Podcast appearances and mentions of Ron Wyden

American politician

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The Constitutionalist
#59 - Tocqueville - The Omnipotence of the Majority

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2025 52:00


On the fifty-ninth episode of the Constitutionalist, Ben and Matthew discuss Volume 1, Part 2, Chapter 7 of Alexis De Tocqueville's "Democracy in America" on the omnipotence of the majority. They discuss Tocqueville's warnings of the detrimental effects of democracy on the citizen. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal abraham lincoln impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs majority elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law senate judiciary committee john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy omnipotence robert morris alexis de tocqueville thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst checks and balances grad student political commentary ron wyden originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform bill cassidy political analysis john hart department of homeland security publius separation of powers national constitution center legal analysis department of labor chris coons richard blumenthal legal history constitutionalism tammy baldwin american founding civic education department of transportation james lankford stephen hopkins summer institute chris van hollen richard burr rob portman tina smith constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton department of agriculture pat toomey thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery historical analysis founding principles samuel huntington constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer apush department of commerce revolutionary america brian schatz founding documents state sovereignty civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era early american republic roger sherman martin heinrich maggie hassan contemporary politics constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee american political development samuel chase richard stockton constitutional conventions alcohol prohibition mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance constitutional conservatism lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Stand Up! with Pete Dominick
1356 David Rothkopf + News & Clips

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 93:33


Today's conversation with Daivid Rothkopf begins at 1:02 Stand Up is a daily podcast. I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day. This show is Ad free and fully supported by listeners like you! Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 700 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous souls Subscribe to Rothkopf's new Substack  https://davidrothkopf.substack.com/ Follow Rothkopf Listen to Deep State Radio Read Rothkopf at The Daily Beast Buy his books David Rothkopf is CEO of The Rothkopf Group, a media company that produces podcasts including Deep State Radio, hosted by Rothkopf. TRG also produces custom podcasts for clients including the United Arab Emirates. He is also the author of many books including Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power, Superclass, Power, Inc., National Insecurity, Great Questions of Tomorrow, and Traitor: A History of Betraying America from Benedict Arnold to Donald Trump. Joe Jacobson is a political strategist with eight years of electoral, lobbying, and government experience. Prior to founding the Progress Action Fund, Joe worked for the Service Employees International Union, where he oversaw endorsements, independent expenditures, and government relations operations in four purple counties in Southern California. In response to COVID-19, he co-founded a bipartisan task force to persuade the GOP led San Diego County Board of Supervisors to allocate $10 million for free childcare for essential workers Before SEIU, Joe worked at AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington, DC, where he devised strategies with union leaders in 21 states to support local, state, and federal candidates. Joe also has a variety of policy experience, including for President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers and Senator Ron Wyden. Joe's start in politics began at 6 years old, when his Grandma Judy gave him a book about the presidents. Grandma Judy was Joe's inspiration for politics, the two of them talking on the phone every few weeks about progressive politics. During her life Grandma Judy was involved with Seattle's League of Women Voters, 33rd District Democrats, and Planned Parenthood. The Progress Action Fund is dedicated to her memory. Be sure to visit https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/membership and scroll down where you should see a "Connect to Discord" button. You can also look at https://support.patreon.com/hc/en-us/articles/212052266-How-do-I-get-my-Discord-Rewards- for more info. Join the SUPD Marketplace! Watch the video to learn how to post at StandUpWithPeteDominick.com/marketplace Join us Thursday's at 8EST for our Weekly Happy Hour Hangout!  Pete on Blue Sky Pete on Threads Pete on Tik Tok Pete on YouTube  Pete on Twitter Pete On Instagram Pete Personal FB page Stand Up with Pete FB page All things Jon Carroll  Follow and Support Pete Coe Buy Ava's Art  Hire DJ Monzyk to build your website or help you with Marketing Gift a Subscription https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/gift

The Constitutionalist
#58 - Montesquieu and the Founding with William B. Allen

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2025 58:24


On the fifty-eighth episode, Shane, Matthew, and Ben are joined by William B. Allen, Professor Emeritus of Political Philosophy at Michigan State University, to discuss Montesquieu's political philosophy and its influence on the American Founding and eighteenth-century British politics. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew K. Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american founders history president donald trump culture power house politics british phd colorado joe biden elections dc local congress political supreme court union bernie sanders federal kamala harris constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage michigan state university political science liberal abraham lincoln impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor founding george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college professor emeritus mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law senate judiciary committee civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions house of representatives ideological george clinton federalism james smith department of education rick scott tom cotton chris murphy thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins 14th amendment john marshall patrick henry benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism montesquieu john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies electoral reform bill cassidy political analysis john hart department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis department of labor chris coons richard blumenthal legal history tammy baldwin american founding james lankford department of transportation summer institute chris van hollen richard burr rob portman tina smith constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono pat toomey department of agriculture thom tillis judicial review mike braun social ethics jeff merkley patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases deliberative democracy department of veterans affairs civic responsibility demagoguery civic leadership historical analysis founding principles samuel huntington constitutional government political education cory gardner lamar alexander temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state george ross mike rounds cindy hyde smith kevin cramer apush department of commerce revolutionary america brian schatz state sovereignty founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era early american republic roger sherman maggie hassan martin heinrich constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams elbridge gerry george wythe william floyd william b allen constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee american political development samuel chase richard stockton alcohol prohibition constitutional conventions mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation
Wake Up and Win with DeVon Pouncey
Episode 292: "The Warm Up" Featuring Senator Ron Wyden

Wake Up and Win with DeVon Pouncey

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2025 40:27


On this episode Chris James joins to discuss Lowkey Golf and their upcoming golf tournament (6:05), latest in the NBA playoffs (13:52), and friend of the show Senator Ron Wyden joins to discuss the groundbreaking ceremony for the new Portland Thorns and Portland WNBA facilities (35:05)

The Constitutionalist
#57 - Tocqueville's Point of Departure

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 65:24


On the fifty-seventh episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane and Matthew discuss Volume 1, Chapter 2 of Alexis De Tocqueville's "Democracy in America." We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal abraham lincoln impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot departure ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott american democracy amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law senate judiciary committee john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris american exceptionalism alexis de tocqueville thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform john hart bill cassidy department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis national constitution center department of labor chris coons richard blumenthal legal history department of energy constitutionalism tammy baldwin american founding civic education james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr rob portman tina smith constitutionalists bob casey democracy in america benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton department of agriculture pat toomey thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility demagoguery civic leadership historical analysis samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer department of commerce apush revolutionary america brian schatz state sovereignty founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era early american republic roger sherman martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution civic learning department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee civic culture samuel chase american political development richard stockton alcohol prohibition constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy government structure department of health and human services american political culture american governance constitutional conservatism lyman hall constitutional rights foundation
The Constitutionalist
#56 - Federalist 37

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 52:14


On the fifty-sixth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss Federalist 37, and Madison's teachings on political and epistemological limits. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law senate judiciary committee john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst checks and balances grad student political commentary ron wyden originalism american presidency michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform bill cassidy political analysis john hart department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history richard blumenthal department of energy tammy baldwin constitutionalism american founding civic education department of transportation james lankford stephen hopkins summer institute chris van hollen richard burr tina smith rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton department of agriculture pat toomey thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery historical analysis founding principles samuel huntington constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer apush department of commerce revolutionary america brian schatz founding documents state sovereignty civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era early american republic roger sherman martin heinrich maggie hassan contemporary politics constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry george wythe william floyd jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee american political development samuel chase richard stockton constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy department of health and human services government structure american governance constitutional conservatism lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Business of Tech
CVE Program Saved, CISA Nomination Blocked, OpenAI's AI Models Released, SolarWinds Goes Private

Business of Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2025 14:58


The U.S. government has renewed funding for the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) Program, a critical database for tracking cybersecurity flaws, just hours before its funding was set to expire. Established 25 years ago, the CVE program assigns unique identifiers to security vulnerabilities, facilitating consistent communication across the cybersecurity landscape. The renewal of funding comes amid concerns that without it, new vulnerabilities could go untracked, posing risks to national security and critical infrastructure. In response to the funding uncertainty, two initiatives emerged: the CVE Foundation, a nonprofit aimed at ensuring the program's independence, and the Global CVE Allocation System, a decentralized platform introduced by the European Union.In addition to the CVE funding situation, Oregon Senator Ron Wyden has blocked the nomination of Sean Planky to lead the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) due to the agency's refusal to release a crucial unclassified report from 2022. This report details security issues within U.S. telecommunications companies, which Wyden claims represent a multi-year cover-up of negligent cybersecurity practices. The senator argues that the public deserves access to this information, especially in light of recent cyber threats, including the SALT typhoon hack that compromised sensitive communications.The cybersecurity landscape is further complicated by significant layoffs at CISA, which could affect nearly 40% of its workforce, potentially weakening U.S. national security amid rising cyber threats. Recent cuts have already impacted critical personnel, including threat hunters, which could hinder the agency's ability to share vital threat intelligence with the private sector. Meanwhile, the Defense Digital Service at the Pentagon is facing a mass resignation of nearly all its staff, following pressure from the Department of Government Efficiency, which could effectively shut down the program designed to accelerate technology adoption during national security crises.On the technology front, OpenAI has released new AI reasoning models, O3 and O4 Mini, but notably did not provide a safety report for the new GPT-4.1 model, raising concerns about transparency and accountability in AI development. The lack of a safety report is particularly alarming as AI systems become more integrated into client-facing tools. Additionally, SolarWinds Corporation has been acquired by Ternerva Capital, prompting managed service providers (MSPs) to reassess their dependencies on SolarWinds products and consider the implications for product roadmaps and support guarantees. Four things to know today 00:00 From Panic to Pivot: U.S. Saves CVE Program at the Eleventh Hour04:17 A Cybersecurity Meltdown: One Senator Blocks, Another Leader Quits, and a Whole Pentagon Team Walks Out08:54 OpenAI Just Leveled Up AI Reasoning—But Left Out the Fine Print11:45 SolarWinds Is Private Again: What That Means for MSPs Watching the Roadmap  Supported by:  https://www.huntress.com/mspradio/ https://cometbackup.com/?utm_source=mspradio&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=sponsorship   Join Dave April 22nd to learn about Marketing in the AI Era.  Signup here:  https://hubs.la/Q03dwWqg0 All our Sponsors: https://businessof.tech/sponsors/ Do you want the show on your podcast app or the written versions of the stories? Subscribe to the Business of Tech: https://www.businessof.tech/subscribe/Looking for a link from the stories? The entire script of the show, with links to articles, are posted in each story on https://www.businessof.tech/ Support the show on Patreon: https://patreon.com/mspradio/ Want to be a guest on Business of Tech: Daily 10-Minute IT Services Insights? Send Dave Sobel a message on PodMatch, here: https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/businessoftech Want our stuff? Cool Merch? Wear “Why Do We Care?” - Visit https://mspradio.myspreadshop.com Follow us on:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/28908079/YouTube: https://youtube.com/mspradio/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mspradionews/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mspradio/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@businessoftechBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/businessof.tech

Federal Drive with Tom Temin
Wyden to block CISA nominee over telecom security ‘cover up'

Federal Drive with Tom Temin

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 7:41


Staff at the cybersecurity and infrastructure security agency may have to wait a little longer than expected for a Senate confirmed director. That's because Oregon Senator Ron Wyden plans to place a hold on Sean Planck, President Trump's nominee for CISA director. For more on why he chooses to do that, Federal News Network's Justin Doubleday joins me. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Federal Drive with Tom Temin
Wyden to block CISA nominee over telecom security ‘cover up'

Federal Drive with Tom Temin

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 8:26


Staff at the cybersecurity and infrastructure security agency may have to wait a little longer than expected for a Senate confirmed director. That's because Oregon Senator Ron Wyden plans to place a hold on Sean Planck, President Trump's nominee for CISA director. For more on why he chooses to do that, Federal News Network's Justin Doubleday joins me. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick
1329 David Rothkopf Returns!

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 40:27


Stand Up is a daily podcast that I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day. Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 700 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous souls Check out StandUpwithPete.com to learn more Subscribe to Rothkopf's new Substack  https://davidrothkopf.substack.com/ Follow Rothkopf Listen to Deep State Radio Read Rothkopf at The Daily Beast Buy his books David Rothkopf is CEO of The Rothkopf Group, a media company that produces podcasts including Deep State Radio, hosted by Rothkopf. TRG also produces custom podcasts for clients including the United Arab Emirates. He is also the author of many books including Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power, Superclass, Power, Inc., National Insecurity, Great Questions of Tomorrow, and Traitor: A History of Betraying America from Benedict Arnold to Donald Trump. Joe Jacobson is a political strategist with eight years of electoral, lobbying, and government experience. Prior to founding the Progress Action Fund, Joe worked for the Service Employees International Union, where he oversaw endorsements, independent expenditures, and government relations operations in four purple counties in Southern California. In response to COVID-19, he co-founded a bipartisan task force to persuade the GOP led San Diego County Board of Supervisors to allocate $10 million for free childcare for essential workers Before SEIU, Joe worked at AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington, DC, where he devised strategies with union leaders in 21 states to support local, state, and federal candidates. Joe also has a variety of policy experience, including for President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers and Senator Ron Wyden. Joe's start in politics began at 6 years old, when his Grandma Judy gave him a book about the presidents. Grandma Judy was Joe's inspiration for politics, the two of them talking on the phone every few weeks about progressive politics. During her life Grandma Judy was involved with Seattle's League of Women Voters, 33rd District Democrats, and Planned Parenthood. The Progress Action Fund is dedicated to her memory. Be sure to visit https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/membership and scroll down where you should see a "Connect to Discord" button. You can also look at https://support.patreon.com/hc/en-us/articles/212052266-How-do-I-get-my-Discord-Rewards- for more info. Join the SUPD Marketplace! Watch the video to learn how to post at StandUpWithPeteDominick.com/marketplace Join us Thursday's at 8EST for our Weekly Happy Hour Hangout!  Pete on Blue Sky Pete on Threads Pete on Tik Tok Pete on YouTube  Pete on Twitter Pete On Instagram Pete Personal FB page Stand Up with Pete FB page All things Jon Carroll  Follow and Support Pete Coe Buy Ava's Art  Hire DJ Monzyk to build your website or help you with Marketing Gift a Subscription https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/gift

The Constitutionalist
#55 - Gouverneur Morris with Dennis C. Rasmussen

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 60:27


Purchase Professor Rasmussen's book here.We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com  The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org.The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.   

united states america american founders history president donald trump culture house politics college doctors phd colorado joe biden elections dc local congress political supreme court union bernie sanders democracy kamala harris blm constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law senate judiciary committee john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins 14th amendment john marshall patrick henry political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden originalism american presidency michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform john hart bill cassidy political analysis department of homeland security separation of powers national constitution center legal analysis department of labor chris coons richard blumenthal legal history department of energy tammy baldwin constitutionalism american founding department of transportation james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr tina smith rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton department of agriculture pat toomey thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters debbie stabenow landmark cases deliberative democracy american constitution society george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery historical analysis samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer department of commerce apush revolutionary america brian schatz state sovereignty founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era early american republic roger sherman contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution civic learning department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee american political development samuel chase richard stockton constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy department of health and human services government structure american governance dennis c rasmussen constitutional conservatism lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Policy for the People
Senator Wyden on the Trump tax plan: “It's going to cause a lot of hardship”

Policy for the People

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 28:36 Transcription Available


Right now, the Republican controlled Congress is speeding down a path that would raise costs for food and health care for millions of families by taking away Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits. It would do so in order to help pay for massive tax cuts primarily benefiting the most well-off, including millionaires and billionaires.In this episode of Policy for the People, we speak with Oregon Senator Ron Wyden about what the budget blueprint currently being discussed in Congress means for Oregonians and the nation. We also speak with Steve Wamhoff, Federal Policy Director at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, about his recent report titled: Federal Tax Policy: What Should It Accomplish? In it he argues that our federal government needs to raise more revenue, not less, and do so in a progressive way. In other words, we need to go in the opposite direction from the current plan in Congress.

The Constitutionalist
#54 - Defending the Electoral College (Martin Diamond and Herbert Storing)

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2025 64:38


On the fifty-fourth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss the arguments of Martin Diamond and Herbert Storing in favor of preserving the Electoral College, presented to the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Senate Judiciary Committee in July 1977. The readings may be accessed here: Martin Diamond: http://www.electoralcollegehistory.com/electoral/docs/diamond.pdf Herbert Storing (Chapter 21 in this volume): https://www.aei.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/-toward-a-more-perfect-union_154408483501.pdf?x85095 We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives diamond nonprofits heritage defending political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington herbert princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham storing bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law senate judiciary committee john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott subcommittee tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden originalism american presidency michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform john hart political analysis bill cassidy department of homeland security publius separation of powers national constitution center legal analysis department of labor chris coons legal history richard blumenthal department of energy tammy baldwin constitutionalism american founding civic education james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr tina smith rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton department of agriculture pat toomey thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery historical analysis samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner david nichols lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer apush department of commerce revolutionary america brian schatz state sovereignty founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era early american republic roger sherman contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution civic learning department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee american political development samuel chase richard stockton constitutional conventions legal philosophy mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance constitutional conservatism lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
CNBC’s “Money Movers”
Countdown to Tariffs…Tariffs & The Fed…Congress Weighs in 4/2/25

CNBC’s “Money Movers”

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 41:49


As we countdown to the President's tariff announcement, we'll look at what the market is hoping for and what could lead to sell off. Plus, Senate Finance Committee ranking member, Ron Wyden, weighs in on the tariffs and taxes. And, we look ahead to what these tariff announcements could mean for the path of the Fed's rate moves. 

Techdirt
Ron Wyden On Chutzpah

Techdirt

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2025 36:47


If you're a Techdirt reader, you're probably familiar with Senator Ron Wyden. In January, he released his new book It Takes Chutzpah, offering up a call for political boldness that feels even more relevant with every day that passes. This week, Senator Wyden joins Mike on the podcast to talk about the book and the political moment we find ourselves in.

AURN News
"Hands Off Our Checks!": Senate Democrats Launch War Room to Protect Social Security

AURN News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2025 1:46


Senate Democrats are gearing up for battle—this time, to protect your Social Security check. Today, they launched what they're calling a “war room” to push back against cuts being made by the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. The move comes as the Trump administration plans to axe certain identity verification phone services at the Social Security Administration next month. Critics warn this will overload an already struggling system and hurt vulnerable seniors. The war room will do more than just sound the alarm. Led by Sens. Elizabeth Warren, Ron Wyden, Mark Kelly and Raphael Warnock, it's designed to amplify messaging, oversee DOGE's actions, hold field visits, and put pressure on Republicans—especially in swing districts—through town halls and public engagement. The bigger play: DOGE is slashing agencies left and right, but Democrats say Social Security is where they're making their stand. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Constitutionalist
#53 - Lincoln's Temperance Address

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 61:40


On the fifty-third episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss Lincoln's famous "Temperance Address," delivered on Washington's birthday in 1842 to the Washington Society in Springfield, Illinois. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local illinois congress political supreme court senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm address constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal abraham lincoln impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor springfield george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott temperance federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst checks and balances grad student political commentary ron wyden originalism american presidency michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education john hart bill cassidy political analysis department of homeland security publius separation of powers national constitution center legal analysis department of labor chris coons legal history richard blumenthal department of energy tammy baldwin constitutionalism civic education james lankford stephen hopkins summer institute chris van hollen richard burr rob portman tina smith constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey department of agriculture thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery historical analysis founding principles samuel huntington constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin temperance movement antebellum america department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer apush department of commerce brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris roger sherman martin heinrich maggie hassan contemporary politics constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry george wythe william floyd jacky rosen constitutional accountability center mercy otis warren civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee samuel chase richard stockton alcohol prohibition constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall washington society constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Tony Katz Today
Episode 3724: Tony Katz Today Hour 3 - 03/25/25

Tony Katz Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 36:12


Hour 3 Segment 1 Tony starts the final hour of the show talking more about Jeffrey Goldberg in the Trump administration group chat and Ron Wyden’s reaction to it. Hour 3 Segment 2 Tony talks about playing Fortnite with his kids to decompress. Hour 3 Segment 3 Tony is joined with Dr. Matt Will, economist from the University of Indianapolis, to talk about the different types of tariffs. Hour 3 Segment 4 Tony wraps up another edition of the show talking about Jasmine Crockett mocking Governor Greg Abbott and Ted Cruz. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tony Katz Today
Tony Katz Today Full Show - 03/25/25

Tony Katz Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 107:24


Hour 1 Segment 1 Tony starts the show talking about John Ratcliffe testifying before Congress after Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic being in a group chat from the Trump administration with highly sensitive plans to bomb Houthi targets in Yemen. Hour 1 Segment 2 Tony talks about Sheng Thao calling out conservatives and California installing speeding cameras. Hour 1 Segment 3 Tony talks about Mahmoud Khalil hid ties to UNRWA on green card application as he gets hit with new accusations. Hour 1 Segment 4 Tony wraps up the first hour of the show by talking about Hyundai announcing a $20 billion investment into the U.S. Tony also talks about reciprocal tariffs. Hour 2 Segment 1 Tony starts the second hour of the show talking about Massachusetts releasing hundreds of illegal immigrants accused of raping children. Tony also talks about how a judge thinks that nazi’s got better treatment than Venezuelan gang members. Hour 2 Segment 2 Tony talks about a woman named Latarsha Brown of staging a hoax hate crime of plating a noose on her desk and facing false report charges. Hour 2 Segment 3 Tony is joined with Noah Rothman of the National Review to talk about why Jeffrey Goldberg was in the group chat. Hour 2 Segment 4 Tony wraps up the second hour of the show talking about Colorado to take down a portrait of President Donald Trump at their state capitol after President Trump called for its removal and calling it distorted. Tony also talks more of an Amazon delivery driver vandalizing a pro-Israel sign. Hour 3 Segment 1 Tony starts the final hour of the show talking more about Jeffrey Goldberg in the Trump administration group chat and Ron Wyden’s reaction to it. Hour 3 Segment 2 Tony talks about playing Fortnite with his kids to decompress. Hour 3 Segment 3 Tony is joined with Dr. Matt Will, economist from the University of Indianapolis, to talk about the different types of tariffs. Hour 3 Segment 4 Tony wraps up another edition of the show talking about Jasmine Crockett mocking Governor Greg Abbott and Ted Cruz. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Constitutionalist
#52 - Texas Annexation - Adding the Lone Star with Jordan Cash

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 66:19


On the fifty-second episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew are joined by Jordan Cash, Assistant Professor at the James Madison College at Michigan State University, to discuss Texas's declaration of independence from Mexico, and its annexation by the United States. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history texas president donald trump culture power house washington politics college mexico state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives assistant professor nonprofits heritage michigan state university political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency sherman ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell declaration of independence supreme court justice baylor university american politics alamo lone star joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton manifest destiny constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice sam houston political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins annexation 14th amendment patrick henry political history davy crockett benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education john hart bill cassidy political analysis department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis national constitution center department of labor chris coons richard blumenthal legal history department of energy tammy baldwin constitutionalism american founding civic education james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr tina smith rob portman texas history constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey department of agriculture thom tillis judicial review mike braun texas revolution jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters debbie stabenow landmark cases department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility demagoguery civic leadership historical analysis samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross mike rounds cindy hyde smith kevin cramer department of commerce apush revolutionary america brian schatz founding documents state sovereignty civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris mexican history founding era early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy roger wicker john barrasso pat roberts william williams american political thought texas independence elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe james madison college jacky rosen constitutional accountability center mercy otis warren civic learning living constitution texians department of the interior tom carper james bowie constitutional affairs richard henry lee samuel chase american political development richard stockton constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy department of health and human services government structure american governance texas republic lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
City Cast Portland
Sen. Ron Wyden on Making Sense of All of This

City Cast Portland

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 20:41


Between tariff battles, government layoffs, the stock market sinking, and Elon Musk waiving around a chainsaw, there's plenty to worry about in the national headlines.  One of our highest-ranking Oregonians is in the thick of it all: As a leader of the Senate Finance Committee, U.S. Senator Ron Wyden has a front row seat to many of these complex, crucial issues. Today Senator Wyden joins us to share what he's seeing unfold in Washington, D.C., and how it's affecting all of our lives back home in Oregon. Become a member of City Cast Portland today! Get all the details and sign up here.  Who would you like to hear on City Cast Portland? Shoot us an email at portland@citycast.fm, or leave us a voicemail at 503-208-5448. Want more Portland news? Then make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter, Hey Portland, and be sure to follow us on Instagram.  Looking to advertise on City Cast Portland? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads at citycast.fm/advertise. Learn more about the sponsors of this March 18th episode: Babbel - Get up to 60% off at Babbel.com/CITYCAST Portland State University Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Constitutionalist
#51 - Madison on Property

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 45:47


On the fifty-first episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane Leary and Matthew Reising discuss James Madison's Note on Property for the National Gazette, published March 27, 1792 We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union rights senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm property constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden originalism american presidency michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education bill cassidy political analysis john hart department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history richard blumenthal department of energy constitutionalism tammy baldwin american founding civic education james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr tina smith rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey department of agriculture thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility demagoguery civic leadership historical analysis samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer department of commerce apush revolutionary america brian schatz founding documents state sovereignty civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era roger sherman early american republic maggie hassan contemporary politics martin heinrich jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry george wythe william floyd jacky rosen constitutional accountability center mercy otis warren civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee american political development samuel chase richard stockton constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Town Hall Seattle Civics Series
383. Ron Wyden with Liz Berry: It Takes Chutzpah

Town Hall Seattle Civics Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 51:28


“If you want to make change, you've got to make noise.” A call to action in the political sense conveys boldness and focus. It's about drawing attention and speaking loudly about one's convictions, with a sense of urgency and persistence. To longtime outspoken advocate and US Senator Ron Wyden, that's what you'd call chutzpah – and his upcoming book sets out to inspire that same quality of action-driven audacity in Americans of all ages. It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change acts as a reflection of Wyden's decades of public service and as a motivational manifesto to push people forward. Noted throughout his career in government for championing civil rights, sensible ideas, and strategic alliances that strive to get pressing bills passed, Wyden understands the importance of strong, loud community and charting new pathways. In It Takes Chutzpah, Wyden explores the long history of the Yiddish word chutzpah, the many interpretations of it across Jewish culture, and how he sees the trait as a tool to reclaim idealism and enact positive change. Wyden compels individuals and groups alike to look at the objectives before them with this boldness in mind, as well as conviction in their values. Wyden touches on the importance of free speech, healthcare, reproductive rights, a clean environment, and regulating the impacts of Big Tech throughout his political tenure. He explores how campaigning for the preservation of those values has been bolstered over the years– and even offers “Ron's 12 Rules of Chutzpah” as a guide to defying convention and achieving progress. It Takes Chutzpah stresses that unapologetic volume and the nerve to keep fighting can prove crucial in accomplishing goals, creating allies, and moving brazenly forward together. Ron Wyden is an American politician and longtime advocate in the areas of civil rights, internet freedom, healthcare, and more. He currently serves as the senior United States senator from Oregon and Chair of the Senate Committee on Finance. He has previously held positions in the U.S. House of Representatives and as the Chair of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. State Representative Liz Berry represents Washington's 36th Legislative District, located in the shadow of Seattle's Space Needle. She is a passionate advocate for ending gun violence, combating plastic pollution, and standing up for working families and consumers against powerful special interests. A lifelong champion for women in leadership and reproductive justice, Rep. Berry served as president of the National Women's Political Caucus of Washington and as a board member for Pro-Choice Washington. She is the former Legislative Director to U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords. Rep. Berry lives with her husband and two young children in Queen Anne.  Buy the Book It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change Elliott Bay Book Company

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick
1314 David Rothkopf & News + Clips

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 65:17


Stand Up is a daily podcast that I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day. Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 700 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous souls Check out StandUpwithPete.com to learn more GET TICKETS TO PODJAM II In Vegas March 27-30 Confirmed Guests! Professor Eric Segall, Dr Aaron Carroll, Maura Quint, Tim Wise, JL Cauvin, Ophira Eisenberg, Christian Finnegan and The Ladies of The Huw will all join us! On today's show I start with Rothkopf at about 30 mins  Subscribe to Rothkopf's new Substack  https://davidrothkopf.substack.com/ Follow Rothkopf Listen to Deep State Radio Read Rothkopf at The Daily Beast Buy his books David Rothkopf is CEO of The Rothkopf Group, a media company that produces podcasts including Deep State Radio, hosted by Rothkopf. TRG also produces custom podcasts for clients including the United Arab Emirates. He is also the author of many books including Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power, Superclass, Power, Inc., National Insecurity, Great Questions of Tomorrow, and Traitor: A History of Betraying America from Benedict Arnold to Donald Trump. Joe Jacobson is a political strategist with eight years of electoral, lobbying, and government experience. Prior to founding the Progress Action Fund, Joe worked for the Service Employees International Union, where he oversaw endorsements, independent expenditures, and government relations operations in four purple counties in Southern California. In response to COVID-19, he co-founded a bipartisan task force to persuade the GOP led San Diego County Board of Supervisors to allocate $10 million for free childcare for essential workers Before SEIU, Joe worked at AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington, DC, where he devised strategies with union leaders in 21 states to support local, state, and federal candidates. Joe also has a variety of policy experience, including for President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers and Senator Ron Wyden. Joe's start in politics began at 6 years old, when his Grandma Judy gave him a book about the presidents. Grandma Judy was Joe's inspiration for politics, the two of them talking on the phone every few weeks about progressive politics. During her life Grandma Judy was involved with Seattle's League of Women Voters, 33rd District Democrats, and Planned Parenthood. The Progress Action Fund is dedicated to her memory. Be sure to visit https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/membership and scroll down where you should see a "Connect to Discord" button. You can also look at https://support.patreon.com/hc/en-us/articles/212052266-How-do-I-get-my-Discord-Rewards- for more info. Join the SUPD Marketplace! Watch the video to learn how to post at StandUpWithPeteDominick.com/marketplace Join us Thursday's at 8EST for our Weekly Happy Hour Hangout!  Pete on Blue Sky Pete on Threads Pete on Tik Tok Pete on YouTube  Pete on Twitter Pete On Instagram Pete Personal FB page Stand Up with Pete FB page All things Jon Carroll  Follow and Support Pete Coe Buy Ava's Art  Hire DJ Monzyk to build your website or help you with Marketing Gift a Subscription https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/gift

Wake Up and Win with DeVon Pouncey
Episode 285: "Be More Liberal " Featuring Senator Ron Wyden

Wake Up and Win with DeVon Pouncey

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 58:11


On this episode we discuss LeBron James reaching 50,000 ponits and the latest in the NBA (11:50) and United States Senator Ron Wyden joins to discuss the legacy of Bill Walton (45:50)

The Constitutionalist
#50 - The Constitution of 1787

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 56:11


To commemorate the fiftieth episode of The Constitutionalist, Benjamin Kleinerman, Shane Leary, and Matthew Reising discuss the Constitution of 1787. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins 14th amendment john marshall patrick henry political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education political analysis john hart bill cassidy department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis national constitution center department of labor chris coons richard blumenthal legal history department of energy tammy baldwin constitutionalism american founding civic education james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr tina smith rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey department of agriculture thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility demagoguery civic leadership historical analysis samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross mike rounds cindy hyde smith kevin cramer department of commerce apush revolutionary america brian schatz founding documents state sovereignty civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy roger wicker john barrasso pat roberts william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen constitutional accountability center mercy otis warren civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee samuel chase american political development richard stockton constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
We Have A Take: A Portland Trail Blazers Fan Podcast

We're not saying we're goofing off or slacking for the rest of the season, it just seemed like the right time to draft Former Blazer Cuties. Who are Blazer cuties? We're glad you asked! Tune in to find out and then tell us what Blazer Cuties would you draft for your Blazer cutie dream team? 3:00 Catching up on the last week, beating bad teams, Suns have big problems and it wasn't Jusuf Nurkic, is Jusuf Nurkic going to have an acting career? Gooooolden warriors are a zombie team that is eating everyone's brains. Paul George is taking time off of podcasting so he can concentrate on winning. 13:00 Why don't we get much of Shaedon and Scoot playing together? 22:00 Blazer Cutie draft (starting with loose-definitions)Rose: Ed Davis, Thomas Robinson, Rodney Hood, Allen Crabbe, Shabazz Napier, Steve BlakeTara: Greg Oden, Al Farouq Aminu, Derrick Jones Jr., Will Barton, Andre Miller, Jake Layman1:02:00 Interview with Senator Ron Wyden about Blazer Legend Bill Walton and the WNBA1:16:00 Takes: Tara: if you are tired of talking in circles about the Blazer, go watch a Bravo show. Rose: The most moves doesn't mean the best moves.Join us on Discord! It's a place where we can share our love for the Blazers, talk about games, and get to know other Blazer fans. Kind of like Twitter but it's not. There are different channels with different topics and you can join in where you want, and ignore the stuff you don't want to see. Give it a try! You can also still find us on Bluesky: @wehaveatake, @tcbbiggs @roselhardingThe cutest intro/outro music by Eric Peterson (@shoozumoops)

The Constitutionalist
#49 - Madison's Notes on Ancient and Modern Confederacies

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2025 55:45


On the forty-ninth episode of The Constitutionalist, Benjamin Kleinerman, Shane Leary, and Matthew Reising discuss James Madison's "Notes on Ancient and Modern Confederacies," compiled in 1786, and his early thinking regarding confederacies, union, and the necessity of a new Constitution. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local modern congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm ancient constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political debate political thought sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden originalism american presidency michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education bill cassidy political analysis john hart department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history richard blumenthal department of energy constitutionalism tammy baldwin american founding civic education james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr tina smith rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton department of agriculture pat toomey thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility demagoguery civic leadership historical analysis samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer department of commerce apush revolutionary america brian schatz founding documents state sovereignty civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era roger sherman early american republic maggie hassan contemporary politics martin heinrich jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry george wythe william floyd jacky rosen constitutional accountability center mercy otis warren civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee american political development samuel chase richard stockton constitutional conventions mike crapo legal philosophy department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Think Out Loud
Oregon senior Senator Ron Wyden on expected Medicaid and social service cuts under Trump administration

Think Out Loud

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2025 18:09


U.S. Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley joined with other senators in a letter to Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and President Donald Trump urging them to not cut Medicare and Medicaid. The two programs serve 140 million people nationwide, and in Oregon, the way people receive Medicaid is through the Oregon Health Plan. Sen. Wyden joins us to discuss protecting the health care these federal programs provide, what Democratic representatives are hearing from their constituents about the rapid take down of the federal government and what he and his party are doing in response.

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick
1302 David Rothkopf + News and Clips

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 65:40


Stand Up is a daily podcast that I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day. Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 700 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous souls Check out StandUpwithPete.com to learn more GET TICKETS TO PODJAM II In Vegas March 27-30 Confirmed Guests! Professor Eric Segall, Dr Aaron Carroll, Maura Quint, Tim Wise, JL Cauvin, Ophira Eisenberg, Christian Finnegan and The Ladies of The Huw will all join us! On today's show I start with Rothkopf at about 33 mins  Subscribe to Rothkopf's new Substack  https://davidrothkopf.substack.com/ Follow Rothkopf Listen to Deep State Radio Read Rothkopf at The Daily Beast Buy his books David Rothkopf is CEO of The Rothkopf Group, a media company that produces podcasts including Deep State Radio, hosted by Rothkopf. TRG also produces custom podcasts for clients including the United Arab Emirates. He is also the author of many books including Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power, Superclass, Power, Inc., National Insecurity, Great Questions of Tomorrow, and Traitor: A History of Betraying America from Benedict Arnold to Donald Trump. Joe Jacobson is a political strategist with eight years of electoral, lobbying, and government experience. Prior to founding the Progress Action Fund, Joe worked for the Service Employees International Union, where he oversaw endorsements, independent expenditures, and government relations operations in four purple counties in Southern California. In response to COVID-19, he co-founded a bipartisan task force to persuade the GOP led San Diego County Board of Supervisors to allocate $10 million for free childcare for essential workers Before SEIU, Joe worked at AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington, DC, where he devised strategies with union leaders in 21 states to support local, state, and federal candidates. Joe also has a variety of policy experience, including for President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers and Senator Ron Wyden. Joe's start in politics began at 6 years old, when his Grandma Judy gave him a book about the presidents. Grandma Judy was Joe's inspiration for politics, the two of them talking on the phone every few weeks about progressive politics. During her life Grandma Judy was involved with Seattle's League of Women Voters, 33rd District Democrats, and Planned Parenthood. The Progress Action Fund is dedicated to her memory. Be sure to visit https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/membership and scroll down where you should see a "Connect to Discord" button. You can also look at https://support.patreon.com/hc/en-us/articles/212052266-How-do-I-get-my-Discord-Rewards- for more info. Join the SUPD Marketplace! Watch the video to learn how to post at StandUpWithPeteDominick.com/marketplace Join us Thursday's at 8EST for our Weekly Happy Hour Hangout!  Pete on Blue Sky Pete on Threads Pete on Tik Tok Pete on YouTube  Pete on Twitter Pete On Instagram Pete Personal FB page Stand Up with Pete FB page All things Jon Carroll  Follow and Support Pete Coe Buy Ava's Art  Hire DJ Monzyk to build your website or help you with Marketing Gift a Subscription https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/gift

The Constitutionalist
#48 - Adams and Jefferson on Natural Aristocracy

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2025 52:48


On the forty-eighth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane Leary and Matthew Reising discuss John Adams and Thomas Jefferson's discussion of natural aristocracy, in a series of letter from August 14 to October 28 of 1813. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court natural senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris adams blm constitution conservatives nonprofits heritage political science liberal impeachment civil rights public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell supreme court justice baylor university american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul polarization chuck schumer marco rubio alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar dianne feinstein civic engagement rule of law john kennedy civil liberties claremont josh hawley polarized mike lee ron johnson supreme court decisions constitutional law house of representatives paul revere ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism james smith department of education aaron burr rick scott tom cotton chris murphy robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy constitutional amendments john hancock fourteenth susan collins patrick henry 14th amendment john marshall political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government samuel adams aei marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones montesquieu john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller aristocracy political debate political thought republicanism sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams ed markey american experiment joni ernst grad student checks and balances political commentary ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education political analysis john hart bill cassidy department of homeland security publius separation of powers legal analysis national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history richard blumenthal department of energy tammy baldwin constitutionalism american founding civic education james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins chris van hollen richard burr rob portman tina smith constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king war powers jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey department of agriculture thom tillis judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility demagoguery civic leadership historical analysis founding principles samuel huntington constitutional government political education charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state george ross cindy hyde smith mike rounds kevin cramer department of commerce apush brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris roger sherman contemporary politics maggie hassan martin heinrich jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy roger wicker pat roberts john barrasso william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen constitutional accountability center mercy otis warren civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper constitutional affairs richard henry lee samuel chase richard stockton constitutional conventions legal philosophy mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Another day, another principled resignation at Donald Trump's Justice Department

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 41:43


Tonight on The Last Word: Resignations mount at the Justice Department under Trump. Plus, Democrats demand answers on Elon Musk's access into Social Security. And Trump and Putin officials meet without a Ukrainian envoy. Andrew Weissmann, Sen. Ron Wyden, and Timothy Snyder join Lawrence O'Donnell.

Inside with Jen Psaki
Bench Press: Trump on Collision Course with Federal Judiciary

Inside with Jen Psaki

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 41:44


Amid warnings of a constitutional crisis, Jen Psaki breaks down the ways that Donald Trump and Elon Musk are laying the groundwork to openly defy court orders, and may already have. Former Federal Judge Nancy Gertner joins to discuss the judiciary's ability to keep Trump's illegal actions in check, as he and his allies push the limits of the constitution. Next, Jen is joined by Senator Ron Wyden to discuss Trump and Elon Musk's takeover of the federal government and why he believes their infiltration of sensitive payment systems constitute a coup. Then, Jen is joined by Representative Jasmine Crockett and PA State Representative Malcom Kenyatta, the newly elected DNC vice chair, to discuss Democratic efforts to fight back, including the possibility of forcing a government shutdown to stop Trump and Musk's assault on federal agencies. Later, Jen breaks down Trump's efforts to stack our intelligence and law enforcement agencies with people who put loyalty first, including asking new hires whether January 6 was an "inside job." She is joined by Representative Jim Himes to discuss his concerns about Trump's loyal tests and potential national security vulnerabilities posed by Musk's DOGE team. Finally, Jen shares a preview of her wide-ranging conversation with Governor Wes Moore - the first guest on her new podcast 'The Blueprint'.Check out our social pages below:https://twitter.com/InsideWithPsakihttps://www.instagram.com/InsideWithPsaki/https://www.tiktok.com/@insidewithpsakihttps://www.msnbc.com/jen-psaki

The Roundtable
US Senator Ron Wyden's "It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change" is a call to action for progressive change

The Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 17:53


Democratic Oregon US Senator Ron Wyden joins us to discuss his new book "It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change."

Decoder with Nilay Patel
Sen. Ron Wyden is here to stop Elon Musk

Decoder with Nilay Patel

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2025 62:36


Today, I'm talking with Senator Ron Wyden, a democrat and the senior senator from Oregon. He's been in the Senate for almost 30 years, which makes him one of longest serving members of the institution. We scheduled this interview with Senator Wyden a while ago — he's got a new book out called “It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change.”  But recent events made it vastly more important to talk about the state of our federal government – and specifically, what Elon Musk and DOGE are doing as they seize power in various federal agencies. So right up front and very bluntly, I wanted to ask Wyden: What is even going on? And can even he and his fellow senators keep up with it? Links:  It Takes Chutzpah | Hachette Book Group DOGE wreaked havoc on the government in just one week | Verge “For all practical purposes, I'd call that a coup.” | Verge Elon Musk's presidency is just getting started | Decoder Elon Musk's computer coup | Vergecast Can anyone stop President Musk? | Verge Demand for GAO to investigate what Elon is doing at Treasury [PDF] Senator Has Dire Warning About Letting Elon Musk Run Wild | New Republic “Trump and Bessent are asking you not to believe what's playing out right in front of your eyes.” | Wyden (Bluesky) “My message to Musk is simple: get your hands off our money and get the hell out.” Wyden (Bluesky) Credits: Decoder is a production of The Verge and part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Our producers are Kate Cox and Nick Statt. Our editor is Ursa Wright.  The Decoder music is by Breakmaster Cylinder. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Bill Press Pod
It takes Chutzpah. With Senator Ron Wyden

The Bill Press Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 36:54


In this episode Oregon Senator Ron Wyden discusses the chaotic first weeks of the Trump administration, including the firing of inspectors general, threats to federal spending, and Trump's nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for HHS Secretary. Wyden criticizes Trump's disregard for the law and his attempts to undermine the federal government. He argues Democrats must focus on issues like healthcare costs, housing, and education to counter Trump's agenda that benefits the wealthy. Wyden also discusses the importance of principled bipartisanship and his new book "It Takes Chutzpah" which outlines his approach to progressive politics. Overall, Wyden presents a critical view of the Trump administration's actions and calls for Democrats to take bold action to help working families. You can purchase your copy of his book It takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change by clicking on this link. This episode of the Bill Press Pod is supported by the Iron Workers Union more information at Ironworkers.org.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Realignment
533 | Senator Ron Wyden: Why We Need More "Chutzpah" in Politics + Marshall's Baby Announcement

The Realignment

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 31:24


REALIGNMENT NEWSLETTER: https://therealignment.substack.com/PURCHASE BOOKS AT OUR BOOKSHOP: https://bookshop.org/shop/therealignmentEmail Us: realignmentpod@gmail.comThe Realignment is back from Marshall's parental leave! Today, Oregon Senator Ron Wyden, author of It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change, joins The Realignment. Marshall and Senator Wyden discuss why American politics could you more "Chutzpah," lessons from his career in activism and politics, what it means to be a progressive, generational change, and the path forward on healthcare. 

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick
1285 David Rothkopf and Joe Jacobson + News and Clips

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2025 87:01


Stand Up is a daily podcast that I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day. Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 700 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous souls Check out StandUpwithPete.com to learn more GET TICKETS TO PODJAM II In Vegas March 27-30 Confirmed Guests! Professor Eric Segall, Dr Aaron Carroll, Maura Quint, Tim Wise, JL Cauvin, Ophira Eisenberg, Christian Finnegan and More! On today's show I start with Rothkopf at about 30 mins then I welcome Joe Jacobson for the first time at about 1 hour. Subscribe to Rothkopf's new Substack  https://davidrothkopf.substack.com/ Follow Rothkopf Listen to Deep State Radio Read Rothkopf at The Daily Beast Buy his books David Rothkopf is CEO of The Rothkopf Group, a media company that produces podcasts including Deep State Radio, hosted by Rothkopf. TRG also produces custom podcasts for clients including the United Arab Emirates. He is also the author of many books including Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power, Superclass, Power, Inc., National Insecurity, Great Questions of Tomorrow, and Traitor: A History of Betraying America from Benedict Arnold to Donald Trump. Joe Jacobson is a political strategist with eight years of electoral, lobbying, and government experience. Prior to founding the Progress Action Fund, Joe worked for the Service Employees International Union, where he oversaw endorsements, independent expenditures, and government relations operations in four purple counties in Southern California. In response to COVID-19, he co-founded a bipartisan task force to persuade the GOP led San Diego County Board of Supervisors to allocate $10 million for free childcare for essential workers Before SEIU, Joe worked at AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington, DC, where he devised strategies with union leaders in 21 states to support local, state, and federal candidates. Joe also has a variety of policy experience, including for President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers and Senator Ron Wyden. Joe's start in politics began at 6 years old, when his Grandma Judy gave him a book about the presidents. Grandma Judy was Joe's inspiration for politics, the two of them talking on the phone every few weeks about progressive politics. During her life Grandma Judy was involved with Seattle's League of Women Voters, 33rd District Democrats, and Planned Parenthood. The Progress Action Fund is dedicated to her memory. GET TICKETS TO PODJAM II In Vegas March 27-30 Confirmed Guests! Professor Eric Segall, Dr Aaron Carroll, Maura Quint, Tim Wise, JL Cauvin, Ophira Eisenberg, Christian Finnegan and More! Be sure to visit https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/membership and scroll down where you should see a "Connect to Discord" button. You can also look at https://support.patreon.com/hc/en-us/articles/212052266-How-do-I-get-my-Discord-Rewards- for more info. Join the SUPD Marketplace! Watch the video to learn how to post at StandUpWithPeteDominick.com/marketplace Join us Thursday's at 8EST for our Weekly Happy Hour Hangout!  Pete on Blue Sky Pete on Threads Pete on Tik Tok Pete on YouTube  Pete on Twitter Pete On Instagram Pete Personal FB page Stand Up with Pete FB page All things Jon Carroll  Follow and Support Pete Coe Buy Ava's Art  Hire DJ Monzyk to build your website or help you with Marketing Gift a Subscription https://www.patreon.com/PeteDominick/gift

The Liz Wheeler Show
7 Craziest Moments of RFK Jr.'s Senate Hearing | Ep 78

The Liz Wheeler Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 53:03


On today's episode, Liz Wheeler breaks down some of the craziest moments from Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Senate hearing. Sen. Elizabeth Warren shrieked, Sen. Ron Wyden was a shill for Big Pharma, and RFK Jr. handled himself well. Plus, Liz breaks down why federal workers are suing the Trump administration over its offer for workers to resign and receive severance — or potentially be fired. It's a crazy reason. Liz also reveals her favorite moment from Karoline Leavitt's first press conference. All that and more!  Contact your senators and tell them to support RFK Jr.! https://standforhealthfreedom.com/actions/final-rfk/   SPONSORS:  Bank on Yourself: You can get a FREE report that reveals how you can Bank on Yourself and enjoy TAX-FREE retirement income, guaranteed growth, and control of your money. Just go to https://BankOnYourself.com/LIZ and get your free report!  American Hartford Gold: Tell them I sent you, and they'll give you up to $15,000 dollars of FREE silver on your first order. So call them now! Click here https://offers.americanhartfordgold.com/liz or call 866-996-5172 or text LIZ to 998899. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

PBS NewsHour - Segments
Sen. Wyden offers way forward for progressives in new book 'It Takes Chutzpah'

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2025 5:31


As Trump returns to the White House with Republicans in charge of the House and Senate, Democrats are searching for a way forward. Ron Wyden, the second-most senior Senate Democrat, offers strategies in a new book, "It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change." Amna Nawaz recently sat down with Wyden. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

Make Me Smart
The tax cut zealots vs. the budget hawks

Make Me Smart

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 26:44


Republicans in Congress want to extend several provisions from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, passed during President-elect Donald Trump’s first term, that are set to expire at the end of this year. But they’re expected to be costly — very costly. We’ll unpack the spending cuts the House GOP is eyeing to offset the impact on federal deficits. And, we’ll get into why Paramount is considering settling Trump’s lawsuit over CBS’ interview with Kamala Harris. Plus, we’ll weigh in on the business trends that are in and out for 2025. Here’s everything we talked about today: “CBS Owner Discusses Settling Trump Suit, With Merger Review on Tap” from The Wall Street Journal “House Budget Republicans eye more than 200 spending cuts, tax changes for major bill” from The Hill Ways and Means memo from the House Budget Committee Bluesky thread from Sen. Ron Wyden “Will 2025 Be the Watershed Year for Return-to-Office Mandates? That Depends.” from The Wall Street Journal “TikTok Influencers React to a Potential Ban” from The New York Times “Every Movie Sequel Releasing In 2024” from Screen Rant “Beyoncé’s Whisky, Kylie Jenner’s Canned Vodka Soda, Plus More Stars in the Alcohol Business” from People “Tesla stock jumps amid speculation Musk could buy TikTok” from Yahoo Finance We love to hear from you. Email us at makemesmart@marketplace.org or leave us a voicemail at 508-U-B-SMART.

Marketplace All-in-One
The tax cut zealots vs. the budget hawks

Marketplace All-in-One

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 26:44


Republicans in Congress want to extend several provisions from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, passed during President-elect Donald Trump’s first term, that are set to expire at the end of this year. But they’re expected to be costly — very costly. We’ll unpack the spending cuts the House GOP is eyeing to offset the impact on federal deficits. And, we’ll get into why Paramount is considering settling Trump’s lawsuit over CBS’ interview with Kamala Harris. Plus, we’ll weigh in on the business trends that are in and out for 2025. Here’s everything we talked about today: “CBS Owner Discusses Settling Trump Suit, With Merger Review on Tap” from The Wall Street Journal “House Budget Republicans eye more than 200 spending cuts, tax changes for major bill” from The Hill Ways and Means memo from the House Budget Committee Bluesky thread from Sen. Ron Wyden “Will 2025 Be the Watershed Year for Return-to-Office Mandates? That Depends.” from The Wall Street Journal “TikTok Influencers React to a Potential Ban” from The New York Times “Every Movie Sequel Releasing In 2024” from Screen Rant “Beyoncé’s Whisky, Kylie Jenner’s Canned Vodka Soda, Plus More Stars in the Alcohol Business” from People “Tesla stock jumps amid speculation Musk could buy TikTok” from Yahoo Finance We love to hear from you. Email us at makemesmart@marketplace.org or leave us a voicemail at 508-U-B-SMART.

Techmeme Ride Home
(BNS) Senator Ron Wyden On TikTok, AI, Regulation And His New Book

Techmeme Ride Home

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 21:25


I speak to Senator Ron Wyden about the TikTok ban, AI and regulation, tech regulation in general, and his new book: It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive ChangeSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Politicology
Sen. Ron Wyden: 'It Takes Chutzpah' to Fight for Privacy

Politicology

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 47:02


For the ad-free version of this episode, subscribe to Politicology+ at https://politicology.com/plus In this episode, Ron talks to Senator Ron Wyden (Oregon) about his new book It Takes Chutzpah and leading the legislative charge for privacy in the digital age. Segments to look forward to: (01:48) What is Chutzpah (06:06) Being the ‘Designated Driver' in the Senate  (07:31) Why he's committed to principled bipartisanship  (10:22) Why the fight for privacy is so important to him  (14:17) The “wild west” of data privacy  (18:35) Putting the “foreign” back in FISA (19:43) Where the political battlelines are drawn on privacy  (24:57) Financial privacy  Read It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change: https://bit.ly/4fWL3st Follow Ron and Sen. Wyden on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RonSteslow https://x.com/RonWyden Email your questions to podcast@politicology.com or leave us a voicemail at ‪(202) 455-4558‬  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Hartmann Report
How To Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change

The Hartmann Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 54:39


With Trump in power and MAGA Republicans controlling Congress, how can progressives push for change? Senator Ron Wyden shares strategies for advancing a progressive future, even in the Trump era. Plus the Republicans who voted against preventing wildfires in California and Gavin Newsom exposes Musk lies. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Lawrence: Biden defends legacy after getting more from NATO allies than Trump ever did

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 38:51


Tonight on The Last Word: President Biden delivers his final foreign policy address. Also, Trump nominee RFK Jr. must have two confirmation hearings. Plus, the Justice Department releases its final report on the Hunter Biden probes. And the death toll rises to 24 in the LA fires as high winds return to the region. Fmr. Amb. Wendy Sherman, Sen. Ron Wyden, Andrew Weissmann, and Chief Brent Pascua join Lawrence O'Donnell.

The Brian Lehrer Show
Sen. Wyden on Fighting for Change

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 41:23


Ron Wyden, U.S. senator (D OR) and the author of It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change (Grand Central, 2025), talks about his new book and how he'll work with the new Republican majority in the Senate. 

Fast Politics with Molly Jong-Fast
Sen. Ron Wyden & Gov. Matt Meyer

Fast Politics with Molly Jong-Fast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 51:43 Transcription Available


Senator Ron Wyden details his new book It Takes Chutzpah. Newly minted Governor of Delaware Matt Meyer examines his journey from teacher to governor in under a decade.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The New Abnormal
Zuck's Secret Trump Rendezvous Before Big Policy Change

The New Abnormal

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2025 27:45


Multibillionaire Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg met with President-elect Donald Trump the day before he announced his company's big fact check flip-flop, revealed Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma—further revealing how Silicon Valley's tech elite is moving to align itself with the incoming Republican administration. “I really think we do need to really clock how bad this tech Republican collusion is,” said The New Abnormal co-host Andy Levy. Plus! Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, and also chair of the Senate Finance Committee, joins to talk about his new book, It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.