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Charlie Kirk
Okay, everybody, at the end of the Charlie Kirk Show. Oh, Canada. What is going on? Ezra Levant from Canada joins us as we talk. California and Canada, two messed up liberal places. And we talk about solutions for both. Email us as always, freedomarliekirk.com and get involved with the most important organization in the country, Turning Point USA@tpusa.com that is tpusa.com Buckle up, everybody. Here we go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
Ezra Levant
Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus.
Steve Hilton
I want you to know we are.
Ezra Levant
Lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks. I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy. His spirit, his love of this country. He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, Turning Point usa.
Charlie Kirk
We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives. And we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here. Noble Gold Investments is the official gold sponsor of the Charlie Kirk Show, a company that specializes in gold IRAs and physical delivery of precious metals. Learn how you could protect your wealth with Noble gold investments@noblegoldinvestments.com that is noblegoldinvestments.com it's where I buy all of my gold. Go to noblegoldinvestments.com we were the first guest on Governor Gavin Newsom's podcast which has now opened an entire national political conversation about California. Should people go on Gavin Newsom's podcast? My conversation went very viral and I think it was a good use of time. Joining us now is the expert on California, Steve Hilton, reversing the ruin of America's worst run state. Steve joins us now. Steve, welcome to the program.
Steve Hilton
Man, it is so great to be with you. I enjoyed that so much. I think it was an absolute triumph, I gotta tell you. Can I just tell you my, I want to set this up the right way, please. When I watched the whole thing, I kept, what came to my mind was this performance by Margaret Thatcher at Prime Minister's questions. Go with me on this, where she absolutely eviscerated the then leader of the opposition in the House of Commons. You know that when they're jousting with each other and there's this phrase that she used that is what came to my mind when I was watching you with Gavin Newsom. And she was, she was calling this, this labor politician, he was weak. But she did it in this incredible Margaret Thatcher way and she went weak, weak, feeble, like that. Incredibly powerful and that's what I thought of Gavin Newsom. You totally dominated him. And he just came across to me as just utterly weak. Weak, feeble, pathetic. It was a total revelation.
Charlie Kirk
Well, thank you. And the response has been overwhelming. It has been seen tens of millions of times. People are constantly remarking on it and thought that I handled it in a gentlemanly way, but also very much confronted him on his core contradictions and major issues. So, Steve, let me ask you just a broad question. What is he doing? Why is he doing this? Because if it was all about, I thought at first it was, he wanted to stand up to Maga. I'm strong enough. But he's not really doing that. No, he was kind of just very sheepish and kind of. Of his own shadow. What, what, what, what is your prognosis of what's going on here?
Steve Hilton
Well, that's exactly right. I mean, you completely dominated him, both in, with your arguments and also physically. I mean, just watching it. People have to watch it, not just listen to it. It was. You dominated him. And I think that the, the story here is that he is trying. I mean, look, he's a machine politician. He'll say whatever is politically expedient. I know him personally. We have friends in common. I've always been clear about that. And fundamentally, I don't think that he is a left wing ideologue. I think that he is a machine politician who will say whatever it takes to get on. And that. And in the last few years, that has meant pandering to the people who really have the power in the Democratic Party these days, which is the far left activists and the unions and the government unions. And they're basically the same people now because the unions are run by the far left activists. So he's gone along with it. But now he realizes that he's got a different audience. He's not running in California anymore. This is all about his next move, which has been well telegraphed for years, is running for president. He wants to run for president. And he knows that the same old shtick that he's been getting away with in California won't work on the national level. So I think he's trying to signal that he can get. He, he's, he's the kind of candidate that can win nationally. I think that's what he's trying to show that his or the audience he has in mind, I think, are Democrat primary voters in the states that will determine who is the nominee for the party in 2028. And I think the message he's trying to send is pick me because I'm a winner, because I can actually operate not just in blue states, but in red states. And I can get along with all sorts of people, and I'm the winner that we need in 2028.
Charlie Kirk
And so I think. I think that's right. And I have a new op ed out right now, kind of reflecting on my time sitting down with him. And I don't think it will necessarily work with the Democrat base if he continues in this direction. But let's take this more broadly. And, Steve, I was not uniquely positioned to do this. Let me tell you why. I've never lived in California. I'm a tourist. I visit often. I love California. Now, if that Nepo baby fat slob JB Pritzker ever starts a podcast and invites me on, that's a completely different ball game because he ruined my home and it would be game on. I know Illinois and Chicago like the back of my hand. However, California, even though the biggest audience of this program is in California, and I feel as if I have absorbed the issues, I still have difficulty prosecuting the case against Gavin Newsom for two reasons. Number one, he's so slippery and so slick at weaseling his way out. You saw that in one time when I was talking about the transgender kidnapping bill. He just lied about it. And he used an argument from authority saying, you don't understand this. And I said, well, no, it isn't. I felt even a little bit gun shy because I don't live there and I don't work in the General Assembly. It's number one. Number two, you know, Gavin kind of has this, like, timeshare salesman vibe to him, where it's just. He's just able to communicate whatever he needs to hear to the audience. But the second part of this, and Steve, I want your reaction, he's so insistent on repeating these, like, 10 or 12 talking points. We're the leaders in AI and we have no rivals and we have no equals. Steve, you are uniquely positioned to prosecute the case against Gavin Newsom.
Steve Hilton
Yes.
Charlie Kirk
How should it be done?
Steve Hilton
Well, first of all, I'm glad you brought that up, because funnily enough, just like you with Illinois, I'm kind of itching to go on this podcast. And when my book comes out, Calia, I really, you know, I think we're trying. We'll see if he takes up the offer. Caliphalia Reversing the Ruin of America's Worst Run State. And who's been running it the Last six years? Gavin Newsom. So somehow I don't think he wants to. He don't think he doesn't want to engage in that argument. We'll see. But you're exactly right. He just, he has these, these, these talking points. And, you know, we can call it gaslighting, and we can call it spin and so on, but it's actually just, It's. Well, it's more than that. It's. It was certainly that. Let's just take that. On the transgender issue and, and, and the one that really made all the headlines, which was the, you know, the. When he was agreeing with you on the unfairness of biological men and girls sports. Okay, fine, but what are you going to do about it? I mean, you've been the governor for six years while that's the law in California. What have you ever done to challenge it? Nothing. What are you doing now to challenge it? Nothing. So you could say that is gaslighting, and he's trying to convey a position without actually doing anything about it. But on other issues, it's actually just lying. Just straight up lying. I mean, not with you, but I just saw with another one of these that he did. He's trying to make out that taxes are somehow lower in California than in Florida by some ridiculous statistical sleight of hand. It's total bs. And on any measure, we have the highest taxes in the country. We have the highest income taxes, the highest tax burden on income, you know, on and on. So the truth is that on almost every meaningful measure, California is literally 50th out of 50 states. And if we're not 50th, we're 49th. So I'll give you an example. So for much of last year, he goes on about the great economy. For much of last year, 2024, we had the highest unemployment rate in America. Now we're the second highest. There's one state that's worse. And so he can brag all he likes about being the fifth biggest economy. The numbers just aren't there. We have the highest rate of poverty in the country, on and on, the highest housing cost, the lowest home ownership, and actually, he does have these ways of wriggling it out of it. I noticed, for example, in his debate with Ron DeSantis, where Ron DeSantis brought up all the exodus of people leaving and so on, Gavin Newsom threw something at him about people going from Florida to California. And when I dug into that, it turned out that that was military transfers, nothing to do with people choosing to move to California. So it's total bs. The record is completely appalling on every single issue. And it's true to say that California remains the fifth biggest economy in the world. But in a way that's. Isn't it even more shaming then that we have the worst homelessness crisis, the highest poverty rate? It's totally shameful. And the reason, by the way, that.
Charlie Kirk
We have second highest housing prices, most unequal state, highest cost of living. We see it all the time. When I visit college campuses, young adults demonize the concept of free markets and think government is the solution to every. How do we change this? By teaching our kids the foundational principles to counter what they are taught in public school. Parents want to teach their children about liberty, limited government and free markets, but often wonder, where do I start? That's where Tuttle twins can help. They empower parents by providing quality resources that break down these ideas in a way children can understand. Take their book. The Tuttle twins learn about the law in this story, the twins learn about their rights, that true laws protect people and that we should help others and that stealing is always wrong. Children can only change the world for the better if they learn these important principles. Now go to tuttletwins.com Charlie today and purchase their 14 book children's series for your family. They'll learn to think for themselves, to stand for Liberty. Go to tuttletwins.com Charlie today tuttletwins.com charlie okay, everybody, I want to play this and get Steve Hilton's reaction. Play cut. 152 please.
Ezra Levant
Gavin, I pay 16% in state taxes. You need a better accountant because it's 13.3%, but there's a millionaires tax on top of it. And I'm 83 years old and I still work. Right. Okay. I have another home in Florida. I don't live there. I prefer where I live. I've gotten used to the fog, to the seagulls, to the cormorants. I know all the birds of the bay.
Steve Hilton
I'm an avid boater.
Ezra Levant
But there's a point at which I will leave this state and that will be taxation without representation. I shouldn't be punished for succeeding.
Charlie Kirk
So, Steve, what's the truth here?
Steve Hilton
It's just a total lie. I mean, I'm just looking it up now because there's, there's, you know that What? Wallet Hub published all the data, so he's completely lying. We have the highest tax burden. I'm just reading that from WalletHub.com California has the highest individual income tax burden. While seven states, including Texas, Florida and Washington have the lowest. Including Florida have the lowest. I mean, it's just there's so many different measures. If you look at individual income tax burden, the highest in the country is California. If you look at overall tax burden, that's taking everything together, sales tax, everything else, California is number five. And Florida on overall tax burden. Where am I getting to the bottle? We've got to go all the way down to number 47.
Ezra Levant
Right?
Steve Hilton
So it's just a total lie. There's no truth to it whatsoever. And he's got this incredibly narrow, detailed kind of total BS statistic that where he Gavin News and he said it in this, in the longer clip where he says, well, the people in California, working people in California, in, in Florida pay the same taxes as the very rich in California. The way he's calculating that is comparing income taxes in California on, on the very rich with combining all the sales taxes, property taxes and everything else on working class people in California, in Florida. And the fact is that people on lower income spend more of their income on things that attract sales tax than on as a proportion of their income than the very wealthy. So it's just total. The Wall Street Journal ripped that apart when he first said it with Ron DeSantis in the debate. But he keeps saying these things because he's got this. He just kind of bulldozes through and he says it in with his total confidence and kind of asserts it as if it's the truth. It's more than gaslighting, it's lying. We have the highest income tax burden in the country, the highest income tax rates on corporate tax, I mean, you name it, it's just a disaster. Which is, by the way, why so many people, why do you think people are leaving? Why is anyone leaving such a beautiful state as California? Why businesses leave.
Charlie Kirk
So let's just say, let's just say you were to become Governor Steve Hilton and you're governor of California. What are two or three things that could change without the legislature? Let's say they keep their super majorities. What could a Republican actually do to change California?
Steve Hilton
Well, the number one thing is that the executive branch means the absolute nightmare of bureaucratic agencies. Let's call it the administrative state, the swamp in Sacramento, which actually worse than what we have in Washington because you've had one party rule for so long, you haven't had any kind of input from an opposing ideological point of view. And so you control all that. I'll give you a specific example. The governor appoints all the members of the State Board of Education. It's the State Board of Education that sets the curriculum for the public schools. The governor appoints members on the California Air Resources Board. Not all of them, but enough to make a difference. The Air Resources Board is what's pushing through the climate extremism. Banning gas cars, banning gas stoves, banning gas heaters and boilers and all the rest of the insanity that is raising costs for everyone. So on and on you've got all the, if you look at a fantastic agriculture industry being completely destroyed by deliberate policy, you appoint the people as governor to the Water Resources Control Board and all those agencies, you can make a pretty much an overnight change because it's these agencies that are implementing and far exceeding what's even. It's just the same pathology as you have in, in Washington where the legislature in, in the case of D.C. it's the Congress passes legislation that's kind of vague and then the agencies, the bureaucrats overzealously interpret that push their own agenda and make it 10 times worse. It's the same pathology in California at the state level. And you can reverse it just in the same way. I mean a simple way of thinking about it is Doge California that would make such a difference and you could, you could start to affect housing costs because the reason housing costs are the highest in the country is because of the overregulation. Every year they change the building codes, endless new climate things they add on that make it incredibly expensive. I mean the, the median house price is now a million dollars in California. It's ridiculous. So there's, that's where you start, right? With the bureaucracy that you directly control. Now the second point is vetoing legislation. So this year already it's unbelievable the number of bills that have been, that have been submitted by members of the legislature, 2,000 plus bills. You can veto them, they can override it because they've got to sue two thirds majority.
Charlie Kirk
And then you have negotiating power and you could bring people to the table and you can actually get a better product. Steve Hilton. Excellent. And you should listen. Everyone should listen to him. He's a great, great guy. Thank you. Charlie Califalia is the book. With President Trump making massive strides in his first month in office alone to deliver on campaign promises to make America great again, it's clear his administration is committed to driving down costs and unleashing prosperity across our country. But Big Pharma is standing in the way. They've raised prices on over 575 brand name drugs in January alone blocked competition and spent millions pushing overpriced meds on hard working Americans. Now they're pressuring Congress to implement mandates that will undermine the US$1 check against drug companies and ban the very market based incentives that help employers and families save on prescriptions and health care costs. Even worse, Big Pharma wants to strip American employers of of the freedom to choose health benefits that work best for them. Their proposals could hand big pharma a $32 billion money grab at the expense of American employers and families. Conservatives for Lower Health Care Costs warns that Big Pharma isn't on our side. They fought against solutions to lower drug prices during Trump's first term, opposed Bobby Kennedy's nomination to HHS to make America healthy again. And now they want even more government control over the private health care market, interfering with President Trump's promise to cut prescription drug costs. Big Pharma is no friend of the American people. Go to pharmawinfall.com to demand fair health care practices, protect the private market and fight Big Pharma's greed. Congress can put a stop to this. You can make a difference. Let's fight back. Visit pharmawindfall.com joining us now is a great man from a country that we're having a little tussle with right now. But we just love this guy. He's a patriot and he could be an honorary American anytime he wants. He's a freedom fighter. Ezra levant Canadian journalist rebelnews.com Ezra, before we get into the plan of which you have authored and you made the case in the Wall Street Journal, I want to just kind of just take a step back here. And how are Canadians processing all of this between our two countries?
Ezra Levant
Well, the Liberal Party of Canada, they've decided that it's easier to run against Donald Trump in the next election than to run against the Canadian Conservative leader in the next election. So you've never seen a Canadian election like this before. All the Liberals are talking about is Trump. And by the way, Trudeau is gone now, but We've got Trudeau 2.0, a guy named Mark Carney, who is even worse. He was on the board of the World Economic Forum. He's got three passports. He's the ultimate globalist. He was the head of the State bank, the Federal Reserve, it's called the bank of Canada. And then he went over to the UK and he headed the bank of England. And while he was there, he was friends with Elaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein's right hand woman. So this guy is the worst. I don't even think he lives in Canada. His wife still lives in New York where she works. He was selected in a Kamala Harris style fake primary where foreign nationals were allowed to vote and children as young as 14. So this guy was installed and he's going straight to the top of the Canadian political food chain. And he has decided that running against America, running on an anti America platform and obviously anti Trump, is his way to win. Trouble is, that's terrible for ordinary Canadians.
Charlie Kirk
So explain this to me. Is that, was this a party vote? I mean, what exactly was the process here?
Ezra Levant
Yeah, Trudeau, for nine years he's been in so many scandals, people are sick of him. So he resigned and he said, I'm out of here as soon as the party chooses a successor to me. So they had an internal vote, but that internal vote is so fishy. 400,000 people registered to vote, but only 150,000 of those were qualified and certified and verified. So more than half of the votes were not qualified. What the heck was going on? And like I said, you didn't have to be a Canadian citizen to vote and you didn't even have to be a grownup. So 14 year olds and foreign citizens chose our new prime minister and he goes straight to the top. It would be as if Kamala Harris became president, but at least she was on a ballot in 2020. This is so undemocratic. And he doesn't have a mandate. He's down in the polls and he knows that fighting with Trump will prick Canadians to come. He's playing Captain Canada. But the trouble is, when you fight with Trump over economics, you're going to get hurt. It's just the fact America is 10 times bigger than us. And I'm really worried that there's what's called a moral hazard here, if you know what I mean. Donald Trump is used to negotiating with people who want a deal, and Trump is the one who's not afraid to walk away. That's how Trump did it in New York City when he was a real estate developer. But in this case, Trump is the one who wants a deal, but it's in the Liberal Party's interest not to get one. They want the fight, and believe it or not, they want the economic damage that the fight will cause so they can blame Trump for our looming recession rather than their own economics. It's really the worst of times in Canadian politics. But more to the point, I hate the fact that we're fighting. It's like Batman and Robin are fighting we're the junior partner, there's no doubt about it. But I think we've got a friendship and a respect. And like, I can't think of two countries that are better friends. And I'm worried that our Liberal leaders are wrecking that just to win an election.
Charlie Kirk
I think you're right. And look, I think all this is going to simmer down. I have great respect for Canadian patriots, not Trudeau, but the rank and file of Canadians have always been so decent and so good to us. And I think the 51st state thing is just, just a negotiation. But, Ezra, you make a good point here. Could an unintended consequence of President Trump trying to rebalance some of these trade deals that have been not great for our own country here, could he unintentionally help the Liberal Party here? Could an unintended benefit not benefit, but consequence of President Trump saber rattling, which I support, could be installing a really bad government of Canada and therefore thwarting what looks to be an ascendant Conservative correction?
Ezra Levant
I think so. And you're exactly right to say unintended consequence. I think Trump likes yanking people's chains, like Justin Trudeau, and so many of us love to see it, but there was some collateral damage there. And so I thought, you know what? We need a plan. How do we put this in America first terms? Because Canadians know what we want. But that's not going to move the needle with President Trump. How can we rephrase this in a way that maybe the President will listen to? And here's my take at it. I'm obviously a Canadian citizen, but I've been a Trump supporter three elections in a row. We're the only Canadian media outlet that endorsed Trump three elections in a row. And we paid a price for that, by the way, under Trudeau. So here's my best effort. And, and Charlie, you tell me if I've got any holes in my argument, because I'm, I'm trying to work this out. Here's my theory. The biggest source of that trade deficit that President Trump talks about is because we sell a huge amount of crude oil to the United States, much more than we sell auto parts or agriculture. And that's because although America produces a lot of oil, it still consumes more than it produces and exports. So Canada fills the void. And so you're not going to get tariffs fixing that. A tariff is good to, to move a Honda factory from Mexico to the States because you just move the factory. But Canada's oil comes from the oil sands in Alberta. And you just can't move that. So a tariff is not going to move the oil to America. It's just going to make it more expensive for those US Refineries that buy it. But here's the thing. That oil, the Canadian oil sands, it's the third largest proven reserves in the world, just behind Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. And it's just sit just north of Montana. And the premier of the province of Alberta, that's sort of like the Texas of Canada, seems so pro America. She went down to President Trump's inauguration. I don't know if you know that. She's so positive and upbeat. She has not given in to the, to the vendetta style politics of Trudeau. She knows Americans are our best friends. And she told me, I met her when she was down there on the inauguration. She says she would love it if Alberta could double the amount of oil that's produced in the oil sands. And so here was my thinking, instead of pushing away the oil sands, pull it close, don't tariff it, buy it all. 170 billion barrels of oil, even if Alberta doubled the production, that's enough oil to take care of all of America's import needs for the next few 50 years. It's a $13 trillion deal. I would think of it sort of like a real estate deal, but much more valuable than Greenland or Panama. And the thing is, Donald Trump negotiated the usmca, which has a special side letter on oil, and it allows America to get preferential access to our oil. So what I would say if I was trying to talk to my America first friends, I would say, don't push this oil away. China is already sniffing around. China is already trying to buy the oil sands. Don't let them in. Take the oil, don't tariff it. It's practically yours anyways. What I mean by that is the companies that pump that oil, that steam it and produce it, they're either American owned or they're Canadian with a lot of American investors. So it's sort of American on every side. You look at it. The producers are American, the consumers are American refineries. Oh, Charlie, I forgot my favorite part. If you buy all your foreign oil from ethical oil in Canada, instead of conflict oil from OPEC, you don't need to have the Fifth Fleet stationed in the Persian Gulf anymore. That's a $50 billion a year expense, let alone the risk of human life. The reason is.
Charlie Kirk
So I guess the question is, Ezra, would Canada be willing to sell? I mean, is Canada, are they, are they open to, are they open to a deal.
Ezra Levant
They already signed it under Donald Trump in the usmca. And the premier of Alberta said, I want to do it. She wants to double it. So keep the price low because it's American consumers. Replace your Venice. Don't buy any more oil from Venezuela. Stop funding those guys. Don't buy any more oil from opec. Stop funding them. If you want to have your military in the Middle east on your own reasons, fine. But at least you won't have to do it to patrol your oil tankers. Alberta wants to sell it. The oil producers are ready to rock. Remember that Keystone XL pipeline? Joe Biden killed it on day one of his presidency. President Trump says he wants to revive it. That pipeline alone would bring 800,000 barrels of oil a day, which would replace a huge swath of OPEC oil. So you know the old saying, don't get mad. Don't get me even. Get ahead. That's what I would say to America first people is get ahead. Don't be distracted by these liberals in Ottawa. By the way, they don't speak for all Canadians. What do you really want when you say you want a 51st state? Do you really want 40 million people who in the electoral college probably tilt a little bit Democrat? Do you really want the French, English, bilingualism? What you really want is you want to hug Canada close. Get the oil. Don't let China get it. Let's do trade. Don't let Trudeau and now Mark Carney knock you off. Your goal, your goal is prosperity and security. If you bring those oil sands close, you're doing both. And your question's a good one, Charlie. The answer is, it's already. The deal is already there. The pipe, the Keystone XL is half built. The premier wants to do it. Say yes to the oil sands. Don't be the Trudeau and Carney. Hate the oil sands.
Charlie Kirk
If you are a patriot in this audience and you have private student loan debt, or your brother does or your niece does or your nephew does, maybe you're just thinking back to Christmas or Thanksgiving, and someone's like, oh, my gosh, I have these student loans and I took them out and I shouldn't have, and it was a private loan, and boom, you're just thinking like, wait a second, I remember that. Well, that's why Refi. That's where they come in. They are not a debt settlement company, but they help you work with each borrower you individually. Why Refi does not care what your credit score is. It may not be available in all states. And bad credit is accepted. Do you have a co borrower? Why? Refi can get them released from the loan. You can give mom or dad a break. You can then skip a payment every six months up to 12 months without penalty. You don't have to ignore. Go to 888 yrefi34. Log on to yrefi.com that is yrefy.com yrefi.com may not be available in all 50 states. Yrefi refinances distrust and defaulted private student loans, which are different from federal loans. Go to yrefi.com yrefy.com that is yrefi.com okay, Ezra, so here I agree with all. I agree with all that. Look, I got a lot of problems with the Canadian government, whatever. I think that if we could negotiate some of the electricity stuff, get rid of some of the tariffs on American goods, love the oil deal. I think we should have all of our energy going after the Mexican drug cartels and the Chinese Communist Party. Would you say this is now resurrecting an otherwise unpopular Liberal party?
Ezra Levant
Unfortunately. And here's why. Let's say someone's happily married. Let's say there's a happily married woman and a man comes up to her and says, hey, divorce him and marry me. Well, that's shocking. That's sort of a indecent proposal, as the old movie with Woody Harrelson put it. But. And so a lot of Canadians are saying, whoa, when you're saying join America, that's sort of asking me to break up my family. By the way, some other people who maybe were thinking of getting a divorce would say, yeah, I'd love to join the US as a 51st state. My point is it started that whole serious debate in Canada over what I think was basically Internet prickles. Trump is a master at that bombastic style. That's the Manhattan style. Canadians are a little bit more passive, maybe a little more thin skinned. So I think that distracted like a million Canadians. And a million Canadians sort of took it personally. And I loved it because it was yanking Trudeau's chain. But Charlie, I'm going to agree with you. That probably cost the Conservative leader of Canada 5% in the polls. And believe me, all of us want that Conservative leader. His name is Pierre Pov. He's great. He would be a great international partner, a bilateral partner for America. I think that Trump knew how to needle Trudeau, but it sort of had that unintended consequence.
Charlie Kirk
You know, is this, is this. Let's just say you go to a bar in Alberta. Is this the number one thing folks are talking about right now?
Ezra Levant
Well, the thing is, Alberta is the most pro America place in Canada. And Alberta's a little nervous because Vancouver.
Charlie Kirk
Montreal, just a bar in Canada.
Ezra Levant
Yeah, I think so. I think some ordinary people are excited about the idea of becoming American. I just don't know if that's likely to happen. I think the risk is if the Liberals win again because people are confused and like some people are actually saying the Americans are going to invade. I mean, I don't think serious people think that that's what's happening. I think Trump is just having some rhetorical fun. But yeah, Charlie, it is true. I think some people are freaking out. But I think that doing a deal like this, there's one more thing it gives Donald Trump. Because let me come back to the America first point of view. How did this whole trade war start? You might remember in November, President Trump tweeted to Mexico and to Canada, get your borders under control before I become president. And instead of doing those two simple things, Trump said, fix the fentanyl issue and stop the illegal migrants. Canada should do that on our own. But instead of doing that, Trudeau wanted to fight. So if you actually did this deal of a century with Canada, it's a 13 trillion dollar, 50 year deal. But you know what President Trump could demand? He could say, if we're going to buy all this oil from you instead of from the Persian Gulf or Brazil or Mexico or whatever, then we want you to take some of that money and reinvest in your military. We want you to remove some of your tariffs on dairy and poultry and eggs. We want you to allow American banks to set up shop on Main Street Canada. We want these basic, you know, bilateral fairnesses. And by the way, Canadians would love that. We have terrible banks, we have the highest cell phone prices in the world. I would love it if American cell phone companies could compete up here. So if President Trump were to say to Canada, all right, we're going to do a deal for your oil, we're going to make you rich, and we're going to make ourselves rich and we're going to get out of this Middle east oil business. But in return, you gotta pump up your military, you gotta get those F35s, you gotta patrol the north, you gotta fix the border, you gotta crack down on fentanyl, you gotta get tougher with China. I think that's a deal that Trump could make and that's a lasting deal. I think that's a bigger deal than Greenland. I think it's a bigger deal than Panama. I just sort of hope that if President Trump looked at it like some sort of a business deal or a real estate deal and thought okay, how do I get all the benefit of the Canadian relationship without the downsides, I think that's the winner and I think Canadians are a little thin skinned on that 51st state thing. It would be like asking someone married do you want to be my girlfriend? I think that that's what happened there. But, but that's put, that's a distraction. Let's put that aside and thanks for having me on Charlie and help me promote the plan.
Charlie Kirk
Ezra, you're great. I love the plan. I will do that. God bless you my friend. Thank you. Thanks so much for listening everybody. Email us. As always freedomarliekirk.com thanks so much for listening and God bless.
Steve Hilton
For more on many of these stories and news you can Trust go to charliekirk.com.
Podcast Summary: The Charlie Kirk Show – "California or Canada: What's Worse?"
Episode Information:
In the episode titled "California or Canada: What's Worse?", Charlie Kirk delves into the political and economic challenges facing both California and Canada. Joining him are Ezra Levant, a prominent Canadian journalist from Rebel News, and Steve Hilton, a seasoned political commentator. The discussion aims to uncover the underlying issues in these two regions and explore potential solutions from a conservative standpoint.
California’s Political Landscape: Charlie Kirk initiates the conversation by highlighting his viral appearance on California Governor Gavin Newsom's podcast, which sparked nationwide discussions about the state's governance. Steve Hilton praises Kirk's performance, comparing it to Margaret Thatcher's formidable presence during Prime Minister's Questions, stating:
"You totally dominated him. And he just came across to me as just utterly weak. Weak, feeble, pathetic. It was a total revelation."
[01:48]
Economic Challenges: The discussion progresses to California’s economic woes, emphasizing high taxes, overregulation, skyrocketing housing costs, homelessness, and poverty. Steve Hilton provides a detailed critique of Governor Newsom's policies, asserting that California ranks near the bottom in various economic metrics:
"We have the highest income tax burden in the country, the highest income tax rates on corporate tax, I mean, you name it, it's just a disaster."
[10:18]
He further debunks Newsom's claims about California's tax situation:
"It's just a total lie. I mean, I'm just looking it up now because there's, there's, you know that Wallet Hub published all the data, so he's completely lying."
[12:05]
Social Policies: Kirk touches upon the state's social policies, such as the transgender kidnapping bill, criticizing Newsom for ineffective governance and slippery rhetoric.
Reversing Bureaucratic Policies: Steve Hilton outlines actionable steps a Republican governor could take to rectify California's issues, even with a legislature dominated by the opposing party:
Control Over Bureaucratic Agencies:
Vetoing Legislation:
Streamlining Regulations:
"The key is to control the bureaucracy that you directly hold influence over and make substantial changes from the executive branch."
[14:15]
Hilton emphasizes that these measures could significantly improve California's economic and social landscape without needing legislative approval.
Current State of Relations: The conversation shifts to the strained U.S.-Canada relationship, exacerbated by political tensions and differing economic policies. Ezra Levant criticizes the Canadian Liberal Party's anti-American stance and the appointment of Mark Carney, whom he describes as a "globalist."
Proposed Trade Solutions: Ezra Levant introduces a comprehensive plan to enhance U.S.-Canada trade relations, focusing on leveraging Canada’s vast oil sands to reduce U.S. dependence on OPEC and other foreign oil sources:
"Instead of pushing away the oil sands, pull it close, don't tariff it, buy it all. 170 billion barrels of oil, even if Alberta doubled the production, that's enough oil to take care of all of America's import needs for the next fifty years."
[26:00]
He advocates for revitalizing the Keystone XL pipeline to facilitate this massive oil deal, which he believes would be mutually beneficial and bolster U.S. energy independence.
Internal Canadian Conflict: Levant discusses the internal turmoil within Canadian politics, highlighting how the Liberal Party's focus on antagonizing the U.S. has backfired, weakening the party and strengthening the Conservative movement led by Pierre Poilievre.
Unintended Consequences: He warns that aggressive U.S. policies could inadvertently empower the Liberal Party by causing division and backlash among ordinary Canadians:
"If you actually did this deal of a century with Canada, it's a 13 trillion dollar, 50 year deal... Let's say, say yes to the oil sands. Don't be the Trudeau and Carney hate the oil sands."
[29:50]
Levant suggests that fostering positive economic ties through energy deals could mitigate political tensions and promote a more cooperative relationship.
Detailed Trade Strategy: Ezra Levant proposes a strategic trade partnership where the U.S. purchases Canadian oil without tariffs, effectively securing a long-term energy supply while simultaneously pressuring Canada to address other bilateral issues such as military investment and border security.
"President Trump could demand... remove some of your tariffs on dairy and poultry and eggs. We want these basic, you know, bilateral fairnesses."
[30:50]
He envisions the deal as a win-win scenario that would not only enhance U.S. energy security but also stimulate Canadian economic growth, all while keeping adversarial influences like China at bay.
The episode concludes with Charlie Kirk expressing support for Ezra Levant’s trade proposal and reaffirming his commitment to addressing California’s systemic issues through conservative principles. Kirk encourages listeners to engage with Turning Point USA and remain active in promoting freedom and limited government.
"Ezra, you're great. I love the plan. I will do that. God bless you my friend."
[36:00]
Charlie Kirk emphasizes the importance of tackling these challenges head-on to foster prosperity and security both within the U.S. and its international relations.
Notable Quotes:
Steve Hilton on Kirk’s Performance:
"You totally dominated him... It was a total revelation."
[01:48]
Steve Hilton on California’s Tax Burden:
"We have the highest income tax burden in the country..."
[10:18]
Ezra Levant’s Oil Deal Proposal:
"Instead of pushing away the oil sands, pull it close, don't tariff it, buy it all."
[26:00]
Conclusion Affirmation:
"Ezra, you're great. I love the plan. I will do that."
[36:00]
Final Thoughts: This episode of The Charlie Kirk Show provides a comprehensive analysis of the socio-political and economic issues plaguing California and Canada from a conservative viewpoint. With expert insights from Ezra Levant and Steve Hilton, Kirk offers actionable solutions aimed at fostering economic growth, reducing regulatory burdens, and strengthening international trade relations. The discussion underscores the necessity of strategic policymaking to combat overregulation and promote prosperity.