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Tim
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Tim
Why wait?
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Ask your doctor.
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Tim
Hey everybody, welcome back to the Find out podcast. This is for episode for Thursday. You heard from we talked about California on Tuesday's show and all the things surrounding Eric Swalwell and today we have one of the candidates for governor and you gotta give me a minute to go through the resume here, but former California assembly member, former member of Congress, former attorney General of California and former Secretary of Health and Human Services under the Biden administration.
Interviewer
Javier Becerra is with us today.
Tim
Mr. Secretary, how are you?
Javier Becerra
Yeah, I'm glad to be alive, glad to be in this campaign and glad I'm with you.
Tim
Great. Well, we're going to dive right into it. So obviously the race upended on Friday with the story about Congressman Swalwell and some very concerning allegations against him by multiple women. First, before we dive into why you, I just want to get your thoughts on what you've heard and you know
Interviewer
how that's shaking up the race.
Javier Becerra
Tim, having been in public service for over 30 years, anyone who wants to get into public service, at least at this level, you got to know the public's going to want to know, want to know more than just what your views are on policy. And they're going they have a right to know. And accountability is the catch word when, when you're in public service. And so no one should be surprised at where are today.
Tim
Yeah. And so obviously he has, he has both resigned from Congress and he suspended
Interviewer
his campaign, which has obviously upended it
Tim
because for most polling it was showing that he was ahead. So there are a lot of gettable voters out there. So. So Mr. Secretary, I want to ask you, why should California voters vote for
Interviewer
you on June 2nd today?
Javier Becerra
I think voters are so concerned about leadership, they don't know who to trust. And after this, the episode that we just went through this past weekend, I think even more reason for folks to have this absence of trust. And so I think right now, trust and what can you trust better than experience someone who makes an inflated promise, how do you know they're going to deliver? Well, if they've done it before and if you California's got a massive budget deficit. You want to know who can balance it? Trust someone who's actually balanced a budget bigger than the state of California. That's what I did at the Department of Health and Human Services, the largest health organization in the world. I've been able to get us out of crisis. Covid Avian flu. You want to talk about getting California out of crisis, don't just promise it. Having having done it helps for sure.
Tim
And I think for those of you
Interviewer
who don't know, Javier was the Health and Human Services secretary before rfk.
Tim
So we actually used to have somebody that believed in science.
Javier Becerra
That's make that clear, right?
Political Commentator 1
Yeah.
Tim
Yeah. You don't believe that. TYLENOL CAUS
Javier Becerra
I believe in science. And what happened to science.
Tim
I know, right? And it's so funny that.
Interviewer
Well, it's not funny at all. But you know, we have to laugh
Tim
at this stuff, but it is very damaging. But you are obviously in charge of a massive health care, you know, operation at Health and Human Services. And one of the things that we have been, because we asked our, our, our followers what they wanted to hear from you on was what is your health care plan for California? So a lot are asking like, is universal health care possible in California without the government? What is your solution to this, the
Interviewer
health care crisis that we've got?
Javier Becerra
Right, yeah, Tim, if I could boil it down, it's Medicare, but Medicare for all. Everyone understands Medicare because there's not a 65 year old or older person in this country who says, go ahead, take away my Medicare. They will fight tooth and nails, keep their Medicare. And so we should be able to tell people what they're going to have. Medicare for you, not just when you're 65 and older, Medicare for you, period. Because Medicare, essentially it is single payer, but it's our form of single payer. What it does is it guarantees everyone 65 and older. You paid into the system, now you're going to get it for the rest of your life. We should do the same thing, cut out all the fat, all the moving parts that have nothing to do with getting a doctor giving you care, and put that money, instead of paying all those bureaucrats, all those pencil pushers, put it into health care and that's how you make it more affordable. Because every other industrialized country in the world, pretty much Germany, France, Canada, they all do that and they give much better care and give it to everyone, not just some.
Political Commentator 1
Right.
Tim
And on the affordability thing in general, because obviously we're pressed for time, so we're going to kind of rapid fire some of this. But obviously affordability across the board has
Interviewer
been a huge concern.
Tim
Donald Trump said he would solve this problem on day one. All he has done is the opposite, is increase prices. So, you know, if you are governor, you would be in charge of the fourth largest economy in the world. What can you do as governor to ensure that Californians can keep more of their money in their pocket and not have to spend it on, you know,
Interviewer
runaway grocery prices, energy prices, things like that?
Javier Becerra
Well, I can certainly first make sure that everyone does have health insurance coverage. So that way they're not constantly trying to battle what they pay for. Visit to the doctor, certainly a hospital stay, and so guarantee folks stability when it comes to health care. We're not going backwards. We're not going to take a knee to Donald Trump. We're not going to take his trillion dollar cut to the health system and say that we're giving up and we're going to let people drop off of their health insurance coverage. You got access to your doctor. That's important, Tim, for one additional reason. More than just giving families access to health care they need, it means every doctor, every hospital will get paid for having provided that care. Because if they don't get paid at some point they have to close their doors because they can't operate without money. And so guaranteeing those providers that they'll get paid is huge. What about gasoline prices? Well, if Donald Trump would stop initiating illegal international wars, we would have gas prices that would go down immediately in California and we have to start building more homes so we can reduce the pressure on prices of housing here in California. So there are any number of things that we can do. The governor does have a big lever to make those things happen.
Tim
Yeah. And I want to push on the housing thing for a minute because that is one of the biggest crises across the country.
Interviewer
This isn't just a California issue.
Tim
That housing is, is, is moving further and further out of the reach of
Interviewer
20 and 30 somethings and really like
Tim
the average age has moved into the 40s, I think when they bought their first home. So obviously you have a, there are a massive state and obviously a lot of land and things like that. How can you actually supercharge development of, of new housing, both single family homes and, and apartments so that we start to drive those costs down.
Javier Becerra
So building, as I mentioned, let me give you one quick way what I'm going to do. Within my first hundred days, we have about close to 40,000 units in California that are essentially shovel ready. One thing missing, it could be that last tranche of financing, it could be that last licensing permit that they need, but they are ready to go. Except for that one thing. First thing I'm going to do is I'm going to get in and say show me those 40,000 units where they are, which developments and let's push them over the top, let's get them going. Because the shovel is going to go in the ground immediately after we say go green light. So that's one way to give the public this sense of confidence that we are going to build. Secondly, we're going to trim down some of the regs. We're going to ask the local governments to cut back on some of the fees they charge developers and we're going to develop everything, affordable workplace and market rate housing, because we need all of everything. And the more we give a developer the incentive to build, the more they will.
Interviewer
Right.
Tim
And I think, I think that has been an issue in a lot of places.
Interviewer
I live in New York City, we have the same issues. We've passed some zoning regulations recently that
Tim
have done exactly what you've said.
Interviewer
It clearly is a workable model. So I'm very glad that you were on that.
Tim
Another thing that Californians care a lot about, but generally is unfortunately not a
Interviewer
priority at the national level right now is the effects of climate change on communities across the country.
Tim
And obviously California, you know, my, my in laws are actually from Southern California.
Interviewer
And you know, they've told stories about they didn't need air conditioning growing up
Tim
and now all of a sudden, you know, you're facing 100 plus degree days for weeks at a time in some instances. So clearly it has an effect. So what would you do as governor
Interviewer
to combat the effects of climate change on California's lives, Tim?
Javier Becerra
I'll, I'll do what I did as Attorney General of the 120 plus times. I ended up having to go toe to toe with Donald Trump and his cronies. And by the way, winning most of those cases. Plurality of almost the majority of those cases was on the environment. We had to fight for clean water, clean air, we had to make sure we protected the Endangered Species act and we beat him most of the time. And so what I'll tell you is this. Just as we defeated Trump's efforts to remove, to eliminate our clean car standards, which by the way, drive the nation when it comes to the standards that we have for our cars, we will do the same thing because the law is on our side. The second thing we're going to do is we're going to continue down this path towards clean energy. But we're going to do it in a way that transitions us without really leaving so many of those working families behind that are really concerned that they can't afford yet to buy that electric vehicle. But what we can do is make it on a pace that works for working Californians. And so California is going to go its own way one way or the other. We're going to continue to move in this direction. We're going to do it smartly and we're going to do it understanding the industries we need to get us there. But what I will tell you is this. We will not take a knee to Donald Trump.
Tim
Is it true that you I saw somewhere, correct me if I'm wrong, did you have the record for suing him as Attorney General? I think I heard someone that said that either you're, you're top two or you're number one. I think for the, for the attorney general that sued him the most. Right.
Javier Becerra
Yeah. I don't know of anyone else who sued more, but they should come out and claim because it's a pretty good record. And not just suing them. I took them to the Supreme Court and beat him. We, you know, we still have the Affordable Care act as we took to the Supreme Court and beat him. We still have the DACA program for all those dreamers, immigrant kid dreamers, because we took them to the Supreme Court and beat them.
Political Commentator 2
Raise your campaign right there. Sued Trump the most. That's perfect.
Political Commentator 1
Yeah. There should be a leaderboard like, you know, up on a, up on a wall somewhere that everybody can look at.
Javier Becerra
I think some of the state AGs today are rapidly catching up to me.
Tim
Yeah, they're trying to catch up, like,
Political Commentator 1
oh, you can, you can do that and win. Javier, I have a question for you. I was doing some research on, on your, the policies that you, that you drove, and I, I read that you negotiated drug prices successfully for, with the drug companies and got what I found was 38 to 79% reductions in, in costs for, for, for Americans on, on, on medications. My question is, why weren't you able to get 14, 15, 1600% reductions in drug costs like Donald Trump? And what did you learn? What did you learn?
Political Commentator 3
Why didn't you go to his school of math?
Javier Becerra
You're like, you're like my parents. What do you mean? You got an A? What happened to the A plus? Come on.
Political Commentator 1
Right, the plus, the 6.0 GPA.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah. A triple plus.
Javier Becerra
Yeah, that's right. You know what? Our prices, let me tell you, we did negotiate aggressively, and we did get prices down up to 80% on some of the most expensive drugs. And there's still room as well. But remember that people wanted to see that there would be success. And what we had to do was aggressively drive prices down, but not make the companies think they could leave the Medicare market. And so what we did is we examined what was out there, and what we came out with was a price that really pared down how much they charged us, but it also made it attractive for them to stay in the Medicare program. But I will tell you this, there is more money to be had there who thinks drug prices are not high. And so we can go at it. But the thing we wanted to prove is that you actually could negotiate lower prices because there were people who said you couldn't do it. Actually, every one of the corporations, pharmaceutical corporations that we negotiated with, sued me saying, I can't do that. I'm not allowed to do that. And we beat him in court. And of course, we did do that. And so what we proved is that negotiating lower prices, da, da, da, works. It's like when you go to a car dealership and pay sticker price for that vehicle. And if, by the way, if you do stop doing that because you.
Tim
Right. Well, I, I've got one. Well, I actually have two questions, but the last one's a little silly, but I'm going to ask this one. So you. So in this race, there are a
Interviewer
lot of really, you know, good people
Tim
that I want, I want to hear a little bit about the experience, though, because you are the only one that has actually run a government agency of any sort of size. Not to knock anybody who's got, you know, Congress experience, but I think they, you know, you have like, 15, 20
Interviewer
people under you in those offices.
Tim
So how important is it.
Interviewer
This is a softball for you.
Tim
How, how important is it for there to be. For somebody to be experienced in government in order to run what is essentially
Interviewer
the fourth largest economy in the world,
Javier Becerra
you're going to run into things that you would not have expected when you're running these operations. Covid, how were we to know that Covid, at the very beginning, certainly Trump didn't realize this, that it would start to mutate and that that virus would take different shapes and that you'd have to have different vaccines for the different mutations of it. And it was a constant thing. How did we know that some people would get out there and say, start saying on social media, hey, masks are the worst things you should do. When you've got. You're surrounded by people with COVID hey, sure, go ahead and attend church and congregate and sing together. And don't worry, Covid doesn't, you know, spread that way. I mean, you have to deal with all these kinds of unexpected stupidities that are out there. And so what you have to do is be ready and you have to have a team that knows how to marshal that. When you have virtually 90,000 people under your wings, you got a lot of work to do. When you got a budget that's 1.8 trillion, you got a lot of money to handle, and you need to know how to do it. The governor's office Is not a place for on the job training. It does not come with training wheels. You need someone who's actually gone through these things. I'm the only one who's actually declared national emergencies and had to respond, deploy personnel and resources. It is a tough job. This is a break glass moment in California. You need someone who's got experience, trust someone with experience if you're going to trust them at all.
Interviewer
Great.
Tim
And final question for you. And I know you got to run. We had a lot of people actually ask us this because a lot of people are saying they are still getting to know you as a, as a candidate and as a person. If someone was to sit down with you, what is your drink of choice? We actually got asked this several times.
Political Commentator 3
Interesting.
Tim
Alcohol, Don. Alcohol. Whatever you want.
Javier Becerra
Yeah, I'm pretty old school. I will tell you my drink of choice every day. I'm just a water guy, but if you ask me for something that's got a little spice in it, you know, I'm a Corona guy. Give me that lemon and just let me have the Corona. And I'm good.
Tim
I, you know, especially in Southern California, I. That is absolutely.
Interviewer
That is. I think people will like that answer.
Tim
So, so, mister.
Javier Becerra
Sorry, one of those commercials.
Tim
Yeah. Well, I'll have to get you. Yeah, the one in the, The Christmas
Interviewer
one, right, where they're on the, the. On the beach.
Tim
Right. Well, well, Mr. Secretary, you. I know you are very busy and the race has been turned upside down, so you're taking advantage of all these opportunities, which you really should do. But we wanted to thank you for coming on and hopefully, you know, after June 2nd, you win the primary, you come back, we have some more time with you so people can hear more about your plans for California. But until then, we wish you the best of luck and, you know, all
Interviewer
the success on June 2nd.
Javier Becerra
Anytime, fellas. It's great to be with you. Anytime.
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Tim
All right, we are back. I really like him, guys. I, I really. The amount of experience that he's had
Interviewer
and he just seems like a nice guy too.
Political Commentator 1
A little off putting. I just got a Snapchat invite from him.
Political Commentator 3
Oh, God damn it.
Political Commentator 1
So. Oh, I'll let you guys know in 24 hours.
Tim
We gotta talk to somebody else now. Geez. For those of you who did not pay attention. Oh God.
Political Commentator 1
Jesus Christ.
Tim
It was Eric Swallow was a big
Interviewer
Snapchatter because the messages disappear. So if you missed that, that's the joke.
Political Commentator 2
But yeah, sounds creepy as man.
Tim
It is not for adults. It's not for people that are above
Political Commentator 3
the age of 25.
Political Commentator 1
The right. The pigs disappeared.
Political Commentator 2
It doesn't seem right.
Tim
I think it's a. Well, it's a text platform for kids who don't want their parents to see
Interviewer
what they're talking about.
Political Commentator 1
Yeah.
Tim
It's not for some creepy 40 year old trying to skeeve on, on interns
Interviewer
and the pics disappear.
Political Commentator 1
But the, but the lawsuits last a lifetime.
Political Commentator 3
God, if only.
Political Commentator 2
Can't you just screenshot like. I mean isn't there like an easy.
Political Commentator 3
You can, but it notifies it.
Interviewer
So you take a screenshot, it tells
Political Commentator 3
the other person that you took.
Tim
So you'd have to have two phones. Two phones. You could get two phones. Take a picture that way.
Interviewer
But there you go.
Tim
Well, and since we Talked to Fraz Ms. Frazzled on Monday for Tuesday's show,
Interviewer
another woman has come forward with a sexual abuse claim. So you know, for all those people who are, who are like, I need proof. I'm like, it's not looking so great for you guys because the numbers keep growing.
Tim
And she told us that there were
Interviewer
dozens more that are possible.
Political Commentator 2
Dozens.
Interviewer
Dozens. She said dozens.
Tim
Yeah.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Interviewer
So.
Political Commentator 1
Well, and again, like I'm not going to do it for 15 years. Yeah, right. Yeah. I'm not going to go testify in court. I'm just not going to vote for, for governor. Like I trust the, the, the women who are the victims and the people who corroborated their stories. And now we can all move on and justice can be served.
Political Commentator 2
Yep.
Tim
You know, yeah, it's a job interview.
Interviewer
We're not sending him to prison. There is a different level. But I.
Tim
Even yesterday I'll have to say when I was on threads, I still saw a Few, not many. It's.
Interviewer
It's shrinking, but that are still, like, where's the proof?
Tim
And I'm like, I. I just like, why is it so hard for you
Interviewer
to believe that a Congressman that now six women have come forward to talk about inappropriate behavior, some of which is potentially criminal.
Tim
Why is that,
Political Commentator 2
like, isn't that, like, an admission? Didn't he, like, Apollo, like, say, like, I did something wrong or did he not say.
Tim
He said. He said something.
Political Commentator 3
I apologize to, like, my friends and families and colleague and stuff.
Political Commentator 2
Right. But that, like, to me, that's, like, that's proof that he did something.
Tim
I think it was like, it was
Interviewer
about the distraction, I think. I don't think.
Tim
Because he said fundamentally, he.
Interviewer
These. He said this didn't happen.
Political Commentator 2
Oh, yeah.
Political Commentator 3
See, but when you go ahead and resign from Congress to run from the Ethics Committee.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Political Commentator 3
I mean, like, I. I call bullshit.
Political Commentator 2
Is the proof, like, if you've did nothing wrong, why are you resigning? You know, you're resigning to avoid being
Interviewer
horrendously doing what Matt Gaetz did, which is to escape the investigation. And everyone's like, well, but there's maybe a criminal investigation.
Tim
I'm like, yes, but like, a. A ethics investigation in the House magnifies the amount of people who will see that exponentially, because all the press will talk about it, everybody will be on it. Whereas, like, you know, the DA In Manhattan, Alvin Bragg, is investigating from a criminal perspective.
Interviewer
But, like, they.
Tim
That is a very different thing than having Congress release a full report, because the AG or excuse me, the District Attorney, is not going to release anything
Interviewer
until there's a trial.
Tim
So that's why he wants. Because he, like, if that came out before the trial, I mean, let's be
Interviewer
honest, everybody's like, the guy would be screwed. So, like, he wants to get away from it.
Political Commentator 1
He did say something about a lapse in judgment.
Political Commentator 3
Yeah, see, that's what I was.
Tim
There you go.
Political Commentator 1
I mean, right there. Yeah. I'm like.
Political Commentator 2
But it's also like, the sheer amount, like, I mean, sort of like conspiracy stuff, where it's like, what do you think? The, like, all these women are conspiring behind the scenes because we're all going to tell the same story. We're all like, it's out of nowhere. Why would they do that?
Tim
There was somebody that literally accused Fraz of treason by. By coordinating with Vladimir Putin.
Political Commentator 1
They know what treason is.
Political Commentator 2
Why would Putin give a shit?
Political Commentator 3
Not really.
Political Commentator 2
The governor of California. It's. I mean, maybe you'd have a little vested interest but not enough to do this.
Tim
Well, I guess the theory is that
Interviewer
you could get one of the Republicans in there, but with that jungle primary.
Political Commentator 1
But that's a state government position, not the fucking federal government. People are right.
Political Commentator 2
That's the dumbest shit.
Tim
Well, but like, that, that, right, that. It's just like. But, but that's the cognitive, Cognitive dissidence of these people.
Interviewer
They.
Tim
They cannot get themselves around somebody that they supported for governor of California being a sex pest.
Political Commentator 1
Well, and, and like, I mean, and that's okay. That it's. This is hard to process. Don't. Don't come clapping back at victims. Right. Like, if you. I, I knew about Eric Swalwell all of, like six months, I don't know, maybe a year. I, you know, we had him on
Interviewer
a few months ago.
Political Commentator 1
Right, right. But I mean, like, before he started, you know, I think getting known. Getting known on social and everything, outside of Snapchat, he was just another member of Congress. But there are people who voted for him probably, you know, and were supporters, donors and stuff for a long time, and they just. Yes, it is hard to believe when you find out somebody you supported or gave money to or admired betrayed your trust and betrayed their constituents, betrayed women. All that's true. But sit with that. Sit with that very quietly and process that and then maybe speak out against.
Political Commentator 2
It shouldn't be hard to process. It's just be like, oh, well, shit,
Political Commentator 3
yeah, he's a piece of shit. I'm done.
Political Commentator 2
Right, exactly like that.
Political Commentator 3
I don't understand the loyalty to politicians to the extent this guy's a rapist. All right, fuck it.
Political Commentator 1
I mean, I don't give a fuck.
Political Commentator 2
I'm with you.
Political Commentator 1
He's not Obama. But if I found out that Obama did something I disagreed with, that's harder for me than if I found out, like, yeah, you know, maybe, but like. Or someone from Iowa.
Tim
To me, it's the same as.
Political Commentator 3
It's the same as if it happened to someone in my personal life where it's like, okay, I find out you're a massive human piece of. I don't want anything to do with you anymore. We're done.
Tim
But I don't think it's you forever. But I don't think as a society that is actually what happens, though. I think that the majority, like, when you hear about these cases or things in college, you hear about whatever, like, they kind of get, like, the men
Interviewer
don't get ostracized for this, generally speaking.
Tim
And it actually is always. This is why I think it's ridiculous
Interviewer
to say, like, the women would get out anything about coming forward.
Tim
They end up, end up in the negative.
Interviewer
Right.
Tim
They get demonized. So, like, I think we as a society have.
Interviewer
It has to be at all levels
Tim
of, you know, like, I know it's
Interviewer
harder to, you know, disassociate with a friend, but if they're like a sexual assaulter, you shouldn't be friends with that person anymore. It's not hard.
Political Commentator 1
If you want to, if you want to really get a really good idea. You know, you look at Eugene Carroll, Monica Lewinsky. We couldn't get the best women in the country in terms of their qualifications for the presidency elected as president because they were, because they were women. How many people would vote for Monica Lewinsky if she ran for a position right now? Like, even the ones who were abused and who were vindicated in the court, in a court of law, they take an absolutely massive toll that they can never. Like, Monica Lewinsky is still the person who, you know, did not have an affair with Bill Clinton. And, and the victims, they can't shake that. They can't shake the.
Political Commentator 3
Yeah.
Political Commentator 1
Just the association with negativity. And so they go down with the ship either way. It's a, it's a fucking terrible system.
Interviewer
Bill Clinton's approval rating after the Lewinsky scandal went up.
Political Commentator 2
Did it really?
Tim
Yeah, well, part of it's because the Republicans tried to get rid of him.
Political Commentator 2
Sure.
Tim
And they did it in a ham fisted way. Right. Because they were investigating White Water, which was kind of stupid. And like, then he was like, oh, Ken Starr's like, oh, I'm going to go chase this thing now. And so it was all. And they way overplayed their hands and
Interviewer
then they got throttled.
Tim
And what was that?
Interviewer
98, midterm, whatever.
Political Commentator 2
Different.
Tim
But point being, a president United States
Interviewer
was credibly accused of sexual assault or misconduct or however you want to label it.
Political Commentator 1
Yeah. He was never. He lied under order. He lied under.
Political Commentator 2
He lied under conduct. He's getting blown in the Oval Office there, like.
Tim
And he's married nowadays.
Political Commentator 3
Not criminal imbalance, but.
Political Commentator 1
Yeah, right, right. It wasn't abuse of power 100. Abuse of power 100. But I don't think that. No, she never claimed, she never claimed it was non consensual. Right.
Tim
No, that's true. They, they went after his.
Interviewer
Because he said, what is your definition of is? Yeah, it depends on your.
Political Commentator 1
Depends on your definition of is.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Political Commentator 1
Which, like, that's a classic Bill Clinton line because he's, he's A very intelligent person. He's like, he's gonna get. Get up in your head and start gaslighting you on a stage.
Tim
I think the difference, though, is if
Interviewer
he were president today and he did
Tim
that, it would be a much different
Interviewer
reaction from Democrats than in the 90s. It's a very different situation. I don't think. I don't think it would have gone the same way at all.
Tim
So. But it just shows that, like, there
Interviewer
are people on our side who defend people who have, yeah, serious misjudgment when it comes to those types of things.
Political Commentator 2
So fucking dumb.
Tim
Well, there's a thing called Blue maga, and I think there's a segment of
Interviewer
the population that looked at what Donald Trump has done and what he's built, and they're like, let's do that. Which is never admit any fault, never admit, like, anything's wrong.
Tim
But, like, we're not those. We're not that block of voters.
Interviewer
It doesn't. It doesn't work the same way, and
Tim
we shouldn't do that, because that's not
Interviewer
the morally right thing to do.
Political Commentator 1
I think the hard thing for me is, I mean, we keep. We've talked about, you know, taking the high road ever since Michelle Obama's famous line that has kind of burned us a few times. But, you know, the hardest part is it's not doing the right thing. It's understanding that doing the right thing no longer resonates with large majority, like, large portions of the American public. And so there was a time where if you were an American and you believed, like, you know, coming out of World War II, if you did the right thing, Americans would ultimately come around like, the good guys always win. Like, that was sort of our. Our motto for a long time and for most of my life. But now we finally have had to come to grips with the fact that, no, like, the good guys sometimes lose really badly, and then it ends up worse for everyone. And then the people who cheered for the bad guys feel even stronger and even bolder coming out of it. And so the question is, like, do you fight at that level to win over those people who have no ethical backbone, no moral compass, and then try to, like, lift everyone back up out of it? Or do you continue to do the right thing until you're 2% of the population and have no power?
Political Commentator 2
I, like, I. The thing is, over all this time, I don't think it matters if you go low or high anymore. I think nobody cares. Like, I think in the end, like, you got to just, like, the reason like Trump won isn't because he went low. It's because he focused on the big issues and didn't give a shit about anything else. Like that was he just like, that's really it. Like, you could be an asshole or you could be the nicest person in the world. As long as you're focused on the shit that people care about. Kind of doesn't fudgeing matter. So I think it's just a different era of politics now where it's like, you, they go low, we go high, we go high, they go low, who gives a fuck? Just focus on what people care about. It doesn't really matter.
Tim
I do think that the go high thing can sometimes come across as weak and absolutely that.
Political Commentator 3
I think that's what it is more than anything.
Tim
And I don't think it's a high or a low.
Interviewer
It's just a, like, I mean it
Tim
look at Zoram and Donnie. Like, he's not fighting anything.
Interviewer
He's.
Tim
But like, he's very good on messages. People care about, focus on things. People care about potholes and affordability and that. But like, isn't apologizing for anything. Which I think Democrats sometimes, like when
Interviewer
the ACA was going through, they were kind of like, oh, let's just like not talk about like some of these things. And it looks weak.
Tim
And then it's like, no, fuck this. Like, this is good for get 20 million people health care. And so I think we're all agreeing on the same thing. It's just like, you have to be strong.
Interviewer
You can take the high road, but you got to be strong.
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Political Commentator 1
Well, it's two conversations in parallel and they both have to go forward because I think just morally we have to do the right thing by the country, obviously, equal rights, dei, all of that stuff. This is a very long legacy that progressives have been working on. And it is right, it is objectively right at every level. There's also the are you fighting for the right things? Conversation. And, and I think, you know, people, people who've followed politics for a long time, we naturally believe that the politics part of it is maybe half of the conversation and the policy or like the focus and the fight is, is the other half. I think, like. Or maybe like 90% of it. Sometimes they're like, oh, I can't believe they said that. That's immediately disqualify, right? Well, it's maybe for you because you watch CNN or Fox News all day long, but I think, I think Zach is 100% right in that the average person, when you look at what they're willing to tolerate, if they think they're going to get a bigger paycheck or if they think they're going to be able to stay in their home or, you know, or make more money or, you know, have health care, like those other things really start to not matter at all. It's got to be a lot more negotiable if they're offensive, right?
Political Commentator 2
100%. Yeah. I saw somebody do a video the other day that like, was exactly emblematic at this point where, like, it was a guy talking about how, like complaining about how some like white leftists arrived at being in their place because they were anti capitalists. Because in the end, like, they were, they were feeling the effects and that, that's what brought them there. And it was like a complaint video too. And I'm sitting there and I'm like, who gives a shit? Like, in the end you have an ally. Like, I think that's the biggest problem that we have that the right doesn't have is they like, we set up red lines everywhere. And it's like the red lines, like,
Political Commentator 3
just totally agree that they got. They became leftists because they were anti capitalist. And not that, not. But they didn't come there because they were anti racist.
Political Commentator 2
Racist, exactly.
Political Commentator 3
He laid out like a bunch of stuff like how almost all the cat was capitalist. He's right.
Political Commentator 1
But he's right.
Political Commentator 3
The thing that I think he missed on it is that he could have said, if you are anti racist. I don't have like, getting there is like, yeah, if you got there because you're anti capitalist and then you're like, oh, yeah, look, capitalism is rated race based in racism. Yeah, we're done. But if you sit there and deny that, like, capitalism isn't tied to race or that you're right fucking racist in yourself, then you. Yeah, I missed that part of that video.
Political Commentator 2
If you did. Yeah, he didn't do it. But like that. But it's like emblematic of the larger problem, right? Is like the right doesn't do this because, like, look at it this Way the right is like these two distinct segments of like, maga. And then like regular Republicans just like, want economic fudgeing value. You know, like, that's like this. But they don't fight with each other, like, at all. They're just like, we just accept each other. We have totally different value systems. But, you know, we want to fucking do win. The left does the polar opposite. That's the problem.
Tim
Well, there's a lot.
Political Commentator 1
I'm not gonna vote for someone if I have to sacrifice my values. I'm like, right.
Tim
But there is no, like, person that you're going to agree with a hundred percent of the time. There's nobody on the planet that you
Interviewer
are going to agree with 100 of the time.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Political Commentator 3
Humans are not enemy of progress.
Tim
Yeah.
Political Commentator 2
And you have different motivations. Everybody has different. We're different people.
Political Commentator 1
You know, find your common denominators and. And hold on to those. Because if you pick these, like, maybe. Maybe they're really important lines. But, like, if you just look at, you know, Kamala Harris and in the Middle east, that's a pretty arbitrary red line. Like, when you look at the history of the Middle East. Yes. There's nothing to do with it. There have been people.
Tim
Well.
Political Commentator 1
And like, the world is really gritty. It's really fucking gritty. It's really violent and really ugly. And especially the Middle east. There have been factions warring since before Jesus existed. So let's accept that, like, there's no American president who can solve for. For violence in the world. You have to find those thresholds where you do intervene. And that's a matter of foreign policy and having really smart, careful people doing that work. It's not a fucking stump speech. It's not a. It's not a sizzle reel on Instagram. Like, these are serious things. Find the things that you can actually control that are closer to home. Generally, I think those are the ones that, I mean, that's how I orient my political beliefs, is the more. The closer it is to you, the more control you have over it. And that's where you should focus a proportionate amount of your energy. But instead we see, like, people just reaching. And I don't mean that genocide is a reach, but like, in everything, everywhere, there's always somebody reaching for the most arbitrary reason to cancel a Democrat. You know, they took $12 from a pack in 2006, and so they're fucked. I'm like, what about the other person, though? Is this the, like, the greater of goods or the lesser of evils? I don't really care. I'm going to the person.
Political Commentator 3
But the thing, like, they'll put the guy who took $12 in 2006 on the same level as the guy who's taken 600,000 in the last four years.
Political Commentator 1
Right?
Political Commentator 3
Those, those things aren't the same.
Political Commentator 2
Right.
Political Commentator 3
You have to operate in a fucking grayscale here. It's not black and white.
Political Commentator 2
And you know what it does, too, is it takes these candidates away from focusing on the shit that people actually want them to focus on. That's the biggest problem, is it, like, it forces them to make choices about where they allocate their time and focus and what they're talking about. Like, even talking about, like, Javier coming on here and having to, like, there's huge issues in California, but, like, people are just talking about this one prick who's a predator. Like, you know, the.
Political Commentator 1
It's right. We.
Political Commentator 2
They, like Californians, want to know what's going on. Why is gas so expensive? Why there so many homeless people? That's it. Like, and him having to focus his attention other places is just going to do damage to his ability to speak to the average Californian that could vote for him. That's the up part.
Tim
Well, and it doesn't feel strong.
Interviewer
We go back to that.
Javier Becerra
Right.
Interviewer
Because you're. You're whiplashing between issues. And if your own party is ripping you to shreds.
Tim
Yeah.
Interviewer
You know, it makes it difficult.
Tim
And the Republicans have always been better
Interviewer
at winning like that. They're like, win at all costs.
Tim
And we're like, well, you know what it is?
Political Commentator 2
It's like Democrats are like a more talented team with a bad coach, and Republicans are a less talented team with a good coach. That's how they win. They're just well coached. That's.
Tim
Yeah. I mean, they've built the ecosystem so
Interviewer
they only see the stuff they've invested top down or down, bottom up, across the board.
Tim
Like, they have a farm.
Interviewer
If we're going to do the coach
Tim
thing, they have a farm system. Right. And they've got, you know, they know how to play the audience.
Interviewer
Like, they have the, you know, you were rich, you were joking about your bobble, your Otani bobblehead.
Tim
Like, they do that from a political perspective all the time.
Interviewer
Whether it's a Trump coin or like, you know,
Tim
sneakers, stay, whatever, Ice, Vineyard, Vodka, you know, plane, airlines, all of
Interviewer
those were not a business.
Political Commentator 1
There's no floor. There's no floor. You know, they'll just do whatever and. And the voters receive whatever they're like, what? You know, how low are we going? You're gonna give me. You're gonna pay me directly like Elon Musk was paying voters to vote in. In Wisconsin? Like that. People on the left don't know that.
Political Commentator 3
Remember? I can't even remember that.
Interviewer
Yeah, but didn't that get tossed because.
Political Commentator 1
No, it was like a million dollar a day lottery and. Yeah, and. But it was because it was somebody outside of the campaign. No, he did it. Whether he got sued afterward or not doesn't change the fact that, like, people
Political Commentator 3
would have got a million dollars because
Political Commentator 1
they, because they thought they were going to get a million dollars anyway. I mean, if a, If a Democrat came to me and they were like, I'll give you a million dollars to go vote for me, it'd be like, I. I'm gonna sit with this for a long time. And I. I probably am not okay with it. Like, a million dollars would be pretty great. But there magazine.
Political Commentator 2
It's.
Interviewer
It's a bribe.
Political Commentator 2
Yes.
Political Commentator 1
Yeah.
Interviewer
That's a bribe.
Political Commentator 1
Yeah.
Political Commentator 3
It's the inverse of a poll tax.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Political Commentator 1
Whereas MAGA voters are like, I can get me them gold. Those, those gold Trump shoes. Yeah, dude, I'll have so much left over, I can buy a monster truck.
Tim
Oh, they're gaudy as shit. But that's his. That's his thing. You see the photos of his apartment and Trump Tower?
Interviewer
It's so gaudy and gross.
Tim
And he's making the White House like that too. Yeah, the White House. The.
Political Commentator 3
The Oval Office sign on the outside looks like something you got out of the HomeGoods.
Tim
It's so gross.
Political Commentator 3
And they stage that dumbass door dash photo shoot.
Political Commentator 2
Oh, my God.
Interviewer
Oh, my God.
Shopify Advertiser
Yeah.
Tim
So that McDonald's.
Interviewer
Yeah, so that. So everybody who hasn't seen this, it's really funny. They meant to promote the no tax on tip stuff. So they like, the president door dashed McDonald's. And if you're on audio, I have air quotes here.
Tim
And this lady, who does not live
Interviewer
in Washington, D.C. by the way, shows up at the White House with a bag of McDonald's.
Tim
He opens the oval, I think.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Interviewer
And like, takes the bag and they're like, no tax on tips. Then of course, they dug into it and it was a total stunt because
Tim
of course it was. And then they tried to say, that's
Political Commentator 3
after Trump goes, well, what do you think? Should men be allowed to play in women's sports? And she goes, I don't really have an opinion. I just hear about tips.
Political Commentator 1
She's like, sir, Just take the fries out of the bag.
Political Commentator 3
Literally take the fries out of the bag.
Political Commentator 2
Imagine if you could door dash to the Oval Office. Like, imagine how unsafe that system would be. It's insane. Just knocking on the door, I got you. It's like, what the are you talking about?
Tim
They just throw it over the gate of security. Throw it over the gate.
Political Commentator 2
Like, just toss it like a fence a mile long around this thing.
Political Commentator 1
You know, I, I know they, they talked up the no tax on tips thing. I, I don't know if people knew this, but I was just reading through all the, like the, the tax updates with, or, you know, the Washington Post or whatever. They were talking about the no taxes on overtime. I didn't know this, but the no tax on overtime thing is only on the overtime. The time and a half, it's on the and a half portion of the overtime.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Political Commentator 1
So like when you say no taxes on overtime, if you make 20 bucks an hour and you're like, fuck, yeah, I'm going to get $30 an hour, you know, it's not no $30 tax rate. You're getting taxed on the $20. You get $10 an hour untaxed for like seven hours that week. Or like, that's okay. That's $12 back on your taxes.
Interviewer
It expires.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Tim
All of the stuff that helps poor and working class all, not very much the stuff that was in the bill for poor working class people has an expiration date.
Interviewer
But you know what doesn't have an expiration date is that tax cut.
Tim
Billions. Billions of tax cuts for rich people.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Tim
Those are permanent.
Political Commentator 1
So you have to ask why? I was just doing some fun math last night. So I was watching the Pit and they had a episode about a hospital closing, a rural hospital closing. And I was like. And I get on the Internet and I was like, how many hospitals are at risk and how many could be covered if, if with that 500 billion increase in military spending that Trump requested. It's all of them.
Javier Becerra
Right.
Political Commentator 1
Remember all of the Medicaid cuts were 1 trillion over 10 years. Not a trillion a year. 100 billion a year over 10 years. Which means every fucking year you could cover the Medicaid cuts five fucking times over every single year with just the extra that he wants for the Pentagon budget. And that is not including the two years of bonus that you'd get from the 200 billion on top of the 1.5 trillion they want for Iran.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah.
Political Commentator 3
Right.
Political Commentator 1
So we got $1.7 trillion. 0.7 of that is Just fucking extra money they don't need so that they can cut Medicaid and not even cover
Tim
for those keeping score at home.
Interviewer
When Donald Trump said that we could not afford the Medicare Medicaid at the
Tim
current level, he was lying.
Political Commentator 2
Shocker.
Tim
But we can go into a war of which we still don't know why we're there.
Political Commentator 3
We spent almost $100 billion there now.
Interviewer
Oh, it's up to.
Tim
Up to almost 100. Great.
Political Commentator 1
Unbudgeted to, like, they haven't even taken that from Medicare or Medicaid or Social Security or, like, homeless people. They just don't. They're like, now we'll figure out where it comes from.
Political Commentator 3
That comes from a mystery land of money.
Political Commentator 1
Mystery money comes from the Treasury. They just print it off.
Interviewer
I mean, you're actually not that far off of that. They just printed off, like, that is pretty much what happens.
Political Commentator 1
Like, we'll deal with the inflation.
Political Commentator 3
It's an unbelieved sell in the Excel spreadsheet.
Tim
What happened to. What happened to America? I thought these guys were America first.
Political Commentator 2
Yeah, well, they are.
Political Commentator 1
I mean, America to them is just Trump and his immediate circle of monetary buddies. I think that's the thing that took me the longest to appreciate is when he says, we're going to be great again, he literally only means me. I will be great again. I will be great again. And if you just swap that out with every single thing he says, suddenly all of the incomes or all of the inputs and outputs all track, like, one to one. Everything makes sense if you only look at it through the lens of what personally benefits Donald.
Interviewer
Well, the good news is that most Americans are hating it. Like, he is doing a horrible job, including.
Tim
I know we talked a little on
Interviewer
Monday, but, like, this whole, like, attack
Tim
on the Pope and the, like, blasphemous image. I know. Luke, Luke, I listened to Get Angry
Interviewer
this morning with you and Brian.
Political Commentator 3
Did you have a stroke?
Interviewer
I laughed a few times, but I almost did, you know, stroke out, stroke out a few times. But, yeah, it's talking about the. The fact that so many people are. Are mad about, you know, using the name, the Lord's name in vain. And then he literally depicts himself as the Lord.
Tim
And they're like, I don't really like it, but it's fine, it's fine.
Political Commentator 2
It's a line, I'm telling you. Like, I was just in Missouri with Brian and we were talking to some of his friends, and, like, one of the questions that came up, it was. The reaction was so funny, was Kind of like, you know, in the end, do you choose the Constitution or do you choose Christianity? And they're like, I'm not answering that question. He got up and left, wouldn't answer it.
Political Commentator 3
It's not hard to pick.
Tim
Well, because you know their answer, right?
Political Commentator 2
Like, their answer is Christianity, right? But that's the point. It's like. Like, I think it's great that Trump is finally realizing, like, oh, there is a barrier that I didn't realize was here. Like, I'm actually not number one for a lot of these people. And I thought I was. It's. It's nice to see him find that horrible realization.
Interviewer
Do you like how he tried to say that he thought that that image depicted him as a doctor?
Political Commentator 1
All the AI images now of. Of him in a. Like, because the pit came up, somebody, like, the operating room of it, right? And Trump in the corner with the robes on.
Political Commentator 3
You know the truth of it, right? Or what I. I believe to be the truth is that all morning that day, every person in the administration was saying, the picture is doctored.
Interviewer
It's doctored. Oh, that's a good.
Political Commentator 3
I'm 90 sure that the reason that he said, I'm a doctor in that picture is because he's not fucking smart enough to put together the difference between a picture being doctored and I'm a doctor. Similar to how he can't tell the difference between insane asylum and seeking asylum 1000%.
Political Commentator 1
Dude. That's such a good fucking doc.
Tim
You're interesting.
Political Commentator 1
I already guarantee you're right 100 fucking percent. Because, yes, when he's like, oh, they're sending their fucking mentally ill. When it's shit like, that is so fucking out of left field, you're tempted to just let it go. But if you actually chase that, like, pull that thread, I'm like, oh, no, he thought it was a mental asylum. Like, he did.
Political Commentator 3
I mean, he is.
Political Commentator 1
They need a new mental asylum.
Political Commentator 2
Do you think he makes them? Like, do you think he's the one who actually types in like? Or, like, do you think he tells people what to make? Because, like, that's what I. I made a video. I want to see the prompt. Like, that's. You can prove that you like all this. Like, you could. There's a prompt for this.
Tim
Somebody wrote, used to be that his team would troll all of those white
Interviewer
supremacist sites and grab images for him to use. Like, if 2016, there were these, like, these.
Tim
This money meme that then had the.
Interviewer
The Israeli or the Jewish star. No, it's a sheriff's badge. Like, no, it wasn't.
Political Commentator 3
No.
Tim
And they got it on 4chan, which is a white supremacist message board. Now they have prompts and that. That. But, like, every. I think they're just. I think his team just troll, like, grabs those images.
Interviewer
Don't think anything about it because they want to show. It's a wink, wink, nod, nod support to those people. I don't think that he's going into chat GPT or Claude and saying, depict me as Jesus.
Political Commentator 3
No, no.
Tim
Because I don't know. He knows what AI. He doesn't use a computer.
Interviewer
He uses them. He has a phone, but I don't think he uses a computer.
Political Commentator 1
No, he. He is 100% the guy who gets the text in, like, a Text thread with 700 other guys. And they're. They look at it and they're like, that's real. And they post it on the Internet. Like, that is the level of society that. Or, like, intellectualism that. That he lives at. And if you just think of it that way, I'm like, oh, no. He just saw this online and thought, well, that looks cool. And then they're like, sir, that's doctored. He's like, yeah, I know that.
Interviewer
It's nuts.
Political Commentator 1
Look at how thick my hair is.
Political Commentator 2
I have true social. And, like, sometimes for fun, I'll just go through and, like, look at the comments sections. Like, it just these kinds of memes. Like, a whole thing is just like, these wildly up memes, and you're like, it's. It's.
Political Commentator 3
Jesus Christ.
Political Commentator 2
It's insane. If you ever want to be, like, the angriest you've ever been, just go and, like, click into Trump's true social profile. Click any of his posts, and there's thousands of memes that will make you want to just shoot everybody in the face.
Political Commentator 1
Okay, next episode of Get Angry Zach.
Political Commentator 3
I don't think that's going to work well.
Political Commentator 1
Zach hosts and he screen shares, and you guys live react to the comments under something. Trump posts.
Political Commentator 2
That'd be a really good idea.
Political Commentator 3
I don't think that's gonna end well.
Political Commentator 2
Oh, it'll end. It'll be great. Great.
Tim
Guys.
Interviewer
Their heads are gonna just, like, explode.
Political Commentator 2
Oh, my God. I'm looking at them right now, and there's so many that slowly catch fire.
Tim
But it is important to look at that stuff, though, because you have to understand the world that these people live in. Like, we don't see any of that stuff. And they live it like they are.
Political Commentator 2
They produce it like this. This one I'm looking at right now, it says while they're distracted by Iran, Trump's rearranging the entire board. And It's Trump playing Ch. Doing a 4D chess. Like, they're all like that. Yeah, right. Like, even that's a tame one. Like, I'm just saying, like, there's a million of them.
Tim
Well, I'm sure there's all kinds of races.
Political Commentator 2
Oh, yeah. I can't say a lot of the things that I'm looking at right now. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Interviewer
Which they have no problem with over there.
Tim
Of course.
Interviewer
Yeah. I'm not gonna go on there. I'll let you be the. The official.
Political Commentator 2
It's very funny.
Interviewer
Should we create a find out podcast to social count?
Political Commentator 3
No, thanks. I'm not running that one. I'm not doing that.
Interviewer
Well, didn't the Harris campaign had an account on there? It was only to troll people, but
Political Commentator 1
I think Newsom had an account.
Interviewer
Yeah, yeah. The meme. The meme wars.
Political Commentator 2
Oh, my God.
Political Commentator 3
Yeah.
Tim
I don't think we're away.
Political Commentator 2
This one's great. I will defend my country against all enemies, both foreign and Democrat.
Tim
Can't imagine why that side thinks we're all a bunch of, like, evil shipbags.
Political Commentator 2
There's so many. They're so good.
Political Commentator 1
And there's time. Last year, we were joking about how we were all going to be sharing bunk beds at seacot. So, like, I. I am glad that we've. I feel like we've turned a corner. It's just been the slowest corner ever. You can't turn around the Titanic overnight, it turns out.
Political Commentator 2
No, definitely not.
Interviewer
I can't.
Tim
Yeah. I. No, we.
Interviewer
Oh, God.
Tim
Every.
Interviewer
I don't even know what to say anymore.
Political Commentator 3
I still get top. Monk.
Political Commentator 1
I think we're at time. Is. Is.
Tim
I think we're at time. I think we're at time.
Political Commentator 1
We're. We're cooked.
Political Commentator 2
That's how effective these memes are. Like, it ends the podcast. Right?
Tim
Yeah, Just like, full stop.
Interviewer
I can't go on.
Tim
Well, we want to thank Javier Becerra for coming on today.
Interviewer
You should go check out his. His campaign and what he's building over there.
Tim
I think, you know, with Swalwell out,
Interviewer
I think we're going to see his numbers starting to rise.
Tim
We have another candidate that we're working on for Monday potentially coming on. Who's at the top? One of the. I'll say top three. Not confirmed. So I don't want to.
Interviewer
I don't want to blow up their spot.
Tim
Yet, but. So we're going to keep talking about California because it's obviously the biggest election
Interviewer
going on right now and the craziest because it's California.
Tim
But, yeah, I think we'll wrap there. Make sure you check out Get Angry, which had an episode dropped. We're recording on Wednesday. So today American Power guys is killing it. Killing it. I mean, everyone's killing it, but they're,
Interviewer
like blowing us out of the water right now.
Tim
So you should go check out.
Political Commentator 1
Yeah, do it for a year. Come on.
Tim
Yeah, go check.
Political Commentator 1
No idea how boring this gets.
Political Commentator 2
Some friendly competition.
Tim
And Nola Haynes is not a spy. Don't forget that one, too. It's a great show. She's got three or four episodes out already. And make sure you subscribe to us on YouTube because again, that's a way
Interviewer
to help us make some money for this where you don't have to pay, though memberships are available.
Tim
Subscribe, substack, all of that. So with that, guys, thank you to Javier Becerra for coming on. Thank you, everyone, for listening. We will be back on Tuesday. Bye, Everybody.
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Date Released: April 16, 2026
Host: Find Out Media & Studio71
Guest: Javier Becerra (Former California Assembly Member, Congressman, California AG, HHS Secretary, Current Candidate for Governor)
This episode dives into the rapidly shifting California gubernatorial race following Eric Swalwell’s resignation amidst scandal. The Find Out team interviews Javier Becerra, spotlighting his extensive record in public service—particularly his unique status as the Attorney General who most frequently sued former President Trump and won. The discussion traverses California’s biggest challenges: leadership, health care policy, affordability, housing, climate change, and the challenge of building trust in government. The hosts also launch into a candid, often irreverent roundtable on political accountability, the culture of loyalty in politics, meme warfare, and the difficulties of doing “the right thing” in today’s toxic political environment.
On Public Service & Scandal:
“Accountability is the catch word when, when you're in public service. And so no one should be surprised at where we are today.” – Javier Becerra [03:07]
On Health Care:
“Medicare for you, not just when you're 65 and older, Medicare for you, period.” – Javier Becerra [05:28]
On Housing Urgency:
“First thing I'm going to do is I'm going to get in and say show me those 40,000 units where they are, which developments and let's push them over the top, let's get them going.” – Javier Becerra [08:40]
On Suing Trump:
“Not just suing them. I took them to the Supreme Court and beat him. We, you know, we still have the Affordable Care Act... we still have the DACA program...” – Javier Becerra [11:51]
On Drug Price Negotiation:
“You're like my parents. What do you mean? You got an A? What happened to the A plus?” – Javier Becerra [13:11]
On Experience:
“The governor's office is not a place for on the job training. It does not come with training wheels. You need someone who's actually gone through these things.” – Javier Becerra [16:31]
On Scandal Fallout in Politics:
“...the lawsuits last a lifetime.”
– Political Commentator 1 referencing Eric Swalwell/Snapchat scandal [19:55]
On Meme Culture:
“If you ever want to be, like, the angriest you’ve ever been, just go and, like, click into Trump’s true social profile ...there’s thousands of memes that will make you want to just shoot everybody in the face.”
– Political Commentator 2 [49:17]
This episode offers a double dose of raw, unfiltered political commentary and substantive policy debate. With Eric Swalwell’s scandal-rebooting the CA governor’s race, Becerra presents himself as the truly experienced “crisis manager” in the field. The pod wraps as it began: deadpan, exhausted, but determined to keep fighting, keep laughing, and keep “finding out."
Next Up: A top-three gubernatorial candidate is likely to appear on Monday’s show, with more on the California primary.
Hosts encourage: Subscribe on YouTube/Substack for more in-depth, real-talk political coverage.