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Josh Shapiro Is Calm but Not Cool

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Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro stops by the studio to talk to Jon Lovett about Trump's war in Iran, growing antisemitism and Islamophobia in America, and what it'll take for Democrats to learn how...

Transcript

EN

[MUSIC]

Hey, everybody. Welcome to Pods av America.

I'm John Love at I just finished an all along conversation with Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro.

We covered a lot of ground. We talked about the war and Iran, we talked about Israel, Netanyahu, anti-Semitism. We talked about his relationship to the Biden administration where he had to push back what it was like downing out of the VP process. We didn't not talk about whether or not he's going to run for president and we got into

some tough questions about big orders. It was a really interesting conversation that went a lot of different places and I hope you appreciate it. [MUSIC] Governor, welcome back to the pod.

It's good to see you. Good to be here. All right, so yesterday, we are taping this on Friday morning. There was another attack on a Jewish community this time. Someone drove their car into a synagogue in West Bloomfield, Michigan.

You were attorney general when there was the attack on the Tree of Life synagogue. It pits burgged there was the arts in attack on the governor's residence when you and your family were home. What was the reaction to what happened yesterday? I mean, just another sad and scary example of how anti-Semitism is dangerous.

It's on the rise across this country. And I think what we need more of is for leaders to speak and act with moral clarity. Call it out and leave no space for it. I was in touch with my dear friend, Gretchen Whitman yesterday. I thought she did an outstanding job speaking out against it and making clear that this

is not going to be acceptable in our society anywhere.

I think it is important for us to address these crises and by the way, thank God, no one

was killed. This could have been far worse, but still incredibly dangerous. I think it is important to not just address these crises after they happen, after an attack whether it's at the Pennsylvania governor's residence, at the Tree of Life or anywhere else. But we have to address it when the seedlings are planted of this kind of hate, of this kind

of anti-Semitism. There should be no place for it in our society. I think leaders have responsibility to call it out wherever they see it on the political left or the political right. So on that note, obviously temperatures are high just today, Josh Godhammer, he's a Democratic

congressman who's district borders your state. He had harsh words for Zorin Mamdoni, Maine Senate candidate Graham Plattener.

He called them Socialist anti-Semites and basically said you're not against anti-Semitism

if you support them. I know you checked in with Mamdoni after the attack that happened in New York. What is your reaction to what Godheimer said? Look, it's hard for me to react. I haven't heard it.

I don't know what the context was. I don't want to get caught in responding, I don't know. Did you need no context? Do you have it all? Yeah.

Look, I'll just tell you. I reached out to Mayor Mamdoni. I guess it was probably three or four days ago at this point, after that incident outside his residence. And I wanted to make clear, look, I've been through it.

Now, thank God, nothing detonated there unlike in our situation in Pennsylvania, but I know that this can affect your psyche, affect the way you think about stuff. I want to make sure he and his wife were okay. And I think we had a good conversation and appreciate that. I think it is really important.

I'm going to just make a general statement on this. I understand what you're getting at here, and I want to try and address your point.

I think it's really important that we have two distinct conversations happen.

One, which is the way you started this, and that is about anti-Semitism. And there should be no room for that. And by the way, it shouldn't really be debatable. We should all stand universally against it on the left and on the right, and it shouldn't be hard to do that.

I think it's a pretty black and white issue with very little nuance.

And then there's a second conversation, and that is about policies in the Middle East about

the war and Iran, about what's happening in Israel and Gaza, and all that, I assume at some point you'll get into that in our conversation. That's full of nuance. And there should be space for disagreement that doesn't lead to charges of anti-Semitism. I think if someone engages in anti-Semitism, we got to call it out.

If they're engaging in expressing their opinion on an issue of the Middle East, we should leave room for respectful and responsible debate. So on the other side of this, you have Alabama Senator Tommy Taberville retreating a photo among Donnie, opposite of photo of the attack on the World Trade Center that said the enemy is inside the gates, another congressman, this week said Muslims don't belong in American

society. We need more Islamophobia, not less. I can't imagine any elected official saying the same against Jewish people, other minorities without facing a ton of calls for resignation. What do you make of the purchase that this kind of anti-Muslim bigotry has in the Republican

Party?

Yeah, look, I think I didn't see the tweets again.

Yeah, I apologize. But I get your point. I actually addressed this, I guess it would have been two nights ago at Iniftar in the Lehigh Valley in Pennsylvania. Talking about the rise in both anti-Semitism and Islamophobia and making clear that we

have to stand together and unite against that and understand that our diversity makes us far stronger.

I think that kind of language on the political right here is you're describing it, it is

just simply unacceptable. And I think it's incumbent upon all of us to speak out against it. It's one of the reasons why I try and do everything in my power to call it out wherever I see it, to reach out to Republicans, reach out to Democrats, reach out to people who disagree. I might disagree with on an issue if they're targeted, whether God forbid by violence,

or that type of incendiary language.

I don't think there's a place for it. Look, I think a big reason for that is because of what Donald Trump has done to our politics over the last 10 years. You know, my wife Lauren and I were talking about this the other night, we have four children, 24, just about 21, 17 and 15.

Their entire political reference point or framework, aside from their dad, right, is Donald Trump. Now, they have to not agree with Donald Trump, it's a good thing, but the way they view our politics is through this prism of just nastiness and cruelty and division. And that's something that we've got to figure out how to fix in this country.

We've got to get back to the guy you worked for, right, which was about hope and change and bring people together. We got to find our way back to that in this society. You're such a, there are things about this conversation. And there's like a natural carefulness that you have, like a measured way you approach

politics. I'm going to give you a thought. No, no, no, no. I'm not. And actually, like it seems to be with a lot of people want, that the people are pretty

sick of politicians that are just saying the most fringe, attention, grabbing, clicky, thing. But it is rewarded in our politics right now. And you seem to try to avoid being part of that. And I wonder if you feel that pressure in either direction, either to like let loose a little bit more or to be a kind of more sober-minded person, even if sometimes people claim they

want something a little bit more shoot from the hip. Yeah, I would just respectfully push back on one thing you said, the certain notion of letting loose. I, I'm being very open and candid with you.

And that's sort of what I think of as let loose.

If you're talking about just yelling and screaming and banging the table, like that ain't me. And I realize that might get me more likes on Twitter. And that might get me more followers on different social media purposes. That ain't who I am.

And by the way, that ain't what the people who elected me want. They want me to go solve their problems. They want me to get shit done for them. They want me to be able to deliver results for them. And if you're just out in the arena yelling and screaming every day, yeah, you'll get some

more followers on social media, but you're not going to accomplish a damn thing. And so I think there's a difference between being thoughtful and sober-minded and being willing to just sort of engage in the slash and burn politics. One might be, again, more likely to get some likes, but at the end of the day, your job is to deliver, and the way you deliver is by trying to find ways to find come-gram, work

with people, see that common threat of humanity that allows us to have dialogue and figure stuff out. So I was reading your book, and I would like to do a disclosure here, which is, you worked on the book with my friend, Emily Jane Fox, and I want to be on the record that what

I believe is interesting and good about the book comes from my friend, and the parts that

I am critical of are the material you provided and are your fault.

Okay, got it, all right, I'll make sure Emily here's that. Yeah. There's a fascinating part. Like John smirked a little bit. I did smirk a little bit.

It's on video. Yeah. I want to talk about your evolution on the death penalty, because I thought it was interesting. You just give people a brief summary of what led you to go from being someone who was in favor of the death penalty to someone who was against it.

Yeah. And by the way, genuinely in favor of the death penalty, and honestly held view throughout my career, including two runs for attorney general, where I was the chief law enforcement officer of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and I believed that the death penalty should be reserved for the most heinous of cases.

And it wasn't to score political points or get votes. It's what I believed. And what began to happen to me over many years, kind of all happened to roughly the same time, right? On more and more cases were coming across my desk as AG, that could have led me to pursuing

capital punishment, and each time I did a sort of life sentence instead. I was dealing with the realities of tragedy striking in Pennsylvania, where the Tree of

Life, the deadliest active anti-Semitism occurred in Pittsburgh, claiming 11 ...

And I supported the death penalty. In that case, it ended up being a federal case on a state one, so it wasn't my active prosecution. But I heard from families, a small number of them, who didn't want the death penalty there. And then I had, as I was grappling with this, as I was seeing the problems in our justice

system, out of conversation with my then roughly 11-year-old son Max, out of nowhere. This was during COVID, we were kind of in the house a lot, and at a nowhere Max says to me, "Hey, Dad, we don't have the death penalty in Pennsylvania, do we?" And I said, "Well, we do."

I think I said, "We cannot for it, are you?"

And I found myself saying to him what I had said many times in the context of a campaign or my work, well, so under the most heinous of cases, you know, "Oh, run, I'm going on on." And I noticed that I wasn't looking at him in the eye, the way I am, you're right now when I said it.

If you can't make eye contact with your kid, that should tell you something about what you're saying. And then my Max looked at me and said, "Well, I don't understand why killing someone as a punishment for them killing someone makes any sense." And man, I walked away thinking, "I'm in the wrong place on this."

By the way, I was probably in the right place on it politically in terms of polling and all that kind of stuff, but later on, you know, I can't remember exactly what the timeframe was. But, you know, some number of months or so later, I announced my run for governor and said that I was against death penalty.

And within the first few weeks of my time as governor, the first execution warrant came

across my desk. And literally, John, if I were to sign it, someone would have been put to death. And I made clear that I would put a moratorium in place, I wouldn't sign any execution warrant so long as I'm governor, and I didn't call on the legislature to reform the system.

I called on the legislature to abolish the death penalty, because I simply believe the state should not be in the business of killing people. So, often there are these debates around hot button social issues and the question of the second, or should Democrats moderate on this and others say, "Don't throw that group of people under the bus."

We should all, others say, "We need to take the popular point of view." But clearly, there's a relationship between being willing to go to the voters of Pennsylvania, who I assume by majority, approve of the death penalty, and say, "I'm not for this," that involves politics around it, where you've built a level of trust and credibility, where you feel like you have the, where you can go to the voters and say, "I'm not with you

on this issue." Can you talk a little bit about that, about, about how you felt like you could confidently do this? Take a position that you thought might be a little politically risky in this situation.

First, I don't want to like overstate the politics in a sense, and I really didn't think

about the political calculus here, and it was just, to me, it was a moral issue.

And I think it speaks to the challenge, I would hope every politician considers, but I

can just speak for myself, which is, you run on a platform, I'm going to do A, B, and C, that platform reflects your own views and values, along with what you pick up from listening to people along the way that they need this for their community or that, for their community. And you try and just sort of mash all that together into the work you do every day.

Now, if someone says they want to do something that violates everything you believe in, you know, you're not going to pursue it. Those are kind of extreme examples. And everything is this effort to be able to pull together what you hear when you're listening, and I pride myself on being a good listener, and what's in your heart, what's in your

gut, what's in your soul, and how to fashion all that together in a platform. In this case, you know, I did feel that even though I was on the wrong side of the polling, that I did owe it to the people of Pennsylvania to explain my rationale, because I was taking a different position than what I had historically taken, and I wanted them to understand how I evolved on this issue.

I think it's important for politicians to be able to change their mind, but I also think

it's incumbent upon us to explain our rationale for that. And that's what I did. And you know what? A lot of people who disagree with me, reached out and said, hey man, I really appreciate how you explain that.

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I was thinking about this because there's this debate. There was a law pass in Canada about end of life. There's been a few laws in the US past about end of life in the rights people have with the state should sanction medically assisted suicide in terminal cases, there's a bill in Pennsylvania about this right now several Democrats have introduced it in the legislature about compassion

in dying. It relates to the death penalty because if you believe that there is a distinction between the power of the state to end someone's life and the power of the state to put someone in jail for the rest of their lives, there's something intrinsic about life itself that comes into play here, something deeper and moral.

I'm wondering how you think about the state's role in end of life as someone who clearly grapples with these questions as a Jewish person as a leader. Yeah, I'm happy with this governor. I don't know that my faith is sort of the driver in this, but I've put aside what's written in the specific bills in the legislature.

And I've heard from a number of people, I've heard from a handful of people on this issue

who have, I think, really passionate perspectives on it and seemingly every one of them

that I've heard from, it's grounded in some life experience, right?

A life experience that I have never, you know, thank God, had to deal with.

I tend to be someone in general that trust people to make decisions over their own bodies, whether it's a woman's right to choose, whether it's a parent's right to be able to vaccinate their kids, how they think is best for them. And so I tend to be libertarian on that stuff and creating a space for individuals to be able to make those decisions.

Now look, we're going to allow that there has to be some rules of the road and some clear guidelines on how that would work, and I'd be lying to you if I was sitting here today telling you that I've got it all figured out. It's an issue that comes up with some, but it's not an issue, I think, that's dominating our legislative process in Pennsylvania.

Well, yeah, but I feel like it's coming, it's coming for the Democratic debate about how we think about this. I ask because I do think it gets at something about what we think about the value of life,

Because I believe in the right to abortion people should have control over th...

destinies, but then when it's the state, when the state allows for something like this,

you have to also worry about people feeling if not coerced like pressure, right, that we

start to say as a society that not that people's lives at the end of their lives aren't of the same value. Yeah, I'm not suggesting that. Yeah, and I know not. I'm curious how you think about that, because what I found in reading the book is that there

is you are grappling with moral questions. You're thinking about what the right thing to do is, and you know, you are somebody that is potentially running for president, and this is an issue to me where it kind of accesses in a typical way, somebody sort of deeper questions.

Yeah, look, I'm in general for stuff I'm running for reelection for guidance.

And I know that. I know that. I'm speaking. Yeah.

I think it's incumbent upon leaders to really think through these issues, not just based

on what gets the most likes on social media, but how they really impact real people, how folks in the community, who care about a particular issue like this, bring it up to you, and raise the issue, and to try and find compassion in your heart for people that you might even disagree with on foundational issues like this. And these are things I try and work through every day.

I think what's incumbent upon me is a public official, it might be different from you or others, is I've got a responsibility to explain myself. The death penalty is an example of that, where I evolved on the issue, I explained myself, I let people know where I was coming from, and how I reached that conclusion. And I think on these underlying questions, you got a responsibility to do that.

So a lot of the attention was on Minnesota, when Trump deployed the National Guard, it feels like ISIS operations in Pennsylvania have fallen under the radar a little bit. What is the scene like on the ground, what have you been doing in response to the way Trump has been deploying ISIS in Pennsylvania?

Well, first of all, what we saw in Minnesota was unconstitutional, it was dangerous, it made

the community less safe, and it claimed the lives of two American citizens, Ms. Good, Mr. Pretty, and there must be accountability for that, just because they got rid of Nome and put in, what's his name, home, and now they're trying to put in the other guy of Mullen. Just because they're kind of shuffling the deck chairs here, it doesn't make it that the policies of this administration are just, remember, the reason why I did what it did in Minnesota

was because Donald Trump commanded them to do that. The problem here is Donald Trump, the problem here is the manner in which ISIS being funded and being directed by Donald Trump. So changing around who the bit players are in this isn't going to solve the problem. Relative to Pennsylvania, the crux of your question, I will tell you that, and this is probably

where I'll maybe hold back and chairing with you a little bit, hopefully you'll understand. We are prepared to be able to address this both in the court and in the communities, and we spend a lot of time working with law enforcement, the local level, working with some other federal partners who we do have the ability to work with on this, to ensure the safety and well-being of the people of Pennsylvania.

I would say is the former Chief Law Enforcement Officer of Pennsylvania.

The most important tool law enforcement has to keep community safe is trust, right?

Not a badge, not a gun, not a radio, but it's trust. And it is really hard to build trust in a community between community and law enforcement. We pride ourselves on doing that hard work. We do not want the federal government coming in and eroding that trust. And so we're going to continue to everything in our power to be prepared and to be able

to be prepared to take the steps necessary to stop the influx should Donald Trump try and should he bring them to Pennsylvania be prepared to deal with that in the communities? I know you're fighting to block instruction of two ice detention facilities. What's the status of that, what levers do you have? So look, the federal government bought these two massive warehouses, think like massive,

Amazon warehouses, that kind of thing. One in Berks County, Pennsylvania, and one in Skooka County, Pennsylvania. These are huge. And they want to convert them to ice detention centers, house about 9,000 people there. They did this without consulting with local officials, certainly without consulting with

state officials. And by the way, pissed off, not just me, but a whole bunch of Republican elected officials in those communities as well. I met with local leaders about, now it's probably about a week or two ago at this point and heard their concerns.

Putting aside the fact that I think this is unjust, they're also very practical reasons why

This won't work and why we're not going to allow it.

At one of the facilities, they're trying to attach to a water system that serves 700 households

in that community. That water system, through no fault, you're going to can barely keep up with the 700 households. You go put 9,000 bodies on that water system. You will literally use up all of the water in that water system in less than 24 hours. That means the home owner won't be able to turn on their sink in the kitchen to boil

a pot of water. They won't be able to flush the toilet or take a shower. We're not going to allow that. I've made clear to Secretary Nome, I know it's on our way out, but at the time she was still the Secretary, that we would not tolerate this, that we would take steps to stop it.

And just a few days ago, I put them on notice that for them to be able to build these facilities,

they require, I'm going to nerd out on you here, but it's important.

They require a number of permits through the Department of Environmental Protection in

the state and other state agencies and based on the sort of general plans that they have, they would not qualify for receiving a permit in Pennsylvania and I'm going to use every lever of power I have to hold it up. Did you actually know directly about it? I communicated with her in writing about it.

Did you ever, ever get on the phone with her, have any direct contact with her while she was running the department? One time we missed each other and exchange voice mails about a snowstorm that was coming. Speaking of permits, you fixed on any five in like two weeks, right, was that it two weeks?

I mean, 12 days. 12 days. 12 days. That was amazing. Honestly, that was, look, California, man, just to think about a bike path, you're talking

about six months.

Just to think if you have the thought, you have to wait six months.

What did you do it in two weeks, 12 days, and why is it that we can do fast construction in emergencies, but we struggle to do it outside of those moments?

Well, we're doing fast construction period now and I'll talk about that in a second.

First on 95, we had a big chunk of I-95 collapse when a fuel tanker exploded underneath. That roadway, which connects, by the way, main all the way to Florida, but is a big heavy artery from, say, like New York to DC and goes through Philly about 200,000 cars in trucks every day. The road literally collapsed, found out at six, seven AMs, something like that, immediately

went to the scene once the fire was out, and you're looking at like a gaping hole. And my immediate response, I am not an engineer, was fill the damn hole with a bunch of dirt, pave over it, get traffic moving again. Why do I share that with you? Because that sort of set the tone for how we approach this. Number one, I signed an executive order doing away with all the procurement headaches and

all the deadlines and delays that typically would slow down a project so that we could get the project started, not within days or hours, but within minutes. So that was number one. Number two, we put the best team on the ground who had the expertise to do the work and that is the Philadelphia Building Trades Union Building Trades who know how to build roads

who know how to build bridges and do this work. Number three, we trusted them to do this work. So every time there was a question about something, they didn't have to like call back to headquarters and wait weeks to get an answer. Here's an example of that.

Remember I said before, fill it with dirt, pave over it, but have you, someone there had the idea that, and they said this to me very politely, I'm sure they wanted to be like, oh, you know, you're talking about, but they were, they were a plate. They said, you know, Governor, we can't use dirt because dirt's really heavy and it'll take a long time for the dirt to settle before we can put asphalt over it.

But there's this recycled material that's made of recycled glass requires no time to settle and it's super light. We can put that as a foundation and then pave over it. They had this innovative idea and the people right out in the community. Now I immediately thought this stuff's going to be like New Zealand or something.

It's going to take forever to get here. It was in Delco, Delwer County, you know, right around the corner from where we were. And in Philly, we trucked that stuff in while the road that was there was being demolished,

getting ready to fill it up, the building trades work 24/7, 365, right?

We put it on a live webcam so Philly could watch. You literally go in a Philly sports bar and you'd see the Philly's on one screen and you'd see the i95 workers on the other. It became a point of pride for us, which is the final point I want to make. It's showed that we can do big things in this country.

It shows that when we kind of put our shoulder to the wheel, we can accomplish big things and we do not need to be mired in the slowness that typically dictates the speed of government. From that experience, we make clear that we're going to be about getting shit done in Pennsylvania,

About getting rid of the limitations on us and about performing at a fast and...

And so we then set out to fix our permanent system in Pennsylvania.

We went from roughly 48th in the country, in terms of speed to permit, to being first

your second or third in the country on speed. Dad took off his took eight weeks to get a simple business license. Now you get it same day. The big buildings that we're trying to build used to take years and years and years to get permitted through our department of environmental protection, you're not going to permit

in less than six months. We are faster than other states and so we're not only rebuilt I-95 in record time. We're building and constructing right now in record time. And as a result of that, we've got the only growing economy in the northeastern part of the United States.

Our unemployment rate has been below the national rate for 32 straight months. We created more jobs than all but three other states in the entire country.

We cut taxes seven different times and have an eight billion dollar surplus.

We're making really strategic investments. The economy is growing and a huge reason why is because our government is nimble and it is fast. I-95 may be the sort of example of that exhibit A of that that folks noticed, but every day we're doing the blocking and tackling of governing that's getting the job done and

getting it done quickly. Do you view that as a way in which the Biden administration just didn't understand the need to have that kind of mentality and executing? There's a lot of examples, electric charging stations, what have you.

Is that a failure of Democrats nationally to understand how to kind of quickly implement?

Look, I'm not here to like, shit on anybody or trash anybody. That's too bad. I will just tell you, I think that we have a responsibility when we're governing to show our work, to put the points on the board that people can see because I think at the end day what people really want is their elected leaders, particularly executives, right, mayors,

governors, presidents, they want them to be out there fixing something for them.

And I think the things I basically want are good schools for their kids, safe communities

to live in an economy that creates opportunity for them in their communities, in communities that they can afford right, kind of fits together. And I think they want their rights and their freedoms protected. And I'll tell you, John, when I'm on a farm in an economy that voted for Donald Trump 80, 20, or whether I'm in the city of Philadelphia that voted for Kamala Harris, roughly

80, 20, I hear the same thing. That's what people want. And so I think it's incumbent upon leaders to not just pass the bill, but then actually drive out the funding and get the construction going, to not just talk about something, but deliver on it in order to make people's lives better.

Yeah, and I hear you're not wanting to just sort of not ask you to go back and just should on the Biden administration, but I do think if there's a perception in the public that Democrats, Republicans are extreme, but Democrats, they're just kind of weak and can't move things forward. We've got to figure out why people have that perception and what are the ways Democrats

have failed. And I'm wondering if you see any ways in which you think like national Democrats right now are not doing enough to signal that they're not just sort of saying the right things, but can actually get things done for people. Well, look, nationally, Democrats, you tell my Democrats and Congress, they don't have

the levers of power right now. We need to make sure we get them back and I'm hopeful that if we have a national referendum and these midterms on Donald Trump, we will win back the U.S. House at least and be able to have a check and be able to have some authority at the table to affect outcomes.

I think for example, if you go back and look, fears go in Democrats were in charge in Washington,

they did an extraordinary job of passing some of the most sweeping infrastructure laws, our countries ever seen. And I commend President Biden and the Democrats who were leading Congress at the time for getting that done. I was also really direct with the Biden administration that once we pass it, that's step

one. We got to get the dollars out and get the construction going. That's the important step, too, so that people kind of see what their own eyes. The effect of sending Congressmen so-and-so were present, Biden, to the job to deliver for them.

And so I think that that is something, again, I can really just speak for myself. That is something I focus on every day is not just past in the bill, we're advocating for the change, but showing how it's making a tangible difference in people's lives. Well, whatever moments after those bills passed, you're the governor, we're like, "Hey, where's the fucking money?"

We said we passed this years ago, why aren't we doing this?

How do we get this done? Are you calling Buttigieg, or are you calling Kamal Harris, or are you calling, just to speak to the President? What was it like trying to get things moving with the administration? Yeah, man, I would call them directly and say, "Hey, look, we passed this, but we've

got to drive the dollars out," or, "We're kind of held up in a regulatory process here. Can you release the money so we can get started on this?" And that was very clear about that.

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We have three Uplift Desks in our office. We love them. You're just thinking about Uplift Desk. They're great desks when they're low, when you're just normal, and seated at them, they're big, and they're spacious, and they're like, well, set up with the monitor, and the

cords, and all that stuff. And then you press a little magic button, and it raises up, and you can stand for half an hour if you want to. We got the Uplift Desk, and I had no idea if we were going to use them. Not when I say that it's basically like that game at the carnival where the mole pops up

and you hit him with the hammer, that's what it's like in our office.

We're just going up and down all day. All day, you look over John's going up, then that'll remind one of the other, one of us to go up, or like, you're like, time for lunch, I'm sitting. What you're describing is a game called Waccamol. Yeah.

We're like Waccamol. We're constantly like, you look, you'll just be typing, and you'll just look over to your left, and time you're just like, and he's up, and he's up. So I come online as the concussions, why sit still, when you can stand out, the new Uplift V3 standing desk helps you move more and get more done.

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desk, plus an extra discount off your entire order. That's UpliftDesk.com/PSA for the exclusive offer, it's only available through our link. All right, let's talk about Iran, because obviously we're in the midst of a war with Iran.

What is your view on the war right now, how it was launched, where the statuses?

Look, you absolutely cannot trust Donald Trump to wage this war. First, he told us it was to go after their nuclear arsenal, which he also said seven months ago, six months ago, or whatever it was, that it was completely decimated. Then he said we went to war, because if we didn't Israel was going to strike first, and we had to, and Israel forced our hand, and then they kind of walked that back.

Then it was to deteriorate their navy, and then it was regime change, and now we're left with the son who seemingly could be more dangerous than the father. The point I'm making here is that this guy's been all over the place.

He's never once looked the American people in the eye, sitting in the Oval Office, where

he should have been, nodded his swim club in Florida, and said to the American people, "This is why we have to do this. This is the imminent threat of which we've now learned. There was no imminent threat." So instead, the President engaged in a war of choice without being clear what the reason

was for going in. Now, some might be watching this dismissing me saying, "It doesn't matter why. They're bad guys." And by the way, bad guys, indeed. The eye told us a bad guy, "largest exporter of terrorism around the world, destabilized

the entire Middle East, chanted death to America for five decades. These are bad people. It shouldn't be hard to say that, but if you don't know why you're going in, you don't know how to get out. And what we're seeing more and more as the days go on are sadly the loss of American heroes

Lives.

We just lost six more Americans in the refueling accident. We lost six, seven apologizes a week or so earlier.

We are losing lives in battle when I think it's unclear why we were there in the first

place. I also have a problem with the fact that the guy who is supposed to be in charge of this, Pete Higgseth, is wildly incompetent. He's like an eight-year-old playing with toy soldiers every day. His language is so fucking offensive.

They talk about this in a way that doesn't respect the humanity in the region and certainly is disrespectful to our soldiers, of which there are pencilvanians who are engaged in this fight on behalf of a commander-in-chief who doesn't have a clue what he's doing. So this was a war of choice by the president. Wasn't clear why we went in and it's unclear how we get out.

I said the first day of this or within the first hours, the Congress needed to act.

So I know some people think it's sort of a processier, whatever, but it is actually the way the law this country works. Certainly Congress did act and they acted to give the president carte blanch here. They basically acted to be wildly weak in pathetic souls who are just going to give away their authority to this president.

So this is the president's war he started and now it's the president's war he's got to figure

out how to get out of and he's surrounded by an incompetent leader in Higgseth who I think

really doesn't have a clue on what he's doing here. And right now we have a more destabilized situation. So I think that is dangerous for America, I think it is dangerous for the world. The last point I want to make and thanks for letting me give a longer answer, I think our enemies are watching and they are seeing weakness by Donald Trump.

Isn't she in China who is calculating every day about when he's going to make his move on Taiwan? So I'm President of the United States, not only in Africa, but in rally the world around this cause, whatever the cause is. But couldn't even rally his own people, couldn't even rally the United States to be

for this. Remember way back to George W Bush, we now have played up, but George W Bush was 85% approval rating on the world when he started again, not suggesting what he did was right there, but he rallied the country around the response. And there's two votes in Congress, one vote in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Exactly.

So I think she is watching this seeing that there's a weakness that the United States has.

In addition, I think we've shown, we've got some military vulnerabilities by moving certain weaponry from one region of the world, one theater to another. I think they're seeing where there's some vulnerability.

Second, I think Putin is watching this, realizing that we've now had to withdraw help from

Ukraine. And by the way, at the same time, Putin is able to have more of his oil and more of his actual resources go into the flow of commerce as a result. So he's making more money and he's got a cleaner shot at Ukraine, which is unfortunate. So not only unfortunate, but dangerous, I should say.

So I think it's bad because you can't trust this guy to prosecute the war. And I think it's bad because it is showing the rest of the world, the weakness of Donald Trump and the weakness of this administration. And all of that combined leaves us worse off and leaves the world more destabilized. So it was genuinely surprising to see the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, basically say,

we had to act because Israel was going to go first and they've tried to walk that back.

That has fed into, I think, some of the anti-Semitism you've seen on the far right, a bit of what you also see on the left that we're in this war because of Israel's brought us back to this debate, over Israel, Governor Gavin Newsom, when talking to John and Tommy on Potsay of America, he was referencing an article by Thomas Reed, but he said that people are talking about Israel appropriately as sort of in a apartheid state.

And I'm wondering what your reaction is to that comment and what it tells you about how the politics on Israel have shifted. Well, look, Gavin should be for Gavin and I'm not going to weigh in on his commentary. I'll just say, look, I think that there are sort of foundational issues here that a lot of people are grappling with.

And I think a lot of people are grappling with it from an honestly held view or concern. I'll come back to the comment about, or I'll come back to answering your question about apartheid because I think that was the comment he made if I'm not mistaken.

I sort of start this conversation around the notion of the question a lot of ...

raised and I was, does Israel even have the right to exist?

Should we sort of be viewing Israel as an ally, should they even be allowed to exist?

And I would argue as someone who is desirous for peace, as someone for the last 15, nearly 20 years has been calling for a two state solution, which I realized feels very far. Wait, right now, I get that. But the idea of Israel and a Palestinian state were both recognized the other right to exist, both want to live peacefully and both recognize that the future for their children

is going to be rooted and the foundational principle will be around this idea of peace because that will allow their children to grow up in a society where they can be whatever they want to be. I want peace and for those who begin by suggesting Israel doesn't have the right to exist as a Jewish state, I think that is a recipe for permanent war.

And so I want to see peace in the region. I also do think it's sort of interesting that you've got 46 nations around the world where the majority religion is Islam, 23 of them recognize Islam as the official state religion. One has the official state religion of Judaism, and that's the one we keep talking about here.

That then leads to a broader question you mentioned apartheid, right, or that was the comment that was made.

And I would just say as we engage in that, we should first address this fundamental question

of what do we want in that region and if we really want peace and I believe you want that, then we've also got to be acknowledging that language matters here, that words matter. And then we've got to use words that are actually rooted in reality and are able to bring the temperature down to create a space for that piece, for that opportunity.

So that's how I view this entire conflict.

I would also say that it is really important that we create space which you do for dialogue that is thoughtful and dialogue that's rooted in reality and dialogue where we're precise with our words, where we're able to acknowledge there's a lot of nuance on these issues and we should debate them, and just because people have different opinions, doesn't make them a bad person.

And just because someone doesn't agree with the Netanyahu government, which I don't on many, many things, doesn't make him an anti-Semite. Just because I disagree with Benjamin Netanyahu, doesn't make me an anti-Semite in as much as because I disagree with Donald Trump, doesn't make me any less of an American patriot. So I just think we've got to be really thoughtful and careful and not just look for buzzwords

and not just sort of follow what's going to get maybe some likes on Twitter. But we've got to be thoughtful about a debate that is really, really hard to have and we've got to have it. >> Yeah, like a discussion on debate. >> Yeah.

So I'm somebody that I see that kind of blurry line between anti-Semiteism and anti-Semitism. It was genuinely shocking to see people defend Hamas or cheer the murder of James after October 7th also horrified by what I view as ethnic cleansing that Israel engaged in Gaza, the efforts to annex the West Bank, which are not only just wrong morally, but also put this idea of a two-state solution even further away make Israel a pirionation.

I think there's a lot of Jewish people who feel this conflict.

How do you think about that conflict that's sort of space between Israel we were taught to believe in growing up and the Israel that we see and how it is conducting itself?

>> I think, and I write about this a lot in my book about the first trip I've ever took

to Israel, about how important that was for me, how it helped me get closer connected to my faith and closer connected to my girlfriend who ended up becoming my wife years later. I have profound differences from the policies of Netanyahu, who's largely dominated Israeli politics for the last two or more decades. I think he and Trump have politicized and poisoned the relationship between the United

States and Israel. And I think at the end of the day that makes America less safe and undermines our national security. I look through all of this through the prism of what's best for the United States of America. The hyper politicization of these kinds of relationships with Israel or with other countries

In the realm of foreign policy, I think ultimately works to the detriment of ...

national security.

I think it's fair game to criticize the Netanyahu government and I'm one who engages in

that. You mentioned the West Bank, let me speak to that. I think what is happening in the West Bank and I've spoken about quite a bit about this, what's happening in the West Bank, where settlers are taking farms of Palestinians, are assaulting them, we're in the case of a kid from Northeast Philadelphia, Palestinian American,

killed him just a week or two ago. I've called on General Bondi to conduct a full investigation about the death of this American young person in the West Bank.

I think that that is ultimately not in Israel's long-term interest and I think the Netanyahu

government has a responsibility to stamp that out, to stop that lawlessness. And I think the American government, the Trump administration, needs to speak up on this and needs to be more of a voice of clarity, more clarity on this issue. Right, but those are two things that isn't simply not going to happen. I want to annex the West Bank and Trump and the ambassador to Israel for the United States

to talk to me, it believes we're on some sort of biblical crusades. So what those two things will not happen as long as Donald Trump is there and Benjamin Netanyahu is there. So then what is the value of beyond just calling for them to become different people? What do we do?

Well, these are the leaders that each country has chosen. I'm not going to speak to what the people in Israel chose, they'll have an election. They'll figure that. Here in the United States of America, we need to have more of a check on this administration. That's going to start in these mid-terms.

We've got to win the House of Representatives at least back and that's why I think we need

a national referendum on these policies, on Trump's policies and encourage everybody whether you're in a swing state like mine or a state that's maybe not as much of a swing state like yours here in California to get out, to vote, to make sure our voices are heard, to change the makeup of Congress and begin to put more checks in place. Pots of America is brought to you by Armra Klaunström.

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about when you were a kid. Were you a popular kid? But do you call yourself popular?

My wife would say I was like one of the cool kids, yeah, I think my coolness factor probably

has gone down since then, but yeah, I think it would have to have, I think it's based on this. You look, you're many things. I don't think you're cool. I don't think it's bad.

We don't, I don't need cool. Well, the reason I asked is because, so, and it speaks to what we were just discussing, you and your mom were advocating for Soviet Jews who were trapped in the Soviet Union. You start this organization, you're advocating a young boy manages to escape. He's at your bar mitzvah, you're speaking at your bar mitzvah, your rabbi is praising

you. All the other moms must have been just telling their sons, like boy, why wish you could be more like little Josh and Shapiro, right? You were like a star at that temple. It's a Frank Lloyd Wright temple, that's the, that's the cool, that was like the big prestigious

temple. Come on, it's a Frank Lloyd Wright temple, you were the king of the bar mitzvah boys, were you?

It was a pretty amazing moment.

My mom told me about the Soviet, I didn't know what they held the Soviet Union was. I was like a eight year old kid when she's talking to me about it. She taught me about kids that were growing up without the kind of freedoms that I just literally took for granted as a little kid here growing up. She told me about this boy named Avi Goldstein who was, you know, in this repressive regime

being held basically captive, the family wanted to leave.

My mom said we got to go to DC and we've got to advocate with our senators to...

they can do something about it.

When I remember meeting with Senator Joe Biden, I remember meeting with Senator Arlin Spector was

one of my senators from Pennsylvania and they took me to meet with Senator Ted Kennedy. I guess he was the chairman of whatever the committee was that was relevant or something. I don't know. And through their work, through my advocacy of them and their work, they were able to secure the release of the Goldstein family just a couple of days before my bar mitzvah and bring

the kid that Alkenz Park Pennsylvania we stood together and had our bar mitzvah together. I wish, John, I could say that was like my aha moment. I'm going to be a senator one day when I grow up. Man, I had no clue. This here's because I believe you.

I do believe you. However, I look, I was an ambitious smart Jewish boy, but I'm small gay and weird. So nobody said I was going to be president when I grow up, which is fine. I've accepted that, but I feel like you're your handsome, you're speaking in front of your temple, you're traveling, you're smart, weren't people saying like, boy, that Josh Shapiro.

He's going to be president. How do you wish parents were? If you, I don't know what the Jewish parents were saying, but if you would have asked my ninth grade girlfriend to go around our class and rank in order, who would be governor at the age of whatever 50, I'd probably have been dead last because I was also a screw up

and gotten some trouble and was kind of a goofball and basically you get focused on your

school. Your sister is here. She can attest to it. What was he really getting in trouble? Come on.

They're a little bit of a shrug. Come on. I think you were a good kid. I mean, I did write about how I got suspended that one time. What did you do?

I locked a kid. Oh, you locked a class. He's finger. He's finger. And the principal told my parents that I could come back to school, but I had to make a decision.

And she said it's the same decision. Her son actually had to make. Was I going to grow up? To be a good kid or was I going to grow up to get in a lot of trouble and I kind of decided to be the former not the latter.

And you've only lost one election in your life. It was your student council's place. Right. That's about that. And now, Jake Tapper is 12 in one.

12 in one. Jake Tapper actually ran and won, not in the same year. He ran and won his race.

What are the qualities that Jake has as a leader that you cannot have?

By the way, Jake had an a lot of trouble, too. His senior year of high school. I don't know if we want to get into that here. But I'm not sure. I guess Jake probably promised better soda.

Oh, he changed. The idea. More of a sort of told people what they wanted to do. I think he probably told people what they wanted to do here. Okay.

Okay. Now, freshman year of college, you run for student council president. Yeah. And you win at college at the University of Rochester as a freshman you're running for president. Yeah.

Man, actually now, I sort of fell into it. I went to college to be a doctor like my dad because I saw my dad helping people. Growing up. I thought that was the most extraordinary thing the way my parents help people and my dad. Being the local like baby doctor, right?

Every kid in our neighborhood went to see my dad and I want to be like him. I also was pretty good basketball back then. It was quick and it was good point card and I'll tell you what. I'll tell you what. That's good at sports.

Unicorn. Okay. freshman year, I flunk out of pre-med. Same day, later that day, I got cut from the men's basketball team. And that night, someone knocked on my dorm room door and said, "Hey, Shapiro, we need

somebody to run for student government."

And I'm like, "I remember that experience a couple of years ago.

I'm not doing that." He's like, "Look, do you got nothing else going on your life? You should give it a shot." I ran, I wanted for like our student senator, whatever. And immediately fell in love with it.

We had a bunch of big issues that came up, I worked hard to resolve them and then I thought it was my freshman and my freshman, I'm like, "I'll give it a shot."

And I went around and knocked on a bunch of doors on college campus, became the first freshman

to ever win, and I think that door knocking experience set me on this path. Well, because there's a strange thing we do in our culture where we like people to be ambitious, but we also want them to pretend that they just happen upon great success. There's something about, I don't know, it's the only people that are allowed to admit they want to be super famous and successful in real-house-wise.

Everybody else has to do this all-shocks routine. And you know, you say in the book, like I wanted to fish differently, I take an unconventional path, but you went from state rep to county commissioner to attorney general to governor. And I think that's a great path for an ambitious and a positive way, a person who wants to have more and more of an impact on their community, like who believes they have talents

and skills. And it seems to me like you're on a path to try to use what gifts you have to do as much good as possible, however high that can go. Is that right? Yeah.

So what you didn't say was that there were several sort of whatever you called forks in the road or whatever, where the political class, where the conventional wisdom was, Shapiro

Should run for something else, first it was US Congress, then it was United S...

And what you didn't note, when you were rattling that off, is that I didn't choose

those paths, even though that's where all the political folks thought I should go. Each step of the way what I have tried to do is to choose a path where I could have the most impact. Where I could serve the most people. And where I could use whatever talent I have to make a difference in life.

That was true when I called the vice president, Seth, and said that I was not interested anymore and being considered for the vice presidency. It was true when I called Chuck Schumer and said, "I don't want to run for the US Senate." It was true when I decided not to run for Congress.

I made some decisions throughout my career that I think the political class might look

at and say, "Why do you choose that that doesn't make any sense?" It was all rooted in kind of what you said in the crux of your question, which is, "How can I best serve? How can I best help?" Yeah.

I'm ambitious to get shit done for people. And I want to use the position that people have entrusted me with to deliver for them. You talked to Tim Alberta about the VP thing and there's this moment where you just sort of said, "She trying to sell books and cover her ass." And they were like, "Oh, I shouldn't have said that.

That was too hard."

I should just be critical on the merits.

I was like, "Oh, that was a relief to me," because maybe she is trying to sell books and cover her ass. And it's good that you can just say it. Clearly there was a real tension between in that process for VP and I'm curious, you talk about it a little bit in the book.

I'm curious where your heads on it now, because when you first get the call, you're emotional about the possibility. Very much. And you're like, "Fuck this." It was unbelievably humbling and an honor to be considered in, I mean, really, what was an incredibly

truncated period. You went through it, obviously, with President Obama. You know it was a long process, and you know everything that occurred there. This was completely different, right, given just given the circumstances to the election. And I was humbled, and I was grateful.

And to this day, I'm really thankful to the Vice President for the incredibly honest conversation that we had at her residence on that Sunday morning, you know, sitting at a small table like this, just being really direct. And what was very clear to me at the conclusion of that very honest and direct conversation

was that this was not the right fit, and it was not going to be the best way for me to serve

people. And I don't think it would have been the best way to serve her, and she deserved to have someone with her who would do it exactly the way she wanted. And that's why I telephone that evening, which was roughly on a 48 hours before she announced her decision, just to say, "Look, you got some wonderful folks.

I should not be in the mixes you consider this, and I'm going to be all in for whoever you pick." And as you know, and as I talked about in the book, when she announced him all, who's a really good friend of mine, that he was the pick, man, I showed up in Philly that night. I announced them to my hometown crowd, and I campaigned all across the country for the

two of them, and worked my tail off to help them get elected. When it'd be ironic if it turned out that Tim Walts was in Masad, that had been crazy. What a twist out there. Yeah, that would have been a twist. You really, they did.

You were, was it, wasn't it, like, there's a, is that just a box checking question? And you really think you were being asked if you were an, an operative of Israel? We went through an entire process for whatever it was on a week or so, where there are a lot of boxes being checked. This was a phone call to me roughly an hour before I walked into meet with the vice president.

And saying, "No, it's exactly what an agent of Masad would say," so I think about, before he let you go, rapid fire for Hanukkah, one big present for the kids or eight small presents. We do one. One big present, I like that.

That's better. Yeah, we did, when we were very little, we had seven tiny tiny gifts, like stickers. And then one, one. And one. It was like a chocolate.

A little similar deal. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Geofiltefish, yes or no?

Disgusting. Really? Yeah. I think that's right. Yeah.

It feels like there should be a way to fix it, but never gets fixed.

Yeah. I don't like judge people that like it. I just don't like it myself. You keep kosher. Do you have any non kosher guilty pleasure snacks?

No. No. And is there any you want to try, but can't try, is there one, maybe, if, if you got a little note that said, you know, God's closing the, not looking for it, like, you know, sort of 20 minutes.

What are we eating? Um, a philly cheese steak in Angela's and South Philly. Have you never had a philly cheese steak? No. You've never had a philly cheese steak.

Oh, you also haven't had a pork sandwich from D'next? Yeah. That's right. That's a bummer. Do you eat kosher style at non kosher places?

Would you get a sandwich from D'next that wasn't pork or do you have to eat at a

kosher establishment? No, I eat it all kinds of stuff, which I just wouldn't eat pork or meat or things like that. Okay. It's a shame. I feel like we should get, as a sister, do you keep kosher?

Wow.

Wow.

Just seeing if we can sneak you up, pork sandwich by accident, a big order, a big leg

and cheese, a little protein. Okay. Okay. What kind of bill?

Playing whole wheat, sesame, cinnamon raisin, not a big everything guy.

Okay. Yeah. Okay. Toasted. It's got to be toasted.

No matter how fresh it's got to be toasted.

That's a horrible answer. Governor Josh Shapiro. You wouldn't toast the beef? Not if it's right at the oven.

Not if it's right at the oven, you've got a beautiful fresh bacon on it.

Yeah, but you kind of have the little crispiness on top. That might be just because you're in Pennsylvania and you're just sort of, now you're going to knock Pennsylvania. Wow.

I'm just saying the quality of the beef.

Look, I mean, it may be it's a New York City thing that you would, maybe the bagels do need a toast. Okay. Maybe they do in Pennsylvania. Maybe in Pennsylvania.

You're doing the, I'm just asking. I'm just asking questions. I'm just asking questions. I'm just asking questions. Governor Josh Shapiro.

Thank you for a great time. We're talking to you. Thanks, Chuck. All right, that's our show. Thanks everybody for listening.

We will be back in your feed with a brand new episode on Tuesday.

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Go to cricket.com/friends to subscribe on Supercast, Substack, YouTube, or Apple Podcasts. Also, please consider leaving us a review that helps boost this episode and everything we do here at cricket. Pods Av America is a cricket media production. Our producer is Saul Rubin.

Our associate producer is Faris Safari. Justin Fisher is our senior producer. Rechurnland is our executive editor. Adrian Hill is our head of news and politics. The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.

Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer with audio support from Kyle Segland and Charlotte Landis. Matt DeGroat is our head of production, Naomi Sengel is our executive assistant. Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cone, Haley Jones, Ben Hefcoat, Mia Kalman, Kerala Pelevi, David Toll's, and Ryan Young.

Our production staff is probably unionized with the writer's Guild of America East. (upbeat music)

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