[MUSIC]
>> Welcome to another episode of The Open The Office. I'm John Fugelsing. Welcome to the show. We have quite an episode today. The Trump regime is losing.
“In Hungary, in courtrooms, and in the Vatican for the first time in our lifetimes,”
we see a pope and a president openly clashing, not over abortion, not over gay marriage. But over the radical controversial leftist idea that killing people in large numbers is bad. For more, let's go to the star of our show. The author of The Open The Office and the president said that people, constitutional law professor Cory Brechneiter, Cory, it is so good to see you.
Welcome back.
>> When a pleasure, John, and some of the best news we'll talk about in the second half of the show,
which is that in a regime that looked like it was destroyed. The democracy had disappeared. It's come back, and that election has got to give us hope in our own situation where we're facing a threat to democracy. And of course, this battle that's brewing between the pope and the president,
something that really seems like a kind of bad novel or something, this is our reality. And we'll see, we'll try to use it to think about what it can teach us about the role of religion, the idea of neutrality and religion in politics.
“And it's a teaching moment, as they say, a teachable moment.”
>> Yeah, there's a lot I want to get to on that. And let's get some announcements out of the way. First off, please subscribe. Everyone, please like us and subscribe. And also, over on the John Figuelsing podcast, really quick, we had a very special guest, Mr. Martin Schene,
who has joined us on stage for a sexy liberal show in the past. But he read my book, Separation of Church and Hate. And I was trying to get him on my show for a long time. I'm in LA last week, Cory, and I was talking to you the day this happened. And I said to Mr. Schene, okay, well, listen, we can do it on Zoom.
I'm happy to book you in a gorgeous space in the Hollywood studios. They're very lovely, or I can come to you. And he wanted to come to my place. And so he had his daughter drive over and we sat around the kitchen table and talked for over an hour. And he discusses everything, activism and acting and craft and talks about everything from
“working with Arthur Miller to Dorothy Day to activism and it's a really, really special conversation.”
And it's the first time I've ever done an interview with anybody around my kitchen table, who's also a former American president. So I was pretty excited to say, yeah, the transition there is seamless because our show, of course, the opening the office so deeply related to President Bartlett. And during the Bush administration, I often imagine that this really was the president.
I had an amazing moment in law school that relates to him, which is that my favorite professor and mentor who will have on this show, Larry Lessig and I were talking in his class.
And I said, I have to leave this conversation because I never missed the West Wing.
And I ran home to watch the West Wing as I always did. And the episode begins with Christopher Lloyd saying, hello, I'm Larry Lessig. Here to see President Bartlett. And it was an episode in which you're interviewing President Bartlett, interviewed my, you know, the fake version of my, my professor played by the back to the future star.
Well, it was really awkward for me because I've never heard of the West Wing. I just wanted to talk about him playing the evil president in the dead zone. I'm Greg Stilson. So it was really not the kind of interview he was ready for. So he was a, he wasn't thinking that was his best role.
Well, I'm glad you're here, professor, because, you know, I'm always happy to talk to entrepreneurs and even though we do a podcast about the Constitution, boy, boy, the founders knew that there were problems when you tried to merge church and state. And the Pope is a guy who follows Jesus, who famously had a bit of a problem with Emperor's demanding loyalty.
So, you know, we just had a very strange Easter week. We talked about it last week, Trump celebrated Easter by having a posting about violence and mass slaughter.
I always thought Easter was about a guy coming back from the dead.
Not sending lots of people to it, but Pope Leo steps up to the mic. And we've talked about this. He gives this greatest hits compilation of Jesus' teachings, blessed of the peacemakers, love your enemies, put away your sword for those who live by the sortle die by the sword, right?
Like basic stuff, Christianity 101, killing civilians is wrong. Peace requires dialogue, not bombs, right? This is very basic. It's like, it's like, wash your hands. Don't eat the silica gel.
And the president, as you know, professor went after him, called the Pontiff Week on Crime, which is great when it's a 34-time convicted felon. And he called him a failure because the Pope was quoting Jesus to impose this war. He called him a liberal. Nothing screams radical left like, don't bomb children.
And Corey, my whole thing is, being mad that a Pope won't endorse your war is like being mad that your doctor won't endorse your cocaine habit. But then Trump posts this AI photo of himself as Jesus at what appears to be...
A NASCAR resurrection halftime show and it looks like he was a doctor.
It was a doctor with light coming out of his hands and a white snake and a red sash.
He's a doctor that looked a lot like Jesus. Yeah, just like Jesus. And apparently he's healing one of the Oak Ridge boys. I don't know who that guy was in the bed. It looked like a can of monster energy drink getting baptized as what the whole thing looked up.
But Corey, you have written so extensively about protecting democracy against the authoritarianism. And it's what we talk about all the time. So what happens when power starts trying to discipline or dictate to or intimidate moral voices like this Pope?
“Yeah, I think that one of the founding ideas, of course, expressed in the free exercise,”
clause, guaranteeing free exercise of religion. And also barring the state takeover of religion. And the worry was that if you got the state involved in religion, it's going to manipulate it for its own purposes. And so our Constitution doesn't just ban and establish church.
It bans any law or really arguably even any expression by the government that suggests that there is one true or false religion. And those ideas, I think you start to see why you want them because you have a president here really trying to comment here and back down and essentially threaten the Pope by engaging in this harsh rhetoric.
The fact that he responded, I have to say from the beginning, by saying, I'm not afraid. What a moment, it really sends the message that, yes, this president of the United States is trying to impose his will on the leader of the Catholic Church. And the elegance of that way of putting it. Pope Leo is winning over a lot of fans and gluing those who aren't in here and simply by standing
“up for the truth. You know, I think in the Trump universe, the Catholic Church religion generally”
is supposed to just be apolitical, not have any comments, nothing to say. What is that, too? It requires an abandonment of any serious principles, part of religion is about the theology of the existence of God, but it also is about ethics, about human relationships. And for a religion to abandon its ethics, is asking it to abandon itself. And so through. And you know, what's happening here is that the Pope is standing up for the principles
of the Catholic Church as he understands them. He's obligated to do. And the president doesn't like it because, yes, ethics conflicts with the policies of this president, of this government. And that's inevitable. There's no such thing as a truly neutral ethics, correct? It really is an ethics. Correct. It was amazing hearing JD Vance essentially tell the Pope to stay in your lane.
You know, you remind the fact that the president's a reality show character, but the Pope he said, "Pope should stick to matters of morality." And it's like, well, uh,
“slaughtering civilians and large numbers, I think, is covered under matters of morality.”
Furthermore, Professor, these folks were never saying
church should stay out of government when they were trying to distort the Bible, no, see that Jesus opposes abortion and to take rights away from people. They piled on for that. And look, historically, poops have made a lot of mistakes. Poops have done a lot of evil things, but not being pro-war enough. It's not one of the things people usually complain about.
Cory, is there even such a thing as neutrality when the core teachings of a religion, like opposition to war, are directly contradicted by state policy? No, how could a religion be neutral? The whole idea of religion and of any ethics is that it has a set of values that it's pronouncing. Now, you know, it's one thing to be partisan, and for a religion to say,
you know, this candidate should be excommunicated or this can't, you know, we could argue about that and churches are supposed to be non-partisan. There's actually a legal requirement that they not endorse candidates from the Pope or oppose them. That's the law that creates non-profit status, and it comes from the Johnson era, in which a decision was made that we don't want churches either engaging directly in politics
or being comidiered by politicians. But that's not what's going on here. What's going on is that the Pope made a pronouncement about an ethical commitment that the president didn't like, and that was in conflict with the president's behavior, including his illegally initiated war. And, you know, that shows that the myth of neutrality can't be right, that religion stands for something. The danger is also, and I don't want to
miss this point, a president, you know, claiming that he wants neutrality, that's not really what's going on. He wants control. And so it's only neutrality that he's going to talk about when it's beliefs that are opposed to him, but when he can control it, when he could use it for its own message,
he's perfectly okay with it. I mean, it's amazing how much this conflict illustrates what the
framers were worried about, a government, comiduring religion. I have to say one personal note, which I've mentioned before on the show, but I'll mention it again, which is that my wife's grandfather
Alan Graves was a Christian ethicist wrote several books about Christian ethi...
at the Louisville seminary and a close associate of Martin Luther King, Jr. and when we think about
the civil rights movement, you can see the points that I'm trying to make. Imagine, and people did say to King, why you involved in politics? That's not your place. And of course, if you're truly an believer in ethics and an ethical philosophy, you not only find yourself in conflict with some political positions, you can't help but speak out and condemn what is immoral. And that's the point of it. I mean, since Rome co-opted Christianity and had their hostile takeover 1700 years ago,
“this has been the pattern. When you want to have state violence, you need to bring in some guy”
with a funny hat and address some clergy to sanctify state violence. And for 1700 years, you know, look at Paul O'White Kane. It's not hard to find some religious figure willing to throw Jesus under the bus in exchange for proximity to power. The whole use of messianic imagery to sanctify political power and violence isn't new. Every authoritarian movement of the 20th century wrapped themselves in God and the flag Hitler did this too. And this is how authoritarians
and we've talked about this, how they signal to their followers that their authority and their violence isn't just political. It's divine, right? So when a president is framing criticism from a religious leader as political, that's really a way of delegitimizing any kind of moral criticisms of what he's doing. Have we seen moments, Corey, where religious institutions had no choice but to confront political power? I mean, it does happen, you know, this is like, this is like what Hitler
said to Bonhoeffer when he used the Bible to pose what the Nazis were doing. Yeah, I mean,
I mentioned King already and that is incredible moment. And you know, he had to find a vocabulary
to learn how to do it. I talked about this in the presidents and the people that he begins with really straight natural law philosophy, the idea of Aquinas that an unjust law is not a law at all and reaching to the idea of the divine law giving birth to the law of nature, which then has an impact on how we should think about society. One of the stories that I tell is that there's a student actually who hears him in a debate, making these arguments and says, you know, this is going to
“grab some people, but not all people. And you have to find a way to combine your Christianity”
with a common vocabulary. And so King transforms his ideas, fundamentally, solely Christian theology to combining it with the Constitution. That's really interesting, you know, to think about the Constitution as an independent document and then a Christian ethics that supports it. But you have to be careful in how you do it. There is a movement now which we've talked about to sometimes called post liberalism that tries to really read the Constitution as a Christian
document. And King is always careful to not do that as solely or exclusively Christian
document. The other point in history that should worry us and concern us about religion being co-opted by the state is in some forms of fascism. I mean, Franko's Spain, for instance, famously used images of Catholicism of Christian imagery in order to co-opt to undermine democracy. So, you know, we have to be really careful when politicians either try to co-opt religion, including Christianity. And also when they claim somehow religious people can't have their own
independent voices or religious leaders and demand neutrality, it's always in the service of their own power. And, you know, that's where learning from this as I call it, teachable moment. And again, I wrote a whole book about this. There's two read the Christianity that have gone on for 1,700 years. You know, I haven't asked you John. I mean, you're working on a new book. I can give us a preview of how all that relates, or would you rather not. It's exactly about this. It's about
it's about Christianity and power. And it's about fake Christians. But that's not a labor life throw around casually ordinary people who am I, right? Like, I'm in Coyote ugly. I don't get to judge anyway. But, but I do use the label for those in power because you'll see a pattern throughout history that you got a spot, which is these people who used Jesus to get power. And then once they have power, they do the opposite of everything Jesus says. And then you see a Christ following resistance
like Dr. King, like the Quakers, rise in opposition. That's normally through history, how you can tell when any kind of authoritarian is co-opting religion. You'll see the Dr. King's will stand up and quote Jesus. And they usually get called communist for it, which we've seen happen to James Taloreco and Reverend Warnoch in recent weeks. You know, it's like these Christians they hate here and from Jesus. But one a political leader publicly attacks a religious figure,
“like Pope Leo, for preaching peace. Does that force religious institutions out of neutrality?”
Whether they like it or not? Yeah. I mean, it's a self-defense. Leo didn't ask for this fight. In fact, he's, I think, been very careful to try to message in a way. It's very clear about his own
Route.
You have to defend your own view, especially if it's being mischaracterized. This is happening here
where slammed or denigrated. You know, at some point self-defense of your own beliefs is necessary. And of course, Trump is getting dirty in all of this claiming, wow, the Pope's brother is a Trumper, which, you know, has some truth to it. But, you know, why are you doing that? Why are you making a call Nancy Pelosi the C word? That's who Donald Trump finds more some particle. Yeah. So that's his religious hero. The Pope's brother who happens to be a fan rather than the
Pope himself. And, you know, all of that is an attempt to denigrate Donald Trump has an office that he's denigrated and he's certainly denigrating the office that the Pope holds as well.
“Yeah. Well, I guess that's why Trump decided to photoshop himself into divinity because this”
ridiculous AI image that he put out. I mean, you got Leo saying, hey, don't worship power and money
and violence and Trump responds with, oh, good. Here's the picture of me is God. Yeah, false idols are all, that is Trump's main, main, main gig. Well, this is what, this is what made a lot of people flip out over this over the weekend. Not not the Trump's blast for me. We're used to that verbally. The guy had cops beating on the capital steps for a lie, but this whole sequence of him saying first, the Pope is bad for a positive war. And then also, I'm Jesus now.
This got a lot of people saying, oh, are we at the point where we have to start talking about the 25th Amendment? And I want to ask you about that today, Professor, because we should be getting very used to people talking about the 25th Amendment quite a bit, something that has been
discussed before, never been deployed before. Let me, let me start with the basics on this one,
“Corey, with the caveat that I don't think this is going to be used against Donald Trump. I think”
he could smear feces on a podium and they wouldn't do it. But what exactly is the 25th Amendment to the Constitution designed to do? It's designed, well, for a moment like this, where the presidency, the word, the crucial word in the 25th Amendment is unable. And an instance in which the president is physically unable to govern, on a comma for instance, to deal with a situation like that. And we've talked about the serious ailments that we now know, which will Wilson
had at the end of his life. That sort of thing is on the mind. It's crafted in the 1960s by among other people, the former dean of Ford and Law School, somebody I know well, John Fierick. It's one of the, you know, true founders of it. And he's confirmed to me something that looks to me playing from the text, but you also get a sense of, it's one of, you know, I can't ask Madison what he thought, but I can ask the founder of the, the crafter of the 25th Amendment that
it was clearly meant to for mentally unstable cases of dementia, psychological, being psychologically
“unable to govern. And that's what we're seeing in all of these tweets, the depictions of Jesus,”
the manic, true social, like a social post that are being, you know, in the middle of the night, showing you know, these are things that really make us worried that this president is unable in a psychological sense to govern. Now here's the problem with all due respect to the crafters of this amendment, including John Fierick. I think that what they imagined was that in these serious moments that people would put partisanship aside, and even members of the cabinet
would realize we've got to remove this person. We've got to stop him. And they put that as one safeguard, I think their thought was, they're not going to do it for political reasons, because they're co-partisans, but they'll rise above partisanship. So section four, requires the vice president, a majority of the cabinet, to push the president out temporarily. And then there are only a few days until Congress has to affirm the decision. And you need two thirds about the house and the
Senate just to compare it to impeachment to see why this is not workable. Right. You need for impeachment is 50% of the house and two thirds of the Senate. So this is actually a more difficult right, a tougher legal threshold for it. There's a little, let me ask about that, because there's a lot of public confusion about this. And I want to people often think it's a tool to remove a president for being unfit, but that's not what it's about. It's for being unable, correct?
Even Woodrow Wilson with his wife answering the bedroom door saying, oh, he says this, he says this while Wilson had a stroke and couldn't talk. I mean, that didn't reach the level. Well, I think it would have, I mean, you know, it's past much later. We didn't have it. But yeah, I think that is the kind of thing that they're thinking about. You know, that he was, he was physically unable to do the job. And so I think in the minds of later on, of the drafters of the amendment,
that's the kind of thing that they were thinking about. But they also were thinking about psychological illnesses, you know, or dementia, for instance, that made the president psychologically unable. And so I think there too, you know, there's a parallel. And that word unable, and again, the cabinet has to initiate it, right? I mean, and vice president. So we're talking about J.D. Vance. And you know, now, you know, if we want to really get into that would be like that. If he was in him of being ambitious
and having no core values. Yeah, maybe if he would have his moment, but, you know, the idea that
Who who is going to vote for this, you know, a headset, the world wrestling c...
the education secretary, you know, I just don't, I don't see it happening. And I think that was what was naive about the moment. They're all selfish narcissists like Trump. So they would all do it, once it became in their interest. Trump got rid of Pam Bondi and Kristi Nome once getting rid of them
was in his interest. There is no loyalty here. There's only obedience. And we've never come close
to using this in modern history. I mean, it seems like Americans are overestimating what the constitution can do on its own without that. Yeah, that's right. I mean, we do have impeachment, which has never worked. And it's an easier threshold. So, you know, the idea that this is going to work.
“But we also, I think, can talk about recrafting it, seeing that it really is an important thing”
that we should have, even though we don't have it. That's one useful reason to talk about it. I mean, like, a more flexible, like, a more flexible use for the 25th Amendment. Well, I think a lower threshold might be part of it, you know, that I don't know how I would design it, but certainly not a majority necessarily, just I wouldn't go to the cabinet. I would probably have a, well, I'll outline one feature that they did think about that hasn't been used,
which is that the amendment creates a new power of Congress, which is to create a board. Now, who would be on this board, we, you know, leaves unspecified, but I imagine, for instance, it could be psychologists who would look at the president. And again, the amendment creates a power of Congress to do this. They would look at the president's health, mental health, or physical health, and then they can make a recommendation. And the event that this legislation was passed and created
to Congress, which then would make a decision. I think that is something short of an amendment that we could do in the next Congress, assuming there's a democratic majority, is create this board of professionals. And, you know, the thought is that maybe Congress would listen, I'd the fact do you need two thirds of both houses? There are Republicans who would have done it during Joe Biden's term quarry. I don't see them ever doing it again. One problem, I mean, this is an interesting
question, John, and constitutional design, because they're always as this danger of overreach
“and of politicization. And that's what they were worried about in the 25th amendment. It's why”
it's so hard to remove a president. They're worried about that kind of situation in which it's it's partisan, rather than based on health. But I guess my view is, you know, what we've seen with this Trump presidency is that the danger of a mentally unstable, to say the least, president, who is aggressive, controlling the Commander in Chief Power, nuclear weapons is so dangerous that I'd rather risk that it would be overused rather than underused. And if you look
at the fact that, as you said, and point it out, it's never been used. And the fact that impeachment actually has never been fully used. We've had majority impeachments in the house, but never two thirds in the Senate. I think we've got to make it easier in some way to remove a president. And so this is one serious possibility. Well, and as I learned from you, impeachment is there because they wanted an alternative to assassinating a president. So I think, yeah, but I'd like
“to have more options, please. All right, more options, please. We've got to take a break when we”
come back, Victor Orbans defeat and what it means for democracy around the world and here, too, with this is the oath in the office. "Can I not be a dictator?" I said, "No, no, no other than day one." How did Donald Trump turn the presidency into a king? Well, it didn't start with him. It was the goal of a decade's long master plan. When the president does it, it is not illegal.
"I'm the decider, and I decide what is best." "Where they won't act, I will." I'm David Sarota from Belever. On our new season of the award-winning master plan podcast,
we uncover the stealth plot to create an all-powerful president, or as some call it,
the unitary executive. The unitary executive. The unitary executive. Our journalists reveal the hidden scheme to eliminate checks and balances, crush democracy, and turn government by the people into government by one man. "I have to write to do whatever I want as president." Check out master plans season two, the king makers. Visit masterplanpodcast.com or search master plan in your podcast app to start listening right now.
If you found yourself asking, and the president really do that, then check out the new season of you might be right. Hosted by former Tennessee governor's Phil Bredison and Bill Haslam. Recently featured as a mustless and podcast by Spotify, you might be right as the chart-topping politics podcast tackling timely policy conversations with world and U.S. luminaries like Al Gore, Judy Woodruff, and more. You'll hear balance
perspectives without the shouting matches found in mainstream news. If you need a place to start, check out their recent episode that poses the question, should a president be able to take control of a state's national guard to restore order, even if a governor disagrees. It's a thoughtful debate featuring Rosa Brooks, former senior advisor at the U.S. Department of Defense, and John
U.
federalize the national guard and the unique role of the guard plays in times of crisis,
and it's well worth the listen. So follow you might be right on Apple podcast, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast and tell them that I sent you. There is a lot, I mean a lot going on in the news around our government and our laws, and there's one question we hear all the time. Is this constitutional? If you don't remember all the civics classes, you may have taken in school, you can get the answer to that question, and many others by listening to civics 101,
the claim podcasts from New Hampshire Public Radio. Civics 101 is an entertaining way to learn about how our government works, or at least how it's supposed to work, and you'll hear a lot of surprising stories along the way. Hosted by Hannah McCarthy and Nick Capoteche, civics 101 will help you understand a bit more about what's going on, and maybe even make you a smarter citizen. You can listen to civics 101 wherever you get your podcasts and tell them the other in the office
sent you. Well, the back to the other in the office, I'm John Fugle, saying along with Professor Corey Brechneiter, Corey, there are a few things more satisfying than watching and AutoCraft,
“who spent 16 years rigging the game. Lose the game anyway, but that's what just happened to Victor”
Urban, Europe's longest running audition for elected dictator. Now leaving after Hungarian
voters finally said, we've seen enough. Thank you. The quite conservative Peter Baggar,
buried this 16 year regime in a landslide. And as we've discussed in the past Professor, Urban was really a case study in 21st century illiberal regimes. He wasn't just a leader. He was the system. Tell me if this sounds familiar. For over a decade, his party pulled a complete takeover. They purged his judiciary. They built an obedient media, rewrote the laws to get rid of guardrails, and they pushed an overtly racist anti-woke crusade and elections.
They were more curated. Does it sound familiar? Yes. What stands out the most to you, Professor, about what just happened in Hungary? Look, the first thing is to say that there's a lot of hope, that there's so much despair. You know, I think that one of the, we have to be honest about what's happening, but of course, one of the entire points of doing this podcast is to give people hope
“that as our constitution is threatened, that we can recover. And so that's what this does.”
It's an example. Arguably, that's worse than what we're living through right now, and that you really did have a dictator. You had legislation, not just executive action, but legislation, really viciously discriminating against gay people, against transgender people. And yet, despite what was arguably a collapse of democracy into a dictator, the people rose up and they push back. Now, this isn't a progressive leader. It's a conservative, but it is a rejection without question
of authoritarianism, of putonism. And hopefully, of this vicious anti-civil rights agenda, a lot of couched in terms of religion, I should say, that a lot of the Christian theater crats in the United States who are advising J.D. Vance have been over there, advising us, and that was, and in fact, of course, J.D. Vance himself has been over there campaigning for or whatnot. So there are close parallels, and yet we came back. One of their big point, which really should give us hope,
is some of the worst jerrymandering that you can imagine happened in hunger, and as bad as the jerrymandering is here, they still overcame it with a landslide. Orban's party has really, you know, it's outvoted almost two to one in this election, or about two to one, I should say. And yet, you know, the jerrymandering didn't work, and that's true here too. They can try to rig the election. They can try to intimidate voters, but if we come out in force against this authoritarian moment,
democracy can prevail, and this is a shining example of it. You're right. I mean, the voters were still able to remove them after all of this rigging, and after the whole authoritarian cinematic universe, showing up for this guy. I mean, Putin and Trump and Marco Rubio goes over there, and J.D. Vance goes over there, and yet these heavily tilted systems can still be overthrown through democracy. And is this, oh,
“do you view this as kind of a weakening of the unitary executive theories power right now?”
Because I think Orban was kind of a template, you know? This model we've talked about for a certain kind of a leader, you win elections, you you undermine the institutions, you rewrite the rules to rig the system, you call it democracy. And for years, that model worked until it didn't, because I think there's a fatal flaw, Cory, and every strong man regime. At some point, you're run out of people to blame. And Orban blamed immigrants and liberals and journalists and
academics and gay people always in other villain. Until one day, you know, the only thing left
Between the voters in reality is you, dictator, how important was civil socie...
organizing, an independent media in making this outcome possible? You know, it is what did it, and you know, when we see the no kings rally and we see people in the streets, that is part of setting the moment. I mean, let's not underplay the way he responded, because he realized that he wasn't going to through a normal democratic process remained in power. And so like Trump, he tried to cheat, and that Jerry Mandarin was a way of trying to undermine
the normal vote of the will of the people. And yet, but this is a truly inspiring thing. It's despite all the cheating it didn't work, that the force of resistance was so strong, that it wasn't just a normal democratic will. It was a reaction, really, of almost the entire
“society rejecting that cheating, rejecting that authoritarianism. And that's what I hope that we see here too,”
you know, the unitary executive theory, although as much as I disagree with it, it was never
designed for dictatorship, but it might lead to dictatorship. And it might lead to a president who tries to nationalize elections in order to cheat. But how can we overwhelm that? Maybe even in Texas, you mentioned, hopefully future Senator Tareliko, through, you know, speaking the truth, through galvanizing support, and even in the face of Jerry Mandarin, you know, the Senate election will be the entire state, but even in the Texas Senate elections, even though they've tried to
Jerry Mandarin, you know, say about five seeds, you know, if we can overwhelm them with force, those fleets might actually not all go in the direction that they were designed to go in. I think one of the takeaways that's kind of a hard pill to swallow for folks on the left is that this was done because they knocked out a right-winger with a conservative. You know, there's this impression, I think that Magiar is somehow this liberal reformer. He is not
in any way. He'd be considered quite conservative in our country right now. And it took all the liberals and progressives in Hungary to hold their nose and vote for the lesser of two evils. And I know that this is tantamount to a sin voting for the lesser of two evils. I get it. Believe me, I voted
third-party several times, but to me, the greater evil is not voting. That's the greater of all
“evils. And sometimes the only thing that works in a democracy is voting for the least harmful”
candidate. And then beating them up every day. I mean, for all its flaws, Corey, democracy seems to have one really inconvenient feature for authoritarians. It allows people to change their minds. Do you see this having a ripple effect around the world, including here? Yeah, you know, just to get into the hungry case a little more, yes, the newly elected leader was ally of Warbon. And then turned on him. And of course, the worry is that even though we've
gotten rid of Warbon, we haven't gotten rid of authoritarianism. And the trick here, I think, is that the constituency that brought him to power has to continue to speak out against authoritarianism. Some of the chanting that I heard and media reports that they were showing was yelling, you know, rush out, Putin out. And, you know, that's the reason he was elected. And so that's not the end of the story. And that's true here, too. I mean, as you know, I think that we need to have a movement.
We have a movement, the no-kings movement, in favor of restoration of our constitution. And whoever the next president is progressive or moderate Republican or Democrat, that movement has to demand from them and end to the Trumpian authoritarianism that we're seeing. That won't come from Trump,
“it won't come from shady vans. We need to replace them. But, you know, that's what we've got”
at demand. My hope, I don't know how hopeful it is. But, you know, one real question with the given the last discussion that we had, the weakening of JD vans, is that Republican primary might be more open than we realize. Oh, very much. That there'll be some sensible, moderate candidate of this kind that might emerge. That can only be good for democracy and not likely me. You know what's going to happen is JD vans is going to try to run as the guy who was really
against the Iran war all the time. Yeah, it just didn't do anything about it and Tucker Carlson
is running for president as the douchebag conservative who's always against the Iran war. I mean,
it's that the ads are already are already written and I'm already not just saying that out loud. Let me bring it back here to some interesting news because you remember a few months ago when Rupert Murdoch in his Wall Street Journal posted that birthday card that Donald Trump made for Jeffrey Epstein's 50th birthday in 2003 because Murdoch will push the propaganda about Trump being great on his TV channel and he'll tell the truth about what Trump is to his peers in the Wall Street
Journal. So Trump sued him for $10 billion. The Madhu probably did more to help him become president than any other person next to Putin. So this week, U.S. District Judge Darren Gales, a Barack Obama and pointy dismissed Trump's $10 billion defamation lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal. It's not often I find myself rooting for Rupert Murdoch in any kind of conflict, but Professor Gales said Trump came nowhere close to proving the Journal had actual malice. When publishing
This story about the tacky birthday card, this is the one with the nude woman...
that he and Epstein share a wonderful secret. So I want to ask you about that. How Trump came
“nowhere close to proving actual malice. What does that standard actually require in plain English?”
Well, there is thankfully a case of Supreme Court case that extends the first amendment to worry
about cases like this where powerful people are going to try to use lawsuits in order to basically
sue people into silence and to have a chilling effect of scaring them from even speaking out in the first place. And I mentioned Martin Luther King Jr. before. This is related case. It's about civil rights organization connected to King. I had a newspaper ad that condemned a Southern police chief. And there were some mistakes in the ad unintentional, but they were there and under the normal law of liable saying a falsehood about somebody could get you sued.
But what the Supreme Court sensibly said is when public figures are involved and when it's an issue of public concern and that certainly was an issue of public concern, we have to be more careful and more protective of the right of people even to make unintentional mistakes. So the way that
they create the law is you can still be sued if you're really intentionally lying about somebody
intentionally trying to be malicious against them. So now to go to this moment, the Wall Street Journal publishes this information about Trump in an Epstein. And thankfully what the court says is there's no case here because even if they were you know we could look into whether there were some mistakes
“here and that's what Trump is claiming. But even if they're mistakes it's not malicious. They believe”
that this is true information. It is. So the law is functioning as it should, one last caveat, it's a great outcome. This is a lower court. The Supreme Court has flirted with the idea that maybe Trump is right after all and thinking as he said from the beginning that the liable laws ought to be changed. In fact that's what he said from the beginning and has considered that maybe this case and the ideas that I talked about of requiring actual malice allowing for a vast amount of
free speech to be free from lawsuits, maybe it's all wrong. And the Supreme Court is flirting with that right now. I kind of love that he attacked the Pope for using Jesus' words against him and then
attacked Rupert Murdoch for using his own words against him. And I get it. This is a $10 billion
lot. I mean that was that wasn't a legal strategy. It was all political messaging. But does this ruling reinforce the first amendment protections for the press even when the reporting is controversial or embarrassing? It's an important moment. It's draws on this case from decades ago that still with us for now, thankfully. And it shows how important it is that we have a first amendment. We've had periods in our history. One thing that New York Times was the Sullivan clearly is
as a review against John Adams and the Cedition Act when the opposition party was shut down. And here, you know, the court, this lower court anyway is saying, no, the president can't use his threat of lawsuits in order to silence people. And thank God for that because that's what we need in a moment in which we have an authoritarian president, our voices to criticize him. Free from both fear of imprisonment, you know, which he's tried to shut down and his attempted prosecutions
of political opponents, like Latisha James and James Komi. But also, we shouldn't have to fear that we're going to lose our income, lose our money, become bankrupt because we engage in free
“speech. And that's why this is so important right now. That first amendment turns out to be a crucial”
part of democracy. Can I just ask a dumb, layperson question, what does it mean that the judge dismissed the case now before it even went to trial? There's no realistic path for an appeal, right? It means that, you know, judges will do this when, you know, the point of a trial is to find out facts and to see how those facts might influence the decision. So with the judges really saying is, as a matter of law, there's nothing that's even possible here that he's going to win on. And here's
the point, and this is why I went through that case, even if he can show Trump that the Wall Street Journal published falsehood's about him. Let's just assume that it doesn't matter because what you have to be able to show is actual malice that they were intentionally trying to harm his reputation and publish falsehoods. And that's, there's no possibility she was saying of that happening here. Okay, we got to take another break. When we come back, believe it or not, they found another way
this administration to persecute transgender children because they're fighting so hard to keep those gas prices low. Back in just a moment on the oath in the office. Welcome back to the oath in the office. I'm Fughal Sang joined by Professor French Knighter, Corey, the Trump administration pulled out of civil rights settlements that were backing transgender students. The Department of Education, which is still there, it's terminating settlements
With different school districts, essentially requiring the school officials t...
with federal anti-discrimination laws or conflicting state laws. And this is all in line with
Trump's executive order that the government only recognizes sex assigned at birth as a person's official gender because these people believe in one thing and it's punching down on minorities weaker than them. Now, the Education Department says there's no precedent for terminating civil rights settlements like this. How extraordinary is this move legally? Look, the executive order itself is arguably a contradiction with the requirement of the
1964 Civil Rights Act. It's commitment to equality in terms of sex when it comes to employment, but also other protections including title nine. And I think it is deeply unprecedented, deeply problematic, John, because look, the executive order, I think is unjust and we could talk about ways in which it's deeply misguided, but usually executive orders are meant to look forward. But what this policy does is it interprets the executive order to rewrite the past and to go in
“undo past settlements against those who violated civil rights. And that's what's so unusual about it.”
And one of the problems with retroactive decision making is people have relied on those decisions. They've come to accept them and going forward, okay, we can argue about that, but there's a particular kind of injustice besides the abandonment of civil rights that's part of the executive order. That's what you do. That's a problematic here. Can a new administration just undo prior civil rights agreements? I mean, there's legal limits of that kind of power, right?
He had to stack the courts before he could take rights away in the case of Roe V Wade. I hope there'll be a lawsuit about this. We'll see. It's an executive action at this point trying to undo these settlements. There'll be litigation I imagine. But I should say too, regardless of whether that succeeds. The idea of the rule of law is that we don't change things after the fact. And that's what's going on here. This retroactivity of rewriting the past is fundamentally unfair.
And it is certainly against the spirit of the law. And it's consistent with what this administration is all about. I have to say too, it shows you one of the things we talk so much about is the danger of executive power. And here we have the executive, really, abusing its power, you know, circumventing the courts. It's not doing this through courts, just undoing what past presidents did. You know, that isn't abusive of that power, but it also shows how massive it is.
But I mean, what are the constitutional implications if schools are effectively forced to choose
“between getting our federal funding and complying with their own state-santi discrimination laws?”
I mean, this is bullying schools into bullying the most bullied of all children. Yeah. And I should say too. I mean, to abstract out this administration's attack on transgender
rights goes beyond what so many conservatives believe. I mean, there's an amazing case called
Boastock, which is about a different issue, but a related one does the 1964 Civil Rights Act ban on discrimination in employment applied to gay and transgender people. And, you know, conservatives like Alito said discrimination based on sex doesn't include transgender people. But yet the majority led by Justice Gorsuch said, you know, what sex discrimination and transgender discrimination are the same thing. Right. And here you see, you know, the opposite.
That's not now, right? Your title line is going to be the basis of the lawsuits then. I mean, the prohibition on sex discrimination. That's going to be what the appeals are about. No? Yeah. There. I guess the administration's view is the opposite of what I just said. You know, that somehow protecting transgender people is sex discrimination. I don't even understand it.
You know, but they are always reversing. They're making up down and down up. Think of what
they do in civil rights. They took a law that was meant to be about racial subordination, of black Americans throughout history and the corrective to it, and made it a white rife's bill. And, you know, look at the policies of the Department of Justice. So, that's their, their game, you know, that they flip on its head with civil rights protections are supposed to be. So, what would sensibly be interpreted as protections for transgender people become weapons against them.
What was meant to be tools against discrimination for black Americans become weapons against them? And we really are seeing the reversal of civil rights by this administration. And here again, not through litigation out through courts through executive action. Real men don't use power to beat up on people weaker than them. Real men use power to lift up people and groups that are
“weaker than them. And that's how we know these aren't real men. But let me close this out by asking”
Corey, what does this mean in practical terms for these transgender kids who are already already in such a tough spot in a culture that despises them for being who they are,
Where the rates of mental illness and depression and suicide are so high, not...
transgender because of how society treats them. I mean, will protections be weakened immediately,
or is this going to play out slowly in the courts? I mean, I think it's grim in the near future, because if you think about it, you know, some of the most vulnerable transgender people are students. And they're in schools where there is an obligation of the school to protect them.
“And that's what these past settlements were about. Schools that we're failing to do so being”
reprimanded by the Department of Justice and getting them to agree to respect transgender kids.
And to protect their safety is often what we're talking about. And here the administration and coming in and on doing these agreements that are aimed at student safety really are putting children at risk. And that's why, as is true, so many of the things that we're talking about on this
“show, it is the evisceration of many of the gains in civil rights for transgender kids that we”
had before. You know, schools are where a lot of this happens. There are contained environments. We trust as parents that the schools are going to be protecting our kids. And I worry that the immediate effect here is really putting people in danger. Well, Corey, I am grateful to you as
always for talking me off a ledge on all these matters. And I want to ask Professor, what is the best
“way for our listeners to follow you and keep up with your brilliance the rest of the week?”
Well, I'm so grateful to our amazing listeners. We have just consistently, we were top three last week in Apple Podcasts. And we posted that and the reviews keep coming in, the five star reviews, and the comments on Apple, or Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. There's also a YouTube channel, the oath in the office, YouTube channel, and a sub-stack. The oath in the office sub-stack. So find us on one of those places. Right on. Professor, thank you so much. I want to thank
everyone who puts the show together, Wendy and Bea Wolf. And of course, I want to thank all of our deeply attractive listeners. Please subscribe. Please share. Please tell your friends. And thank you guys so much for taking this journey with us. I'm John Feekel, saying along with Professor Brechneider, and we will see you next time on the oath in the office.


