Jon Stewart & Pete Buttigieg on Tariffs, Trump Chaos and the Democrats’ Future | The Weekly Show

2.04M views14275 WordsCopy TextShare
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
As the economy reels from Trump's sweeping tariffs, Jon is joined by former Transportation Secretary...
Video Transcript:
JON STEWART: I've heard very little consistent logic. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Why would-- why bother with that? [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: Oh, why tell the people? PETE BUTTIGIEG: It's not their problem. [ROCK MUSIC] JON STEWART: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Weekly Show podcast. My name is Jon Stewart. It is touring this April 8th. I always tell you now the day that we're taping this because of the velocity by which change occurs in this nation, which is becoming great again by leaps and bounds. Now, you may say to yourself, OK, occasionally we take a step or two back,
but clearly, moving in the right direction. So this comes out Thursday. So by then, we could be at war with China. Or more likely, I think President Trump will do the thing that he always does. And I use this analogy with Rahm Emanuel on the show, but I think it's instructive to say it again here. I used to have a dog who would eat things on his own volition. This was not-- he was not encouraged to do so. He would eat grass, and sticks, and whatever he could find outside, inevitably. He had a delicate stomach.
He is my dog, after all. I don't-- that's how we knew we were each other's soulmates. My-- the way I process lactose is the way he processed everything that he would eat from the outside. He would become nauseous. He would vomit. And then before I had a chance to get the towels, he would lap it up, clean it up, and then he would look at me like, hey, huh? Buddy, I did you a favor, right? Can I get a treat? And I would always think, like, no, that was your-- you made a mess. And yes,
you did clean it up. But I to tell you something. You didn't clean it completely up. You left damage, residue, things like that. And that is what Trump will do. I, I-- he will come out and be like, oh, the nuclear bomb I dropped on the economy, it worked. Vietnam has decided that they're going to make a deal like nobody's ever seen before. And, and that's going to be the way that this thing off-ramps, you would imagine. Because these guys are, I mean, between the signal chats and the trillions in the economy, and firing people
at the FAA, and nuclear commissions, they are forgetting the first rule of authoritarian regimes, which is you kind of have to get shit done right. That's-- I think that's the whole point, isn't it? We, we let them disappear people because they do shit right? That is that how things go? Then you get to wear-- I'm waiting for Trump to come out and wear the jacket with the epaulets or whatever it is that those guys like to do, come up with a nickname. But you, you got to live up to that end of the bargain, from
what I understand. But it's been a very interesting-- and we've been spending a lot of time talking with some Democrats about where they see this thing going and their frustrations. And there's someone that I really wanted to talk to about it, because I find that he's so articulate and, and well versed. He's, he's been an executive as a mayor. He's been within administrations. He was a consultant. He's well versed in a lot of different aspects of it, and he's one of the few people who's able to articulate those experiences in such a great way. So
I'm just going to get to our guest for today's program. Here he is. [ROCK MUSIC] Ladies and gentlemen, our guest today, very excited. Our former Secretary of Transportation, Mr. Pete Buttigieg, is joining us now. Pete, look at you with the scruff. What, are you not working for a month or two, and you're growing out the beard now? PETE BUTTIGIEG: You started it. JON STEWART: That is-- that is true. PETE BUTTIGIEG: No, I-- yeah, you know, it's very rare in my former life that I could go more than a day without shaving. So we just had
a little family vacation. I took advantage, and I'll let it go with it for a little while. We'll see. JON STEWART: What is-- you know, I'm always curious, leaving the government in the way that you, you guys had, right, it's a incredibly intense experience when you're in the government at that high a level and you're managing things at that high a level, and then that moment when you kind of pack up and leave. What is that feeling like? I assume, in some ways, almost maybe like the experience you had leaving the military. Or, you know,
you're sort of now-- you've been running at 120 miles an hour. And then suddenly, it's-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, yeah. And it's funny you mention it. I mean, redeployment is the only thing I could compare it to professionally that was so sudden and so total. I mean, this is a department with 55,000 people. Anything happening anywhere in the country, or sometimes anywhere in the world, could be on your desk in a matter of minutes. And then one day, you know, it's 12:00 o'clock, and you're done. And you're just like, I guess-- I guess I should, you
know, feed the dog now. [LAUGHTER] You know, it's a strange feeling. JON STEWART: You hadn't fed the dog? PETE BUTTIGIEG: No, I was already feeding the dog. But, but suddenly, all these-- all these things are in the house start to loom larger, right? You realize all these things you've been neglecting. Obviously, I was leaning a lot on my husband Chasten the whole time, you know, had had, like, a wonderful family that, as anytime you're in a job like this, supports you and makes it possible. Then you realize you're kind of making up for lost time.
Like, suddenly, it's like, you know, it's my turn to do the laundry for a very, very long time after the way the last four years went. But it's been great. I'm, you know, I'm spending a lot more time with the kids. They're 3 and 1/2 right now, and it's a-- JON STEWART: 3 and 1/2. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Great time to be, but it's a very hands-on time. Like, it's, you know, it's demanding. So I'm living into that. And at the same time, of course, you don't stop caring about everything you used to work on and everything
you still care about as a citizen. JON STEWART: Oh, that's got to be so hard. To have had your hands in that pie and to have had some control over it, and then to watch things happen where you no longer have any agency in that must be very frustrating. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, I mean, it cuts both ways, though. Right? I mean, the other thing is, you don't have-- I no longer have to turn the ringer of my phone on, you know, off of vibrate so I can get the call in the middle of the night.
JON STEWART: You can silence those notifications now. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, yeah, which it took me a while to realize that I was actually allowed to do that, as long as I knew where Jess and the kids were. But-- JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Of course, you still feel a huge ownership of things. I mean, just after dropping off the kids, I saw a road project going on here in Michigan and stopped to talk to the guys, because it was one of the projects that we funded. I want to see how it was going. And yeah,
I'm very invested in it. But on the other hand, if something goes wrong with it, that's not on my desk anymore. I care about it. So, you know, but I think all of us are, at the same time, obviously, just very, very alarmed about what's happening around the country. And I think the strange thing for those of us who've left the cabinet or left government is being just as concerned as ever, but obviously, having a very, very different role. JON STEWART: Right. Now, in terms of the role in the house, I found, like, after I
left the show and was home for a bit, that apparently, I was unaware of all the protocol in the house. So everything I did that I thought was incredibly helpful was like, actually, that's not the way we do things around here. Oh, is that what you're going to do with the laundry? You're going to bring it down there and do it that way? Because that's not the way we do things around here. Like, in the same way that you get onboarded into the government, did you have to get onboarded back into the house, where they're
like, actually, that's not what we do at dinner, we do something different? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Oh, yeah, there was a whole fight this morning, because the kids were fighting over how many toys they were allowed to bring in the van with them while I was taking them to school. [LAUGHTER] And it turned out that, like, dad-- I'm Papa. Chasten is Dad. I was informed that dad had established a clear policy on this. And they were litigating it between each other. And I was not helping with my intervention until I understood that there was a rule. Yeah,
there's a lot of stuff that turns out that the standard operating procedures were not written down. But the kids will remember. They will never let you forget anything. Any daylight between one parent and the other, right, on the teeniest policy thing about-- I don't know. It could be anything. Toys, candy, yeah, they hold you accountable. JON STEWART: You thought international diplomacy was difficult. But trying to figure out the toy situation in the van, that can create-- by the way, speaking of tantrums, how are you absorbing this new tariff regime in the world? I would imagine
you wouldn't argue the point that the idea of renegotiating certain trade barriers, or those types of things wouldn't be a worthy pursuit. I imagine you would take issue with the table overturning tantrum way of doing it. How are you absorbing this general shock? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Look. I grew up in Northern Indiana. I live in Michigan. Like, I get what the wrong kind of trade has done to the industrial Midwest, because I grew up surrounded by collapsing factories. And part of that was because of technology. Part of that was because of automation. You know, part of
that was because of trade and the way it was handled. And we spent the last, I think, 30 years coming to a new understanding as a country about what we need to do. And sometimes that means tariffs. Look. The last administration, there were tariffs. But tariffs are supposed to be a tool, a political and economic tool, in order to get some kind of advantage for the people you serve. This is not that. Because in order for it to work, first of all, you have to know what you're doing. It was a conservative think tank just
found out that there was just a basic math error in how they came up with these numbers. JON STEWART: They divided the deficit and then the goods, and that's-- isn't that reciprocal tariffs? PETE BUTTIGIEG: No! JON STEWART: That's not how it's done? PETE BUTTIGIEG: It's not, it turns out. And that actually matters when trillions of dollars depend on, first of all, what you do, and secondly, how you do it. Is it consistent? Do people understand? When people are making decisions right this minute, small businesses are deciding whether to go through with an order or not.
Businesses of all sizes are deciding whether to make an investment or not, whether to hire somebody or not. You know, I already talked to a lot of people. I spend a day, a week at the University of Chicago talking to students. A bunch of them, these seniors that are graduating, got job offers. Then they got the job offers withdrawn, right? There was already tons of uncertainty about hiring. That was before the tariffs. And that's true whether you're a college graduate looking to get a job at a bank or something. It's true whether you're, you know,
hoping as a construction worker that a project is going to go forward near you. The investment's not just numbers on a page. These are decisions that very quickly go to our everyday lives. So the biggest things I'm watching is, one, of course, how hard is this going to hit us in terms of prices. That's the immediate thing. I mean, you know, a tariff is a tax. The price we pay goes up. JON STEWART: Will it be priced or so? Because as you collapse the economy, nobody will purchase anything. So maybe the way this works is,
sure, it raises the prices of certain things. But what if we, we won't buy anything if consumption goes down so, so drastically? PETE BUTTIGIEG: That gets you to number two. The other thing I'm really watching is the jobs part, right? Like, what's this going to do to people's jobs? You know, it's hard enough to have those price increases if you continue to have a full employment economy, right, one where, more or less, it's true that if you want a job, you can get a job. It's a whole other thing to deal with that kind of
elevated prices, inflation, at the same time as you're dealing with a recession. And now, a recession has gone from being viewed as pretty unlikely a year ago or even three months ago, to being viewed as better than a coin flip by most of the people who have spent their lives figuring out whether we're likely to go into recession or not. It is a frightening cocktail, especially for people who are living close to the edge, who are paycheck to paycheck, who weren't sure whether they're going to be able to-- right. Look, if you're a billionaire, if
you're like most of the people in the president's cabinet right now, or a multimillionaire, like most members of the US Congress, then OK. This may not be your problem overnight. JON STEWART: You can ride it out. If you're a billionaire, you can probably ride it out. PETE BUTTIGIEG: You'll probably be OK. Right? JON STEWART: Yeah, maybe. PETE BUTTIGIEG: But for so many people, this is not a game. This is not just something that's of interest because you like watching the news. Like, this is people's lives. And obviously, with the stock market taking the turn that
it has the last few days, that's people's retirements. And that's not just, you know, people sitting on giant trust funds. That's, that's ordinary people who've been saving up all their lives. JON STEWART: Do you find it interesting, you know, when you see certain interviews or things where the reporters go out into to the world? The people that are oftentimes most vulnerable to it seem to be the ones that are most OK with it. So it's-- you know, when they talk to people that are in, you know, the shrimp boats down in Louisiana, or the, the,
like you say, certain factory towns in Indiana, I think there's a certain feeling amongst them that the system is so rigged, and we've been screwed over for so long, that fuck it. Like, burn it down. And I find that to be-- it's almost faith based. They have faith that, that, oh, he knows what he's doing, and this is exactly how it's supposed to go. Now, someone else might look at it and think, you're not really giving us a coherent explanation as to how the manufacturing is going to come back. It's certainly not magic people have
to trust to reinvest that kind of money. And look. When manufacturing went from 30% of the economy to 10% of the economy, yeah, that, that's a problem. What are we aiming to bring back? Do you have a sense of what the internal logic is? Or are we fighting a war that was fought, you know, in the '50s, and it's not the future, it's the past? What-- in your mind, how is this calculation going? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Well, I think the spirit of it is they want to turn back the clock. Right? That's the motto, make America
great again. I think the reality is it's never about again when you're talking about how to survive and thrive in an economy that's changing like it is right now, when you're facing the way China is right now, when you're facing AI and things like this. But I think their spirit is about, yeah, let's just get things back to what they were. But the mechanics of it are all over the place, I think, because you have a bunch of people in the same White House, same administration, same team who ferociously disagree with each other. Right? I
mean, you see the latest thing is this fight between Peter Navarro and Elon Musk. But it's going to be some new version of this every day. Look. Part of what you have is very old fashioned Republican policy, even now, right? It is about tax cuts for the rich. And quietly, that is still probably the number one in dollar terms. The number one economic policy that they're working on right now is the trillions of dollars. JON STEWART: Are they still going through? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Totally. Yeah, it didn't get a lot of attention, but-- JON STEWART: The
$5 trillion, that's still going through. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And let's be clear. There's a relationship here, right? And a few of them in moments of weakness have admitted it. Because you might think, OK, tax cuts for the rich, that's old fashioned Republican policy. JON STEWART: Sure, the dogma, the trickle down there, baby. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And then tariffs, that's the populist Trumpism that's blowing it all up. Right? JON STEWART: Correct. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And those two schools of thought are duking it out. But there is a certain connection here, which is tariffs are a tax. Taxes bring in
revenue. And there are clearly some people in this White House who think that they can use the money they're going to get from the stuff that we're buying at Target that costs more, that have that tax on it-- JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: --to substitute for some of the revenue we're not going to get out of the, the taxes on the wealthy that they're moving to cut. JON STEWART: Oh my God, it almost seems like they have a plan. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Right? There is a relationship here. There's a reason why some conservative Republicans who never
liked tariffs might swallow them right now. Because if their number one priority is tax cuts for the rich, and they can look to Trump to deliver that, they know he will because he did before. And you got another group who are saying, look, our priority is tariffs. They can get that through. Maybe the grand bargain that's being made here-- and, you know, some of them again have, have talked in these terms-- is OK, basically, if you look at the tax burden of how the things they're still willing to have, I mean, look. Obviously, they're cutting
a lot of stuff. They're cutting the cancer research, and the people who answer the phones, and Social Security. JON STEWART: Sure. Well, who needs that? That's-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: You know, VA staff, right? But, but the stuff they're not going to cut, like national defense, has to get paid for somehow. JON STEWART: Not only not going to cut. He just proposed a trillion-dollar defense budget. Trillion. PETE BUTTIGIEG: So how are you going to do that? Well, if less of that is being funded by taxes on the wealthiest and on corporate profits, then more of it, at
least proportionally, will be funded by everybody going to the store and paying more because of tariffs, which is happening literally this week. And then the rest is deficits. JON STEWART: Now, as you watch this, as someone who has-- look. McKinsey and you understand that, the consultant side of it. You understand the mechanics of it. Are you seeing the matrix on this from them? Because one of the things that I think is-- whether they're right or wrong, people make bets on, you know, every administration has their idea of how they're going to stimulate the economy, how
they're going to raise the money. The one thing that I've been almost more shocked at by anything is an inability to coherently communicate what the idea is and what the plan is, other than everything's unfair to the United States, and we're not going to take it. We're not going to be the world's whipping boy, even though, for the most part, this is the world we created post World War II, and policed. But, but no longer will we be the patsy. I've heard very little in the way that you're describing it now, consistent logic. PETE BUTTIGIEG:
Why would-- why bother with that? [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: Oh, why tell the people? PETE BUTTIGIEG: It's not their problem. They don't view an honest conversation about the finer points of policy as something they need to slow down and do. They're-- right? Move fast and break shit. Do it our way. And if some people get hurt along the way, OK. But it's all in the service of the bigger vision. But I don't think-- honestly, I don't think they believe that they have to justify what they're doing to the American people, even to the people who voted
for them. They just don't think that that's their problem. Why do you think they're so hostile to the media? Right? JON STEWART: Are you talking about the fake news lamestream media? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Well, yeah. Right? I mean, there's very little interest in working through, you know, one person admitted a mistake, right, where they, like, sent the wrong guy to El Salvador. JON STEWART: Yes. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And what did they do? They fired the guy who admitted it. JON STEWART: Bye bye. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Or the lawyer who admitted. I don't know if it was a man
or a woman. But, but that person got fired, right? So as they screw up along the way, they fire the wrong people at the National-- the NNSA that keeps our nuclear weapons safe, and then they hire them back real quick. They-- JON STEWART: FAA, same thing. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Accidentally sent a buyout email to all the air traffic controllers in the middle of an air traffic control shortage, right? They-- JON STEWART: Just insane. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Right? They send the battle plans to the wrong guy on the wrong text app, right? And they randomly put a tariff
on a country that doesn't have anybody. It's not even a country. It's just an island with some penguins. Like, these screw ups are not something that causes introspection. Like, to be clear, every time I've been in government, whether when I was mayor of my hometown, or when I was Secretary of Transportation, like, obviously, there were things that we did not get right. Always there are things you don't get right. Human beings doing their best. Sometimes you don't get it right. If you believe that the press will hold you accountable, then you know that when you
don't get something right, you have to talk about it, think about it, learn from it, do better next time. If, on the other hand, you think you can just beat your chest and say it's all fake news, don't believe your lying eyes, no problem, you know, the leader knows best, then why bother going through the finer points of, you know, making sure that all the places you're putting tariffs on are actually countries, or, like, checking your math once or twice before you throw the markets into total turmoil? Right? JON STEWART: I imagine it's got to
be mind blowingly frustrating to watch shit like that go down, you know, stock markets tanking, $10 trillion going out. And the Democrats are like, we can't even wear a tan suit. If we wear a tan suit, the world goes bonkers. It's the lead story for a week. My favorite was RFK, was, he was talking about the huge cuts to Health and Human Services and all the people, and how they had to rehire people. And he goes, we always knew that 20% of those job cuts were going to be wrong. Part of the plan was always,
we were just going to rehire 20% of the people. And you're like, what if you took an extra two days? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Right. JON STEWART: Like, that's what I can't figure out. What is the rush? It's been two months. What about trying to negotiate trade deals prior to killing the hostage and then asking for ransom? I don't get it. PETE BUTTIGIEG: There's a logic here, too, right? On the trade deals, especially, if you make it completely chaotic, then the only organizing principle is the man himself. And then all that matters is which country, which industry,
which company got to the man, and convinced him or flattered him, or whatever it took, got him to give them some mercy. So the countries are all deciding, right? I mean, if you about it, this is part of how consolidating power works. Like, there is a-- there is a sort of logic to this, right? The more messy you make it, the more, like, they can't appeal to you saying, like, oh, this, you published this guidance on how the tariffs were going to work. And if you really interpret it the right way, you should give us
a break. It's going to be, I'm going to find Trump. I'm going to find him. I'm going to appeal, I, whether it's a country, a company, or an industry, and think of a way to say, you want to make an exception for us. And the more it works that way, the more it's total chaos, except you get to the man, you get to the King, right, the more power he personally has. But I've got to believe, first of all, obviously, that's a terrible way to make policy. [LAUGHTER] And it's terribly unfair, obviously. JON STEWART: Really?
PETE BUTTIGIEG: But also, like, I got to believe, definitely, most liberals. I think most conservatives, thoughtful conservatives I've ever talked to, and any libertarian gets that literally the entire point of this country is that we don't have a king, that we don't have some guy, who how he feels in the morning, or what he decides to do, or whether he got off the wrong side of the bed this morning, is going to decide your fate. But actually, we have rules, and we have things we all have to negotiate over and fight over, and there's winners
and losers, but we come together in this process. Now, to your earlier point about people who look at this and shrug, I think the process we inherited sucks. Let's be clear. This is not about going back to what we had before. When you destroy something, you destroy everything that was good and everything that was bad about it. And that's part of what I'm thinking about as I think about the giant federal bureaucracy that I operated in for four years, trying to get stuff done as a Secretary of Transportation. Right? I'm not here to say that
everything should be put back the way it was in 2024 or 2015, or, you know, 2000, for that matter. It is maddeningly difficult to get something actually built in this country. It is difficult across the federal government to properly reward your best performers and to remove your worst performers. Like, these things are real, right? I'm not saying they're not. JON STEWART: And to incentivize progress. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Totally, right? These are real problems. The challenge now becomes, especially for my party, which is transfixed in horror by what we see all around us, is to have an
answer that's better than, this is terrible, let's just go back to where we were before. JON STEWART: Better than noblesse oblige in the right of kings, you're saying. We need a process-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: We can do better. JON STEWART: --that's not necessarily the whims of the individual. So have you thought about that process? And, you know, look. In transportation, you guys had this bill that was going to build all these charging stations. And by the time, you know, you guys left, 100 had been built, and that's about it. Have you thought about the things that
you would change within that process to make building more efficient and, and more productive? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Totally. I mean, look. The amount of time that it has taken in this country to build a mile of subway, a stretch of road, a clean energy project-- JON STEWART: Rural broadband. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Absolutely. It's indefensible. Now, it got the way it is for lots of reasons, many of which are reasons that I think are noble. But it's still-- the outcome is indefensible. And that's what we've got to rewire as a country. We've got to get back to basics.
JON STEWART: What is it in those processes, Pete? Because that's-- what I'm interested in, when I look at, for Democrats, it seems like if they want to solve a problem, that solution has to solve every problem. In other words, we need rural broadband, but the solution also has to solve inequality, racial inequality, climate change. You know, we have to load it up with everything before we can start. Is that something that you've identified? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. I mean, look. I think it's right to pay attention to those things, because we know that how you build
a road or where you put a train could make those things better, or it could make them worse. So, of course, you're going to pay attention to fairness. You're going to pay attention to climate. You're going to pay-- you know, that should be part of the picture. But we have reached a point now where any one piece in even a process that has thousands of steps and billions of dollars, any one piece can wreck the whole thing. This is why it's hard to get housing built. This is why it's hard to get transportation infrastructure built.
And, I mean, without getting into all the guts of things like the Administrative Procedures Act, right, there is-- JON STEWART: Oh, let's get into the guts, baby. Come on! PETE BUTTIGIEG: So, I mean, there is a paperwork machine, right, that, again, with the best of intentions. And look. The basic intention is to make sure everybody can be heard. So in order to build a complicated project, you have to go through a process where everybody can weigh in, and then you got to go through all of that before you can move. There are ways to work
through that, though, where people get heard, and it doesn't delay everything. We did it. We started doing things like-- again, I don't want to get super weedsy here. But pre-award authority. Ways to-- You know, if you're trying to build high speed rail or something, start getting things built and getting the dollars moving, even while we're working out the finer points of the contract, as long as we can agree on a certain amount of risk between-- let's say the State Department of Transportation is building something, and the federal government's providing the money. And there are ways
to do that, agreements within agreements, or other arrangements. But look. Some of it's going to take-- it is going to take some introspection in my party and in our country to come back to what are the priorities. Because it can't be-- and letting the perfect be the enemy of the good, I think, has cost us in the extreme in many ways as a country. JON STEWART: Right. If I were to sum it up-- and, sort of, the only experience I've had in working down there is mostly kind of VA stuff, and watching how that goes--
it seems as though the government has a bit of an adversarial relationship to its clients, which is the people, in that it basically, in setting up, you know, protocols that are going to weed out waste, fraud, and abuse, those protocols create waste, fraud, and abuse. In other words, you treat whatever 2% to 3% of fraudulent, or wasteful, or abusive practices are going to occur. You're going to make the other 97% of the people go through an incredibly inefficient, not commonsensical process. Maybe the main thing is to just flip that and say, this will no longer
be adversarial. And what we'll do is, we'll bolster on the back end the look for waste, fraud, and abuse, so that we don't delay everything by 2 and 1/2 years to set up all these ridiculous obstacles. Would that be a simplistic version of that? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, I agree with that. I think the challenge there is, it does take some political will, because the more risk you take, the more there will be some mistakes. One of the first things I said to my staff when I came in was, when we're-- you know, we're trying to
move a trillion dollars. About half of that is to the Department of Transportation, so half a trillion through the economy. We've got 55,000 people working on every facet of transportation. Everything you do is important, which means, when you make mistakes, which you will because we're people, some of those mistakes will matter. JON STEWART: Mm-hmm. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And the most important thing will be to make sure that that mistake is not repeated. It won't be beating everybody up. It won't be a blame game. It won't be finger pointing. But you have to be ready to spot
those mistakes and be very transparent about them right away, so that we can figure out what happened, learn from it, and move on. That does take political will, because the moment there is some fuck-up somewhere, there will be press stories and grandstanding politicians. JON STEWART: Wait, what? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Perish the thought, right? JON STEWART: I understand. PETE BUTTIGIEG: But that's cause there's a real cost to that, right? JON STEWART: But as you watch this administration bulldoze through all of that-- and I watched, by the way, George W. Bush do the same thing. It always was
shocking to me. You know, the Democrats would have a super majority in the Senate, and they'd have a majority in the House, and they still would have trouble getting some things done, whereas, you know, George Bush could get whatever the fuck he wanted without having any-- As you watch them bulldoze that, do you find that there is a ground that you can take that isn't so risk averse that you paralyze the entire workings of the government? PETE BUTTIGIEG: I think there might be. And that's what I'm getting at when I say that this is not
about going back to what we had. Right? So look. The FDR era of, kind of, New Deal federal government as we have known it our whole lives is, is gone, or at least it will be gone by the time these guys are done with it. The international order, economically and security wise, the post World War II transatlantic security framework, the assumptions around how alliances work, and how the US fits in with them, and obviously, assumptions around trade, as we've known it for my entire adult life, is gone, or it will be gone by the time
these guys are done with it. So it's time to take a breath and say, OK, if and when we get a chance to put it back together, are we just going to scramble back to create the closest copy we can to the thing they just smashed? Or are we going to design something a little bit better? And to me, what that looks like is starting with an understanding of what government is for. And for me, government is for making you more free. And it does that in three ways. One, it provides services from national defense
to sewage. Two, it gets in the way of anybody who might make you unfree, let's say, a bank, a cable company, a railroad, your neighbor, anybody who is-- JON STEWART: A segregator. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: If there wasn't somebody to stand up to them, they would harm you. OK? So that's number two. And then three, really important, is to constrain itself. So if government does those three things, it provides basic services, it constrains people who can hurt you or harm your freedom, and it constrains itself from hurting you or hurting your
freedom, then you have a government that actually works for people. And around that, you can build an economy that works for people. JON STEWART: Which one of those do you think would be the most challenging? Because I think right now, you know, people would say, government can't regulate itself. It can't constrain itself. PETE BUTTIGIEG: I actually think that's where the common ground starts, because, again, whether you're-- if you're so libertarian or conservative that you thought the Clean Air Act was tyranny, right? [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Then I got to think, whether you're saying
it out loud or not, you know, if you're in Congress and you're afraid of being primaried or whatever, on some level, you get that when a White House official suggests that TV reporters be imprisoned because they uncovered-- because they covered the administration unfavorably, or when some student gets stuffed into a van because she wrote an op ed, may or may not agree with that op Ed, but she gets stuffed into a van-- when government agents pick up the wrong guy and send him to El Salvador, right? JON STEWART: Mm-hmm. PETE BUTTIGIEG: That is the kind
of thing that is the behavior of a government that is not constraining itself. JON STEWART: Correct. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And that should horrify liberals, conservatives and libertarians in equal measure. JON STEWART: Principled, principled ones. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. Well, yeah, I mean, that's-- obviously, when you look to Capitol Hill, that's a problem right now. JON STEWART: Right. I always said, you know, libertarians are just Republicans whose towns haven't been hit by a tornado yet. You know, it's always, oh, we don't need anything. Then after the tornado, it's, where's the money? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, so to me, it's
like, where's the liberty? Right? Let's start with that? JON STEWART: Where's the freedom? PETE BUTTIGIEG: And of course, you're going to start with a disfavored group that it's OK to-- JON STEWART: Always. PETE BUTTIGIEG: You know, and often, not always, but usually, it's immigrants. But over history, it's been gays. It's been Jews. I mean, you know. JON STEWART: The hits, all the hits. [LAUGHTER] PETE BUTTIGIEG: It never stops there. Anyway-- JON STEWART: No. PETE BUTTIGIEG: I think that you start with some common ground there. But then let's be real, and let's have some introspection in
my party about where we could be doing a better job on the services part. The people who are actually getting what they expect out of their taxpayer dollar, that the roads are getting built, that the power stations are getting built. It's just like stuff works, right? I mean, to me, even some really nerdy stuff about digital citizenship, the fact in the 2020s, the way that you prove who you say you are is to send a letter to get something out of a file cabinet, in a drawer in a county office where they keep your birth
certificate. Right? I mean, we got some just basic work to do there. And then there's the other one, which is constraining other parties that can make you unfree. In my view, this is the part where we're actually largely getting on to a better track in the last few years, because we had a government that was standing up for people. You had Rohit Chopra over at the CFPB, making sure that if a bank screwed you on overdraft fees, that they would actually be held accountable. I worked on this in the airline regulation. We said that if
an airline gets you stuck, they have to cover your costs. And at the very least, they need to be telling you what they're charging, right? These kinds of things-- click to cancel, you know, this rule out of the FTC, which I think the Trump administration is trying to get rid of. But this is one that says, like-- you ever sign up for gym membership, or-- JON STEWART: Right, right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Like, a newsletter or something? And then-- JON STEWART: And they make it physically like you've got to go into the guts of the email. PETE
BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, you have to get there on a Tuesday and pay in quarters only. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Even though all you had to do to sign up was an email. But you have to find somebody on the phone or go somewhere in order to cancel it. JON STEWART: You got to drive there and do it in person. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Right, so that got-- that got addressed. And now they're trying to take it back-- the Trump folks are trying to take it back to where that you're vulnerable there. So the sticking up for people
part I think is really important, because that's another way to show people that government can be in their corner. Look. The bottom line is, if the economy and the government were working the way they should for most Americans, a guy like Donald Trump and a movement like Trumpism would not have been possible. JON STEWART: Mm-hmm. PETE BUTTIGIEG: We are here because the system we inherited is, at best, showing its flaws, and at worst, is just no longer up to the task of what it takes to help people live free and thriving lives in the middle
of the 21st century. JON STEWART: Right. And to have that coherent-- you know, we were talking to Michael Lewis last week, and he said something I thought was really a great nugget about this, which was, you know, the government is there to fill in the gaps where the private sector won't. And I think that's something that is not well articulated, in that the private sector is not a freedom machine. It is not something that takes care of all the needs. You need, in the same way that the legislative has to check the executive, has to
check the Judicial, which has to check-- You need some balance between public and private, so that the excesses of the operating system we use, which is capitalism, don't create the kind of collateral damage that it often creates. Government has to be that mitigating factor. There's nothing else of the size of multinational capitalism that can provide exactly as you say. You know, one of the-- I've always said, I think the biggest limit to American freedom and liberty is poverty and struggle. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yes. JON STEWART: Almost entirely. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Absolutely, absolutely. I mean, talk about the
biggest thing that can make you unfree, right? It's when you don't have resources. And what's happening to-- or what's about to happen to poor and low-wealth people in this country is horrific. The threats to Medicaid, the threats to snap, the food aid being cut, to say nothing of what could be happening with VA, Social Security, that, of course, the less income you've already got, the more that matters to you. Right? And again, look. The folks in charge right now, they're not sitting up at night worrying about this kind of thing. This is not their problem.
JON STEWART: How do we get people more margin of error? Because it's not just, you know, even in the low income. But middle income is, it's that squeeze where you have no margin of error. Your parents are getting older as your kids are getting ready to go to college, and the childcare isn't there. You know, I always found it interesting. If you look at the tranches of where your taxes go, right, the first five of them, I think, are, like, defense, service of the debt, Social Security, Medicare. It's things that don't impact, don't give people,
really, margin of error until they're either really old or really poor. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. JON STEWART: But if people aren't confident that the government can competently provide those things, it's sort of a chicken and the egg now. Now we're in this terrible cycle. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, and look. Sometimes it's provided literally. Right? The government provides a service, like air traffic control, or national defense, or wastewater. Sometimes the government just makes sure needs to make sure certain things can happen. So we continue to live in pretty much the only country, not even the only rich country,
which is the only country, period, that doesn't have some system for national health, national childcare. Not that the-- JON STEWART: Or health care. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Or yeah, at least health. We've at least gotten to where most people are insured. There's a lot more. There's a lot that's messed up about our health care system. But when I look at where we're at on child care, where we're at on even just parental leave, right? And again, it doesn't have to be provided by the government. There has to be a policy by the government to make sure that
you can get it. One of the handful of things the Trump administration did that I actually thought was good last time was they made sure that, at least for federal workers, there was parental leave. But everybody ought to have parental leave. And that's one of those things. It shouldn't be just, like, something you can get a voucher for if you're poor. It should be something that is a basic part of a functioning economy. And we know that it works because, literally, everybody else has done it at some level in the world, and there's no country
that's, like, you know what we ought to do year? We ought to get rid of our parental leave. You know, that was a big mistake. We shouldn't do that anymore. JON STEWART: I love that Denmark has parental leave, and it has national health care. And we looked at their country and thought, you know what we got to take from them? Greenland. Like, the one thing that doesn't-- that's got nothing to do with what makes that country-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: That's true. Maybe we need more of a fact finding mission over there to-- JON STEWART: Right. PETE
BUTTIGIEG: And look. We're not Denmark, and not everything that works here will-- JON STEWART: Harder to do in a heterogeneous country with this many people, no question. PETE BUTTIGIEG: But look. The really frightening thing is that in statistical terms, the American dream, as in, born poor, wind up rich, you're more likely to live out the American dream right now in Denmark than in America. And as long as that is true, we've got profound, profound problems as a country. Look. The year my mom was born, end of World War II, you had a 90% chance of
finishing off economically better than your parents. 90%. By the time I was born in the early '80s, it was a coin flip. And that kind of uncertainty is only growing, because, again, we have not been taking care of the basics. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Just basic things around affordability, around protection, around what it's like to get through everyday life in this country obviously have been leaving a lot of people out, or we would not be here. And that's where I think my party needs to be very realistic about what our project is. Obviously, part
of our project is to stop the cruelty, and the chaos, and the horror show that's emanating from D.C. But if all we have is an account of what it is we're stopping, or what we're against, it's still going to be pretty hard for people to hear us. Maybe we can win the midterms. Maybe we can even win the White House. But when I think about it once, but when I think about a generational project of really transforming the country, and transforming the country for the better versus transforming the country into whatever it has been plunged
into in the last 100 days, that's going to require a deeper level of vision and a greater readiness to walk away ruthlessly from what hasn't worked. JON STEWART: Mm-hmm. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And to stand up relentlessly for what has worked-- JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: --even if it's unpopular. JON STEWART: And to be honest about it with yourselves. It's still a reckoning that, you know, I think there's still a generational churn that has to occur within the Democratic Party, the government probably writ large. Although, I think a lot of the younger energy is probably on the
other side. But there seems to be a real reluctance and fear to walk away from those legacy structures and incumbent structures, and embrace, you know-- I thought it was so interesting. You know, even something as small as AOC not getting the senior position on the committee she wanted, and they gave it to a 74-year-old guy. Nothing against him, but it just speaks to this idea that I don't know if what you're speaking about-- I don't know if it has registered yet writ large within the leadership. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Well, it's a really hard thing to absorb
when it could mean you need to move along. But-- [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: Oh, right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Let me point to you a couple of really interesting examples. Right? JON STEWART: Yeah. PETE BUTTIGIEG: One, Nancy Pelosi. She excused herself. I mean, I worked with her after she was speaker, and she was still a formidable leader and member of Congress, delivering for her district, doing things for the party. But then when she was weighing in on questions around generational change, she had a lot of moral authority because she could say, hey, I stepped away. Another example I
think of, we keep talking about Europe. This wasn't Denmark. This was the Netherlands. My counterpart came over for a meeting. This is something you do a lot as Secretary of Transportation, right? Your equivalent from another country comes in. You have a bilateral meeting. You discuss areas of cooperation, any issues that you need to resolve or negotiate. And I have this counterpart who I had met and dealt with on a number of things, came in, we had a nice conversation and meeting. And toward the end, he said, by the way, this is the last time that
you'll see me. And I thought, like, I don't remember-- I don't think they had, like, an election, like, he's about to lose his job or anything. He said, yeah, I've decided it's time for me to move on. It's time for a newer generation to take over, and I'm going to try new things. But we really need to give it up to the newer generation. And then I went back and I looked him up. He's like 55. JON STEWART: 55? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. JON STEWART: He's not even old enough to be in the Senate yet. [LAUGHTER]
PETE BUTTIGIEG: But it's just a different-- it's just a different attitude there. And I do think we could learn something from that, right? Like, there are a lot of countries and cultures where you have your time and Service, and then you go do something else, or maybe you even do something in government. You know, another person I got to know, the Australian ambassador to the US. Fascinating guy. He was the premier. He was the prime minister, I think it's called. He was in charge of Australia. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Then he wasn't. Then he
went and got a degree. JON STEWART: Wait, he didn't have a degree before he-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: Had lots of degrees, but he, like, went and-- went and got a doctorate. And then he became-- and then he got elected again, and he was in charge. I think in between he was foreign minister. And then-- and then he became ambassador, and he's got another job, and he doesn't feel the need to, you know, have his grip on the entire country. JON STEWART: You know, it used to be that way. There were presidents that would end up on
the Supreme Court, and then they would move up. There was an ethos that it wasn't-- I think ceding power wasn't the difficulty that it is today, that it wasn't-- boy, you see it with wealth. You see it with power. There's an incumbency to all of it. And it's very difficult to get any churn. And I think the interesting part is, people don't begrudge, I think, power, or they don't begrudge wealth or those things. I think what they begrudge is if, once that power and wealth is accumulated, you begin to use it to insulate and isolate
the system, to rig it in a way that makes it nearly impossible for others to then permeate those hallowed halls of money and power. It's the rigging. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Think about it. I mean, what is one thing that, even today, most Republican incumbents and most Democratic incumbents have in common? It's going to be a desire to remain incumbent. JON STEWART: I thought you were going to say prostate cancer. [LAUGHS] That's a terrible joke. I apologize for that. PETE BUTTIGIEG: It's a bias that is built into our system. But your system is supposed to have checks
to stop that from happening. JON STEWART: That's right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And look. I think some of the things get thrown around like term limits are too easy, that doesn't get at the bigger issue, which is an institutional and cultural readiness to do your part and then let somebody else. JON STEWART: And for the incumbents to have a sense, I think when you're down in Washington-- and you probably experienced this as Transportation Secretary-- the access to those individuals is so much greater for industry lobbyists or those with power and money, that the other voices really are
never heard, that they're not heard, at the very least, at anywhere near the same volume. And so it's very easy, as the daily churn goes on in Washington, to lose sight of what those voices would be telling you, as opposed to the voices that you do hear. PETE BUTTIGIEG: You know, one thing I felt right away when I went to Washington was how inward looking it can be. And I don't mean to-- look. A lot of people, especially in the other party, kind of constantly run against Washington. I don't mean to paint a negative brush
on the incredibly dedicated, talented people and public servants who go there to do good work. But I did notice at the political layer. JON STEWART: That's what I meant. More the political layer. That's right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: It's really true. It was really striking to me, I think because when you're a mayor, even in a big city, and certainly in a smaller city like I lived in Northern Indiana, you eat what you cook. Right? Like-- [LAUGHTER] Whatever decisions you make, like, good or bad, like, you're making them for yourself and for your neighbor. And your neighbor
is going to come find you and tell you what they think, and-- JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Somebody's going to catch you at the grocery store and tell you what they think. And like, you're just getting-- you're getting a lot of feedback. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: All the time from friends, frenemies, political and non-political people. Right? JON STEWART: But they have access to you. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, yeah, by design. Right? JON STEWART: Yes. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And I think one of the reasons why you often see-- like, sometimes you'll see footage of a Senator getting
confronted in an elevator, who-- and they're just-- they look like a deer in headlights, because some constituent, some activist gets in their face. And look. That could be like, look. Sometimes that's a shitty thing to do to somebody who's, like, not quite ready. But as a Senator, it's your job. JON STEWART: I've done it to them. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, it's your job to, like, be responsive. Like, literally, you're a representative of the people, right? And I think about it. I've never met a mayor who wouldn't know what to do in that situation, because it literally
happens to them all the time. But I do think Washington creates these bubbles around people. And by the way, I suspect I haven't spent that much time in corporate America. I spent a couple of years as a consultant, but I imagine that happens a lot around very wealthy people, too, right? I mean, we know that happens a lot around very wealthy people, right? Part of what's frightening to me about this moment is you've got a lot of creatures of Washington who haven't had to be responsive to people in a while, being coupled with creatures of
enormous wealth who haven't heard "no" in a long time. And now they're just feeding off each other. Right? JON STEWART: Like a hubristic perfect storm of entitlement and arrogance. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. And the answer to that, not to sound pious, but, like, the answer to that is supposed to be democracy. Like, the answer to that is supposed to be the fact that, like, all those people making decisions have to come check in with their boss, the American people, every couple of years, every four years. JON STEWART: Look at the panic that occurs with the simple
town hall that, you know, this idea of the town hall, the kind of Capraesque vision of, you know, a John Doe to stand up and ask a question to their-- they're treated like, oh my god. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, they stopped doing them. JON STEWART: They went into the lion's den, and you're like, of your voters? PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. JON STEWART: Of your constituents? Like-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: They just stopped doing them. JON STEWART: They just stopped. PETE BUTTIGIEG: I've had my ass handed to me in public meetings. Like, it's not fun. But like, it makes you
better, because either you have a good answer and you get a chance to convince somebody, or you don't have a good answer about why you're doing the right thing, and you have to think of a better way to explain it. Or most importantly of all, you might be wrong about something, and you find out. Right? Like, that's how the process is supposed to work. But-- JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: --by virtue of these cocoons that we have around people. And of course, the other thing is the algorithm. Like, the thing about those town halls or
about, you know, local processes is they're offline. Like, you're actually in a room with other people. And yeah, maybe it's contrived. Maybe it's lopsided. All of that could be going on, especially in a town hall that happens right now. But you're offline, looking people in the eye, talking to them. And we don't have a lot of that in terms of how most of us get most of our information. It's just the feed, right? I mean, even, even TV, like, used to give us some sense. You would see-- you would see a news story about some
controversy, and you'd hear from the one person on the one side, and you'd hear from the other person on the other side, and maybe you'd be moved by it. Maybe you'd be-- it would further entrench you in what you already believe. But you would think about it. You would think about it for a minute because you had to hear those sides. Right? So very little of that is now part of how most of us get most information. JON STEWART: Does Washington discourage that to some extent for people? And can you remember a time that you
can recall hearing something, and you went, oh, I think I might be looking at this wrong, where you were open minded enough to hear something constructive? And the only thing I can liken it to is, in some ways, like, I can remember reviews of things I've made, like a movie or something, where, like, it's just ripping me to shit and I got to, like, get through it. But there's like one Nugget in there that I'll read and go like, oh God, that's right. Why didn't I do that? Like, have you had that experience? PETE BUTTIGIEG:
Yeah, sure, all the time. I mean, there was a bias toward being defensive of everything you've done. That's human. That's not just politics. That's human. JON STEWART: Sure. PETE BUTTIGIEG: But you want to encounter people. One thing I did a lot is I sat down with a lot of Republican governors. And often, kind of going back and forth with them, would-- sometimes it would really make me dig in my heels, because I would think what they had to say was not convincing. Other times, it was the reverse. I mean, I had a governor from a
Western State who came in and said, look, you have this EV rule that there's got to be-- you know, every 50 miles, there's got to be a charging station in order to get the federal money. And I said, yeah, you guys should love this. Like, it's making sure that out in these rural areas where there's not a lot of, you know, there's not a lot of-- like, private sector's not going to do it. Like, we're making sure that there's charging stations. And then he starts walking me through how his road network works. And he's like,
look. Here's a place where literally nobody would-- if you made us put a charger here, like, it would maybe be, like, very interesting to an elk that comes by from time to time. [LAUGHTER] It could, like, you know, rub its antlers on it. But it's not gonna-- it's not gonna do much for EV users, even if you make us put it in. And we talked about some flexibility we could have there, which was actually something we worked on together. So yeah, there's so many times. Like, you think you go in with an idea you, hope
you're right, but you got to, like, be open to finding out that that's maybe not as you-- how you thought it was. And that's OK. That's how it's supposed to work. JON STEWART: And as you-- as you move forward, because right now, the Democratic Party, you would hope, is in a period of reflection, but also, of laying groundwork for what that new vision or a convincing argument to be given the responsibility of creating that new vision would be. I've seen it done with individuals. I've not seen much of a concerted effort top-down. Even, you know,
the new guy they got at the DNC, you know, his first comment was, like, their billionaires are terrible, but our billionaires are great. Like, you know, it was just like, oh, shit, we're screwed. You know? Are you seeing a nascent effort in the way that, you know-- the Republicans, they had all their ducks in a row when they got in the door. Doesn't seem like Democrats have any ducks. They're all free range. They're all flying around. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, we're not really top-down kind of people, right? [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: Even bottom up. PETE BUTTIGIEG: The
sooner we can accept, kind of, what we are and what we aren't, I think, the better. I don't think we're going to have the equivalent of Project 2025, where, you know-- I mean, don't get me wrong. There's lots of policy work going on. But the idea of us generating some thousand-page document, and everybody kind of saluting and marching forward, that's just, you know, that's not really what we're about. I think what we do need to do is lay out a real reckoning of three things we need to rethink, what we have to say, the policies,
the ideas. JON STEWART: Mm-hmm. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Hold absolutely true to the ones where our values are at stake, but reconsider any ones that just aren't quite right. That's what we have to say, how we say it. A lot of that's the tone. It's the messenger. It's especially the way we talk to Trump voters who we're trying to win over, because "I told you so" is not a great way. [LAUGHTER] Anybody who's, like, ever been married knows that, like-- right? That is, like, not a smart way. Like, even if you think you're being vindicated on something.
And obviously, we're going to have lots of moments. JON STEWART: You're saying carry yourself with some humility, even when you're right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Especially when you're right. JON STEWART: Don't be a sore winner. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And be open to the possibility that maybe you weren't right about some things. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: So there's what we have to say. There's how we say it. And then the other big thing that my party is terribly behind on is where we say it. And by this, I mean what media spaces we are in. You know, I
did a couple appearances, kind of, almost last minute ideas where, during the campaign last year, as I was working to help my party, I did some things on online, YouTube-based media outlets I had never even heard of. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And had more people coming up to me, but different people than came up to me if I'd been on CNN, more likely to be a high school student or a server at a place where I was grabbing something to eat, who had not gotten to know me through some of the other media that
I was doing every day. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: But did get to know me through some of these other media, the podcast thing. Right? My party is all up in arms about who's our Joe Rogan. We're not going to have a Joe Rogan of the left. That's not how it works. JON STEWART: It's also not something you can conjure. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Exactly. JON STEWART: In the way that, you know, they just think, oh, let's inorganically build this thing. Those positions have been built over time, and they've earned their credibility, and they've earned their authenticity,
and they've earned all those things that they have. You can't just poof them into existence. PETE BUTTIGIEG: That's right. But we're also aware they are there. And where they are willing to give us a hearing, we should show up, same as-- same as I made a habit of showing up on Fox News. Right? JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: I think we're really struggling to find people where they are. JON STEWART: And by the way, very impactful when you show up in spaces and articulate something that they-- it almost feels novel to them-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: Exactly.
JON STEWART: --to hear it laid out in that way. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Exactly. I could say something. I could be the 10th person to say roughly the same thing on a liberal show. Or I could literally be the first time somebody heard a certain idea if I'm in a more conservative space, which is why right wing spaces, like X and like Fox News, I think, continue to be important for people like me to be in. But we've also got to be finding folks who are not always looking for politics. JON STEWART: People who have other shit
to do. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. JON STEWART: Yeah. No, I find that a lot of the media now is-- it really has become a kind of self-sustaining legacy kind of complex. And I always tell people, you know, like, even with shows like mine, I run like a Tower Records. Like, we are, in many respects, dinosaurs, dinosaurs of infrastructure. Like, I'm out there like, hey, kids, come on in and see the new CDs on the rack. And they're like, I don't know what you're talking about. I don't-- I don't go into brick and mortar stores. I don't
listen. You know, and these things naturally evolve, and there is a churn, and new voices arise. And those voices can be really exciting and valuable. And it creates, you know, new avenues to express these ideas. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And that should be exciting and empowering, but only if we know what we're doing. And we can't be naive about it. Right? So on one hand, things are, you know-- ideas are spreading, and compelling voices are emerging and are spreading in this space. But also, let's be clear. The right has a very sophisticated infrastructure to amplify some of
those voices. JON STEWART: No question. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And it feels organic. It looks organic, many of them propagating through spaces that I barely understand, like Discord, but that reach people and feel real. And so we need to be as savvy about the mechanics of that kind of stuff, in the same way that, you know, 30, 50, 70 years ago, a D&C operative would need to be smart about-- I don't know-- how to buy radio ads in the new radio era, or, you know, a bunch of stuff they probably hadn't thought about a generation sooner. JON
STEWART: But there is a lot more Trojan horsing going on nowadays than I think I can ever recall, things that are, you know, they keep exposing. Oh, there was a Russian oligarch who bought $8 million worth of podcast shows and didn't-- nobody ever said anything, and they just went through it. And, you know, they are incentivizing. And there's-- I guess they used to call it payola. But there's a great deal of that. And even somebody like, you know, Leonard Leo would admit to it. I saw an interview with him where he said, oh, I did
what the left did with universities. And you're like, the left didn't do that with univer-- they didn't pay millions of dollars to, you know, infiltrate universities with left wing activism. But that is what he did with the court. And he would say as much. Yes, I'm capturing our court system through the use of money. Like, he'll just say it. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah. No, they think that's fair game. JON STEWART: Right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: And we have some decisions to make on my side of the aisle about how to maintain our integrity, and also, not get outgunned
in these spaces where you have that kind of money flying around. Because, you know, something doesn't just show up in your feed just because. JON STEWART: Hey, the algorithm is all knowing, and all-- it's a radicalizing machine. And that's why I always say, these things are not the town square. The town square doesn't have suggestions. It doesn't make. It doesn't make anti-Semitic remarks at you every time you log into the town square. Like, that's just not how it works. But I think you're right. Do you feel confident? And I'm cognizant of your time because I
know you probably got to go pick up the kids at a certain point, or maybe grow that beard out a little more. Because I got to tell you, friend, you need some work filling in a couple of gaps. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Yeah, I'm working on it. I'm working on it. JON STEWART: All right. Very nice. In your travels, are you confident that you've identified at least some of the players that you think will be valuable in creating those three protocols that you talk about? Have you run across the areas where you think, these are the people--
because it does need macro leadership. You can't wait for life to bubble up from the primordial ooze of the damage of the election. It has to be led and it has to be nurtured. Have you seen the buds of that? PETE BUTTIGIEG: I would say the-- to shift metaphors, I'd say-- [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: From primordial ooze? Yeah, all right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Or buds. JON STEWART: Buds, all right. PETE BUTTIGIEG: The pieces are there. The pieces are emerging. I see it everywhere. I see conversations. I see folks iterating, trying, which is part of how this has
to work. Again, we talked about risk aversion earlier. Like, we got to try lots of things, some of which will fail, and be OK with that. I see that happening. I don't think that it's been consolidated in any meaningful way, but I think it will. And I will do my part to help. JON STEWART: Well, that-- done. Pete Buttigieg has just volunteered to lead the-- if I'm hearing this correctly, and I think I am. PETE BUTTIGIEG: I said help. [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: Has-- is going to lead-- PETE BUTTIGIEG: Help. JON STEWART: --the remake. Oh, all
right. Help, all right. Fair enough. [LAUGHTER] Well, from your mouth to God's ears, sir. Thank you so much, Pete Buttigieg, for joining us. And I'm so glad you've been able to take a breather to disconnect, but also have not unconnected. And I look forward to seeing the fruits of all those things in the future. PETE BUTTIGIEG: Thanks. Thanks for having me on. I enjoyed it. JON STEWART: No, man. My pleasure. [FUNKY MUSIC] Buttigieg with a beard. You know, we're all in a business where-- and you guys, we all experienced it working at The Problem-- where
one day, you're in the hive of the office and everything is bustling and all those things, and the next day, you're crying at a karaoke bar with nothing to fucking do. GILLIAN SPEAR: I loved his story, though, about going to visit the projects that he had been involved in when he was in charge. JON STEWART: I love that. Imagine pulling up to a construction site and being like, hey, how are you guys-- you know, I-- the money. GILLIAN SPEAR: He's undercover bossing it. JON STEWART: How's the trenches? Puts on the helmet and the little orange
jacket, and walks his way through. But have you-- you've all had that experience of, like, one day, you're in it, and the next day, it's just out. And I've always found, for me, the way my mind works, that's a really hard adjustment, because the brain is going like this. And when it stops, it turns and it looks at you and like, well, now, I'll just devour your face. Like, it turns on you. GILLIAN SPEAR: Yeah, I wonder what someone like him does with so much free time. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Yeah, he's got to find something to
do, right? It's a shame he's not running for anything. JON STEWART: Oh, I think he's-- BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Yeah. JON STEWART: Oh, Gillian. Sweet, sweet Gillian, do you think-- or do you think he's, like, taking pottery classes? Where do you-- where do you think this thing is going? GILLIAN SPEAR: Do both. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Yeah, he's somewhere in the middle. JON STEWART: Maybe that's the way to go. But hopefully, they'll begin to work on this new plan. I was. Like, at the end, I was like, so you'll do that, right? Like, I was definitely, like, guilting him
a little bit, like, so that sounds like a very smart plan. You'll do that, right? [LAUGHTER] You'll get on that. What are the listeners saying, viewers? What's this week's-- BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: We got two juicy ones. JON STEWART: Juicy. Bring them. Bring them. Bring them. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: What was the cause of the moment you first found yourself politically engaged? JON STEWART: Oh. I mean, I grew up in the late-- like, I was born in '62. So, like, one of my first memories was, like, Martin Luther King being assassinated. Like, I was in a kindergarten class in
the middle of Trenton, and there was unrest. And like, we had to hide under our desks, and, and we got to eat lunch under our desk. And I was like, this is the greatest day ever. Meanwhile, it was, you know, Martin Luther King had been killed. And then Robert Kennedy was killed, and then Vietnam. And I-- you know, we knew people that were in Vietnam, and then Watergate. So you can imagine that roiled, you know, for anybody that was-- that was supposed to feel like our country was stable and we were on a path to
greatness, like, that was a very volatile, mercurial, tragic, catastrophic error. So and, by the way, I think I said error and not era. But both are applicable in that. So I think that informed a certain level of skepticism, a certain expectation that things are not inevitable, that things are not solid, and that-- and that greatness can be lost, and that it's not a rite of passage. It's not-- you know, exceptionalism is not a birthright. It's-- you know, it's that it's work, and shit happens that shocks the conscience and system. And that was-- that's your sort
of formative years. And then, of course, Reagan came and fixed all of it, so. [LAUGHTER] GILLIAN SPEAR: Morning in America. JON STEWART: Yeah, yeah. Now, for you guys, you know, we've all grown up in slightly different eras. Does that resonate with you guys for the way you grew up, or not as tumultuous? GILLIAN SPEAR: I mean, 9/11 I think was the moment, feels pretty tumultuous. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Yeah, that was a biggie for me. I went to school in Long Island, and I was sitting in my art class, and I just saw fire engines going past,
like, all day. And I definitely was curious, like, what is happening? And they didn't tell us at the time, because there were kids in the school whose parents were in the building. JON STEWART: Oh, Jesus. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: But they all got out. They were OK. But that was the first time that I was-- I was inquisitive. But I would say, personally, really, like, you kind of had that impact on me. Not to make this about you, but-- JON STEWART: That's a terrible, terrible thing. I apologize. [LAUGHTER] BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: No. But yeah, I mean, I would
say that that was-- you had a big impact on, kind of, me getting or paying attention politically. Certainly, working for you. JON STEWART: Brittany, if I'd known that, I would have tried much harder if I had known how it worked on there. Gillian, what about you? Same? GILLIAN SPEAR: Yeah, I mean, I don't-- you know, obviously, it was. I don't really remember 9/11 as, like, a very political moment of me being, sort of, turned on to that. But I would say, like, Prop Eight in California was a moment where me and my friends got pretty
political. JON STEWART: Wow! GILLIAN SPEAR: And-- the financial crisis, as well. So a lot of, you know, people lost their jobs, friends, parents, things. And it was, yeah, like, very obviously impactful on your teenage years. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Branching off Gillian's point, 9/11, I think, became political for me because it wasn't explained in the same way Brittany is describing. Like, we were maybe too young. And so I was watching the news with my family every night. And then that was the switch that was like, I need to know what this was. So. JON STEWART: Isn't it
interesting, though, that for all of us-- and maybe it's just the way that I started framing it, but that the awakening is based on chaos and disorder, and not on hope? And like, I think if you talk to other people, they might say, oh, mine was Martin Luther King organizing marches and getting, you know, or Obama's election, or, you know, something else that was gravitational, but to the positive. And I wonder if that changes your perspective, because when you do ask me, like, it's not-- I was not raised into politics through optimism. It was through
chaos. And I wonder what that does to your-- I don't know-- to your mentality. It's a good question, though. GILLIAN SPEAR: That you expect chaos, maybe. JON STEWART: Yeah, or that you carry yourself like-- it's sort of like when you live in New York. You carry yourself like you're braced, you know? Nobody likes strolls through New York. Like, it's all like, all right. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Yeah. GILLIAN SPEAR: And if you do, we're trying to get around you. JON STEWART: Exactly. GILLIAN SPEAR: Move to the side. JON STEWART: Excellent point by Gillian. If you are strolling
through New York, do it around 10th Avenue or 1st Avenue. Don't do it towards the center. GILLIAN SPEAR: No. JON STEWART: You'll fuck every-- you'll fuck everything up. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Truly. GILLIAN SPEAR: This isn't the Green Mile. This is a sidewalk. [LAUGHTER] JON STEWART: Very nice. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: All right, we got another one. JON STEWART: All right. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Should elected officials like Ted Cruz, for example, be allowed to have podcasts? JON STEWART: Sure. I-- the more Ted Cruz, the better. [LAUGHTER] GILLIAN SPEAR: As you always say. JON STEWART: As I have always said, I
can't get enough of that sweet, sweet Texas man. [LAUGHTER] Of course, they should be allowed to have podcasts. I don't know why they would want them, but I do think they should be-- I think they think this format is the new media, and so, but oftentimes I think familiarity breeds contempt to a large extent. And those things are not as intentional and directional. And you're seeing it now. Like, everybody that wants to run for president is like, I know how I'll do it. I'll start a podcast. And you're like, the first week, everybody's like, oh,
this shit-- wow. Was that an hour and a half? That was fucking long. Like, it's-- I don't know that it's necessarily the best way for those folks to communicate. I think, obviously, transparency. But, you know, certainly, they should be allowed to. And as a matter of fact, I think in this country, podcasts may become mandatory for everybody-- [LAUGHTER] For everybody over 14. But certainly, I love the fact that Ted Cruz is the person that they brought up. BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Yeah. JON STEWART: Should Ted Cruz be allowed to? And you're like, boy, I do want to
say free speech, and I do want people to have them. But Ted Cruz, that is-- Brittany, how can they keep in touch with us? BRITTANY MEHMEDOVIC: Twitter. We are Weekly Show Pod, Instagram threads, TikTok, Blue Sky. We are Weekly Show Podcast, and you can like, subscribe and comment on our YouTube channel, The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart. JON STEWART: As always, great job, guys. Lead Producer Lauren Walker, Producer Brittany Mehmedovic, Video Editor and Engineer Rob Vitolo, Audio Editor and Engineer Nicole Boyce, Researcher and Associate Producer Gillian Spear, and our executive producers, including just back from
maternity leave, the great Caity Gray, and Mr. Chris McShane. Were delighted to see you back and delighted with little baby Norah. She's so cute. All right, we're starting a whole-- we're starting, like, a Weekly Show commune. [LAUGHTER] All kinds of things. We'll see you next week. And that's it. Bye. [ROCK MUSIC] The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast that's produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions. [ROCK MUSIC]
Related Videos
Jon Stewart & Rory Stewart on Trump’s Restructured Global Order | The Weekly Show
1:13:21
Jon Stewart & Rory Stewart on Trump’s Rest...
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
954,046 views
Project 2025 Is Real. And It’s Happening Now.
45:39
Project 2025 Is Real. And It’s Happening Now.
Katie Couric
166,460 views
Jon Stewart, John Oliver, Trevor Noah | 60 Minutes Full Episodes
52:17
Jon Stewart, John Oliver, Trevor Noah | 60...
60 Minutes
266,640 views
Pete Buttigieg on Trump Tariffs, Taxing Billionaires, and Republican Gays
2:50:16
Pete Buttigieg on Trump Tariffs, Taxing Bi...
FLAGRANT
1,012,184 views
Why Can't We Have Nice Things with Ezra Klein | The Weekly Show
1:18:21
Why Can't We Have Nice Things with Ezra Kl...
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
643,654 views
Sen. Bernie Sanders says Democrats lack ‘vision for the future’: Full interview
8:03
Sen. Bernie Sanders says Democrats lack ‘v...
NBC News
5,793 views
Trump Breaks America, Voters Yawn? (w/ Anne Applebaum) | Focus Group
58:10
Trump Breaks America, Voters Yawn? (w/ Ann...
The Bulwark
268,268 views
Trump & Tariffs: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
27:06
Trump & Tariffs: Last Week Tonight with Jo...
LastWeekTonight
8,053,791 views
Trump's Second Term (So Far) - First 100 Days: Part 2  | The Daily Show
1:33:55
Trump's Second Term (So Far) - First 100 D...
The Daily Show
71,429 views
Why Trump Could Lose His Trade War With China | The Ezra Klein Show
1:05:46
Why Trump Could Lose His Trade War With Ch...
The Ezra Klein Show
1,238,904 views
Jon Stewart & Heather McGhee discuss Anti-DEI Policies and Trump’s Autocracy | The Weekly Show
1:18:27
Jon Stewart & Heather McGhee discuss Anti-...
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
230,064 views
Trans Athletes: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
42:21
Trans Athletes: Last Week Tonight with Joh...
LastWeekTonight
2,841,655 views
The Most Dangerous Building in Manhattan
33:39
The Most Dangerous Building in Manhattan
Veritasium
3,250,663 views
Trevor Noah: My Depression Was Linked To ADHD! Why I Left The Daily Show!
2:38:57
Trevor Noah: My Depression Was Linked To A...
The Diary Of A CEO
7,056,162 views
🚨 US Supreme Court move SURGES into national spotlight
13:32
🚨 US Supreme Court move SURGES into natio...
Brian Tyler Cohen
302,700 views
A Conversation with President Barack Obama | Hamilton College Sacerdote Great Names Series
1:16:14
A Conversation with President Barack Obama...
Hamilton College
423,171 views
Larry David Roasts Bill Maher Mercilessly Over Trump Meeting
35:58
Larry David Roasts Bill Maher Mercilessly ...
The Majority Report w/ Sam Seder
366,997 views
Who Is Government? Storytime with Michael Lewis | The Weekly Show
1:20:11
Who Is Government? Storytime with Michael ...
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
378,625 views
The Problem With Men, with Scott Galloway | What Now? with Trevor Noah Podcast
1:27:31
The Problem With Men, with Scott Galloway ...
What Now? with Trevor Noah
198,751 views
The Very American Roots of Trumpism | The Ezra Klein Show
1:09:22
The Very American Roots of Trumpism | The ...
The Ezra Klein Show
261,043 views
Copyright © 2025. Made with ♥ in London by YTScribe.com