Hi, I'm Molly John Fast and this is Fast Politics, where we discussed the top political headlines with some of today's best minds, and national security secrets are being leaked in video game chat rooms. We have an intriguing show today the Washington Post. Caroline Kitchener talks to us about the horrifying reality of post role America. Then we'll talk to Yale law professor Scott Shapiro about all of the legal fuckery with the Supreme Court. But first showtimes the circuses.
Mark McKinnon, Welcome to Fast Politics. Mark Well, glad to be on the discard. We're delighted to have you. I feel like this week was I mean, I don't understand what Republicans ever get sick of losing? Apparently not. They just clawing their weight to the bottom. I'm not sure we've reached you. You have spent your whole life, or not your whole life, but some of your life working in Republican politics. Did you watch what happened in Tennessee?
Would the two Justin's removed for several days in abject horror? I mean, did you see how this would just completely bite them? Of course? And it's funny Molly, because this is in the category of great minds thinking alike. In the middle of all that, I've said, oh, man, I'm going to write a column about how the Republicans are now that they've cut the car the cars running over them between guns and Tennessee and Kentucky and abortion and Trump.
And I pitched that to our favorite friend, David's friend, and he said, well, sorry, buddy, Molly just wrote that. So, I mean, it's shocking to me to watch the arc of the Republican Party since the days of compassionate Conservatism and how it has gone from the Tea Party to MAGA to It's something that I don't wreck ignize at all. And to your point, ultimately, everything that's being done it's just appealing to a smaller and smaller and smaller base
of a diminishing demographic. So whatever short term games they're getting, which aren't a lot, it's a long term disaster for the Republican So I was thinking about this because I had coffee with a guy called John de la Volpi. I think, does all the polling on millennials right? Exactly?
Does all this polling on millennials and you'll be surprised to hear that millennials are not that interested in Donald Trump's belief that the election was stolen from him, and in fact, they are quite interested in climate and other
real things. And I want to talk to you because you were involved in Republican politics around the time when Republicans still offered voters something and I wondered, if you were in charge now, if you had to sort of do a post mortem on these smoking emperors that will be the Republican Party when Trump is done with it, what would you offer. Well, you almost have to start from scratch. I mean, there was a post mortem done in twenty twelve which sort of laid out a battle
plan for Republicans to grow the party. And that means addition. That means adding voters, not subtracting voters, and that means appealing to the de LA vote voters, to a whole cross section of voters who are growing not diminishing as the MAGA voters are, which is a highly white and old demographics. So yeah, I mean across the board you just look at. First of all, I was drawn to the Republican Party in George Bush because of the appeal
of the idea of compassionate conservatism. There's nothing compassionate left, So I mean much less is driving away Republicans like me, much less not attracting independence or even some conservative Democrats like George W. Bush did or others. So it's just in a death spot. And you know, the worst thing that can happen to the Republican Party is Donald Trump. And I mean think about this. He's first of all, twice impeached, and he lost the twenty twenty election, not
just the presidency. He lost the presidency, he lost the House, he lost the Senate. That hasn't happened in a hundred years. Grover Cleveland was the last person to manage that. And now he's once indicted. But it's very possible that by this time next year, I'd say even probable, that he'll be running as a four time indicted, twice impeached and once lost the House, the Senate, and the presidency. That's a heck of a load to try and carry across
the finish line. And it's a dream scenario for Democrats because I like Biden and I think he was the right guy for the right moment. I don't like him running for reelection, but Donald Trump may be the only guy that Biden could be. So I just want to ask you, I mean again, not to get into the nuances of the campaigns yet, and especially not on the Democratic side, because while Trump is running, I agree, well, Trump is running. Well, the only game in town is Trump,
I wondered. I had read something about this idea that the more attention Trump gets, the worse he does in this sort of general population, and I think that's how the Biden administration is playing it too. Sure. I mean, it's the old maxim that we used to say, don't catch a falling knife. Let it fall, let him catch it. It's his knife. And yes, there's no appeal to a guy who's being indicted to that's not going to expand
his voters. I mean, he was short eleven million, right according to everybody but him, And if you're short eleven million in twenty twenty, you got to have eleven million plus in twenty twenty four. And all that's happening right now is not going to appeal to one single voter of those eleven million, I assure here, But here's my question. Why can't Republicans explain to us the machinations here? Like
why is no one. I mean, is it just because they didn't get a blowout in these last elections that they've decided to continue down this road of Trump is um or do you think it's because the base really controls a party or do you think it's some third option the base controls the party. I mean, thirty percent is not a majority, but it's a lot of voters,
and that's enough voters to control the primaries. And every time that somebody stands up and takes a shot at Donald Trump, they face the wrath of the MAGA faithful. And that's, like I said, twenty five to thirty percent of that Republican base and that's enough. That's enough to cause a lot of pain. And that's why you see everybody just laying down. And they're damned if they do
and damned if they don't. But I've said for a long time that the only option for a resilient or any future at all in terms of winning the presidency and majorities in this country where Republicans is to take Trump off the windshield and put them in the rear view of mirror. And until then they're going to get that thirty percent of the MAGA voters or control those primaries.
And as I've watched this, what happens is it's just sort of, for lack of a better chart, where maybe it is the right term, it's just dumbing down everything completely, so that in these primaries increasingly you have these sort of purity tests. You have to say the election was stolen, you have to agree with all this Trump stuff, which just takes you out of consideration for general election voters. And it's just getting worse and worse. But the appeal
is not going up, it's going down. And so if you're somebody running in a Republican primary, I mean, Arizona is a good example. This sheriff now is going to run in the Republican where for the Senate, and King's going to out carry Lake. Carry Lake. And by the way, Carry Lake is my favorite example because for anybody who watched that election last cycle, she had all the candidate skills that you would want as someone who does campaigns
or works with candidates. She's just a great communicator, fast, smart, and should have won that election going away. And yet she goes into a room full of potential voters Republicans, and she says something along the lines of who here supported John McCain, and a bunch of people raise their hands. She said, get out, and it's like, are you kidding me? You're telling John McCain voters to go to hell? Well guess what they're going to tell you to go to hell?
And you are not going to be in the United States Senate. So that's the klin of thing. And so she's going to have to out sheriff the sheriff now and it just keeps spiraling downward and down. But that's what DeSantis is trying to do with Trump right now. Yeah, he is, and he was supposed to be the Golden Boy, and he hasn't had a lot of luck the last month or so. And it's a good example of what happens when you take him on. I mean, he did
so lightly, man. I think Chris Prittie is the only guy who's really taken a two by four to him. But Christie's not even in the ratio. I mean, I just am curious, though. Do you think that running to the right of Donald Trump on policy would be hard pressed to even name a Trump policy makes any sense. No, you're not going to get to the right of Trump.
That's just not going to work. And I think the only way to do it is just do what Christie's doing and just go ahead and take the two by four to Trump with the expectation, which I think is a realistic one and a practical one and a probable one that one indictment rough to the brutal three wow four unsurvival. At some point that's just going to be too much and it's going to break his back at some point. It's like if you ever read the book or some of the movie The Man Who Would Be King.
But I mean the sort of whole notion of it is as soon as they see it bleed, you're screwed. And as soon as people, even the magabase see that Donald Trump is mortal and he bleeds, they could evaporate overnight. So this is a very interesting thing that I have never heard anyone say. And so I want you to say more about this. Well, I just don't think that you're gonna outflank Trump on the right. That's just not going to work, right, And so listen, everybody's afraid of
making the maga faithful mad Well. The thing that people respond to, I think a Trump responds to is strength, right, So go up and just get a rock and be David and thruff it and you're gonna get a lot of heat immediately from the base. But over time you'll be seen as the guy who was willing to take on the king, and as I said, at a certain point,
over time. And it's going to take time. But when you get sounded with the second and the third and the fourth indictment and you're the guy that's been slugging him and suddenly he buckles, you're going to be the guy standing in the ring. So here's my question for you with this. Do you think there's a moment where
the Magabasse says this is enough. I just have so much trouble imagining that one day they're like because I mean, if you think about it, what happened last Tuesday in New York was they decided that Alvin Brad was a racist, which right, of course is the thing they love to say, and that Trump was a victim, and then they gave him a lot of money. Yep, yep, that's the playbook. But I think that what they can't and won't accept again over time is the notion that Donald Trump would
be a loser. I mean, there's nothing more contrary to his brand than being a loser. And if again, it's hard to project that far out, but when you think of a guy running with three or four indictments over his head at a certain point, I mean, the polling is already not good for Trump and it's just going to get worse. It's not going to take all of them to leave. But if enough of them look around and say, well, Jesus, I love this guy Trump, but he's not going to beat Joe Biden. We got to
get somebody else, Gotta get another horse. And who do they go to? Then? Well, I mean I would prefer somebody like Glenn Yuncin. I think young he's the kind of candidate. He's got a kind of a Reagan sunny, optimistic approach in sensibility. That's the kind of guy I'd like to see running. I mean, Tim Scott, I think is in a lane that I like. And Nicky Haley to a degree also, I think once you get to
Nicky Haley, you really sound exhausted. I'm trying not to be too mean here because I know I feel like the Republican Party dug itself into this ditch. But I mean they are in this irretractable death ray. They are, but it's again the prospect of losing maybe the tonic and nothing happens in politics still does, right, And Tim Scott is another guy who had disagree with his policies, but he's a very sunny guy. It is hard to dislike.
And I think he's got generally the right approach in terms of tone anyway, which is, you know, like fascism. But I don't know how you go as a Republican Party from the guy who called all Mexicans a rapist to the eleventh black Senator. Yeah, it's a stretch for sure. So my other question is, like, the thing that in some ways scares me the most about where this Republican Party is right now is that they seem to have embraced this urbanism, right this sort of victor orban democracy
is a failed experiment. Let's go for this sort of populous fascist thing, and that a lot of the sort of younger thought leaders of the party, they have a real dark vision for the country. And I mean, how worried does that make you? Well? Again, I genuineflected at the altar John mccainon especially on foreign policy. So I mean, it's just I'm stunned by it. I can't believe it. And it's it is dystopic too. I mean it's anti democratic because I antink American, and that's what strikes me
as so profound about it all. It's just like, wait a minute, these are the guys waiting in the flag and they're over there supporting autocrats in Bolivia and Hungry and around the world, and this is their new model and they like to get it in debates now about saying, you know, the United States is not even democratic. No, I mean, we've crossed a scary rubicon. This is why I wanted to like a sort of question I wanted
to drill down on. And I've asked you this before socially, but like say you were terrified of where this Republican Party was headed, and you wanted to I mean, how would if there were people who were still in charge of the Republican Party, which it's clearly just Trump driving the show at this point, what would they do How would they be able to push back against these autocratic urges? Well? I think that they would, and I think there's conversation
certainly going on. I mean, people with any sort of common sense and humanity left in the Republican Party realized that Trump is unacceptable on any level and that there has to be an alternative. And that's when you sort of had some romp movement among donors whoever to start lining up behind somebody the real alternative approach, whether it's Juncan or Tim Scott or whoever it might be. They just say listen. I mean, the problem is that it's
just party politics are so disintegrated. Now there's nobody in charge of the Republican Party. There's nobody in charge of the Democratic part they're more in charge because they have the presidency, but it's not like there's some committee like there used to be in the fifties or something. We can kind of control this and say, hey, well the whistle.
This guy's a big problem. But I do think he saw a lot of people lining up for the Santis and I don't count to Santas out and by any need one, I think he's had a rocky few weeks, but he didn't win Florida by double digits by being an idiot, at least strategically, so I think there's a good chance that he'll bounce back as well, so interesting, Mark. I hope you will come back. We'll kick it hard, carry on regardless, keep the faith. Caroline Kitchener is a
national political reporter covering abortion at the Washington Post. Welcome too Fast Politics, Caroline, Thank you so much for alriy. So you have a really interesting beat. Will you talk a little bit about what you cover? Where to start? I don't know. Even just today, there's like three different big stories gone on. So I cover abortion, which just
means I get to focus on this issue fully. The stories that I most like to write are the ones that focus on how these bands and various restrictions impact the lives of people. So I spend a lot of time in states where abortion is restricted trying to talk to people who are trying to get abortions or just have really direct experience with how these laws are planning out. So one of the pieces you most recently wrote is pretty fucking heartbreaking. I can say that because we're not
on cable news. It is this story of Annia Cook in Myanmar, Florida. Will you tell us a little bit about this story, because these stories, again are like the unintended consequences of these abortion bands, or least we thought they were the unintended consequence of this. Yeah, the story, it was absolutely heartbreaking. So it's actually the story of two women, Anya Guok and her friend Shanna Smith Cunningham,
very close friends. They were going through their pregnancies together three weeks apart, and Anya first her water breaks at sixteen weeks, which is long before a fetus is viable, right, seven weeks before viability even the chance exactly. So immediately realizes that this baby is not going to make it. And I should say, this is the baby that she definitely wants. I mean, this is somebody who's had a lot of miscarriages, who just wants to be a mom
more than anything in the world. These are both women in their thirties, yes, in their thirties, all black women in the Fort Motordale area, And so Anya rushes to the hospital with her husband and the doctor explains that she experiencing a condition called p prawn that's a pre viable pre term rupture of the membranes mouthable. Basically, it means that your water breaks a long time before the fetis is viable. But he says that she has to
go home. He can't help her because Florida has a fifteen week abortion law in place, so typically in a situation like this, a doctor would offer to induce or perform an abortion on the pregnancy, but because of the law,
they can't. They can make this situation much less horrible by removing the fetis, right, and that is often what they do because these situations come with a high risk of infection, a high risk of hemorrhage, so the standard of care, according to the American College of Oppetitions and Gynecologists, the standard of care is to offer that induction or abortion. But the doctor explains that he can't do that, and Anya is devastate's and she's terrified. Right, she's sent home
to possibly get an infection or bleed to death. Right. They give her some antibiotics and the nurse offers to pray for her. Oh, very helpful, and she goes home. Jesus, how does an end for these women? While Anya hasn't just unthinkably traumatizing experience. The next morning, she tries to
go back her life as normal. She goes to get her hair done, and she delivers the fetus in the bathroom of the hair salon, and she starts severely hemorrhaging, and she's rushed to the hospital and over the course of the day, she loses half of the blood in her body and she almost dies. But I think one thing that really stuck out to me about the story is that it's it's not just one woman that this happened too. It happened to these two friends within a day.
We One day later, her friend Shane, her water also breaks at nineteen weeks, and she, also, in the state of Florida, cannot get the care that she needs. She can't get an induction, and she can't get a d NC. But what's different about Shane's situation is that because she knows what happened to her friend, she keeps going back to the hospital. She goes back and back and back. She's like, I can't deliver at home. I can't have
this happen to me. And so finally, on her fourth trip to the hospital, she is dilated enough that they keep her and she's able to deliver and she doesn't have any terrible right but she still has the trauma for sure, russure of delivering a dead baby or a dead fetus. This story is so incredibly common, it's like almost I feel like it's shockingly common. I want to know, aren't these anti choice Republicans a little bit? I mean, don't they give a shit at all about these women?
I mean, these are their wives, their children. And I interviewed the sponsor of the fifteen week abortion band that's in effect right now in Florida for the story, and I told her the story and I asked her what she made of it and how kind of what the law is supposed to do in these circumstances, because there is a medical exception, but it's very narrow. It's for save the life of the mother. And in these situations when you present with your water breaking, it's not like
you are like, there's no choices. Yeah, but the medical exception doesn't like it's not clear that that medical exception kicks in. But she is saying when I interviewed this woman, she's saying, oh, it should count, that situation should count. But she actually accused the doctors of sort of playing politics with people's lives, which is obviously a very serious accusation. And I spoke with many doctors in Florida for the story who said, we fear that we will be fined
or go to jail if we do this. So if that is the reality, if the sponsor really is saying that they should be allowed, that they need to change the law and they need to be explicit about the circumstances and which this is allowed. I mean, that is so striking to me. I feel like we I mean, that is the thing that's so shocking to me, that we are in a situation where there are all these unintended consequences. But again, this is what happened in the
nineteen seventies. I mean, there was the doctors who drove the road decision more than I mean, there was a sense in which this situation was untenable for the medical profession. Ok. Yeah, I mean the doctors. I spoke with over a dozen doctors for this story, and they all were just like they're devastated because they want to provide this care for
their patients, right like they this is their job. Yeah, they desperately want to be able to take care of people like aren't here in Cheney, and so when they can't, when they have to say I'm sorry you had to go home or just send you to another state, It's like it is such a difficult thing to grapple with as a doctor. And and I have had people and I was reporting this story, I had people say to me,
why don't they just do it? And that's not fair either because these are people, I mean, they go to jail, yeah, and so that's not fair to put that on them. It's also the hospitals too, right, the hospitals are another liar of this, right, So talk to me about the hospitals, because that's something that's really interesting is we're seeing the
hospitals refusing to treat right, right. But I mean the hospitals I think are also kind of caught in a confusing movind Like what we found in public records request is that the language of the hospital policy pretty much directly reflects the language of the law, which is confusing. Like the medical exception, it's really not clear like what
is covered and what is not covered. So what we found is that they're sort of putting it on the doctors to decide and kind of take it into their own hands because the hospitals are also afraid of being liable for the stuff. So's to So let me ask you about what you're seeing at the state level now with abortion bills, because we have Florida. Florida's the big one, So talk to me about Florida. Florida has been the place that has not been as insane about abortion, but
that's about to change. Yeah. I mean, currently, they allow abortions to kick fifteen weeks of pregnancy, which does allow the vast majority of abortions to continue. But either today or tomorrow, the Republican legislature will pass a six week abortion ban. And it is impossible to overstate the impact that that's going to have across the entire country. Because Florida performs more abortions than almost any other state in
the country. It's huge, huge state, and the ban abortion at six weeks, which is before most people know they're pregnant, than people are going to be pushed out of that huge state. And the places where they would go North Carolina, South Carolina, Illinois. They're already so overwhelmed with everybody else from the southeast that's been going there, and a lot of people from the southeast other states have also been going to Florida. So it's just the ripple of us
of that band are going to be unbelievable. Yeah, no, I mean, it's just incredible so talk to me about how that goes down. Now that's a state bill, it's going to go to the governor. I mean, do you think link this race to create more and more restrictive abortion bands? What is driving it? Think the base? I do have to say it once somewhat surprising to me that Florida went thus far. I thought we just have seen again and again and again that voters really care
about protecting abortion rights. We saw it like just last week or the week before in Wisconsin. It's so clear, and I really thought that that would be on the mines of legislators in a place like Florida, but it doesn't seem to be. So. I do think it's a matter of the base, probably for desantists, right like he wants to run for present, needs to win a primary. But it's I think the big test is there to
be twenty twenty four. So abortion has done really really well on these ballot initiatives, and I was hoping that you could talk a little bit about the ballot initiatives you've seen and how they've performed and what you can extrapolate from that. Yeah, I mean, I think the biggest one for me on election night the biggest surprise to me. It was Kentucky. Yeah, Kentucky. Just voters in Kentucky, conservative Kentucky came out to support abortion rights, and I think
that that really shocked a lot of people. And together with Michigan too, I mean, Michigan was able to protect abortion rights, especially protect them, but Kentucky basically was sort of the opposite thing. That people were coming out to say. There was an amendment to say that there were no explicit protections for abortion in the state constitution, and people were coming out to say, no, we don't want that,
we don't want that amendment. So now what you see are just like abortion rights advocates are just scrambling to do this and in many places as possible. They want to have these valid initiatives in as many places I can effectively do them, and I do think it's tough because you can't do them everywhere successfully. I think at the same time, because they're sponsor. So right now we're seeing some of that play out. By the kind of thick of a summer, we'll know which states are gonna
do this for real. Next came around. So one of the things I want to ask you is abortion has this right has been taken away from women less than a year. Now we're trying to pro choice lawmakers are trying to figure out how to protect women. I want to ask you, like, why has the Congress been able to codify same sex marriage but had such tough time with row? The great question. I mean, some people have really questioned why was this not done in the Obama
era when dem felt stronger control. I mean, now there's just not the votes for it, right, But I think that for so long we really assumed our gas was never going to happen, Like even after the Leek, like people were saying that this was never going to happen. And I think that it was that really ran so deep that it was hard to get energy. Kind so denial, I think, so yeah, yeah, I mean that's what I think too. But it's just so shocking to me. I mean,
I don't know where we go from here. I mean, I do think that twenty twenty four is going to be massive for abortion. I mean, if a Republican gets in the lighthouse an anti abortion Republican, which I think that all of them so far have come out backing some kind of national restriction. What we have seen is really the power that the FDA has, I mean some of the agency, the administration actually has an incredible amount of power to particularly restrict the abortion pill and then
potentially helped Shepherd through a national band. So I think that abortion rights advocates are going to be working really hard to make it crystal clear that abortion really is on the ballot next time around. So crazy, I mean just and the Fifth Circuit is known to be very conservative. Oh yeah, known as the most conservative in the country. Thank you so much for joining us. I hope you'll come baha, thank you. I would love to. Scott Shapiro
is a professor at Yale Law School. Welcome too, fast Politics, Scott Shapiro, Oh, thank you so much, Shamali, great to be here. Talking to you is great because like talking to every single one of my relatives. I'm sorry, it's like, okay, talking to my Auntie Esther. Yeah, that's always how I want to be seen in the world as the same as Auntie Esther is Auntie Esther ninety no no, no, no no. She's the best person in the world. And it said it's a high compliment. I'm good. You know.
She pronounces everything like cancer. Oh yeah, New York accent thing is brutal. So, Scott Shapiro, I wanted to have you on to talk because for any number of reasons. But you're fancy Yale law professor, but you also are involved in the Yale Cybersecurity Lab, so you have really a bunch of skills that are you're really an expert
in all the stuff I want to talk about. But first, before we talk about anything, we have to talk about the crazy Texas judge, the Trump appointed Texas judge who decided a federal judge from Armarillo, Texas, who decided that the FDA approval process isn't good when they approved something he doesn't like. Yeah, I mean that's the way we got into this is that you DM me after I tweeted the originalist case against Tayland. All right, really, this
is a shocking ruling out of Texas. The law is really really not on the Texas judge as side, and in fact, it's hard to think of this as anything other than just like a brute power play to try to shut down safe and legal abortions in the United States. Yeah, that's what I wanted to talk to you about. Is there any legal precedent for something like this at all. Let me just say one of the biggest problems with the opinion and the ruling is that it runs a
foul of something that's called the standing doctrine. And the standing doctrine says not anybody can bring a case in front of federal court. You have to have what's called a case or controversy. You have to be personally affected by it. So the one thing, if women who tried to terminate their pregnancies using medication a worship got harmed in some way, that'd be one thing. Then you could say, yes, they've been personally affected and so therefore they have standing.
But the people who brought this suit, the plaintiffs so when it brought the suit, are physicians, and they're not even the physicians of particular women that have taking this drug. They're worried about fallout from taking the drug, so they really don't have any they're not personally affected, and under standing doctrine that has been around for decades, they would not be allowed to bring a suit, and yet they did, and it was just affirmed in the Fifth Circuit. Let's
talk about that fifth circuit. So this judge was picked by the anti abortion group that was bringing lawsuits. It was jurisdiction chopping. He was picked because in this jurisdiction there's only one judge, and this judge has been a very vocal anti choice activist since way before he was put on the bench. This case now went up to the Fifth Circuit. The Fifth Circuit is notoriously shitty. Can you explain why and how? And I know you won't use the word shitty, but since I'm not awe where
I can use technical terms? Yeah, no, no, no, sure, I'll try not to use any Latin. So the Fifth Circuit is a very conservative circuit, and lots of the rulings that come out of the Fifth Circuit are not rulings that people they would describe themselves as progressive. They don't like those decisions. I think people even in the center recognize that the Fifth Circuit is really somewhat extreme
in their conservative views. I would also just say that it's also true that the Ninth Circuit in California has historically been known for its very strong liberal views. So this is not something that was just invented by Republicans or the Federal society. But it is true that this strategy of stocking the federal judiciary with conservatives, and in
particular Trumpist judges has been going full tilt. I mean, it was one of the main reasons why a lot of conservatives supported Donald Trump, even though everything about him is kind of not very conservative, not very conservative, not very family values. So and we can talk about it, but I think that this has created an enormous political problem for the Publican Party because they created a monster and now it's hard to see how they put it
back in the box. Yeah, so I wanted to ask you about the I feel like the federal Society has gotten some bad publicity lately. You've written on this a lot. One of the interesting things about this pro PUBLICA reporting about Clarence Thomas and his good friend Harlan Crowe. If that isn't a superhero villain name, I don't know what is his good friend Harlan Crowe, is that there is actually no ethics provision for the Supreme Court, kind of
the cut of judicial ethics. I believe that's the name that applies to federal judiciure doesn't apply to the Supreme Court, though, as good law and order people, they do consult the rules as they say, and I mean, you know, I mean the thing is, I'm a law professor, are teaching a law school, and one of the things I tell students over and ever again, I don't everyone tells us that, you know, there's one thing to have a conflict of interest,
you know, and that's that's bad. But the second thing is to it's really important to avoid appearances of conflict of interest. And Clarence Thomas seems to get into these bad optics. Is like the king of bad optics. Yeah, he is, he really is. I call him Justice hot Dog Guy, oh break because of the hot dog Guy meme where he's like, how did we get here? Right? Right exactly? Guy dressed up at a hot dog sued through the hot dog car trying to get to the
bottom of things. Yeah, we gotta get to about her who did this? And I think it's just completely laughable of when Clarence Thomas says, oh, I think the leak of Dabbs has eroded the legitimacy of the Supreme Court, as if that hasn't been what he's been doing for the last several decades. I think it's a huge embarrassment how he's been behaving but he acts to me like he which technically he is untouchable. One of the things that Justice Roberts and I don't want to give Justice
Roberts too much credit, really, I don't. But Justice Roberts has been very much a person who we've seen behind the scenes trying desperately to get these trumpy justices to slow their role, to not change everything right away, to keep focused on the legitimacy of the court, whatever that means. But he also has a wife who is a legal recruiter.
I guess I want to be kind of careful, you know, so lots of times, you know, when you have professionals and their couples and they are their own people, and so we we should be kind of careful about not caring one partner with what the other partner does. Though I think in the case of Justice Thomas, I think there are really serious problems with his partner and how
he's behaved visa viright. But you know, in terms of Justice Roberts, you know, like we you know, our partners have lives too, and they have lives before Justice Roberts in this case, you know, was elevated not only to Supreme Court, but to the to be Chief Justice, So I would be just kind of careful about not trying to overcriticize the conservative majority. I think there's plenty plenty, right, But I'm just saying it speaks to the idea of
why Justice Roberts might not want to go down this road. Oh, I say, I see what you're saying. I say, I also just think that, you know, it's called the Roberts Court, and you know, his legacy is tied up with how some of these really reckless people his colleagues are behaving, right, And I think it paints him because I think he's, you know, a conservative small see who wants you know,
he's got conservative views. But I think he also wants to maintain the legitimacy legitimacy of the Court, which at this point I think that ship has sailed. So I want to ask you, So we have this abortion ruling, one of the many problems here is that we have also other rulings that are about mytho prostone, which are contrary in other circuits. Can you talk about that? Yeah?
Out of Washington State, like within hours, I forgot which one came first, but one had come out saying that I think it was in seventeen states that the Democrats that Democratic attorneys general we're trying to keep access to abortion medications. And so now we have a situation where we have dueling injunctions to Washington State saying that least in seventeen states that access to medication has to be provided, and the Texas saying that in all fifty states it
can't be. And so this is not great. And so this is why we have circuit courts that as appellate courts that try to resolve some of these disagreements. Although the Fifth Circuit which includes Texas, does not include Washington State here. So ultimately, if we want to get this resolved, they'll probably go up to the Supreme Court. So let me ask you about this. It seems like that you have all these different judges with different ideas on how
this should go. The Supreme Courts about to go on vacation. They take their summers very seriously. As somebody who also takes the summer circuit, I don't want to be I don't want to be too critical because I am you know, we do get the summers off, not summers off. We don't teach during the summers as academics. But yes, spring Court has been moving really Historically they've moved slowly, but they've been moving particularly slowly this year and last year too.
Probably some of it's COVID. Probably some of it was distrust about the leak is slowing things down. Maybe there's political tensions, institutional tensions there. I don't know, but like, right, what's going to happen. It's hard to it's hard. It's hard to know when they'll get around to ruling and then what they'll rule. It's so hard to say. They could do it on the shadow docket like they did with SBA the Texas abortion law. They basically overturned Row
a year before Rowe was overturned. Yeah, basically they could do that, which is basically not schedule oral arguments and have hearings and then write an opinion, but basically just vote on what they wanted to do and then just deal with it that way. The Supreme Court has become really quite even more unpredictable, I think in certain ways institutionally and also just like who knows how they're going
to rule in this case. So that's what I wanted to ask you about the Supreme Court because West Virginia had a trans kids sports ban which they kicked up to the court, and the court refused to hear it on the docket, but they did. The dissenters were Thomas and Alito. Let me say the following thing to give listeners a sense of what's at stake here. So on the one hand, you know, obviously access to safe and effective abortion medication is something that one side wants a
lot and the other side does not want. But there's also a thing going on, which is the standing doctrine. So the standing doctrine, as I mentioned earlier, is about like when are you allowed to actually bring a lawsuit?
And the standing doctrine was made more and more severe, meaning harder and harder for plaintiffs to bring lawsuits in the eighties and nineties two thousands, because it was a way of stopping progressives from bringing lawsuits against let's say, the Reagan administration or environmental activists would bring these lawsuits to try to stop some agency action that would affect the environment, and the conservative justices and judges really whittled
down when you were allowed to bring lawsuits. So if the Supreme Court were to say, yes, we're going to change standing doctrine. So now people who are really directly affected by a law it's still challenge it. Then that opens up the floodgates to all progressive activists who want to challenge the things that they want to challenge. So the standing doctrine was a creation in the last several days, gates out of the conservative movement, and so now they're
being a bit hoisted by their own pitard. This is super interesting. Thank you so much. I hope you will come back. I would love to, and I will tell anti Esta to listen. Molly junk Fast, Jesse Cannon. You know it was the best when all these people who've been bought things by Harlan Crowe, we're saying, no, there's nothing wrong with Clarence Thomas taking vacation, and then another
shoe drops to make them look stupid. No, I'm gonna go back here and say they were saying that there's nothing wrong with having Nazi artifacts, and in fact, there was an article title having Nazi artifacts does not make you a Nazi. You horrible Internet people forever saying such bad things about our favorite donor. Again, I ask you, all right, let's just stop and do a thought experiment.
If a Democratic donor had the standing bull death mask and cocktail napkins, personally, I would just not simp for the guy with Hitler's cocktail napkins. But that is a choice that all of us need to make. Anyway, Today we learn Harlan Crowe, but Justice, Clarence Thomas's houses, numerous houses that maybe Clarence Thomas couldn't sell, or maybe we don't even know. It looks like fuckery to me, and for that that is our moment of fuckery. That's it
for this episode of Fast Politics. Tune in every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday to hear the best minds in politics makes sense of all this chaos. If you enjoyed what you've heard, please send it to a friend and keep the conversation going. And again, thanks for listening.