Daily Review with Clay and Buck - Apr 2 2026
The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show
iHeartPodcasts
4.5 • 11.4K Ratings
🗓️ 2 April 2026
⏱️ 62 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
Birthright Citizenship Scam
Clay Travis and Buck Sexton discuss President Trump’s national address on Iran. They highlight Trump’s assertion that the military campaign has been highly successful and that Iran will never be allowed to obtain nuclear weapons. They focus on Trump’s most consequential comment: a two‑to‑three‑week timeline for intensified strikes, paired with ongoing negotiations. The hosts analyze the strategy as classic Trump-style pressure—applying overwhelming force while leaving room for a deal—and predict the conflict will be resolved by early May. They also discuss market reactions, particularly energy prices, predicting oil volatility will calm as shipping lanes stabilize.
They also discuss the Supreme Court and the birthright citizenship case, with intense criticism directed at Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson following her questions during oral arguments. Clay and Buck play and analyze a clip in which Jackson compares birthright citizenship to criminal jurisdiction while traveling abroad, calling the analogy legally incoherent and emblematic of deeper concerns about preparation, competence, and judicial philosophy. The hosts argue that Supreme Court justices should represent the very top of the legal profession, and they denounce what they describe as ideological appointment criteria under former President Joe Biden.
Buck expands the critique into a broader examination of elite legal education, affirmative action, and merit, contrasting Jackson with Justice Clarence Thomas, whom they praise as a historically significant legal thinker. Both hosts stress that their objections are not personal but institutional, warning that lifetime appointments at the Supreme Court have consequences measured in decades. They argue that poorly reasoned questions and factual errors undermine public trust and diminish the gravity of the Court’s role as the final arbiter of constitutional law.
AG Pam Bondi Out
Attorney General Pam Bondi has officially been removed from her role by President Donald Trump, following a turbulent stretch marked by the mismanaged “Epstein Files” release and heightened criticism from inside the MAGA base. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton revisit why Bondi’s tenure drew frustration from Trump supporters rather than Democrats, pushing back on a listener claim that her removal was a “scalp” handed to the left. They argue that Bondi’s exit reflects Trump’s effort to tighten his administration ahead of Senate confirmation battles and the rapidly approaching midterms—framing the transition as strategic, not reactive.
Clay and Buck detail the emerging shortlist of possible replacements, including EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, widely rumored as the frontrunner. They also explore alternative names that could instantly stabilize the DOJ and navigate Senate confirmation with ease, such as Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Mike Lee, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, Harmeet Dhillon, and interim Deputy AG Todd Blanche. They analyze the political calculus required for each option—particularly red‑state Senate seats that governors could safely fill—and even speculate on whether the Attorney General role could be used as a power‑balancing move in internal Republican conflicts, such as the GOP civil war unfolding in Texas. Throughout the discussion, they emphasize that Trump is not “panicking” but rather strengthening his cabinet while timing and Senate control still allow significant personnel changes.
Hollywood Freefall
Legal strategist Katie Zachariah weighs in on the removal of former Attorney General Pam Bondi and the question of who should be President Donald Trump’s next pick to lead the DOJ. Zachariah strongly backs Todd Blanche, praising his loyalty to Trump during the post‑presidency legal battles and arguing that his willingness to risk his career for the president proves he has the toughness and credibility required for the role.
The discussion broadens into California Democratic politics, particularly speculation that the DOJ leadership change could expose renewed scrutiny of Congressman Eric Swalwell, including past allegations connected to a Chinese spy and questions about his residency. Zachariah argues that the Democratic Party lacks a deep bench in California, suggesting candidates like Swalwell and Katie Porter reflect broader party weakness as the state faces fiscal decline, population loss, and policy failure. Clay and Buck sharply criticize the idea of Swalwell as a potential governor, framing California as a case study in one‑party rule and systemic dysfunction.
Yes, We Talk to Democrats Too
An interview with retired Brigadier General Shawn Harris, a Democrat running in the special election for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District. Harris, a 40‑year military veteran and former senior defense official in Israel, presents himself as a “moderate Democrat” heavily recruited by Republicans in his rural district. Buck presses him on why he is running as a Democrat given his policy alignment on major issues, including border security, ICE enforcement, gender in sports, and foreign policy. Harris repeatedly emphasizes that he supports Trump’s border policies, believes the southern border must remain closed, and insists men should compete only in men’s sports—a position at odds with mainstream Democratic leadership. He explains that his campaign is focused on “kitchen‑table” issues, job creation, and restoring representation for rural communities neglected by Washington.
The conversation turns geopolitical as Clay and Buck ask Harris, given his national security background, whether he would support Trump’s military actions against Iran. Harris argues that Congress must be fully briefed at the top‑secret level before authorizing force, emphasizing lessons learned from past “forever wars.” He stresses the importance of having clear entry and exit strategies and warns that the United States could “win militarily but lose politically” if leaders fail to communicate objectives to the American public.
The wide‑ranging interview also touches on internal Democratic politics, including whether Harris would vote for Hakeem Jeffries as Speaker. He declines to commit, insisting his allegiance is to rural Georgia rather than any party leader. Harris admits he voted for Kamala Harris in 2024 but says he will support Trump’s policies when they are correct—arguing that Marjorie Taylor Greene’s recent positions have moved closer to his, not the other way around. He closes with an ambitious vision for bringing “generational jobs” tied to aerospace and future moon‑to‑Mars projects into Northwest Georgia.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is an I-Heart podcast. |
| 0:02.5 | Guaranteed Human. |
| 0:04.3 | Welcome back in Clay Travis, Buck Sexton Show. |
| 0:08.2 | Okay, let's dive into this a little bit. |
| 0:14.0 | We got a couple of different takes that I just, I can't not play this right now. |
| 0:20.9 | Katanji Brown Jackson Buck is Joe Biden's final curse on the United States. |
| 0:28.4 | We talked about yesterday when Joe Biden said, |
| 0:31.4 | I will only put a black woman on the Supreme Court. |
| 0:35.0 | I believe team look this up and make sure that I'm right. I think |
| 0:38.9 | 2% or 3% of lawyers are black women in the entire country. So in one fell swoop, Joe Biden said, |
| 0:48.4 | I'm not going to consider 97 or 98% of all lawyers in America for the Supreme Court. |
| 0:57.9 | And as a result, we now have Katanji Brown Jackson. |
| 1:02.8 | And Buck, it feels like every single oral argument there is another viral, I can't believe this is real, Katanji Brown Jackson |
| 1:14.3 | clip. |
| 1:15.1 | And I tweeted this yesterday and I said, we only have about 30 more years of this. |
| 1:20.4 | But it is the truth that the most consequential decision from a personnel perspective that |
| 1:26.8 | almost any president will make is who |
| 1:29.7 | he puts on the Supreme Court. |
| 1:32.1 | And Kataji Brown Jackson, I believe, is 56 years old. |
| 1:35.5 | So if we think that she's going to serve for another 25 or 30 years, we're going to have |
| 1:39.9 | to prepare ourselves for more and more of this. |
| 1:42.8 | And this was the question that she asked, |
... |
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