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Newt's World

Episode 981: Senator Lamar Alexander

Newt's World

Gingrich 360

News, Politics

4.66.4K Ratings

🗓️ 24 May 2026

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Newt talks with Senator Lamar Alexander, former Governor of Tennessee and U.S. Education Secretary, about his memoir, “The Education of a Senator: From JFK to Trump.” He traces his public life from a 1963 Justice Department job under Robert Kennedy, where he heard Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, through the rise of “digital democracy,” social media, globalization, the Great Recession, and the Obama and Trump eras, arguing that social media and economic disruption have transformed American politics since around 2008. Alexander contrasts gubernatorial and senatorial leadership, likening governors to Moses and Senate leaders to drum majors who must recruit, align, and manage diverse “marchers,” and notes that many governors find the Senate frustrating while some senators struggle as pragmatic executives. He credits Howard Baker with teaching him to be an “eloquent listener,” to “learn to count” votes, and to remember “the other fellow might be right.” Relationships, he argues, are the essence of the Senate: he cultivated them by visiting House counterparts, maintaining courtesy, and hosting about 60 Senate couples, both Republicans and Democrats alike, at his Tennessee home. Alexander reflects on his own presidential bids, which he compares to moving from eighth-grade basketball to the NBA finals. He warns that presidential politics are increasingly dominated by “media and money,” recalling a 1999 quip predicting a Trump-like figure emerging from this environment.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.5

Guaranteed Human.

0:07.9

Welcome to News World Podcast on the IHeart Podcast Network.

0:12.5

The Trump administration has announced they're suspending a billion, $300 million in federal

0:18.5

Medicaid payments for California.

0:20.7

They apparently have, and I've talked

0:22.5

to Memad I as the head of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, they apparently have

0:27.5

had this huge failure to monitor seriously hospices. And there is apparently just an enormous

0:34.8

amount of theft and corruption. So they've really put the lockdown. California

0:40.6

has not been responsible and not come back with the information. And so they're now being very

0:47.2

tough, although I have to say California receives so many billion dollars in Medicaid money.

0:53.9

Well, it sounds like a lot, and to you and me it is a lot.

0:56.5

It's actually a very small part of the total California Medicaid spending. So as in many other areas,

1:03.0

California is badly run and has a huge amount of corruption. I think we also should all be concerned

1:10.0

that the Stanford Education Opportunity Project

1:13.1

showed a drop in U.S. test scores. The fact is they now show that reading scores are down

1:20.1

83 percent and mass scores are down 70 percent from last year compared to the decade ago.

1:27.4

The declines affect rich districts and poor districts and affects every racial and demographic

1:32.4

group.

1:33.6

Test scores in low-income districts fell the furthest, but even more affluent districts also

1:38.5

lost ground.

1:40.1

They found that from 2017 to 2019, students lost as much ground in reading as they did during the pandemic.

...

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