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Politics Politics Politics

Gretchen Whitmer's Big Gamble and The Race to Redistricting (with Alex Isenstadt and Evan Scrimshaw)

Politics Politics Politics

Justin Robert Young

History, News

4.6870 Ratings

🗓️ 22 August 2025

⏱️ 97 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Katie Porter's Surge in the California Governor Race

With Kamala Harris opting out of a gubernatorial run, Katie Porter is reaping the benefits. New polling from Politico shows Porter pulling ahead, with 30 percent of Harris's former supporters now backing her. Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra trail behind at 16 and 11 percent, respectively. Porter's advantage comes from her visibility and defined ideology — she’s well known and clearly positioned on the progressive spectrum.

California's jungle primary system means all candidates run on the same ballot, and the top two — regardless of party — face off in the general. Right now, two Republicans are splitting their share of the vote, which adds up to something in the thirties. Porter is in the driver’s seat, but with that comes the expectation of incoming fire. Her reputation for detail and sharp questioning in Congress could cut both ways — she's admired for precision but rumored to have a temper and staff issues that may resurface.

If you ask me, I'd rather be in her shoes than anyone else’s in this race. Governor Porter is no longer a long shot — she's a top contender. Sure, she's not universally loved, and her style is a sharp contrast to someone like Gavin Newsom, who leans more on charisma than policy depth. But Porter's grounded, process-oriented approach might resonate with voters ready for a different kind of leadership. It's early — but she's clearly in the lead.

The Freedom Caucus Exodus

Chip Roy is heading home — not just to Texas, but into the state attorney general race. He’s leaving behind his role in the House and with it, another domino falls in the dissolution of the Freedom Caucus. He’s not alone. Byron Donalds is going for Florida governor. Barry Moore wants a Senate seat in Alabama. Ralph Norman is aiming for South Carolina’s governor’s mansion. The list goes on — and the pattern is clear.

These were the hardliners — the names you heard when Speaker fights broke out or when high-stakes votes were in play. Now, they’re moving on, seeking promotions or exits. The Freedom Caucus’ influence, once loud and obstructive, is quietly fading. They all bent the knee to Trump eventually, and now it seems like they’re cashing out or repositioning for relevance in state politics.

In Texas, the AG job is a powerful one. Ken Paxton used it as a springboard and wielded it aggressively. If Roy wins, expect more of that hard-edged, action-first governance. But nationally, their exodus signals something more — the end of a chapter. The Freedom Caucus isn’t what it was, and its main voices are scattering. Their watch has ended.

Tulsi Gabbard's Deep State Overhaul

Tulsi Gabbard, now Director of National Intelligence, has unveiled ODNI 2.0 — a major restructuring plan that slashes staff and consolidates units focused on countering foreign influence and cyber threats. The goal is to cut $700 million annually — a bold move, but one in line with this administration’s mission to slim down government operations. It’s another signal that this White House doesn’t operate under old assumptions.

The intelligence world, long a target of Trumpian criticism, is being gutted — not just for size but for perceived bias. There’s a strong undercurrent here about the so-called deep state and its relationship with the press. This move isn’t just administrative — it’s cultural. It’s about information control. Gabbard is targeting the pipelines that leak classified narratives to shape public perception.

Living in D.C., you feel the impact of this. It’s a company town — when the company is laying off hundreds, the town shifts. Longer happy hours. People breaking leases. Uncertainty hanging in the air. But if you're in this administration, it’s not about sympathy. It’s about loyalty — or the lack thereof. And for many who see Trump as the duly elected CEO of the U.S. government, trimming the fat is justice, not politics.

Chapters

00:00:00 - Intro

00:02:43 - Interview with Alex Isenstadt

00:27:40 - Update

00:28:54 - Katie Porter

00:31:49 - Chip Roy

00:34:28 - Gabbard Cuts

00:41:23 - Interview with Evan Scrimshaw

01:31:52 - Wrap-up



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On this edition of the program, Texas has passed their gerrymandered map.

0:05.0

Let's take a look into the future and see where this is going to land by the time the midterms are voted on.

0:12.4

Evan Scrimshaw joins us to do just that.

0:15.9

Plus, that woman in Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, is doing something opposite to a lot of the other

0:22.9

2028 contenders like Gavin Newsom and J.B. Pritzker. She's agreeing with Donald Trump on things.

0:32.4

Alex Eisenstadt of Axios breaks all that down. It's all coming up.

0:40.3

The following is brought to you by just another pilot.

0:48.3

Politics, politics, politics, politics.

0:50.3

Oh, video from all, joining you for August, 2017. and welcome everybody to the politics, politics, politics program.

1:11.3

Your old pal, Justin Robert Young, joining you for August 22nd, 2025.

1:17.7

And where I sit in South Austin, not but a manageable scooter ride up the road in the Texas State capital. There are new maps that will govern this state,

1:33.9

not only for their local elections, but also very critically for the federal ones that are

1:38.9

coming up next year. This is the first domino to fall. We are going to see what happens with California.

1:46.9

We'll have Evans Crimshaw on a little bit later to talk through every inch of that.

1:53.9

Just a smidge of NFL talk at the very end. If you hate the NFL talk, you can just skip it.

2:00.5

And we will also have in just a few minutes conversation with Alex Eisenstadt of Axios about Gretchen Whitmer.

2:12.5

Eisenstadt wrote the book Revenge, which I thought was excellent.

2:16.7

And he is a phenomenal reporter, somebody that is very plugged in in D.C.

2:22.8

We have a great chat with him in just a minute.

2:25.6

That's coming up right after this.

2:32.7

Do I have anything else to say? I don't think I have anything else to say?

2:34.5

I don't think I have anything else to say.

...

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