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The Home Front

Using Corporate Scandals to Drive Political Change with Professor Pepper Culpepper

The Home Front

Reed Galen

Government, News, News Commentary, Politics

5.0632 Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2026

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today, Reed Galen and Professor Pepper Culpepper discuss the themes of corporate scandals and their impact on democracy, regulation, and public opinion. They explore how scandals like Dieselgate and the Exxon scandal can catalyze political change and regulatory responses, particularly in the context of differing approaches between the US and Europe. The discussion also delves into the implications of emerging technologies like AI and the FTX scandal, highlighting the polarized responses from different political factions. Ultimately, they discuss the need for a balanced approach to regulation that protects democracy and small businesses while addressing the challenges posed by powerful corporations. Find Pepper's book here: https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/billionaire-backlash-9781399424127/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to the home front. I'm your host, Reed Gailen. Today, I am joined by Professor Pepper Cull Pepper, author of the new book, billionaire backlash, the age of corporate scandal and how it could save democracy here. Get it wherever you get your finest books. He wrote it with Harvard professor, Tekew Lee. Pepper is the Blavatnik, he is the vice dean for academic affairs at the Blavatnik chair.

0:25.8

And, sorry, I'm going to start over.

0:27.5

Pepper is vice dean for academic affairs and the Blavatnik chair in government and public policy at the Blavatnik school in government.

0:34.9

His research focuses on the intersection between capitalism and

0:38.6

democracy, both in politics and public policy. Prior to becoming to the Blavatnik School, he taught at

0:44.4

the European University and at Harvard, the Kennedy School at Harvard. Today, he is coming to us from

0:49.6

Oxford. Pepper, welcome. Well, thanks very much to having me, Reid. All right.

0:58.2

So your book, Billionaire Backlash, it was a great read.

0:59.7

I killed a highlighter on it.

1:00.4

A couple of things.

1:06.6

One is, as you start, there are so many things that I think for me personally, and to take some personal privilege here, I owned a 2015 Volkswagen Tour-Reg.

1:15.9

So Dieselgate spoke to you.

1:17.4

No, 2010.

1:18.2

Excuse me.

1:18.5

It was a 2010.

1:21.2

And it was a great car and it got incredible mileage.

1:25.0

And we were like, this is the greatest car anybody's ever met. And we felt so good because we got a rebate and we were like this is the greatest car anybody's ever met and we felt so good

1:29.0

because we got a rebate and we felt good because it was a clean diesel and all this other stuff

1:34.8

and it turns out the whole thing was horse hockey good news bad news we turned it back in we got

1:39.9

almost as much money for it as we paid for it, bought another car, which we still have.

1:50.3

But give us a sense of why you and Professor Lee wrote this book and how corporate scandals can be the catalyst for political change.

1:54.5

Well, so we wrote that because everyone has had an experience with a corporation.

...

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