From a smoky, humid Times Square with the Canadian wildfires blanketing the city, Paul Rieckhoff delivers a quick-response warning ahead of Trump's primetime address. His read: this isn't a State of the Union or a policy rollout. It's the same rhetorical build-up we saw before the strikes on Iran and Venezuela — a president throwing rationales at the wall to justify an attack. Except this time, the target is the one thing that can still check his power: the midterm elections.
Rieckhoff lays out the pattern already in motion — the National Guard extension in DC, the push against mail-in ballots, Kash Patel and Tulsi Gabbard sent in to re-litigate 2020, and the coming pivot to blaming China. He argues this is now the number one national security issue in America, and that a failure of imagination is the biggest risk. It's summer. People are at the beach. The MAGA machine is counting on you to tune out. This short pod is a direct call not to.
In this episode
- Why Rieckhoff frames tonight's speech as the equivalent of a wartime address
- The pattern: how Trump built rationales before Iran and Venezuela — and is running the same play on the midterms
- The midterms as the 'circuit breaker' to Trump's power
- The National Guard extension in DC and the assault on mail-in ballots
- Kash Patel, Tulsi Gabbard, and the effort to re-litigate the 2020 election
- The coming pivot to blaming China for election interference
- Why this is the number one national security issue in the country right now
- The failure of imagination problem — and why summer distraction is part of the strategy
- A reporter's-eye view from a Times Square choked by Canadian wildfire smoke