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Podcast Pritzker digs in against Trump abuse of National Guard; warns of 2026 Trump scheme

The Rachel Maddow Show · 42:57 · 189d ago

Queued Transcribing Analyzing Complete
85% High Human

"Be aware of 'narrative threading,' where unrelated events (like a protest statue and military personnel changes) are woven together to create a sense of a coordinated conspiracy, making a specific political conclusion feel like an objective observation."

MildModerateSevere

Transparency

Mostly Transparent

Primary Technique

Intensity amplification

Inflating the importance, drama, or shock value of information using superlatives, alarming framing, and emotional language. Once your alarm system activates, you stop evaluating proportionality.

Cultivation theory (Gerbner, 1969); availability heuristic (Tversky & Kahneman, 1973)

The episode connects disparate events—a satirical statue, military firings, and a California ballot measure—into a singular narrative of a 'Trump regime' preparing for domestic military intervention. It uses high-intensity emotional framing to suggest that these events are not merely political shifts but precursors to a systemic takeover.

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Provenance Signals

The content exhibits the high linguistic complexity, emotional inflection, and spontaneous conversational markers characteristic of a professional human broadcaster. The presence of commercial ad-reads followed by a seamless transition into a specific, ongoing news narrative further confirms human production.

Natural Speech Patterns The transcript includes conversational fillers, rhetorical questions ('God, that's got to drive him nuts, right?'), and self-corrections ('for lack of a better term').
Personal Voice and Editorializing The narrator uses a distinct, recognizable journalistic style with specific narrative callbacks ('We reported last week here on the show') and subjective commentary.
Contextual Awareness The content references specific, real-time political events and interactions with other journalists (Caitlin Collins) in a way that reflects live reporting rather than synthetic script generation.
Episode Description
Donald Trump continues to terrorize urban populations with militarized ICE raids while trying every loophole he can find to justify using the actual military in U.S. cities.Illinois Governor JB Pritzker talks with Rachel Maddow about his threat to leave the National Governors Association of the group won't speak out against Donald Trump's use of the National Guard against U.S. cities. Pritzker explains how he sees the militarization of ICE and Border Patrol agents as a normalizing precursor to establishing a military presence in cities in time to interfere with the 2026 election. And as individuals find ways to assert peaceful resistance against the Trump regime, major corporations, like Apple, are giving up without a fight. Apple removed from its app store an app called ICEBlock that allowed people to flag where ICE raids were taking place. The app's creator, Joshua Aaron, talks with Rachel. Want more of Rachel? Check out the "Rachel Maddow Presents" feed to listen to all of her chart-topping original podcasts.To listen to all of your favorite MS podcasts without ads, sign up for MS NOW Premium on Apple Podcasts. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Worth Noting

This episode provides a detailed list of recent high-level military and intelligence personnel changes that might otherwise go unnoticed by the general public.

Be Aware

The use of 'associative guilt'—linking the president to Jeffrey Epstein via a protest statue and pardon musings—to prime the listener to view subsequent policy and personnel news through a lens of inherent criminality.

Influence Dimensions

How are these scored?
Repeated emphasis on 'child sex trafficking' in the context of Trump's pardon comments → uses the visceral horror of child abuse to bypass a policy discussion on the pardon power and create a moral stain by association.
Framing military personnel changes as 'destroying' leadership → transforms standard (though aggressive) executive branch turnover into a narrative of national vulnerability and impending violence.

Moral outrage

Provoking a sense that something is deeply unfair or wrong, activating a feeling that demands action — sharing, protesting, punishing — before you've fully evaluated the situation. It's one of the most viral emotions online because it combines anger with righteousness.

Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory (2004); Brady et al. (2017, PNAS)

Fear appeal

Presenting a vivid threat and then offering a specific action as the way to avoid it. Always structured as: "Something terrible will happen unless you do X." Most effective when the threat feels personal and the action feels achievable.

Witte's Extended Parallel Process Model (1992)

Listing military firings without providing the administration's stated reasons or the legal context of presidential appointment powers → creates the impression of a purge for the purpose of a coup, excluding the possibility of standard ideological realignment → benefits the 'existential threat' narrative.

Single-cause framing

Attributing a complex outcome to a single cause, ignoring the web of contributing factors. A clean explanation is more satisfying and easier to act on than a complicated one. Especially effective when the proposed cause is something you already dislike.

Fallacy of the single cause; Kahneman's WYSIATI principle

The assumption that California's gerrymandering is a neutral 'defense' of democracy rather than a partisan tactic → treats a controversial political maneuver as a moral necessity, making disagreement feel like complicity with the 'enemy'.

Moral framing

Presenting a complex issue with genuine tradeoffs as a simple choice between right and wrong. Once something is framed as a moral issue, compromise feels like complicity and disagreement feels immoral rather than reasonable.

Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory; Lakoff's framing research (2004)

Characterizing the 'Trump side' of the California ballot measure as consisting of only '130 donors' and 'one right-wing billionaire' → reduces an entire political opposition to a small, illegitimate group of elites to trigger the bandwagon effect for the 'yes' side.

In-group/Out-group framing

Leveraging your tendency to automatically trust information from "our people" and distrust outsiders. Once groups are established, people apply different standards of evidence depending on who is speaking.

Social Identity Theory (Tajfel & Turner, 1979); Cialdini's Unity principle (2016)

Character flattening

Reducing a complex person to one defining trait — hero, villain, genius, fool — stripping away nuance that would complicate the narrative. Once someone is labeled, everything they do gets interpreted through that lens.

Fundamental attribution error (Ross, 1977); Propp's narrative archetypes (1928)

About this analysis

Knowing about these techniques makes them visible, not powerless. The ones that work best on you are the ones that match beliefs you already hold.

This analysis is a tool for your own thinking — what you do with it is up to you.

Analyzed: 29d ago
Transcript

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So it is a statue called Best Friends Forever. It's about 12 feet tall. We talked about this on last week's show. You might remember. This is a statue in Washington that was created by anonymous artists. It shows Donald Trump and his longtime friend, the convicted pedophile and sex trafficker, Jeffrey Epstein, holding hands and gazing lovingly at each other while they kick up their heels, seemingly delighting in their longstanding friendship. We reported last week here on the show that this statue had a permit to be put up on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., but despite that, Park Service personnel were sent out by someone to topple it over and take it down. And the officials who toppled it over and took it down, they pretty severely damaged it. They smashed in the Trump head part of it. They tore the hands apart so the Trump and Epstein figures wouldn't be holding hands anymore. We reported last week at this time that the group that created the statue was able to retrieve the broken statue and repair it. And then they brought it back out again to put it up again, again with a permit to be there up on the National Mall. When they went back to put it back up, they were met with a big show of federal force, not just Park Service personnel, but also people in unmarked cars there to take it down as soon as they put it back up. But these artists are nothing if not persistent because they did put it back up again for a third time. Best friends forever, this time with even better repairs. The plaque on the statue says in honor of Friendship Month, and it has the big heart hands symbol. It says we celebrate the long lasting bond between President Donald J. Trump and his closest friend, Jeffrey Epstein. So the Trump administration took this thing down twice, but the artists who made it got it back up for the weekend right there on the National Mall. When President Trump went to Norfolk, Virginia this weekend to treat an audience of U.S. Navy sailors like they were paid attendees at one of his political rallies, this actually was one of the protests he had to pass by on the way to get there. People on this overpass on the way into Norfolk with a big sign that says, end the GOP shutdown in the center of your screen there. But look there on the right, off to the right of that, a silhouette of the Trump and Jeffrey Epstein holding hands, kicking up their heels statue. God, that's got to drive him nuts, right? Or maybe not. Maybe not. Today in the Oval Office, the president was asked a question by CNN's Caitlin Collins. It was a question about Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein's, for lack of a better term, partner in crime, the woman convicted of child sex trafficking with Jeffrey Epstein, who herself participated in molesting kids with him. Trump was asked about the Supreme Court decision today to uphold her federal conviction to leave her in federal prison. President Trump responded to that question by saying that he planned to talk to DOJ about whether or not to give Ghislaine Maxwell a pardon. Seriously. Reporter. Why would she be a candidate for clemency, sir? President Trump. I don't know. I'd have to speak to the DOJ. I mean, I'll look at it. I have a lot of people who have asked me for pardons. I'll call him Puff Daddy. He has asked me for a pardon. Reporter. But she was convicted of child sex trafficking. Trump. Yeah, I mean, I'm going to have to take a look at it. I'd have to ask DOJ. Yeah, I know the child sex trafficking thing, but. This is a woman convicted of organizing the Jeffrey Epstein child sex trafficking ring and of participating in the sexual abuse of children with Jeffrey Epstein. Again, the president's longtime friend. This president has reportedly been told by his attorney general that his name is in the Epstein files multiple times. He is refusing to release those files. His administration has already intervened in Ghislaine Maxwell's federal sentence to arrange to have her move to a low security, more comfortable federal prison where typically sex offenders aren't even allowed. But now, now on top of that, today, he is volunteering to reporters in the Oval Office that he thinks, you know, maybe she should be getting a pardon. Can talk to the DOJ about it. Reporter. But she was convicted of child sex trafficking. Trump. Yeah. I mean, I'm going to have to take a look at it. I'd have to ask DOJ. But she was convicted of child sex trafficking. Yeah, I mean, I'm going to have to take a look at it. I have to ask DOJ. Why do you have to ask DOJ? Why do you have to ask DOJ about somebody who's already convicted and serving time for child sex trafficking and has just had her appeal rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court? Why would you need to check in with DOJ about that kind of a person, about a person in that circumstance? Well, it's because he might want to set her free. And why would he do that? I mean, we don't know why, but we do know that he really was great friends with Jeffrey Epstein for 15 years plus. And this woman is Jeffrey Epstein's co-conspirator. And the president has been told by his own attorney general that his own name is in the Jeffrey Epstein investigative files multiple times, the files which he now won't release. Incidentally, the release of those files may be forced by the House of Representatives. On paper, at least, the House now has the requisite number of votes to force the administration to release those files. They have enough votes to force the release of the files because a woman named Adelita Grielva won a special congressional election in Arizona last month. She says as soon as she's sworn in, she will happily vote to release the Epstein files. And that should, on paper, give them the number of votes they need to force those files into the public domain. The Republican Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, has thus far refused to allow Ms. Grijalva to be sworn in as a new member of Congress, even though she won her election last month. And so the Republicans in Congress, most of them at least, appear to be willing to do basically anything to shield Trump's involvement with Jeffrey Epstein from public view. And we are still at that point of this story. Right before they sent the president out to hold this partisan political rally with active duty U.S. Navy sailors in Norfolk this weekend, right before that trip, the Trump administration, for some reason, fired the U.S. Navy's chief of staff. And I have to say, it did not make a ton of news when that happened. I think in part because this is one in a long series of firings like this now. Right. The military, by definition, is not a political body where the whole thing is supposed to turn over every time there's a new president. Since Trump has been back in office, he has just been destroying the top leadership of the U.S. military. Since Trump has been back in the White House, we have seen fired or pushed out the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the head of the Navy SEALs, the chief of naval operations, the head of the Navy Reserve. Now, this weekend, the Navy Chief of Staff, the head of U.S. Cyber Command, the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, the commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard, the chief of staff of the Air Force, the vice chief of staff of the Air Force, the head of the Air Force Global Strike Command, the top legal officer in the Air Force, the top legal officer in the Army, the top legal officer in the Navy. And in what may or may not be related news, the New York Times reports tonight that they have also removed the top legal official at the CIA. Because why not? All of these people have all been fired or pushed out by Trump, by the Trump administration. While, simultaneously, Trump, as of this past week, is explicitly telling all the remaining top generals and admirals in the U.S. military that he wants them to plan to bring U.S. military operations. He expects them to bring the force of the U.S. military to bear against Americans at home in U.S. cities. Specifically, he told them that he wants to see U.S. troops, U.S. active duty military engagement against the cities of San Francisco, Chicago, New York and Los Angeles. New York, Chicago and Los Angeles are the three largest cities in the country. Trump wants the U.S. military to operate in those cities against the Americans who live there. So is the military going to say no to that? Are they going to say yes to that? What Trump is doing as president, broadly speaking, is very unpopular. And you can you'll get results like this from any poll, any snapshot, any day. The latest CBS YouGov poll, for example, has Trump's overall approval rating 16 points underwater. Trump is 10 points underwater on immigration. He is 20 points underwater on the economy. He is 30 points underwater on inflation. Trump is unpopular. His actions, even on his supposed signature issues, are unpopular. He is unpopular. The political fights against Trump, on the other hand, are popular. And here's an example of that. In California, they've had to put this question to the voters as a ballot measure about whether or not California should gerrymander its congressional districts in the state so that they purposely can send more Democrats and fewer Republicans to Congress. California would not generally do this, but they are explicitly doing it just to counteract what Trump is telling Republicans to do to their congressional maps in red states. This is a very unusual circumstance brought about only by what Trump has done in red states. And on paper, this is a big lift, a super heavy political lift for California voters. States like California like to stay above the fray on issues like this. And voters, by design, have to be asked for permission for the state to do this. They have to be asked directly for their permission to do this. But despite that heavy lift people in that state understand that this is a fight against Trump This is a fight against Trump effectively his attempted permanent takeover of the government of the United States And so voting starts today in California on that California ballot measure, which, again, by right, should be a heavy lift. But look at the polling as voting starts on that ballot measure. The yes side, the yes, let's redistrict side is ahead by 18 points. They're up 18 points in the polling. The yes side, in terms of donors, they have 65,000 individual donors who have collectively donated over $83 million to that side of the fight. On the other side, on the Trump side, the San Francisco Chronicle reports that they have not tens of thousands of donors, but rather 130 donors total and that they've raised $35 million. But you want to do the math on that? Five million dollars of their 35 million came from one check from a Republican Party PAC. The other $30 million that they raised came from one check from one right wing billionaire guy. So they had 100 plus donors. I guess everybody else gave a few cents, enough to add up to a rounding error. Basically, they've got support from two checks and a handful of people. The anti-Trump side in California in the polling is ahead by 18 points, and they've raised their money from 65,000 people. The Trump side in the polling, they're down by 18 points, and their support appears to be basically just two checks. So this is what happens when you are pursuing very unpopular political ends, and you are doing so by very unpopular political means. And so Donald Trump is in a position where he really can't win politically, right? People are saying, no, they don't want it. They don't like what he's doing. So what do you do if you can't win politically? Well, let's use military force instead. Trump has sent federalized troops, including active duty U.S. Marines, into California's largest city already. He's got National Guard troops in Los Angeles still. He's now told the remaining top leadership of the U.S. military, the ones he hasn't fired yet, that he wants the active duty U.S. military to use both Los Angeles and San Francisco as, quote, training grounds. He wants what he described as a war within the United States, a war of the United States military against the American people. There were big peaceful protests against Trump and against his immigration agents this weekend in L.A. Sending in the troops in L.A. hasn't made people any less interested in protesting against him. Hasn't changed the character of peaceful protest to which the American people are constitutionally entitled. There were protests this weekend against Trump in Memphis as well, against Trump's plans to send troops there. Protests continued this weekend in Chicago as well. We're going to be speaking with Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker live in just a moment. Ahead of the expected arrival of federalized National Guard troops in Chicago, just plain federal agents in Chicago. From ICE, from CBP, from the FBI, from other agencies, they've been treating the city like it's Fallujah 2004. or something. This is from the Chicago Sun-Times. Quote, armed federal agents in military fatigues busted down their doors overnight, pulling men, women, and children from their apartments in Chicago, some of them naked, residents and witnesses said. Agents approached or entered nearly every apartment in this five-story building. U.S. citizens were among those detained for hours. The next day, toys, shoes, and food were still in piles in the building's hallways. Property managers were seen throwing mattresses and broken doors into dumpsters. Neighbors said federal agents used flashbang grenades to burst through the building and several drones and helicopters were deployed. One woman who lives across the street said it looked like hundreds of agents were outside her door. She said she saw agents dragging residents, including kids, out of the building without any clothes on. And into U-Haul vans, kids were separated from their mothers. This is from the Associated Press. Agents used unmarked trucks and a helicopter to surround this five-story apartment building in Chicago. News Nation, which was invited to observe the operation, reported that agents, quote, repelled from Black Hawk helicopters. Agents then went door to door, woke up residents and used zip ties to restrain them. Again, keep in mind, this is before the military gets there. This is just what Trump's federal agents are doing in Chicago. Calling in the Black Hawk helicopters to raid a residential apartment building. And then zip tying all the kids and the old people and breaking down all the doors and ransacking all the apartments. I mean, this is what they're doing to the American people in Chicago already. Before they send in federal troops. This is just federal agents. Trump is trying to deploy Federalized National Guard to Chicago against the wishes of the mayor and the governor. Again, we're going to talk with Governor Pritzker about the lawsuit that he's brought to try to stop that deployment when we speak with him in just a moment. Another lawsuit has been brought by a group of journalists and Chicago residents to try to stop federal agents in Chicago from infringing on people's rights to protest and on journalists' right to report on protests. As part of that lawsuit, the plaintiffs included some video exhibits about how federal agents have been behaving in Chicago already, again, before troops even get there. I want to show you two of those video exhibits that have been filed as part of this lawsuit. I'm going to show you two of them that depict attacks by Trump's federal agents on a priest, on a minister. Here's the first one. This is just about 20 seconds. Watch. you see them spray the minister in the face with chemical spray of some kind he falls to his knees In this next exhibit from the lawsuit, you will see Trump's agents shoot the minister with some kind of less than lethal munition. They shoot him in the head. This is about 15 seconds long. You'll see the minister praying. He's standing alone at the beginning of the tape. He's standing, praying with his hands raised. Watch. He's a priest. He's a Presbyterian minister. Again, these are exhibits from a lawsuit filed by journalists and Chicago residents over the Trump administration's use of force in Chicago against protesters and passersby and city residents and journalists who are covering their operations. Meanwhile, the state of Illinois itself has also filed its own lawsuit asking a federal judge to block Trump from escalating the situation further by sending not just agents like these, but federalized National Guard troops to Chicago as well. A similar lawsuit to stop Trump from sending federalized troops into Oregon was successful this weekend. This is a judge in this Oregon case who was appointed by Trump, for what it's worth. and she first blocked Trump from federalizing Oregon National Guard to send them into Portland under Trump's command. The judge said there was nothing in the conditions on the ground in Portland that would justify that kind of military force that Trump wanted to use those troops for. So she established a temporary restraining order prohibiting Trump from sending in the Oregon National Guard for that purpose. The Trump administration responded by saying, okay, well, if we can't send in the Oregon National Guard into Portland, then we'll send federalized National Guard troops from other states, from California, since we already federalized them for the L.A. operation, and we'll send some Texas National Guard federalized troops as well. That same judge in an emergency hearing late last night told the Trump administration in no uncertain terms that they were obviously trying to defy her order, and they were not allowed to do that. And I say no uncertain terms. Now I will show you what I mean. The judge, Mr. Hamilton, let me ask you, how could bringing in federalized National Guard in California not be in direct contravention of the restraining order I issued yesterday? Trump administration lawyer, Mr. Hamilton. The restraining order issued yesterday, paragraph one of it, enjoined implementation of Secretary Hegseth's order to the Oregon National Guard. And this is the judge. Mr. Hamilton, You are an officer of the court. Aren't defendants simply circumventing my order, which relies on the conditions in Portland? Nothing has changed. There's nothing in my order that has changed. Trump administration lawyer. No, your honor. The judge. So why? Why is this appropriate? Trump administration lawyer. Well, the reason is that the California National Guard were federalized under a different presidential memorandum. the judge. Mr. Hamilton, Mr. Hamilton, you are missing the point because here it's the conditions on the ground in Oregon that was the basis that were the basis for my finding that there was not a legal basis to bring federalized National Guard into Oregon. Is there any legal authority for federalizing National Guard for one purpose, that is to help California and then to divert them to another purpose in a different state where there's no showing that that is military help that is necessary to assist law enforcement or to protect law enforcement or the one federal building here for ICE? Trump administration lawyer. Well, the judge, is there any legal authority for what you are doing? Trump administration lawyer. Well, this section of the U.S. Code, section 12406, has not been utilized any time in history. So there are not many previous precedents from the use of this authority. But the judge, tell me, why do you think it has not been utilized? Trump administration lawyer. I can't speak to that. The judge, Mr. Hamilton, Mr. Hamilton. So again, if it were the case that you could federalize National Guard in one place and simply send them to a place where the president doesn't have authority to federalize the National Guard, then what would the purpose of this section of the U.S. Code be? You have to have a colorable claim that Oregon conditions require it, but you don't. We've already gone over that. So why is this appropriate? Trump administration lawyer. Well, again, no additional California guardsmen were federalized. They were instead relocated from California to the state of Oregon and the judge. So are they federalized or are they not? Trump administration lawyer. They are federalized, but new guardsmen were not federalized. 200 already federalized California guardsmen were relocated to the state of Oregon, the judge. Let me ask you, Mr. Hamilton, you're an officer of the court. Do you believe that this is an appropriate way to deal with my order or an order that a judge issues that you disagree with? Or is the appropriate mechanism to appeal? Trump administration lawyer. Well I not a policymaker but my judge you a lawyer That how it going for the Trump administration in court in trying to send in the troops to Oregon We'll see how it goes in Illinois, right? I mean, Trump does not seem to have the law on his side on this matter. He does not seem to have the people on his side. He does not seem to have the politics on his side. And so what he has is just force. And, I mean, let's be clear. We have entered the part of a movie where the authoritarian leader is trying to impose an indefinite military occupation on the streets of his own country. He has told the senior officers in the active duty military, which he is stressing and threatening and misusing already for his own purposes. He has told them already that they need to be ready to wage war on cities that oppose him with the active duty U.S. military turned against the American people. Governor J.B. Pritzker of Illinois is calling this exactly what it is. He's calling this an invasion. He is pushing back as hard as possible against Trump trying to send in the troops against his state. Governor J.B. Pritzker joins us live here next. Tired of home remodelers who overpromise and underdeliver? You and your home deserve better. Like an app that lets you track your project's progress whenever, from wherever. and a lifetime labor warranty backed by expert craftsmen who treat your home like their own. At Power Home Remodeling, this all comes standard because we hold ourselves to a higher standard. Schedule a free quote on windows, roofing, siding, or doors at PowerHomeRemodeling.com. Power. Our work. Shows. What do you know about the Family Detention Center in Dilley, Texas? It's where our government imprisons immigrant parents, children, and even newborns, a place with putrid drinking water, food with bugs and worms, and even a confirmed measles outbreak. These conditions are unsafe and inhumane. The Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, or RAICES, is the only legal aid provider inside Dili, day in and day out. We're there right now, defending immigrants' rights to due process and filing emergency petitions to free families illegally detained. You can fuel our fight to protect the rights of our children, our neighbors, and all of us. Donate at freeallfamilies.org. That's freeallfamilies.org. This message comes from the International Rescue Committee. Right now, in places like Gaza, Sudan, and Ukraine, conflict and disaster have forced millions of families into temporary shelters without basic supplies and in urgent need of aid. With your help, the International Rescue Committee is on the ground in more than 40 countries, delivering food, clean water, shelter, and medical care where it's needed most. Donate today by visiting rescue.org slash rebuild. Imagine being a child awakened in the middle of the night by a Blackhawk helicopter landing on your roof. Imagine an armed stranger entering your home and forcibly removing you from your bed, zip-tie in your hands, separating you from your family, and detaining you in a dark van for hours. This didn't happen in some faraway authoritarian regime. It happened right here in Chicago, right here in the United States of America. Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker describing the situation in his state with ICE conducting military-style raids, literally using Black Hawk helicopters in Chicago neighborhoods. President Trump saying he'll deploy hundreds of National Guard troops there, federalized troops both from Illinois and also from Texas, of all places. Today, a federal judge in Illinois declined for now to block the Trump administration from doing that. The judge will hold a hearing on the matter later this week. But that apparently means the deployment can go ahead in the meantime. Hours ago, with no ruling in place to bar the deployment, one U.S. military official told The New York Times that 200 Texas National Guard troops are expected to fly to the Chicago area tonight in military aircraft. Tonight, Governor Pritzker is, interestingly, calling on his fellow governors around the country to rally to Illinois' defense. In a letter to the National Governors Association, he says, quote, If the president continues overriding governors to deploy military assets into another state against the governor's will, We have abandoned the foundational principles that have protected our republic for nearly 250 years. This action must be denounced immediately and unequivocally by the National Governors Association. Should National Governors Association leadership choose to remain silent, Illinois will have no choice but to withdraw from the organization. Joining us now from Chicago is J.B. Pritzker, a Democrat, the governor of the great state of Illinois. Governor Pritzker, I know there's a lot going on. Thank you for making time to be here with us tonight. Good to be with you, Rachel. Let me ask you just first about this call to your fellow governors around the country. What are you asking them to do here to support you? Well, let's start with that we should stand as one against the idea that Donald Trump has the ability to call up our National Guard against our will. I want to remind you that just last year, Joe Biden tried to call up National Guard, federalize them to take Air National Guard and move them into the Space Force. And all 50 governors signed on to a letter, including, I might add, Greg Abbott from Texas, saying that it was improper for the president of the United States to call on governors to either send their National Guard or to federalize the National Guard so that the president could use them however he wanted to. Now, this year, of course, Greg Abbott is a tool of Donald Trump. He's his lackey, and he is, in fact, doing exactly what Donald Trump wants and going against exactly what Greg Abbott said he would do last year. So this is a problem. The National Governors Association under Governor Stitt from Oklahoma, whose chair, seems unwilling to stand with the rest of us governors, Governor Kotech, Governor Newsom and others, to prevent Trump from taking our National Guard, federalizing them and then using him either against us or against other states. Today, you sued to try to get a federal judge to block that deployment. It seems like we're going to have what will amount to a substantive hearing on that matter on Thursday. But here it is Monday night. It seems like in the meantime, there is reporting that some 200 Texas National Guard members are expected to fly to Chicago on military aircraft tonight. I know this is a very short, short, short term question, but what is your plan in the short term for this interim period where you may have federalized National Guard troops on the ground before the court has actually ruled? Well, the judge did warn the federal lawyers that if, in fact, they brought those National Guard and put them on the streets, that that would be a really bad idea because there may be a ruling against them in just a couple of days. And I might add that if they do deploy them to the streets and then they are ruled against, I mean, how embarrassing to have to turn tail and run back to Texas two days after you've arrived in Chicago. So we'll see what they do. It would be improper for them to be deployed before there is a ruling. And we think that there will be a ruling on Thursday. Governor, let me just ask you the big picture question here, which is that you have described and we have seen in open reporting and on social media and even in exhibits filed with other people's lawsuits against these actions by the Trump administration, we have seen tactics against the people of Chicago that look very much like military tactics. Using Black Hawk helicopters, the apartment building that they ransacked, broke down all the doors, took all of the residents out of the way that they've behaved on the street using military-style vehicles and weapons in the faces of people on the streets of Chicago. That's before troops get there. And now he's saying Trump is saying that he wants to escalate further and put actual troops there. What do you think the goal is here? What do you think the risk is here to the country? And how do you think this is going to end? Well, the broader goal, I believe, is the militarization of major American cities before the 2026 elections. Let me be clear about what's going on on the streets of Chicago. They have dressed ICE and CBP in fatigues, put them in military gear, including with automatic weapons, and had them marching up and down major streets in downtown Chicago. It's a signal that they're trying to send that it's OK to have troops on your street, that this would be a welcome thing for people who live in Chicago. Nobody here welcomes it, by the way. I mean, literally, as they're walking down the street, people are yelling at them. But they think they can get people used to the idea. And next year, I fear that what they're going to do is deploy these folks eventually to polling places and say they're protecting the vote. Donald Trump knows that without shenanigans and without these breaches of the Constitution, that he's going to lose the Congress. And if he loses, he's going to immediately in the aftermath of the election do what he said he might do in 2020, which is use the military to confiscate the ballot boxes and count the votes claiming that there's fraud. Remember, he's called up all 50 states election data to the Department of Justice because they want to review all 50 states for fraud. And they won't tell you exactly what they're going to do, but I fear that these are all connected. And this militarization, even without National Guard or military troops on the ground, you're seeing ICE act like a militaristic organization. You're seeing CBP act like it. One more thing. CBP, I want to remind you, the Customs and Border Patrol, they're supposed to only operate within about 100 miles of a border. we're not anywhere near a border here in Chicago. So how can they operate here? Well, they're claiming that Lake Michigan, the shores of Lake Michigan and Chicago, those shores are the border of the United States. But Canada is an awful long way from here across Lake Michigan. So we know that they're using it again as a pretext. They want CBP here. Those are the folks that you saw in uniform marching up and down the streets. Greg Bovino, who led the effort in Los Angeles for the Customs and Border Patrol and ICE, is leading the effort here in Chicago. And you saw what happened in Los Angeles. They incited people, and they're doing that here in Chicago. We want them. I mean, if they're going to do that, they got to go. We honestly they got to get the hell out of Chicago if that is their aim But that is what Donald Trump I believe is trying to incite it so they can bring more troops in invoke the Insurrection Act and militarize Chicago and other major cities Governor, if that's the stakes that we're talking about here, that's about somebody trying to hold power by force and thereby ending democracy. What should the scale of the response be? You've asked people to continue to protest peacefully, to make sure they film what these guys are doing. You're asking your fellow governors to join you on this. You've sued this government, the government to try to get a federal judge on your side. Are there other things that the country can be doing to say no to this, given the existential stakes that you're talking about in terms of whether or not we remain the United States of America? Well, there are two things I would say. One is we have to rely on the courts. And you've seen in the cases in Oregon that even a Trump appointed judge followed the law and followed the Constitution. And we have to rely on the courts to do the same here in Illinois. I would say there's another thing that we all are paying attention to, and that is making sure that we're electing people in 2026 who actually will follow the law and follow the Constitution in the United States Congress. We're only a few votes away from having a majority like that. And frankly, I think there are some Republicans who, yes, they are afraid of Donald Trump right now. But there are some who actually have a conscience. And I think that they're beginning to talk about breaking away from President Trump. Those things, I mean, whether we're going to win those Republicans over, maybe not, or we're going to win the elections in 2026. the courts and the Congress are going to be vital for us maintaining our democracy. Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker joining us live tonight right at the center of the storm. Sir, thank you for your time. I appreciate it. Thanks, Rachel. Much more ahead tonight. Stay with us. You ever wonder how far an EV can take you on one charge? Well, most people drive about 40 miles a day, which means you can do all daily stuff. no problem. Go to work, grab the kids at school, get the groceries, and still have enough charge to visit your in-laws in the next county. But they don't need to know that. 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He says he built this app as a resource not for people who want to avoid traffic enforcement operations by police, but for people who want to avoid encountering ICE agents. In July, Trump Attorney General Pam Bondi went on Fox News and said the DOJ was, quote, looking at Mr. Aaron and, quote, he better watch out. This did not have the intended effect. Downloads of ice blocks skyrocketed, put the app at the top of the Apple App Store rankings. So last week, Pam Bondi tried a different tack. The Justice Department simply told Apple that they should take down the app out of the App Store, and Apple did it. We reached out to Apple for comment. Here's what they told us tonight. Quote, we created the App Store to be a safe and trusted place to discover apps. Based on information we've received from law enforcement about the safety risks associated with IceBlock, we have removed it and similar apps from the App Store. Yeah, you didn't remove all your own apps that use exactly the same technology to tell people about all other kinds of law enforcement activity. It's another split screen moment in American courage and cowardice, right? You've got normal people refusing to stop protesting against the Trump administration, being really creative and patriotic in the way they're doing it. People trying to protect their neighbors from the Trump administration, people refusing to back down even when the White House targets them. And then on the other side of the screen, you've got our nation's biggest and most powerful corporations that are repeatedly, repeatedly just folding when they don't have to. In this case, not just Apple, but also Google, fresh off Google, settling a dead end, legally super dubious Trump lawsuit by giving Trump more than twenty four million dollars. Google now says it too has removed apps similar to IceBlock from its app store. And Google says the Justice Department didn't even have to ask them. Didn't have to, apparently. They just did it in advance. Think you're going to keep them happy and they'll be nice to you? Think that's how this works? Yeah, you probably only have to hand over the lunch money once, right? Authoritarian regimes are predictable. We know what they're going to do. They try to appear all-powerful, but they are not. almost all the time, you don't actually have to do what they want, especially when they don't have the law on their side. If there's one lesson from the Jimmy Kimmel cancellation, right, and uncancellation, it's that, yes, big cowardly companies are susceptible to pressure from Trump, but they're also susceptible to pressure from the American people, who can make them reverse their bad, cowardly decisions simply by pushing back on them. The creator of Ice Block joins us live here next. When the giant, super-rich company Apple capitulated to a demand from the Trump administration to take down an app called IceBlock, which people use to point out where ice operations are happening, the creator of the app responded like this. He said, quote, capitulating to an authoritarian regime is never the right move. This is protected speech under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. He said, quote, we are determined to fight this with everything we have. Joining us now is Joshua Aaron, creator of the IceBlock app, which has been taken down out of the Apple App Store. Mr. Aaron, thanks very much for being here. Appreciate your time. Thanks for having me, Rachel. Have you had any contact with Apple since they took the app down out of their store? I have not had any contact. On Thursday of last week, I received a message from Apple that they were contacted by law enforcement, alleging that IceBlock was targeting law enforcement officers. Of course, there's no truth to that whatsoever. And after reevaluation, they decided to reverse course on their decision to approve the app and remove it from the App Store, citing objectionable content. I understand that Google has also made a similar decision about similar apps. In their case, it appears they've made that decision without even being asked, just sort of following in Apple's wake here. Is that your understanding? That is my understanding, yes. You said in your statement, we are determined to fight this with everything we have. What does that fight look like? What options do you think you have? So Ice Block has an incredible legal team, and we're going to do everything in our power to fight back. I mean, I can't get into specifics right now, but I think more importantly, let's talk about the Trump administration pressuring large corporations and small businesses alike into complying with their demands. As you mentioned, look what happened to Jimmy Kimmel. He said something they didn't like, and the FCC chair calls ABC and they yank him off the air. IceBlock grows to amazing popularity and does something they don't like, so they call Apple and demand its removal. Now, interestingly, IceBlock users are the same users who build, support, and buy Apple's products. And these same people rely on and trust Apple every single day. And I'll tell you, if I was speaking directly to Tim Cook, I'd say, Tim, you've broken that trust. And now it's up to you to fix it. You're getting at something I think that's really important, even larger than this fight that you and your legal team are now in, I think, which is that it's one thing for an authoritarian-minded government to announce that they're doing a thing or even to do a thing. It's another thing for them to count on public-facing, publicly accountable institutions to do their work for them. And an ABC, even a Nexstar, a Sinclair, an Apple, a Google, they've got different considerations that they need to make in terms of what the public thinks of them than an authoritarian government does. I expect that Apple will feel a lot of pressure about having done this to you. I do want to ask you, though, personally, you know, after Apple caved, after we see Google cave as well, after Pam Bondi singled you out directly on national TV, can I ask what your secret is, why you're not backing down when these huge, two of the largest, richest companies in the world so easily are? You know, I've said it before, and I'm happy to say it on your show, but I was raised in a Jewish household. And growing up in that community, I had the privilege to speak with Holocaust survivors and learn all about Hitler's rise to power in Nazi Germany. And when we see five-year-olds in courtrooms with no representation or college students being disappeared for their political beliefs, or even worse, babies being ripped from their mother's arms while they're screaming for their children in the name of patriotism, we have to do something to fight back. We cannot remain apathetic. We must wake up to what's going on in this country before it's too late. Joshua Aaron, the creator of the IceBlock app, keep us surprised. We'll be really interested to see this legal fight as it goes forward. Thank you for helping us understand tonight. Thank you for having me, Rachel. All right. We'll be right back. Stay with us. All right. That's going to do it for me tonight. If you dread dealing with your insurance company more than you dread being stuck in an elevator with a total stranger. Hey. Who's an oversharer. Oh, bean burrito for lunch. Then you might have Insuranoia. And if you have Insuranoia, then you should have NJM. 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