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Politix

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Politix is a weekly podcast about the 2024 election from Brian Beutler, Matthew Yglesias, and some occasional guests. We’ll have some good-faith disagreement, some points of consensus, and an overall effort to focus on what’s really at stake in November. Subscribe for new episodes each Wednesday and listen wherever you get your podcasts.

www.politix.fmMatthew Yglesias & Brian Beutler
Ciencia Política Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Prostate of the Union
    May 21 2025
    This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.politix.fm

    By the time you listen to this episode, the Republican bill to give rich people trillions in tax cuts, and throw millions of people off of Medicaid will be…somewhere. It could be on the glide path to passage in the House, or on life support, or somewhere in between. But the basic shape of what Republicans want to do, and what Donald Trump wants them to do, is clear.

    In this episode, Matt and Brian discuss:

    * How this terrible bill, which many Republicans really do not like, might become law anyhow.

    * Should this bill, if it passes, change the way Democrats think about the social compact, where productive, younger, more tolerant Americans underwrite Republican populations and politicians that despise them?

    * Will Republicans be committing political suicide by passing a huge, debt-financed tax cuts given inflation pressures and high interest rates?

    Then, behind the paywall, the renewed but cursed Joe Biden discourse. Did Biden or his advisers actually perpetrate a coverup of any kind, or is that just hype from reporters and Republicans trying to sell books and hurt Democrats? Do Democrats really need to have any kind of “reckoning” or are the lessons of 2024 and electing extremely old presidents pretty obvious to everyone? And how should they go about engaging in this and other forms of discourse that are frustrating and unhelpful, but impossible to avoid.

    All that, plus the full Politix archive are available to paid subscribers—just upgrade your subscription and pipe full episodes directly to your favorite podcast app via your own private feed.

    Further reading:

    * Update: Biden says his last PSA was in 2014.

    * Greg Schultz on the REAL reason Democrats lost the 2024 election. (The real reason was that Biden was very old.)

    * Brian argues Democrats should spend less time staking out positions on controversies, and more time reflecting privately on what their real views are.

    * Jonathan Cohn on the highly irregular way Republicans are trying to force their tax and Medicaid cuts through the legislative process.

    Más Menos
    41 m
  • Bullshit In A China Shop
    May 14 2025
    This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.politix.fm

    Donald Trump blinked, as many people suspected he would. This week, he reduced the embargo-level tariffs he imposed on China a month ago, and did so unilaterally. So in exchange for a month-long crisis, a still-looming supply shortage, lost jobs, and lost wealth, we got nothing! But Trump’s supporters are all too ready to cover for him.

    In this episode, Matt and Brian discuss:

    * What does Trump’s reversal mean for the economy in the near and medium term?

    * Will his army of propagandists be able to sell his flailing as a “win,” and, thus, blunt the political consequences of his economic mismanagement?

    * Would Democrats be better off if their grassroots were similarly cult like, or is Trump’s “superpower” actually a big weakness, both for the GOP and the country?

    Then, behind the paywall, how should Democrats think about the damage Trump is doing, not just in the trade realm but across government? It’s (apparently) easy to tweak tariff rates, but much harder to convince trading partners that we’re trustworthy. Could this be a basis for Democratic opposition? Should Democrats unify behind a general promise to reconstitute the government Trump broke, and rebuild global faith in the United States? Or are technical questions surrounding how to rebuild destined to leave the party mired in infighting?

    All that, plus the full Politix archive are available to paid subscribers—just upgrade your subscription and pipe full episodes directly to your favorite podcast app via your own private feed.

    Further reading:

    * Brian argues it’s counterproductive to wallow in the fact that building things is harder than breaking them, and that Dems should adopt a posture of resolve and defiance.

    * Matt on Trump rediscovering the virtues of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and how he succeeds politically by claiming credit for renegotiating shittier versions of deals he broke in the past.

    * Adam Serwer: “The Coronavirus Was an Emergency Until Trump Found Out Who Was Dying.”

    Más Menos
    47 m
  • Medicaid And Discomfort
    May 7 2025
    This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.politix.fm

    They won’t come right out and say it this time, the way they did in 2017. But Republicans are still hellbent on repealing the Affordable Care Act—or at least the half of the ACA that expanded Medicaid coverage to millions more poor and disabled Americans.

    In this episode, Matt and Brian discuss:

    * What do Republican pronouncements about their aspirational health care cuts actually mean?

    * Will cuts to a program that benefits millions of Trump supporters, and that basically nobody in industry supports, create disarray among House and Senate Republicans?

    * How should Democrats and industry stakeholders alike go about clarifying the stakes, so that Republicans might balk?

    Then, behind the paywall, the ACA meant to expand Medicaid in every state. But the Supreme Court decided it was unconstitutional for the federal government to force states to adopt policy under threat of massive, peripheral spending cuts. Since that’s the law of the land, shouldn’t Democratic governors err on the side of fighting Trump, rather than capitulating to his extortionate threats? What counts as fair-game cooperation with the Trump administration, and what counts as caving? And do Democrats need to be mindful of the underlying issue, or should they fight everywhere the law’s on their side?

    All that, plus the full Politix archive are available to paid subscribers—just upgrade your subscription and pipe full episodes directly to your favorite podcast app via your own private feed.

    Further reading:

    * Matt on not letting the awfulness of the GOP tax-and-Medicaid agenda slip through the cracks.

    * Brian on why Democratic governors like Gretchen Whitmer should stop Paul Weissing themselves.

    * Resources to help citizens with Republican representatives effectively oppose Medicaid cuts.

    Más Menos
    45 m
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