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{"id":"1775679261151-MPAsUZEJHiM","videoId":"MPAsUZEJHiM","url":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPAsUZEJHiM","title":"Josh Shapiro on Trump, Iran War Chaos, Israel's Failure, the Economy, and 2028 Race","type":"youtube","topicCount":10,"segmentCount":117,"createdAt":"2026-04-08T20:14:21.151Z","uploadDate":"20260408","chunks":[{"title":"Introduction and Basketball Banter","summary":"The host introduces Governor Josh Shapiro and plays a vintage clip of him playing basketball. They exchange lighthearted banter about their rival NBA teams.","entries":[{"text":"Host: Alright everybody, weve got an incredible guest today. Governor Josh Shapiro is here, obviously Governor of Pennsylvania. Hes got record-setting popularity in Pennsylvania right now, 60% approval at least. Hes a moderate, hes focused on getting [ __ ] done, GSD. Hes tough on crime, ranked number one according to my notes on charging Medicaid fraud. Hes pro-data center, hes got a nuanced take on Israel, and hes a baller, apparently. Cuts to the tape.","offset":0,"duration":29},{"text":"Host: Got him! There it is.","offset":29,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: Oh my god.","offset":32,"duration":1},{"text":"Host: Theres your Governor.","offset":33,"duration":1},{"text":"Host: Look at those short shorts. Holy [ __ ]. Incredible, wow. Its the late 80s?","offset":34,"duration":9},{"text":"Host: And based on the VHS tape, this looks like the 80s.","offset":43,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: Yeah, that was 1990, I think.","offset":46,"duration":4},{"text":"Host: Look at that, playing the point.","offset":50,"duration":2},{"text":"Host: There you go. Very nice, very nice.","offset":52,"duration":8},{"text":"Host: All right, enough of that. That was back when, that was back when people shot mid-range jumpers. They dont do that anymore, man. They dont do that.","offset":60,"duration":3},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: They should. All threes, yeah. I mean, we have a couple of players and we were talking before the show started, youre obviously a big Philly fan and Im a big Knicks fan, so I will see you at the games. Were on a collision course.","offset":63,"duration":11},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I, by the way, with all due respect and I hope we have a good conversation here, I hope to never see you at the games. Because if youre showing up in Philly with all your Knicks crap on, Im not going to be a happy guy.","offset":74,"duration":7},{"text":"Host: Oh, look at the selfie courtside with my friend Dave, who is one of the co-owners of the team who is our mutual friend of ours, who I think egged you on a little bit to come on the program here, which I appreciate.","offset":81,"duration":10},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: He did. He said go on All-In, they have thoughtful conversations and anxious to have one with you. So thanks for having me.","offset":91,"duration":6}],"startTime":0},{"title":"Economic Growth and Permitting Reform in PA","summary":"Shapiro outlines Pennsylvania's pro-growth strategies, emphasizing a streamlined permitting process with a money-back guarantee. He explains how improving government efficiency creates jobs and reduces voter cynicism.","entries":[{"text":"Host: Yeah, theres so much for us to talk about but I thought I would start with your track record in Pennsylvania. And the reason I wanted to start there is because theres a bit of a collision course happening right now between you and Gavin. Gavins got what I would describe as a variable tenure here in California. I left California for Texas because I just thought it was a bit of a disaster. But youre doing great in your state and thats in the face of New York, my hometown, New Jersey, Boston, like losing a lot of business leaders. And youve been scoring, you know, some big wins. So when you look at your track record, maybe you could just educate the audience on what youve gotten done and maybe in comparison to whats happening in those other states with other Democratic leaders, because you seem to be maybe the exception to this rule that Democrats arent getting it done on a business level.","offset":97,"duration":52},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Look, Im proud of what weve done. Im not in comparison with Gavin or any other Democratic governor. Ill just talk about what weve done here in Pennsylvania. We are a pro-growth state. We want businesses to come here and grow. Im proud of the fact that weve created more jobs than all but two states in the entire country. Weve cut taxes seven different times to be more competitive. Cut taxes for small businesses, also for families trying to afford childcare, for seniors, for working Pennsylvanians. Weve taken our permitting process, thats the usually the the ticket you need say to build your building, right, if youre trying to build something here in Pennsylvania, we were bottom five in the country. I think were now a national model, easily top five in terms of speed. Weve got a money-back guarantee on all of our permits. If we dont get you your permit in time, well give your money back. And fun fact, weve issued 40 million permits during my time as governor, weve only had to issue five refunds, meaning only five of those permits were late. We are now the only growing economy in the northeastern part of the United States. At the same time, were investing in workforce development, especially if you dont have a college degree, tripling funding for Vo-Tech and apprenticeship programs and understanding the need to take the workforce we have today and prepare them for jobs here in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Proud that weve got an unemployment rate below the national rate consistently over the last 32 months. I think it is really critical that every kid born in Pennsylvania gets a great quality education, that that kid has a safe street to walk down to get to school or wherever else theyre going, and that theyve got a job in the community that they love. Those to me are the core foundational principles. Its what we focus on every single day. Our mantra, as you said at the top, is GSD, get [ __ ] done. Those are the areas where we focus on getting [ __ ] done and I think were putting a lot of points on the board every single day thats having a meaningful difference in peoples lives.","offset":149,"duration":126},{"text":"Host: How are you getting that done? Lets just take the permitting as an example. Why is it so dysfunctional in California? You know, obviously Im an investor in technology companies and we just saw red tape after red tape, then on housing, its incredibly hard to build anything. The NIMBYism, you know, if you cast a shadow, nothing can be built and then housing prices keep going up. And you know, if you want to hire a nanny or a teacher or you know, if a firefighter moves in, they cant even afford a home in the community that theyre servicing. So how did you fix this and why cant other states not fix it?","offset":275,"duration":38},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I mean, look, I cant speak to how its done in California. Ill just tell you in Pennsylvania, the way we start the conversation is by recognizing permits are critically important to economic development and to creating jobs, right? If we the government can move at the speed of business, if I can give you as a CEO predictability to know your business is going to be open in six months instead of three years, right, because the permit took too long, then youre going to want to invest here. So we sort of start with the important idea that permits matter. Second, when you come into our state government to get your permit, lets just use building a building as an example, right, we want to get to yes. We still want to protect the environment and public health and public safety, and we do that, but we want to get to yes. So our attitude has shifted. Third, weve got to have that money-back guarantee, because that money-back guarantee holds the bureaucracy accountable. Now, I will tell you that some of this weve done administratively, meaning Ive signed executive orders and weve made those changes. But other things, weve worked with the legislature to pass new laws to speed up our permitting. And it hasnt always been easy. Understand Im a Democrat as governor, Ive got a divided legislature. I was the only governor for a while with a divided legislature, now theres one other. Ive got a Senate led by Republicans by just two seats and a House led by Democrats by just one seat. But this is an area where Ive been able to bring Democrats and Republicans together in order to make progress in terms of passing this this permitting reform. And again, proof is in the pudding. What we are seeing is that businesses are coming here and the economys growing. Let me give you one more example. This may seem really small to you, but its a big deal, okay? When I talk about a permit, if you want to be a barber in Pennsylvania, you need a permit, or technically its called a license, but I put it all under my...","offset":313,"duration":101},{"text":"Host: Yeah, some kind of certificate, yeah.","offset":414,"duration":1},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Right. The day I took office, it took 20 days for a barber to get their permit to be able to go out and cut hair. Today you get it same day, you get it within that day. That may seem silly to you, but but understand, I called my barber. I asked him, I said, how many heads do you cut a day? He said about 10 a day. At 20 bucks a pop, 200 bucks a day for for 20 days, thats real money. Thats thousands of dollars that were putting into that barbers pocket just because we got them their permit more quickly. So I know it may sound nerdy, it may sound wonky, but whether youre building some big building thats going to house hundreds of workers or thousands of people who are living there, or whether youre the local barber that everybody needs to go to to get to get their haircut, this stuff matters. And the quicker you are, the more jobs you create and the more money you put in peoples pockets.","offset":415,"duration":58},{"text":"Host: It also matters I think on a philosophical basis of who is the government working for? Themselves and their timelines, or for the people who put them in office? And I think thats the philosophy, just watching it happen in New York and California, its the opposite of what you described. Theres no sense of urgency and theres almost a situation where people believe its intractable, that they cant change it. And so thats I think such an important point is that you actually made it happen.","offset":473,"duration":31},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think thats a great point. I want to focus on what you just said there. First off, I start the conversation believing that government can be a force for good in peoples lives. Second, that weve got to figure out a way to get to yes. Whether its building a building or whether its getting that mom the support she needs for her kid with autism who needs support. Weve got to figure out a way to get to yes and get them that help. And then you mentioned in your question the way people get, I dont recall if you used the word frustrated or or they feel, you know, that governments sort of holding them back, right?","offset":504,"duration":34},{"text":"Host: Its oppressive in a way, right? Just if you have that experience three or four times, whether its at the airport or getting your drivers license or getting the haircutting, you know, certificate, like its just oppressive over time, you just feel like the governments working against you.","offset":538,"duration":14},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, and what does that, what does that person feel after they try and get their permit, they cant get it, they try and open up their small business, it wont work? They get frustrated. By the way, they get pissed. And then not only are they pissed at that agency or that governor, or theyre pissed at that state government, they also grow, and this is an important point, a little more cynical about government and a little more frustrated about the process. And when that happens, I think that that creates more distrust in our system and it creates more opportunity for, I think frankly dark voices on extremes to come in and take advantage of people. I I find that, you know, if we get it done the right way, if we process things quicker, if we get people to yes, then maybe a byproduct of that is a little bit less cynicism in our system.","offset":552,"duration":52}],"startTime":97},{"title":"Rooting Out Waste and Medicaid Fraud","summary":"The host asks about eliminating government waste and fraud. Shapiro highlights his record of prosecuting PPP loan fraud as Attorney General and his ongoing efforts to target Medicaid fraud.","entries":[{"text":"Host: Yeah, and the horseshoe theory that youre kind of referencing there, these two extremes just taking over the conversation, thats not what the majority of the country wants. They they want to just live in a high-functioning society. I was curious how you look at fraud, waste fraud and abuse. My friend Elon, to drop a name, you know, did this doge thing, was a little controversial, but I think what weve seen is hey, 20-30% of every tax dollar collected is wasted. Some of its fraud, some of its just incompetence, it could be anything on that spectrum. And this seems to be the Republican partys rallying cry to beat the Democrats, going into California and prosecuting people, Michigan, etc. You have seemed to have gotten ahead of this, youve been doing this for years. So maybe you could explain your take on fighting fraud specifically, healthcare or in other areas.","offset":604,"duration":53},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Look, I think weve got to focus on rooting fraud out of the system. Now, you and I may differ on hey, should we spend a dollar on that initiative or not? And by the way, those are super healthy differences and we should argue that out, we should debate that. But where we should have no difference is if someones stealing that dollar instead of going to its intended purpose, we should be against that. And and I am. Prior to serving as governor and having the privilege of sitting here in this office serving the good people of Pennsylvania, I was the states Attorney General. And youll remember back during COVID, there were those PPP loans to help our small businesses and other businesses stay afloat. Wed probably agree like, good idea, right? Weve got to keep businesses afloat. But during that time, I went out and prosecuted a whole bunch of people for stealing that PPP money, for not using it for its intended purposes. Here as governor, Ive maintained a similar focus through my office of Inspector General rooting out fraud, through making sure, by the way, were not fronting you money when youre going out and providing say human services, you have to submit for reimbursements and youve got to make sure you prove that you did that work. When we find that someone took advantage of the system, were referring them to prosecutors. Im proud of the fact that weve had more Medicaid fraud prosecutions in Pennsylvania than I think any other state, maybe there was one other. Were were certainly toward the top of that list. Proud of the fact that weve identified that, weve sent it to prosecutors and weve addressed it. If we can address it administratively, we do. If not, we understand that those things need to be prosecuted. We should have a zero-tolerance policy for that and we should make sure that if were going to utilize a hard-earned dollar of a taxpayer for a purpose like providing someone with healthcare, that weve got to make sure that that dollar makes its way to that person so they get their healthcare. And, you know, our folks are working really hard on that in Pennsylvania.","offset":657,"duration":114}],"startTime":604},{"title":"State Tax Policy and Wealth Disparity","summary":"Addressing concerns about wealth taxes, Shapiro details Pennsylvania's tax cuts and the Working Pennsylvanians Tax Credit. He contrasts his approach with Donald Trump's tax cuts, which he argues disproportionately benefit the wealthy and harm healthcare access.","entries":[{"text":"Host: So pro-business, less regulation, lowering taxes, eliminating fraud, and all of this is just getting done in the state. And then, you know, the next piece that in at least my community, people who are creators of businesses, venture capitalists, angel investors, founders, we pay our taxes, pay a lot of taxes depending on which state you live in. And then theres this movement...","offset":771,"duration":26},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: You should be paying more taxes in Pennsylvania, man, stop paying them elsewhere.","offset":797,"duration":2},{"text":"Host: Yeah, well, the and you know, we then get struck with this California law and a lot of my friends have moved to Austin where I live now, they just said suddenly hey, we want to seize 5% of whatever you got. You already paid your taxes, you havent paid capital gains on some of this equity you own in your company, maybe its paper wealth, maybe your company went public now and you could sell some of it, but you might crater the stock if you do. And Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and California all trying to seize assets on gains theyve never received. Its a, it seems to be getting momentum.","offset":799,"duration":60},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I mean, I would just tell you, weve cut taxes seven times in Pennsylvania. Weve got one of the lowest income taxes in the entire country, thats why Im joking with you, you should come to Pennsylvania and relocate here. And and look, I mean, that kind of tax that youre describing is not something we have here, its certainly not something on on my agenda. I do think people need to pay their fair share. I think youd agree with that. We need to make sure that we are easing the burden on those who are working and who are at the lowest, you know, sort of economic point on the scale. And weve got to make sure that folks at the top are paying their their fair share in order to to sustain our society. And I think weve struck a really good balance here in Pennsylvania. And I think our growth numbers bear that out. I think seeing more people coming to this state bears that out. And I think theres an important stat, one of the things you you cited in those entrepreneurs as you were going through your question is, you know, these are people who kind of started with a dream, with an idea that, you know, someone might have looked at and said, jeez, I I dont know about that, but they stuck with it and and they built up their companies. We see here in Pennsylvania, particularly when it comes to life sciences, right, were seeing people plant a flag here in Pennsylvania, start with an idea that others might think, boy, I I dont know about that, but then because of our tax environment in Pennsylvania, because of our pro-growth approach in Pennsylvania, were seeing more of those small businesses, more of those small companies, especially in life sciences, survive that sort of valley where a lot of those companies go out of business and sustain themselves here because again, I think were showing that were pro-growth, weve got a smart tax environment for them, and by the way, after we invest in them, after we give them a shot, and after they do well, we expect them to pay their fair share back to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. And I think thats thats the approach weve taken and its working.","offset":859,"duration":118},{"text":"Host: Yeah, and so if youre not in favor of a wealth tax, what would you do to deal with maybe this disparity in wealth that were seeing? There was just some statistics that came out the other day, Im sure you saw them, the upper-middle class has just been surging, middle class going down a bit, and people in the lower rungs going down as well. So people may feel like theyre not making enough money, but in reality whats happening is people feel other people have made a tremendous amount of money, which is true because of equity holdings are growing much better than salaries ever will and only 40% of only 50% of the country really participates in a meaningful way in equities, the other 40-50% dont have any exposure to that. So how would you deal with somebody making, you know, 100 billion dollars, 500 billion dollars, a trillion dollars and never selling their equity or maybe not selling it for 20 years? How do you think about that?","offset":977,"duration":58},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Let let me make three points, a Pennsylvania point and a couple broader points. One, you cannot have a national economy that works if its only working for the 1%. And you pointed out in your question the wage disparity and the disparity of income. You have to make sure that there is opportunity for those at all different income levels. And look, as we sit here today, if youre making a million dollars versus fifty thousand dollars, if you make a million dollars youre going to be able to buy some stuff that someone at fifty thousand dollars cant buy, right? We sort of understand that, but youve got to have opportunity and youve got to have a level playing field, and youve got to have a fair shot, and youve got to have a tax system that works in a fair way. So thats sort of point one. Point two is here in Pennsylvania, weve tried to address some of that economic disparity by passing the first-ever Working Pennsylvanians Tax Credit, sort of a state-side earned income tax credit. So what were saying is if youre working, if youre going out and busting your hump, were going to put some money back in your pocket. About 940,000, almost a million Pennsylvanians are going to qualify for a little over 800 bucks back in their pockets. So thats going to help not only today with rising costs due to a lot of these federal policies, but its going to put money back in peoples pockets, allow them to make, you know, the the the investments they need to make in their everyday lives. Heres the third point. What I would not do, because you asked what I would do, what I would not do is what President Trump did at the federal level with an aid and assist from a whole bunch of sycophants in Congress by passing that budget bill, the beautiful budget bill, whatever the hell they called it. In effect, what they did was they gave a tax cut for those who simply do not need it, right? And by the way, in the palace of truth and justice, you talk to those folks, they know that they didnt need that tax cut. And what happened as a result of that is Ive got 500,000 Pennsylvanians who are going to lose their healthcare. Ive got 120,000 who have already lost their healthcare, about another 320,000 or so are likely to lose Medicaid next year. Ive got 26 rural hospitals that are likely to shutter because these are rural hospitals that are working at an operating deficit and theyre relying so much on Medicaid, which has been slashed by the federal government. So the idea that Donald Trump thought it was smart economic policy to give a tax cut to those who dont need it and pay for it with those who are struggling where and and create even greater economic disparities, that is going to hold back our entire economy. Just take those 500,000 people who arent going to have healthcare. Youre paying for that, and Im paying for that, with our private insurance premiums. So what Donald Trump has done is shifted that burden onto those who are struggling, making it harder for them, adding additional costs to the middle class, and I think that that is that lacks frankly its just dumb economic policy and I think its going to set us back.","offset":1035,"duration":181}],"startTime":771},{"title":"Democratic Strategy and the VP Selection Process","summary":"The host questions the Democratic Party's primary process and whether Shapiro was passed over for Vice President due to his Jewish faith. Shapiro clarifies that he voluntarily withdrew from consideration to continue serving as Governor.","entries":[{"text":"Host: So here we are, politics is on the table. Incredible track record you have, but lets dive into the Democratic Party. Im an independent, but grew up Irish Catholic in Brooklyn, so grew up a Democrat. Probably have voted, you know, 60-40 Democrat to Republican, but always for a moderate, somebody who can get stuff done, thats why I find you quite appealing. But lets talk about the Democratic Party and the shellacking they got in the last election and specifically what really troubled me, Biden didnt look like he was all there and I think weve all come to some consensus that he probably should have dropped out early. But what was really disheartening to me was that they didnt do the speed run primary, they didnt do, you know, a capsule primary over that July-August period and gave you a shot and other people a shot, Pritzker, Buttigieg, whoever, to to compete for the nomination. Was that a huge mistake for the Democratic Party and and when you look back on it, do you think that might have cost you all the election?","offset":1216,"duration":62},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well, look, I mean I actually wrote about this in in the book I recently published where, you know, it it became clear to me that, you know, Joe Biden seeking another term was probably not in the best interest of the party or the country and I spoke to him directly about that and bluntly about that. Once he made the decision to drop back with a hundred and whatever days to go, you know, there there were not many opportunities I think to have the kind of primary process that youre talking about. I think it is important to look forward, right, and not look backward and you said in the last election Democrats took a shellacking. Actually, if you look at 2025, it was the opposite. I mean the Presidents party, the Republican Party, got beat in New Jersey, got beat in Virginia, got beat here in Pennsylvania where we won three state supreme court seats. So obviously theres a pendulum in in American politics and its clearly swinging back and forth. I think whats important is that we look forward and I think its also really important for our party to have for my party to have a real debate and to have a real discussion about ideas. What are we for? And what are we willing to fight for? And I realize that process may at times look a little messy, I realize and I mean this with the utmost respect, it gives folks like you on a podcast or on a show the ability to sort of pick apart, maybe try and, you know, sort of parse words or point one Democrat at another and try and create conflict. But I would just say that overall, having this debate and having these issues be raised and having disagreements, thats healthy for our party and ultimately I think our partys poised to take back power and that will make us better at governing. To me, the whole purpose of running in an election is getting the chance to govern, not just winning the election. And so having these debates right now puts us in a better position when we win those elections and Im running for reelection right now in Pennsylvania, going to work my ass off to win another term and earn the support of the people of Pennsylvania again and I want to continue to deliver, continue to, you know, focus on these issues that matter most and having that debate I think is really healthy.","offset":1278,"duration":123},{"text":"Host: I understand looking forward is most important, but I got I gotta go one more time in the rearview mirror here, which is Kamala Harris was picked because Biden had put out a criteria hey, I want to have a woman of color as my Vice President, he was very explicit about that. She could be quite qualified, unqualified, you know, moderately qualified, but then when she went out to pick her VP, everybody was saying hey, Josh Shapiro should be really in that running and she didnt pick you specifically because she didnt think she could win with a Jewish Vice President.","offset":1401,"duration":30},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, I I dont, respectfully, I gotta push back on that. And again, Ive been very, very open about this.","offset":1431,"duration":6},{"text":"Host: Okay, push back on it, yeah, lets go.","offset":1437,"duration":1},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, and respectfully, Im not looking to be argumentative with you, but I was very, very detailed and very specific in my book about this process and I was very grateful to the Vice President for being considered and grateful to her for the candid dialogue we had and about 48 hours before she picked Tim Walz, I pulled out and made clear that that was not something I was interested in doing. I thought I could serve the good people of Pennsylvania and do my best serving here as Governor in a job that I absolutely love. So this wasnt about her not picking me because of my faith, this was about me in the end not being interested in in that job.","offset":1438,"duration":41},{"text":"Host: Really? Sincerely, yes? Because it did seem like you wanted to to be considered for that VP position.","offset":1479,"duration":7},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I I called Sunday evening after she and I met and had a really candid conversation to inform her that I did not want to be considered. I thought she had some really good people to choose from.","offset":1486,"duration":11}],"startTime":1216},{"title":"Democratic Platform and Expanding Opportunities","summary":"Discussing the path forward for Democrats, Shapiro outlines a platform centered on education, safety, economic opportunity, and freedom. He highlights his work expanding housing, funding vocational training, and removing college degree requirements for state jobs.","entries":[{"text":"Host: All right, so lets move forward then, looking at winning. Youre gonna run for Governor again. I assume thats gonna be a shoo-in, you know, you gotta do the work, but its pretty clear youre gonna win.","offset":1497,"duration":8},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I appreciate your your confidence there, my man.","offset":1505,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: No, its clear. But lets talk a little bit about if you were to run for President, which people seem to think youve got a really good shot, but youre below maybe national recognition right now or a little bit far behind. Gavin has come out hey, Im running, Im running, here I am, hes obviously in the pole position for now. I want to understand the Democratic Party and how they should proceed because just like the right seemed to separate and you had this MAGA coalition and you had, you know, the traditional Republicans who were just aghast at Trump and his style and his behavior, etc., now that seems to have fractured again. You have America First, America Only, all the supporters who were supporting Trump now have come out vocally against him because of the war in Iran. And then you have on your side this Socialist Democrat movement, which I think a lot of moderates are like, well thats confusing, we dont want to have more Mondames and that doesnt seem super appealing to a lot of moderates, and the moderates are the ones who flipped this election and they went, the last election, they went with Trump largely as opposed to going with Kamala. So handicap for me what has to happen in the Democratic Party to win in 2028?","offset":1508,"duration":76},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I understand why youre asking that, and I will answer your question. I dont think anyone should be looking past these midterms. And while I appreciate the confidence you have in me and and maybe in the broader dynamics here, I think we need to have a national referendum in these midterms on what people see happening in Washington, D.C. The chaos and the corruption that exists there. I think people need to show up in record numbers and vote their concerns. And so Im not looking past the midterms. I do think it is important that we acknowledge Donald Trump has injected chaos and corruption into everything he touched. And I think its important for me, for other Democratic leaders in this country, to be able to show what calm, competent governance can actually deliver for people. Thats what Im going to be talking about in these midterms as I seek reelection. I think it is important to paint an alternative picture to the chaos Donald Trump has created. One where you can actually grow the economy. You can make our communities safer. We didnt talk about this yet, but weve hired 2,000 more police officers, invested in community violence prevention, and violent crime is down 12%, fatal gun violence is down 42% in our Commonwealth. Weve invested in public education and by the way, scores are up, truancy is down, were moving up on the list, were about 10th according to Consumer Affairs in the quality of public education. I think weve got to show that there is an alternative to Donald Trumps chaos, to his cruelty, to his corruption and youre seeing that I think certainly in my state and I think youre seeing it in other states as well. And we need to paint that alternative picture.","offset":1584,"duration":107},{"text":"Host: So 2026 is certainly going to be a referendum on the first two years of this presidency, which was extremely popular for the first nine months or so. People felt really good about the economy and that had well...","offset":1691,"duration":13},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Some people.","offset":1704,"duration":1},{"text":"Host: Well, I think his polling was great, but there was this tinge, I think its pretty accurate to say the tariffs felt like those were chaotic. Then you get the ICE situation, that feels very chaotic. Then you go to this war with Iran, and that feels like a peak chaotic moment that were in here in week six of this. So its certainly going to be a referendum on Trump, and it feels like all the Democrats have to do is sit back and say like look, is this what you want? Gas prices up, inflation. But youre saying they have to paint another picture. Paint that picture for me, what is that picture?","offset":1705,"duration":34},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think on both sides of what you just said, Donald Trump chose to push the tariff button, right? And as a result, here in Pennsylvania, what were seeing is coffee prices are up 30%, beef is up 19%, OJ, orange juice is up 9%. The fertilizers my farmers rely on here in Pennsylvania up 36%. So were seeing whether youre a farmer, whether youre, you know, a dad just trying to cook dinner for his kids, whatever the case may be, everything costs more because of the recklessness and the chaotic approach Donald Trumps taking our economy with these tariffs. Obviously this war has spiked gas prices, up today about 4:15, 4:16 here in Pennsylvania, similar across the country. Probably years before those gas prices come down, even if the war, you know, hopefully ends, you know, very very soon. And so I think it is important yes, to point that out. The way Donald Trumps policies have hurt the American people, have hurt our farmers, have hurt our small businesses. The point I was making a moment ago is I think thats part of the conversation. The other part of the conversation is okay, well what are you doing to make peoples lives better?","offset":1739,"duration":72},{"text":"Host: Yeah well so what should the top three things be? Like if you were running the Democratic Party and everybody got in a room and said you know what, we really are going to take winning seriously, not getting into this like purity test for everybody in the party and you know, everybodys gotta be perfect and Joe Rogans not good enough to go on air with because hes a lifelong Democrat but he said something about COVID we dont agree with, therefore hes out of the party. Elon Musk is a little bit weird on the well, but the Democrats did. And then oh Elon Musk waited hours to and had Obama at SpaceX and then all of a sudden he cant come to the White House for the EV summit, the category he created. Like its pretty obvious the Democratic Party had some real dysfunction in there in terms of building a bigger tent. And I can tell you, I have never felt more courted in my life than the Republican Party trying to get me to be part of the the Trump movement, which I demurred and declined, it wasnt my style. Right. But they are trying to build the biggest tent possible. Theyre like oh you agree with 14% of what we do? Youre in. Okay. Yeah, so walk me through what the top thing should be, yeah.","offset":1811,"duration":68},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: So lets dissect that a little bit. First off, you attribute a number of things to Democrats that I didnt say. So um youre here interviewing me, so lets focus on the things I say. Number two, they went and they courted you, and you demurred, but by the way, even had you not demurred, had you signed up, I dont know that your life would be better off after a year and a half of Trumps policies. What I am for here in Pennsylvania, the ultimate swing state, the toughest state to win in, an incredibly tough state to govern in, particularly with a divided legislature. Im for investing in public education giving every child a God-given opportunity. Im for safe communities and were building that here and were reducing crime in all of our communities. Im for a pro-growth economy where we generate more energy, we generate more jobs, where we create more opportunities particularly in our rural communities and forgotten communities that have been too often left behind. And heres the fourth thing Im for, I am for freedom. And Ill tell you what, this president represents a party that used to be known as the party of freedom, and now they have turned their backs on that. They want to tell my kids what books theyre allowed to read, they want to tell women what medicines they can take and what they can do with their bodies, they want to control the way I raise my child, they want to say, you know, every day that yeah you can vote but were going to set the rules and try and rig them in a way where youre not going to be successful. They are not the party of freedom. And I think the Democratic Party has an opportunity to be the party of education, safety, economic opportunity and freedom. Thats what were doing here in Pennsylvania and thats what Im going to continue to put forth.","offset":1879,"duration":103},{"text":"Host: I think its a great platform. I would add to it housing. The thing I hear about from young people all the time is, you know, just Ill never be able to afford a house, the American Dreams a bit of a scam, and college is overpriced. So how do you think about housing and what is is that an issue in your state or?","offset":1982,"duration":18},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, lets talk about housing, lets also talk about college because you raised both of them in your question.","offset":2000,"duration":5},{"text":"Host: The two hard I mean that has disinfected by the way just like two generations who are like you guys tricked us on housing, you told us wed be able to get a home, and you wont sell your home, boomers, and and you told us we could always make more than our college education cost, and that was a lie too.","offset":2005,"duration":14},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah. When I was talking about economic opportunity, its somewhat shorthand, if you will, for also being able to afford that community. Affording that community can be healthcare, it can be housing, right? But lets talk about housing. Here in Pennsylvania, Ive asked the legislature for a 1 billion dollar fund to be able to build more housing in Pennsylvania and repair existing housing. 50% of my housing was built prior to 1950. You can invest a few thousand bucks in a new boiler, a new roof, some new windows, actually keep people in their homes and not have to build new homes. We also have to eliminate or damn near eliminate the red tape that exists when it comes to building housing. Weve got to be able to build this faster and so I put forth a regulatory reform plan to be able to build more housing. I think that is really, really crucial. And lets talk about college for a minute. The first day I was Governor, the first executive order I signed was to do away with the college degree requirement to work for state government. We have 80,000 employees, damn near all now you do not have to have a college degree. Other than say the doctors and lawyers and people like that who require advanced degrees. Right. So now 60%, 6-0, 60% of all of our hires in state government dont have a college degree. We followed up on that by tripling our funding for Vo-Tech and CTE in our high schools, you know dramatically increasing our funding for apprenticeship programs. 62% of my adult population here in Pennsylvania do not have a college degree. So we need to make sure were investing in them so that they have opportunity. You want to go learn to be a welder, youre going to make six figures working at a shipyard in South Philadelphia. You want to go and you want to work on HVAC system, youre going to work in some of our most complex life sciences construction jobs and youre going to make six figures doing that. So for us, we fundamentally believe that youve got many pathways to opportunity here in Pennsylvania. For some, its going to college, great, and for others, if you choose not to go to college, thats also great, were going to make sure that we pave the way for you and give you that opportunity.","offset":2019,"duration":132},{"text":"Host: Yeah, the generation tool belt movement is well upon us. People are starting to figure out going in debt 100 to 200k versus getting a plumber job, carpenter job, HVAC, whatever for six figures out of the gate is a much better opportunity.","offset":2151,"duration":15},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, and to be clear, Im not [ __ ] on people that go to college. I went to college, I presume you went to go to college. But for too long, by the way, politicians in both parties defined success exclusively around the idea of you having to have a college degree. And then set up arbitrary barriers to entry. Hey, if you dont have a college degree, you cant apply here. Or what about the skills that you developed in the military? What about the skills you developed at a trade school or the skills that you developed working in the private sector? Those skills should matter. And now they do in Pennsylvania, and were no longer taking an elitist approach that shuts people out just because they dont have a college degree. Were giving them the keys to opportunity and were giving them opportunities to pursue more success here in Pennsylvania.","offset":2166,"duration":46},{"text":"Host: Does the Socialist Democratic movement worry you, Mondame and the crew, and how do you think about that in terms of the party dynamics?","offset":2212,"duration":11},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I mean, remember the question you asked me I dont know three or four questions ago about you said well I only agree with 14% of what you agree with, you know come join the party. Look, my view is that weve got to have a big tent and my view is that weve got to have a real debate around different ideas and just because I might not agree with you on these three things, I might agree with you on something else. Listen, Im sitting behind my desk here in the Governors office. This is where I negotiate bills and budgets and other things. If I threw everybody out of my office that I didnt agree with 100% of the time, wed never get anything done. When I sit down across a table from a Republican lawmaker, say what are the 10 things you want to accomplish? I tell him the 10 things I want to accomplish and you know what, were not going to agree on all 10, but if we agree on three or four, Id rather focus on those three or four things where we can find common ground than the five, six, seven things where were just going to disagree. And so I think if you want to make progress, youve got to figure out how to create, you know, majorities whether its a majority in the legislature to get a bill to my desk, a majority come election time to win an election. Youve got to find ways to bring people together and find common ground and not just focus exclusively on our differences.","offset":2223,"duration":70}],"startTime":1497},{"title":"Congressional Dysfunction and Executive Corruption","summary":"Shapiro criticizes Republican leadership in Congress for abandoning their constitutional duties to act as a check on the executive branch. He condemns the Trump administration's alleged corruption, self-dealing, and abuse of the presidential pardon power.","entries":[{"text":"Host: Whats your take on whats going on in Congress, Senate, in terms of Trump and getting alignment there because hey, when you go to war or you do tariffs, um this was something we had a consultation between these different branches of our government. And we had other presidents on the Democrat side, etc., you know, say were going to just get rid of student loan, Im doing an executive order. Curious your take on the balance of of our different branches of government and the lack of collaboration because this is particularly disturbing, were both Gen Xers, we grew up watching the Democrats and the Republicans argue, but then they all got together, had lunch, and they negotiated. Where is that esprit de corps of everybody rowing in the same direction for all Americans versus this toxic you know, were just going to block each other at every and do character assassination at every single turn? Its its the most polarized of our lifetimes for sure.","offset":2293,"duration":56},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I actually think the Congress of the United States, the leadership there, I mean they are frankly kind of sad, pathetic people. And let me explain why, right?","offset":2349,"duration":10},{"text":"Host: Please.","offset":2359,"duration":0},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: You put uh whats his name, Johnson in as Speaker, and hes effectively a rubber stamp for anything Donald Trump wants. And by the way, whether you agree with Trump or not, I think you can agree that youd like your member of Congress to at least meet the burdens that they have on them in the Constitution of the United States, which is to be a check, which is to be a separate branch of government. And a branch of government that has meaningful responsibilities here. When the Congress of the United States walks away from their responsibilities, whether on tariffs or whether on declaring war, and ultimately just kind of empower the president, again, agree or disagree, I obviously have profound disagreements from the president on on those things, then what youve really done is youve limited the power of the Congress, and what youve really done is youve seen a whole bunch of people that put Donald Trump before the oath of office they take to the Constitution. And I think thats just pathetic. And its weak. And I think our countrys suffering as a result of it. Look, Im here in Pennsylvania, where where it all began 250 years ago. And the brilliance of our founders was that they left so much of the work to the next generation and the generation after that to pick up the baton and continue to perfect our union. Our founders though, always contemplated two things. One, that there would be honorable people in office. And two, that the people in office would exercise their power and be a check on one another. And in some cases, slow things down to make sure that bad things didnt occur, bad things couldnt get through the process. I think what Americans are confronting now is a realization that we dont really have all honorable people in positions of authority in the federal government. And that that checks and balance system that was constructed here in Pennsylvania is not standing the test of time because youve got these profoundly and pathetically weak people like Johnson and others who just simply give away their power to folks who are corrupt and to folks who are not acting in an honorable way.","offset":2359,"duration":156},{"text":"Host: You keep bringing up that corruption, explain to me what corrupt things you know that the Trump administration has done.","offset":2515,"duration":3},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think to me there has been an extraordinary amount of self-dealing. There there has been a good bit of family members doing quite well in this in this environment. I think youre seeing more and more people who have the presidents ear being able to lobby him at his swim club to get a pardon for someone that frankly doesnt deserve a pardon. I mean I think the list goes on and on and on, but those are some examples that I think the American people see with their own eyes. Taking a a billion-dollar jet from the Qataris and thinking theres nothing attached to that, right? I mean I think that theres just a lot of that that moves so fast that the American people are having a hard time keeping up with it, but there will be a reckoning on this one day.","offset":2518,"duration":51},{"text":"Host: Yeah so on the pardons Im strongly agreeing, feels like the pardon power is super abused. Is there a path to refine that tool? Because it relies on norms, right? And ever since Bill Clinton, you know, did some you know friends and then obviously Biden did his son and then Trumps doing his you know folks. It feels like now this is just a get-out-of-jail card, you come into an administration and then everybody from Fauci to you know Hunter Biden, everybody else is just going to get a pardon on the way out. How would you reshape that tool?","offset":2569,"duration":37},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well lets be clear, and I dont think youre suggesting this, but um and I was critical of Joe Biden when he pardoned his son, right? I was critical of him publicly. What we are seeing under Donald Trump, you have to admit, is next level when it comes to the abuse.","offset":2606,"duration":14},{"text":"Host: I mean its on the way its yes, its literally its in the first year, its not on the last day even, its like an ongoing tool here. We had CZ, who was a crypto person who got pardoned, and Trump didnt even know who he was. He was just like oh I heard hes a good guy.","offset":2620,"duration":13},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Right. I mean I will tell you, I sit at this desk here and I sign pardons and clemencies. And I take that responsibility so seriously. And I agonize over these decisions. And and I pray that I get these decisions right. And I believe I have. And Im transparent about why I viewed someone as worthy to get a clemency and also worthy of not getting one, or not earning one. And these are tough, tough decisions. Goes back to what I said a moment ago, our founders when they vested that kind of authority in an executive, didnt necessarily do something wrong by giving the executive that power. But they were leaning on the assumption that the executive would be honorable. That the executive would would do this with morality and real scruples in mind. And and I think what were seeing with the President is if you sidle up to him at his swim club, you donate a certain amount of money maybe, or you have his ear for some other social reason, you can usually get him to do what you want him to do. And thats simply an abuse of power, man. Its wrong and and its something that the American people I think should take issue with.","offset":2633,"duration":67},{"text":"Host: ...give a pardon to someone who's important to you.","offset":2700,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, the pardons are definitely super troubling.","offset":2702,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: How do you deal with the family members and the kids enriching themselves? Obviously nothing has been done by a court or an investigation into Trump's kids at this point, so we just want to be clear about that. You know, we had Hunter Biden getting a ridiculous million dollar board seat. I've never seen anybody get paid a million dollars to be on a board. That was obviously corrupt in some way, or somebody trying to curry favor. Doesn't mean that President Biden was, but definitely was corruption there.","offset":2705,"duration":36},{"text":"Host: How do you deal with kids of - and this has been going on for a while - these kinds of allegations. If we can't rely on honor and norms, is there another proposal here that the kids of people in office can't make money? Your kids can't make money if I was running for office? My kids couldn't make money in the free market. How do you - is there any kind of solution you can think of?","offset":2741,"duration":19},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think it is important, you cited Hunter Biden. They went through a legal process. There was an investigation by the Department of Justice. I think there has to be a real look - I say this as a former prosecutor - a real look at some of this stuff and follow the evidence, follow the law. And if charges are warranted, bring them, and by the way, if charges are not warranted, don't bring them. Do not use the rule of law as a tool to go against political opponents in any way.","offset":2760,"duration":31},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: But I think what you've got to have here are people who are operating with real morality. And you do have to figure out a way to operate within the norms again. I'm unwilling to accept that that is gone. It may be temporarily suspended under Donald Trump, but I'm hopeful that we can find our way back to that. Let me be clear about something else here, that finding our way back to that is a bipartisan exercise.","offset":2791,"duration":25},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: It's going to require Republicans and Democrats and independents all demanding when they go to the ballot box that we want to elevate people who are ethical, people who are honest, people who are focused on doing their jobs with integrity. And then when those people are in office, rewarded with the votes of the public and in these positions of public trust, to hold them accountable as well.","offset":2816,"duration":22},{"text":"Host: And you believe that can happen in a post-Trump world?","offset":2838,"duration":3},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I do. I do.","offset":2841,"duration":1}],"startTime":2293},{"title":"Condemning Anti-Semitism Without Nuance","summary":"The host brings up the recent firebombing of Shapiro's home and rising anti-Semitism. Shapiro asserts that anti-Semitism must be universally condemned without nuance, regardless of whether it originates on the political left or right.","entries":[{"text":"Host: I strongly agree. Hey, it's a year since your home was firebombed by an insane person who was anti-Semitic. Your faith comes up over and over again. I personally think people are a little obsessed with it, but here we are. And the Democratic Party has been split apart as well over this support of Israel issue. You have a very nuanced position. Number one, how are you dealing with that personally, the anti-Semitism, which to me as somebody who grew up in Brooklyn with lots of Jewish friends and all kinds of different people, just insane to think that Jewish students are being - or any particular group of students - being chased by the other students at Columbia University because they're Jewish? This chaoticness is just heartbreaking. But as a Jewish person and literally experiencing it first-hand, I mean, how are you doing with that?","offset":2842,"duration":48},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, I appreciate that. Look, we should separate this and have two conversations: one about Israel and one about anti-Semitism, because you kind of blurred both in the question. Let's focus first on anti-Semitism. I have been very outspoken about those who are engaging in anti-Semitism, peddling words that are anti-Semitic. And importantly, I've been critical of people on the political left and on the political right.","offset":2890,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And I think anti-Semitism is a problem in our society and it's a problem on the left and it is a problem on the right. And I think it is important that we call it out. We call it out whether we're in an interview - not accusing you by any stretch - conversation, yeah. Call it out on social media, and then we just call it out in our communities and our daily lives where we see it. On that, there should be no nuance.","offset":2918,"duration":22},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: We should be able to come together, people who are Jewish, people who are Christian, Muslim, and all agree that hatred, bigotry in any form directed at a Jew, a Muslim, a Christian, anyone, it has no place. And by the way, it makes us all less safe. And so we have to focus on speaking out against that. No nuance on that.","offset":2940,"duration":22},{"text":"Host: Yeah, Trump.","offset":2962,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: On the issue of Israel and the Middle East and the war in Iran and Gaza, there's a lot of nuance there. I'm happy to answer your questions on that, but I think on the issue of anti-Semitism, we have got to be in a place where we universally condemn it.","offset":2964,"duration":7},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And I think what you're seeing from some folks on the right and some folks on the left is they'll only call it out if it's said by a political opponent or someone they disagree with. And I frankly respect people on the right, like Ted Cruz, who have called it out within the Republican party. I've tried to call it out when it rears its ugly head in my party. It is important that it be universally condemned.","offset":2971,"duration":26}],"startTime":2842},{"title":"U.S. Policy on Israel and the War in Iran","summary":"Shapiro criticizes Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu while separating legitimate policy critiques from anti-Semitism. He also condemns Donald Trump for leading the U.S. into a war with Iran, describing it as a war of choice with no defined mission.","entries":[{"text":"Host: So easy to do. Let's tackle the issue of Israel and I would say, yeah, every Jewish person, Jewish American person who I know, when I ask them about this issue, obviously incredible tragedy October 7th, going and collecting the hostages seems like a reasonable thing to do. I was there for 9/11, you know, it seems like a pretty analogous situation. This has to be settled and the United States went and did what it had to do in Afghanistan and took out Iraq for extra measure, that's a whole other diversion.","offset":2997,"duration":32},{"text":"Host: But 100% of folks say they don't agree with Netanyahu's approach to what happened in Gaza. And then folks feel a decent number of people, whether it's reality or not, that America's getting dragged into this war with Iran not under false pretenses and because Israel is pushing us to do it. So let's take these two issues separately and I'm just curious in understanding your position on this. Are you part of the Jewish American diaspora that believes hey, Israel has a right to defend itself, but maybe Gaza went too far?","offset":3029,"duration":34},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Okay. Well, first off, let me say this: I don't view this issue as a Jewish American, as you said. I view this issue as an American. And I view this issue in a way of trying to understand what is the best thing for America, which to me is having peace and stability in the Middle East. Okay? That's how I approach these issues.","offset":3063,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: It is - and I've been clear and consistent about this long before October 7th - that I think Netanyahu, the leader of Israel, is someone who's been leading Israel down a dangerous and isolated path. I think he has made Israel more isolated in the world community. He has fractured really what used to be a nonpartisan or bipartisan American support for Israel. And I think he has put Israel in a very dangerous place.","offset":3091,"duration":30},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And of course, he was the leader of Israel who wasn't minding the shop when October 7th happened. So I've been very critical of Netanyahu for years and years and years. I've also for years made very clear that I think America's interest in the region should be for stability and peace. And that it would be my hope that you would have two states living peacefully side by side, Israel and a Palestinian state.","offset":3121,"duration":30},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Now, I realize that is a long way off given where we are right now. But it is clear that we need to work toward that. And obviously that Palestinian state cannot be led by Hamas, which is a terrorist organization, and there has to be some structure that is put in place in order - in order to create that.","offset":3151,"duration":19},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: As it relates to the war, which you also asked about in - in your question, I mean, this was a war of choice. The president never defined the objectives. It is clear he doesn't know how the hell to get out of this. We'll see what he ultimately does with his big threats, you know, we're recording this on the eve of his - of his big threat...","offset":3170,"duration":18},{"text":"Host: Ultimatum.","offset":3188,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: ...using language, using language that was so [expletive] offensive, you'll excuse my language, that diminished the value of human life. We'll see what he ultimately does. Does he chicken out as he usually does, or does - God forbid - he - he go through with that? But this was a war of choice. He didn't know why he got into it. He doesn't know how...","offset":3190,"duration":23},{"text":"Host: Why did he get into it? Handicap it. Why did he do it?","offset":3213,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: America's national security interests have not been well-served by this. And economically, you've talked about this, economically we are worse off because of this war. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to speak over you.","offset":3215,"duration":10},{"text":"Host: No, no. No, I mean, listen, I appreciate your candidness, Governor. Why did he do it? If you had to handicap it, or what are you hearing when you talk - because you have obviously a lot more information than the average American. Why now? Why did we do this?","offset":3225,"duration":17},{"text":"Host: Now, we had done, you know, the strategic trimming of the hedges, mowing of the lawn, whatever the term is, to get rid of the nuclear progress. That containment seemed like a perfect strategy and then all of a sudden we decide we're going to do regime change. This is after Trump promised that he would never get an - do an intervention like this in the Middle East. This is after we were told by the Republicans, do not vote for a crazy Democrat who will take us to war with Iran. And here we are in month 14, 13 of the Trump presidency and he started a war.","offset":3242,"duration":35},{"text":"Host: His own biggest advocates, from Megyn Kelly to Tucker Carlson and, you know, people on the fringe, Alex Jones and everybody in the middle, the comedians who supported him, the podcast diaspora or the podcast bros, they're all fleeing the ship. They did not want this. So here we are. Why did he do it? Why now? What is your handicapping of it?","offset":3277,"duration":18},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well, I'll answer that. I will just say it's yet another broken promise to the people who put him in power. He screwed over the farmers who put him in power. He told people he wouldn't slash Medicaid, he cut Medicaid. He told people he'd bring down prices, prices have skyrocketed because of his tariffs. He - he's got this long string of broken promises. Now, why did he break this particular promise? You know, let's - let's examine the record.","offset":3295,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: First, Rubio went out and said he did it because if we didn't move then Netanyahu was going to move and was going to force our hand. Then they walked it back. He said seven or eight months ago that they destroyed their nuclear capabilities. And then came back seven or eight months later and said we had to go in because we had to destroy their nuclear capabilities. I don't know.","offset":3323,"duration":22},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Then they said it was about regime change. Well, great. I mean, we went from like an 80-something year old Ayatollah to a 60-something year old Ayatollah who by all accounts seems to be far more hardline. I'd hardly call that successful regime change. So to me, it is hard to - and I think you've seen I've been trying to be very forthright in answering your questions. You're doing great.","offset":3345,"duration":23},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I don't know how you answer that question because the President never answered that question. He never sat in the Oval Office and looked the American people in the eye and said, this is why we're going in. And you know what? This isn't semantics. This isn't politics. If you don't know why you're going in, you don't know how the hell to get out. You don't know how to instruct the military, our brave military, including those 13 souls who did not make it home to their families because they went on a mission that the President never defined.","offset":3368,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And we mourn their loss, we thank our military heroes for what they did, and we thank our military who are out working every day on behalf of our freedom and our safety and our security, but they deserve a Commander-in-Chief who would have defined the mission. And if you define the mission, you know how to get out, and he never defined the mission. I don't know ultimately if he will follow through on his threat again. It's, you know, it's Tuesday afternoon, you and I are talking. We'll see ultimately what he does here, but to me, this has been a failed and compromised mission from the beginning because he never made clear why he was going in.","offset":3396,"duration":39},{"text":"Host: Yeah, and I know you got to go in a moment. It does seem to me that first explanation, sometimes people, you hear their first reaction and their first statement is the true statement, just in general. And it does seem like Israel was going to do this and we joined them and we didn't need to.","offset":3435,"duration":16},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: No, America should never - pardon me, America should never be led around by any other nation. It should always be about America's interest, our national security interest, the interest of expanding freedom and opportunity for the American people. We should never, ever be bullied as maybe President Trump was by any other world leader.","offset":3451,"duration":20},{"text":"Host: Back to the anti-Semitism we're experiencing now. You said hey, let's address them separately. But I don't think you can separate them if we're getting pulled into this war by another nation and people believe, like you and I do, hey, Netanyahu maybe went a little too far here. That is what's causing the anti-Semitism in this country, don't you think? This relationship with Israel, the state of Israel and Netanyahu, our undying support for Netanyahu, that's not causing the anti-Semitism here? That's what these young people seem to be saying is, we don't want to vote for somebody who supports Netanyahu.","offset":3471,"duration":37},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well, I think you've got to be real careful on that. You, the collective, not you individually. I mean, if you're suggesting say that Jews are Israel and reflect Israeli policies and support everything Israel does, I mean, that's one of the oldest anti-Semitic tropes out there, this sort of notion of dual loyalty. I think it is fair to vote on the issue of do we support what Donald Trump is doing relative to Netanyahu.","offset":3508,"duration":34},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: That's fair. But to suggest that somehow it's, you know, because Jews are tied to Israel and that's why we're doing what we're doing...","offset":3542,"duration":7},{"text":"Host: Well, you and I can parse this issue I think very easily. But young people at Columbia or Harvard, where all this is going on and these, you know, pro-Palestine protests are going on, they don't seem to be able to make that parse. That seems to be one of the roots of the problems here, is that people do put together - these young people, they could be stupid, they could be misinformed - but they do put together what the state of Israel is doing and they equate it with Judaism.","offset":3549,"duration":22},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And that's why I've tried - and that's why I've tried to be so outspoken on this in making clear that on anti-Semitism there should be no nuance. And that's a conversation where we should all be able to unite. And that we have to protect a place for nuance when it comes to Mideast policy, when it comes to Israel, when it comes to Iran and - and anything happening in the Middle East. And we need to give space for those who want to peacefully - and I want to stress peacefully - protest.","offset":3571,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: We want to give space to those who differ from the administration and frankly, those who support the administration to be able to go out and to protest peacefully. And that is I think an - an important part of the fabric of our American society. I just think it's important - and I try and do this work every day as Governor - to keep those conversations separate. Because when they get blended, that's where I think it gets dangerous and that's where - uh, I - I think it - it really crosses a line into something we don't want to see in our society.","offset":3599,"duration":28},{"text":"Host: And you could be super critical of Israel and you could love your Jewish neighbors and friends. These are - this is a very simple concept here.","offset":3627,"duration":8},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Absolutely. And I think that reflects where I am on many things. I've been super critical of the Israeli government, the Netanyahu government. Um, and - and I'm someone who loves Israel, someone who has spent time in Israel. I wrote a whole book about - uh, I proposed to my wife there and how I think the - the idea of it is - is important. We've got to figure out ways to keep those two conversations - not separate, but - but blurring the lines in a way that creates some dangers I think is something we have to guard against.","offset":3635,"duration":34}],"startTime":2997},{"title":"Conclusion and Final Banter","summary":"The host thanks Governor Shapiro for the interview. They conclude the discussion with a friendly exchange about the upcoming NBA playoffs.","entries":[{"text":"Host: Yeah, lots of education, lots of opportunities. Josh Shapiro, thank you so much for coming on \"All In\" and we look forward to having you on again and good luck with your race. Good luck with your 76ers. I will see you in the second round, it looks like.","offset":3669,"duration":13},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Next year - next time I'm on, I'll be wearing a Sixers hoodie. So go Knicks!","offset":3682,"duration":6},{"text":"Host: There you go. I'll see you courtside, my friend. You go to the games.","offset":3688,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: I'm going all in!","offset":3691,"duration":15}],"startTime":3669}],"entries":[{"text":"Host: Alright everybody, weve got an incredible guest today. Governor Josh Shapiro is here, obviously Governor of Pennsylvania. Hes got record-setting popularity in Pennsylvania right now, 60% approval at least. Hes a moderate, hes focused on getting [ __ ] done, GSD. Hes tough on crime, ranked number one according to my notes on charging Medicaid fraud. Hes pro-data center, hes got a nuanced take on Israel, and hes a baller, apparently. Cuts to the tape.","offset":0,"duration":29},{"text":"Host: Got him! There it is.","offset":29,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: Oh my god.","offset":32,"duration":1},{"text":"Host: Theres your Governor.","offset":33,"duration":1},{"text":"Host: Look at those short shorts. Holy [ __ ]. Incredible, wow. Its the late 80s?","offset":34,"duration":9},{"text":"Host: And based on the VHS tape, this looks like the 80s.","offset":43,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: Yeah, that was 1990, I think.","offset":46,"duration":4},{"text":"Host: Look at that, playing the point.","offset":50,"duration":2},{"text":"Host: There you go. Very nice, very nice.","offset":52,"duration":8},{"text":"Host: All right, enough of that. That was back when, that was back when people shot mid-range jumpers. They dont do that anymore, man. They dont do that.","offset":60,"duration":3},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: They should. All threes, yeah. I mean, we have a couple of players and we were talking before the show started, youre obviously a big Philly fan and Im a big Knicks fan, so I will see you at the games. Were on a collision course.","offset":63,"duration":11},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I, by the way, with all due respect and I hope we have a good conversation here, I hope to never see you at the games. Because if youre showing up in Philly with all your Knicks crap on, Im not going to be a happy guy.","offset":74,"duration":7},{"text":"Host: Oh, look at the selfie courtside with my friend Dave, who is one of the co-owners of the team who is our mutual friend of ours, who I think egged you on a little bit to come on the program here, which I appreciate.","offset":81,"duration":10},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: He did. He said go on All-In, they have thoughtful conversations and anxious to have one with you. So thanks for having me.","offset":91,"duration":6},{"text":"Host: Yeah, theres so much for us to talk about but I thought I would start with your track record in Pennsylvania. And the reason I wanted to start there is because theres a bit of a collision course happening right now between you and Gavin. Gavins got what I would describe as a variable tenure here in California. I left California for Texas because I just thought it was a bit of a disaster. But youre doing great in your state and thats in the face of New York, my hometown, New Jersey, Boston, like losing a lot of business leaders. And youve been scoring, you know, some big wins. So when you look at your track record, maybe you could just educate the audience on what youve gotten done and maybe in comparison to whats happening in those other states with other Democratic leaders, because you seem to be maybe the exception to this rule that Democrats arent getting it done on a business level.","offset":97,"duration":52},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Look, Im proud of what weve done. Im not in comparison with Gavin or any other Democratic governor. Ill just talk about what weve done here in Pennsylvania. We are a pro-growth state. We want businesses to come here and grow. Im proud of the fact that weve created more jobs than all but two states in the entire country. Weve cut taxes seven different times to be more competitive. Cut taxes for small businesses, also for families trying to afford childcare, for seniors, for working Pennsylvanians. Weve taken our permitting process, thats the usually the the ticket you need say to build your building, right, if youre trying to build something here in Pennsylvania, we were bottom five in the country. I think were now a national model, easily top five in terms of speed. Weve got a money-back guarantee on all of our permits. If we dont get you your permit in time, well give your money back. And fun fact, weve issued 40 million permits during my time as governor, weve only had to issue five refunds, meaning only five of those permits were late. We are now the only growing economy in the northeastern part of the United States. At the same time, were investing in workforce development, especially if you dont have a college degree, tripling funding for Vo-Tech and apprenticeship programs and understanding the need to take the workforce we have today and prepare them for jobs here in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Proud that weve got an unemployment rate below the national rate consistently over the last 32 months. I think it is really critical that every kid born in Pennsylvania gets a great quality education, that that kid has a safe street to walk down to get to school or wherever else theyre going, and that theyve got a job in the community that they love. Those to me are the core foundational principles. Its what we focus on every single day. Our mantra, as you said at the top, is GSD, get [ __ ] done. Those are the areas where we focus on getting [ __ ] done and I think were putting a lot of points on the board every single day thats having a meaningful difference in peoples lives.","offset":149,"duration":126},{"text":"Host: How are you getting that done? Lets just take the permitting as an example. Why is it so dysfunctional in California? You know, obviously Im an investor in technology companies and we just saw red tape after red tape, then on housing, its incredibly hard to build anything. The NIMBYism, you know, if you cast a shadow, nothing can be built and then housing prices keep going up. And you know, if you want to hire a nanny or a teacher or you know, if a firefighter moves in, they cant even afford a home in the community that theyre servicing. So how did you fix this and why cant other states not fix it?","offset":275,"duration":38},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I mean, look, I cant speak to how its done in California. Ill just tell you in Pennsylvania, the way we start the conversation is by recognizing permits are critically important to economic development and to creating jobs, right? If we the government can move at the speed of business, if I can give you as a CEO predictability to know your business is going to be open in six months instead of three years, right, because the permit took too long, then youre going to want to invest here. So we sort of start with the important idea that permits matter. Second, when you come into our state government to get your permit, lets just use building a building as an example, right, we want to get to yes. We still want to protect the environment and public health and public safety, and we do that, but we want to get to yes. So our attitude has shifted. Third, weve got to have that money-back guarantee, because that money-back guarantee holds the bureaucracy accountable. Now, I will tell you that some of this weve done administratively, meaning Ive signed executive orders and weve made those changes. But other things, weve worked with the legislature to pass new laws to speed up our permitting. And it hasnt always been easy. Understand Im a Democrat as governor, Ive got a divided legislature. I was the only governor for a while with a divided legislature, now theres one other. Ive got a Senate led by Republicans by just two seats and a House led by Democrats by just one seat. But this is an area where Ive been able to bring Democrats and Republicans together in order to make progress in terms of passing this this permitting reform. And again, proof is in the pudding. What we are seeing is that businesses are coming here and the economys growing. Let me give you one more example. This may seem really small to you, but its a big deal, okay? When I talk about a permit, if you want to be a barber in Pennsylvania, you need a permit, or technically its called a license, but I put it all under my...","offset":313,"duration":101},{"text":"Host: Yeah, some kind of certificate, yeah.","offset":414,"duration":1},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Right. The day I took office, it took 20 days for a barber to get their permit to be able to go out and cut hair. Today you get it same day, you get it within that day. That may seem silly to you, but but understand, I called my barber. I asked him, I said, how many heads do you cut a day? He said about 10 a day. At 20 bucks a pop, 200 bucks a day for for 20 days, thats real money. Thats thousands of dollars that were putting into that barbers pocket just because we got them their permit more quickly. So I know it may sound nerdy, it may sound wonky, but whether youre building some big building thats going to house hundreds of workers or thousands of people who are living there, or whether youre the local barber that everybody needs to go to to get to get their haircut, this stuff matters. And the quicker you are, the more jobs you create and the more money you put in peoples pockets.","offset":415,"duration":58},{"text":"Host: It also matters I think on a philosophical basis of who is the government working for? Themselves and their timelines, or for the people who put them in office? And I think thats the philosophy, just watching it happen in New York and California, its the opposite of what you described. Theres no sense of urgency and theres almost a situation where people believe its intractable, that they cant change it. And so thats I think such an important point is that you actually made it happen.","offset":473,"duration":31},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think thats a great point. I want to focus on what you just said there. First off, I start the conversation believing that government can be a force for good in peoples lives. Second, that weve got to figure out a way to get to yes. Whether its building a building or whether its getting that mom the support she needs for her kid with autism who needs support. Weve got to figure out a way to get to yes and get them that help. And then you mentioned in your question the way people get, I dont recall if you used the word frustrated or or they feel, you know, that governments sort of holding them back, right?","offset":504,"duration":34},{"text":"Host: Its oppressive in a way, right? Just if you have that experience three or four times, whether its at the airport or getting your drivers license or getting the haircutting, you know, certificate, like its just oppressive over time, you just feel like the governments working against you.","offset":538,"duration":14},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, and what does that, what does that person feel after they try and get their permit, they cant get it, they try and open up their small business, it wont work? They get frustrated. By the way, they get pissed. And then not only are they pissed at that agency or that governor, or theyre pissed at that state government, they also grow, and this is an important point, a little more cynical about government and a little more frustrated about the process. And when that happens, I think that that creates more distrust in our system and it creates more opportunity for, I think frankly dark voices on extremes to come in and take advantage of people. I I find that, you know, if we get it done the right way, if we process things quicker, if we get people to yes, then maybe a byproduct of that is a little bit less cynicism in our system.","offset":552,"duration":52},{"text":"Host: Yeah, and the horseshoe theory that youre kind of referencing there, these two extremes just taking over the conversation, thats not what the majority of the country wants. They they want to just live in a high-functioning society. I was curious how you look at fraud, waste fraud and abuse. My friend Elon, to drop a name, you know, did this doge thing, was a little controversial, but I think what weve seen is hey, 20-30% of every tax dollar collected is wasted. Some of its fraud, some of its just incompetence, it could be anything on that spectrum. And this seems to be the Republican partys rallying cry to beat the Democrats, going into California and prosecuting people, Michigan, etc. You have seemed to have gotten ahead of this, youve been doing this for years. So maybe you could explain your take on fighting fraud specifically, healthcare or in other areas.","offset":604,"duration":53},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Look, I think weve got to focus on rooting fraud out of the system. Now, you and I may differ on hey, should we spend a dollar on that initiative or not? And by the way, those are super healthy differences and we should argue that out, we should debate that. But where we should have no difference is if someones stealing that dollar instead of going to its intended purpose, we should be against that. And and I am. Prior to serving as governor and having the privilege of sitting here in this office serving the good people of Pennsylvania, I was the states Attorney General. And youll remember back during COVID, there were those PPP loans to help our small businesses and other businesses stay afloat. Wed probably agree like, good idea, right? Weve got to keep businesses afloat. But during that time, I went out and prosecuted a whole bunch of people for stealing that PPP money, for not using it for its intended purposes. Here as governor, Ive maintained a similar focus through my office of Inspector General rooting out fraud, through making sure, by the way, were not fronting you money when youre going out and providing say human services, you have to submit for reimbursements and youve got to make sure you prove that you did that work. When we find that someone took advantage of the system, were referring them to prosecutors. Im proud of the fact that weve had more Medicaid fraud prosecutions in Pennsylvania than I think any other state, maybe there was one other. Were were certainly toward the top of that list. Proud of the fact that weve identified that, weve sent it to prosecutors and weve addressed it. If we can address it administratively, we do. If not, we understand that those things need to be prosecuted. We should have a zero-tolerance policy for that and we should make sure that if were going to utilize a hard-earned dollar of a taxpayer for a purpose like providing someone with healthcare, that weve got to make sure that that dollar makes its way to that person so they get their healthcare. And, you know, our folks are working really hard on that in Pennsylvania.","offset":657,"duration":114},{"text":"Host: So pro-business, less regulation, lowering taxes, eliminating fraud, and all of this is just getting done in the state. And then, you know, the next piece that in at least my community, people who are creators of businesses, venture capitalists, angel investors, founders, we pay our taxes, pay a lot of taxes depending on which state you live in. And then theres this movement...","offset":771,"duration":26},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: You should be paying more taxes in Pennsylvania, man, stop paying them elsewhere.","offset":797,"duration":2},{"text":"Host: Yeah, well, the and you know, we then get struck with this California law and a lot of my friends have moved to Austin where I live now, they just said suddenly hey, we want to seize 5% of whatever you got. You already paid your taxes, you havent paid capital gains on some of this equity you own in your company, maybe its paper wealth, maybe your company went public now and you could sell some of it, but you might crater the stock if you do. And Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and California all trying to seize assets on gains theyve never received. Its a, it seems to be getting momentum.","offset":799,"duration":60},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I mean, I would just tell you, weve cut taxes seven times in Pennsylvania. Weve got one of the lowest income taxes in the entire country, thats why Im joking with you, you should come to Pennsylvania and relocate here. And and look, I mean, that kind of tax that youre describing is not something we have here, its certainly not something on on my agenda. I do think people need to pay their fair share. I think youd agree with that. We need to make sure that we are easing the burden on those who are working and who are at the lowest, you know, sort of economic point on the scale. And weve got to make sure that folks at the top are paying their their fair share in order to to sustain our society. And I think weve struck a really good balance here in Pennsylvania. And I think our growth numbers bear that out. I think seeing more people coming to this state bears that out. And I think theres an important stat, one of the things you you cited in those entrepreneurs as you were going through your question is, you know, these are people who kind of started with a dream, with an idea that, you know, someone might have looked at and said, jeez, I I dont know about that, but they stuck with it and and they built up their companies. We see here in Pennsylvania, particularly when it comes to life sciences, right, were seeing people plant a flag here in Pennsylvania, start with an idea that others might think, boy, I I dont know about that, but then because of our tax environment in Pennsylvania, because of our pro-growth approach in Pennsylvania, were seeing more of those small businesses, more of those small companies, especially in life sciences, survive that sort of valley where a lot of those companies go out of business and sustain themselves here because again, I think were showing that were pro-growth, weve got a smart tax environment for them, and by the way, after we invest in them, after we give them a shot, and after they do well, we expect them to pay their fair share back to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. And I think thats thats the approach weve taken and its working.","offset":859,"duration":118},{"text":"Host: Yeah, and so if youre not in favor of a wealth tax, what would you do to deal with maybe this disparity in wealth that were seeing? There was just some statistics that came out the other day, Im sure you saw them, the upper-middle class has just been surging, middle class going down a bit, and people in the lower rungs going down as well. So people may feel like theyre not making enough money, but in reality whats happening is people feel other people have made a tremendous amount of money, which is true because of equity holdings are growing much better than salaries ever will and only 40% of only 50% of the country really participates in a meaningful way in equities, the other 40-50% dont have any exposure to that. So how would you deal with somebody making, you know, 100 billion dollars, 500 billion dollars, a trillion dollars and never selling their equity or maybe not selling it for 20 years? How do you think about that?","offset":977,"duration":58},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Let let me make three points, a Pennsylvania point and a couple broader points. One, you cannot have a national economy that works if its only working for the 1%. And you pointed out in your question the wage disparity and the disparity of income. You have to make sure that there is opportunity for those at all different income levels. And look, as we sit here today, if youre making a million dollars versus fifty thousand dollars, if you make a million dollars youre going to be able to buy some stuff that someone at fifty thousand dollars cant buy, right? We sort of understand that, but youve got to have opportunity and youve got to have a level playing field, and youve got to have a fair shot, and youve got to have a tax system that works in a fair way. So thats sort of point one. Point two is here in Pennsylvania, weve tried to address some of that economic disparity by passing the first-ever Working Pennsylvanians Tax Credit, sort of a state-side earned income tax credit. So what were saying is if youre working, if youre going out and busting your hump, were going to put some money back in your pocket. About 940,000, almost a million Pennsylvanians are going to qualify for a little over 800 bucks back in their pockets. So thats going to help not only today with rising costs due to a lot of these federal policies, but its going to put money back in peoples pockets, allow them to make, you know, the the the investments they need to make in their everyday lives. Heres the third point. What I would not do, because you asked what I would do, what I would not do is what President Trump did at the federal level with an aid and assist from a whole bunch of sycophants in Congress by passing that budget bill, the beautiful budget bill, whatever the hell they called it. In effect, what they did was they gave a tax cut for those who simply do not need it, right? And by the way, in the palace of truth and justice, you talk to those folks, they know that they didnt need that tax cut. And what happened as a result of that is Ive got 500,000 Pennsylvanians who are going to lose their healthcare. Ive got 120,000 who have already lost their healthcare, about another 320,000 or so are likely to lose Medicaid next year. Ive got 26 rural hospitals that are likely to shutter because these are rural hospitals that are working at an operating deficit and theyre relying so much on Medicaid, which has been slashed by the federal government. So the idea that Donald Trump thought it was smart economic policy to give a tax cut to those who dont need it and pay for it with those who are struggling where and and create even greater economic disparities, that is going to hold back our entire economy. Just take those 500,000 people who arent going to have healthcare. Youre paying for that, and Im paying for that, with our private insurance premiums. So what Donald Trump has done is shifted that burden onto those who are struggling, making it harder for them, adding additional costs to the middle class, and I think that that is that lacks frankly its just dumb economic policy and I think its going to set us back.","offset":1035,"duration":181},{"text":"Host: So here we are, politics is on the table. Incredible track record you have, but lets dive into the Democratic Party. Im an independent, but grew up Irish Catholic in Brooklyn, so grew up a Democrat. Probably have voted, you know, 60-40 Democrat to Republican, but always for a moderate, somebody who can get stuff done, thats why I find you quite appealing. But lets talk about the Democratic Party and the shellacking they got in the last election and specifically what really troubled me, Biden didnt look like he was all there and I think weve all come to some consensus that he probably should have dropped out early. But what was really disheartening to me was that they didnt do the speed run primary, they didnt do, you know, a capsule primary over that July-August period and gave you a shot and other people a shot, Pritzker, Buttigieg, whoever, to to compete for the nomination. Was that a huge mistake for the Democratic Party and and when you look back on it, do you think that might have cost you all the election?","offset":1216,"duration":62},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well, look, I mean I actually wrote about this in in the book I recently published where, you know, it it became clear to me that, you know, Joe Biden seeking another term was probably not in the best interest of the party or the country and I spoke to him directly about that and bluntly about that. Once he made the decision to drop back with a hundred and whatever days to go, you know, there there were not many opportunities I think to have the kind of primary process that youre talking about. I think it is important to look forward, right, and not look backward and you said in the last election Democrats took a shellacking. Actually, if you look at 2025, it was the opposite. I mean the Presidents party, the Republican Party, got beat in New Jersey, got beat in Virginia, got beat here in Pennsylvania where we won three state supreme court seats. So obviously theres a pendulum in in American politics and its clearly swinging back and forth. I think whats important is that we look forward and I think its also really important for our party to have for my party to have a real debate and to have a real discussion about ideas. What are we for? And what are we willing to fight for? And I realize that process may at times look a little messy, I realize and I mean this with the utmost respect, it gives folks like you on a podcast or on a show the ability to sort of pick apart, maybe try and, you know, sort of parse words or point one Democrat at another and try and create conflict. But I would just say that overall, having this debate and having these issues be raised and having disagreements, thats healthy for our party and ultimately I think our partys poised to take back power and that will make us better at governing. To me, the whole purpose of running in an election is getting the chance to govern, not just winning the election. And so having these debates right now puts us in a better position when we win those elections and Im running for reelection right now in Pennsylvania, going to work my ass off to win another term and earn the support of the people of Pennsylvania again and I want to continue to deliver, continue to, you know, focus on these issues that matter most and having that debate I think is really healthy.","offset":1278,"duration":123},{"text":"Host: I understand looking forward is most important, but I got I gotta go one more time in the rearview mirror here, which is Kamala Harris was picked because Biden had put out a criteria hey, I want to have a woman of color as my Vice President, he was very explicit about that. She could be quite qualified, unqualified, you know, moderately qualified, but then when she went out to pick her VP, everybody was saying hey, Josh Shapiro should be really in that running and she didnt pick you specifically because she didnt think she could win with a Jewish Vice President.","offset":1401,"duration":30},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, I I dont, respectfully, I gotta push back on that. And again, Ive been very, very open about this.","offset":1431,"duration":6},{"text":"Host: Okay, push back on it, yeah, lets go.","offset":1437,"duration":1},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, and respectfully, Im not looking to be argumentative with you, but I was very, very detailed and very specific in my book about this process and I was very grateful to the Vice President for being considered and grateful to her for the candid dialogue we had and about 48 hours before she picked Tim Walz, I pulled out and made clear that that was not something I was interested in doing. I thought I could serve the good people of Pennsylvania and do my best serving here as Governor in a job that I absolutely love. So this wasnt about her not picking me because of my faith, this was about me in the end not being interested in in that job.","offset":1438,"duration":41},{"text":"Host: Really? Sincerely, yes? Because it did seem like you wanted to to be considered for that VP position.","offset":1479,"duration":7},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I I called Sunday evening after she and I met and had a really candid conversation to inform her that I did not want to be considered. I thought she had some really good people to choose from.","offset":1486,"duration":11},{"text":"Host: All right, so lets move forward then, looking at winning. Youre gonna run for Governor again. I assume thats gonna be a shoo-in, you know, you gotta do the work, but its pretty clear youre gonna win.","offset":1497,"duration":8},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I appreciate your your confidence there, my man.","offset":1505,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: No, its clear. But lets talk a little bit about if you were to run for President, which people seem to think youve got a really good shot, but youre below maybe national recognition right now or a little bit far behind. Gavin has come out hey, Im running, Im running, here I am, hes obviously in the pole position for now. I want to understand the Democratic Party and how they should proceed because just like the right seemed to separate and you had this MAGA coalition and you had, you know, the traditional Republicans who were just aghast at Trump and his style and his behavior, etc., now that seems to have fractured again. You have America First, America Only, all the supporters who were supporting Trump now have come out vocally against him because of the war in Iran. And then you have on your side this Socialist Democrat movement, which I think a lot of moderates are like, well thats confusing, we dont want to have more Mondames and that doesnt seem super appealing to a lot of moderates, and the moderates are the ones who flipped this election and they went, the last election, they went with Trump largely as opposed to going with Kamala. So handicap for me what has to happen in the Democratic Party to win in 2028?","offset":1508,"duration":76},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I understand why youre asking that, and I will answer your question. I dont think anyone should be looking past these midterms. And while I appreciate the confidence you have in me and and maybe in the broader dynamics here, I think we need to have a national referendum in these midterms on what people see happening in Washington, D.C. The chaos and the corruption that exists there. I think people need to show up in record numbers and vote their concerns. And so Im not looking past the midterms. I do think it is important that we acknowledge Donald Trump has injected chaos and corruption into everything he touched. And I think its important for me, for other Democratic leaders in this country, to be able to show what calm, competent governance can actually deliver for people. Thats what Im going to be talking about in these midterms as I seek reelection. I think it is important to paint an alternative picture to the chaos Donald Trump has created. One where you can actually grow the economy. You can make our communities safer. We didnt talk about this yet, but weve hired 2,000 more police officers, invested in community violence prevention, and violent crime is down 12%, fatal gun violence is down 42% in our Commonwealth. Weve invested in public education and by the way, scores are up, truancy is down, were moving up on the list, were about 10th according to Consumer Affairs in the quality of public education. I think weve got to show that there is an alternative to Donald Trumps chaos, to his cruelty, to his corruption and youre seeing that I think certainly in my state and I think youre seeing it in other states as well. And we need to paint that alternative picture.","offset":1584,"duration":107},{"text":"Host: So 2026 is certainly going to be a referendum on the first two years of this presidency, which was extremely popular for the first nine months or so. People felt really good about the economy and that had well...","offset":1691,"duration":13},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Some people.","offset":1704,"duration":1},{"text":"Host: Well, I think his polling was great, but there was this tinge, I think its pretty accurate to say the tariffs felt like those were chaotic. Then you get the ICE situation, that feels very chaotic. Then you go to this war with Iran, and that feels like a peak chaotic moment that were in here in week six of this. So its certainly going to be a referendum on Trump, and it feels like all the Democrats have to do is sit back and say like look, is this what you want? Gas prices up, inflation. But youre saying they have to paint another picture. Paint that picture for me, what is that picture?","offset":1705,"duration":34},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think on both sides of what you just said, Donald Trump chose to push the tariff button, right? And as a result, here in Pennsylvania, what were seeing is coffee prices are up 30%, beef is up 19%, OJ, orange juice is up 9%. The fertilizers my farmers rely on here in Pennsylvania up 36%. So were seeing whether youre a farmer, whether youre, you know, a dad just trying to cook dinner for his kids, whatever the case may be, everything costs more because of the recklessness and the chaotic approach Donald Trumps taking our economy with these tariffs. Obviously this war has spiked gas prices, up today about 4:15, 4:16 here in Pennsylvania, similar across the country. Probably years before those gas prices come down, even if the war, you know, hopefully ends, you know, very very soon. And so I think it is important yes, to point that out. The way Donald Trumps policies have hurt the American people, have hurt our farmers, have hurt our small businesses. The point I was making a moment ago is I think thats part of the conversation. The other part of the conversation is okay, well what are you doing to make peoples lives better?","offset":1739,"duration":72},{"text":"Host: Yeah well so what should the top three things be? Like if you were running the Democratic Party and everybody got in a room and said you know what, we really are going to take winning seriously, not getting into this like purity test for everybody in the party and you know, everybodys gotta be perfect and Joe Rogans not good enough to go on air with because hes a lifelong Democrat but he said something about COVID we dont agree with, therefore hes out of the party. Elon Musk is a little bit weird on the well, but the Democrats did. And then oh Elon Musk waited hours to and had Obama at SpaceX and then all of a sudden he cant come to the White House for the EV summit, the category he created. Like its pretty obvious the Democratic Party had some real dysfunction in there in terms of building a bigger tent. And I can tell you, I have never felt more courted in my life than the Republican Party trying to get me to be part of the the Trump movement, which I demurred and declined, it wasnt my style. Right. But they are trying to build the biggest tent possible. Theyre like oh you agree with 14% of what we do? Youre in. Okay. Yeah, so walk me through what the top thing should be, yeah.","offset":1811,"duration":68},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: So lets dissect that a little bit. First off, you attribute a number of things to Democrats that I didnt say. So um youre here interviewing me, so lets focus on the things I say. Number two, they went and they courted you, and you demurred, but by the way, even had you not demurred, had you signed up, I dont know that your life would be better off after a year and a half of Trumps policies. What I am for here in Pennsylvania, the ultimate swing state, the toughest state to win in, an incredibly tough state to govern in, particularly with a divided legislature. Im for investing in public education giving every child a God-given opportunity. Im for safe communities and were building that here and were reducing crime in all of our communities. Im for a pro-growth economy where we generate more energy, we generate more jobs, where we create more opportunities particularly in our rural communities and forgotten communities that have been too often left behind. And heres the fourth thing Im for, I am for freedom. And Ill tell you what, this president represents a party that used to be known as the party of freedom, and now they have turned their backs on that. They want to tell my kids what books theyre allowed to read, they want to tell women what medicines they can take and what they can do with their bodies, they want to control the way I raise my child, they want to say, you know, every day that yeah you can vote but were going to set the rules and try and rig them in a way where youre not going to be successful. They are not the party of freedom. And I think the Democratic Party has an opportunity to be the party of education, safety, economic opportunity and freedom. Thats what were doing here in Pennsylvania and thats what Im going to continue to put forth.","offset":1879,"duration":103},{"text":"Host: I think its a great platform. I would add to it housing. The thing I hear about from young people all the time is, you know, just Ill never be able to afford a house, the American Dreams a bit of a scam, and college is overpriced. So how do you think about housing and what is is that an issue in your state or?","offset":1982,"duration":18},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, lets talk about housing, lets also talk about college because you raised both of them in your question.","offset":2000,"duration":5},{"text":"Host: The two hard I mean that has disinfected by the way just like two generations who are like you guys tricked us on housing, you told us wed be able to get a home, and you wont sell your home, boomers, and and you told us we could always make more than our college education cost, and that was a lie too.","offset":2005,"duration":14},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah. When I was talking about economic opportunity, its somewhat shorthand, if you will, for also being able to afford that community. Affording that community can be healthcare, it can be housing, right? But lets talk about housing. Here in Pennsylvania, Ive asked the legislature for a 1 billion dollar fund to be able to build more housing in Pennsylvania and repair existing housing. 50% of my housing was built prior to 1950. You can invest a few thousand bucks in a new boiler, a new roof, some new windows, actually keep people in their homes and not have to build new homes. We also have to eliminate or damn near eliminate the red tape that exists when it comes to building housing. Weve got to be able to build this faster and so I put forth a regulatory reform plan to be able to build more housing. I think that is really, really crucial. And lets talk about college for a minute. The first day I was Governor, the first executive order I signed was to do away with the college degree requirement to work for state government. We have 80,000 employees, damn near all now you do not have to have a college degree. Other than say the doctors and lawyers and people like that who require advanced degrees. Right. So now 60%, 6-0, 60% of all of our hires in state government dont have a college degree. We followed up on that by tripling our funding for Vo-Tech and CTE in our high schools, you know dramatically increasing our funding for apprenticeship programs. 62% of my adult population here in Pennsylvania do not have a college degree. So we need to make sure were investing in them so that they have opportunity. You want to go learn to be a welder, youre going to make six figures working at a shipyard in South Philadelphia. You want to go and you want to work on HVAC system, youre going to work in some of our most complex life sciences construction jobs and youre going to make six figures doing that. So for us, we fundamentally believe that youve got many pathways to opportunity here in Pennsylvania. For some, its going to college, great, and for others, if you choose not to go to college, thats also great, were going to make sure that we pave the way for you and give you that opportunity.","offset":2019,"duration":132},{"text":"Host: Yeah, the generation tool belt movement is well upon us. People are starting to figure out going in debt 100 to 200k versus getting a plumber job, carpenter job, HVAC, whatever for six figures out of the gate is a much better opportunity.","offset":2151,"duration":15},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, and to be clear, Im not [ __ ] on people that go to college. I went to college, I presume you went to go to college. But for too long, by the way, politicians in both parties defined success exclusively around the idea of you having to have a college degree. And then set up arbitrary barriers to entry. Hey, if you dont have a college degree, you cant apply here. Or what about the skills that you developed in the military? What about the skills you developed at a trade school or the skills that you developed working in the private sector? Those skills should matter. And now they do in Pennsylvania, and were no longer taking an elitist approach that shuts people out just because they dont have a college degree. Were giving them the keys to opportunity and were giving them opportunities to pursue more success here in Pennsylvania.","offset":2166,"duration":46},{"text":"Host: Does the Socialist Democratic movement worry you, Mondame and the crew, and how do you think about that in terms of the party dynamics?","offset":2212,"duration":11},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I mean, remember the question you asked me I dont know three or four questions ago about you said well I only agree with 14% of what you agree with, you know come join the party. Look, my view is that weve got to have a big tent and my view is that weve got to have a real debate around different ideas and just because I might not agree with you on these three things, I might agree with you on something else. Listen, Im sitting behind my desk here in the Governors office. This is where I negotiate bills and budgets and other things. If I threw everybody out of my office that I didnt agree with 100% of the time, wed never get anything done. When I sit down across a table from a Republican lawmaker, say what are the 10 things you want to accomplish? I tell him the 10 things I want to accomplish and you know what, were not going to agree on all 10, but if we agree on three or four, Id rather focus on those three or four things where we can find common ground than the five, six, seven things where were just going to disagree. And so I think if you want to make progress, youve got to figure out how to create, you know, majorities whether its a majority in the legislature to get a bill to my desk, a majority come election time to win an election. Youve got to find ways to bring people together and find common ground and not just focus exclusively on our differences.","offset":2223,"duration":70},{"text":"Host: Whats your take on whats going on in Congress, Senate, in terms of Trump and getting alignment there because hey, when you go to war or you do tariffs, um this was something we had a consultation between these different branches of our government. And we had other presidents on the Democrat side, etc., you know, say were going to just get rid of student loan, Im doing an executive order. Curious your take on the balance of of our different branches of government and the lack of collaboration because this is particularly disturbing, were both Gen Xers, we grew up watching the Democrats and the Republicans argue, but then they all got together, had lunch, and they negotiated. Where is that esprit de corps of everybody rowing in the same direction for all Americans versus this toxic you know, were just going to block each other at every and do character assassination at every single turn? Its its the most polarized of our lifetimes for sure.","offset":2293,"duration":56},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I actually think the Congress of the United States, the leadership there, I mean they are frankly kind of sad, pathetic people. And let me explain why, right?","offset":2349,"duration":10},{"text":"Host: Please.","offset":2359,"duration":0},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: You put uh whats his name, Johnson in as Speaker, and hes effectively a rubber stamp for anything Donald Trump wants. And by the way, whether you agree with Trump or not, I think you can agree that youd like your member of Congress to at least meet the burdens that they have on them in the Constitution of the United States, which is to be a check, which is to be a separate branch of government. And a branch of government that has meaningful responsibilities here. When the Congress of the United States walks away from their responsibilities, whether on tariffs or whether on declaring war, and ultimately just kind of empower the president, again, agree or disagree, I obviously have profound disagreements from the president on on those things, then what youve really done is youve limited the power of the Congress, and what youve really done is youve seen a whole bunch of people that put Donald Trump before the oath of office they take to the Constitution. And I think thats just pathetic. And its weak. And I think our countrys suffering as a result of it. Look, Im here in Pennsylvania, where where it all began 250 years ago. And the brilliance of our founders was that they left so much of the work to the next generation and the generation after that to pick up the baton and continue to perfect our union. Our founders though, always contemplated two things. One, that there would be honorable people in office. And two, that the people in office would exercise their power and be a check on one another. And in some cases, slow things down to make sure that bad things didnt occur, bad things couldnt get through the process. I think what Americans are confronting now is a realization that we dont really have all honorable people in positions of authority in the federal government. And that that checks and balance system that was constructed here in Pennsylvania is not standing the test of time because youve got these profoundly and pathetically weak people like Johnson and others who just simply give away their power to folks who are corrupt and to folks who are not acting in an honorable way.","offset":2359,"duration":156},{"text":"Host: You keep bringing up that corruption, explain to me what corrupt things you know that the Trump administration has done.","offset":2515,"duration":3},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think to me there has been an extraordinary amount of self-dealing. There there has been a good bit of family members doing quite well in this in this environment. I think youre seeing more and more people who have the presidents ear being able to lobby him at his swim club to get a pardon for someone that frankly doesnt deserve a pardon. I mean I think the list goes on and on and on, but those are some examples that I think the American people see with their own eyes. Taking a a billion-dollar jet from the Qataris and thinking theres nothing attached to that, right? I mean I think that theres just a lot of that that moves so fast that the American people are having a hard time keeping up with it, but there will be a reckoning on this one day.","offset":2518,"duration":51},{"text":"Host: Yeah so on the pardons Im strongly agreeing, feels like the pardon power is super abused. Is there a path to refine that tool? Because it relies on norms, right? And ever since Bill Clinton, you know, did some you know friends and then obviously Biden did his son and then Trumps doing his you know folks. It feels like now this is just a get-out-of-jail card, you come into an administration and then everybody from Fauci to you know Hunter Biden, everybody else is just going to get a pardon on the way out. How would you reshape that tool?","offset":2569,"duration":37},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well lets be clear, and I dont think youre suggesting this, but um and I was critical of Joe Biden when he pardoned his son, right? I was critical of him publicly. What we are seeing under Donald Trump, you have to admit, is next level when it comes to the abuse.","offset":2606,"duration":14},{"text":"Host: I mean its on the way its yes, its literally its in the first year, its not on the last day even, its like an ongoing tool here. We had CZ, who was a crypto person who got pardoned, and Trump didnt even know who he was. He was just like oh I heard hes a good guy.","offset":2620,"duration":13},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Right. I mean I will tell you, I sit at this desk here and I sign pardons and clemencies. And I take that responsibility so seriously. And I agonize over these decisions. And and I pray that I get these decisions right. And I believe I have. And Im transparent about why I viewed someone as worthy to get a clemency and also worthy of not getting one, or not earning one. And these are tough, tough decisions. Goes back to what I said a moment ago, our founders when they vested that kind of authority in an executive, didnt necessarily do something wrong by giving the executive that power. But they were leaning on the assumption that the executive would be honorable. That the executive would would do this with morality and real scruples in mind. And and I think what were seeing with the President is if you sidle up to him at his swim club, you donate a certain amount of money maybe, or you have his ear for some other social reason, you can usually get him to do what you want him to do. And thats simply an abuse of power, man. Its wrong and and its something that the American people I think should take issue with.","offset":2633,"duration":67},{"text":"Host: ...give a pardon to someone who's important to you.","offset":2700,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, the pardons are definitely super troubling.","offset":2702,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: How do you deal with the family members and the kids enriching themselves? Obviously nothing has been done by a court or an investigation into Trump's kids at this point, so we just want to be clear about that. You know, we had Hunter Biden getting a ridiculous million dollar board seat. I've never seen anybody get paid a million dollars to be on a board. That was obviously corrupt in some way, or somebody trying to curry favor. Doesn't mean that President Biden was, but definitely was corruption there.","offset":2705,"duration":36},{"text":"Host: How do you deal with kids of - and this has been going on for a while - these kinds of allegations. If we can't rely on honor and norms, is there another proposal here that the kids of people in office can't make money? Your kids can't make money if I was running for office? My kids couldn't make money in the free market. How do you - is there any kind of solution you can think of?","offset":2741,"duration":19},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I think it is important, you cited Hunter Biden. They went through a legal process. There was an investigation by the Department of Justice. I think there has to be a real look - I say this as a former prosecutor - a real look at some of this stuff and follow the evidence, follow the law. And if charges are warranted, bring them, and by the way, if charges are not warranted, don't bring them. Do not use the rule of law as a tool to go against political opponents in any way.","offset":2760,"duration":31},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: But I think what you've got to have here are people who are operating with real morality. And you do have to figure out a way to operate within the norms again. I'm unwilling to accept that that is gone. It may be temporarily suspended under Donald Trump, but I'm hopeful that we can find our way back to that. Let me be clear about something else here, that finding our way back to that is a bipartisan exercise.","offset":2791,"duration":25},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: It's going to require Republicans and Democrats and independents all demanding when they go to the ballot box that we want to elevate people who are ethical, people who are honest, people who are focused on doing their jobs with integrity. And then when those people are in office, rewarded with the votes of the public and in these positions of public trust, to hold them accountable as well.","offset":2816,"duration":22},{"text":"Host: And you believe that can happen in a post-Trump world?","offset":2838,"duration":3},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I do. I do.","offset":2841,"duration":1},{"text":"Host: I strongly agree. Hey, it's a year since your home was firebombed by an insane person who was anti-Semitic. Your faith comes up over and over again. I personally think people are a little obsessed with it, but here we are. And the Democratic Party has been split apart as well over this support of Israel issue. You have a very nuanced position. Number one, how are you dealing with that personally, the anti-Semitism, which to me as somebody who grew up in Brooklyn with lots of Jewish friends and all kinds of different people, just insane to think that Jewish students are being - or any particular group of students - being chased by the other students at Columbia University because they're Jewish? This chaoticness is just heartbreaking. But as a Jewish person and literally experiencing it first-hand, I mean, how are you doing with that?","offset":2842,"duration":48},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Yeah, I appreciate that. Look, we should separate this and have two conversations: one about Israel and one about anti-Semitism, because you kind of blurred both in the question. Let's focus first on anti-Semitism. I have been very outspoken about those who are engaging in anti-Semitism, peddling words that are anti-Semitic. And importantly, I've been critical of people on the political left and on the political right.","offset":2890,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And I think anti-Semitism is a problem in our society and it's a problem on the left and it is a problem on the right. And I think it is important that we call it out. We call it out whether we're in an interview - not accusing you by any stretch - conversation, yeah. Call it out on social media, and then we just call it out in our communities and our daily lives where we see it. On that, there should be no nuance.","offset":2918,"duration":22},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: We should be able to come together, people who are Jewish, people who are Christian, Muslim, and all agree that hatred, bigotry in any form directed at a Jew, a Muslim, a Christian, anyone, it has no place. And by the way, it makes us all less safe. And so we have to focus on speaking out against that. No nuance on that.","offset":2940,"duration":22},{"text":"Host: Yeah, Trump.","offset":2962,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: On the issue of Israel and the Middle East and the war in Iran and Gaza, there's a lot of nuance there. I'm happy to answer your questions on that, but I think on the issue of anti-Semitism, we have got to be in a place where we universally condemn it.","offset":2964,"duration":7},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And I think what you're seeing from some folks on the right and some folks on the left is they'll only call it out if it's said by a political opponent or someone they disagree with. And I frankly respect people on the right, like Ted Cruz, who have called it out within the Republican party. I've tried to call it out when it rears its ugly head in my party. It is important that it be universally condemned.","offset":2971,"duration":26},{"text":"Host: So easy to do. Let's tackle the issue of Israel and I would say, yeah, every Jewish person, Jewish American person who I know, when I ask them about this issue, obviously incredible tragedy October 7th, going and collecting the hostages seems like a reasonable thing to do. I was there for 9/11, you know, it seems like a pretty analogous situation. This has to be settled and the United States went and did what it had to do in Afghanistan and took out Iraq for extra measure, that's a whole other diversion.","offset":2997,"duration":32},{"text":"Host: But 100% of folks say they don't agree with Netanyahu's approach to what happened in Gaza. And then folks feel a decent number of people, whether it's reality or not, that America's getting dragged into this war with Iran not under false pretenses and because Israel is pushing us to do it. So let's take these two issues separately and I'm just curious in understanding your position on this. Are you part of the Jewish American diaspora that believes hey, Israel has a right to defend itself, but maybe Gaza went too far?","offset":3029,"duration":34},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Okay. Well, first off, let me say this: I don't view this issue as a Jewish American, as you said. I view this issue as an American. And I view this issue in a way of trying to understand what is the best thing for America, which to me is having peace and stability in the Middle East. Okay? That's how I approach these issues.","offset":3063,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: It is - and I've been clear and consistent about this long before October 7th - that I think Netanyahu, the leader of Israel, is someone who's been leading Israel down a dangerous and isolated path. I think he has made Israel more isolated in the world community. He has fractured really what used to be a nonpartisan or bipartisan American support for Israel. And I think he has put Israel in a very dangerous place.","offset":3091,"duration":30},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And of course, he was the leader of Israel who wasn't minding the shop when October 7th happened. So I've been very critical of Netanyahu for years and years and years. I've also for years made very clear that I think America's interest in the region should be for stability and peace. And that it would be my hope that you would have two states living peacefully side by side, Israel and a Palestinian state.","offset":3121,"duration":30},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Now, I realize that is a long way off given where we are right now. But it is clear that we need to work toward that. And obviously that Palestinian state cannot be led by Hamas, which is a terrorist organization, and there has to be some structure that is put in place in order - in order to create that.","offset":3151,"duration":19},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: As it relates to the war, which you also asked about in - in your question, I mean, this was a war of choice. The president never defined the objectives. It is clear he doesn't know how the hell to get out of this. We'll see what he ultimately does with his big threats, you know, we're recording this on the eve of his - of his big threat...","offset":3170,"duration":18},{"text":"Host: Ultimatum.","offset":3188,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: ...using language, using language that was so [expletive] offensive, you'll excuse my language, that diminished the value of human life. We'll see what he ultimately does. Does he chicken out as he usually does, or does - God forbid - he - he go through with that? But this was a war of choice. He didn't know why he got into it. He doesn't know how...","offset":3190,"duration":23},{"text":"Host: Why did he get into it? Handicap it. Why did he do it?","offset":3213,"duration":2},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: America's national security interests have not been well-served by this. And economically, you've talked about this, economically we are worse off because of this war. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to speak over you.","offset":3215,"duration":10},{"text":"Host: No, no. No, I mean, listen, I appreciate your candidness, Governor. Why did he do it? If you had to handicap it, or what are you hearing when you talk - because you have obviously a lot more information than the average American. Why now? Why did we do this?","offset":3225,"duration":17},{"text":"Host: Now, we had done, you know, the strategic trimming of the hedges, mowing of the lawn, whatever the term is, to get rid of the nuclear progress. That containment seemed like a perfect strategy and then all of a sudden we decide we're going to do regime change. This is after Trump promised that he would never get an - do an intervention like this in the Middle East. This is after we were told by the Republicans, do not vote for a crazy Democrat who will take us to war with Iran. And here we are in month 14, 13 of the Trump presidency and he started a war.","offset":3242,"duration":35},{"text":"Host: His own biggest advocates, from Megyn Kelly to Tucker Carlson and, you know, people on the fringe, Alex Jones and everybody in the middle, the comedians who supported him, the podcast diaspora or the podcast bros, they're all fleeing the ship. They did not want this. So here we are. Why did he do it? Why now? What is your handicapping of it?","offset":3277,"duration":18},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well, I'll answer that. I will just say it's yet another broken promise to the people who put him in power. He screwed over the farmers who put him in power. He told people he wouldn't slash Medicaid, he cut Medicaid. He told people he'd bring down prices, prices have skyrocketed because of his tariffs. He - he's got this long string of broken promises. Now, why did he break this particular promise? You know, let's - let's examine the record.","offset":3295,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: First, Rubio went out and said he did it because if we didn't move then Netanyahu was going to move and was going to force our hand. Then they walked it back. He said seven or eight months ago that they destroyed their nuclear capabilities. And then came back seven or eight months later and said we had to go in because we had to destroy their nuclear capabilities. I don't know.","offset":3323,"duration":22},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Then they said it was about regime change. Well, great. I mean, we went from like an 80-something year old Ayatollah to a 60-something year old Ayatollah who by all accounts seems to be far more hardline. I'd hardly call that successful regime change. So to me, it is hard to - and I think you've seen I've been trying to be very forthright in answering your questions. You're doing great.","offset":3345,"duration":23},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: I don't know how you answer that question because the President never answered that question. He never sat in the Oval Office and looked the American people in the eye and said, this is why we're going in. And you know what? This isn't semantics. This isn't politics. If you don't know why you're going in, you don't know how the hell to get out. You don't know how to instruct the military, our brave military, including those 13 souls who did not make it home to their families because they went on a mission that the President never defined.","offset":3368,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And we mourn their loss, we thank our military heroes for what they did, and we thank our military who are out working every day on behalf of our freedom and our safety and our security, but they deserve a Commander-in-Chief who would have defined the mission. And if you define the mission, you know how to get out, and he never defined the mission. I don't know ultimately if he will follow through on his threat again. It's, you know, it's Tuesday afternoon, you and I are talking. We'll see ultimately what he does here, but to me, this has been a failed and compromised mission from the beginning because he never made clear why he was going in.","offset":3396,"duration":39},{"text":"Host: Yeah, and I know you got to go in a moment. It does seem to me that first explanation, sometimes people, you hear their first reaction and their first statement is the true statement, just in general. And it does seem like Israel was going to do this and we joined them and we didn't need to.","offset":3435,"duration":16},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: No, America should never - pardon me, America should never be led around by any other nation. It should always be about America's interest, our national security interest, the interest of expanding freedom and opportunity for the American people. We should never, ever be bullied as maybe President Trump was by any other world leader.","offset":3451,"duration":20},{"text":"Host: Back to the anti-Semitism we're experiencing now. You said hey, let's address them separately. But I don't think you can separate them if we're getting pulled into this war by another nation and people believe, like you and I do, hey, Netanyahu maybe went a little too far here. That is what's causing the anti-Semitism in this country, don't you think? This relationship with Israel, the state of Israel and Netanyahu, our undying support for Netanyahu, that's not causing the anti-Semitism here? That's what these young people seem to be saying is, we don't want to vote for somebody who supports Netanyahu.","offset":3471,"duration":37},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Well, I think you've got to be real careful on that. You, the collective, not you individually. I mean, if you're suggesting say that Jews are Israel and reflect Israeli policies and support everything Israel does, I mean, that's one of the oldest anti-Semitic tropes out there, this sort of notion of dual loyalty. I think it is fair to vote on the issue of do we support what Donald Trump is doing relative to Netanyahu.","offset":3508,"duration":34},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: That's fair. But to suggest that somehow it's, you know, because Jews are tied to Israel and that's why we're doing what we're doing...","offset":3542,"duration":7},{"text":"Host: Well, you and I can parse this issue I think very easily. But young people at Columbia or Harvard, where all this is going on and these, you know, pro-Palestine protests are going on, they don't seem to be able to make that parse. That seems to be one of the roots of the problems here, is that people do put together - these young people, they could be stupid, they could be misinformed - but they do put together what the state of Israel is doing and they equate it with Judaism.","offset":3549,"duration":22},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: And that's why I've tried - and that's why I've tried to be so outspoken on this in making clear that on anti-Semitism there should be no nuance. And that's a conversation where we should all be able to unite. And that we have to protect a place for nuance when it comes to Mideast policy, when it comes to Israel, when it comes to Iran and - and anything happening in the Middle East. And we need to give space for those who want to peacefully - and I want to stress peacefully - protest.","offset":3571,"duration":28},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: We want to give space to those who differ from the administration and frankly, those who support the administration to be able to go out and to protest peacefully. And that is I think an - an important part of the fabric of our American society. I just think it's important - and I try and do this work every day as Governor - to keep those conversations separate. Because when they get blended, that's where I think it gets dangerous and that's where - uh, I - I think it - it really crosses a line into something we don't want to see in our society.","offset":3599,"duration":28},{"text":"Host: And you could be super critical of Israel and you could love your Jewish neighbors and friends. These are - this is a very simple concept here.","offset":3627,"duration":8},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Absolutely. And I think that reflects where I am on many things. I've been super critical of the Israeli government, the Netanyahu government. Um, and - and I'm someone who loves Israel, someone who has spent time in Israel. I wrote a whole book about - uh, I proposed to my wife there and how I think the - the idea of it is - is important. We've got to figure out ways to keep those two conversations - not separate, but - but blurring the lines in a way that creates some dangers I think is something we have to guard against.","offset":3635,"duration":34},{"text":"Host: Yeah, lots of education, lots of opportunities. Josh Shapiro, thank you so much for coming on \"All In\" and we look forward to having you on again and good luck with your race. Good luck with your 76ers. I will see you in the second round, it looks like.","offset":3669,"duration":13},{"text":"Josh Shapiro: Next year - next time I'm on, I'll be wearing a Sixers hoodie. So go Knicks!","offset":3682,"duration":6},{"text":"Host: There you go. I'll see you courtside, my friend. You go to the games.","offset":3688,"duration":3},{"text":"Host: I'm going all in!","offset":3691,"duration":15}],"logs":[{"elapsed":"0.0","message":"Downloading audio from YouTube...","detail":null},{"elapsed":"0.0","message":"Trying download with browser cookies (ad-free)...","detail":null},{"elapsed":"2.7","message":"⚠ Cookie download failed: WARNING: [youtube] [jsc] Error solving n challenge request using \"deno\" provider: Error running deno process (returncode: 1): \u001b[0m\u001b[1m\u001b[31merror\u001b[0m: Uncaught (in promise) TypeError: Cannot read prope","detail":null},{"elapsed":"2.7","message":"Retrying without cookies...","detail":null},{"elapsed":"30.7","message":"⚠ Downloaded without cookies — audio may contain ads","detail":null},{"elapsed":"30.7","message":"Audio downloaded (33.7 MB) in 30.7s","detail":"File size: 33.7 MB"},{"elapsed":"30.7","message":"Video title: Josh Shapiro on Trump, Iran War Chaos, Israel's Failure, the Economy, and 2028 Race","detail":null},{"elapsed":"30.8","message":"Audio duration: 1:01:51 (61.9 min)","detail":null},{"elapsed":"30.8","message":"Large audio (61.9 min) — will use chunked transcription with gemini-3-flash-preview","detail":null},{"elapsed":"30.8","message":"Skipping full-file attempt — using chunked transcription for 61.9 min audio","detail":null},{"elapsed":"31.2","message":"Split audio into 2 chunks for transcription","detail":null},{"elapsed":"31.2","message":"Transcribing chunk 1/2 (starts at 0:00)...","detail":null},{"elapsed":"31.2","message":"Uploading audio to Gemini File API...","detail":null},{"elapsed":"34.8","message":"Audio uploaded in 3.6s","detail":"File ref: files/pjkvf3xqiro0"},{"elapsed":"34.8","message":"Audio processed in 0.0s. 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