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Dive into the complete episode list for The Signal Sitdown. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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Pub. DateTitleDuration
13 Feb 2025Rep. Mark Harris: This Is How Deep Did Biden Administration Corruption Went00:42:26
Recovery and rebuilding efforts continue across the southeastern United States in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene’s devastation last September. In the break-neck pace of the newscycle since the general election campaigns, one of the most under-covered stories from 2024 is how the Biden administration withheld desperately needed hurricane aid from conservative citizens impacted by the hurricane. Freshman Rep. Mark Harris, R-N.C., has been deeply involved in recovery efforts and recently visited impacted North Carolina communities with President Donald Trump. Harris joined The Signal Sitdown this week to provide an update on how Trump and Republicans are trying to rectify the wrongs done to hurricane victims by the Biden administration. As for, “where do things stand now, they've got a long ways to go,” Harris told me. But “?the American people have been doing a great job, I feel like, of stepping up and helping. People literally came in from all over the country, offering aid, offering help.” Without the generous aid and hard work from private citizens, Harris suggested things in western North Carolina would be much worse because of the “nightmare” response from FEMA and the Biden administration. “[?The] corruption that was uncovered and was exposed really began to bring things to light,” Harris said. “For the federal government, through FEMA in this particular case, to have been so corrupted to avoid helping those who were perceived to have conservative values or even to support President Trump in the upcoming election—that's almost criminal.” Other reports have uncovered that FEMA, under the Biden administration, had spent millions on housing migrants in hotels throughout the country, rather than having that money ready for natural disaster aid. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
20 Mar 2025Trump v. Putin: Who Has The Cards In Play For Peace? | Curt Mills00:50:56
On the heels of a Tuesday phone call between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, Curt Mills, executive director of The American Conservative, joined “The Signal Sitdown” this week to discuss the latest on the push for peace. Mills said the three-hour call between Trump and Putin “threw a little bit of cold water” on the prospects for a rapid peace. “The Russians don’t have the most incentive right now for the war to end,” he noted. What we know of the call offers some evidence to Mills’ claim: While both leaders signaled they want the war to end, the only deliverable from the call was that Putin agreed on a 30-day halt on attacking Ukrainian energy infrastructure.  Mills continued explaining why Russia lacks incentives to come to the table: Ukraine is only getting weaker. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
17 Apr 2025'Trump Is Bringing Democracy Back': Is Trump the Most Honest Politician in Washington?00:54:27
It's been 15 days since "Liberation Day," the day President Donald Trump announced a slew of tariffs on foreign goods. After unexpected movement in the bond market—bond yields rose rather than fell—Trump announced a 90 day pause on many of his April 2 tariffs. Since "Liberation Day," however, the administration claims more than 130 countries have come to the negotiating table. Both proponents and critics of Trump's tariffs can agree that the ongoing trade negotiations are a testament to the monumental undertaking the American people elected Trump to accomplish: A reordering of the global exchange of labor, goods, and services. Daniel McCarthy, editor of Modern Age, joined "The Signal Sitdown" this week to break down the Trump administration's strategy to effectuate an overhaul of the American system and the challenges the administration could face along the way. Tune in to find out what happens next:  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
05 Dec 2024Rep.-Elect Riley Moore: How Conservatives Can Deliver for the Working Class00:54:59
President-elect Donald Trump’s victory in the 2024 election marked the first time in 20 years that a Republican presidential candidate won the popular vote in addition to the electoral vote.  The commanding fashion of Trump’s historic comeback was further proof that the political realignment Trump started nearly a decade ago—transforming the Republican Party into the party of the working class—is being further cemented.  And it’s no surprise, then, that victors of down-ballot elections are increasingly representing the coalition that now makes up the Republican base. Rep.-elect Riley Moore, R-W.Va., is a perfect example, and he joined me on this week’s episode of “The Signal Sitdown.” The Daily Signal cannot continue to tell stories, like this one, without the support of our viewers: https://www.dailysignal.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
19 Dec 2024Justin Shubow: Here's How Trump Can Make America Beautiful Again00:52:35
Shortly after President-elect Donald Trump announced his 2024 presidential bid, the former and now future president released some preliminary policy objectives. Among them, Trump promised that, if put back in office, his administration would undertake efforts to get rid of ugly public buildings and beautify American cities. This week on The Signal Sitdown, my guest was someone who can, and already has in the previous Trump administration, help the next president deliver on his promise to make America beautiful again. Justin Shubow is the president of the National Civic Art Society, a nonprofit that promotes the revitalization of classical architecture and art in public works. Shubow previously served on Trump’s U.S. Commission of Fine Arts. In a recent op-ed for the Wall Street Journal by Intercollegiate Studies Institute President Johnny Burtka, Shubow was floated as someone who could play a big role in Trump’s beautification agenda. While some conservatives wish the federal government would mostly get out of the architecture business, Shubow told me the construction of public buildings is not just inevitable but worthy of more conservative resources. “Great architecture can inspire people to be better people, to be patriots, to be better citizens,” Shubow said. When conservatives aren’t involved in this process, public architecture and art “can be subversive and be demoralizing.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
06 Feb 2025Craig Iffland: Why Trump Wants to Know Who Killed JFK01:38:46
The full account of events that culminated in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy has been kept hidden from the American public for over 60 years. Now, however, President Donald Trump is on the verge of declassifying what other administrations—even his own previous administration—refused or declined to make public. Not only has Trump promised to declassify documents pertaining to the JFK assassination, but also the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.  Craig Iffland is an independent researcher with a Ph.D. in Moral Theology from Notre Dame. He is more knowledgeable about the JFK assassination, what we know and what we don’t yet know, than anyone I’ve ever met. Daily Signal readers may have become acquainted with Iffland by reading a recently-published Daily Signal article titled, “Here’s How We Find Out Who Killed JFK.” This week, he joins me on The Signal Sitdown to not only discuss Trump’s effort to bring transparency to the assassination attempts but also revisit what happened on Nov. 22, 1963 and the years leading up to that fateful day. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
27 Feb 2025Sen. Jim Justice, Ft. Babydog: ‘Don’t Screw It Up’ Republicans00:56:37
Jim Justice’s life feels like an American folktale. Standing at 6’7”, the Republican senator from West Virginia is built like Paul Bunyan. He, like Bunyan, has an animal sidekick in Babydog, his English bulldog. He sounds like a character written by Mark Twain. Justice was born and raised in Raleigh County, West Virginia, where he’d ride his bike to school, play Little League baseball, and romp through the woods. He went to college on an athletic scholarship and became captain of the Marshall University golf team. He then joined the family agriculture business, and became an eight-time national corn-growing champion. He’s headed too many businesses to count, but decided to run for public office. He served two terms as governor of West Virginia and is now the junior senator from West Virginia. Justice and Babydog joined me this week on “The Signal Sitdown” to talk about his journey from West Virginia to Washington, D.C. Don’t miss out on the latest Signal Sitdown episodes by subscribing to The Daily Signal now, and enabling all notifications: https://www.youtube.com/dailysignal?sub_confirmation=1 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
01 Apr 2025Memer-in-Chief: How Donald Trump Took the Digital Town Square by Storm | Kaelan Dorr00:23:21
President Donald Trump has made massive inroads with Gen Z voters through an alternative media strategy that took the president’s message directly to the digital town square. As a deputy assistant to the president and White House deputy communications director, Kaelan Dorr is a key player in executing Trump's digital media strategy. He joined a special episode of The Signal Sitdown to discuss how Trump became “the Memer-in-Chief.” Over the course of the 2024 campaign, Trump eschewed traditional media, opting for a media strategy that met voters where they were consuming content. The Trump team brought the president’s message to podcasts and social media platforms instead of op-eds and primetime cable news. The big secret, however, is that this strategy is actually “very simple,” Dorr said. “I think that's what makes it very effective at the end of the day.” “The beauty of the digital strategy and of the movement we've kind of curated over the last decade is that anybody can do it,” Dorr told me. “It's truly valuable because it doesn't require an ad executive on Madison Avenue… to talk about ‘what's our message progression on this issue’ and ‘how do we do videos that tell a story over time?’”  “I like to tell everybody this is the easiest job I've ever had because the American people gave us a honey-do list and we're just checking things off.” Trump’s infamous use of social media serves as the foundation for the rest of the administration’s digital strategy. Listen now to find out what happens next: Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
10 Apr 2025 Rod Dreher: Communist Dissidents Have a Message For the West01:13:39
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was arrested on Feb. 12, 1974, for speaking out about the evils of Soviet communism. The next day, he was exiled to the West and would not touch Russian soil again for more than 15 years. On the day of his arrest, Solzhenitsyn published an essay titled “Live Not by Lies.” The four-page essay was a call for civic courage: The end of Soviet totalitarianism would begin only when the Russian people refused to accept the regime’s lies. Solzhenitsyn’s essay inspired the title of Rod Dreher’s 2020 book “Live Not by Lies: A Manual for Christian Dissidents.” Almost five years later, Angel Studios has turned Dreher’s book into a four-part documentary series focusing on the stories of the brave souls that stood up to communist regimes. Dreher joined “The Signal Sitdown” to give a behind the scenes look at the Angel Studios project. Dreher started working on “Live Not by Lies” when he received a shocking phone call. Tune in to find out what happened next: Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
09 Jan 2025This Could Be Republicans' Last Chance To Fix Immigration | Rep. Brandon Gill00:37:32
The Republican-controlled Congress has a monumental task ahead of them: Passing the agenda that elected President-elect Donald Trump and gave Republicans control of both the House and Senate. It will be trial by fire for the newest members of the Republican House like Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas. This week on The Signal Sitdown, politics editor Bradley Devlin interviews the newly-minted Congressman. Gill gives us an inside look into how new members of Congress go about setting up their office and getting up to speed on the legislature’s rules and procedures. All the while, these new members are posed to play important roles in the House Republican conference’s dynamics and passing the Trump agenda. “Everybody recognizes President Trump's leadership, and he's got the ability to sort of bring people in line—to put it nicely—in a way that I don't think our party has had in decades, if ever,” Gill said of the Republican trifecta. “I think we all recognize this is his mandate,” Gill continued. “We have a majority in the house because of President Trump, not because of anybody else. We have a majority in the Senate because of President Trump. So that is the vision that President Trump has cast for the party, which is an America first agenda. That’s what we're going to be focused on passing.” With slim majorities, Republicans in Congress will have to pass large swaths of this agenda through a process called budget reconciliation. Reconciliation is exempt from the 60-vote cloture threshold in the Senate, but it also to a certain degree limits what can be included in the budget reconciliation legislation. The razor-thin majority in the House makes the path to success even more narrow and marred with potential pitfalls. House Speaker Mike Johnson is meant to guide his energetic and rambunctious Republican conference down this path. “There is no harder job in politics than being a Republican Speaker of the House,” Gill claimed. Keep Up With The Daily Signal and Bradley Devlin X: @bradleydevlin Instagram: @bradleypdevlin Sign up for our email newsletters: https://www.dailysignal.com/email Subscribe to our other shows: The Tony Kinnett Cast: https://www.dailysignal.com/the-tony-kinnett-cast Problematic Women: https://www.dailysignal.com/problematic-women The Signal Sitdown: https://www.dailysignal.com/the-signal-sitdown Follow The Daily Signal: X: https://x.com/DailySignal Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thedailysignal/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheDailySignalNews/ Truth Social: https://truthsocial.com/@DailySignal YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/DailySignal Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/TheDailySignal The Daily Signal cannot continue to tell stories, like this one, without the support of our viewers: https://www.dailysignal.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
27 Mar 2025Bringing Rogue Federal Judges to Heel | Rep. Tom Emmer00:41:46
When Rep. Tom Emmer became the House GOP whip in 2023, Republicans' mission was simple: Limit the damage President Joe Biden did before President Donald Trump returned to the White House. Emmer, a Republican from Minnesota, shared his party's struggles in an interview on "The Signal Sitdown." While coordinated opposition to a forceful administration is no easy chore (just ask former Speaker Kevin McCarthy or Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer), governing, even with a trifecta, is even harder. But that’s precisely the task Emmer and his colleagues face. The House majority whip peeled back the curtain on the dynamics inside the House Republican Conference as budget negotiations and bringing rogue federal judges to heel dominate conversations on Capitol Hill. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
06 Mar 2025Amber Duke: Trump Makes Democrats Look ‘Like Absolute Clowns’ in Joint Address00:42:00
“America is back,” President Donald Trump declared in his Tuesday address to Congress, making no bones about connecting what he sees as the imminent American revival to his electoral victory in November and the accomplishments of his first six weeks in office. The president’s triumphant tone, and Democrats’ reactions to it, made Democrats look “like absolute clowns,” Daily Caller Senior Editor Amber Duke told me in this week’s episode of “The Signal Sitdown.” Since their loss in November, Democrats claim to be doing a lot of soul searching, but apparently without much success, given that Democrats in Congress refused to even stand for the possibility of an American “golden age” under Trump, much less stand for families of migrant crime victims or a child on his way to beating brain cancer. Democrats are adrift: The American people see it, and the president seems to delight in it. For Duke, “there were two things that Trump did that I thought were incredibly effective.” “The first,” Duke said, “was listing specific accomplishments from the administration” just six weeks into Trump’s second term. “Typically, the president comes in the first year, they give this address, they're talking about the things that are wrong with the country, and what they're going to do throughout their administration to fix it. “Well, Trump's already been fixing it. He's already accomplished a lot in his first six weeks, so it sounded like the type of speech that you would hear in year two, year three, even year four,” Duke explained. Trump brought the receipts, too. Trump “back[ed] it up with data,” Duke said, particularly when it came to “examples of government waste, fraud, and abuse that DOGE has uncovered,” and issues of border security. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
20 Feb 2025Max Primorac: 98% of USAID Employees’ Political Donations Go to Leftwing Causes00:37:55
On this week’s edition of “The Signal Sitdown,” Bradley Devlin speaks with Max Primorac, former acting chief operating officer at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), under the first Trump administration. As chief operating officer, Primorac saw firsthand how U.S. taxpayers unwittingly fund a litany of leftwing causes at home and abroad. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
03 Apr 2025This Republican Was on to USAID Corruption Before DOGE Even Existed | Rep. Eli Crane00:43:14
Rep. Eli Crane, R-Ariz., is a fighter. The week after 9/11, he dropped out of the University of Arizona to join the Navy and accomplished his goal of becoming a Navy SEAL. In 2023, he brought that fighting spirit to Congress, where he’s been proven prescient on major issues such as America’s actual role in the Ukraine war and the need to reign in out-of-control government spending from agencies like USAID. Crane joined this week’s episode of "The Signal Sitdown" on the heels of a bombshell report from The New York Times about the extent of U.S. involvement in Ukraine and in the midst of major negotiations between Republicans in the House and Senate on cuts to government spending. The Arizona congressman was onto the U.S. Agency for International Development before DOGE drew attention to it this year. “I tried to defund USAID last Congress by 50%,” Crane told "The Signal Sitdown." After Crane co-sponsored a piece of legislation from former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz in August 2023 to abolish USAID, he brought an amendment to the House floor to slash USAID funding in half.  “Democrats stopped it and Republicans stopped it,” Crane recalled. The amendment failed, with 102 in favor to 326 opposed. A majority of House Republicans—114 of them to be exact—voted against Crane’s amendment. Tune in to find out what happened next! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
26 Dec 2024Ryan Walker: How To Get Trump's Agenda Through Congress01:01:02
A sweeping election victory on Nov. 5 means Republicans will have control of the House, Senate, and the White House come January. Capturing this trifecta, however, was just the beginning of conservatives’ fight to save the country.  Now comes the much harder task: conservatives actually have to govern. Republicans, animated by President-elect Donald Trump’s winning agenda, will have to work at record pace to get the changes the American people want through the slow-turning gears of Washington, D.C.  To preview the incoming Congress, I spoke to Ryan Walker, executive vice president of Heritage Action for America, on this week’s episode of “The Signal Sitdown.” Walker has nearly a decade of experience working for the House of Representatives under his belt and is now tasked with ensuring conservative grassroots priorities are attended to on Capitol Hill. While Republicans have a strong majority in the Senate, it is nowhere near the 60 votes needed to overcome the Senate filibuster. Nevertheless, there are some mechanisms that exist for the Senate to circumvent the filibuster and pass their agenda with a simple majority vote in the upper chamber. And Republicans are planning to put one of these mechanisms, budget reconciliation, to use to pass large portions of Trump’s agenda. In this upcoming budget reconciliation process, Walker told me that “the American people have demanded that [Congress] go big.” “[The American people] don't just want a bill dealing with tax reform,” Walker continued. “They want substantial change to the way the government functions. They want the border closed. They want inflation to come down. They want crime rates to drop. They want folks to start acting in a way that is not weaponizing government agencies against the people. They want spying on American citizens to stop. They want their votes to count and illegals to not be allowed to vote in federal elections or even state and local elections.” To no surprise, the American people actually want the policies they voted for in November to be enacted, Walker suggested. “Regardless of which strategy,” Republicans in Congress go with, Walker said, “it needs to be a big and massive piece of policy change.” #dailysignal #congress #democrats #Republicans #mikejohnson The Daily Signal cannot continue to tell stories, like this one, without the support of our viewers: https://www.dailysignal.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
24 Oct 2024Vince Coglianese: The Plot to Replace Biden01:01:06
On this week’s episode of “The Signal Sitdown,” Badley Devlin is joined by Vince Coglianese, host of WMAL’s “The Vince Coglianese Show.” As a radio host in the Washington, D.C., area, Coglianese intimately knows how Washington interacts with the media, and how the corporate media does the bidding of uniparty interests. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
12 Dec 2024Kelley Vlahos: How Close Are We to World War III?01:17:31
This week on “The Signal Sitdown,” Bradley discusses the latest from Ukraine and Syria with Kelley Vlahos, editorial director at Responsible Statecraft. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
10 Oct 2024Rick Scott: The Senate Is Run by ‘Dictatorships’00:43:18
Bradley Devlin sits down with Sen. Rick Scot, R-Fla., to discuss the race to become the next Republican leader in the Senate for this week's episode of "The Signal Sitdown." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
17 Oct 2024Andy Harris, House Freedom Caucus: ‘When We Go to Battle, We Go Together’00:28:46
The newly minted chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, Rep. Andy Harris joins “The Signal Sitdown” this week to discuss the conservative cohort’s priorities heading into the elections and the 119th Congress. The House Freedom Caucus is no stranger to putting pressure on House GOP leadership. The concessions secured by the caucus and other conservatives at the beginning of the 118th Congress ultimately led to then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s undoing. At times, McCarthy’s successor, House Speaker Mike Johnson, has also been challenged from his rightward flank. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
21 Nov 2024Dr. Kevin Roberts: 'I Can't Thank the Kamala Harris Campaign Enough'01:08:20
Dr. Kevin Roberts, President of the Heritage Foundation, joins Bradley Devlin on "The Signal Sitdown" to discuss his new book "Dawn's Early Light" and the implications of Trump's recent electoral win. They delve deep into 'Project 2025', the changes to conservative policies, the concept of 'Family First Fusionism,' and the anticipated future of the American right. Join us for a comprehensive breakdown of the shifts in American politics post-election and the conservative vision for the future. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
28 Nov 2024Lora Ries: Here’s How to Deport Over 10 Million People01:01:06
Under President Joe Biden’s failed leadership, the United States has been in the throes of a four-year-long illegal immigrant crisis, during which an estimated more than 10 million people have entered the country. With immigration among the top issues in the 2024 campaign cycle, the American people are sending President-elect Donald Trump, who campaigned on a platform of mass deportations, back to Washington. The question now becomes how does the government actually go forward with deporting more than 10 million people, many of whom are deep in the interior of the country. Bradley Devlin sat down with Lora Ries, director of the Border Security and Immigration Center at The Heritage Foundation, to discuss what a second Trump administration’s immigration agenda could look like on this week's episode of “The Signal Sitdown.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
16 Jan 2025Rep. Ralph Norman: What Trump Told Me After I Voted Against Johnson for Speaker01:06:53
Rep. Ralph Norman was on the House floor Jan. 3 when Rep. Nancy Mace, a fellow South Carolina Republican, phone in hand, told him that President-elect Donald Trump wanted to speak with him. Norman had just voted for Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, to become speaker of the House, rather than Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La. For this week’s episode of “The Signal Sitdown,” Norman joins Daily Signal Politics Editor Bradley Devlin to explain why he initially voted against giving Johnson a second term as speaker, to share the inside story on how he went from a “no” to a “yes” on Johnson, and to pull back the curtain on an exclusive meeting Trump held with House conservatives at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on Jan. 11. “I had one chance when we voted for the speaker to use my one vote out of 435 the way I thought it should be used, and I voted against [Johnson]. I voted for Jim Jordan,” Norman said. “Nancy Mace handed me the phone,” Norman recalled. “She said, ‘the president wants to talk to you.’” The first thing Trump told Norman? “‘You're interrupting my golf game,’” the South Carolina lawmaker said with a smile. “I said, ‘Well, Mr. President, I hate to be doing that.'” “‘Mike's the only one that can win it. Jordan can't win it,’” Trump said in Norman’s retelling, “‘I love Jim Jordan more than you do.’” “I said, ‘Mr. President, I get that, but you need to be calling Mike Johnson and going over where is he going to take a stand on [budget] offsets,” Norman claimed. “And that's why we've got the $38 trillion in debt.” Trump agreed Johnson and his House objectors should meet. In a side room, Norman, Johnson, and others huddled around the phone with Trump on speaker. “I said, ‘Mike, are you going to not put any more suspension votes up where more Democrats vote for it than Republicans?'” Norman recalled. “'Before you spend another dollar, are you going to have it offset with cuts?'” “After we talked back and forth, he said, ‘Yes.’” Norman claimed. “He said, ‘I will do that, and if I don't, you can put me out,’” essentially promising to make good on his promises to conservatives or suffer going the way of his predecessor, former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. The Daily Signal cannot continue to tell stories, like this one, without the support of our viewers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
23 Jan 2025Rep. August Pfluger: What ‘Drill Baby Drill’ Can Do For You00:40:45
“Energy security is national security.” If you spend enough time with Rep. August Pfluger, you might get tired of hearing him repeat those words. The Texas congressman and new Republican Study Committee chairman would be the first to say that if you aren’t tired of hearing it, Republicans haven’t been saying it enough.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
28 Mar 2025What It’s Really Like Working for President Trump | Karoline Leavitt00:13:24
Karoline Leavitt made history when she became the youngest person ever to hold the title White House press secretary. In a special episode of "The Signal Sitdown" filmed at the White House, Leavitt opens up about her relationship with President Donald Trump, her political upbringing, and how the president is garnering record support with young voters. At just 27 years old, Leavitt is tasked with communicating Trump’s priorities to the American people, oftentimes through testy exchanges with the adversarial corporate media in the White House briefing room. "I don't think anyone could anticipate having this job," Leavitt told The Daily Signal. "Certainly, one may hope for it, but you never really know if it will happen." These days, Leavitt makes headlines sparring with journalists, but once upon a time, she thought she might become one. "I always was enthralled with the media and news growing up," Leavitt said. "Always thought I wanted to be a reporter, actually on your side of the table, and covering the news." That started to change, however, when Trump burst on to the political scene. "2016 was the first election I was actually eligible to vote in, and I cast my ballot in the New Hampshire primary for Donald Trump," Leavitt recalled. Listen to find out what happens next: Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
14 Nov 2024Rachel Bovard: “Loyalty is the Game,” Explaining Donald Trump’s Cabinet Picks01:05:38
President-Elect Donald Trump’s picks for his Cabinet—Pete Hegseth, Rep. Matt Gaetz, and Marco Rubio, among others—have caught most people off guard. But there’s more than meets the eye to these picks. Rachel Bovard joins this week’s “The Signal Sitdown” to discuss the Senate’s leadership election, the Trump-Vance transition team, and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
30 Jan 2025Richard Stern: Trump’s Best Shot to Get His Agenda Through Congress, Explained00:59:43
The budget reconciliation process stands as President Donald Trump's and congressional Republicans’ best—and likely only—hope to pass their agenda through Congress. While this policymaking mechanism has become more well-known in recent years because recent presidents have used it to get their policies through Congress, the budget reconciliation process is difficult to untangle—even for the seasoned Washington insider. Budget reconciliation, however, does not evade the understanding of Richard Stern, the director of the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget at The Heritage Foundation. Stern joined me this week on “The Signal Sitdown” to discuss the players, procedures, and policy options on the table as Republicans consider their legislative path forward. Reconciliation, “is the one shot we have to really get all these things done,” Stern told me. “Really, almost all of the agenda can and should be in this bill.” “That's both border security, its interior immigration enforcement, deportations, but it's also permitting reform, regulatory reform, deregulation, unleashing our energy resources. We could go after the deep state. We could dismantle the deep state if we really wanted to,” Stern said of what could be accomplished in budget reconciliation. Though there are limitations imposed on what can be done through budget reconciliation, Stern suggested Republicans can go big on it because the Senate can make changes to the rules that govern the reconciliation process—and some of those rules are in dire need of reform. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
30 Mar 2025Inside President Trump's Ambitious Policy Strategy | May Mailman, Senior Trump Policy Strategist00:28:13
President Donald Trump’s pace since returning to the White House has surprised the president’s friends, perhaps even more than his enemies. On the 66th day of his administration, Trump signed the 100th executive order of his second term, breaking FDR’s record of 99 executive orders in the first 100 days. While Trump plows ahead, the leftist lawfare complex that once sought to imprison the president is attempting to handcuff his second term by filing more than 130 lawsuits against the administration. As a deputy assistant to the president and Trump senior policy strategist, May Mailman is one of those administration staffers tasked with executing President Trump’s game plan. She sat down for a special episode of "The Signal Sitdown" filmed at the White House. “I think actually the president's speed has always been this fast,” Mailman said of the offensive posture of the administration. It has always been, ‘I need this, I need this, let's go, let's go, let's go.’” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
03 Oct 2024Ron Johnson: We Can’t Have Another JFK Assassination01:08:14
For the premiere of The Signal Sitdown, host Bradley Devlin sits down with Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., to discuss the state of the 2024 election, the race to replace Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., as Senate GOP leader, new revelations from both assassination attempts on former President Donald Trump, and much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
31 Oct 2024Kyle Brosnan: How Noncitizen Are Voting in the 2024 Election 01:10:31
The Biden-Harris administration has seemingly hatched a plan to structurally alter the election so that Democrats maintain power. I sat down with Kyle Brosnan, chief counsel for The Oversight Project at The Heritage Foundation, for this week’s episode of “The Signal Sitdown” to discuss “Biden Bucks” and their potential impact on the outcome of the 2024 presidential election. Subscribe to “The Signal Sitdown” now and don’t miss out on all things election 2024 and beyond: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjMHBev3NsoW9SFJq5Zb5XMdFHI_gj8ig&si=rA1b-FjfEolW191a Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
30 Sep 2024COMING SOON: The Signal Sitdown with Bradley Devlin00:02:24
Bradley Devlin hosts The Signal Sitdown, a new show from The Daily Signal that looks to expose how the sausage really gets made in Washington, D.C. Fingers will be pointed. Names will be named. Are you ready? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
13 Mar 2025Trump Is Right: 'Everything's Computer!' | Wesley Hodges01:03:40
"Everything's computer!" President Donald Trump said on Tuesday while checking out a Tesla. The president might be right about that, not only regarding the Tesla, but for the future of the American economy: The Trump administration is attempting to usher in the AI economy while bringing the tech giants working on this technology to heel. Its no small task, and two massive stories from the tech world that corporate media outlets swiftly swept under the rug this week are illustrative. Thus far, however, “it is a loud silence on the part of the media,” Wes Hodges, acting director of the Tech Policy Center at The Heritage Foundation, told me on this week's episode of ”The Signal Sitdown.” The first story came from a Facebook whistleblower’s allegations that the tech giant was willing to bend over backward to appease the Chinese Communist Party, even sharing critical technological developments in AI and then “lying about it” to U.S. officials. The second came from Elon Musk’s X. After X suffered a series of outages on Monday, Musk said the social media platform was the victim of “a massive cyberattack to try to bring down the X system, with IP addresses originating in the Ukraine area.” Corporate media outlets swiftly trotted out experts to claim Musk’s claims were “garbage,” even though U.S. officials claim they have not yet been able to identify who was behind the cyberattack. Though the corporate media wants the public to pay no mind to these stories, each provides essential insights into the fight for the future of the American economy, a fight President Donald Trump is fighting on two fronts. The first is with China; the second is with American elites. “There is a lot of truth to being able to deflect and hide your source of attack with enough time and resources,” he said of those questioning whether the attack actually came from the Ukraine area. Nevertheless, “Musk's accusation that it came from Ukraine isn't something that we should rule out,” because of the enemies Musk has made since entering the political arena. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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