having the debt ceiling fight. but what we do know is that this whole, long week, republicans do not have the votes of their own caucus to pass a rules package. so people thought this week was crazy, if the folks that tonight was a rollercoaster. or you know what show. buckle up. because you re gonna have votes like this. once a month, for the next two years. so long as kevin mccarthy is the speaker of the caucus. where he has empowered the never kevins. aka, the extremists. who hold hostage and do of their jobs. holy cow. let s bring tim miller into this conversation. and tim, one of the things that we have heard over and over this week from those who were never kevins is that they didn t trust him. he went back on his word. could he go back on his word in the next 48 hours since he has now got the votes. but they haven t agreed on a rules package? i think, conceivably, what happens with the rules package. you saw one republican rep
he didn t want people knowing what he was doing, but he didn t trust the government. one of the fascinating things about the donald trump presidency, explore this, it s just ali deep level of paranoia. and what that meant for somebody who was overseeing this apparatus, that he didn t trust. he didn t trust the government. and the government didn t trust him. at the end of his presidency. we read it in the introduction to the segment. john kelly doesn t believe trump can have access to these documents. shoe box in the oval office. that s a staggering development. we know there s always been this institutional deep state desire to protect trump from himself. but the degree to which they really didn t trust him with anything, it sounds like. now, and this was an ongoing issue with the classified material where he would sometimes my colleagues and i wrote about this recently he wanted to keep stuff. and they weren t really sure why, or what it meant. they would try to get thing
not our phone, apparently meaning it was not a government issued device. so it sounds like trump sent someone to verizon to get a phone for him so he can make calls that were kind of unmonitored. and then, promptly loses it. he was very keen on keeping his own phone. and kudos to my former colleague, alex burns, who s the first person to hear there was an issue with the phone and a golf cart. we initially reported that detail a couple years ago. but there s some new reporting here relating to it. you know, aides were a little stunned that he would suddenly have another phone after they had he didn t want people knowing what he was doing, but he didn t trust the government. one of the fascinating things about the donald trump presidency, explore this, it s just this deep level of paranoia. and what that meant for somebody who was overseeing this apparatus, that he didn t trust. he didn t trust the government. and the government didn t trust him. at the end of his presidency. we
to the segment. john kelly doesn t believe trump can have access to these documents. they start taking away classified documents so he can t squirrel them away in a shoe box in the oval office. that s a staggering development. we know there s always been this institutional deep state desire to protect trump from himself. but the degree to which they really didn t trust him with anything, it sounds like. now, and this was an ongoing issue with the classified material where he would sometimes my colleagues and i wrote about this recently he wanted to keep stuff. and they weren t really sure why, or what it meant. they would try to get things back, but for the most part, they felt this if you can t say no to the president of the united states. and he is the president, and he wanted it. his argument would be, and his aides are the people closest to him now, they would say he had a reason not trust the government. look what happened in various investigations, and would go on and on
the donald trump presidency, and i explore this is just the deep level of paranoia, and what is that meant for somebody overseeing this apparatus that he didn t trust. he didn t trust the government, and the government didn t trust him. that s right. at the end of his presidency, we re talking about someone we read it in the introduction to the segment. like john kelly doesn t believe that trump can have access to these documents, they start taking away classified briefings so he can t squirrel them away in a shoe box in the oval office. we know there s been this institutional deep state desire to protect trump from himself. but to the agree they really didn t trust him with anything, it sounds like. no, there was an ongoing and my colleagues wrote about this recently, he would ask to keep stuff. they weren t sure why, or what it meant, and they would try to get things back. for the most part, you can t say no to the president of the united states. and he is the president and