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Date: 2026-03-03 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00029458
US POLITICS
SENATOR ADAM SCHIFF INTERVIEW ... The New Yorker

Senator Adam Schiff on How the Trump Administration Targets Its Opponents | The New Yorker Interview


Original article: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VC9PMbE7Wdc
Senator Adam Schiff on How the Trump Administration Targets Its Opponents | The New Yorker Interview

The New Yorker

Dec 5, 2025

1.06M subscribers ... 196,139 views ... 3.7K likes

The New Yorker Radio Hour

The California congressman talks with David Remnick about federal authorities’ inquiry into his mortgage, the Supreme Court’s primary role in enabling this Administration, and why he thinks the rule of law in America is “hanging by a thread.”

This interview is drawn from The New Yorker Radio Hour, a weekly radio show and podcast hosted by David Remnick. For more, follow The New Yorker Radio Hour wherever you get your podcasts. http://swap.fm/l/tny-radiohour-eBFv3Y

Subscribe to the New Yorker channel on YouTube so that you never miss an episode: http://bit.ly/newyorkeryoutubesub
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY



Peter Burgess
Transcript
  • 0:00
  • - The President of the United States seems
  • to really dislike you.
  • - Yeah. - Why?
  • - I live rent-free in that guy's head
  • and let me tell you, it's pretty scary in there.
  • I have a suspicion, which I hesitate to articulate
  • 'cause it's kind of a vain suspicion,
  • - Please. - But I'll share it anyway.
  • During the Russian investigation,
  • I'm deposing Jared Kushner.
  • And it is just shortly after Trump has first attacked me
  • on his Twitter account,
  • 'Sleazy Adam Schiff, corrupt this, blah, blah, blah,
  • spends too much time on TV,
  • pushing the hoax,' something like that.
  • And I remember at the time being desperate to respond,
  • being attacked by the president.
  • At the time, a few months into Trump won,
  • that was very unusual for a president
  • of the United States to be--
  • - Unpleasant or flattering?
  • - Well, my colleagues were all deeply jealous of me,
  • but I was frantic to figure out how I was gonna respond.
  • This was going to tens of millions of people.
  • I would soon learn, because it became quite routine,
  • there was no way I could respond, at least not in a way

  • 1:00
  • that the people he was talking to
  • would ever hear me respond.
  • But nevertheless, I remember being on the House floor
  • and Mike Thompson, my colleague from Northern California,
  • grabs my arm and he says, 'Adam, you should tweet back,
  • 'Mr. President, when they go low, we go high.
  • Go fuck yourself.'' [David laughing]
  • And I so wanted to do it.
  • If I write a book one day
  • of the tweets I wish I'd sent, that'll be on the cover.
  • So like, a week later or two weeks later,
  • I'm deposing Jared Kushner in the Russian investigation.
  • And during one of the breaks, he comes up to me
  • in an ingratiating way, in a calculated, ingratiating way.
  • And he says, 'You know, you do a really good job on TV.'
  • And I said, 'Well, thanks.
  • Apparently your father-in-law doesn't think so.'
  • And he said, 'Oh, yes he does, and that's why.'
  • I think in the same way that Donald Trump picks his cabinet
  • by watching Fox, he picks his enemies
  • by seeing who's effective against him on TV.
  • - Now, he loves you so much that he wrote on Truth Social
  • to the attorney general,
  • 'Pam, I have reviewed over 30 statements and posts saying

  • 2:08
  • that essentially same old story as last time,
  • all talk, no action, nothing is being done.
  • What about Comey, Adam 'Shifty' Schiff, Leticia???
  • They're all guilty as hell
  • but nothing is going to be done.'
  • Now, Comey has been encountered.
  • Letitia James as well.
  • What's the status of this accusation against you?
  • And I know there are limits to what you can and cannot say.
  • But please do.
  • - I could tell you what I know,
  • which is frankly all I read in the paper.
  • We've had no word from the Justice Department,
  • no communication from them.
  • - But it's coming like Christmas, no?
  • - You know, they're I think having a problem,
  • at least as I read in the paper.
  • - What's the supposed case?
  • - The problem is they don't have a supposed case.
  • - But spell out the accusation if you would.
  • - The accusation is a loose accusation of mortgage fraud

  • 3:03
  • and they're making it against all their political opponents.
  • I know that we've been completely open
  • with my mortgage brokers, bankers,
  • so there's no they there.
  • And they know it too.
  • The question is, I think,
  • are they gonna fire everyone in Maryland
  • so they can bring in another Lindsey Halligan
  • like they did in Virginia?
  • But we've seen how well that has gone in Virginia
  • with both of the cases they brought
  • against the other two Trump mentioned in that angry tweet,
  • having their cases thrown out.
  • - You seem rather serene about this.
  • - To me, what I'm facing
  • is frankly the same fight I've been in
  • since he became president the first time.
  • In the beginning, it was a forward-leaning democracy,
  • preserving effort to impeach a president
  • who was abusing his power
  • and then hold him accountable
  • through the January 6th Committee.
  • This is the same fight,
  • but now it is very much a defensive battle.

  • 4:02
  • And now he has new tools to abuse,
  • including the Justice Department, but it is the same fight.
  • - He talks a lot about Russia, Russia, Russia,
  • hoax, hoax, hoax.
  • Did you get anything wrong about that?
  • - No, I don't think we got anything wrong.
  • I do think that at the end of the investigation,
  • Mueller concluded, and I said,
  • you know, throughout the investigation--
  • - Robert Mueller. Yeah.
  • - Robert Mueller, I said throughout the investigation,
  • this was very possible, that he could not prove the crime
  • of conspiracy beyond a reasonable doubt.
  • - A lot of Democrats think there was,
  • in the rear view mirror,
  • some overreach, legal overreach in the attempt
  • to bring down Donald Trump.
  • Do any of those cases seem like overreach
  • or ill-advised in any way?
  • - Well, certainly the federal cases, I would say no.
  • The January 6th case, it's hard to imagine a bigger crime
  • against a democracy than incitement of insurrection.
  • - It wasn't a day of love, in your view.
  • - I was there. It was no day of love.

  • 5:03
  • Likewise, the president's not only bringing of hundreds
  • of classified documents to his residence
  • but lying about it by obstructing the investigation into it.
  • Also very serious.
  • In terms of the civil case,
  • you know, I will let Letitia James speak
  • for herself on that case.
  • - You seem a little dubious of it.
  • - No, no, I wouldn't say that at all.
  • But whether the same standard
  • in that case was applied against Donald Trump
  • as would've been applied against others,
  • I would leave her to speak to.
  • I wouldn't be able to compare what kind
  • of cases I brought as a prosecutor in New York
  • without knowing what kinda prosecutor cases I brought
  • in New York.
  • But I do think that the argument
  • of some kind of equivalence
  • is a false narrative.

  • 6:01
  • And I hear it all the time
  • on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
  • I hear all the time
  • how the Justice Department under Merrick Garland,
  • under that horrible partisan Merrick Garland,
  • was so weaponized against Donald Trump.
  • And that's a complete fiction of fabrication.
  • - Do you feel that Merrick Garland
  • moved too slowly, too cautiously?
  • - I absolutely do. Yeah.
  • And this is the irony of it, of attacking Merrick Garland,
  • which is they moved with alacrity against the foot soldiers
  • who broke into the Capitol that day.
  • They moved not at all
  • for entire year against the higher ups.
  • - Why did Merrick Garland move so slowly?
  • What about his character or tactics
  • or strategy led him to behave that way?
  • - The Justice Department in the first Trump
  • was abused and made partisan,
  • and he wished
  • to restore the Department's reputation for independence.
  • Now, what they did in the first Trump Justice Department

  • 7:00
  • is peanuts compared to today.
  • But nevertheless, Merrick Garland wanted
  • to restore the reputation of the Department
  • for strict non-partisanship.
  • And that made him very reluctant
  • to pursue an investigation of the President, too reluctant.
  • Ultimately that gave the Supreme Court the time it needed
  • to drag things out further
  • and make the case against Trump go away completely
  • when it could have been brought to fruition.
  • And we might be in a very different place today,
  • but I think it was that laudable aim
  • that taken too far amounted to a kind
  • of immunity for the President.
  • - I have to think that Donald Trump feels two things
  • about the prosecutions against him and the impeachments.
  • He feels that he prevailed
  • and that fills him with a sense
  • of invulnerability at this point and rage at the same time.
  • Do you agree with that?
  • And how does that shape his behavior as President?
  • - In his own head,
  • it's often difficult to figure out, okay,
  • what does the president really believe?

  • 8:00
  • Because I think what the President really believes
  • is you make your own truth through repetition.
  • So whether he's talked himself into his victimization,
  • he's always viewed himself as a victim of everything.
  • Whether he truly believes it, who really knows,
  • is probably less important than what does he do on the basis
  • of whatever belief he has.
  • But I've also, you know, thought
  • there's this interesting comparison of blind spots.
  • Trump being a pathological liar
  • can't envision anyone else committed to the truth.
  • It's just an alien idea to him, it's a blind spot.
  • Likewise, but from a completely opposite perspective,
  • Bob Mueller, such a person of integrity and truth
  • that I think he found it impossible to believe
  • that Bill Barr would so betray him as Barr went on to do
  • by misrepresenting Mueller's report.
  • In a way, they have kind of an interesting

  • 9:01
  • but opposite blind spot,
  • one unable to see people acting so unscrupulously
  • because they comport themselves
  • with such integrity like Mueller
  • and the other like Trump who has no moral compass
  • and doesn't believe anyone else does either.
  • - Do you think there's anything ruinous
  • about the Epstein situation for Trump?
  • Or is this something that will fade,
  • like so many other things?
  • - If there are ruinous things in the files,
  • the public will never see them.
  • Bondi and company
  • will make sure they never reach the public eye.
  • But for another, I think he's almost impervious to dirt.
  • - One thing I get tired of hearing,
  • and this has been going on for years, is Democrats saying,
  • 'You know, my Republican colleagues in the halls
  • of Congress allowed to me, they admit to me
  • that they can't stand Donald Trump
  • and then they don't act on it.'
  • - Yeah. - Why not?
  • In other words, if you're...
  • I ask a lot of people this, are these jobs so swell?

  • 10:00
  • Is it so great being a congressman
  • or a senator that you don't wanna risk going back
  • to your home state or district and being a lawyer
  • or a teacher or whatever it was before
  • that you sell your principles and soul?
  • - No, no, the job isn't worth it
  • and no job would be worth it.
  • And at that level, I don't understand it at all.
  • At a different level, I understand it completely.
  • They're afraid.
  • And I talked to one senator, for example.
  • I, along with Tim Kaine, had been offering resolutions,
  • war powers resolutions.
  • So I was working the Republican senators.
  • I know that a lot of them are deeply uncomfortable
  • with this blowing up of ships
  • and more uncomfortable with the idea
  • of going to war in Venezuela.
  • But I had one very senior Republican tell me,
  • 'You have to understand,
  • it's not just that he will punish us,
  • he'll punish our whole state.'
  • So they're worried about their constituents,
  • they're worried about themselves,
  • they're worried about their personal safety.
  • And then there is also this endless process
  • of rationalization, which goes like this.

  • 11:00
  • - Somebody worse will come.
  • - 'If I don't vote for RFK Junior,
  • you should see the guy they've teed up
  • to run against me in the primary.
  • If I don't vote for Pete Hegseth, I would be primered.
  • I'd be gone. You should see who would come after me.'
  • My feeling is let me see him.
  • I mean, if you're gonna just vote the same way anyway,
  • how much worse could it be?
  • I don't really derive any satisfaction
  • from hearing private misgivings.
  • I long since gained any solace from that.
  • If you're gonna vote with him on these things
  • that are destroying the country, then why be here?
  • And some of 'em are deciding, as you say,
  • it's just not worth it to them anymore
  • and they are leaving the Congress.
  • - In drips and drabs. - Yeah. Yeah.
  • - You raised Venezuela, and rightly so.
  • The Senate and House have ordered investigations
  • into whether Pete Hegseth ordered the killing
  • of unarmed survivors in one of those boat strikes
  • that's been going on in the Caribbean
  • as I don't know how many have already taken place.
  • The numbers are growing.

  • 12:01
  • Is there really actual bipartisan concern
  • about these actions and how much longer can they go on?
  • What's coming down the road here?
  • - There is bipartisan concern.
  • We've had now two votes on war powers resolutions.
  • We've had two Republicans who have voted to end the strikes
  • or to withdraw any implied congressional approval
  • of these things.
  • We need four to be able to win in the Senate.
  • We need obviously to carry the house,
  • and we would need to do it by a veto proof majority.
  • Nevertheless, even in the absence of veto proof majority,
  • it makes a statement and it has an impact.
  • The president does pay attention when he's voted against
  • by his own party.
  • But up until now, the Republicans seem to take turns
  • as who can vote against the President
  • and rarely allow that more than four people do so
  • at one time.
  • By and large, all we're seeing is verbal expressions

  • 13:01
  • of concern, occasional votes of concern.
  • The Republicans who are now saying they're concerned
  • about these reports,
  • that Hegseth ordered the murder of these survivors on one
  • of these ships I think does deeply concern them.
  • The question is will they go beyond concern?
  • They both said they'll do an investigation
  • in the House and Senate.
  • So let's say this investigation reveals that yes,
  • there were survivors and yes, they were killed.
  • - Is that a war crime?
  • - It would be a war crime.
  • If those reports are accurate, it's a war crime.
  • It's also murder.
  • Will Republicans take the next step
  • to hold anyone accountable?
  • I'm very doubtful about that.
  • - One of the great spectacles,
  • and there's so many every day in political life,
  • is the testimony and the committee hearings
  • involving Kash Patel
  • and your committee and Pam Bondi as well.
  • The technique being employed by Kash Patel
  • and Pam Bondi seems like something new.

  • 14:03
  • The way they don't answer your questions
  • and then attack personally, whether it's you
  • or anybody else on the committee.
  • - If you watch Bondi in particular, it was so obvious
  • 'cause she kept turning to her notes
  • for the pre-planned attack on Senator Blumenthal
  • or Senator Whitehouse or Senator Schiff or whoever.
  • - Does it work?
  • - Well, it only works if the Republicans allow it to work.
  • If the Republicans in that committee said,
  • 14:30
  • 'Actually, we need to know,
  • did Tom Homan, the White House border czar,
  • allegedly take $50,000 from undercover FBI agents?'
  • And if he did, why was the case dismissed?
  • And if it was, was he allowed to keep the money?
  • I mean, pretty basic oversight question
  • of a top-ranking Trump official.
  • - And how did the Republicans respond?
  • - With silence and allowed Bondi
  • to simply attack anybody asking that question.

  • 15:02
  • But it's also an illustration
  • of who they're really speaking to in those hearings,
  • which is an audience of one person.
  • Pam Bondi knows the only person
  • that she owes her job to is Donald Trump.
  • The only one she needs to please is Donald Trump.
  • So that's what Bondi does.
  • And as long as she does that,
  • she'll never have a problem in a hearing with her boss.
  • - But does it matter that the institution involved
  • is up in arms against its leader now?
  • The FBI, for example, seems to be,
  • in its rank and file, apoplectic about Kash Patel
  • and Dan Bongino, that this leadership has made them furious
  • in any number of ways.
  • - Yeah. - So does Kash Patel last?
  • - I don't know if he lasts.
  • If he doesn't last,
  • it's because he keeps embarrassing the president.
  • The president doesn't care
  • whether the Kash Patel is competent.
  • He does not like to be embarrassed though.
  • For Patel, for example, to say that the suspect
  • was in custody after Charlie Kirk's horrible murder

  • 16:01
  • when it wasn't true
  • because Patel wanted to leap out there on social media ahead
  • of people and say things he knew nothing about,
  • that is a humiliation for the President.
  • And you can count on Patel to keep on embarrassing
  • and humiliating the President because he's incompetent
  • and in way over his head.
  • - Who else would you put in that category
  • of incompetence in the key cabinet positions?
  • - Well, I don't know that I would put her
  • in the category of competent, but willfully destructive,
  • I would say Tulsi Gabbard.
  • She does not get as much attention as the rest of these.
  • - Well, it's hard to hear every voice in the choir.
  • - Yes, it is.
  • It's only an asterisk in articles now about Venezuela
  • that the whole predicate of these attacks
  • is a lie, that the intelligence community assessed
  • that Tren de Aragua,

  • 17:01
  • this Venezuelan gang was not being controlled
  • by Maduro, by the government.
  • They weren't sent to infiltrate America,
  • carry out terrorist attacks or whatever.
  • And so the National Intelligence Council writes this report.
  • They speak truth to power,
  • and they're told by Gabbard's chief of staff
  • basically to rewrite their conclusion.
  • And ultimately, they're fired
  • until analysts know that if they write things
  • that contradict the president's preferred narrative,
  • they're gone.
  • - Since it's the holiday season and we wanna bring nothing
  • but good cheer to our listeners, I must ask this.
  • I know you'll say the fever will break step by step
  • with things like the midterm elections
  • and the coming to an end of this term.
  • But we've had historians on
  • and other political analysts who say,
  • 'Look, remember, this is not the first bad period
  • of American history.
  • We've had the Civil War for God's sake.
  • We've had all kinds of periods of enormous crisis

  • 18:02
  • and even existential feeling crises.
  • Tell me what your greatest immediate fears are.
  • And maybe go back to a little bit
  • about how they can be avoided and tamped down
  • and for us to get from month to month, year to year.
  • - Yeah.
  • In the category of deepest fear,
  • most profound concern is that, you know,
  • somehow they're successful
  • in thwarting the one remaining mechanism for accountability.
  • And that is the election.
  • Barring that, their time will come to an end.
  • What we do right now will determine how quickly it passes,
  • how much damage is done in the meantime,
  • and making sure that we have a free and fair election
  • has gotta be at the top of our priority list
  • because the Supreme Court will not save us.
  • Republicans in Congress will not save us,

  • 19:02
  • certainly not based on current conduct.
  • - And will the coherence of the Democratic Party save us?
  • - I think what will save us
  • are the American people themselves.
  • The most important players in our democracy
  • are what is gonna save this democracy.
  • And that is the people with the title of citizen.
  • And if you look at what the citizens are doing,
  • gathering by the millions to protest the president,
  • what the citizens just did in this last election
  • in California, there were lines around the block
  • to vote on a ballot measure about reapportionment.
  • Seriously, reapportionment?
  • I mean, who would've thought five people would turn out
  • to vote on reapportionment?
  • But if anything,
  • that election in California was the purest referendum
  • on the president.
  • In New Jersey and Virginia, in New York City,
  • it was a competition of candidates.
  • In California, there was no competition of candidates.
  • It was simply a referendum

  • 20:00
  • on the president and his policies.
  • And it drove people to the polls.
  • So it's gonna be the citizens that save us.
  • We need to make sure that their votes still matter.
  • The most successful tool that we've had has been litigation.
  • We do very well in the lower courts.
  • The Supreme Court obviously still a big problem,
  • but even delaying harms is valuable
  • when a country is marching towards a kind of dictatorship.
  • The way I view my job every day,
  • and I think this should be the same way
  • that we all view our jobs,
  • every day we need to think about what can I do today
  • to mitigate the harms?
  • I love how in Chicago where they're learned
  • from the experience in Los Angeles,
  • you have parents driving other parents' kids to school
  • so that their parents
  • don't risk being arrested and deported.
  • I love how people are dropping off food to families
  • so they don't have to risk going to the store.

  • 21:01
  • People are taking steps to support their neighbors,
  • to support each other.
  • These public servants who are getting fired
  • or quitting are doing something really important
  • to serve the country.
  • And the federal employees who are staying on the job
  • are doing something really important to save the country.
  • There're just lots of people showing millions of acts
  • of kindness, of devotion to our democracy
  • that give me the confidence
  • to know we're gonna get through this.
  • - Adam Schiff, thank you.
  • - Thanks, David. Great to be with you.


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