As you said, the President's been talking about this for four decades.
This is transformational for the American economy, for the American worker, and for the new Republican alignment.
It's a combination of Yes, sir.
to fund the new nation and to protect American industry.
President Trump has added a third leg to the stool and he uses terrorists to negotiate.
Yes. But I think this is not unlike, I was a freshman in college when Ronald Reagan came in in 1980 and, you know, New Day in America and when I talk to people now and they look back and they look at the Reagan years so fondly.
Yes. I remember what it was like, and it was choppy.
And look, this is not an invitation, but at one point in the early 80s, a farmer showed up with a shotgun at the Federal Reserve to kill Paul Volcker for raising rates.
So, like I said, that's not an invitation for anybody for action, but it was a tough time.
And then in 1984, President Reagan won re-election with 49 states.
And I think they may have even let Mondale win Minnesota, just so it wasn't a skunk.
For years, the American worker, Middle middle class has been eviscerated American workers have taken it on the chin and you know We're just starting to see some of the research now like we're seeing research on what's called the China shock from 2004 it's just coming out now and it's what you know,
it's what I know, but finally academics are saying oh the gosh the American workers never recovered from the China shock.
What a surprise and President Trump sensed it 40 years ago, but out on the campaign trail starting in 2015, up until last year, he has promised the American workers that the old standard of living can come back.
And because what we've seen over the past at least 20 years since the China shock, but more like the past 30, are these massive distributional problems where the coast have done great, Yes.
And the middle of the country has just seen quality of life expectancy decline.
They don't think their children are going to do better than they are.
And a lot of people don't care.
And President Trump cares.
This administration cares.
And this is the first step towards realigning that a lot of our trading partners, including some of our allies, have not been good partners.
Right? Or, if the American consumer is going to pay all the tariff, then why do they care about tariff?
Right. Because they're going to eat them.
So, I think that this is the beginning of a process.
We're going to re-industrialize, that we have gone to a highly financialized economy.
We have stopped making things, especially a lot of things that are relevant for national security.
I think one of the few good outcomes from COVID was we had a beta test for what maybe a kinetic war with a large adversary could look like.
And it turned out that these highly efficient supply chains were not strategically secure.
So that we don't make our own medicines that we don't Make our own semiconductors that we don't make our own ships anymore.
So I think if I were to say Was there any good outcome from kovat?
It was it work woke the world up to these supply chain problems.
So Economic security is national security President Trump and I have talked about that a lot.
So this is national security issue that we're seeing here, but it's also an economic security issue, and it's to, I don't want to say redistribute, but it is to give working Americans real wage gains and enhance their lives.
And I've said out on the campaign trail that one of my most frequent mottos was Wall Street's done great.
It can continue doing well, but it's Main Street's turn.
Warren Buffett has a saying, in the short run, the market's a voting machine.
In the long run, it's a weighing machine.
And in the long run, it's going to weigh, do we have good policies?
Yes. And I, in my former business, I common, commented on market structure, market ups and downs a lot.
I'm trying not to do that.
Yes. But for everyone who thinks that these market declines are all based on the President's economic policies, I can tell you that this market decline started with the Chinese AI announcement of DeepSeek.
Right. So the So The AI-related stocks started coming down.
So, like, if I were to analyze in my old hat, and this is the only time I'm going to talk about it, my old hat, what's happening with the market, I'd say it's more a Mag-7 problem and not a MAGA problem.
So, actually, the markets are, you're saying, in this specific case with tech stocks, are taking, like, a real measure of the value of companies relative to foreign companies.
But if we look, The equal weighted S&P, even after today's move, down 4% in the year.
In a long-term chart, you wouldn't even notice that.
And I think the most important thing that we can do, that I can do as the Treasury Secretary, that President Trump wants to do, is put in sound fundamentals for the underlying economy.
And if the underlying economy is good, if Taxes are stable.
Businesses have predictability.
We have cheap and plentiful energy.
If we deregulate, if we treat our workforce well, then we're going to have a great stock market.
I just want to go back for a moment, too, that one of the things that the terrorists are doing is we are pushing back against other economic systems.
So the Chinese have a very different economic system.
They have low cost, some would call it Literally, slave labor.
They subsidize industry with subsidized loans.
They have a lot of non-tariff barriers.
Your show can't be shown there.
Yes. So we're pushing back against that.
And with the tariff income, it can be substantial.
If we think like a classical model of tariff income would say if there's a 10% tariff then the currency would appreciate about 40% of that so 4% of it then the producer in the other country would eat about 4% and then the US consumer might have a one-time price adjustment of 2% so you know in a 10% tariff maybe The consumer pays 2
% of it.
We saw there's a study out recently from a group at MIT that shows that with President Trump's first China tariffs, which were approximately 20%, the price level went up 0.7.
So to answer your question, if we could put on a 20% tariff and have the foreigners pay that and use that money to go.
down our government deficit and keep taxes low here.
That's a very unique formula that hasn't been tried in this country for a long time.
What we're gonna have now, we are in this very odd, what I would call betwixt and between, between the tariff income and what Doge is doing in terms of the cutting government expenses.
So CBO scoring, and for 35 years, I was on the other side of the wall, and I would always, oh, well, CBO says this.
And I didn't really realize that CBO scoring is a lot like Enron accounting, that it's not real.
Yes. So they just assume 1.7 or 1.8 percent economic growth over the 10 years.
And that never moves.
Whether you raise taxes or cut taxes doesn't move.
So that's what, like, during the campaign when Vice President Harris was announcing all these big tax increases she wanted to do and things like that, that the CBO was scoring her very well and President Trump wants to make the 2017 tax cuts permanent.
That was kind of a blowout number because obviously growth is going to go up a lot when you cut taxes.
So that was a long way of saying we will not get credit for the tariffs in any bill because Congress is not going to legislate it.
The president is doing it with executive authority, but the money will be coming in.
We've already taken in several hundred million dollars on the China tariffs.
from his first term, we take in about $35 billion a year just on the old tariffs, not on the new ones.
So in the CBO window, that's about $350 billion, which pays for a lot of the president's promises on no tax on tips, no tax on Social Security, no tax on overtime.
Making interest deductibility on autos made in the U.S. And think what the president's doing here.
He is backing into an affordability solution for the bottom 50% of wage earners, because they're the ones who will benefit from all four of those programs.
So looking at, say, a year from now, so beginning of next April, Do you have any sense of how much the U.S. government anticipates bringing in from the tariffs announced yesterday?
I think with AI, with automation, with so many of these factories are going to be new, they're going to be smart factories, that I think we've got all the labor force we need.
And what we are doing on the other side, one of the reasons, other than my Support for President Trump that I came out from behind my desk, and you know I had a pretty good life Yeah, and I wanted to come out and really Tell people that I was worried about an impending financial Calamity given the high levels of government spending that were leading to high levels of government debt So what we are doing on one side the president is
reordering trade On the other side, we are shedding excess labor in the federal government and bringing down federal borrowings.
And then on the other side, that will give us the labor that we need for the new manufacturing, and we're going to re-lever the private sector.
So the private sector, in essence, has been in recession during the Biden years.
And this is an opportunity to right-size the federal government and unleash the private sector again, because it's been hemmed down by excessive regulation and it's been crowded out by the government.
Here's a fact of life you may not learn until you're older, but I'm going to tell you now.
It's very hard to have a good time if you're wearing bad boots.
In fact, it may be impossible and that's why you need to COVIS.
As a matter of fact, you don't just need them, you owe them to yourself.
Tecova's makes Western boots for everybody.
Ranchers, real ranchers, lifelong cowboys, first-time boot buyers, and anyone in between.
Every Tecova's boot is handcrafted, made by hand, with over 200 meticulous steps for a broken-in feel right out of the box.
You don't have to compromise between looks and quality.
You can have them both.
Whether it's a long day or a big night, Tecova's are built to last and impressed.
You wouldn't believe the compliments people here get when they wear them out, which they do.
Right now, get 10% off at tecovas.com slash Tucker.
When you sign up for email and text alerts, that's 10% off at tecova, T-E-C-O-V-A-S dot com slash Tucker.
Do you ever think, since your job is to, part of your job is to forecast like the effects of these policies, that you have, um, we've got probably one out of six people in this country's here illegally, maybe 50 million.
Illegal aliens, and the president said he wants to deport them.
Then you have AI, and the projections there are massive labor market disruption, fewer people needed.
You alluded to that a minute ago.
Then you have the tariffs, and like, we can guess their effect, but we don't really know because we've never done it.
And then you have the reaction from the rest of the world to those tariffs, like there's so many huge factors.
That are effectively unknown, that are black boxes, really?
Do you ever think like, wow, you know, it's kind of hard to know what's going to happen?
And if you look at a system that's not working, you've got to be brave to change it.
So what wasn't working?
Would it have been really fun for me to come in and just keep issuing a lot of debt?
It's almost like a bodybuilder is taking steroids.
Outside looks great.
You're muscular.
Inside, you're killing your vital organs.
That's what was going on here.
But it would have been easy to keep pumping up the economy, borrowing a lot of money, creating a lot of government jobs.
There was no controversy when we were doing all that.
But you were going to end up in a calamity if you go back and look.
You look at the financial crisis in 07-08.
Economy looked great right up until then.
You go back and you look at the end of the dot-com bubble, and then the whole credit problem, the fraud at WorldCom, Enron, some other companies.
Economy looked great until it didn't.
And I think one of the things that we won't get credit for, but that this administration will have done, is avoiding a financial calamity.
You know, think about it, that they've done an analysis that one of the reasons 9-11 happened, because the airlines didn't want to pay for reinforced doors.
Yes. They kept pushing back.
FAA didn't push hard enough.
And now, you know, we've got the reinforced doors.
So I look at it, we're putting on the reinforced doors before the crash.
What's the scramble, the lobbying scramble, by foreign governments going to be like over the next three months?
Because the president said yesterday, you know, we're putting a universal tariff, you know, one standard, but then, of course, each country's adjusted according to a lot of different factors, trade deficit, currency manipulation, regulation, and then tariffs.
But, you know, this is all, as you said, a moving picture.
It's a developing situation.
So, like, if I pick a country, you know, Vietnam, China, I mean, I'm going to really try to bring pressure to bear on this administration to adjust those numbers.
And I think his view is this has been going on for a long time for friends and foes.
And we're going to see where this plays out.
I think what's going to be more important than the discussion with countries is the discussion with companies.
So, what do companies want to do?
As President Trump said yesterday, best way to get around the tariffs, build your factory here.
Yeah. And what can we do here at Treasury to help that?
We're pushing to get the tax bill done so we can guarantee the low taxes, full depreciation within the first year.
We're working We're The EPA commissioner is working to push through all the permits that they need because we've just gone into this regulatory morass where it takes so long to get things
done in this country.
So I think what will be more interesting are the individual company announcements more than the country announcements.
well, I don't know if they can retaliate for a couple reasons if you look at the history and I Used to teach economic history.
And when you look at the history, we are the debtor nation.
Yes, we have the trade deficits.
The surplus nation is in the weaker position because the Chinese business model and Tucker, by the way, the Chinese business model and the economy are the most unbalanced, imbalanced in the history of the modern world.
We've never seen anything like this in terms of their export level.
Relative to their GDP, relative to their population.
So I think it is going to be very difficult for them to try to change the model.
They're in a deflationary recession slash depression right now.
They're trying to export their way out of it and we can't let them do that.
But I think that when you think the Chinese manufacturing system is like that old Disney movie with the brooms carrying the buckets.
Yeah. There's nothing you can do.
That's their business model.
It's not going to stop.
Now, what could happen if you were to say, Scott, what's the dream scenario?
That somehow there could be a deal where the U.S. and China, we want more manufacturing, which would mean a smaller part of the economy's consumption.
The Chinese have this imbalanced economy with too much manufacturing.
And actually the Chinese consumers really Get the short end of the stick.
So Chinese households, they're caught in what's called a middle income trap, that could we do something together to say, okay, you rebalance, you consume more, manufacture less, we are going to consume less and manufacture more, and we'll be military rivals, There'll still be an economic rivalry, but we're going to level the playing field by a lot.
Now, that's not going to happen tomorrow.
That's not going to happen in a month.
But over the next few years, they may have to come around because I think their business model is broken.
I think President Trump's broken their business model with these tariffs.
Are you confident that there's, like, a clear enough channel of communication between the two governments that the details can be worked out and that nothing will go crazy in the meantime?
Look, the Europeans, we look back and there was the famous meeting where President Trump told the Europeans, you're insane for building Nord Stream 2. What are you doing?
You already get Most of your energy from Russia and you're going to double down on it?
I know some Norwegian fishermen bumped into it is what I read.
But look, the Europeans go kicking and screaming.
But I think they're going to have to rebalance to Germany as a very the imbalanced export economy, and they were on the verge of de-industrialization.
They were the opposite of us.
They had expensive energy.
Yes. They were depending on Italy and the countries in the south to keep the euro suppressed, and they were selling into China, and now China is becoming their competitor.
So you said at the outset, the first example, the analogy that you used was President Reagan's first term, you know, obviously big win in 80, recession of 82, wipeout, and then like the biggest landslide in history in 84. So you're suggesting by saying that that, you know, the fruits were obvious within the first term, within four years.
Only difference now is there was a lot of competition back then.
then but there's a level of civility yeah and the the real danger here and if there were a midterm law and i don't think there has to be you know what's going to happen i know what's going to happen democratic house is going to go immediately to impeachment for something of course right like the law fair is going to start again yes and i think the american people are going to hate it again so i'm Einstein's definition of insanity, doing the same thing again and again and expecting a different outcome.
Do you think that, and this is really aimed at the people who support President Trump and who agree with you wholeheartedly that the current system was really bad, and like drive across the country you'll see how bad it has been.
Horrible. It lowered life expectancy, but the people who are hoping that yesterday's move will lead to a demonstrably brighter future within four years, is it your sincere I believe that it's going to work and I know that what we were doing wasn't working.
Yes. So I think we have to try this and I have a high confidence ratio it's going to work.
And I have a very high confidence ratio.
The good news is we have President Trump's previous term when everyone said none of this was going to work.
Oh, the China tariffs are going to do this.
They're going to cause inflation.
They didn't.
This is going to happen to working class.
It's going to be bad for working class Americans.
Well, guess what?
Working class Americans, the hourly workers, they're better than supervisory workers.
The bottom 50% of households, their net worth increased faster than the top 10% of households.
And look, I'm not happy.
With what's going on in the market today, but the distribution of equities across households, the top 10% of Americans own 88% of equities, 88% of the stock market.
The next 40% owns 12% of the stock market.
The bottom 50 has debt.
They have credit card bills.
They rent their homes.
They have auto loans, and we've got to give them some relief.
It used to be only crazy people thought they were being watched all the time, surveilled, the guy mumbling next to you on the bus.
But now anyone who knows what's going on thinks that because it's true.
Your phones are listening to you.
Tech companies tracking all your online activity in order to profit off of what ought to be private information.
Governments are watching too.
It's a corrupt system.
It's frightening.
And the worst part is it's all legal.
Government certainly will not help stop this.
Of course, the intel agencies love it.
So it's up to you to protect yourself, and that's where ExpressVPN comes in.
ExpressVPN, which we use here, is an app that sends 100% of your online activity through secure encrypted servers.
That means nobody can see what you do online.
Not internet service providers, not data brokers, not Intel agencies.
Don't believe it?
Listen to this.
Within the last year, ExpressVPN received over 400,000 data requests from tech companies and government agencies, but did not share a single piece of customer data.
That's because the company has a strict zero logs policy.
ExpressVPN cannot and will not share your data.
They don't even have your data to share.
ExpressVPN is easy to use, takes one click.
It's rated number one by the experts at CNET and The Verge.
And right now you get an extra three months for free when you use a special link.
Go to expressvpn.com slash Tucker and get that extra months for free.
It's expressvpn.com slash Tucker.
You grew up in a middle class, working class background.
You were very successful, lived in rich person world for a long time.
While this was all going on, and I just have to ask you candidly, when you were ever at dinner with people like, wow, you know, we're doing great.
I live in rich person world too.
I'm not criticizing you at all.
But like, did anyone at dinner ever say, Wow, you know, I just tried to drive somewhere for a hundred miles.
This country doesn't look good.
Like, people are not thriving.
Was there any sense of that among the people you knew?
You can't believe, oh my god, I'm gonna switch charter companies.
And look, Tucker, that I'm especially attuned to what I think is going on with the United States because, you know, I will tell you, my family was very affluent.
So, early settlers, we were very affluent for about 250 years.
My dad made a lot of bad financial choices.
So, when I was born, first six, seven, eight years, we were affluent.
He lost everything.
And so, I've seen what that's like.
I've seen both sides.
Yes. That I was fortunate enough to be able to make it back.
And that, you know, I know...
What economic insecurity is like and I don't think people should have to have that or if you want to work hard and people want to work hard.
You are out of the campaign trail of President Trump.
I was out on the campaign trail and I got to say one of the most so I went for the final two stops in Pittsburgh Grand Rapids, Michigan Pittsburgh in the Duquesne Arena Walk in, and there are the union workers, the steel workers, they got on their hats, they got on their vests, they're with their children.
And it's very moving.
Like, they just want a better life.
They want their communities to be sound.
They want their kids to do better.
They want Little League Baseball.
Like, they don't care what's going on in Madison Avenue.
They don't know what the hot new restaurant is in Paris.
That President Trump somehow has assembled this incredible coalition of Elon Musk, the richest man in the world, and those folks who were in the Rose Garden yesterday, and those people I saw at the Duquesne Arena, and I think it's unbelievable.
So, to the extent that in my business career, I had a strong point, I think it was risk management.
So, I do myself two things.
The United States' leading bond salesman, and I think that with what's going on, I'm going to have a better and better story to tell as we're getting our economic health and our fiscal health in order.
And then I try to imagine what could go very wrong.
What would we do if there were another outbreak similar to COVID?
You can't worry about things like that, but I worry about a kinetic war somewhere.
What would we do in the event of something that happened?
And what I try to do is create the situation Where I can worry a little less every day.
So, I'll tell you, I came in, I was confirmed on January 28th, and during the month of January, 10-year interest rates, which is probably the most important rate in the country, mortgages are based on that, business and capital formation is based on that.
I came in and that had almost spiked to 5%, and I think 5% can be an uncomfortable area for the economy, for Treasury, who has to issue a lot of bonds.
And now that I've gotten in, I worry a little less, but I still worry.
We've got a tremendous amount of debt to roll, and I worry that we aren't going to do the smart cuts and the Focus on waste, fraud, and abuse.
I worry that that gets sidelined.
And then on the other side, I worry that the tax bill somehow gets bogged down.
We could have the largest tax increase in history.
Or, you know, I worry that the normal geopolitical things, whether it's Iran, Taiwan, that something goes haywire between Russia and Ukraine.
So you began your job description by saying you're a bond salesman.
You're selling America's debt to the world.
Yep. And I know that was like a big part of the portfolio as the transition was envisioning it, like who can make the case for American bonds to the world.
How were your case, are you confident you can do that?
As I said, right now we're in this strange betwixt and between because we are going to take in substantial tariff revenue.
And what Doge is doing is substantially cutting expenses, but we're not getting credit for it right now.
But I think markets starting to get a hand of it.
So the 10-year bond having almost peaked at five is now through four.
way to think about it is every hundred every basis points about a billion dollars in savings, so We've saved a hundred billion dollars and That's probably Not gonna happen that quickly again but I I think that we are setting the sales for Much better fiscal time.
And people don't have to say, the US is out of control.
The US is going to default.
We're not.
And I think every day, my case gets better.
And if we were to just imagine a very reductionist formula for government.
So G equals S minus T. Spending minus taxes.
That, for spending, our side, the Republicans, we like to spend, but less than the Democrats, but both sides like to spend.
And then, minus T, Democrats like higher taxes, we like lower taxes.
What if the S actually went down?
And I think, to me, that's the exciting part, that that's been unthinkable in everybody's calculation.
Yeah, and look, I think President Reagan had a different agenda, that he ramped up defense spending, and remember, oh, he's crazy, it's this, it's gonna break the budget, Star Wars is crazy, he's a madman, and then the Iron Curtain went down.
Yes. And we were able to, so...
It's actually a Soviet term and he used the Soviet strategy on this on themselves on the Russians Escalate to deescalate.
Yes, so we escalated military spending they tried to keep up and then they collapsed so You know again Everything is easy in hindsight But I think here what we're doing in terms of bringing down these incredible levels of spending but more importantly I tell anyone who'll listen,
I said, remember, DOGE is the Office of Government Efficiency, not elimination, not extinction.
So what if we can actually do a better job with less?
Seems inconceivable, but when I see what's going on in a lot of these government agencies, it's unbelievable.
And if you think, I've lived in Manhattan, I've lived in Florida.
Roughly, state of New York, state of Florida, have the same number of people.
Actually, Florida has a few more now.
So, New York budget is about $235 billion.
Florida budget's $125 billion.
How did they do that?
Oh, yeah.
And there's no income tax in Florida.
Oh, yeah.
And the roads are better.
And you go and get your driver's license and it takes 15 minutes.
Not five hours.
So, I think, can we make the rest of America look more like Florida and less like New York?
Or, one day, is New York going to look more like Florida?
But I think his imprint is going to be with us a long time.
And I think that the mainstream media has tried to demonize Doge and all the folks who work with him.
And I tell you, we have a couple at Treasury, a couple at IRS.
They're Treasury employees who I hired.
I interviewed, and I'll tell you, there's this one fellow, Tom Krause.
He was on TV with Brett Baier the other night, and Tom's incredible.
He's done $100 billion of tech mergers.
With my investment business, I would have hired him.
I don't think I could have afforded him.
And he is doing this for the good of his country.
He came in without touching any of the payment systems that the mistruths that were spread by The Washington Post, he has analyzed the system, and within six weeks, pointed at all the vulnerabilities.
There's a young man named Sam Kyrkos, who was on Laura Ingraham with me the other night, and that was my idea.
Let's bring him out of the shadows, and let's make this demonization stop.
And, like, this young man, other than the fact he only owns one pair of pants, which he likes telling everyone, you or I would be happy if our daughter brought him home.
He's a patriot, he's working hard for the country, and he's analytical, and the things that he's seen at the IRS, just in their tech systems, and that's all he does.
You know, Elon has a shirt that he wears under his jacket, and he'll flash it every once in a while, and it says, Tech Support.
And that's what we're getting, is we've got a blockbuster-style government, and we should be on Netflix.
So we're not positive that cryptocurrency is the future of finance, but we do know that what we have now is broken and dangerous.
Debt has never been higher in this country.
Many of our so-called leaders are getting rich serving you.
It's a scam.
So where does it go?
Well, thankfully, there are options.
Donald Trump has said repeatedly he wants the United States to be the crypto capital of the world.
He's already created the Crypto Advisory Council and recently signed an executive order to establish a Bitcoin strategic reserve.
This could give normal people an alternative to the government's failing system and frankly, to the US dollar.
I'm not saying put all your money outside the US dollar, but like, don't be crazy.
Don't be stupid here.
You can see where it's going.
So the people that I trust capital can help you get in.
It's complicated for people who aren't following it.
They make it easy.
They're based 100% in the United States of America.
We looked into this.
They service only American investors, and they operate the only platform that allows you to buy and sell crypto 24-7, both inside and outside of your tax-advantaged IRA.
And it all happens on one easy-to-use dashboard.
They also operate a closed loop system, meaning that bad actors can't access your account and steal your money.
So if you're considering adding Bitcoin, if you want to, or some other cryptocurrency to your portfolio, iTrust can be trusted and it's easy to understand.
itrustcapital.com or click the link below.
Can I ask you a weird question?
Who runs the Federal Reserve exactly?
I don't really...
How can you have this like pivotal entity, institution that obviously has like the most direct effect on markets of any?
Well, look, I think that during my confirmation hearing, and I was actually at a dinner that Jerome Powell was at last night, at my confirmation hearing, I said, you know, I'm only going to talk about the mistakes the Federal Reserve has made in the past.
I won't talk about the ones they're going to make in the future.
But I think it is important for monetary policy that they are walled off.
That some of the other things they do, whether regulation, they got into DEI, they got into climate, I actually think that that impinges on their Monetary policy and makes them vulnerable.
So I think that they should focus on monetary policy, doing the best that they can for the American economy, the American people, keeping inflation low.
And then the rest, there are a lot of other banking agencies, too.
Climate. Well, I will tell you, there's something that the Treasury Secretary chairs something called the Financial Stability Oversight Council, and it's all the financial regulators, and I think it was two weeks before Silicon Valley Bank went under, FSOC issued a report, and guess what they said the biggest risk to the financial system was?
Climate. Really?
Not that there was a large bank in California that was having a slow-motion run on its assets, and that it would cause another bank failure, then another bank failure.
It was climate.
So, as far as I can see, climate's been pretty good.
They failed.
The regulators failed.
And I think that's what people are getting sick of.
And it's back to, One of my favorite phrases that President Trump uses, common sense.
Yes. Look, it's just common sense.
That if you have a whole bunch of deposits that could leave your bank with a click, you shouldn't have all these long-term assets.
But they were too busy worrying about the weather.
And there was also some degree of regulatory capture.
Seems hard to believe to the average citizen.
The CEO of Silicon Valley Bank was on the board of the San Francisco Federal Reserve, who was his chief regulator.
But it's just, do you find it interesting that even now, 2025, when everything is abstract and digital, that gold is still widely believed globally to be a reliable store of value?
I think that gold has a lot of history going with it.
friend of mine's grandmother during Russia had a financial crisis in 98 then they had a big inflation and a friend of mine's grandmother went out and bought 18 bicycles and Put them in her apartment and that was her store of value.
Well, so but that Look, yeah gold Gold also has other applications a lot of applications jewelry in India But it's something that historically people have all agreed on.
And gold does not have...
Gold can't have a fiscal problem.
Gold cannot have a gigantic budget deficit.
Gold cannot have a war.
So just the fact that it is this isolated thing makes it very interesting.
And the fact that The entire global trading system until Richard Nixon took us off was tied to gold.
Well, he actually asked me to lead the economic agreement That was part of his peace plan, and I think it's important to look at the arc of President Trump's peace plan, and he had sequenced it really well.
It was, we're going to sign a deal with Ukrainians, and it'll do several things.
One, it will make the US and Ukraine partners.
So, link us closer together.
Two, it will be a symbol to Russian leadership that the U.S. isn't abandoning Ukraine.
But importantly, three, it will show the American people that we have an economic stake and that we haven't just been doing these massive grants, which have been the history of U.S. aid.
We succeed, and it could be a long-term partnership.
Now, President, I thought it was important to take the agreement to Kiev and present it to President Zelensky.
Everyone's telling me, I don't know, have him meet you in Vienna.
He's going to be at the Munich Security Conference a few days later.
I said, no.
I want to go there and discuss it with him.
And that's how I ended up going to Kiev.
Very interesting going to Kiev.
Fly to Poland.
Then you get on, I don't know if you've been on it, get on this night train for 10 hours, and you arrive at Kiev at 830 in the morning, and for anyone who, they said, oh, the President Trump's selling out to the Russians, not selling out to the Russians, the Russians bombed Kiev four hours before I got there.
They hadn't bombed since November.
So the Russians didn't like the look of this deal because it thought that it was actually something durable for the US people and the Ukrainian people.
President Zelensky was in the mood to sign the deal that day.
We had a spirited discussion and I said to him, you've got 50 reporters out there.
I am here to show that there is no daylight Between the American people, the Russian people, between, excuse me, Ukrainian people, between the American leadership and Ukrainian leadership.
And I said, you've opened up daylight sides of the Grand Canyon.
What are we going to go out and tell those people?
He said, tell them I'm going to sign the deal in Munich.
I said, so you're going to sign the deal when you see Vice President Vance and Secretary of State Rubio in Munich.
Yes. He didn't sign it there.
There's a lot of back and forth.
The following week, they're begging to come to the White House and should make him sign the deal before he comes.
And then he got to the Oval Office and blew up what should have been the easiest thing to do in the world.
He was supposed to show up, have a press conference.
We were going to have a private lunch.
If he had anything on his mind, there were going to be nine of us, nine of them.
In the White House dining room.
He could have aired his grievances then.
And there's a famous photo in the East Wing ballroom of everything laid out on the table to be signed.
So this is an unelected president of a client state whose bureaucrats are being paid directly by American taxpayers, including their retirement accounts are funded by us.
And so, at a certain point, you know, you wouldn't expect a man like that in a highly precarious position, I think it's fair to say, to, like, assume a high-handed tone with American officials, and berate them, and sniff a lot, and say, you know, just basically act like a crazy person.
And he was an ordinary person thrown into a fraught time, rose to the occasion.
Yes. Was heroic.
Yes. And I think is stuck.
And I think under a tremendous amount of pressure.
I think that some of the government officials around him and the cabinet are very good I think some of the people around him, he's not getting the best advice, that his advisors are not perfect.
And I think if we go back to the agreement, I think one of the great things about the agreement is it makes sure that the money comes to the American people and the Ukrainian people.
Tucker, let me tell you what the agreement wasn't.
It wasn't one of these rapacious Chinese deals where it's sign over your mind, sign over your port, or it wasn't a loan to own.
Here's the loan, you're never going to be able to pay it back, we're going to get this.
It's a genuine economic partnership that they put in assets, we can put in loans from our overseas banks, we put in American know-how, and we don't make any money unless they make money.
And you know who doesn't like that?
People with their hand in the till.
Right. Because we were regulating the flow of the money.
So I think that's part of the glitch.
I am hopeful that it was a bug, not a feature of the system, and that that's been fixed.
We're expecting a Ukrainian technical team beginning of next week And I'm hopeful we can get this thing signed and go back to a win-win situation.
Because President Trump, I didn't give you the full arc of the deal, President Trump wanted to create this deal with the Ukrainians, then be able to go to Russian leadership and show them that we do stand with the Ukrainians, but on an economic basis.
Then the Russians would be incentivized to come to the table also.
For a Treasury Secretary, you're a very capable diplomat, I must say.
Very diplomatic language.
Last question.
How do you...
So, because this is all so new, just going back to the tariff announcement yesterday, and because it's like, it really is a total departure from what all of us have grown up with, and our expectations, and however much you support it, it's new.
And people are freaked out about it.
How do you keep message discipline in an administration, in any administration, and this one specifically, how do you decide How you're going to explain this?
Who's going to explain it?
How do you keep messages from contradicting one another?
So it turns out that YouTube is suppressing this show.
On one level, that's not surprising.
That's what they do.
But on another level, it's shocking.
With everything that's going on in the world right now, all the change taking place in our economy and our politics, with the wars we're on the cusp of fighting right now, Google has decided you should have less information rather than more.
And that is totally wrong.
It's immoral.
What can you do about it?
Well, we could whine about it.
That's a waste of time.
We're not in charge of Google.
Or we could find a way around it.
A way that you could actually get information that is true, not intentionally deceptive.
The way to do that on YouTube, we think, is to subscribe to our channel.
Subscribe. Hit the little bell icon to be notified when we upload and share this video.
That way you'll have a much higher chance of hearing actual news and information.