Chuck Todd breaks down a seismic primary night in New York, where Mamdani-backed Democratic Socialist candidates swept their races — and argues the DSA may be on the verge of becoming the far-left equivalent of the Freedom Caucus, a small but disciplined faction capable of making the establishment's life genuinely miserable. The most stunning data point: Chuck argues Chuck Schumer likely couldn't win a Democratic primary anywhere in New York right now, that Dan Goldman lost his primary handily, and that while Schumer clearly shouldn't run again, politicians rarely walk away on their own. It was also a quietly bad night for Hakeem Jeffries, and Chuck raises the genuinely open question of whether Jeffries would even survive a primary challenge — and whether he still has a clear path to the speakership if Democrats take the House. The strategic lesson the left has internalized, Chuck argues, is that the smaller the Democratic majority, the more leverage a committed progressive bloc can apply, which means Democrats may have to govern in a fundamentally different way than their leadership wants. But Chuck repeatedly returns to the central tension: this brand of far-left politics plays beautifully in coastal cities but the socialist label simply doesn't travel well elsewhere, the rise of far-left politics has become uncomfortably intertwined with rising antisemitism, pro-Israel Democrats may soon find themselves politically homeless, and the real test will be whether progressives can win anywhere outside their urban strongholds. It all amounts, Chuck says, to a genuine fight for the heart and soul of the Democratic Party. He closes with a heartfelt remembrance of former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who passed away at 100 — recalling a man who always grounded his opinions in data, and what a personal treat it was to have known him.
Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt — the popular Republican who has won all three of his mayoral elections with at least 60% of the vote — joins the Chuck Toddcast to make an impassioned and deeply substantive case for pluralism as the foundation of the entire American experiment. Holt, who recently gave a notable speech on the subject, argues that the American system was fundamentally built on the acceptance of pluralism and the idea that compromise should produce something "good enough" rather than perfect for any single faction — and that the founders gave us a pretty good system specifically designed to channel disagreement away from political violence. The problem, Holt argues, is that the system is now actively making compromise harder. He points to closed partisan primaries as a central culprit: because he faces all voters rather than a narrow partisan base, he's incentivized to build consensus, but most candidates today are forced to pass bizarre litmus tests with base voters and campaign on culture-war messaging rather than the bread-and-butter issues people actually care about.
The conversation broadens into the structural and cultural threats Holt sees to a pluralistic society. He argues this era has revealed the long-ignored flaws in American democracy — that we've all taken the system for granted — and makes the case that getting rid of closed partisan primaries, sometimes through ballot initiatives, is one of the most important reforms available, provided it's done in a way that doesn't simply flip parties or states for partisan advantage but instead empowers minority-party voters to act as genuine swing votes. Holt is sharp on education's role in all of this: he worries that the voucherization of schools and the explosion of private schools risk teaching kids in ideological monocultures, and laments the erosion of civics education over the past two decades, noting that public schools deliberately deemphasized social studies after No Child Left Behind. He and Chuck dig into whether pluralism can even be taught or whether it has to be lived in a genuinely diverse place, the difficulty of having a nuanced public conversation about AI data centers, and the housing crisis that Holt argues is not getting nearly enough attention from either the national media or Washington — closing with a concrete look at what a federal housing bill would actually mean for a fast-growing city like Oklahoma City.
Finally, skip the reflecting pool… Chuck presents his ToddCast Top 5 list of his favorite Washington D.C. monuments & answers listeners’ questions in the Ask Chuck segment.
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Timeline:
(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements)
00:00 Chuck Todd’s introduction
04:00 Mamdani backed DSA candidates sweep in NY primaries
06:00 Democratic socialists could become the far left equivalent of Freedom Caucus?
06:45 Chuck Schumer likely couldn’t win any Democratic primary in New York
07:30 Dan Goldman lost his primary handily
09:45 Schumer shouldn’t run again, but politicians rarely walk away
10:30 It was a bad night for Hakeem Jeffries, would he survive a primary?
13:30 The left has learned that you can make life miserable for the establishment
15:00 The smaller the Dems majority, the more pressure the left can apply in Congress
15:45 Hakeem Jeffries may not have a clear path to the speakership
17:00 Democrats will have to govern differently if the majority is narrow
19:00 The far left politics play on the coasts, but can it win elsewhere?
21:45 The socialist label doesn’t travel well outside the left leaning cities
23:30 Far-left politics has become intertwined with rise of antisemitism
24:45 Pro-Israel Democrats could become politically homeless
25:45 Big test will be if progressive can win elsewhere
27:45 There’s a real fight for the heart and soul of the Democratic party
29:00 Alan Greenspan passes away at the age of 100
30:30 Greenspan always grounded his opinions in data
33:15 It was a treat to know Alan Greenspan personally
41:45 Mayor David Holt joins the Chuck ToddCast
42:30 Was the city in mourning after the OKC Thunder lost?
44:15 Are San Antonio and OKC set to become rival cities?
46:15 The mayor gave a speech about the importance of pluralism
47:00 The American experiment is based on the acceptance of pluralism
47:45 Compromise should result in “good enough”, not perfect for anybody
49:15 The founders gave us a pretty good system to avoid political violence
51:30 Nowadays, the system is making compromise harder
52:15 OKC’s politics mirror the country, went 49-48 for Trump in ‘24
53:45 Won all three mayoral elections with at least 60% of the vote
54:30 Mayor faces all voters rather than closed partisan primaries
55:45 Electoral system needs to incentivize consensus building
57:30 Candidates used to campaign on their ability to work across the aisle
59:00 Messaging from gubernatorial candidates are not bread & butter issues
01:00:15 Candidates are forced to pass bizarre litmus tests with base voters
01:02:15 Can you teach pluralism, or do you have to live in a diverse place?
01:04:00 There are always opposing views that exist even in highly red/blue areas
01:06:15 This era has revealed the flaws/weaknesses of our democracy
01:07:15 We’ve all taken our system for granted
01:07:45 We have to get away from closed partisan primaries
01:09:45 How do you convince parties in power to open up primaries to more voters?
01:10:45 Some states can get rid of partisan primaries via ballot initiatives
01:12:30 The process shouldn’t flip parties or states
01:14:15 Voters in the minority should act as swing votes
01:16:30 Voucherization of schools can lead kids to learning in a monoculture
01:18:00 There’s been explosion in the creation of private schools
01:19:45 There’s been an erosion in civics education the past two decades
01:21:15 Public schools deemphasized social studies after No Child Left Behind
01:23:30 Can the electorate have a nuanced conversation around AI data centers?
01:25:15 Hard for elected officials to go against the NIMBY crowd
01:25:45 Politicians have to argue for the positive trade offs
01:27:00 Bringing in tech and investment used to be good politics, it’s not with data centers
01:27:30 Housing is the issue that’s not getting enough attention from media & DC
01:28:30 What would the housing bill do for you in OKC?
01:29:45 Chuck’s thoughts on the interview with Mayor David Holt
01:32:00 ToddCast Top 5 list
01:33:30 Top 5 historical attractions in Washington DC
01:35:45 Honorable Mention - Mount Vernon
01:37:15 #5 The World War I Memorial
01:38:45 #4 Albert Einstein Memorial
01:40:30 #3 Arlington National Cemetery
01:43:00 #2 Korean War Memorial
01:44:15 #1 Vietnam Veterans Memorial
01:47:15 Ask Chuck
01:47:30 Thoughts on the predictions Trump might not finish his term?
01:56:15 Do leaders rise due to the political moment, or do they make the history?
02:03:00 Does George W Bush’s “go shopping” mindset say something about boomers?
02:09:15 Where would you rank the Iran war amongst top presidential blunders?
02:18:45 Why can’t the country ever deal with long term crises in advance?
02:23:15 How do you manage to juggle your busy schedule?
02:27:15 Does Trump’s leadership style hurt the ability to make peace?

Chuck’s Commentary - Mamdani Wins The New York Primaries + RIP Alan Greenspan
1:40:22

Interview Only w/ Mayor David Holt - Defending Pluralism At A Time Of Polarization
57:13

Chuck’s Commentary - Trump Is The Worst Role Model President Ever + The Sharp Contrast Between Trump & Obama
1:30:39