Skip to content
Home » Transcript: Sen. Eric Schmitt’s Interview on The Tucker Carlson Show

Transcript: Sen. Eric Schmitt’s Interview on The Tucker Carlson Show

Read the full transcript of US Senator Eric Schmitt’s interview on The Tucker Carlson Show titled “FBI and DOJ Corruption, and How Politicized Judges Are Undermining America”, premiered on August 13, 2025. 

The Power of Attorney General vs. Senate

TUCKER CARLSON: So you were Attorney General of the state of Missouri for four years, and you’ve been in the Senate for three.

SEN. ERIC SCHMITT: Yeah, almost three.

TUCKER CARLSON: Almost three. What job was more powerful?

SEN. ERIC SCHMITT: Well, I think the Senate is sort of the apex of how you can affect a number of things, but the Senate, in many ways, is kind of broken the way it’s currently constituted and it’s proclaimed to be the world’s most deliberative body. But a lot of it’s kabuki theater, honestly.

But I think in the time in which I served as Attorney General, when you had a Democrat president, you could affect a lot of things by challenging the extremism we saw from the Biden administration in court and win. And you didn’t need to ask anybody’s permission for that. You could just make that decision. You didn’t need 50 other people to vote for it.

So I think for me at that time, it was just a critical moment in our country’s history, and I just happened to be in that position at that time. And you got to remember, too, I think if you take a step back, President Trump was out of office, and so this responsibility sort of fell to a relatively unknown group of people to kind of hold the line, which is why “The Last Line of Defense and How to Beat the Left in Court” is the title of the book, because I felt like we were really holding the line for the country until reinforcements could come. And thankfully, they came with President Trump.

The Shift from Legislative to Judicial Power

TUCKER CARLSON: It’s just interesting. And you were principled and very aggressive, which are the two, I think, qualities necessary to succeed in it, really, in any job. But the reason I asked the question is because serving in the Senate is the highest level for legislator. You travel to any country in the world, you go through the diplomatic airport terminal, you get a motorcade. I mean, it’s a big deal to be a US Senator, but it does seem like the center of gravity has shifted from the legislative branch to the courts.

I mean, it does seem like courts have more power than voters. Will you flesh that out a little bit since you’ve had both jobs?

SEN. ERIC SCHMITT: Yeah, no, I think it is. And one of the reasons why I wanted to write the book was to, number one, lay out the landscape. Because in that job, you saw – I saw the threats that were coming from all directions, from the highest levels of government and the censorship enterprise that was created by Biden and big tech companies to the local superintendent that somehow got bought into this training that you divide every classroom by race through critical race theory. So you got to see that entirety of the landscape.

TUCKER CARLSON: Yes.

Fighting Back Through the Courts

SEN. ERIC SCHMITT: And take action. And that is what I loved about the job, is if you were committed to taking action, you can make a difference. And that was happening in the court.

So to answer your question, I think conservatives for a long time have viewed the courts as sort of where the left wins, where they cement their policies because judges sort of make it up as they go along. I do think there’s an opportunity now, especially after Trump’s first term when he appointed 200 plus federal judges, and now in the second term, where you’re going to have more members of the judiciary that view the law as it is, not how they want it to be, but that also requires people to step up and push back.

And you just think of the wins that we were able to have, like preventing 100 million people being forced to be vaccinated because OSHA, which was an agency created to make sure forklifts beep when they back up, somehow created this rule that 100 million people had to be vaccinated to keep their jobs. You just think of the guy that’s swinging the hammer and just wants to feed his family, he had to do that to keep his job is totally insane. So we went to the Supreme Court on that. We won.

Of course, the student loan debt forgiveness case. Missouri had a little known loan servicing agency called Mohela that gave us standing to sue. Our argument was, look, Mohela is this loan servicing agency. If you eliminate all the student loan debt, which he wasn’t allowed to do by law, that might go out of business. Therefore, we had standing to bring suit to challenge Biden’s action. And we won. The Supreme Court said, yeah, Joe Biden and the Secretary of Education didn’t have any authority to wipe away a half a trillion dollars worth of debt. So we took that to the Supreme Court, we won.

We had some wins on the border wall to stave that off as long as we could, even though ultimately this mass migration plan that Joe Biden had came through.

Exposing the Censorship Enterprise

But I think probably the biggest example was, we intuitively knew that something was happening inside the Biden administration to suppress speech. And we filed that lawsuit in May of 2022, and we sought discovery first before we sought a preliminary injunction. That was an important strategic decision. And the judge granted it.

And because of that, we saw all of the emails, we saw all of the text messages, this vast censorship enterprise that had been created was exposed. And this was before Elon Musk buys Twitter. It’s before you had the congressional hearings. And I think being able to draw attention to that and flesh out the truth through our court system was a really important thing to do.

So, yes, I think this is a front that we have to fight in.