PODCAST · government
Pantsuits and Lawsuits with Attorneys General Kris Mayes and Dana Nessel
by Attorneys General Kris Mayes & Dana Nessel
Pantsuits and Lawsuits is a no-holds-barred podcast featuring Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes as they break down the biggest legal and political battles shaping the nation. With sharp wit and deep expertise, these two trailblazing AGs will keep you informed on what’s happening in their offices, how they’re fighting to protect your rights, and what’s at stake in the courts. From democracy and civil rights to corporate accountability, they’ll tackle it all—bringing in expert guests along the way to dig even deeper. Smart, bold, and unapologetically candid—this is the legal commentary you didn’t know you needed.
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24
Crony Capitalism And The Cost To Consumers
When the rules change on a whim, your budget becomes collateral damage. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel sits down with University of Michigan economics professor Dr. Justin Wolfers to unpack why the affordability crisis is also a governance crisis: unpredictability, interventionist decision-making, and pay-to-play incentives that can quietly raise prices while weakening competition.We dig into concrete Michigan flashpoints that make the stakes real, including the Gordie Howe International Bridge and what it means when major infrastructure and cross-border trade can be threatened for political leverage. We also talk energy policy and the cost of forcing uneconomic choices, plus the strange contradictions of blocking renewable energy like wind while global conflict pushes oil prices higher. Along the way, we connect these choices to business confidence, market stability, and the long-run foundations of growth.Tariffs and manufacturing are a core thread, especially for automakers and suppliers that live and die by predictable supply chains. We also confront a harder question: what happens to democracy when major corporations feel too intimidated to speak publicly, even when policies hurt their bottom line? Finally, we zoom out to America’s innovation edge, the risk of scientific brain drain, and why welcoming global talent matters for pharmaceuticals, advanced manufacturing, AI, and the next generation of high-quality jobs.Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s feeling the squeeze, and leave a review if you want more conversations like this. What’s the clearest sign you’ve seen that policy chaos is showing up in your everyday costs?
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23
Inside Data Centers: Who Pays, Who Profits, And Who Decides
A single hyperscale data center asking for 1.4 gigawatts can redraw the map of a state’s energy system—and your monthly bill. We unpack the real-world stakes of the AI buildout with a candid look at how utilities, regulators, and mega-customers strike deals that shape reliability, affordability, and community well-being for decades.We walk through the mechanics of large-load growth: queue gaming that secures scarce capacity, special contracts that move behind redactions, and rate structures that can quietly shift costs from hyperscale users to households. You’ll hear why standardized large-load tariffs and hard collateral requirements matter, how transparency lets consumer advocates test utility claims, and what goes wrong when evidence is sealed. We also dig into utility incentives to build capital-intensive projects, the risk of “gold plating,” and the uncomfortable truth that regulated returns can persist even when performance lags.The conversation turns to long-term risk. With 15 to 20-year deals on the table, rapid shifts in AI workloads, chips, and cooling could strand assets and leave communities paying for empty capacity. We outline practical guardrails: public dockets with accessible data, performance-based obligations, clawbacks on incentives, demand flexibility from data centers, and community benefits that outlast hype cycles. Along the way, we spotlight the role of state commissions versus attorneys general, why revolving doors and political money complicate decisions, and how to align tax incentives with real local gain.If you care about fair rates, grid reliability, climate resilience, and the promises of AI, this is your roadmap to smarter policy. Subscribe, share with a friend who follows energy or tech policy, and leave a review with the guardrail you think should come first.
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22
Policy Whiplash and the Rule of Law: Attorneys General on What Happens Next
Rapid policy swings aren’t just political noise—they have real consequences. When funding changes overnight, clinics stall, families worry, and trust erodes. This episode looks at how state attorneys general step in to challenge unlawful actions, stabilize services, and protect the people caught in the middle.Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield joins us to talk through managing early crises while also tackling the unglamorous but critical work of modernizing systems, supporting frontline staff, and defending consumers. He also explains the multistate challenge to federal tariffs and how questions of authority translate directly to everyday costs.Former DC Attorney General Karl Racine reflects on the first travel ban, the evolution of the AG role in a more polarized era, and major accountability fights—including the emoluments lawsuit. We discuss prosecutorial ethics, officer-involved shooting investigations, and how new legal doctrines are reshaping the limits of accountability.If you care about the rule of law, reliable public services, and institutions people can trust, this conversation offers clear-eyed insight and practical perspective. Subscribe, share, and let us know the reform you want to see next.
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21
Cleaning Up Power: Fighting Public Corruption
Power protects itself—until someone pulls the thread. We sit down with New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin to unpack how public corruption actually works, why it inflates your bills and weakens your services, and what it takes to hold powerful people to the same laws as everyone else. From the misuse of tax credits to officials running private ventures from public offices, we break down real cases, hard lessons, and the reforms that followed. We talk candidly about the pressure that comes with prosecuting the well connected: claims of “weaponization,” media megaphones used against prosecutors who can’t respond, and the Supreme Court decisions that narrowed federal corruption tools. That’s where state attorneys general step up. Platkin explains the history behind New Jersey’s strong anti-corruption statutes, while Nessel shares Michigan’s recent overhaul of opaque earmarks—forcing sponsors to testify and face specific votes. These aren’t abstract fixes; they’re working guardrails that deter the next scheme. The conversation turns to the hidden “corruption tax”: dark money washing through politics, utility influence that distorts rates and reliability, and FOIA gaps that breed suspicion. We explore practical solutions with broad public support: banning stock trading for officials with enforcement power, tough financial disclosures, cooling-off periods to slow the revolving door from elected official to lobbyist, robust public financing to elevate small donors, and a sustained push to overturn Citizens United. If the system looks rigged, trust dies; if the rules are clear and enforced, trust returns dollar by dollar. If you care about honest government, pocketbook fairness, and the health of democracy, this one matters. Listen, share with a friend, and tell us the first anti-corruption reform you want to see in your state. And if you believe this work should continue, subscribe, leave a review, and help more people find the show.
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20
Taxation Without Representation
A district spoke, and power stalled. When voters in Arizona’s 7th chose Adelita Grijalva, the oath never came—leaving more than 800,000 people without a voice for 50 days. We take you inside the legal fight to end the delay, the constitutional questions it raised, and the very real ways a shutdown and a locked office can silence a community that did everything right at the ballot box.Adelita shares the ground truth: pro forma sessions that swore in others but not her, long security lines without the member’s pin, no email or phones, and a stack of constituent cases with nowhere to go. From veterans benefits and immigration emergencies to Social Security help, the gears of government froze for an entire district. We talk through why that matters far beyond Arizona—because if a Speaker can pause representation, every voter is one procedural tactic away from losing their seat at the table.We also dig into the bipartisan outrage, from conservative legal voices to longtime progressives, and why a simple, automatic swearing-in rule could prevent abuse regardless of which party holds the gavel. Then we connect the dots to the Epstein files and a discharge petition designed to force transparency, centering survivors’ rights over partisanship. Adelita explains the push for full disclosure, accountability for anyone implicated, and how Congress can reclaim its role while honoring separation of powers.If you care about fair representation, clean process, and real services reaching real people, this story matters. Hit play, learn what changed, and see what comes next. If the conversation resonates, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find it.
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State AGs Versus Lawlessness
A quiet revolution is happening in state courtrooms and attorney general offices across the country, and in this episode of Pantsuit and Lawsuits our guest co-host New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin pulls back the curtain on how it works. We talk about how New Jersey moved from participant to leader in multistate litigation, protected food benefits for millions, and delivered three straight years of record-low gun violence—roughly 750 fewer people shot compared with the year before he took office. The focus isn’t speeches about “the rule of law.” It’s families who feel safer, kids who get dinner, and residents whose rights still mean something when those in power become reckless. We walk through the mechanics that keep complex cases moving through leadership transitions, why some of the most consequential fights against federal overreach happen at the state level, and how bipartisan coalitions can still form around tech accountability and consumer harms. Then we zoom out: reported abuses at the border, no-warrant intrusions, and a chilling effect on pro bono representation. Platkin reframes the Bill of Rights as a living shield—First, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendment protections that apply on real streets, to real people, right now. We don’t dodge the Supreme Court. From Bruen to Dobbs to presidential immunity, we parse what these decisions mean for public safety, reproductive rights, and equal accountability. Yet the advice isn’t despair—it’s strategy. Lower courts remain vital. Records matter. Clear narratives win. Long-term fixes, from campaign finance reform to constitutional amendments, deserve a real push if we want a democracy that can stand up to concentrated power and money.
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18
Free Speech Under Fire
Power concentrates in silence, and lately the silence is spreading. We unpack a sweeping pressure campaign against the First Amendment—on campuses, in briefing rooms, on city streets, and across shrinking newsrooms—with an unflinching look at how intimidation, lawsuits, and funding threats are changing the way America speaks and learns.From protest crackdowns to new restrictive policies at the Pentagon, we trace how best practices are abandoned and dissent turned into a risk calculation. We talk about national outlets that can lawyer up, local stations that can’t, and why even a single settlement can send a chilling message across the entire industry. Veteran reporter Mary Jo Pitzl joins us to explain how newsroom economics, algorithmic incentives, and headline gamesmanship can reshape coverage, nudging editors toward safe choices and audiences toward confusion. Her decades of experience on the beat have made one thing clear: when institutions accept control over who asks questions and what gets printed, the public will never get the answers they deserve.We also follow the pressure beyond media. Universities juggle academic freedom against the threat of defunding, law firms face retaliation for their clients, and nonprofits fear hosting events that could draw political ire. These choices create a quiet chill—self-censorship that never makes headlines but erodes civic life all the same. We share concrete steps to push back: collective action among schools and firms to spread the legal risk, smarter support for local journalism and public broadcasting, and a recommitment to rigorous reporting over viral bait.Free speech isn’t self-executing; it survives because people use it. If this conversation resonates, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. Then tell us: where are you seeing the chill, and how should we fight it together?
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Guns, Kids, And Common Sense Reform
A hard truth sets the tone: gun violence is now the leading cause of death for kids and teens in America. As parents, we share the fear that comes with lockdown texts and campus alerts; as attorneys general, we break down how states can act when the window opens and how those wins ripple upward. From there, we dig into what actually works—red flag laws, safe storage, and other common sense reforms—and why politics still manages to stall simple, popular solutions.We’re joined by Emma Brown, executive director at Giffords, who brings clear evidence and a coalition mindset. She explains how ERPOs give law enforcement a narrow, court-supervised tool to temporarily separate dangerous individuals from firearms, and why departments that once opposed ERPOs now rely on them. We look at the data linking safe storage to fewer youth deaths and the real-world impact of free gun locks distributed by police and pediatricians. We also confront the rise of ghost guns and conversion devices—unserialized parts and forced-reset triggers that undercut tracing, evade basic safeguards, and raise the risk for officers and communities. The conversation is frank about the political headwinds: organized lobbying and industry immunity that keep Congress trailing behind public opinion—even when over 90% of the country supports universal background checks. Yet there’s a roadmap. State progress builds the case for federal action, especially when tragic events focus the nation’s attention and coalitions are ready with proven models. The takeaway is practical and urgent: educate the public about ERPOs, normalize safe storage, back law enforcement on ghost guns, and make the most of every opportunity to pass reforms that protect kids without infringing responsible ownership.If this conversation resonates, follow the show, share it with someone who cares about safer communities, and leave a review to help more people find it. Your voice helps turn common sense into common practice.
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16
Collisions of Power and Protocol at DOJ
Power without guardrails doesn’t just bend the law—it breaks trust. We sit down with former U.S. Attorney Barb McQuade to unpack how federal-state partnerships actually solve complex crimes, and why those partnerships falter when DOJ norms are sidelined by politics and performative “toughness.” From FBI and DEA collaborations that cross borders to the grand jury and charging protocols that keep prosecutions rooted in facts, we walk through the machinery that keeps justice fair—and what happens when leaders try to manipulate our systems to their own advantage. Barb takes us inside the culture of DOJ: why morale matters, how selective investigations and “name and shame” tactics corrode legitimacy, and what it costs when dockets are flooded with low-complexity immigration cases at the expense of public corruption, cartel, and violent crime work. We get specific on Arizona’s fentanyl pipeline, agent redeployments that weaken strategic cases, and the difference between optics and outcomes. We also examine leadership under pressure, from subpoenas targeting gender-affirming care to universities and hospitals that “obey in advance,” and why institutions must balance legal risk with their own organizational values. We don’t stop at problems. Together, we outline a path to repair: codify core DOJ norms into durable regulations, restore a real firewall between the White House and federal investigations, reinvest in prevention and complex cases, and demand a Congress that reasserts oversight regardless of party. The through line is simple and urgent—democracy relies on rules, habits, and courage.
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Tomorrow's Cures, Today's Cuts: The Hidden Cost of Health Agency Rollbacks
The dismantling of America's public health infrastructure is happening at breakneck speed, with potentially catastrophic consequences for generations to come. When top CDC scientists walk out in protest, we should all pay attention. That's exactly what we explore in this urgent conversation with Will Humble, Executive Director for the Arizona Public Health Association, who brings decades of public health leadership experience to help us understand what's at stake.What happens when anti-vaccine ideology drives national health policy? The answer is chilling. Humble breaks down how the gutting of the Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices could lead to essential childhood vaccines being dropped from recommended schedules. Since these recommendations determine what's covered by both the Vaccines for Children program (serving over 50% of American children) and private insurance, the result would be widespread vaccine inaccessibility. At $200 per COVID vaccine and similar costs for other immunizations, many families simply couldn't afford to protect their children.Beyond vaccines, the administration's proposed 40% cut to the National Institutes of Health threatens to collapse the research pipeline that delivers medical breakthroughs. As Humble explains, NIH-funded research on mRNA technology enabled rapid COVID vaccine development and now holds tremendous promise for cancer treatment. Cutting this funding doesn't just delay progress—it drives researchers overseas and creates a scientific brain drain that could take decades to rebuild.The assault extends to medical education itself, with new loan limits making it financially impossible for many students to become doctors, especially in critically needed primary care fields. Combined with inadequate support for residency programs, these policies will worsen physician shortages, particularly in rural areas where healthcare access is already precarious.The stakes couldn't be higher. Listen now to understand the full scope of this public health crisis and what we can do to fight back before it's too late. Share this episode with anyone who cares about protecting our nation's health and scientific leadership.
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Human Trafficking: Beyond the Headlines
Award-winning prosecutor Melissa Palepu takes us beyond the headlines to reveal the unsettling reality of human trafficking in America. This eye-opening conversation dismantles widespread misconceptions about what trafficking actually looks like and who it affects.Forget what you think you know about human trafficking. The "white van abduction" scenario represents just 6% of cases. Instead, traffickers target vulnerable individuals through manipulation and false promises. Even more surprising? Labor trafficking—not sex trafficking—constitutes the largest category worldwide, hiding in plain sight in restaurants, farms, nail salons, and construction sites.Palepu shares disturbing insights into how traffickers now target children through video games and social media platforms parents may not even recognize. With candid urgency, she emphasizes why open conversations with children about online dangers aren't optional—they're essential protection against predators who have adapted to the digital world.Current political realities have created additional barriers to fighting trafficking effectively. Increased immigration enforcement has silenced many victims who fear deportation more than their exploiters. Meanwhile, high-profile cases like Epstein's become political footballs while actual victims are forgotten and trafficking networks continue operating with impunity.For parents, educators, and concerned citizens alike, this episode provides crucial knowledge about trafficking's warning signs and how communities can respond. The prosecution of these cases faces enormous hurdles—from resource limitations to widespread misunderstanding of trafficking dynamics among judges and juries—yet remains essential to disrupting these criminal networks.Join us to understand why human trafficking continues to flourish despite increased awareness, and what meaningful action looks like beyond hashtags and headlines. Subscribe now to hear more conversations that cut through misinformation and bring expert perspectives on the most pressing legal and social issues of our time.
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End of Summer Lawsuit Roundup: Dozens of Lawsuits and Billions Saved
AG Mayes and AG Nessel are back from a summer break to take us behind the scenes of their relentless legal battle against what they describe as the most unconstitutional administration in American history. They’ve filed over 25 lawsuits against the Trump administration in just six months, working around the clock to protect their states from illegal trespasses against their residents’ rights and devastating federal funding cuts.The financial stakes couldn't be higher. Through successful litigation, Michigan has preserved $1.6 billion and Arizona $1.2 billion in federal funding for critical programs including healthcare, education, infrastructure, and public safety. These victories come at a crucial time as both states face potential budget shortfalls from the recently passed "big bill for billionaires" that slashes taxes for corporations and the wealthy while cutting essential services. The AGs walk us through their most significant wins: preventing the dismantling of AmeriCorps, protecting library funding serving millions of cardholders, saving cancer research and treatment programs, and stopping illegal conditions on roads funding. In many cases, the Trump administration simply abandoned its efforts after initial court defeats rather than pursuing appeals – a pattern the AGs attribute partly to staffing challenges at the Department of Justice, where many experienced attorneys have departed. Perhaps most alarming is the administration's aggressive data collection efforts. Both AGs express deep concern about federal agencies attempting to "hoover up" massive amounts of personal information from Treasury, IRS, Medicaid, and SNAP programs. This intrusive data gathering crosses partisan lines – as Mayes notes, traditionally Republicans have opposed such "Big Brother" surveillance. The question remains: what happens to all this sensitive personal data, and who controls it?
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The Fight for Public Education: The Critical Battle to Save the Department of Education
When public education comes under attack, who stands in the breach? Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes take us behind the scenes of their critical legal battles to protect students, teachers, and the very institution of public education in America.Their fight is deeply personal. Nessel shares the story of her son with significant learning disabilities whose life was transformed by a dedicated teacher who continued teaching while battling terminal cancer. "She wasn't ready to die until Zach had finished fifth grade," Nessel recounts. That boy, once considered unlikely to read or write, later graduated from Michigan State with a 4.0 GPA. For Mayes, whose mother and sister both served as public school teachers, these attacks on education compelled her return to politics after a decade-long absence.The attorneys general detail their successful legal actions to prevent the dismantling of the Department of Education, protect AmeriCorps programs training desperately-needed teachers, and ensure promised ESSER funds reach school districts that had already committed to projects. Their interventions have prevented devastating budget shortfalls for already underfunded schools across America.NEA President Becky Pringle, drawing on her 31 years teaching middle school science, offers powerful insights into education's connection to democracy itself. "You could follow the trajectory of a society," she explains, noting that falling societies invariably begin by "taking away the right of its citizens to learn." From book bans to curriculum censorship to teacher intimidation, the current climate threatens not just academic achievement but the foundation of democratic participation.The conversation exposes the false promise that dismantling federal education programs would simply transfer funds to states, pointing to evidence from Arizona where universal voucher programs have diverted billions toward private education while draining public resources. As class sizes grow, special education supports vanish, and teachers face unprecedented pressure, the attorneys general remain committed to their fight for America's educational future.Subscribe to learn how these legal battles affect every family in America and what's at stake for our democracy itself.
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Love Wins: 10 Years of Obergefell v. Hodges - PART 2
A decade ago, two Michigan nurses embarked on a journey that would transform American history – not in hopes of a constitutional revolution, but because they wanted to protect their children.April DeBoer and Jayne Rowse had been together for 18 years when they first approached attorney Dana Nessel about a seemingly simple problem. As Michigan foster parents raising three children, they faced a legal paradox: the state trusted them to foster children together but prohibited them from jointly adopting. Each parent could only legally adopt specific children, creating a precarious situation where neither had legal rights to all their children.After surviving a near-fatal car accident, the reality hit them hard – if something happened to either mother, their family could be torn apart by the legal system they trusted to protect them. What began as an adoption rights case unexpectedly pivoted when a federal judge suggested they challenge Michigan's marriage ban instead. This fateful turn transformed their personal struggle into what would become the landmark Supreme Court case legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide.April and Jayne invite listeners into the emotional Supreme Court experience – from the sea of supporters outside, to the confusing oral arguments where Justice Kennedy's position remained unclear, to the euphoric moment when they learned they'd won. With remarkable candor, they share how they balanced raising five children while becoming reluctant civil rights pioneers, and how they found courage in looking at "those tiny faces" they were fighting to protect.As we mark ten years since Obergefell, their story offers both inspiration and warning. While reflecting on how quickly attitudes have changed, these accidental figureheads also express concern about how easily these LGBTQ rights and protections could disappear. Their powerful testimony reminds us that behind every landmark legal decision are real families with everything at stake – and that ordinary citizens stepping up for their children can indeed change history.
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Love Wins: 10 Years of Obergefell v. Hodges - PART 1
Ten years after the landmark Obergefell decision legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel takes us behind the scenes of the historic legal battle she personally led. As the attorney who argued Michigan's DeBoer v. Snyder case (later consolidated with Obergefell), Nessel provides a remarkably candid account of what it took to secure marriage equality against overwhelming odds.Nessel shares deeply personal reflections about what the victory meant, calling the day Obergefell was decided "the best day of my life." Local clerks set up impromptu wedding services for couples who had waited decades to marry legally. Beyond the emotional impact, marriage equality brought economic benefits, increased adoption rates for foster children, and crucial family stability. Nessel's own experience as a parent illustrates how marriage rights transformed everyday life – enabling her wife to legally adopt their children and make medical decisions when their son needed surgery.This Pride Month conversation also comes with a warning. With Justice Thomas explicitly calling for Obergefell to be reconsidered and unconstitutional marriage bans still on the books in many states, the rights secured in 2015 remain vulnerable. Subscribe to hear part two of this special series featuring an interview with April and Jane themselves – the couple whose fight to protect their family changed America.Credit: This episode includes excerpts from news segments from the Associated Press, MSNBC, NBC News, WPTV News, WSBT-TV, WXYZ-TV Detroit, KHON2 News, and other clips from Youtube.
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The $625 Billion Cut That Could Break America's Healthcare System
The fight for America's health and wellbeing takes center stage as we tackle the most alarming proposals coming from Washington. Attorneys General Dana Nessel and Kris Mayes break down their ongoing legal battles against unconstitutional actions by the Trump administration – revealing why they've each filed over 15 lawsuits (and won most of them).Our candid conversation explores the real-world consequences of federal budget cuts already taking effect across America. From overflowing toilets at the Grand Canyon to park facility closures at Sleeping Bear Dunes, national treasures are deteriorating before our eyes. Meanwhile, vital nonprofit organizations that feed vulnerable populations face extinction as funding disappears.The heart of our episode features Georgetown University's Joan Alker, who delivers a masterclass on Medicaid's essential role in American healthcare. As Republicans propose slashing at least $625 billion from Medicaid – the largest cuts in history – Alker explains who stands to lose the most. Did you know Medicaid covers 40% of all births nationally and nearly half of all births in rural communities? Or that it's the primary funder of long-term care for seniors and covers almost half of all children?We examine how these proposed cuts would devastate rural healthcare systems already struggling with provider shortages and hospital closures. Alker also dissects the problematic "work requirements" some states have tried implementing – revealing shocking statistics about how they've increased bureaucracy while causing thousands to lose coverage.What makes this episode particularly powerful is the bipartisan concern emerging around these issues. As Nessel notes, people across the political spectrum are showing up at town halls worried about these changes. The message becomes clear: speaking up works, whether through contacting representatives, writing op-eds, or joining local meetings.Join us for this urgent conversation about protecting the programs that make America healthy. The time to make your voice heard is now.
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8
You Down with FTC? Yeah You Know Me!
Ever wonder who's fighting for fairness when corporations grow too powerful? Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes pull back the curtain on the world of antitrust enforcement with special guest Lina Khan, the groundbreaking former Chair of the Federal Trade Commission.This episode of Pantsuits and Lawsuits kicks off with a stark warning: without strong federal support, states like Michigan are left powerless against corporate abuse. AGs Nessel and Mayes join FTC Chair Lina Khan to unpack how weakened consumer protections, corporate mergers, and AI-driven “surveillance pricing” are putting everyday Americans at risk—and what’s being done to fight back. Throughout the episode, one message resonates clearly: corporate accountability requires vigilant state-federal partnerships that stand firm against powerful interests. As Khan notes, there's growing energy among young lawyers wanting to become "trust busters" - providing hope that the next generation is ready to continue this essential work.Check our department websites and social media to stay updated on our ongoing efforts to protect consumers from corporate abuses that affect your daily life.
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Reproductive Review: Bodily Autonomy and Your Right to Healthcare
The foundation of reproductive freedom in America continues to crumble beneath our feet, leaving millions without access to essential healthcare. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel sits down with Alexis McGill Johnson, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, for a sobering exploration of the post-Dobbs landscape.McGill Johnson reveals the coordinated, multi-pronged attack against reproductive healthcare access happening right now. From Title X funding cuts targeting Planned Parenthood to Supreme Court challenges that could strip Medicaid patients of their provider choices, we're witnessing a systematic dismantling of the healthcare infrastructure that millions rely upon. With 22 states now operating under abortion bans, one in three American women of reproductive age lives without access to complete healthcare.The consequences are both immediate and far-reaching. Doctors are fleeing states with abortion bans, creating dangerous healthcare deserts. Women with pregnancy complications face delayed care until they develop life-threatening sepsis. Young families are making permanent reproductive decisions out of fear. Join us for this critical conversation about what's at stake and how you can fight back through ballot initiatives, community organizing, and supporting Planned Parenthood's frontline work. Because as McGill Johnson powerfully reminds us: abortion is healthcare, bodily autonomy is essential to freedom, and none of us are truly free until all of us are free.
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Journey to Justice: The Hidden Cost of Cuts on Crime Victims
Federal funding for crime victim services is evaporating at an alarming rate. Since 2017, the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) fund has plummeted by a staggering 83%, leaving millions of vulnerable survivors without critical support. The human cost is devastating.We sit down with Kirstin Flores and Rebekah Snyder Cox, who lead victim services divisions in Arizona and Michigan, to understand what's at stake. Their stories from the frontlines reveal how these funding cuts threaten the very foundation of our justice system. When a sexual assault victim living in a shelter can't access a phone or transportation to participate in their case, justice remains out of reach. When domestic violence survivors have nowhere to turn because shelters can't keep their doors open, lives hang in the balance.The conversation explores how victim advocates serve as the unsung heroes of our criminal justice system, providing crucial emotional support, safety planning, and practical assistance at every stage of a case. Without them, cases collapse, victims remain traumatized, and offenders escape accountability. As Rebekah poignantly shares, "I just called a sexual assault victim who reported her crime in 2007. The offender fled, and the case went cold. Now I'm calling her again saying 'We mean it this time.' Without the help of federal partnerships, we couldn't even locate these fugitives."The episode also examines how post-conviction issues uniquely traumatize victims. When offenders unexpectedly receive parole or pardons without proper notification to victims, it shatters trust in the system. As one victim advocate described the impact: "It's indescribable. It takes them right back to the crime and brings everything back, but now 30 years later without their support system."What can we do to ensure justice for crime victims? Start by understanding that victim services aren't optional—they're essential infrastructure that makes our entire legal system function. Contact your representatives about supporting VOCA funding and connect with local victim service organizations in your community to see how you can help fill the growing gaps.
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Breeze, Trees, and Sea Lampreys: America's Conservation Crisis
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes unite to sound the alarm on the environmental crisis unfolding across America. From the Grand Canyon to the Great Lakes, our national treasures are under unprecedented threat as the Trump administration slashes funding, terminates Park Service employees, and rolls back critical environmental protections.The attorneys general reveal the shocking reality behind recent cuts – multiple-hour wait times at national parks, visitor centers forced to close, and safety concerns mounting as essential personnel disappear. "Who is it that wants to see our national parks defunded?" Nessel asks, highlighting the bewildering nature of these attacks on beloved public spaces that transcend political divides.Environmental experts Lisa Wozniak of Michigan League of Conservation Voters and Vania Guevara of Chispa Arizona join the conversation, bringing frontline perspectives on how these federal actions directly harm local communities and ecosystems. Wozniak details the terrifying spread of invasive sea lamprey in the Great Lakes, while Guevara shares how extreme heat in Arizona claimed over 1,000 lives last year – both problems exacerbated by weakened environmental agencies.The discussion delves into the economic devastation facing rural communities dependent on park tourism, the disproportionate impacts on communities of color, and the strategic communication needed to build environmental consensus across political lines. Despite the federal retreat from climate leadership exemplified by the Paris Climate Accord withdrawal, the conversation offers hope through state-level action and grassroots advocacy.Join these powerful women leaders as they chart a path forward for environmental protection when Washington won't lead. Whether you're concerned about public lands, climate justice, or the economic health of your community, this episode delivers crucial insights into one of today's most urgent battles.Subscribe now and join the conversation about how we can protect our natural heritage for future generations regardless of political headwinds.
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Firing America's Heroes: Veterans Cast Aside in Government Purge
In this episode of Pantsuits and Lawsuits, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes and Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel break down the unprecedented upheaval in the federal workforce. With mass firings sweeping across agencies like the Department of Veterans Affairs, the CDC, and even the nation's nuclear weapons programs, what do these cuts mean for government stability and public safety?Joining the discussion is Max Rose, Senior Advisor for the VetVoice Foundation and former U.S. Congressman, who shares insight on how these sweeping layoffs are affecting veterans, government efficiency, and national security.Plus, we examine the legal challenges being mounted against the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and what’s at stake for Americans who rely on these essential services.Credit: This episode includes excerpts from an MSNBC segment, viewable here.
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3
Birthright Citizenship
In this episode of Pantsuits & Lawsuits, we dive into the fight against the Trump Administration’s executive order attempting to redefine birthright citizenship. Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes is joined by two powerhouse advocates—Susan Reed, co-founder of the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center, and Reyna Montoya, founder of Aliento Education Fund. Together, they break down the constitutional, legal, and human impact of this unprecedented attack on the Fourteenth Amendment. How would this EO affect thousands of newborns each year? What are the economic consequences for states like Michigan and Arizona? And most importantly—what can we do to fight back? Tune in for an urgent conversation on immigrant rights, legal challenges, and the power of advocacy.
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2
Litigation 101 & Pig Butchering Scams
Ever wondered how Attorneys General fight harmful policies in court? Or why some lawsuits take years to resolve? In this week’s episode, Michigan AG Dana Nessel and Arizona AG Kris Mayes break down the legal process in a way that makes sense—no law degree required! We’re kicking things off with "Litigation 101"—a crash course on how legal action serves as a defense, why cases take so long, and what terms like standing actually mean. Then, we dive into a major scam targeting people across the country: “Pig Butchering” scams. Joining us are Alex Juarez from AARP Arizona and Mark Fetterhoff from the AARP Fraud Watch Network to help you protect both your heart and your wallet from these sophisticated fraud schemes.
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1
About the Podcast and the Women Behind the Pantsuits
Episode 1: About the Podcast and the Women Behind the PantsuitsIn this debut episode of Pantsuits and Lawsuits, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes pull back the curtain on why they launched this podcast and the journeys that led them to their roles as state attorneys general. From landmark legal battles to personal motivations, they share the defining moments that shaped their careers, their approach to justice, and their commitment to defending the rights of everyday people. Get to know the AGs beyond the headlines as they set the stage for the candid, insightful conversations to come.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Pantsuits and Lawsuits is a no-holds-barred podcast featuring Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes as they break down the biggest legal and political battles shaping the nation. With sharp wit and deep expertise, these two trailblazing AGs will keep you informed on what’s happening in their offices, how they’re fighting to protect your rights, and what’s at stake in the courts. From democracy and civil rights to corporate accountability, they’ll tackle it all—bringing in expert guests along the way to dig even deeper. Smart, bold, and unapologetically candid—this is the legal commentary you didn’t know you needed.
HOSTED BY
Attorneys General Kris Mayes & Dana Nessel
CATEGORIES
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