Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders recently appeared on comedian Theo Von’s popular MAGA-friendly podcast and shared straightforward views about immigration reform. The conversation on This Past Weekend showed how much common ground exists outside the usual political fighting, especially considering Von’s audience.
According to The Hill, Sanders laid out a practical view on immigration that matches what many working people think. He said that people who have been living in the United States, following the laws, working hard, and raising families deserve a path to citizenship through comprehensive reform. Sanders pointed out that the economy needs workers badly. “Given the fact that we have worker shortages all over this country, we need those workers,” he stated.
This practical approach reflects a major change in public opinion. Current enforcement efforts are targeting many people who aren’t dangerous criminals, including those who have lived here for years and contributed to their communities. Data shows that 61 percent of Americans now say current enforcement efforts are “too tough,” suggesting most people believe enforcement goes beyond targeting real threats.
Sanders sees Trump’s ICE deployment as authoritarian intimidation
Sanders criticized how President Trump is using enforcement agencies. He sees Trump’s use of ICE as intimidation tactics. “I think it’s Trump saying, ‘I have the power and we got a domestic army. It’s called ICE. And we’re going to go out there and we’re going to arrest and we’re going to intimidate,'” Sanders said. He called this “Trumpism” and warned that relying on intimidation is what authoritarianism is about.
The conversation highlighted deep political frustration across the country. Theo Von captured this feeling on his show, saying, “It doesn’t even feel like either one of these parties works for anybody anymore.” That sense of being politically homeless is widespread. Podcasts have become important platforms for these conversations, though some podcast episodes end unexpectedly when controversial topics arise.
Data shows a record-high 45 percent of U.S. adults identified as political independents in 2025. Sanders is an independent but still works with Democrats, even though he admits the party is sharply divided. He explained that starting a new major party isn’t realistic right now. Instead, he’s focused on changing the existing structure.
“We are trying to move the Democratic Party to be a party that stands with working-class Americans and has the courage to take on powerful special interests,” he said. He contrasted this with “another faction of the Democratic Party” that opposes Trump but “basically cuddles up to the moneyed interests.” Political podcasts continue drawing audiences despite recent changes in podcast viewership across the platform.
What’s happening isn’t a sudden shift left or right but a massive demand for accountability. Voters aren’t interested in purity tests or blind party loyalty anymore. They want policies that actually reflect how people live, work, and raise families in the real world. When most people agree that enforcement has gone too far, and nearly half the country is walking away from both major parties, the old political playbook clearly isn’t working anymore.
Published: Jan 23, 2026 02:38 pm