Rep. Madeleine Dean Blunder on Bananas: 'We Cannot Build Bananas in America' (Actually Grown in Hawaii, Florida, California Since 1876); Democratic Candidate: 'Every Single Person in the World Deserves Health Care'; Jennings: 'As a Candidate, You're for Illegal Aliens Getting Medicaid?'
Rep. Madeleine Dean Blunder on Bananas: “We Cannot Build Bananas in America” (Actually Grown in Hawaii, Florida, California Since 1876); Democratic Candidate: “Every Single Person in the World Deserves Health Care”; Jennings: “As a Candidate, You’re for Illegal Aliens Getting Medicaid?”
Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-PA) had a memorable blunder during her questioning of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in June 2025. After asking “What’s the tariff on bananas?” (10%) and complaining Walmart raised banana prices 8%, Dean objected to Lutnick’s point that “there’s no uncertainty if you build in America, you’ll have no tariff.” Dean’s response: “We can’t produce bananas in America… We cannot build bananas in America.” The factual problem: bananas HAVE been grown in America since 1876 when the first banana farm was established in Florida near Silver Lake. Today, Hawaii leads US banana production, followed by Florida. California, Texas, Louisiana, and Arizona also produce bananas. Florida is a major exporter, particularly of specialty and Thai cooking bananas. Separately, a CNN panelist running for office declared: “Every single person in the world deserves health care.” Scott Jennings: “As a candidate, you’re for illegal aliens getting Medicaid?” Candidate: “Yeah. Everyone in the world. How is it controversial?” Abby Phillip: “Scott, who do you think pays for healthcare when undocumented people show up at a hospital?” Jennings: “We all pay for it! That’s the point… Taxpayers.”
The Banana Blunder
Rep. Madeleine Dean’s questioning backfired spectacularly.
“What’s the tariff on bananas?” Dean asked.
Commerce Secretary Lutnick’s answer: “The tariff on bananas would be representative of the countries that produce them.”
Dean pressed: “And what’s that tariff?”
Lutnick: “Generally 10%.”
Dean noted the impact: “Walmart has already increased the cost of bananas by 8%.”
Lutnick responded: “But as countries do deals with us, that will go to zero. As countries do deals with us, that will go to zero.”
Dean made her complaint: “But the cost is on the American consumer now and on the businesses with the confusion now.”
She delivered her lecture: “Mr. Secretary, I believe you know better. I believe you recognize that a trade deficit is not something to fear. I believe you know that predictability, stability is essential for businesses.”
She closed with a dig: “I wish you would show that truth to this administration. And I yield back.”
Lutnick’s Correction
Lutnick requested brief response time.
“Do you mind, Mr. Chairman, if I make one quick comment to the end? Would that be okay?” Lutnick asked.
The chairman: “I’m sorry? Would you mind if I make one quick comment to the representative? Please.”
Lutnick delivered his correction: “There’s no uncertainty if you build in America and you produce your product in America, there will be no tariff.”
Dean’s Disastrous Response
Dean interjected: “We can’t produce bananas in America.”
Lutnick reiterated: “So the concept of building in America and paying no tariff is very, very clear.”
Dean doubled down: “We cannot build bananas in America.”
The chairman ended the exchange: “Time of the General Nities expired.”
The Factual Problem
Dean’s claim was factually wrong.
US banana production history:
- First American banana farm established 1876
- Located in Florida near Silver Lake
- Ongoing production for 150+ years
- Commercial scale in multiple states
- Well-documented American industry
Current US banana production:
- Hawaii: Leading US producer
- Florida: Major producer, particularly specialty varieties
- California: Significant production in southern areas
- Texas: Production in Rio Grande Valley
- Louisiana: Gulf Coast production
- Arizona: Some southern production
- Puerto Rico: Substantial production (U.S. territory)
Specialty banana production:
- Thai bananas (Florida)
- Cooking bananas (Florida, Hawaii)
- Organic varieties (multiple states)
- Specialty varieties for tropical markets
- Growing artisan production
Export status:
- Florida exports bananas internationally
- Hawaii exports within US
- Specialty bananas to Caribbean markets
- Small but genuine industry
- American farmers producing bananas
Why Dean’s Claim Mattered
Dean’s factual error was politically significant.
The specific error:
- Democrat congresswoman on record
- Televised hearing
- Questioning Cabinet Secretary
- Making definitive factual claim
- Completely wrong
Why it mattered:
- Dean was lecturing Lutnick
- Claiming superior knowledge
- Establishing her authority on tariffs
- Undermined by basic factual error
- Illustrated broader ignorance
The broader pattern:
- Democratic officials often ignorant of American production
- Assumed American economy was imports-only
- Didn’t understand tariff policy incentives
- Didn’t know American agricultural capacity
- Pattern of intellectual unpreparedness
The ironic detail:
- Bananas grown in Florida (major state)
- Dean was from Pennsylvania (not tropical)
- But should know basic American agriculture
- Congressional research available
- Basic staff work should have caught this
The Lutnick Framework
Lutnick’s broader point about American production was sound.
The basic principle:
- American production avoids tariffs
- American consumers support American workers
- Strategic independence from foreign suppliers
- Reduced vulnerability to trade disputes
- Economic sovereignty enhanced
Applied to various products:
- Manufactured goods: yes, can build in America
- Agricultural products: some can be grown in America
- Strategic materials: essential to produce domestically
- Luxury items: flexibility for imports
- Context-dependent analysis
The banana case:
- Some bananas grown in America
- Most bananas imported (Central America, Ecuador, Philippines)
- Tropical climate needed
- Hawaii and Florida suitable but limited
- Majority of supply still imported
The proper point:
- Not every product can be produced domestically
- Most products can be produced domestically
- Strategic choice about where to produce
- Tariffs incentive American production where possible
- Some products require foreign sources
Dean’s overreach on bananas distracted from the legitimate point that not all products can be produced domestically.
The Democratic Candidate on Universal Healthcare
The broadcast pivoted to CNN panel discussion.
Abby Phillip featured a segment with a Democratic candidate.
Candidate’s declaration: “Everyone deserves health care.”
Jennings asked: “Do you have any illegals?”
Candidate: “Every single person in the world deserves health care.”
Jennings clarified: “Just for the record, as a candidate, you’re for illegal aliens getting Medicaid.”
Candidate: “I think everyone in the world deserves health care.”
Jennings: “That’s a yes.”
Candidate: “That’s a yes. I’m such a lot of people. It is a yes, but yeah. It’s a democratic position.”
The “Everyone in the World” Position
This was an extreme position captured on television.
What the candidate claimed:
- Every person in world deserves healthcare
- Illegal immigrants should get Medicaid
- American taxpayers should fund
- Democratic party position
- Not controversial apparently
The practical implications:
- American workers fund global healthcare
- Unlimited beneficiary expansion
- Fiscal impossibility
- Creates massive pull for illegal immigration
- Treats American citizenship as meaningless
The Democratic framing problem:
- Standard rhetoric: “We support legal immigration”
- Reality: Candidates support unlimited coverage
- Disconnect between messaging and policy
- Progressive wing driving actual positions
- Voters unaware of actual scope
”How Is It Controversial?”
The candidate’s response was revealing.
“How is it controversial?” the candidate asked.
This suggested:
- Genuine belief that position was mainstream
- Disconnection from broader public opinion
- Assumption that everyone agreed
- Progressive bubble mentality
- Political miscalibration
Why it was controversial:
- Americans paying for foreigners’ healthcare
- Unlimited fiscal obligation
- Creates massive immigration incentive
- Undermines border enforcement
- Political non-starter with majority
The majority American position:
- Americans should get American healthcare
- Illegal immigrants should not receive Medicaid
- Focus should be on American citizens
- Limited resources to American priorities
- Not “every person in the world”
The candidate’s shock at controversy reflected:
- Bubble mentality
- Disconnection from voters
- Progressive ideological capture
- Inability to read political landscape
- Why Democrats were losing elections
The “Who Pays” Question
Abby Phillip tried to defend the position.
“Scott, who do you think pays for healthcare when undocumented people show up at a hospital? Who pays for that?”
Jennings: “We all pay for it.”
Phillip: “Exactly.”
Jennings: “That’s the point.”
Jennings continued: “That’s the point. I just want to remind you. Who pays for the welfare system in this country generally?”
The Defensive Framing
Phillip’s “who pays” was defensive.
What Phillip was trying to argue:
- Americans already pay for undocumented healthcare
- Current emergency care is funded by taxpayers
- Providing Medicaid might be cheaper overall
- It’s already happening
- Why object?
What Jennings’s response meant:
- Yes, we do pay
- That’s a problem
- We should pay less
- Deportation reduces costs
- Not expand benefits
The Democratic error:
- Defending current costs as inevitable
- Extending to Medicaid (increase) not decrease
- Assuming “already paying” justifies more
- Not questioning why we pay at all
- Extending rather than restricting
The Jennings rebuttal:
- We’re paying shouldn’t be justification for more
- We should reduce not expand
- Remove illegal immigrants rather than give more benefits
- Taxpayer burden should decrease
- Political accountability for costs
The Welfare System Reminder
Jennings pivoted to broader welfare discussion.
“I want to remind you and Brad. Can I start my logic training? Are you for it or not?”
Candidate: “My logic training starts with the fact that I don’t want to kick 11 million people off of Medicaid.”
Jennings: “I don’t want to kick the legal aliens on or not.”
Candidate: “Do I want… First of all, do I want undocumented citizens to have health care? The answer is yes.”
The “Undocumented Citizens” Term
The candidate used a revealing phrase: “undocumented citizens.”
This was:
- Oxymoron (can’t be both undocumented and citizen)
- Deliberate progressive terminology
- Expansion of “citizen” to non-citizens
- Rhetorical strategy to normalize illegal immigration
- Undermining concept of citizenship
Why this mattered:
- If non-citizens are “citizens,” citizenship is meaningless
- Rights of citizenship extended to all
- Difference between legal and illegal immigrants erased
- American political community redefined
- Undermines electoral legitimacy
The Insulin Hypothetical
The candidate used emotional appeal.
“If someone is undocumented, do you want them to not get insulin if they’re diabetic?”
Jennings’s response: “I want Medicaid to exist first and foremost for American citizens who need it.”
Candidate: “What about second?”
Jennings’s answer: “How about this? When the people that are picking your peaches…”
Candidate (interrupting): “Yeah, I’m passionate about Americans.”
Jennings: “Very passionate for the illegals.”
Candidate: “No, I’m passionate for Americans.”
The “Picking Your Peaches” Framing
Jennings’s “peaches” reference was important.
The implicit argument:
- Americans depend on illegal labor
- Illegal immigrants pick agricultural products
- Essential to American economy
- Deserve healthcare for their contribution
- “Can’t live without them”
Jennings’s counter:
- Americans can do these jobs
- Higher wages would attract Americans
- Illegal labor suppresses wages
- System benefits employers at worker expense
- Restrictive immigration would raise wages
The economic reality:
- Agricultural work pays poorly
- Conditions are often poor
- Illegal status enables exploitation
- Strict enforcement would require:
- Higher wages
- Better conditions
- American workforce
- Mechanization
- Alternative models
The political calculation:
- Americans wanted higher wages
- Americans wanted to work
- Immigration suppressed wages
- Strict enforcement would benefit Americans
- Not restricting enforcement hurts Americans
”How Dare You Want People to Be Alive?”
The candidate’s emotional escalation was revealing.
“How dare you want people to be alive? How dare you? How dare you? How dare you?”
Jennings: “I’m not feeling… But yes, you need more.”
The Hyperbolic Framing
The candidate was suggesting restrictive immigration policy would kill people.
Why this was absurd:
- Restricting immigration ≠ killing people
- Not getting US Medicaid ≠ dying
- People have home countries for healthcare
- Not entitled to US healthcare
- Emotional manipulation rather than argument
The pattern of Democratic argumentation:
- Emergency framing
- Life-or-death stakes
- Personal responsibility accusations
- Emotional manipulation
- Avoiding substantive policy discussion
”We Need More Illegals”
Jennings made a sharp observation.
“To make your vision of America work, we need more illegals who get more benefits. That’s your version of America.”
Candidate: “No, what I want from America is a place that was promised to us, Scott.”
Jennings: “To the illegals.”
Candidate: “No, it was promised to us. It was promised to us, not us, me and you, black and white, brown.”
The “Promised to Us” Framing
The candidate pivoted to racial identity politics.
“Scott, do you think that your family was born here? You weren’t born here, Scott. I was born in… What does your family come from?”
Jennings: “My family wasn’t born here.”
Candidate: “My family was actually from Sierra Leone.”
Jennings: “You’re making an impressionate argument.”
Candidate: “Correct.”
Jennings: “For a country built on unfettered illegal immigration and that is not anywhere near a politically popular position.”
Candidate: “Our country is built on immigration periods.”
Jennings: “What kind?”
Candidate: “Period.”
Jennings: “What kind?”
The Immigration Category Distinction
Jennings’s “what kind” question was crucial.
The basic distinction:
- Legal immigration (supported historically)
- Illegal immigration (traditionally opposed)
- Refugee programs (selectively supported)
- Visa programs (strictly regulated)
- Categories have always existed
The candidate’s blurring:
- Treats all immigration as equivalent
- Ignores legal-illegal distinction
- Universalizes “immigrant” category
- Undermines rule of law
- Political advantage through confusion
The Slavery Deflection
The candidate’s final argument was startling.
Candidate: “Oh, first of all, before we go to commercial, what kind of immigration was I brought here? You’re already in the hole. You sure you don’t want to stop digging? No, because it was slavery. That’s not immigration.”
Jennings: “Come on. Well, okay. Come on, what?”
Candidate: “There’s a lot to be said. No, no, no, no. I can’t say come on when somebody’s like, my family was brought here in change. The answer’s not come on.”
The Slavery Reference
The slavery reference was politically deployed.
What the candidate was doing:
- Invoking slavery as trump card
- Making moral claims based on ancestors
- Using historical injustice for current argument
- Equating illegal immigration with slavery
- Generational guilt as argument
Why this was problematic:
- Slavery ended 160+ years ago
- Current illegal immigrants unrelated
- Legal immigration ≠ slavery
- Historical trauma ≠ current policy
- Conflation of different issues
The Jennings response:
- Too awkward to engage
- Recognized trap
- Conceded rhetorical point
- Lost political ground
- Couldn’t effectively counter
This was standard progressive strategy: when losing argument on facts, invoke slavery or historical trauma to make further discussion socially impossible.
The Panel Dynamic
The exchange revealed CNN panel dynamics.
Jennings’s position:
- Conservative voice
- Substantive engagement
- Factual arguments
- Political realism
- Restraint in response
Phillip’s role:
- Supposedly neutral moderator
- Actually pro-Democrat
- Defensive of Democratic positions
- Hostile to Jennings
- Selective questioning
Candidate’s role:
- Extreme progressive positions
- Emotional manipulation
- Identity politics deployment
- Factual weakness
- Political commitment
Democratic panelists:
- Coordinated against Jennings
- Interrupted his arguments
- Provided cover for extreme positions
- Emotional support for candidate
- Pack behavior
Key Takeaways
- Rep. Madeleine Dean’s blunder: “We cannot build bananas in America” — actually grown in Hawaii, Florida since 1876.
- Democratic candidate: “Every single person in the world deserves health care” — yes to illegal aliens getting Medicaid.
- Jennings: “We all pay for it! That’s the point… Taxpayers.”
- Candidate’s emotional manipulation: “How dare you want people to be alive?”
- Jennings on political reality: “To make your vision of America work, we need more illegals who get more benefits.”