Nathan Roberts expressed unwavering support for President Donald Trump, citing his immigration stance, foreign policy, economic approach, and unfiltered style since 2016. “I’ve been on the Trump train since 2016,” he said, crediting Trump with reshaping the Republican Party. Nick Roberts offered a starkly contrasting view, calling Trump complicit in threats to democracy, a “clown show” on the global stage, and a “total disaster” whose current term has worsened the economy and immigration challenges.
In a speed round, the brothers laid bare their differences on due process for undocumented immigrants, abortion, trans rights and Trump’s tariffs. They converged on a few points, agreeing that any war with Iran should be “in and out quick” and endorsing the firing of officials like Christine Noem and Pam Bondi.
On impeachment, Nathan rejected it outright; Nick said he would “absolutely” vote yes. Yet throughout the heated exchange, the twins remained respectful, often laughing and referencing shared childhood memories. They traced their partisan split to eighth grade, when a school project already had them identifying as the “Republican twin” and “Democratic twin”. They credited a mixed family environment (conservative father, liberal-leaning mother who voted for Bernie Sanders, and influential grandparents) along with teachers and party mentors for shaping their views.
Despite the intensity, both underscored the importance of maintaining personal bonds. Nick advised against cutting people out of one’s life over politics, arguing it only pushes them “further into the rabbit hole of extremism” and that “honest conversations” are the better path.
Nathan echoed this, saying, “If you’re cool with me, I’m cool with you,” and noting that for politically active individuals like themselves, severing family ties is rarely effective activism. “People need to get over it,” he added, while praising Nick’s point that such cutoffs often achieve little.
Their advice to the public was clear: disagree vehemently on issues, but don’t let it destroy relationships.
Also, it’s helpful to recognize and vocalize when you agree with the “…other side”.
For instance, Nick gave Trump credit for recruiting mavericks and turning adversaries (Tulsi Gabbard, RFK Jr., Elon Musk) into allies, urging Democrats to embrace a bigger “big tent.” Nathan then voiced concern that the Iran war could become an “albatross”. Interestingly, both brothers support the full, unredacted release of the Epstein files.
The episode highlighted not only America’s divisions, but an optimistic path forward. If identical twins, who disagree fiercely on policy yet get along personally and treat each other with respect, perhaps others could do the same.
