Let's Find Common Ground - Two Friends— a Democrat and a Republican— Search Together for Common Ground. Jordan Blashek, Chris Haugh
Episode Date: August 3, 2023Are Americans really as divided as we think we are? One liberal and one conservative jumped in an old Volvo and drove along nearly 20,000 miles of roads and highways in a series of journeys to find t...he answer. They went through 44 states and met an extraordinary range of people along the way. At a time of political gridlock and hyper-partisanship, Republican Jordan Blashek and Democrat Chris Haugh formed an unlikely friendship that blossomed, not in spite of, but because of their political differences. The result of their remarkable road trips is their book Union: A Democrat, A Republican and a Search for Common Ground." In this podcast episode, we hear a mixture of wisdom and humor and discover what Chris and Jordan learned about American politics, culture, civics, and our potential to find common ground.
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This week we're bringing you a show we first released when Let's Find Common Ground was
pretty new in 2020.
Yeah, we loved this episode with two young guys with different political views who traveled
the US together by car and lived to tell the tale.
Here's the show.
Two young men, one liberal, one conservative, jumped in a Volvo and drove across America several times
along nearly 20,000 miles of roads and highways, an ex-Marine and businessman and his friend,
a writer and former intern at the Obama White House from Berkeley, California.
What did they discover about dealing with their own differences and our divided nation?
This is Let's Find Common Ground. I'm Ashley Melntite.
And I'm Richard Davies.
Chris Har and Jordan Blasheck are our guests.
They first set out in 2016 and then several more times in the next three years to get a better
understanding of America and themselves.
Their new book is called Union, a Democrat, a Republican, and a search for common ground.
It's a great story, so let's get started.
First with Chris, the liberal in this duo.
We went on six road trips across nearly 20,000 miles, 44 states.
We talked to countless people hailing from all sorts of different backgrounds.
And our honest takeaway was that we are not as far apart as you'd imagine.
In fact, we're quite close together.
There are serious and real divisions in this country, but the way we articulate our desires,
the way we articulate what is good about this country, the values
that underwrite all of our expressions of political aspiration or future planning are the
same.
They really are.
We found that over and over again, whether it was in Tulsa or Detroit or New York City
or California, I think ultimately underneath a sort of patina of difference in division,
there is a common language. And we really felt that.
Jordan, you're the conservative. Chris is the liberal. Do you see it the same way? Because
boy, in our media, it's where we're incredibly divided as a country.
I do. I saw the same exact thing as Chris.
And I think that was one of the most
heartening parts of our road trip.
When we first started this, we were new friends.
We're from different sides of the aisle.
We weren't sure that we were going to see
the same things on the road.
And our first experience with that
was at a Trump rally in Phoenix.
And we experienced the rally from inside with Trump supporters
and then outside with the
protesters.
And we believe that we saw over and over again with the people we met this common feeling
towards the country and the sense of who we are that shared.
And while the media and social media do thrive on division and it seems like that's all
there is, we believe that that's actually the small minority and that for most of the country there's
this desire to move away from the constant state of division to reunite with the better
angels of themselves and their community and to have better politics.
Talk for a minute about why you embarked on this journey together in the first place.
Okay, one of you is a former Marine from LA.
The other is from Berkeley, California, writer, former speech writer, and the
Obama administration.
You met at Yale Law School, but you actually didn't know each other all that well.
I think you hadn't even known each other for even a year when you decided to go on a road
trip together.
So what drove that decision?
Well, it was something I immediately regretted. you decided to go on a road trip together? So what drove that decision?
Well, it was something I immediately regretted. I asked Chris a little when we were out of bar at night
and I was gonna drive home to LA for the summer,
for a summer job.
And I just had this moment of, you know,
it would be nice to have a friend out on the road.
And so I tapped him on the chest and said,
hey man, do you wanna go on a road trip?
And then immediately realized that I was gonna have to spend seven days in a car with
this hippie with long hair.
And I became a little nervous about it.
I didn't end up regretting the road trip until it was four in the morning on the first
night and we're still driving.
But that's when I started to regret our road trip.
What were your world views though?
Like gives people a sense of, as you set out, what was like Jordan, what was your world
view? How would you describe it?
I had just spent five years in the Marine Corps.
I thought that the ideas and ideals embodied
by the United States were noble and worthy
and things that were worth fighting for.
And that kind of infused how I saw the world.
And second, Chris came to know that I like to describe
myself as a Berkean after Edmund
Berk.
And this sort of defining feature of that is this idea that progress is important in many
ways vital for holding a society together, but progress is best achieved if done slowly,
temperately, and with a lot of respect for what came before, because you never know what
you're going to throw out in the process of progress.
And it led me to be an optimist
about what we were gonna see across the country.
My experience in the Marines made me feel that
wherever we went, we were gonna find signs
that America was good, strong, and healthy
everywhere we went.
And I think it was a little different
from Chris' worldview.
Yeah, I grew up in a pretty radical milieu in Berkeley.
You know, I remember going to protests, taking the subway to San Francisco I grew up in a pretty radical milieu in Berkeley.
I remember going to protests,
taking the subway to San Francisco
to protest the Iraq War when I was quite young.
One of the first books I intentionally picked up
and read on my own and high school was
Sol and Ice by Eldridge Cleaver.
I was fascinated by the Black Panthers.
And through time I kind of started
to become a little bit more of an institutionalist.
I'd spent time in DC, I interned at the White House, the Obama White House, I had to specify now.
And then at the State Department, I'd sort of come to a new sort of fascination and appreciation for our government institutions outside of that kind of more radical vision of the world that I had grown up with.
And one of the reasons I think I was open to a friendship like this was, you know, at the State Department
in diplomacy, we were writing speeches where we would
quote Kennedy and Reagan.
There's this sort of, you know, postpartisan
larger message to what we were trying to achieve.
That said, you must have had some arguments.
You must have had, even perhaps, some verbal fights, some jousting between you.
No, never. Not once.
No, absolutely. I mean, we fought like cats and dogs.
And in those early days, we would get into these battles and Jordan's a little bit more of a pugilist than I am.
He enjoys the back and forth. So he would start it and I would engage and then I would try to pivot out of it.
We write in the book that new friends have a way of inoculating one another against the
worst of combat, of verbal combat because you don't want to lose that friendship.
We would start, but then we often wouldn't finish those arguments.
We were able to avoid them until the election got going in full swing,
and then it almost became oppressive. You couldn't avoid politics.
We are, I'm thinking about one particular fight that you write about. It's post the Trump rally
that you attended. I think you came this close to thinking, gosh, can we continue doing this?
Have we really got it in us to kind of stay with each other in this car? Can you talk about that?
this, have we really got it in us to kind of stay with each other in this car? Can you talk about that?
So the fight that you're talking about happened as we were driving through Nevada, through
these long open stretches of highways.
And it started sort of innocently enough where both of us were trading remarks about the
night before from the Trump rally.
And at some point I said to Chris that it really bothers me that the president is always
characterized, in the worst possible light, for whatever he says.
And then that characterization is used to tar all of his supporters.
And that kind of started us down this path of discussing the president's remarks about
undocumented immigrants and the wall and how those may or may not have been racist. And it led to this sort of brutal all-out fight
where we kind of moved from the issues to ad hominins
and started questioning each other's underlying values
and motives and ended with us in silence,
steaming about the other person and unable to continue talking.
And we didn't say a word to each other for quite some time,
probably about an hour, until finally,
Chris was able to break the silence
and say that he was still angry,
he needed time to heal, but he still loved me.
And that began the process of reconciling.
What did you learn from that?
What did you learn from your disagreements
in terms of how to
disagree? What I learned is the importance of coming back to the table. You
don't solve all your issues in one conversation. I didn't convince Jordan of
my perspective in that 45 minute battle we had and he didn't convince me. But
what matters is like summoning the desire to keep going. The grace to say, look, I love you, man,
you're one of my closest friends, I'm angry,
but I wanna come back to the table, I wanna try again.
Because the honest truth is that coming ground is hard.
It's not easy, and it takes so many conversations
that takes making mistakes.
We wrote Union very intentionally to show those mistakes.
We wanted to show that battle, that fight,
because we wanted people to know that, you know,
we're not experts.
We had to figure it out as we went as well.
Yeah, I think too that come to mind for me
are there's a way of arguing where the way we frame things
draws a line and says, if you're on this side of the line,
you're on my side, if you're on that side of the line,
you must be evil or I, you must be my opponent.
And I think in that conversation, we definitely did that where we would say things that whether
implicitly or explicitly said that if you disagree with me, there must be something repellent
or morally repugnant about your views.
And that makes people very defensive.
And I think a second thing we learned from that fight was that we might be arguing rationally
and using words and ideas to communicate,
but there's this underlying emotion.
Beneath it, that's the real engagement.
And in that conversation, some things were set on both sides
that carried a lot of emotion.
And we rushed over those because we're each just waiting
to make our next point.
And so we didn't hear the emotion in the other side.
And I realized, well, I said something that hurt Chris
because he had an experience earlier in his life
that this triggered and vice versa.
And in ignoring that emotion underneath it,
it led us to just get even angrier and feel misunderstood and unheard.
And we've learned to ask questions to bring those out
as opposed to just trying to argue based on reason and facts.
I'd love to hear from each of you how that played out
with some of the people you met.
Like, I bet that each of you met at least one person
that you thought, ooh, am'm not gonna be able to find
common ground with this person.
And then you were, I'd love to hear an example
from each of you, Chris, do you wanna start?
You know, we wrote a chapter about our time
with Peter Mylon, who's a 57 year old truck driver
from Daytona Beach, Florida, who picked us up in Las Vegas
and drove us all the way to Slyde, L Louisiana. And I remember when we first arrived in Las Vegas, we were in
the truck stop looking for him. We hear this big honk and he jumps down and goes
to introduce himself and he opens his arms and he's wearing this make-America
great again shirt. And at this point in our road trips we had been trying to get
away from politics. And when I saw that shirt I said oh my god it's gonna be
impossible to get away from politics and you know I saw that shirt, I said, oh my God, it's going to be impossible to get away from politics. And, you know, fast forward a couple of days. And we found
Pete to be one of the more complicated, interesting thinkers we met on the road. You know, one
of the first things he said about politics was that the president, Donald Trump, didn't
talk enough about climate change. And he said this, of course, you know, driving a diesel
engine, you know, long haul truck down the highway at 80 miles an hour. And, you know, I think that was really important to me to
realize that we're more than just the party we vote for. Our thinking is often not just a, you
know, towing the lion of a party. It's complicated. It's informed by so many different life experiences
and beliefs. And, you know, what books we've read. And it's so hard to look at someone and say, I know exactly who that person is.
Jordan, as the conservative, was there a flaming liberal who you approached and thought,
uh, uh, I think the experience I had that I wondered if we would be able to connect with,
with these people was when we went to Parnell Prison. We got to spend a day with a Shakespearean prison group of
of inmates at Parnell who were meeting once a week to discuss Shakespeare. And
before going in, I was a little nervous. I had no idea what we were gonna talk to
these men about or find any way to to reach each other. And we were watching them perform King Lear.
And it was so inspiring to watch these men engage
over the text and talk about these deeper ideas and emotions
that were coming up for them as they were reading the passage
that they were performing.
And we got to witness this.
And I think Chris and I were sort of in awe of these men
and how they engaged on the topics. And then afterwards we were able to ask them questions.
And again, we were very nervous about asking these men what we wanted to ask, which was
about the idea of redemption, and yet they approached it with so much humility and emotion
and insight.
And we struck up this great, I think, communion with them, as we talked for a couple hours,
and it was deeply meaningful for both of us.
This is Let's Find Common Ground.
I'm Ashley.
And I'm Richard.
We're revisiting a show with Chris Ha, a liberal writer from Berkeley, and Jordan Blashek,
a conservative military vet about what they learned during a series of road trips across
the country.
And before we go back to our interview, we want to let you know about a free offer related
to a show we did during the spring, with two women on opposite sides of the abortion
debate.
Yeah, that was episode 84, with Francis Hogan and Anne Fowler.
They were featured in the documentary The Abortion Talks.
You're invited to Common Ground Committee's special online
complimentary screening of that film.
Francis and Anne were part of it.
To give you some background,
in the aftermath of a murder spree at two Boston area clinics
in the 1990s, leaders from opposing sides of the abortion debate met together in secret
talks.
None of the participants would change their minds, but the dialogues did change their lives.
Sign up today at commongroundcommity.org to get access to the film between August 5th and
August 12th.
Now back to our conversation with Jordan and Chris.
It sounds like both of you have come away from this series of road trips, believing that many people are a lot more interesting and nuanced than they first appear.
Absolutely. But I didn't realize how interesting these sort of conversations can be. Pete, the
men of Parnell, we thought we were going to come back with one story and we always came
back with another one. In fact, that kind of became our reporting ethos while we were out
there. It was, okay, we're headed to Portland to write about the lobster industry. What's
the against the grain story here? It always emerged that way. A story about a Trump supporting
truck driver suddenly becomes about climate change and how to interpret one's faith and
what the Bible really means. It's always more interesting than you expect.
Yeah, actually it reminds me of somebody that Richard and I have talked about recently. There's this
quite well-known journalism teacher Tom Rosensteel who said something recently that was very
similar to what you said the more reporting you do the less sure you should be about what you
went in thinking and that's exactly what you two discovered.
That'll resonate with Jordan, the budding young journalist he is.
Oh, I totally agree.
Chris has been prodding me along into the journalistic ethos since we started these trips.
And I think I came in with this very sort of clear sense of right and wrong.
And this is how the country is and how it's gonna be.
And every step the way, every person we met
convinced me more and more that actually things
are just very complex.
It's hard to spend so much time on the road
meeting Americans and seeing the American landscape
and not come away with just this deep sense of love
for who we are and the mosaic of this country.
And you also, the story you told about the truck driver
Pete reminds us that slogans, I know they're catchy,
but they can also be very reductive,
whether it's that or Black Lives Matter,
which might invoke a similar reaction to somebody else,
that the person who's wearing that t-shirt
isn't necessarily everything that you would
think from the slogan.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And I think those slogans are also overloaded.
They have so much additional meeting beyond just whatever the phrase is.
And we're being asked to say whether we agree with it or not.
And there's probably many parts of it I agree with and many parts of it I don't agree
with when it comes to slogan after slogan. And yet you can't get to that nuance when all we're doing is
shouting slogans back and forth at each other. There's a quote in your book, Union, about common ground.
And you say finding common ground isn't about being right. It's about laying a foundation to
argue passionately while respecting the other side.
It's a lot about getting to agreement, but getting to the point where disagreement isn't
reason to pull away.
Jordan?
Yes.
What we realized was we were never going to convince each other that I was right and Chris
was wrong, even though I am right and Chris is usually wrong. Um, we were never gonna convince each other
or fully change each other's mind.
But what we wanted to get to
was the point where we could have
these deeper conversations and wrestle over issues
and voice disagreements completely honestly
and not feel like that was gonna pull us apart.
And so we came to the view that common ground actually
has nothing to do with finding the areas we agree.
It's about being able to disagree and not have reason
to end the friendship over it.
Chris, what would you add to that?
Yeah, and I think that's a responsibility to that, too.
Because if we're going to disagree,
we have to be able to listen, but coming to that realization,
and especially with someone who you know and you trust,
I mean, it's easy for me to say that now about Jordan,
because I've literally put my life in his hands before.
So I know if I get angry about a political perspective
of his, I know that underneath it all
is the guy who helped drag me away
from tear gas canisters in Arizona
or drove through the night when I was too tired
to take the wheel.
So I think it's really important to be able to say,
I'm not gonna convince Jordan of every last point I have,
but that's okay.
Now that you're back,
well now that you've stopped your final trip,
or unless you're gonna plan a whole nother load of them
in coming months when you can, but now that your trip is over and you've written about it, would you say that your world views
have changed at all? Did they change through the time that you spent with each other and talking
to other people with whom you might not speak usually? Jordan? Well, this is a bit of a spoiler alert,
but Chris is still a Democrat and I'm still a Republican.
So, our world views, I think, have largely stayed the same.
I think what we do believe is that we've made each other better.
Chris has made me a better Republican, and hopefully I've done something for him.
But for me, Chris has helped me realize where there were holes in my world view and where
there were blind spots.
Have you found a receptive audience for what you're doing or are people
determined to be divided? We find a very receptive audience pretty much everywhere we go.
Whenever we tell people what our project is, they go, oh my god, you know, I, you know,
that sounds fascinating. I remember talking to a guy in Berkeley who I work out with, and he said,
oh, you know, like I come from a conservative family, and I spent all this time in, like,
liberal Berkeley. I can't wait for this book, but pretty much everyone we talk to is intrigued
by it.
Yeah, and I think there are certain people who do just want to pick fights and they want
to kind of use these very partisan set of talking points.
And we've never heard that in person.
And so there's something about the anonymity of doing this online and having no consequence
that brings that out in some people.
But everyone we engage with in person and talk to has had the
same reaction that Chris described. It's almost this longing for something better.
Ultimately, would you say that this series of road trips has taught you more about America
or more about your own relationship with each other?
That's a really good question. Wow. I'll be curious to hear what Jordan says. more about your own relationship with each other.
That's a really good question. Wow, I'll be curious to hear what Jordan says.
I would say more about the relationship.
I think what was most amazing is just sort of getting
to know one another and letting the relationship grow.
I mean, we went from fighting almost, you know,
like half of our road trips were like some sort of
heated conversation about an issue of the day.
We rarely fight now, we disagree, but we are able to sort of understand one another,
where we have this sort of shared language that sometimes we worry that when we open the door of
the Volvo and walk out into society that it might sort of start to dissolve, but at least the two
of us have been able to build this amazing way of getting ideas across
and sharing where we came from.
Jordan, you get the final word.
Oh, I think it pains me to say this,
but Chris nailed it, he's exactly right.
Thanks, bud.
Yeah, I think that's right.
I think we saw pieces of the country
that if we weave them all together
to us paints this beautiful picture
of who we are and who we can be together moving forward.
And it left us hopeful.
And it doesn't mean we didn't see all the dark spots
and the structural challenges we face going forward.
But we saw so many wonderful people
working so hard to make life better, that it's hard
not to walk away hopeful from these trips.
But we also know that that was a tiny glimpse of America.
And we could spend a lifetime out on the road and still not see it all.
And so in the end, what we're left with is that our own friendship was strengthened and
deepened and made us better people. And this book is in
part a reflection on how our relationship changed as much as it is. I've been using this phrase
lately and Chris laughs at me for it, but a love letter to the country. It's us saying, you know,
here's the beautiful things we saw out on the road and we hope other people can experience this too.
Jordan Blashek, Chris Ha, thank you for joining us on Let's Find Common Ground.
Well, thank you both so much. This was so much fun.
Thank you.
Yeah, this was great. It's such an interesting book.
So a hopeful ending and a fascinating story.
Jordan and Chris' new book is Union, a Democrat, a Republican, and a search for Common Ground.
There's a link to more about it on our website,
commongroundcommity.org slash podcasts.
Let's find common ground as a production
of Common Ground Committee.
Thanks for listening.
you