Pod Save America - 2020: Michael Bennet on fixing Washington and defeating Mitch McConnell
Episode Date: July 2, 2019Dan talks to Colorado Senator Michael Bennet about the threats facing our democracy, what he’ll do to fix Washington, our immigration system, and how he plans to get to universal health care. Plus, ...his take on fighting back against a partisan judiciary.
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. I'm here in Los Angeles, and I just spoke to Colorado Senator and Democratic presidential candidate Michael Bennett.
We talked about why he's running for president, his plans to reform democracy, immigration, health care, and so much more.
And here's my conversation with Michael Bennett.
Senator Bennett, welcome to Pod Save America. Thanks for having me. It's great to Positive America.
Thanks for having me. It's great to be here.
I want to start, as we often do in these interviews, with the question of why you're running for president. Most people we've had at this table, it's their children or the country or Trump's election.
You have offered in previous interviews a more unique reason for why you're
running, a certain senator from Kentucky. Well, that's right. I'm running because,
and you saw it up close in the Obama administration, these guys, McConnell and the
Freedom Caucus, have successfully immobilized our exercise in self-government. We have to
overcome that. And I think there are two things we're going to have to figure out how to do at the same time. One is going directly at them to undo
the structural challenges that are facing our democracy, Citizens United being one of those,
but political gerrymandering being another, the attack on voting rights that Shelby versus
Holder represents, and whatever it is we need to do inside the Congress to make it work better.
And at the same time, I think we have to build a broad coalition of Americans
to overcome the intransigence in D.C.
The Freedom Caucus and Mitch McConnell are not going to fix Washington.
They're not going to fix themselves.
They need to be overcome, and I think the Democratic Party can lead the way
in unifying the American people to do it. It's not going to be easy to do, and I don't think it's going to be overcome. And I think the Democratic Party can lead the way in unifying the American people to do it.
It's not going to be easy to do. And I don't think it's going to be accomplished in just one election either.
And like as like you looked at this field, including a significant percentage of your fellow senators, and you said, you know, you said to yourself, like, I should be a person who, you know, I can uniquely be the person to do this.
What is it about you or your experience that made you think that you should take this on?
I would say in my experience, I've been in the Senate for 10 years, you know, and before that I was in business.
And after that I'd run a school district that was over a billion dollars of budget.
It was a major school district in this country.
So I come with, first of all, a different set of experiences.
But my work in the Senate has both allowed me to accomplish big bipartisan things.
We didn't finish the Gang of Eight immigration bill thanks to the Hastert rule, but we were well on our way to getting it done.
We got 68 votes in the Senate.
I was part of that.
We rewrote and reformed and ended, really.
No child left behind. I was I was part of that. We rewrote and reformed and ended, really, No Child Left
Behind. I was a big part of that. The approval process at the Food and Drug Administration that
now has, this was signed by President Obama, and now more than 120 drugs have been approved as a
result. And there are other things like that. But just as important as what I've been able to do,
I've been able to learn why the place doesn't work, how it's broken, how it's corrupted,
what I've been able to do. I've been able to learn why the place doesn't work, how it's broken,
how it's corrupted, why President Obama's theory of the case, which was when he was re-elected president, that the fever would break and that somehow we would be able to get back to working
together. I think I understand why that didn't happen. I think I understand what's going to be
required to get us beyond it. Why do you think it didn't happen? I think it didn't happen because I think
that McConnell and the Freedom Caucus had an ideological commitment to destroying our exercise
in self-government that we didn't understand. And I'm not sure President Obama fully understood it.
I didn't fully understand it. It's equivalent, by the way, to our lack of comprehension that Donald Trump
could ever have been elected president. A lot of us didn't believe that was possible either,
because we didn't see the reactionary forces building in our political system,
and we didn't see the ways in which the Freedom Caucus had dismantled our ability to govern
ourselves on the one hand, but on the other hand, had successfully eluded blame for having caused all these problems to begin with. Now we have an opportunity to do something different. I believe,
and this really is why I'm running for president, I think that if we spend the next 10 years
in Washington the way we've spent the last 10 years, we're going to be the first generation,
I will be part of the first generation of Americans to leave less opportunity,
not more to the people coming after us. And I think that's entirely unacceptable. Do you, you know, McConnell is not a particularly popular politician nationally,
but gets reelected all the time. These Republicans keep getting elected. Do you believe they are
reflecting the will of their voters or are they sort of pulling the wool over their eyes?
I think they are pulling the wool over their eyes? I think they are pulling the wool
over their voters. And this is a place where I differ, you know, from other people in the field
and in the Democratic field. I represent a state that is a third Democratic, a third Republican,
and a third Independent. The vast majority of Republicans I know don't subscribe to the views
that the Freedom Caucus has. They're more conventional and more traditional Republicans.
to the views that the Freedom Caucus has. They're more conventional and more traditional Republicans.
These guys, and the manifestation of all of it really is in Donald Trump. I mean,
you've got a Republican Party that's turned everything on its head. Let me give you a good example. Climate change. I don't think we can solve climate change two years at a time. Other
people might disagree with me. I believe it's a very urgent problem and we need to act urgently, but we also need an enduring solution. We can't
do it even one administration at a time. It's going to have to last longer than that.
And when you look at the issue of climate, the Republicans had a relatively honorable tradition,
which is that Richard Nixon put the EPA in place and signed the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act.
Ronald Reagan closed the hole in the ozone layer.
Both Bushes said we had to deal with climate and led efforts at the U.N. to do that.
McCain ran on climate change.
What changed?
Citizens United changed.
And that completely changed the way the National Republican Party looks at this because they're being corrupted into inaction by
the Koch brothers. Republicans in Colorado are not being corrupted in
action by the Koch brothers. They are seeing their farms and ranches
threatened because of our inability to deal with climate change. So I think
there is a big distinction here. Obviously there are people that are
watching Fox News all day long
who now have come to believe McConnell's the greatest guy in the world, having hated him,
by the way, for years and years, as you know. But I don't think that's true of conventional
Republicans in my state. If I sort of like dig deep into what you're saying about climate change
in particular, am I right to interpret what you're saying is that your Republican colleagues in the Senate go to work every day and lie about an existential threat to the planet because they want money from the Koch brothers or they're afraid of anchoring the Koch brothers?
I think your last – I agree with everything that you said.
I think the last point is the most important one because it's not even about the Koch brothers' money.
It's about all those guys have to do not even about the Koch brothers' money. It's about
all those guys have to do is rattle the change in their pockets and threaten a primary. And
that's enough for people to have said, well, we'll move on to some other topic.
So you put forward a, very recently, an aggressive electoral reform, democracy reform plan. What's
in that plan?
So there are two parts. There's a way of thinking about it broadly, which is
taking the money out of politics. And the other part of it is getting people back into politics.
There are reforms in Washington, ending political gerrymandering, dealing with Citizens United,
banning members of Congress from becoming lobbyists after they leave Washington, D.C.
I've had that bill for 10 years. I noticed
last week AOC and Ted Cruz were both saying, now it's cool, now it's cool, and everybody loves it,
and it's all on Twitter. I don't know if that is a reflection of my failure as a politician,
but I believe in it because over half the people that leave the Congress and don't retire
become lobbyists in Washington. That sends a terrible signal, and the incentives are misaligned.
I think this wasn't included in that package, but I'm coming with it later. I also think members
of Congress shouldn't get their health care subsidized until we've got universal health care
for the American people. It would be amazing how fast that actually happened if we were having to
give it up. That's one side. The other side is very much focused on how do we improve the
opportunity for Americans to be able to vote,
you know, so it's things like same day registration, automatic registration when people
are 18. It's trying to mop up after the Supreme Court's anti-voting opinions, like the one I
mentioned earlier. And I think that's another place where the National Republican Party and their allies, I guess, around the country have worked really hard over the last 15 or 20 years to deny people the right to vote.
And we should be on the side of making it easier for people to vote.
And I think that's where the American people are, too.
But, you know, let me just I do think the basic tenet here is that I don't think Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell are for our democracy.
I don't think they're for a republic.
I think they're for themselves and the interest groups that they're serving.
And I don't think that represents what Republicans in my state believe. I think that's right in the sense that we like democracy as we know it is under a real threat here.
No question.
And that there's a whole series of things that have been happening slowly over time, but much more rapidly since Trump got here that put us on a path where we will have essentially minority rule in this country.
One of those challenges is the Electoral College.
Do you support abolishing the Electoral College? I do. I do. I think we'll be dead by the time we
do that. So it's not high on my list of stuff. Like I would rather be focused on an amendment
to overturn Citizens United. And maybe you could do a little both. But for all the reasons that
you say, yeah. Do you have higher, granting that the constitutional amendment process
is very challenging,
do you have reason,
but you picked Citizens United above Electoral College,
do you think that there's a greater chance
we could get that done sooner, like before we die?
I think there is a greater chance
we can get that done sooner
because 96% or something of Americans
say there's too much money in our
politics and something like 94% say that wealthy people have an outsized influence. So if we can't
make the politics of that work and we can't use that to overcome McConnell and these guys,
I'm not sure what we can do. I mean, climate is in the 70s, I think, compared to that. So
that would be one that not only do I think we could get it done sooner, it would have the really useful effect of giving people the opportunity, like my daughter who's here today, who are in the next generation, the opportunity to organize around politics, to get their voice in politics and to get money out of politics.
That's why I've sort of prioritized that.
Another tool to repress the voices of the majority of this country is the filibuster.
And as I understand, you've opposed getting rid of the filibuster. Is that right?
I have.
And why is that?
So I think, first of all, the history with the filibuster with the judges is instructive. It's
not dispositive, but it is instructive. And that's a history of Mitch McConnell winning
and America losing and Democrats losing.
What do you mean by that?
What I mean by that is that we entered into the sort of the preemptive retribution that led to our changing the rules first.
So those guys wouldn't allow President Obama to get any of his, not any, but a lot of his nominees through.
He wouldn't let in particular the D.C. Circuit judges through. You'll remember that. Chuck Hagel, who is the
Secretary of Defense nominee for President Obama and was a Republican senator, was filibustered by
the Senate. And a Secretary of Defense had never been filibustered in the history of America.
So we changed the rules. I didn't believe that was the right thing to do at the time. And I think the history has shown that it wasn't because Donald Trump has
been able to get more judges on the courts in the first two years than any president in American
history. I believed it was wrong for us to filibuster Gorsuch. You know, I took a lot of
beatings for that. But the reason why was that I thought we were playing right into Mitch McConnell's hands because we gave McConnell the ability to blow the nuclear option on Gorsuch instead of holding it for the next one when obviously he would have tried to do it again.
But that was when it was 5-4.
Roe versus Wade was at stake.
It seemed to me that that's when we would have wanted to organize the American people around that.
And we didn't do that.
We didn't. McConnell strategically waited and waited until the moment, you know, and we basically played into his hands over and over
again. And now he's getting exactly what he wanted. This is to say nothing of what he did to
Merrick Garland, which, you know, is a totally different thing. So the result of this is we now have reduced what was for 200 years a
bipartisan approach to advise and consent in the Senate that every time we did it,
reinforced the independence of the judiciary. We've now infected the judiciary with the
partisanship that's supposed to be hopefully temporary of the legislative branch. So I think
the history on this is bad. But beyond that, I've got another argument, which is Mitch McConnell is the majority
leader of the Senate. If we really are going to take the view that we should get rid of the
filibuster while he's the majority leader, and again, set the precedent for McConnell to change
the rules, then we're going to have to accept the Senate where he can privatize Social Security if he wants, where he can go after reproductive rights, go after voting rights, go after the environmental stuff.
All of which they would have done between George Bush, when George Bush, the son, was president.
That would all be done.
all be done. And I don't think we should be sacrificing protections for the most vulnerable people in our country because we think we can't, for some reason, make a compelling case to enough
Americans to beat these Republicans. Our job should be to win the presidency and win a majority in the
Senate and hold a majority in the House and reset the table here politically. The American people are with us, not with them.
I agree with you to a point. I agree with the risk. There's no doubt that if you get rid of
the filibuster, that there's going to be a moment in time that where Republicans have the House,
the Senate, and the presidency, and they're going to do terrible things. I see a couple of challenges here, which is there is basically zero path with current demographic trends to 60 Democratic senators
again in our lifetime. Just the way things are going with the very odd time, very briefly,
when Democrats had 60 involved having senators in the Dakotas, Arkansas, Louisiana, everywhere,
Alaska, states that we're unlikely
to have again soon. And so if you're a progressive and you're sitting there saying we have to do
something about climate change, what is the, how do we like, let's say that we have a president
Michael Bennett and Senator Schumer gets rid of the filibuster. You could pass climate change
legislation then, and we could actually do something. But if we wait, I mean, do we can try to fix that now or 10 years from now or 20 years from now, we'll still be fixing it and able to fix it.
With climate, it's different.
If we don't act now, it might not be able to be fixed.
It probably can't be fixed.
But I think climate makes the point, much less on the filibuster than more broadly on the pitch that I'm trying to make to Democrats and to the American people on what we have to do with our politics, which is,
this is much more important than just what the filibuster. In climate, as I said, you can't fix
it for two years. We have to fix it for a generation, and we have to sustain it. It doesn't
mean the policy doesn't change, or it doesn't mean that, But if if politicians in Washington that are influenced by special interests and and money can flip us back and forth on climate based on 51 votes, you tell me how long it's going to last, especially when if I if I take your point that it's hard for Democrats to get a majority.
It's hard to get a majority.
It's hard to sustain a majority.
It's hard to get to 60.
That's true.
By the way, I'm not quite as pessimistic as you are.
I think that we will in our lifetime be able to get to 60 again. Do you know of a large group of millennials moving to Wyoming anytime soon?
No, but I do remember Barack Obama standing in Brooklyn urging people to move to Wyoming.
Yes.
They didn't follow him, unfortunately.
Well, maybe they'll change their mind.
We should have sent him to Wisconsin.
But I think that would have been helpful, too.
But I think there are changes in the South.
Look, we've got in the West, Colorado has the chance to have two Democrats.
New Mexico, we've got two.
Arizona, we would never have thought we'd have two, and we might have two.
Nevada, I think there's Southern states that are going to change. So, look, I think the much more important point from my point of view is we need a Democratic Party message that's compelling to enough people that not only can we accomplish what we're trying to do, but we can sustain what we're trying to do.
And that's a really tough challenge.
I mean, that is the fundamental challenge with where we are in this democracy. It'd be a lot easier if we were an autocracy, but we're not.
I'm going to go back to the question of the filibuster for judicial nominees for a sec.
I can understand a strategic debate about whether you filibuster Gorsuch or the next person who
at that point may or may not have come down the line. I think that's a strategic conversation. But you did say that it was a mistake to give her to the
filibuster for appointments, executive and judicial. And I'm just wondering two things about that. One
is, what was the alternative in a world because it wasn't just chuck hagel at the time republicans had were saying that they were not going to give brock obama a defense secretary a epa administrator
and a labor secretary all at the same time and we had a bunch of empty seats on the circuit court
dc circuit court second most important court in the land that had been sitting open just waiting
mcconnell been holding them open forever And so the choice was have no cabinet,
not fill any of those seats. And then theoretically, if we progress down the same path where
Trump wins and we lose the Senate, that Trump is filling even more judicial seats.
Well, I don't think Trump could be filling any more judicial seats. He's filling, he's got,
I mean, they are now, because they got rid of the two-hour rule, they got rid of all, all we do is judges.
Right, what I'm saying is there will be more vacancies if Obama is not able to fill those spots at 13.
One of the great disappointments of the Obama administration was that there were more vacancies at the end of the first term than there were at the beginning.
There were more at the end of the second term than there were at the beginning, and that's a huge problem.
second term than there were at the beginning. And that's a huge problem.
I think that the short term gain of getting three people on the D.C. circuit is well,
is way overwhelmed by what has happened as a result of the Trump people. I wouldn't expect you to agree with my position, by the way. Most Democrats don't agree with my position,
but or most Democrats in Washington don't agree with my position. But I think that we set the precedent
and we set the predicate for McConnell to be able to do his dirty work, which is what he did.
You asked what the alternative was. I think the alternative was another gang of 14 to say,
we're going to head this off. We headed it off before. We headed it off even in the same term as as as as when we
confronted this. And I think there was a feeling at the time that it was just too late. We had to
give in to this. And and I wish we hadn't done it. I don't think we needed to. But you you believe
that had Democrats not done this and we get to a world in 2017 where Trump is president, McConnell's majority leader and Paul Ryan speaker that and Democrats are blocking all of Trump's judicial nominees and with filibuster and they're blocking his cabinet secretaries and they're preventing from from filling whatever whatever other jobs you think McConnell would not have triggered the new corruption? I absolutely believe he would have done it. I absolutely believe he would have done it.
There's no question in my mind, but I think, I believe we should expect more out of our elected
officials than we have been delivered on this issue, for example, in the last 10 years. When
I was in law school, and so I don't accept the degradation of our institutions in this way.
And I think it's worth fighting for
them to make sure they're not degraded. Because the people who win when it's degraded are the
Freedom Caucus. I used to walk around, I would land at Denver International Airport when we were
doing some idiotic thing in Washington. And I wish that I had a paper bag to put over my head
because I was so embarrassed. And you know, I would wonder, why would anybody want to work in
a place with a 9% approval rating? And there's an answer to that. If you think you've been sent
there to dismantle the federal government, having it be at 9% suits you just fine. If you're going
there to expand opportunity for people, to change the tax law so it actually gives the American
people a chance to get out of poverty if they're in poverty, a chance to make a paycheck pay again,
then it makes it much harder for you to do your job. And I think that's the challenge that we
confront now, because the degradation of all of this makes it harder for us to do our work,
not easier for us to do our work. And the fact that I would absolutely believe Mitch McConnell,
given the opportunity, would do the same thing, leads me to conclude that we've got a job to do to change our politics and restore these institutions. Dan, there's a reason there's
a guy in the White House who is a reality TV star. You wouldn't send a person there unless you had
such a degraded sense of what we were doing there that it seemed like a suitable thing to do. And I think we need to elevate our view of all of that.
We'll shift to a slightly happier topic. We'll come back to some unhappy ones. But one of the economy, economic inequality have been a core part of the debate in this election. You
have a plan, a piece of legislation that you helped author,
called the American Families Act, which has been described as one of the
most aggressive anti-poverty initiatives in a long time. Can you tell us what's in that plan?
I can, yeah. It's called the American Family Act. It's a dramatic expansion of the child tax credit.
It takes it up to $3,600 a year for a kid under the age of six, three thousand for a kid older than six.
And one of the really important parts of it is instead of having it be an annual payment,
it pays out every month. So that's about three hundred dollars a kid for people that have a kid
or two. That makes a really material difference. I, you know, my state has one of the greatest
economies on the planet. And if I had to summarize the last 10 years of my town halls, it would be that people come and say, because our wages haven't gone up and because expenses have gone up, we can't afford housing, health care, higher education, and early childhood education, no matter how hard we work.
don't come to my town halls because they're so poor that they're working and working and working.
It's that they, but I think about the kids that were in my old school district and their families. It's that no matter what they do, they can't get out of poverty. And I think
the Bennett-Brown bill, which is the American Family Act, combined with the Brown-Bennett bill,
which is a big increase to the earned income tax credit, combined with paid family leave,
combined with an increase in the minimum
wage could make an enormous difference in this country. Just my bill alone, the American Family
Act, the professors that have looked at it say that it would reduce childhood poverty in America
by almost 40%. It would end $2 a day poverty in America for America's poorest children and
all for the less than 3% of the cost of Medicare for all.
This is probably a dumb and naive question, but is there any world in which
there's any interest from any Republicans who'd work on some version of that plan with you?
I believe there is. It's not a dumb and naive question. There are a lot of libertarian think
tank type folks who are for this kind of thing because they see it as a way of addressing
poverty without adding a bunch of
bureaucracy to it. So I think, you know, in there's a world, Marco Rubio's worked on some of
this stuff. There are other people that have looked at it. And I think that it's the kind
of proposal that in a rational world, we'd be able to work on. Now, I'm going to go back to
the unhappy topic of Mitch McConnell in the context of this. I want to go back to that,
too, because I got one more thing I want to say. So the first night of the Democratic debates,
the one you weren't in, one of the questions that the moderators asked the candidates on stage was,
essentially, let's say you're elected president. Republicans keep the Senate. What's your plan
to deal with Mitch McConnell? So here you have an aggressive plan, which has some,
at least conservative thinker
prospects of support. How does a President Michael Bennett deal with a Senate majority leader,
Mitch McConnell? Well, first of all, he's not going to do anything without being forced to do
it. I mean, he's not interested in these issues. And I write in my book, which is called The Land
of Flickering Lights, based on some work we all did together,
that Mitch McConnell is impervious to give and take unless he's taking everything,
which he almost always is, which is true. And so you have to force him either. And I'm assuming for this, the purpose of this, that he's still there, because that's what you said. Yeah. I
don't think there's any other way to do it than to propose solutions that are broadly popular among the American people, a public option,
for example, versus Medicare for all. That's one example, but there are many others.
Something that's broadly popular, and then go out to the country and fight for it and make sure that
the country understands that McConnell is
misleading them about what he's saying, which he is. And at a certain point, you either achieve
victory that way, highly unlikely, or you change the election, the outcomes of elections so that
you can close over these guys. We live in a democracy. I mean, he he he the tyranny of the
minority will continue to persist in this country, whether you have the filibuster or not.
If we don't win elections based on based on a broad policy agenda that that the American people can get behind.
And I think that's what we're going to have to do. So when I say it's not just one election, it's you know, it's a lot.
I think if you look at 2018, right, which is one of the all time best years for Democrats
in the House, in the Senate, we lost elections with some pretty good candidates in all the sort
of states you're talking about where you would need to change electoral outcomes to have to pass
policies. Is there something we would do differently? Is there something that would
change in politics that would mean that, you know, a very moderate person like Joe Donnelly could be reelected or elected in Indiana?
You know, Claire McCaskill, et cetera.
Like that.
The challenge, I think, politically is and why.
I think those guys, this isn't the only reason they lost.
But I think they paid a very heavy price because of Kavanaugh, the Kavanaugh hearings.
I mean, and.
Is it how they voted?
hearings. I mean, and... Is it how they voted? Not how they voted, just getting caught up in national politics and looking like it's the National Democratic Party and it's not about
an opportunity agenda. It's not about trying to drive economic growth for people. You know,
it's about McConnell and these guys, the Freedom Caucus, have so successfully
delegitimized the federal government that that's a huge problem
that we got to catch up to. But I take your point. I mean, they were really good candidates
in those places, but they couldn't carry that burden. So you brought up Medicare. So you have
your own Medicare plan called Medicare X, I think, which is a public option plan.
Why substantively, and you hinted at this, politically go that route instead of either a Bernie Sanders-esque plan or even the Medicare for America plan that some of the other candidates support?
I think it's simpler than the Medicare for America plan, and I think substantively it's better than Bernie's plan. I just think
Bernie's wrong on the policy here. I think it's a lot better to give people an option to get to,
I mean, my desire here is to get to universal health care as fast as we possibly can. That's
what we need to do. There are millions of people in America who are making too much money to be
on Medicaid, but not enough money to afford private insurance. They desperately need a solution and I think finishing the job on Obamacare with the public option that
we should have passed back then is the best way of doing it because it gives folks a choice
and it also allows the public option to compete down the price of private insurance in the
country which I think will help as well. That's why I think it's better. So then in the universal health, at the point at which
the Michael Bennett Medicare X plan reaches universal coverage, that'll be a mix of private
insurance and government insurance? Like many countries. I mean, Australia in many ways is the
best example. They've got great health outcomes for the people there,
and they've got a mix of public and a mix of private.
I listened to you and Ezra Klein debate this topic on Ezra's podcast a few weeks ago.
And one of the arguments that you made on the political side about Bernie's plan is that
Republicans want to call Democrats socialists, and when we give them an opportunity to do so, it makes it harder to win elections. Is that right? Well, let me make a
better argument. I don't think, I think that it would be very hard for a Democrat to lose Colorado
next fall in the Senate race, unless they're for Medicare for all. Medicare for all and the Bernie,
the single payer version. And that's version. But that is the version.
And why is that?
Because it's so deeply unpopular.
I mean, once you understand just the fact that it takes health insurance away from 180 million people,
its support falls into the low 30s.
When you add the taxes on that, its support falls into the low 30s,
and that's the way people in Colorado see it,
and I'm sure in Arizona, and I'm sure in North Carolina.
And Bernie, at least, is honest about what's in his plan.
You know, Bernie has been very clear that what his plan does
is make private insurance illegal, except for what he
calls cosmetic insurance, which is, I guess, insurance for cosmetic surgery, plastic surgery.
That is the plan. And so people that have signed up for that plan that are in this primary have
signed up to a plan that Bernie is being honest about. I'm not sure everybody's being as honest as Bernie is being about it. And it really matters because it's the difference
between running on a plan that the majority of Americans support and running on a plan that only
33% of Americans support. A bunch of your colleagues in the Senate, also on the debate stage,
other than Bernie, signed up for that, co-sponsored that plan. I'm not going to ask you to name names and attack people, but do you think candidates,
you're one of the only candidates who spoke up against Bernie Sanders' plan directly on that
debate stage. Do you think some of these candidates are trying to have their cake and eat it too when
it comes to Medicare for All? I'm sure they are. And that's up to them. They have to run their race. My thing is we just got to beat Donald Trump at the end of the day here. And so we have to have an agenda that is going to appeal to the American people. And it's not just about disqualifying us as socialists. It's about disqualifying us as people that want to take away 180 million people's insurance. I mean, think about it.
that want to take away 180 million people's insurance.
I mean, think about it.
You remember what the pushback was when Barack Obama said,
if you like your insurance, you can keep it.
And a couple million people maybe lost their insurance because they had those plans that didn't meet the bareth.
Right? You remember that?
You remember the politics of that?
Imagine a world where our offer is,
and if you like your insurance, we're going to take it away from you.
I might be for Bernie's plan if we didn't have an existing system because there are a lot of merits to it.
But we do have an existing system, and I think this is an issue we can win on.
Think about this.
Those guys spent years and years threatening to repeal the Affordable
Care Act. And we were on defense all those years. Barack Obama always said, he said,
there's going to come a time when you're not going to be on defense anymore. And he was right. It was
when we defeated the repeal attempt in the Senate. The next week, Bernie introduced his Medicare for
All. And these folks signed up to it.
And then we're on defense on that bill instead of being on offense on universal health care, which is where we should be, I think, as a party.
Not just as a party, but for the good of the country.
So there's the question of taking health care away from people.
But then also another moment in the debate that was quite notable, I think, for people who've been involved in the politics of health care for a long time was the moderators asked, would undocumented immigrants be included under your plan? And everyone, including you, raised your hand.
So I'm curious both substantively why that's the right thing to do and whether you have political concerns about it along the lines of some of the concerns you have with some of these other healthcare plans. the reason that people put their hands up is that people are here and they're going to need
health care and the way they get their health care today is through the emergency room which
we pay for which is ridiculously expensive and as somebody who used to be a school superintendent
I know firsthand that it does no good for kids that are American citizens who have had inoculations to sit in classrooms with kids who haven't been inoculated.
That's a bad thing. And we should figure out how to deal with that.
It is true that that represents change politically. Gang of Eight immigration bill. The Republicans insisted that the undocumented people be banned
from having health care because their argument was we're never going to be able to convince our
colleagues who hate the Affordable Care Act already that that should be available. So we're
going to have to figure out how that goes. And I do think the politics of this are very complicated.
I think it would be dishonest to say otherwise.
Because, you know, as you remember, that's the reason for the famous you lie moment in Barack Obama's joint address on health care when Republican Congressman Joe Wilson yelled you lie.
It was right after Obama said that undocumented immigrants would not have health care.
But now it's 10 years later, 10 years of paying for emergency room visits, 10 years of classrooms that aren't safe, 10 years of these guys unwilling to do anything.
I think obviously the best thing to do would be to pass comprehensive immigration reform and to deal
with the refugee crisis that we have at the border. Let's get to immigration. Do you have a plan? Have you put out an immigration plan for this,
for your campaign, or do you stand by the original Gang of Eight?
I stand by the original Gang of Eight. I think that we have two distinct issues that we need
to contend with right now. One is the immigration issues, which represent the Gang of Eight. The
other is the refugee crisis at the border. I don't think we should be making immigration law based on the refugee crisis
at the border. Trump is acting like we're this pathetic, weak country. I mean, he's not acting
like we're strong, we're powerful, we're wealthy, and by the way, humane. And if we were behaving
that way, we'd be spending money that's necessary to create a set of conditions for
people at the border, sending lawyers down there, making sure people got this stuff adjudicated.
We'd be leading a conversation in the hemisphere with everybody, Canada and Latin America, to say
what is it we're going to do to all carry a share of the refugees that are coming from the
Northern Triangle countries. We certainly would need to take our share, but I think there are other countries that would want to take theirs.
And over the long haul, we've got to figure out what we can do so that we don't have failed states 1,500 miles from our border
that are perpetually sending refugees to the southern border.
On immigration, I think it would change.
There are things that have changed since 2013, but in the main, the deal that was struck there, which is a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million people that are undocumented, the most progressive Dream Act ever conceived, much less passed in the Senate, the agricultural jobs provision, and $46 billion of border security
is probably the deal that could get struck again. I mean, Trump's wall and all this stuff, I mean,
we had real 21st century security that we were going to put in place that basically
would allow us to see every single inch of the border and understand who had come in
and overstayed their visa and who needed to go back. And we have none of that because of the
tyranny of the Freedom Caucus in the House. Would you be willing to, in a world in which we were
actually negotiating on immigration now, would you be willing to fund Trump's wall or some portion
of his wall in exchange for some of the elements of the 2013 bill?
I don't think funding his wall makes any sense.
I think, look, we had in the bill that I was just talking about 350 miles of fence, which he now calls steel slats.
Yes, weird. He doesn't care whether it's concrete now or steel slats. And he goes down there and stands next to this like two or three steel slats that are left over from what the Obama folks were doing.
We could have had 350 miles of steel slats today if we had done the Gang of Eight bill.
We doubled the number of border security agents on the border.
Lindsey Graham used to say that those guys would be able to hold hands at the border.
They'd be standing so close to each other. So when Trump says that Democrats are for open borders, that's a lie. I mean, it's
demonstrably false because every single Democrat who was in the Senate when that bill was on the
floor voted for it, which is more than I can say for the Republicans. Well, I think, yes, it is a lie, as most things Trump says is. He has found a new context for that lie after the debate on Thursday night when they asked, once again, the 10 candidates on stage, yourself included, which of you would support changing, eliminating the part of the law that's that criminal that makes crossing the border illegally a misdemeanor crime.
So the proposal is, would you turn it into a civil offense?
Nearly every person on that stage, including all the people at the top of the polls, raised their hands.
You did not. Why?
I did not because I know that Barack Obama was able to enforce that law without separating children from their parents at the border
and without giving the American people the sense that we believed in having open borders.
And I think we can do that again.
Look, Trump has every reason to want to conflate the refugee crisis on the border with our immigration issues.
And we shouldn't fall into that trap, in my view.
Were you surprised to see so many people raise their hand?
Yeah, I was actually. I was.
Where do you rank it on your list of political concerns?
High. Very high.
Look, every day they try to disqualify us.
And as you were saying earlier, you know, that the conversation I had with Ezra,
he's always going to do it and they're always going to do it.
That's true. I accept that point. That's not the point I'm trying to make.
The point I'm trying to make is that Franklin Roosevelt never called himself a socialist.
He was called a socialist over and over again, but what he was for was American democracy.
What he was was a Democrat. What he wanted was the survival of this republic,
was was a Democrat. What he wanted was the survival of this republic. And what he expressed was the need for us to have what he called four new freedoms or the four freedoms. That's what
he was doing. The conditions haven't changed. The political terrain is the same. I think we just
need to be as smart as he is. And we need to be not less strategic than than mcconnell is and and trump's
no genius in any of this but he does have a preternatural sense of how to disqualify people
based on you know a grain of truth or a shred of truth and we shouldn't give it to him the
trump is going to want to make immigration the subject of this election, right?
No question.
It always is.
That's how he thinks he won in 2016.
It's what he credits for keeping the Senate in 2018.
The challenge is comprehensive immigration reform is a good issue for Democrats.
There is a majority of support, including a lot of, even a good chunk of Trump's voters
who support a version of comprehensive immigration reform that you
support and most Democrats support. The problem often is, is that we either end up on the defensive
about it, or we're talking about immigration reform and not talking about healthcare,
the economy, the things that matter to a lot of other voters. If you were the nominee,
how do you navigate that terrain? I don't think I have,
I don't, there's not a defensive bone in my body on immigration. My landing place is the work I did
in the 2013 Gang of Eight. And I can defend that work in any county in this country, I think,
Republican or Democratic. People may disagree with it. They may not think it was a good idea,
but I'm in no sense worried about being disqualified by it. And
actually, I think, as you said, most people support it. If you look at the polling,
the elements of the Gang of Eight poll much higher than anything else, including Trump's wall.
And do you, what do you think, so that bill passed 68 votes including trump's golfing buddy lindsey graham right
presidential candidate marco rubio who has no memory of having worked on that bill
um but just like the context of the political context it's totally different but yeah i was
but the political context of that bill i think for people who are younger or may not have been
following politics closely then is the republicans believe the only way they would ever win the white house again after brock obama won in 2012 was to deal
with the immigration issue absolutely and then you flash forward to four years later and donald
trump or donald trump's president states having run with the most right-wing inflammatory immigration
agenda in history what did the politics change? Did we misread the
politics? We misread the politics. In what way? Here's what we did. So Reince Priebus, who was the
Republican chair, you'll remember, did the autopsy in which he said, maybe if we weren't so negative
about gay people, maybe if we didn't hate Latino people, we would do better in
the polls and we wouldn't lose to the likes of Barack Obama. Remember that? Yep. And then what
happened was Ted Cruz shut the government down in 20, whatever that was, when was that? 2013.
2013. 2013. Ted Cruz shut the government down and his numbers went up and the Republican Party's numbers went down. And the
Freedom Caucus went to Boehner and they said, it turns out we don't need a big tent party. It turns
out we don't need to do rational things. We don't need to legislate. All we have to do is break the
government and we're going to win. And that is their operating theory. And that has been the
theory since then. I also think, and I could, you know,
I don't have a monopoly on wisdom. I certainly don't. I don't believe there's this massive,
that there was this massive latent anti-immigrant sentiment in America when Donald Trump rode his
escalator down from Trump Tower and called Mexicans rapists. I think it's been created by Trump,
from Trump Tower and called Mexicans rapists. I think it's been created by Trump, Fox News, and by, to their everlasting shame,
the Republican National Committees who have been running ads about MS-13 all over America.
John Tester, who barely won in Montana, tells a story this time about being in a tractor on his farm in Big Sandy, Montana, and he's listening to the radio
and the Trumps rolled into town to support his opponent and to attack John. And John's just
sitting there completely mystified because he's talking about MS, is it 13? MS-13. Mystified by
that because there hasn't been an MS-13 person within 1,000 miles of Big Sandy, Montana. Now,
this is a fact of our political system that we did not have to deal with when we wrote the Gang of
Eight bill, and we are going to have to deal with going forward. And I don't think there's any way
to deal with it other than by going straight at these guys. We've got to go straight at the Fox
guys. We've got to go straight at these Republicans and stand for what the American people want, which is a rational immigration
system that supports the rule of law and reflects our history as a nation of immigrants.
Do you think the party has moved too far left to win states in the middle of the country?
I don't think the party has. I think that when I say the party, I mean our Democratic base. When I'm in Iowa and New Hampshire and South
Carolina, they're the same as the folks in Colorado. You know, they want universal health
care. They don't want to take it away from 180 million people to get there. They want us to act
urgently on climate change, you know, in a way that really is durable.
They want economic opportunity for everybody. That's what they want. I think there is a social
media component here to the Democratic Party that some people have called the Twitter base of the
Democratic Party that has moved way to the left. And you couldn't elect the Twitter base in
Colorado. You couldn't elect them in Arizona.
And my argument is I'm fine with all that.
I mean, people can do what they want to do.
But to go back to the sort of central thesis of this whole discussion, it really would be better if we had a Democratic majority in the Senate.
And to get a Democratic majority in the Senate, we need to run on an agenda that is appealing to people in the states that you were talking about that can allow us to win elections at a moment where you've got
somebody as corrupt, as demonstrably incapable of being president of the United States,
who doesn't believe in the rule of law, doesn't believe in freedom of the press,
doesn't believe in the impending judiciary, doesn't believe in the most profound traditions
of this country. That's a guy who's a
climate denier on top of all of it. That's somebody who we should be able to beat. And I think we can
beat them if we've got an agenda that's unifying for the American people. And to me, to go back to
your earlier point, that actually is not about who's progressive and who's a moderate. It's about who's got an agenda that's going to appeal.
The running for president is, as you're discovering, I'm sure every day, a somewhat
absurd process that where the quote unquote Twitter base has a lot of influence, where
it's really about finding ways to get known and noticed in a very in a strange media environment where being viral is helpful and all of that.
And rewards a lot of things that are different from the things that make one a successful legislator or a successful governor or whatever else.
Now, your time in the Senate, you you've been there 10 years now.
the senate you you've been there 10 years now you got there you have never been someone who in my perspective has tried to make a huge name for yourself you you know you really i was surprised
to even find out you were thinking of running for president because it you kind of you can kind of
smell the people who want hopeless well no it's not hopeless it's that you like there i often
notice that there are two kinds of senators the those who arrive is thinking of the senate as a way station to a white house
run and it's pretty clear who those people are you see them on cable news all the time they're
on the sunday show circuit they do aggressive things and they're people who are like i'm going
to be a senator i'm going to do the work of being a senator for as long as the people in my state
will have me i always put you in the latter category. And I think the things that made you
a very successful senator, I'm just curious how those things have translated to the presidential
race for yourself. Well, it's a great question. So first of all, I didn't spend my whole life
thinking I was going to run for president. Or even Senate, right? Yeah, or even Senate. I mean,
yeah, it hurt my feelings. But when I was appointed to begin with, the Republican chairman
in Colorado called me an accidental senator.
But it was true.
It was true.
I had been in business and I had been a school superintendent.
By the way, a job that I really loved.
And I thought my job when I got to the Senate was to represent a state that was a third, a third, a third Republican, Democrat, and independent.
And I thought my job
was to support what you guys were trying to do. And my job was to do my part to show the American
people that our system wasn't broken, that it could still work. And I think I held that end
of the bargain the whole time that I've been in the Senate. It is broken, and it doesn't work.
time that I've been in the Senate. It is broken and it doesn't work. And we can't spend another 10 years like we did the last 10 years and expect to do our job as Americans. I believe that. And
that's why I'm running for president. And if I lose, I'll go back and run for the Senate again.
And as I hope that I'll get reelected and go on to play a constructive role for the country. But this is a moment in our
country's history when we need all of us to step up here. The carelessness with which we treated
our democracy allowed us to elect Donald Trump president of the United States is something we
can never repeat again. And the fact that he got elected once means he can get elected again if we're not careful.
And we need to be, the worst thing we could possibly do is let this guy get elected again.
But on the back end of beating him, we also have to figure out a way to govern the country again.
I know the people here are going to shoot me that came with me on the judges, but I have to say one
more thing about it, which is it's not okay with me that I grew up in a country where the advice and consent was done
by senators in a bipartisan way, establishing the independent judiciary. And now my kid has to endure
a judiciary that's just partisan like the rest of our government because a bunch of politicians in washington couldn't figure out how to do something else it's not it's not our democracy it's their
democracy we we've got to find a way to preserve it i'm glad you brought the judges back up because
what do you what like what changed the like what what no what changed that what changed the nature of the process?
What changed this from a putatively independent judiciary to a very partisan judiciary?
Everybody can pick their beginning of this one.
I mean, you can say that it was, you know, some people say it was Robert Bork.
Some people say it was when Democrats started filibustering circuit court judges.
Some people say it was when Republicans were appointing people that were so odious that they had to be filibustered by Democrats.
My point is, so anybody can point the blame in
whatever direction they want. My point is that in the end, the people that got sacrificed are the
American people who deserve an independent judiciary, who are the same people who are
being sacrificed every single day because this country uniquely can't seem to address our
healthcare challenges, can't seem to address our economic challenges, can't seem to address our health care challenges, can't seem to address our economic
challenges, can't seem to address climate change. And that's why I think we need to do better. And
I don't accept the idea that we're on this one-way ratchet down, that we have to accept
the Freedom Caucus's destruction of our governing, now I'm talking much beyond the judges,
of our governing institutions or our governing agenda, because to go back to your point on climate, to the discussion on climate, I don't see how a democracy deals with climate under those circumstances.
If we are if we if we have to accept a world where every two years or four years, the work that's done on climate is torn out by the other party, we will never be able to address climate in a meaningful way. But isn't the fear that the alternative is we never start the work that's done on climate is torn out by the other party, we will never be able to address climate in a meaningful way.
But isn't the fear that the alternative is we never start the work?
But that's the alternative we're living right now.
And we're living that alternative because we frickin' elected a climate denier
president of the United States.
That should never have happened.
But that's the problem, though, with that is any person,
the 16 Republicans ran for president in 2016.
Yes, we got probably the worst one.
But if any 16 had won, they would have run the exact same play.
They were all climate deniers.
They would have done the exact same thing that Trump is doing.
Like the people embedded in the administration who are denying climate science.
I mean, like you gave Bush some credit, but Bush refused to put us, George W. Bush, put us back in the Kyoto Treaty.
He, climate science was a huge problem in his administration.
Like this is like climate change is a problem that whether we get rid of Trump or not is going to continue to be a problem.
And so for a lot of Democrats, the view is like, yes, it would be terrible if we pass a climate bill and then they undid it two years later.
But we also know from the Affordable Care Act that it's harder to undo something than to just keep us at the status quo of nothing.
Yeah. I think climate is so much more urgent and so much more grave than that,
that accepting that half a loaf is the same thing as not getting anything done. That's my view.
Yeah. I just can't see what the path is to something different in the short term.
How can... Look, the majority of people in this country believe that climate change is real
and we should be doing something about it and that it's an urgent problem.
They may have some disagreements about how to deal with it.
I think we lost the climate argument because we lost the jobs argument.
That's what I believe.
I think we lost the economic argument to Donald Trump preposterously, ridiculously. We didn't make an affirmative argument on the economy in 2016,
and we didn't make an argument on the economy in the context of climate change. If you're down in
Miami, Florida, as we were last week for the debates down there, it's impossible to argue
that not contending with climate is better for the, that contending with climate is not better for the economy than not contending with climate.
It's impossible to make that argument in Colorado.
It's impossible to make that argument in California.
We did not make that argument in 2016.
Donald Trump won a cartoon argument on the economy.
And if we are going to continue to lose
to that argument, then I accept that we're doomed. But I think we can do better than that. I really
do. I mean, I think we have to. Let's go back to the judges one more time and then I'll let you go
because you brought it back up. You were free. I guess one of the the i just i've really struggled to see what the pat like is there a
reform that you would propose to the process i think the judges were done i think the next
generation is going to inherit our stupidity and our inability to lead and and and do what needed
to be done i you know the answer to the, what we've done with all these vacancies,
flip side of that is Betsy DeVos wouldn't be secretary of education and Pruitt wouldn't have
been secretary of whatever it is he was secretary of before they ran him out of town. And we
wouldn't be accepting this degraded view of what it all should look like. I don't think it can be
fixed. I mean, if you were in a perfect world, what you would say is, look, we were insane for a moment. We had this moment of madness. We were overcome by the Koch brothers,
and we were overcome by cable TV hosts, and we were overcome by social media, and we abandoned
our best traditions as a result. So here's what we're going to do. We're going to let everybody
loot the same number of district court judges and circuit court judges and Supreme Court justices.
And when we got parity on each of those, we'll go back to the old rules where we actually had a
reason to be bipartisan. Today, these judges that are going on these courts, I mean, my God,
they are people who have written racist briefs. And in the old days, Republican senators, not the old days,
10 years ago, five years ago, Republican senators would have said, I'm not voting for that person.
You're not going to be able to get the Democrats on. Today, it's become this badge of honor. Do
you support Donald Trump or not? You have no excuse for not voting for these people. And that
means it's a whole different quality of person that's
populating these seats. And I don't, I don't, I'm sorry, we got stuck on the judges because I,
my, my, my instructions are never to talk about the judges, but, but it goes for the institutions
generally. You know, if, if, if, if your view is that it doesn't matter whether we, I'm not saying
your view, Dan Pfeiffer, I'm just saying if one's view is that it doesn't matter whether we, I'm not saying your view, Dan Pfeiffer, I'm just saying if one's
view is that it doesn't matter whether we perpetuate these instruments of self-government,
which is, I think, the Freedom Caucus's view and Trump's view, then none of this matters. You know,
the quicker you get to an autocracy, the better off you are. From our point of view,
an autocracy, the better off you are. From our point of view, inheriting a legacy about making this country more democratic, more fair, and more free, and wanting to do that again for the next
generation, I think that's too much sacrifice that we're asking for the country. And it's not
expecting enough leadership from our elected officials and, frankly, from all of us. There's a lot we can do here to win.
And I guess that's my argument is let's go out and win.
Gee, I will let you go right after this.
That's all right.
I have nowhere to go.
I've got to, at some point, an airplane to go.
I have to get home because I have a one-year-old daughter
who will be in her 30s when Brett Kavanaugh is Ruth Bader Ginsburg's age,
which is why I find this so concerning.
That's my point. That's the point.
Do you, you know, within the context of the Republicans, the Republicans in the Senate, right?
Do you, are there a group of people who you think would be willing to work?
You know, like, let's say Mitch McConnell loses in 2020 or a Democrat president, yourself, wins.
Are there some Republicans who are sort of chafing under this within the Senate who might be part of some sort of either bipartisan Senate reform or something that would like, is there a path other than when I got there in 2010 because that was the beginning of the Tea Party assault that basically started with Mike Lee beating Bob Bennett on a Saturday morning in Utah, you know, that then led to Rand Paul, that then led to everything else, the cascading thing that has ended up with Bob Corker going away and what's-her-name coming back in.
I mean, you know, the trade has always been more toward the Tea Party side than not in the last 10 years.
Still, there are some people, though, that I think would be willing to try to work,
particularly if they felt that they were imperiled politically if they didn't.
to try to work, particularly if they felt that they were imperiled politically if they didn't.
And I am not going into this deal believing that we can trust that that will happen any more than I signed on to the Iran deal because I thought we could trust what Iran
was going to do. We don't know. We don't have any idea. The thing we can do is control what
we can control. control what we can
control. And what we control is what our agenda looks like, what our message looks like. We can
make an effort to really talk to America broadly. And I think we would find that if we did that,
we're running against a candidate who's actually really, really weak because he's so far outside of the ideological mainstream of America that I think he can be beaten.
We will end it on that hopeful note.
Let's do that.
All right.
Senator Michael Bennett, thanks for joining us here on Pod Save America.
Thanks for having me.
I really appreciate it. Thank you. Bye.