Pod Save America - "99 days to the election (with Mehdi Hasan)."
Episode Date: July 27, 2020The Intercept’s Mehdi Hasan joins to discuss the state of the presidential campaign now that we’re less than 100 days out, how COVID reached deep into the White House and forced major changes to T...rump’s campaign, the latest with COVID relief in Congress, how Trump’s message went from calling Biden soft on China to member of Antifa, and how the media can learn from the mistakes of 2016. Then Jon F. interviews Mother Jones' Ari Berman about voting during the pandemic.Make sure you're registered, request an absentee ballot, and get involved at votesaveamerica.com/everylastvote.
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Welcome back to Pod Save America. I'm Tommy Vitor. It has been a very exciting week for us here at
Crooked Media. John and Emily Favreau welcomed a new baby boy, Charlie Favreau, into the world,
and we are just overjoyed for them. Hannah and I quickly stopped by their place when they got home
from the hospital. We dropped off Leo, their pup. We got to see Charlie from an appropriately
distanced vantage point. And so I can confirm the early news reports from over the weekend that Charlie is, in fact, adorable.
And we can't wait to fill his sweet little brain with our liberal propaganda.
But for the for the next week or so, John is going to take a little bit of time off to change diapers and hang with Charlie instead of hate reading Twitter.
So he is not on the pod today.
And now, if you're friends with the Favreau family,
really any of them, you know that they don't just arrive on time. They get there early.
Charlie is no exception. He arrived a couple of weeks before his due date, which is wonderful
because he is happy and healthy and a perfect baby boy. And who does not want that in your life
as soon as possible. But it also means that Love It is out this week for a long planned bit
of rest to recharge. So I am your sole Monday pod representative today. Now, don't you even
consider skipping this episode. We have less than 100 days until the election. We got to stay
focused. There's a lot of important stuff going on right now. And we are thrilled to have an
incredible guest co-host who you will love. His name is
Mehdi Hassan. Mehdi is a columnist for The Intercept. He's the host of the Deconstructed
podcast and the presenter on the Al Jazeera English shows Head to Head and Upfront.
I guarantee you that you have seen clips of his interviews before. He is known for dogged,
unrelenting questioning to the point where you often wonder, like, why on earth did this person
agree to do
METI's show? Did they not Google him first? But frankly, that's what I love about METI. It doesn't
matter if we're talking about Trump or Obama or the Democratic Party. He pulls no punches. He
suffers no fools. And I promise you will love hearing from him. So here's what we're going to
cover today. We're going to talk about the state of the race now that we have less than 100 days
to go. We're going to talk about how COVID has reached deep into the White House and finally forced Trump to make major changes to his campaign.
We'll get into the latest coronavirus relief negotiations in Congress, how Trump went from
calling Joe Biden soft on China as his strategy to like the mayor of Antifa, the law and order
strategy and the politics of fascism that seems to be emerging, and some great advice from The
Washington Post and from Mehdi about how we can learn from the mistakes in coverage of 2016 and
get it right in 2020. Later in the pod, you'll hear an interview that Jon Favreau recorded with
Mother Jones's Ari Berman about voting during the pandemic now that we are so close to election day.
Two quick things before we get to the news. First, don't miss Love It or Leave It this week.
Love It talked to Eric Holthaus
about the best case climate scenario
and Guy Branum came on for the return of OK Stop,
so you know that will be funny.
And then yesterday we kicked off
our Every Last Vote week of action
to fight back and make sure that every last vote is counted.
Over this week, we're gonna be asking you guys
to volunteer, to donate where you can,
and then tomorrow specifically to request your vote by mail ballot.
Tomorrow is National Vote by Mail Day.
I didn't get you anything either.
Don't worry about it.
But if you head to votesaveamerica.com slash everylastvote, you can request your ballot
now and get it done early.
While you're there, you can sign up to text young voters in swing states.
You can tell them to do the same. This election is going to come down to every last vote, and we cannot afford
to lose a single one. We got to work hard. Go to votesaveamerica.com slash every last vote to find
out all the ways you can help and thank you in advance for everything you're doing. Okay, let's get to the news with Mehdi.
Mehdi Hassan, so great to have you in the show. Great to see you from a Zoom distance.
Safely, safely. Zoom social distancing.
Okay, my friend, we have 100 days until the election. And I bet me saying that out loud made a bunch of people want to throw up. But to them, I say, think back a thousand years ago to Trump's inauguration and how
you would have felt that moment to be just a few months away from sending this guy packing.
So this is exciting stuff.
It's a time for all of us to get to work.
So, Mitty, I thought we could start with just a quick snapshot of the state of the race.
So the 538 polling average has Biden up eight points.
That's obviously quite good.
Trump's approval rating is about 40 percent approved, 56% disapproved.
That is quite bad.
Biden's numbers in key swing states are strong too.
Fox News, I love that, have Biden up in polls.
Nine points.
Yeah, Trump's favorite poll is Biden up nine points in Michigan, 13 points in Minnesota,
11 in Pennsylvania.
Other polls have Biden winning in Florida by as much as 13 and BC has Minnesota, 11 in Pennsylvania. Other polls have Biden winning
in Florida by as much as 13, NBC has him up five in Arizona. So look, that's obviously good,
but that's a snapshot in time. The question is why? Why is Biden up? What's driving these numbers?
And the polling experts say the answer is COVID. That Fox News poll we mentioned,
29% of respondents said COVID is the most important
issue facing the country. 15% said the economy. That's not normal, right? Usually the economy
drives these elections. And Harry Enten from CNN argues that in these rare instances when a
non-economic issue is driving the campaign, usually the candidate who's best seen is able to handle
that problem wins. So my question is, Betty, do you agree with that? Is this a COVID election
and the rest is noise? I mean, it's partly a COVID election. It would be mad to say otherwise.
I mean, I do push back, and I know you have on the show before as well, against this idea of it's
COVID versus the economy, even in polling terms. For me, the economy is COVID. COVID is the
economy. There is no growth. There is no employment issues without dealing with the coronavirus.
So I always find
this kind of weird dichotomy that people are trying to present this stark choice. Do you think
the COVID-19 is important or do you think the economy is important? Well, I want 40 million
Americans or whatever it is to get their jobs back, which means you have to tackle the pandemic. So I
don't buy for a start the way it's framed by pollsters or by commentators. But clearly COVID
is at the front of people's minds, especially now this summer with it kind of raging back
in some of these Sunbelt states, et cetera.
But even without COVID, let's be clear,
Donald Trump is a historically unpopular president.
Whichever Democrat was going to take him on this year,
even if it wasn't Joe Biden, even if there was no pandemic,
would have been in a very good position to take him down.
And that's just a reality.
I think what we did on the left is we kind of overcompensated.
We didn't see him coming in 2016.
Most of us, not all of us,
there were the Keith Ellisons
and Michael Moores
who said he could win.
But many of us, myself included,
thought he wouldn't win.
He couldn't win.
And I think there was a kind of PTSD
off the back of that.
And we overcompensated.
We went from saying
he's a joke who can't win
to saying he can't be beaten.
Even now, friends of mine,
apolitical friends of mine, people who are not involved in journalism, media, politics, just
average Joe, you talk to them about elections, they're like, Trump's won. He's going to get
re-elected, especially in minority communities, in Muslim circles, brown circles that I've been.
There's a real defeatism, like, oh, he's going to win again. And I kind of say, that's not true.
Actually, the evidence suggests he's more likely to lose than win. That doesn't mean he can't win.
Of course he can win.
Anything's possible.
And the Republicans are the masters of cheating.
But when you look at polling, he's historically unpopular.
I think only Harry Truman comes even close to him in terms of unpopularity as a sitting
president going for re-election.
And he was still 10 points more popular than Trump and managed to get re-elected in 1948.
I think, you know, he's had a consistent, what,
what's his 40%, 38%, 42%? Yeah, it's about a ceiling.
Unless you're Rasmussen, he can't break 40 on any particular given day. So, you know,
that's unheard of as well for most presidents. He looks in a very weak position. Why? Partly
coronavirus, partly his own historic unpopularity and incompetence Partly Joe Biden. I was a critic of Joe Biden.
I didn't want him to be the Democratic presidential nominee.
But two things happened with Joe Biden that's helped.
Number one, he does get to kind of not have to have a high profile and do rallies and speak a lot.
Because the more Joe Biden speaks, the more mistakes he makes.
So it's great that he isn't actually doing that much.
And Trump is kind of doing all the speaking and shooting himself in the foot.
That's a good thing.
That it's not a conventional campaign. I think that's definitely good for Joe Biden. And the second issue with Biden is even those of us who were opposed to Biden always
knew that he had a huge advantage, one that we don't like, but it's just the world we live in,
which is he's an old white guy. And an old white guy has automatic advantages in a race against
Donald Trump and the Republican Party. Because the Republican Party playbook, Tommy, as we know, as you and I have discussed on our shows many a time,
is racism, sexism. Black guy, racism. Woman, sexism. What do you do when it's not a black
guy or a woman? They have nothing left in their playbook. They are turning the pages. They don't
know where to go. They're, oh, he's a Marxist. That doesn't work. Nobody believes Joe Biden is
a Marxist. So, you know, they really, oh, he's got dementia. Well, who else has dementia? You know, person, woman, man, camera,
TV. See, I can be president. So that's, their playbook doesn't work. And I think that's helped
Biden hugely. I think the Republicans are the ones who are on the defensive. They're the ones
flailing right now with no real strategy come November and a completely insane person in the
White House making everything worse for them. Yeah, look, I do worry. If COVID hadn't happened with a strong
economy, I think this would have been a tough race. But I have the PTSD you're talking about.
And one way I'm trying to work around it is to look at governors, right? So states like Arizona,
Texas, Florida that you mentioned, they didn't take COVID seriously. They're really struggling
now. Their governors, Doug Ducey, Greg Abbott, Ron DeSantis, their approval ratings have just tanked. And meanwhile,
Roy Cooper of North Carolina, who took a ton of heat from Trump because he wouldn't let the
Republican convention happen in Charlotte with no social distancing, is now up 20 points in his
campaign as approval. Is it like 59%? Even Gavin Newsom, Democrat in California,
and California is one of those states, is one of the few non-Republican-led states that's doing really, really, really badly
right now. Even his poll ratings haven't tanked like Ron DeSantis has, because while California
is doing badly, it's clear that the governor is not in la-la land, is not denying it,
is not denying reality. I think even Republicans in Florida have woken up to the fact that they
have a governor who is denying reality, and you see that in the polling. His approval ratings
are cratering. Even Republicans in Florida in big
numbers are starting to support things like a mask mandate. And I think that's really an
interesting development. Yeah, look, I share your frustration with this idiotic political debate
about the economy or COVID. It's both. And that's the only way we're going to save lives. Now, look,
I think, you know, for listeners who heard our bullishness on this wind up, right, like a lot
can happen between now and Election Day.
We know that.
Some history, some context that will humble me.
Like at this point in 2016, WikiLeaks had dumped the Podesta emails.
The Comey letter was months away.
At this point in 2008, Lehman Brothers was about a month and a half away from bankruptcy.
In 1998 at this time, Dukakis was winning by double digits.
The infamous tank photo had not yet happened.
So lots of time, right? And we live in a crazier time than any of those election years, where the news agenda changes by the hour, let alone the day. So I'm not complacent at all.
Anything could happen in the next 99, 98 days, definitely. And if you had told me six months ago,
the biggest story of the year would be a pandemic, we wouldn't have known that. There was no
coronavirus in January, mid-January, late January. If you had told me six months ago the biggest story of the year would be a pandemic, we wouldn't have known that. There was no coronavirus in January, mid-January, late January.
If you had told me during the coronavirus height in March that actually coronavirus would be taken over in the news agenda by anti-racism protests.
George Floyd, we didn't see that coming either.
So anything could happen.
What I worry most about, Tommy, and I know you'll share my worry here, is a foreign war.
Could the October surprise be something to do with Iran?
We're not following the Iranian crisis,
which is ongoing in the back of our,
you know, the stuff going on there in terms of a flashpoint.
So anything could happen, unfortunately.
All I'm saying is, as of today,
Joe Biden's in a very strong position.
If the election were held today,
it would be a landslide victory.
And he's not Hillary Clinton, rightly or wrongly.
Hillary Clinton faced unfair misogyny, but the reality is Biden is more liked than Hillary. And he's
seen as more trustworthy. I'm not saying that's right or wrong, but he's seen as more trustworthy
than Hillary. And that's, you know, that wasn't the case in the summer of 2016.
I share your anxiety about Iran. Some might argue we are, or someone is engaged in a low-wage war
with Iran because things keep exploding every couple of days.
But, you know, that's a bigger topic. But one big thing ahead of us, Mehdi, is the VP selection.
You've been making the case that the state of the race now, Biden's strength means he should pick Elizabeth Warren.
Why is that? Like, what's the pitch for Warren, do you think, right now?
I think the pitch for Warren is very straightforward. It's three very simple points.
Number one, she is best prepared
to be president on day one. Biden says that's his number one criterion. I agree with him. That
should be the number one criterion. When you pick a VP who's a heartbeat away from the presidency
and the president himself may have heart issues, head issues, all sorts of issues at some point,
yes, you want someone who can take over a moment's notice and can do the job. That person
is undoubtedly Elizabeth Warren. You know, Biden's people are talking about, you know, Rooseveltian rhetoric. He's going to be another FDR. Yeah,
I believe that when I see it. But there is a person who can turn Rooseveltian rhetoric into
reality. That's Elizabeth Warren. So that person should be there in the White House at the side of
Biden, ready to take over at a moment's notice, execute a clear vision. Number two, she would
boost him in the polls. You want to go back to what we were just talking about. If you are still
worried about Biden in some of those swing states,
if you look at the polling done by YouGov for Data for Progress,
makes it very clear that amongst persuadable voters
who still haven't made up their minds on Biden in battleground states,
Warren is the candidate that would help them make up their mind.
Warren would do most to get them on board a Biden nomination.
That's what the polling shows more than any other candidate.
And finally, yes, there's this pressure for a person of color to be on the ticket. I get that. I'm a person of
color. I hate all white tickets. Kamala Harris amongst the black women being considered would
probably be the best bet if you were going down that road. But on the other hand, I believe that
Elizabeth Warren would be best in terms of policies for minority communities. And black
voters say they prefer Warren to any other candidate, including Kamala Harris.
That's what the polling shows.
Don't shoot the messenger.
Those are good.
Those are good, relevant data points.
Two thoughts in response.
One, I have no idea who Biden's going to pick,
but I do think that the worst things
are going to get for Trump,
the more likely it will be that he jettisons Mike Pence
to try to shake things up
and swap out someone new on the ticket.
So let's get that rumor going.
Let's get that one over to Pence's house. Two, I thought it was interesting to wake
up this morning and see a report in Politico about Kamala Harris and her VP prospects who
you just mentioned. And the gist is that many in Biden's camp think that on paper,
she's the most qualified, she's the obvious choice. But some, specifically Senator Chris Dodd,
former Connecticut senator who's on the VP search committee. He questions
her loyalty to Biden. This all dates back to that first debate in 2019 when Kamala Harris
hammered Biden on the issue of busing and school integration. And it was a tough night.
The quotes on that piece are awful about, you know, she should be more apologetic. She should
be more contrite type language from Chris Dodd. It's not going to help Biden at all. This idea, you know, Biden's already associated with our old white boys club. And,
you know, I have a lot of criticism of Kamala Harris. I get attacked by the K-Hive all the time
for daring to bring up her prosecutorial record in California, which I think is bad and I think
will hurt her in the long term. But, you know, if you want to reject Kamala Harris, reject her on
the substance. Don't reject her on bullshit grounds like this.
And don't let Chris Dodd be the one who rejects Kamala Harris, especially in this moment of time.
Chris Dodd, who's got all sorts of issues, Me Too issues that we probably don't have time to get into.
You know, he's all sorts of Wall Street issues that we don't have time to get into.
He's the last person who should be telling Joe Biden who should be the vice presidential candidate.
But unfortunately, given Biden's kind of the people around him in his own sensibilities, that is what it's going to come down to. It's not going to come down to
policy. He said it himself, Biden. He said, you know, someone he gels with. You worked for Obama.
Biden said, you know, had this great relationship with Barack. He wants that chemistry again that
he believes he had with Barack Obama, which again causes problems for people like Elizabeth Warren,
who has a long history of clashing with Biden, which is why if I was a betting man, I would say
he probably won't pick Elizabeth Warren, sadly, because he's clashed with her far too many times. Although apparently
the reporting suggests that him and Warren are now speaking once every seven to 10 days,
and she raised more money for him than any other person other than Barack Obama. So maybe that
will influence him. Fingers crossed that that will influence him. But yeah, it's between Warren
and Kamala Harris. Those are the two most qualified and obvious candidates. I think if
he went anywhere else, that would be weird.
And I'd love to see the reasoning for it.
Yeah, time will tell.
And yeah, I too found it interesting to hear that Warren and Biden are talking that often.
I also, you know, that political story I mentioned about Kamala Harris, I roll my eyes at anything
that quotes a whole bunch of donors.
That's a good rule of thumb in politics.
But one last quick thing on the VP thing.
We obsess over the role of a vice presidential candidate
in an election.
All the data shows the vice presidential picks
don't really influence elections.
What we should more be worried about is
Joe Biden is going to be
almost certainly a one-term president.
You know, God bless his health.
He lasts a full four years.
Maybe he doesn't.
He's old.
He's got health issues.
Anyone like that,
and I would say this if Bernie Sanders was a candidate too,
you need to have a vice president
who's ready to step into the breach and take over.
So you're really not just picking a VP this time. You are picking a president in waiting. And
therefore there should be much more consideration given to the policy record, the substance,
the experience, not just how this will play in November.
Mehdi, how dare you bring substance into this conversation? I'm offended by that. No,
I totally agree with you. The stakes are higher than ever in a lot of ways because of that, the role that person will fill. Okay,
so this is the coronavirus election. Let's talk about it for a minute. As of this morning,
we are just under 4.3 million confirmed cases in the U.S., nearly 150,000 deaths.
Today, we learned that Robert O'Brien, Trump's national security advisor, has the coronavirus.
So, Mehdi, let's linger on this news for a minute. According to
CNN, NSC staffers, people who work for O'Brien, learned that he has COVID from news reports.
O'Brien had just gotten back from meetings in Europe with the French, British, and German
officials. So, good of him to spread this thing around there. The White House is trying to claim
that there's no risk to the president or VP. I don't believe them for a second. Mehdi, Trump's
valet got it.
His son's girlfriend got it. Secret service agents got it. Staffers got it. Now his national
security advisor. How the hell has Trump avoided getting this thing? I don't get it.
It is a great question. It's a question everyone is asking. Everyone, even apolitical people,
the first question, how has he dodged it? But remember when Bolsonaro and his team came to
visit Trump right at the beginning, they all tested positive. How come Trump doesn't have it?
This guy doesn't wear a mask. He shakes hands. And we know he gets everyone tested who comes
near him. The hypocrisy. This is a guy who says testing is overrated. And yet anyone who comes
near him has to be tested. He himself, according to his press secretary, gets tested multiple times
a day. The hypocrisy of our, you know, we talk about the word elitist. I mean, that's the
definition of elite. Testing for me, not for you. So he protects himself in that way.
But yes, even then, how has it not crept through to him?
I don't know.
There's a theory on Twitter amongst many that he did have it
and they covered it up.
I don't know.
I can't comment on such things, but it is bizarre.
And this whole Robert O'Brien thing, you know,
that story about him getting it,
but then going home last week
and not telling the NSC staffers about it
and then finding out from the news,
it's yet another reminder that he, like everyone else who works in this White House is a really shitty person right in January 2017 I think I was one of the first columnists to
describe this administration as a kakistocracy ruled by the worst people and every time there's
a crisis there's a reminder that these so instead of focusing on Robert I want to think I want to
be a good person and think Robert O'Brien I, I disagree with him. I don't like him. He's a, you know,
he carries water for a fascist, but you know, wish him well with his health. But I can't do that
because the first thing I think is, what a piece of shit. He screwed over his own staff who he may
have infected, who don't get tested multiple times a day like the president. So that's what, I mean,
they're just horrible, horrible people. And yes, I don't know how Trump's avoided it. He's risked the lives of so many people in Tulsa. His Secret Service agents
tested positive. Organizers on the day tested positive. And even now in Florida with the
convention that was supposed to happen until very recently, he was going to risk the lives of all
those people because he's a sociopath who doesn't care about human life and would happily sacrifice
thousands of his own voters in order to get a good photo op. Yeah. I'm glad you're at the convention because that's what I want to talk
about next. I just look, if the national security advisor isn't meeting with the president several
times a day, that is very weird. There are things they should be talking about. We're in wars right
now. Two, if that idiot went to Europe and infected Angela Merkel, I'm going to lose my
shit. Stay away from her. Yeah shit. Is that an act of war?
Stay away from her.
Yeah, it should be an act of war.
Here we go.
Well, they claim the Chinese,
you know, if you go on the batshit
far-right conspiracy circuit,
their claim is that China
deliberately infected the world,
let people leave China knowingly
that they could transmit the virus.
Well, the Trump administration
is guilty of the same thing,
both in Oklahoma,
both in terms of deporting people
with COVID-19 to Guatemala, who they knew had it, both in terms of Robert O'Brien going to Europe,
knowing he might have it and spreading it. The irresponsibility of these people, not just Trump,
I mean, it's always the enablers around him. Robert O'Brien was, until very recently,
a mainstream Republican, not a kind of crazy MAGA type. And yet, look, he behaves in the same way.
Yeah, the disrespect, the stupidity. Okay,
let's talk about the convention, because I think it's hard to overstate what a disaster this
process has been. The Republicans first raised and spent, raised and spent around $38 million
to set up their convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, before deciding they had to move it
to Florida. So that money is gone. It is lit on fire. It has been burned. Florida Governor Ron
DeSantis, who suffers from a condition we call resting dumbface, told Trump that it would
be no problem to host the event in Florida. He promised them he wouldn't make them wear masks
or social distance. And now DeSantis' leadership is a big reason why cases are exploding in Florida,
which gets us to last week. Trump abruptly announced that the convention was canceled.
He tried to portray that decision
as being about safety, but the reality is that officials in Jacksonville didn't want them there.
The attendees were going to have to book hotel rooms and vendors and lose more money. So this
was more about logistics. Matty, the bigger question I have is, do we think finally canceling
the convention hurts Trump? Did he have an advantage if he was to have a convention and
Biden didn't?
I think it hurts him in one central way, which is the only thing he's ever been good at, and I use good in a very loose sense, is the rallies, is the showmanship, is the television events. You know,
we all know that he was certainly helped by CNN running hours of uncritical, uninterrupted live
coverage of his rallies in 2015 and 2016. Even Zucker's kind of admitted they shouldn't have done that.
And this time round, that's what his plan was to do again,
was to turn up to rallies, say all sorts of shit, get his base worked up,
dominate the news agenda, because we know Donald Trump
is the number one news assignment editor in America.
He can decide the day's news headlines in a way that no one else can.
No previous president has ever had that kind of grip over the daily news agenda. Simply by saying mad shit at events like an RNC convention or a Tulsa rally.
And I think that has hurt him. And that's why he was so hell bent with doing it,
because he knew he needed it as one kind of last gasp effort reviving what looks like a
failing campaign. They were so desperate, Tommy, did you see the story in the Washington Post
that at one point RNC officials told city officials, could they put attendees on a cruise ship? On a fucking cruise ship. I mean,
this is where the virus began for a lot of Americans back in February and March, on cruise
ships. I mean, imagine the dumbness, cacistocracy ruled by the worst people, that we're going to
have a convention. We're not just going to endanger you in an indoor hall or an outdoor
hall or no mask. We're going to ask you to go on a ship. Whose idea was that?
I mean, absurd. So the levels of absurdity, the levels of desperation. By the way, did you also
see the Trump quote that he gave when he said he's canceling the keynote in Jacksonville? He said,
and I quote, I've got it here. I could see the media saying, oh, this is very unsafe. I don't
want to be in that position. The saying it's like so even when he's
cancelling media he won't say that he's not thinking it's unsafe it's the media would accuse
him falsely of it being unsafe so even at the very moment he's doing something semi-responsible
as usual he shoots himself in the foot by revealing he's a complete uh fraud and he's not
actually taking it seriously and another important quote that all of your listeners and viewers
should really take on board the damning quote all, which should be in every Democratic ad between
now and November. David Carney, who is not a flaming liberal, advisor to Texas Governor Greg
Abbott, said, and I quote, the president got bored with it, it being COVID-19. The president got
bored with it. So the Texas governor's staff had to just talk to Mike Pence because Trump didn't
want to talk to him anymore about what was happening in Texas. For me, that is the most damning and clear.
I mean, we all know it to be true, but to hear it from the mouth of a loyal Texas Republican is
interesting. Yeah, I mean, I imagine even casual observers will look at what's happening and think
this has just been incredibly mismanaged and why on earth would we give this guy a shot at managing
the country again? I mean, look, it's still fascinating. Here
we are weeks away. It sounds like the Republicans are still going to kick their thing off in
Charlotte. Trump will still give some keynote at some point, but the rest is a mess. I saw a detail
in some of the reporting about the TikTok and how they came to this decision is that the White House
plans to adapt to not having a convention and sort of keep the media spotlight on him by saying, look, our persuadable voters watch morning network TV shows.
So Trump will be out on more of those.
I don't know that that's a good idea because things go badly when he leaves his little safe space.
Yes. So just without contradicting what I said earlier, while he's good at the rallies and why they've helped him in the past, when it comes particularly the coronavirus he has been so bad so self-destructive so self-defeating if he just
shut his mouth uh he would have a better you know a smaller deficit in the polls with joe biden
that's the advantage right now biden's not saying as much trump's saying loads bringing back the
briefing last week madness why would any advisor allow donald trump to go to get one good day's
headlines from idiot journalists
saying change in tone? It's not worth it.
The mad shit he's going to say between
now and November. We know he can't help himself.
Even if he has half a
good day, it'll be cancelled out by seven days
of madness. And doing any kind of
rally, doing any kind of free-flowing...
You remember how many weeks ago
was Rampgate? Do you remember that?
Where he did a rally? One of those rallies?
He just spent 15 minutes, 15 minutes of a live rally
talking about how it was a slick ramp,
and he had shiny shoes, and he had to...
It was just... That's batshit crazy.
You want to show that to the world, to America,
in the run-up to an election?
I just think, great, bring it on.
I think he's going to just...
Every time he runs his mouth, it's painful to watch,
but it's actually finally seeming to be self-destructive with suburban women, with independent voters, et cetera, et cetera.
Yeah, yeah, I agree. No, look, and, you know, the details of the Democratic side are starting to leak out today.
Stephanie Cutter, a Democratic strategist in charge of producing the Democrats event, says it's basically entirely virtual.
They rolled out some themes. But my question, Matty, is like long gone are the days of broker convention and real news happening at these
things. It is scripted events. It's scripted speakers. Some of them are newsworthy, right?
Today is the 16th anniversary of Obama's 2004 convention speech, which was a hell of a night
for me and launched his political career. Do you think that these virtual events can or should get
the same amount of coverage this year? And maybe more
importantly, do we cover conventions in a way that's fundamentally stupid here in the US?
I think we cover all conventions, conferences. I mean, I've covered British party politics before
I moved to the US in 2015. I went to the annual Labour Party, Conservative Party conference in
the UK. They do it every year there. Everyone knew the whole thing was ridiculous. It was just
an excuse for journalists
to get drunk and politicians to get drunk and some people to sleep together. And I came to the US and
I went to the 2016 conventions. I went to RNC, DNC. It's just, yeah, it's not substantive. We
know that. It's not about substance. The speeches matter, obviously, on the night, especially with
a new candidate unveiling them. I alone can fix it. Remember that? That was his classic fascist one line. That's when he first unveiled his kind of fascist
vision of America to the world. And I think, look, yeah, it's not going to make a big deal
whether it's remote or physical. It's just not. The reality is we have a pandemic killing a
thousand people a day in this country. We need to focus on that. If people at the Democratic
Convention can focus on that and come up with some good ideas and remind us that they are
actually credible when it comes to the issue in the way that the
other side is not, fine, let's cover it. But otherwise, yeah, it doesn't really matter to me
whether it's Zoom or in person. I just don't see that as a big deal.
Yeah. I mean, look, I've been to a few conventions myself. They can be fun. The
parties can organize. It's good to hear from candidates directly. It's good to hear from
up-and-coming voices in the party. But these
things cost 60, 70, 80 million dollars to pull off. I think they are probably the number one
symbol of how the U.S. political process is too long, too expensive, too much of a spectacle.
And stage managed. You mentioned just that, broken conventions. 2020, 16 weeks ago, you and I would
have been on this podcast talking about, is there going to be a broken convention, Bernie versus
Biden? How quickly that went away. Now we're talking about virtual
conventions where Biden's already the nominee. He's been the nominee for weeks. It's all a
formality. Get on with it. Bring on November. Just get this thing over.
Agreed. Two more quick things on COVID. So like, you know, the great thing about canceling your
convention is you have more time for sports and leisure. Trump played golf for the 280th time
over the weekend, including a round with Brett Favre.
He played catch with Mariano Rivera
at the White House last week,
ostensibly to prepare to throw out the first pitch
at Yankee Stadium in August, which he then canceled.
Many resistance Twitter people like me,
we have long raged about Trump's golf habit
and the hypocrisy given his attacks on Obama.
To date, no one has given a shit
in terms of the electorate.
Is that changing because of the pandemic?
Do you think these things are more salient now when you see Trump and Brett Favre?
I do.
I do.
And like you, I've been screaming about the golf since day one.
But the pandemic has really brought it home in the way that I've tweeted about this endlessly
about the normalization of Trump's complete abdication of responsibility, the way he just
has made it normal to turn up at his own properties.
He doesn't just play golf.
He plays golf at his own property. So he makes money out of playing golf which is a crucial
point and how he's normalized it you know there's a report study out a few weeks ago that he'd spent
a few he'd spent a year of his presidency 365 days at his properties playing golf or doing other
things at his properties of his own um that got normalized i accepted defeat it's normalized
nothing to do about it but i do think you make an interesting point that during the virus period,
yes, people locked down,
unable to see loved ones,
unable to play sports,
unable to relax with their friends,
canceling events,
canceling travel plans.
Yet this guy who's tested multiple times a day,
doesn't wear a mask,
turns up like clockwork at his properties every weekend.
No matter the weather,
no matter what's happening in the political,
the thousand people die, five days.
What was it on the weekend?
Five straight days of 1,000 people or more dead in America.
This guy turns up with his ridiculous thumbs up
next to that guy, next to the quarterback at his golf course.
I mean, Tommy, you've worked in government,
you've worked a lot.
Can any sane press person working for a politician say,
that's a good idea, Mr. President. Take that picture, tweet it? No, nobody would in any other
normal climate for any other normal politician, Republican or Democrat. He does this because he
gets away with it. Hopefully he's not getting away with it. And what annoys me is he only won't get
away with it unless we all talk about it, but not just us, but his political opponents. And
the Lincoln Project has been doing these amazing attack ads. I'm not a fan of all the people behind
it, obviously, as someone on the left.
But I don't believe that, you know, criticizing the ads is silly.
The ads are amazing.
And I just don't understand why we don't have more ads like that from Democrats, from the
Pelosi's and Schumer's and Biden's of this world.
And Biden's done some good ads I've seen.
But I just want to see more of that.
I do want to see people dying and Trump playing golf.
Yes, I do believe that will be salient in 2020.
Yeah, I think you're right. I think we'll get there. You know, the other major thing happening
over the weekend and right now, frankly, is the ongoing congressional negotiations over COVID
relief. And we got, you know, Senate Republicans want to cut the supplemental unemployment benefit
from $600 a week to $200 a week until states can create a system where they figure out how to cap
your benefit at 70% of your previous pay. It's worth noting that Trump's own labor secretary $600 a week to $200 a week until states can create a system where they figure out how to cap your
benefit at 70% of your previous pay. It's worth noting that Trump's own labor secretary had
previously said that creating a system like that is impossibly complex. It's basically unworkable.
And states are already having a hard time managing the massive influx of people who are unemployed.
McConnell has also held bent on passing liability protections for businesses and schools. So, Matty, things are getting dire, right? Benefits have expired. People are
struggling. The negotiations are a mess. What do you think Pelosi should do here when offered this
sort of skinny plan that is sort of a half-assed benefit along with, say, liability protection for
businesses? It's easy for me to say, but I would say reject it. And I
know there's been an argument about rejection since day one, since the first piece of legislation
in March. And there was a debate then. And the argument from Democrats, which was a good argument,
I'm not dismissing the argument, which was people need help now. Now is not the time to make a
political point or grandstanding. Now is the time to get them that help. Some of us said, fine.
Then it happened again. Number two, second piece of legislation,
third piece of legislation.
And I think AOC and others have pointed out,
how many times will we kick the ball down the road?
How many times do we say, you know what?
Next time.
Next time we'll take a stand.
At what point do you say, you know what?
We cannot sign off on it.
This is a disgrace.
It's an insult.
People need proper help,
not scraps from the table
while you support corporations and billionaires.
And that only works, of course.
I mean, it's a two-part strategy.
You can only reject something if you're then willing to go to the country and fight like hell to say why you rejected it and why everyone should be on the phone and in the streets pushing back against that ridiculous legislation.
The problem is most people, Tommy, you know, listeners to Pod Save America and listeners of Deconstructed might be following politics closely. Average Americans don't,
right? The average American does not watch the news, does not look at the content of legislation.
So, you know, they'll get the check. Trump's very clever, $1,200 check with name, great. They hear
about the $1,200 check and they're redoing that, surprise, surprise. But they don't maybe know
about the evictions if they're not a renter themselves or even if they're a renter, they're
not aware that moratorium ended at the weekend, that the $600 ended at the weekend. It's gone. The deadlines came and went. Mitch McConnell took a break. The Senate went home last week, shamefully. I say shamefully, but the man has no shame, so it's really not shamefully.
a different mindset, which I just don't believe Nancy Pelosi has. I think she's too much of a compromiser. I've been a critic of her leadership for a long time. You know, it's not the right
leadership for the time we're in. You're not just facing fascism and white nationalism. But yes,
you're facing a humanitarian crisis. That's the only word for it. It's a humanitarian, we don't
like to use that phrase, because we apply that to developing countries. But it's a humanitarian
crisis when people are losing their homes, losing their jobs, lining up at food banks. And that
requires a much stronger response. You know, Steve mnuchin came out over the weekend i picked
up the quote before i came to talk to you we're not going to use taxpayer money to pay people more
to stay at home says steve mnuchin who like every trump child was born with a silver shovel in his
mouth he was born to a goldman sach partner, his dad. He himself became a
multimillionaire Goldman Sachs partner and is now grotesquely lecturing Americans on how they
should survive on scraps. And when he says, by the way, we're not going to use taxpayer money
to pay people to stay at home, the people stay at home are taxpayers too, you idiot.
Right, right.
So this is the problem, the them and ours. And this is a perfect opportunity. We talk so much
about populism.
Oh, Trump, you know, he's managed to get working people angry at DC, angry at the swamp, angry at corporations.
Well, this is the moment for Democrats to say, you know what?
These people are the elites.
They are the Marie Antoinettes of our time, the Kushners and the Mnuchins and the Trumps.
Take them down in November and now don't accept this shit that they're shoveling towards you of 400 bucks or while they give half a trillion dollars to corporations, no questions asked.
No, I don't think you just keep accepting one McConnell bill after another. I don't.
I think a bad bill that is a compromise will actually harm people.
And look, Republicans usually win these fights when they have lots of time and they have corporate money to message them.
win these fights when they have lots of time and they have corporate money to message them.
That's how you end up with the inheritance tax being framed as about farmers and not about Don Jr. being able to buy a second beach house, right? So public opinion is with Democrats here.
And Lindsey Graham said that half of Republicans are going to vote no on any additional stimulus.
So that means the Republicans need a lot of Democratic votes and the Republicans own
whatever happens. So I agree with you.
I think Pelosi should go to the mattresses, right?
Ted Cruz is also out there saying that unemployment benefits are keeping people at home when they
should be working.
It's like, hey, Ted, that's the point.
The pandemic is worse now than before.
We have to get the virus under control.
The only response to Ted Cruz should be, sorry, record numbers of people are dying in Texas.
More people died in Houston in the month of July than in the previous four months. Ted Cruz, shut your mouth and deal with
people dying in Texas. We don't need your commentary on unemployment benefits. Deal with
your state that is now one of the epicenters of the global coronavirus crisis. And I think the
problem is, though, Tommy, Nancy Pelosi and a lot of these Democrats, I often feel like it's
pointless to ask them to do this because it's just not who they are their mindset they're it's not about politics oh he's left he's right it's not about donor money
I mean that's a factor no doubt about it I'm on the left I believe there's far too much you know
big money in politics but it's also about who they are I think in their DNA they've just they
grew up in politics they do politics in a way which is inherently cautious they come at it
from a position which is Democrats are always in a defensive crouch,
always trying to find some middle ground.
You even have Democrats now talking about, how do we pay for this?
Democrats are saying this.
I want to shoot myself in the head.
Right now you're saying this?
Seriously?
I mean, when Pramila Jayapal came to them in conference and said, you know what?
You're doing this Heroes Act.
You know it's not going to pass.
It's a messaging bill.
Therefore, best message possible,
put my proposal to cover everyone's salary 100% until this crisis is over, which is what they've done in some European countries. Pelosi said no, and they had a falling out over this. And many
other Democrats said no because they thought, how do we pay for it? That's bullshit. I mean,
seriously, now is a time to go big. Go big or go home. Sorry, it's a cliche, but seriously,
just go home if you're not willing to save the American people from the worst humanitarian crisis in living memory.
Yes, I could not care less about how we are going to pay for this right now.
And Republicans don't either. That's the key point.
Yeah, they don't. They don't and they never will.
They never will.
One thing I did want to raise with you, Mehdi, is is like if you and I talked three weeks ago,
it looked like that China was going to be the focus of this election. Right. We had Republicans pouring literally millions of dollars into ads on TV, calling Biden soft on China. And I checked
in with the Biden camp over the weekend. And I don't think those ads are on TV anymore. They
might be digital ads, but they're gone. And they've gone all in on calling Biden the mayor of Antifa, right? And so
we'll get to that law and order message in a minute.
Well-known Antifa member.
Yeah, you know Joe. So I just wanted to raise this because I know you and I both care a lot
about foreign policy. And listeners might not realize that Trump has dramatically ratcheted
up tensions with China lately, right?
It started with the Wuhan virus rhetoric, but there have been reports that the White
House wants to ban all Chinese Communist Party members from traveling to the U.S.
That's an estimated 92 million people.
Last week, the U.S. ordered closed the Chinese consulate general office in Houston, Texas,
claiming it was part of an espionage ring.
It probably was, but we should just know the Chinese say they will reciprocate and close a U.S. facility. The administration has been delivering
a series of speeches about China, including one by Mike Pompeo, where he said, quote,
the free world must triumph over this new tyranny, which had a bit of an Axis of Evil vibe to me,
Mehdi. Mehdi, what do you make of this escalation from the Trump administration? And if you have
advice for what they should be doing, I'm happy to hear it, though I know it's a very hard problem.
So it's a worrying time, no doubt about that. Relations between the two countries are at a
low point. Some are saying, you know, there's not been this bad a relationship between the US and
China since the late 1970s when diplomatic relations were normalized between the two
countries. You mentioned Mike Pompeo. He gave a speech at the Nixon Library of all places.
Nixon went to China, basically disowning the approach of Nixon and Ford and Bush Sr. and other presidents,
saying basically China exploited engagement, got what it wanted, screwed everyone over,
which is not a fair description of what has happened over the last 40 years at all.
But yes, sounding axis of evil is sounding regime change-esque.
I mean, seriously, regime change in Iraq or Libya is one thing.
Regime change in Beijing, that's a big, big talk there from Mike Pompeo.
It is very worrying.
Many of us worry about a conflict between the two countries,
even an accidental, unwitting conflict between the two sides
would be disastrous for the world and for the two countries.
But, you know, the problem, of course, is that there is no strategy as usual.
So Pompeo could go make noises.
But what's his plan to go to war?
No, of course not.
What does he actually want to do about it?
Oh, we're going to ban 92 million people.
Of course, they're not going to ban 92 million.
You can't ban 92 million people.
Of course, Trump's solution to everything is to try and ban it.
Terrorism will ban Muslims.
China will ban the Chinese.
It's a ridiculous gesture.
I'm all for targeted sanctions, actually.
Trump signed targeted sanctions legislation
against Chinese Party officials,
Chinese Communist Party officials
who've been directly linked to or involved
in the crimes against the Uyghurs in Xinjiang,
which you and I have talked about before, Tommy.
There's a cultural genocide,
what's being called a demographic genocide
going on in Xinjiang province,
up to a million people maybe in camps
being brainwashed, tortured,
held against their will.
AP just had a story out a few days ago, a horrific story about Uyghur women being forced
to undergo abortions, forced sterilizations, draconian, inhuman response by the Chinese
to what they call the problem of the Uyghurs or Muslims in Xinjiang, basically cut the
population force.
That is genocide, right?
That is genocide, trying to destroy a minority population. So the world has to do something about it,
has to say something. And the Trump administration belatedly has come to this and said, you know,
we're going to bring in sanctions. We're going to target Chinese officials. A lot of right-wingers
have jumped on the bandwagon, Tommy. If you look at Twitter these days, Ben Shapiro and co,
they're talking about Uyghur Muslims, the first Muslims any right wing has ever actually spoken out in favor of.
Surprise, surprise.
Wonder why, because they're in China, right?
My enemy's enemy is my friend.
So it's almost like, remember the last time this happened?
Afghanistan, 1980s.
Anyways, when the communists come along,
suddenly we care about Muslim minority.
They don't give a shit.
We know from John Bolton's book that Donald Trump encouraged
President Xi Jinping to build camps to put Muslims in.
Donald Trump, the President of the United States, encouraged genocide abroad. Let that sink in.
Again, another story that was a 24-hour news story. We've all moved on. No one talks about
it anymore. No one asks him about it. He encouraged genocide in China. And this is the problem. There's
no strategy. There are problems in China that need to be dealt with. This administration,
this president, this party can't do it. I mean, until the other day,
he loved China more than any other president
has ever loved China.
I mean, this is the whole irony
of the whole Biden is the candidate
of the Communist Party.
Donald Trump, just if you could look
at his Twitter feed,
and if you look at some of the stuff he's saying,
he said, and I quote,
this is what he said about China
from January onwards.
They were working hard, working very hard,
working really hard,
leading a successful operation and doing a very good job on the coronavirus. He said he appreciated their efforts and transparency. He said, I want to thank President Xi, called him a friend multiple
times. And here's my favorite, Tommy. I hadn't heard this until I went and looked into it.
In Davos in January, he said, he's for China, I'm for the US,
but other than that, we love each other.
Now, we've talked about the Kim letters, love letters,
and we laugh about Chairman King and Trump.
How about Xi Jinping?
I think Xi Jinping and Trump get a pass.
I think Xi Jinping gets a pass in and of itself.
I think he's one of the world's worst dictators,
if not the world's worst dictator right now.
Not just because of Xinjiang, but Hong Kong,
and what he's doing in China,
even by Chinese dictatorial standards,
this guy is extreme.
And yet Trump says, I'm in love with him.
Again, sorry to do this.
Hashtag, imagine if Obama did it.
Imagine if Obama said, I'm in love with a dictator
who the rest of the Republican Party was slamming.
And he goes from this love affair with Xi Jinping
to suddenly Wuhan virus.
It came from China.
They're our number one enemy, regime change. That's just bizarre. That's not how you handle a country
like China, which does need to be tackled on issues like the Uyghurs, but not by this erratic,
crazy, reckless, completely ill-thought-out nonsense from the White House.
Yeah, quite possibly the single biggest problem that Joe Biden will inherit from Donald Trump in terms of foreign policy.
But maybe Trump, you know, his goal here is to emulate Xi Jinping, right?
Because if you look at the campaign's new message, it's law and order, right?
And so if you look at Portland, you know, the goal clearly is stoke the flames of a culture war, demonize all Democrats, demonize protesters, call them the radical right.
There are reports trickling out about how
personally involved Trump is in all of this. He's calling the DHS secretary in the morning for
updates on what's happening in Portland. These agents in Portland are no longer just defending
federal buildings. They're moving out blocks into the neighborhoods. The Daily Beast reported
that Trump wanted an ostentatious show of force and to see protesters, quote, shaking in their
boots. One official gave up the game by telling The Washington Post that, quote, it was about getting
viral content online. It always is.
You've been arguing for a while that it is time to start saying the F word,
fascism. What do people need to know?
So what people need to know is that Donald Trump is an authoritarian. That is indisputable. I don't
think anyone debates that. The issue is, you know, oh, has he gone far enough to be a fascist? Has he met whatever thresholds people have in their imagination of what a fascist is? And often it's just reduced to Adolf Hitler or Benito Mussolini. Jason Stanley, who's a professor of philosophy at Yale, written a brilliant book on fascism, good friend of mine. He made the point on Twitter a couple of days ago. He said, you know, fascism apparently only comes from Germany and Italy. That's what fascism is. You know, sarcastically, this idea that we've just,
we think that can only happen in that way.
No, fascism takes on board.
Each country responds to fascism differently,
produces different forms of fascism.
There is an American form of fascism,
which has been around for a while,
since even before Hitler.
In fact, Hitler paid tribute to Jim Crow laws in Mein Kampf
when he was writing Mein Kampf.
And, you know, neo-Nazis were gathering in the 1930s. Henry Wallace, vice president under FDR, his second
vice president, wrote a famous article for the New York Times in 1944 at the height of the global
war against fascism. And I've got the quote here because I knew you'd ask me about fascism.
And he said at the time, this is what he said. He said, the American fascists are most easily
recognized by their deliberate perversion of truth and fact.
They use every opportunity to impugn democracy.
They claim to be super patriots, but they would destroy every liberty guaranteed by the Constitution.
Sound familiar to anyone right now following the news?
I mean, look, Trump, you mentioned China.
We just talked about China. In 1990, a year after Tiananmen Square, Trump did an interview with Playboy magazine in which he praised the Chinese for their show of strength against the protesters
in Tiananmen Square. That's who he's always been, an admirer of autocracy, an admirer of state
sponsored violence. That's what he enjoys. Yes, he doesn't have some thought out ideology as a
Hitler or Mussolini does, but he definitely likes the tactics of fascism,
the state-sponsored violence, the criminalization of the free press, the use of paramilitaries on
the streets, the talk of them and us, the xenophobia, the nationalism. It's all there,
all of the ingredients. And look, yes, maybe we're not Germany 1943, but are we Germany 1933?
Are we the Germany of the Reichstag fire? The Germany where Hitler was seen
as an idiot who could be controlled by
the conservative elites to get what they wanted done
in terms of tax cuts? Are we
in that period of time? I don't know the answer.
I suspect we are, but I'd like us to have
a discussion about this and talk to the experts
and look at the evidence in front of us.
How can you look at what's happening in Portland,
Oregon and say, oh, this is just any other
bog-standard authoritarian American president?
It's not.
Come on.
You mentioned the Daily Beast.
Another quote in the Daily Beast that I saw jumped out at me.
Former senior Trump administration official told the Beast, Trump would often talk about lining up drug dealers and gang members in front of a firing squad.
If it was solely up to him, that's how the country would solve crime in Democrat-run cities.
We just gloss over this and move on.
What?
A former official is saying that Trump
says he wants to line people up and shoot them.
This is absurd.
A lot of respect for due process here.
I mean, Richard Nixon didn't come anywhere close to this.
And look, along these lines,
I mean, lost in the incoherence
of that interview with Chris Wallace
was a claim Trump made that the Supreme Court's recent ruling against his attempt to roll back the DACA program somehow gives him new authorities on immigration and health care.
And I remember thinking, like, that is maybe the big news out of this interview.
Like, what is he talking about?
Initially, nobody knew.
But apparently he was referencing an argument advanced by a Bush administration
lawyer named John Yoo. In case listeners at home don't know who John Yoo is, can you remind us
why this should make us a little nervous? Yes. And before I get to John Yoo, just touching on
the Trump-Wallace thing, what he said was just a new version of what he's always said, which is,
I should have complete power. I should be Xi Jinping. He said this at coronavirus presses. He says, Article 2 of the Constitution gives me total power and authority.
It's mad. This is what he believes. And of course, Republicans have always believed in a strong
executive, right? Dick Cheney and the unitary executive theory that the president can basically
do anything. But they only believe that for Republicans. They didn't think your boss,
Barack Obama, had executive power. He was a tyrant
and a dictator, Obama. But Republican presidents should always have no controls, no checks and
balances. And Trump is part of that school of thought. He himself just wants to be a dictator,
right? So he reaches out for whatever argument he can get, Article 2. And then obviously someone
saw this National Review article by John Yoo, which basically said that the DACA court ruling,
which the Supreme Court didn't say DACA is good or bad. I'm not a lawyer, but my understanding is
what they said was the process that Trump used to try and get rid of DACA, he can't do that.
And John Yoo's argument was, well, if he can't do that, that means the next president can't
undo what Trump's doing. Trump can do whatever he likes using executive powers. Tortured argument
that a lot of more qualified law professors have said is completely bonkers, as have the ACLU. But this is John Yoo. John Yoo was part of the Bush
administration, which says the president can do whatever they like as long as they have a Republican
next to their name. And the thing that John Yoo pushed under George W. Bush was torture. That was
his pet issue. He was in the Office of Legal Counsel. I think he was Deputy Assistant Attorney General at the time.
And he wrote the famous torture memos in 2002,
which gave Bush and the CIA and others the authority to torture people,
literally torture people.
In fact, you, he came up with the argument that it's not torture
unless it's organ failure, unless it's permanent damage to the body,
or unless you die while it's happening.
Otherwise, fine. You want
to slap someone around? No organ failure. You want to waterboard someone? They're not dead. Fine. Go
for it. That was his legal argument, which never stood up in any court of law, violated the Geneva
Conventions. And, you know, I would say two things. Number one, one of the biggest mistakes your boss
made, Barack Obama, in office was not prosecuting people like John Yoo.
This whole, we're not going to look backwards, we're only going to look forwards on torture.
The reason John Yoo is able to write national review pieces today and go on CNN and Fox is because he was never really held to account for the crap he did for George W. Bush.
He should have been. The rest of them should have been.
And, you know, we talk about cancel culture today, cancelling people.
John Yoo is a law professor at fucking Berkeley, right? The home of all lefty
liberals in America. How the hell is John Yoo a law professor at Berkeley if we're supposedly
canceling people? I don't want him to be fired from Berkeley. You want to talk canceling? I
don't just want to cancel his career. I want to see him in prison. You and I should have a long
debate someday about exactly this question, because I think it's a worthwhile debate.
But it is insane to me that this man is still allowed to publish pieces, work at a law school and taken seriously in Washington.
Liberal law school.
Run out of town. Liberal law school.
So the last subject I want to talk to you with is about the media because you are an expert. Margaret Sullivan from The Washington Post wrote this piece about why the media coverage of 2016 was disastrous and how we can get it right in 2020.
And we do a lot of media criticism here at Pod Save America, but you are a professional.
You're a trained journalist.
And the best part, I think, about your perspective is you came up in the UK where the press is less deferential.
It's more brutal.
It's unsparing.
And you are unsparing in your criticism of the political media. So let me briefly summarize Sullivan's criticism of the 16 coverage for the listeners. Basically, she says it relied too much
on polling. It overplayed, the press overplayed the email story. They were out of touch with the
anger in the electorate and the racism and sexism that was often driving it.
The media let Trump play assignment editor.
They didn't understand Facebook's influence and generally didn't adapt to modernity.
What do you think of that list?
Anything you'd add?
A hundred percent.
I think she nailed it.
I'm a big fan of Margaret Sullivan.
She's one of the few journalists who gets it.
And she basically covered everything.
The whole Trump being a shiny new toy for the media,
I think is the phrase she used,
which was spot on description of the way he was treated.
It was like, yay, someone different and entertaining.
And, you know, he was a fiscal stimulus
for the media in 2016.
CNN made record profits.
Yeah, for sure.
MSNBC, Fox, wherever you were on the political spectrum,
you made record profits as a cable news provider.
The New York Times had a record boost in subscriptions
once he was elected.
I mean, that was a silver lining to the times of the Trump election.
The New Yorker and others all did really well out of the Trump phenomenon.
And they treated him in that way as a kind of shiny new toy.
So I think she's right.
There were so many failures.
My biggest worry, which she touches on in this piece, but I think she could have been even more unsparing about, is that they haven't learned the lessons.
So, you know, one of the things we've talked about over the last year, journalists, is have we learned
the lessons of 2016? And we haven't.
We have not learned the lessons of 2016.
And therefore, you still see the both sides
coverage. You still see the resistance
to calling a lie a lie.
You still see the euphemisms
for racism in the New York Times and the
Washington Post. Racially
coded, racially whatever it is.
Inflamed. all this nonsense.
Say racist. Say freaking racist, right? So I think those are the huge problems. The inability to
really, I think, again, it comes back to my criticism of Pelosi. It goes back to who these
people are. Democratic politicians are the way they are. It's in their DNA. Political journalists,
DC press corps, it's the way they are. It's the way they've always been. They don't know any other way. They've always covered it a certain way. And when someone like
Trump comes along and disrupts the entire press, they can't compute, they can't cope, and they
try and use the same methods which don't work. It doesn't work at all to do a both sides.
We know today that free speech is under assault. democracy is under assault civil liberties are under assault uh all of the progress that the u.s has made on racism is under assault and the only
way you can cover that fairly is to point out that it's the republican party and trump that is leading
that assault and neutral journalists can't do that they can't call they can't call it out because
that would be one side well hold on what's the democrats where's their role in this they have
to be blamed too and of course the have problems, but right now the white nationalist
is the guy in the Oval Office. And I think they just, and then they say, oh, we can't be biased.
We can't take a side. Yes, you can. Sorry. You can be pro-fact. You can be pro-truth.
You can be pro-civil liberties and you can be anti-racism and anti-authoritarianism. There's
nothing stopping journalists from doing that other than if they do go down that road, they'll have to start saying some unpleasant
to themselves, home truths to their viewers and readers about the modern Republican party.
Yes. One thing I think that she missed just from a whiny Democrats perspective that is a pre-Trump
problem, which is one of the big differences between running as a Democrat and running as
a Republican is the way conservative media can drive the narrative. Benghazi is the
best example. It was a tragedy. There's lots to criticize in the government's security measures
for those individuals. But the coverage was disproportionate. It was partisan. It was driven
by constant Fox News coverage. And there's no analogous capacity on the left. And we know that
because we recently
learned that Russia was paying Taliban linked militants to kill U.S. troops. Trump did nothing
to stop them. It's no longer a story. I mean, it's no longer a story is the epitaph of the
Trump presidency and media character. I mean, if I go through the things that were. I mean,
the other I was just tweeting last night about something about Trump. Oh, you know, he tweeted
just he just tweeted yesterday about mothers, the scam of the mothers in Portland.
And he put mothers in quote marks.
And I was like, are they not mothers?
I mean, sometimes I don't know why I do this to myself, but sometimes I'm like, even with
bizarre Trump standards, what does that even mean?
And somebody reminded me about his history of attacking protesters.
And do you remember, is it Martin Gugino, I think his name was, the 75-year-old guy in Buffalo
who was just pushed down to the pavement?
Trump attacked him, if you remember. Trump
called him anti-first, said he was a troublemaker.
All totally false. 75-year-old
white pensioner, right?
Normally, Republicans would be first to the defense
of this guy. He's in hospital.
We don't even talk about it.
All I do is criticize Trump. I'd forgotten
about that.
It's no longer a story, as you say, because we in the media,
even those of us who are critics of Trump,
don't have that infrastructure or quote-unquote echo chamber to really do harm to the Republicans by constantly saying,
what about this?
What about this?
Don't forget this.
The way that the Republicans could over Benghazi or over Ebola.
We don't do it.
We just move.
I mean, partly it's Trump just overwhelms us.
You know, to quote Steve Bannon, he floods the zone with shit, which means we can't cover
everything.
But on the other hand, we do just, we don't circle back to things.
So one classic example I often ask is, Trump does a lot of interviews.
Why does no one say to him, you know what, you told AOC and Ilhan Omar to go back to
where they came from.
Let's talk about that.
I would love to see him press on just that one issue.
Because it's indefensible.
No Republican can defend him.
No one has.
It's one of the few issues you'll note that no Republican has ever come out and defended him on.
They don't criticize him, but they don't defend him.
Because it's indefensible by any stretch of the imagination.
There's no cover for it.
No one asked him about it.
It's a year ago.
A year ago is 20 years ago in Trump dog years.
So that's a real problem it's a year ago is 20 years ago in trump dog years so that's a real problem uh when it comes to coverage and you know one thing i will never forgive the dc press corps and where
i the moment where i really really knew that they're completely irredeemable sadly most of
them if not all is you know sarah huckabee sanders was two years white house press secretary carrying
water for a president who basically incited violence and hate against the media every day, called them fake news, called them scum, called them
enemies of the people.
She herself attacked the press from the podium.
She then abandoned the briefing.
She lied to them so much that Robert Mueller included one of her lies in his report to
the press.
And yet when she quit, they held her a going away party, the White House press corps.
I mean, just.
You wouldn't have gone?
Yeah.
No, I wouldn't have gone.
I mean, I think anyone who did go, shame on them for organizing the damn thing.
And, you know, when ordinary people say, you know, as people on Twitter say to me, the problem, Medhi, is it's access.
Journalists, you know, and I try and defend my colleagues, but yeah, that is access.
It's access. Itists, you know, and I try and defend my colleagues, but yeah, that is access. It's access.
It's a fear of power.
You look at the way that even in the briefings, Tommy,
have you seen some of these journalists?
You talk about British journalists.
British media has a lot wrong with it,
but at least some journalists in England can ask tough questions.
You look in the briefing, there's a couple of them
who can ask tough questions, mostly women, by the way,
and a lot of the rest of them are just intimidated by Trump
or by Kayleigh McEnany or whoever it is.
They're very deferential. They get spooked easily when they're attacked. They don't really push back
hard enough. Maybe Jim Acosta occasionally. But, you know, there's just there's the access,
the deference, the fear, the both sides. I mean, the both sides is the killer, Tommy. That's what's
going to kill us in the run up to the election. When even The New York Times is both sides in
Trump in 2020, you know, we're screwed. And it's an old phrase. Maybe some of your listeners have heard it before.
There's an old line about journalism. What is the job of a journalist? If someone says to you,
it's raining outside and someone else says to you, it's not raining outside. Your job is not to say
person A says it's raining. Person B says it's not raining. Your job is to open the fucking window
and find out if it's raining outside. That's right.
Okay.
We will finish on a positive note here, which is Sullivan's fixes.
Okay.
So she says, focus on voting rights and election integrity.
Good idea.
Present polling with more context.
Good.
Don't let Trump play assignment editor.
Don't fall for manufactured crisis like the email scandal.
Understand the influence of social media.
To your point, I would like to include in that list, be more adversarial.
It drives me crazy when people like Mike Pompeo come on Sunday shows, they get deferential
treatment. I don't care if they come back. The host shouldn't care if they come back. Everyone
should watch your shows and to see the way guests are pressed again and again and again when they're
not answering. I feel like if everyone did it, where else are the Trump people going to go?
They can't only go on Fox. Yeah. And even on Fox, Chris Wallace is relatively, by cable news standards,
a good, tough interviewer. What was interesting about that interview with Trump that everyone
praised was, and I tweeted about at the time, was, you know, oh, Chris Wallace did this great
interview. Okay, but why didn't other people do it? Rather than just go, isn't Chris Wallace great?
Well, why didn't the rest of the TV interview? I mean, Trump has pretty much sat down with most
top American TV.
You know, he doesn't do it often.
But if you go through the list, he's done Stephanopoulos.
He's done Chuck Todd.
He's done all most of them.
He hasn't done Jake Tapper, I believe.
But he's done he's done most top TV hosts.
He's done most Sunday show hosts.
He's done 60 Minutes.
Why haven't they been able to kind of put him on the spot in that way?
Why haven't they been able to offer follow ups?
I think they need to have a real long, hard look at themselves.
A lot of these journalists who have interviews
with Trump either on tape or on print
and ask themselves, really, you know,
history will judge you when this guy,
when this serial fabricator,
when this deranged narcissist,
when this white nationalist was sitting in the Oval Office
and you got a chance with him to sit down with him.
What did you ask him?
What did you do with that time?
Yeah, that's a great question.
Mehdi, thank you so much for doing the show today.
Everyone should follow your work at The Intercept.
They should subscribe to Deconstructed, your podcast,
and check out everything you're doing with Al Jazeera English,
head-to-head, up front.
It's fantastic work.
I love talking to you, man.
I love that you give me a couple of jabs to the face.
You're welcome back on Deconstructed anytime.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And have a great day.
Appreciate it.
Thank you so much, Tommy.
It's fun.
Okay.
When we come back, you're going to hear Jon Favreau's interview with Mother Jones's Ari
Berman about voting during the pandemic.
Now that we are less than 100 days out.
Ari Berman is a senior reporter at Mother Jones covering voting rights.
He's the author of Give Us the Ballot, the Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America.
Ari, thanks for joining us.
Hey, John. Good to see you from afar again.
I know.
So people are hearing a lot of crazy lies from Donald Trump about voting by mail.
You're a journalist who spent more time on this topic than just about anyone.
How safe is voting by mail?
You're absolutely right, John. The president has engaged in a massive propaganda effort around vote by mail, calling it rigged
and dangerous and fraudulent. But in fact,
vote by mail is very safe. There is very little fraud when it comes to vote by mail. The
Conservative Heritage Foundation, which is a close ally of Donald Trump, found only 143 criminal convictions for mail ballot fraud over the past 20 years.
So that equals 0.00006% of fraud out of total votes cast.
So you can see it's not a very big problem.
Also, I think we've had, you know, people like the military has been voting by mail
for I don't know how long, decades.
We have multiple states that vote by mail.
Like this is a practice that has gone on for so long in this country that the idea that it's some new thing that we should worry about is just absurd, right?
Yeah, that's absolutely right.
Voting by mail is going to be used in larger numbers than ever before.
But it's not a new
invention. It's not like we invented vote by mail in the year 2020. States like Oregon have been
doing it for a few decades now. It works really well there. Both Republicans and Democrats like
it. The military has been voting by mail for decades. Overseas voters have been voting by mail for decades.
So we have a lot of data on this.
We have data that shows that vote by mail doesn't lead to large scale voter fraud.
We have data that people like using vote by mail.
And we have data that vote by mail increases voter turnout.
So we're going to see an expansion of vote by mail.
But there's not going to be anything really of vote by mail, but there's not
going to be anything really different in terms of how it works this year than how it's worked
in years past. In fact, I believe there's some people who voted by mail in the past who live
and work in the White House. Isn't that right? Imagine that. There to the Washington Post, there are 16 top Trump administration officials, including Trump himself, that have voted by mail. So you have Trump voting by mail. You have Pence voting by mail. You have Attorney General Barr voting by mail. You have Kellyanne Conway voting by mail. I'm not going to read the whole list, but on and on and on you go.
Basically every top member of the Trump administration has voted by mail and Trump
is trying to create this crazy distinction between vote by mail, mail ballots and absentee voting.
But they're the same thing. It's people voting by mail.
Every time I see him say that on Twitter, I want to scream because it's just like, no, there's not enough people pointing out that
there is absolutely no difference between voting by mail and absentee voting. It's the same thing.
And Donald Trump is trying to just draw this distinction between the two. It's crazy.
It's the same thing. He's basically saying, well, if you vote absentee, you have to go through a
process. Well, in every state, you have to go through a process.
If your ballot is automatically mailed to you, you still have to go through a process
of sending it back.
If you request an absentee ballot, you still have to go through a process to get it.
And so it really doesn't make any sense what Trump is saying.
I think what he's trying to do is he's trying to say that states should not make it easy
to vote by mail, that states should not, for example, mail ballots to every registered voter like
Oregon does, like Washington does, like California is going to do this year.
In my view, that's actually what we should be doing.
If you look at the data, the best way to do vote by mail is to have it be universal and
to send a ballot to every registered voter.
And I think Trump is so afraid of that because that way of voting by mail is going to lead to the largest increase in voter
turnout because it's going to get ballots in the easiest way to the largest number of voters.
So 2020 will be the first time that a lot of people vote by mail.
How easy is it to do that right now?
It's very easy to vote by mail in most states. In seven states in the country,
ballots are mailed to every registered voter. So you'll actually get a ballot where you live if
you're registered. You won't have to do anything to get it. And that's really the gold standard.
That's what Oregon and Washington and California, states like that are going to do. In 34 states,
you can request an absentee ballot for any reason. That means that anybody in those states
can vote by mail, and that includes basically every swing state in the country. So in all of
the states that are going to decide the next presidential election, people will easily be
able to vote by mail. Then there is about 10 other states in which you have to have an excuse to vote
by mail. Most of those states allowed you to vote by mail due to coronavirus in the primaries.
And the hope is that they'll allow you to do that in the general.
Now, there are some notable exceptions where it's very, very difficult to vote by mail.
One of those places is Texas, where, for example, if you're over 65, you can vote by mail for
any reason.
But if you're under 65, you can't actually cite fear of contracting
COVID as a reason to vote by mail, which I just think is so absolutely, totally insane.
The Republican attorney general there has said that fear of contracting COVID is an emotional
condition, not a physical condition, even though there are 10,000 cases a day in Texas right now.
So in a few states like Texas, Republicans have created a situation where it's easy for their
voters to be able to vote by mail, particularly voters over 65. And it's harder for Democrats,
those under 65, to be able to vote by mail. But the good news is that in most of the country,
anyone can vote by mail, and it's very easy to do so.
What do we know about voter turnout in states where there's a lot of voting by mail?
We know that voter turnout increases when you make it easy to vote by mail. So just look at
what happened in the primaries. Four of the five states with the highest increases in voter turnout
mailed ballots to all registered voters. So that policy works. And 13 of the 15 states with the highest increases in voter turnout mailed ballots to all registered voters.
So that policy works.
In 13 of the 15 states with the highest voter turnout in the primaries, 60% or more of the electorate voted by mail.
So what we're seeing is that in states with high turnout, a lot of people decide to vote
by mail because that's the safest way to vote in a pandemic.
And I think that's what the Trump administration is so afraid of.
They're afraid of the fact that there will be unprecedented voter turnout in November and that voters will
decide to cast ballots by mail because it's the safest way to do so. And they think that's going
to hurt their voters, even though, in my view, Republicans are just as likely, if not more likely,
to want to vote by mail as Democrats will be. Well, that was going to be my next question,
to want to vote by mail as Democrats will be.
Well, that was going to be my next question,
is I've seen a lot of stories recently that Republican operatives in various states
are now trying to tell the White House,
stop having the president attack vote by mail
because they want vote by mail
because they believe that if more of their voters
get ballots to mail in,
they will have better turnout in Republican
sections of certain places in America. Absolutely. If you look at who the GOP's core voters are,
they are older, more rural voters that are going to need vote by mail more than just about anybody.
And so what President Trump is doing by trying to dissuade people to vote
by mail is he's essentially disenfranchising his own voters. And that's why Republicans in
Wisconsin and Florida and all of these states are saying, no, we actually want people to vote by
mail. And they really reached an absurd level in Florida, John. You may have seen this mailer
that was done by the Florida Republican Party, where they took a tweet from President Trump that says, absentee voting is good. And they
highlighted that and then they blurred out the part where he said, mail voting is bad.
So, I mean, they are doing quite the jujitsu here, trying to finesse this issue. And what
we're seeing is that in states like Florida, Democrats have now a huge advantage in terms of requesting mail ballots. And that's a big reversal because in Arizona and
Florida and other swing states, Republicans were ahead when it came to vote by mail. They've
completely lost that advantage because of what the president has been saying.
Are there any drawbacks of vote by mail that you've seen?
Yeah. So vote by mail isn't perfect. There are a few things to keep an eye on.
One thing is the fact that if you don't turn your ballot in on time, it can be rejected. So in the
primaries so far, 65,000 absentee ballots have been rejected because they arrived too late. Now,
that's not that big of a number. That's only 1% of total ballots cast. However, if the election is
close, you have to keep an eye on, are these ballots being returned in time? So
I would urge everyone who wants to vote by mail, make sure you request your mail ballot early and
make sure you send it back early. Because the closer to the election you get in terms of
requesting it, that's going to put more stress on election officials. That's going to put more
stress on the postal service. Another potential drawback of vote by mail is ballots can be rejected if you don't sign them,
for example. If you don't sign them neatly, they might be thrown out because of things like
mismatched signatures. So you have to be careful when you vote by mail. Some states have very
strict laws about this. So voting by mail, I think, is really good, particularly in a pandemic.
But you have to be
careful in terms of how you do it. You have to request a ballot early. You have to fill it out
carefully. And to me, all of the rules governing mail voting are a reason why we should make
mail voting easier, not harder, because there are already a lot of rules surrounding mail voting.
And if they become more restrictive, not less restrictive, fewer people are going to use it as a result. I've talked to a lot of folks on the Democratic side who say that
as much as we want to make vote by mail much easier and universally accessible, really,
that they also want to preserve some in-person voting options that are safe for the fall because
there are a number of Democratic constituencies
or people who tend to vote Democratic, and this is especially true, apparently, of a lot of black
voters who don't have a lot of trust in vote by mail, partly because of voter suppression efforts
over the years, and they worry that their ballot somehow won't be counted. And so they actually
want to go vote in person. Do you think it's important to sort of preserve these in-person voting opportunities for people in the fall, even as,
you know, you know, we may be dealing with with COVID? Yeah, I think in-person voting is still
really important. I don't think it's either or. I don't think you vote by mail or you vote in
person. You have to have both options. And we've clearly seen that in the primaries, because one
of the most disturbing things that happened in the primaries is there's been very long lines to vote. Five-hour lines in
Wisconsin, six-hour lines in Georgia, seven-hour lines in Nevada. And one of the reasons why the
lines were so long is because so many polling places were closed. And so these states were
encouraging people to vote by mail, but they weren't preserving enough polling places.
And what happened was you either had constituencies that wanted to vote in person, or you had
constituencies that didn't get their mail ballots for one reason or another. And if you don't get a
mail ballot, your only recourse is to go vote in person. And so I think we should expect that in
November, we're going to see unprecedented mail voting, but a lot of people are still going to
want to vote in person. And it's going to be critically important to have
enough polling places. And I think one thing is also really important is that to make sure there's
enough poll workers, because poll workers tend to be older. I saw a statistic that 58% of poll
workers are 60 or over. So they're the highest risk category. So if you're young, if you feel like
you're in a safe enough position, I would encourage people to become poll workers. Because if you
don't want your polling place to close, someone has to be able to staff the polls who's not at
risk and willing to do this kind of work. Yeah, we're trying to do that this week as well as to
try to make sure as many people as possible who are young and healthy can sign up to be poll workers so that a lot of people who are elderly and at risk don't have to do that.
One of the most important things, obviously, we need for vote by mail to be successful is a working post office.
Trump has been trying to screw that up, too.
What worries you about how he's treated the U.S. Postal Service and sort of the state of the U.S. Postal Service right now as we head into this election? I'm very concerned about what the Trump administration is doing to the
post office. They named the former top fundraiser for the Republican convention as Postmaster General,
which is totally unprecedented to put such a partisan person in that position. He recently
announced major changes to the post office. One of the
things the Trump administration is trying to do is to eliminate overtime for postal workers and
also to say that they don't have to deliver packages the same day. So what's that going to
mean? That's going to mean that postal workers are not going to be able to work as many hours
and mail is not going to be able to be delivered as efficiently in the middle of a pandemic in which you're going to see unprecedented vote by mail.
So I don't think it's coincidence that suddenly the Trump administration is attacking and
politicizing the post office at the very moment when vote by mail is more important than ever.
I think they are using the post office as a vehicle for voter
suppression. And that's why it's so important that Congress funds the post office. Congress has
already given the post office $10 billion, but the post office hasn't been able to access that money
because Steve Mnuchin is putting all of these considerations on them using the funds. So that's
insane. They're not even able to use the money that they've
already gotten. And also, they are running out of money. And one of the things Democrats did in the
HEROES Act, which they passed in May, they included $25 billion for the post office. And so the post
office says they need that money or they're going to run out of it. And to me, again, this should
not be a partisan issue. Just in the same way that Republicans vote
by mail, Republicans get mail. I mean, there's not an inherent bias when it comes to mail. And
again, a lot of Republicans live in rural areas where they absolutely rely on the post office. So
this is one issue where it seems like there should be some sort of bipartisan agreement
that we need the post office in general and we specifically
need it in an election in which vote by mail is going to be used in unprecedented numbers.
So, you know, as you said earlier, in the swing states that will decide the election,
it does seem like voting by mail is accessible in all those states without an excuse.
Now that we've been through most of the primaries and we're looking towards
the fall and you've been covering a lot of the voting problems that we've had in these primaries,
what sort of worries you the most as we look to the fall about ensuring voting access in November?
What worries me is we've never done this before. We've never had a presidential election in a pandemic to begin with. And then we've never had people vote by mail in such large numbers. So during the primaries, for example, in Wisconsin, they went from 6% of people voting by mail to 60% of people voting by mail, which is just an unbelievable increase from one election to the other. And election officials were overwhelmed. The post office was overwhelmed.
Voters were confused by the process. And now voter turnout is going to be two to three times higher
in all of these key swing states than it was during the primaries. So I'm worried that even if
everyone is well-intentioned about this process, the system could just get overwhelmed by the volume
of mail voting. That's one thing that concerns me. The other thing is that clearly there are
people that don't want this process to go well, that the Republican Party has been engaged
in a very long effort, you could say a 50-year long effort, to try to suppress voters. Certainly,
it's accelerated since the 2010 election when all of these new restrictions on voting
went into effect in places like Ohio and North Carolina and Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
And they're going to double down on those efforts during a pandemic.
And they're trying to, the Republican Party is currently trying to weaponize coronavirus
to make voting more difficult.
They're trying to make it more difficult to vote by mail.
They're also trying to make it more difficult to vote in person.
The good news is that in the primaries, a lot of these efforts seem to have backfired, that there's been record voter
turnout so far. And so I'm hopeful that people are going to be so motivated to vote that they're
going to be able to overcome whatever barriers are put in front of them. But I also think that
in the way that we saw high turnout in Georgia and high turnout in Wisconsin, voter suppression
efforts could actually motivate people to vote and say to people, if my vote didn't matter,
why are they trying so hard to suppress it? I'll tell you one thing that keeps me up at night
that I actually think we can all have an effect on by educating people about it now is, you know,
in 2018, for example, Arizona's a state that has a lot of vote by mail on election
night. It seemed like Kyrsten Sinema was behind Martha McSally. A lot of networks didn't think
that she was going to win. Right. We didn't know that she was going to win. A couple of days later,
she ends up winning by two or three points because it took time to count these ballots.
I have a fear that with so much voting by mail,
some of these states on election night will look like, will look closer than they will end up.
And Donald Trump may even declare victory in some of these states. And I worry that sort of the
reporters covering these races won't really price in the fact that in a couple of days, the outstanding ballots may be
may favor Joe Biden or the Democratic candidate. And this could start causing the trouble where
Trump declares victory when when he didn't win at all. Is that is that something you're worried
about? Or is that just sort of a fear that I have? I'm incredibly worried about that scenario. And
it's completely plausible to
me. Because one of the effects of Trump urging Republicans to vote in person is that in-person
ballots are counted sooner than mail ballots in most states. Because in a lot of states,
ballots don't have to arrive till election day or after. And so that means that it takes longer to
count mail ballots. So you could have a situation where more Republicans are voting in person and their ballots are
counted sooner and more Democrats are voting by mail and their ballots are being counted
later.
And so it makes it seem like there's a lot more Republican votes than Democratic votes
when in fact it just takes longer to count the Democratic votes.
So I think that's absolutely possible in a lot of key states that the Republicans could be up early, saying we're not going to declare any kind of winners until all the votes, or at least enough
of the votes, are counted. Wisconsin's election in April was a complete disaster. But one of the
things they did well was they just held all the results for a week until all the ballots were
counted. And so therefore, there was no speculation on election night. Everyone knew that the results
were coming out a week later.
There was nothing untoward about it.
And a week later, the ballots were counted and we knew who the winners were.
And so I think we need to have some sort of agreement on this now.
And I think all of the major institutions in America that have credibility, whether
it's local election officials, the media, other government agencies outside of the Trump
administration, have to start educating people about this because you're completely right that Trump's going to do whatever he can to try
to delegitimize the result, especially if it looks like he might lose. Yeah, I think it's incredibly
important that everyone in a position of influence who is a reporter, who is a journalist, and this
is this doesn't have to be partisan, right? Like we have to socialize the idea now with the American public
that it may not be election night, it may be election week, and that we're all just going to
have to go to bed on election night without the results, without knowing who won the election.
And that just we're in the middle of a pandemic that just may be what we have to do this year.
There's another scenario that also worries me a lot, which is the Supreme Court.
another scenario that also worries me a lot, which is the Supreme Court. We've already seen a number of decisions from the Supreme Court that have put in effect bad voting laws for the
primaries. So they've put in place restrictions in Florida and Alabama, in Wisconsin and Texas,
pretty much consistently, the Supreme Court has intervened in 2020 to say that Republicans can basically put in
effect any restrictions on voting they want, even in a pandemic. So what worries me is there's all
of this litigation about the rules of mail voting. When do ballots need to be postmarked by? Do the
signatures have to absolutely match? Those kind of things. And if the election is really close in certain states, you can absolutely imagine that this
stuff is going to be litigated to the Supreme Court.
And I'm very concerned if we have a Florida 2000 situation where it's 537 votes or a few
thousand votes in a number of key swing states, it's going to go to the court and the court
in that case will say that the Republicans are going to prevail and Donald Trump is going to go to the court. And the court in that case will say that the
Republicans are going to prevail and Donald Trump is going to be elected. I really hope that doesn't
happen. But unfortunately, there's already a precedent for that in this country. And when it
comes to voting rights, John Roberts is not a swing vote. And I think it's really, really important
for people to understand that. This is the guy who authored the majority decision gutting the Voting Rights Act. This is the guy that said federal courts can't review
gerrymandering. This is the guy that said that states can do aggressive voter purging. So he's
not a swing vote when it comes to voting rights. And basically, what I hope is, number one,
the election isn't close. But number two, that we know what the rules are ahead of time. And there's agreement on that so that the Supreme Court doesn't again
decide the winner of the election like they did in 2000. Yeah. Fortunately, the answer to
all of these concerns, no matter which way you slice it, is massive voter turnout. Ari Berman,
thank you so much for joining us. Senior reporter at Mother Jones, your book is Give Us the Ballot, The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America. Go check it out. Thanks again for the time.
Thanks so much, John. Great to talk to you.
for guest hosting today.
Thank you to all you listeners who made it to the outro,
who have gone to votesaveamerica.com
slash every last vote
and who are pitching in
and doing your thing.
Dan and Alyssa will be here on Thursday.
Jon Favreau is threatening to be back
a week from today, that next Monday.
We'll see if that holds up.
But thanks, everybody.
Talk to you soon.
Thanks, everybody. Talk to you soon. Thank you.