Pod Save America - A Guide to the 2024 Battleground States
Episode Date: March 20, 2024Addisu Demissie joins Tommy to discuss President Biden’s post State of the Union swing state tour, plan to reach Latino voters, and dig into the key 2024 battleground states. They also cover Tuesday...’s primary election results and the down ballot races that will determine control of Congress next year, including the critical Ohio Senate race between Senator Sherrod Brown and Trump-backed MAGA candidate Bernie Moreno. Then they discuss Trump getting the old criminal band back together as former aides Paul Manafort and Corey Lewandowski are rumored to be making a return to his 2024 campaign team. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pot Save America, I'm Tommy Vitor.
I am Adisu Demisi.
You guys, you all know Adisu by now.
You've been on co-hosts before.
Live shows, yeah, the whole deal.
In case you missed those, he has worked for every top Democrat in the party,
at least the ones you guys like.
Obama, Biden, Clinton, Gavin Newsom, Cory Booker, Katie Porter.
Sure, I left some out.
You did, but that's cool.
As experienced a campaign staffer as I know, and a great guy. So thank you for being here. Yeah, good to be here as experienced, uh, a campaign staffer, as I know,
and a great guy. So thank you for being here. Good to be here again in person too, in person.
I love it in LA. Uh, of course, rocking the, yeah, I got to represent the Bay. I'm rocking my
warrior's gear as ever. Steph is still good. Uh, we got a great show today. Uh, Sherry Brown's
gonna officially face off against Bernie Moreno in Ohio Senate race. Biden travels to Nevada and
Arizona to make his pitch to Latino voters and promote his
plan to lower housing costs and create jobs.
And Team Trump is getting the old criminal band back together for 2024 as Paul Manafort
and Corey Lewandowski are making a return to the team.
God help us all.
God help us all.
Why do that?
We'll get to that in a bit.
But first, Adisu, the presidential primary might be over, but there's lots of action
happening in these down ballot races that could determine who controls Congress next year,
will determine who controls Congress next year. Last night, we had primaries in five states. We
had Ohio, Arizona, Kansas, Florida, Illinois. In Ohio, the Trump-backed MAGA candidate Bernie
Moreno managed to fend off challenges from Secretary of State Frank LaRose and the state
senator named Matt Dolan.
Moreno is now going to go up against Sherrod Brown in the general election.
Moreno is a former car dealer from Cincinnati.
He's the MAGA guy.
He had backing from Trump and J.D. Vance and all the goobers.
The tally with about 95% of the vote in this morning was Bernie Moreno, 50%, over 50%.
Dolan at 32.9%.
LaRose, 16.6%.
So they certainly split the vote there.
So Adesu, this is one of those races where Trump's guy won and our guy won.
The Democrats guy won.
Can you talk a bit about Bernie Moreno and what you think his winning means for our chances
of keeping this seat?
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know if he's our guy, but I think he's the best candidate that-
Well, the DSCC spent $3 million boosting him uh he is the candidate that is most likely to lose and thus to
have sherrod brown the senate majority pacted rather sorry sorry shout out to shout out to smp
but yeah i think it increases our odds i don't i think the s p knows something i think the ds knows
things and that is that reynolds week and we saw this in 2022 that, you know, while Trump is his own political phenomenon, you have to, you know, credit that with the performance both in 16 and in 2020.
He has whatever the opposite of the Midas touches when it comes to endorsing down ballot.
You got, I'm thinking back to 22, Doug Mastriano and Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania, Kerry Lake and carrie lake and blake masters in uh in arizona um god
the list goes on herschel walker i'd look i'd thankfully forgotten about him uh herschel walker
in georgia etc they all lost and i think you know the mega thing is um it helps trump but it hurts
everybody else i think uh and it helps trump only to a degree. And so ultimately, I think Moreno is the weakest candidate that we could have drawn. That said, in 2022, one of the
candidates that Trump endorsed that actually did win was J.D. Vance, right? So in Ohio right there.
And so Ohio is a tougher state for us, but we've got Sherrod Brown. And I think, with no offense
to Tim Ryan, who ran, I think, pretty much a flawless campaign. He was not an incumbent. He did not have decades of statewide name recognition and brand building and all the things that Sherrod Brown has. So bottom line, Bernie Moreno is for a national abortion ban. He's for repealing the ACA. He is everything that we hate in many of the other senators that are there in the Republican caucus. And he has the MAGA state on him and a
tough primary. He just went through with a lot of negative ads dumped on his head. So
is it going to be easy? No, but did we draw the best candidate that we possibly could?
Yes. And I'm sure it has a real chance.
Ohio is a tough, tough state, tough, tough state, but the DSCC put out some attacks early on Moreno.
He also opposed the existence of the minimum wage, apparently.
Yes.
He refused to pay employees overtime and shredded documentation
about it when when challenged uh he's an election denier he called the j6 defendants political
prisoners and there was this late breaking like ap reports scandal about moreno so the ap reported
that in 2008 someone using bernie moreno's work email created and authenticated an account on a
website called adult friend finders uh who was
seeking men for one-on-one sex while traveling geolocation data says this account was set up
in fort lauderdale florida where moreno's parents owned a home at the time the account name was like
his first name and his birthday um why does it matter it shouldn't it shouldn't matter
enthusiastic supporter of lgbt rights but he changed everything about his views uh in 2021 and now he's seeking votes from bigoted people
that he spoke to you know with these bigoted views so you know the moreno campaign says a
former intern created this account as a prank that intern is also the old intern defense yeah
the old let's sign my boss up for adult friend finder prank who hasn't done that
one anyway weird thing that just happened at the end i again i don't give a shit but uh republicans
might but we should say uh so the establishment rode for dolan the republican governor of ohio
mike dewine endorsed him uh rob portman the former senator endorsed him too but dolan and larose
split the establishment votes but let's just play a quick
clip of Donald Trump out on the campaign trail, stumping for Moreno from, I think, last weekend.
I like sports and I like tradition. So you have a team called the Cleveland Indians. Indians,
they're Indians. And they took the name Cleveland Indians and made it the Cleveland Guardians.
It's almost like they're in charge of a trust fund.
They're in charge of a trust fund, the Cleveland Guardians.
And my attitude is anybody that changes the name of the Cleveland Indians
to the Cleveland Guardians should not be a senator, should not be a governor.
guardians should not be a senator, should not be a governor.
So I just thought that clip was like a perfect encapsulation of Trump because it's clearly racist because Mr. Populous there is dropping a reference to trust fund stewardship.
I don't even know what he's talking about.
But also at the end, he seems to maybe forget what Moreno is campaigning for.
So just vintage Trump.
Vintage.
Yeah.
I mean, look, yeah, he's a,
it is part of the appeal of Trump to the Republican base that he just sort of
says,
says whatever the heck comes to mind.
It is not convincing to swing voters.
And obviously,
uh,
you know,
you've left leaning voters as well.
So,
but that's the thing that sells.
And look,
the,
the Republican party is Trump's party.
I said it last time I was on this show.
I said it in the live show we did back up in San Jose and And last night's results just make it clear, not just in Ohio, but elsewhere, that he has taken over the party and this brand of politics is going to win over a majority of Republican voters, but not a majority of American voters. And our challenge is to make sure they vote for our guys when time comes in November. And we should just note that in this case, Sherrod Brown is like one of the best senators
we have.
He is extremely progressive in a very red state.
He is more comfortable in factories and union halls than he is at fundraisers.
And trust me, I've seen him at both.
A lot less good at the fundraisers, right?
And that's why we like the guy.
So we really need him to win.
Yeah.
And can I just say, I think the Sherrod Brown model of the Democratic Party is actually,
I think, the future of the Democratic Party.
Weird maybe to say about a relatively older white guy from the Midwest.
But the combination of populism and social liberalism that he really embodies maybe better
than anybody, it's kind of similar to what President Biden, sort of how he came up in
politics, is, I think, the coalition that we both have to assemble this year and going
forward. And we will see, I think in November that it can win in a place like Ohio, let alone
Pennsylvania, Arizona states that are a little more purple than Ohio is. So he's a great,
great Senator, a great guy. And in many ways, I think going to be a model for us going forward
into 26, 28 and beyond, hopefully with Trump in the rear view mirror. Totally agree. And critical
to holding the Senate. Also, add Maryland, by the way, to your states to be anxious about. Larry
Hogan is near 50% in some polls out today in that Senate race. So don't like that, Adesu.
Don't like that at all. So a couple other races we should mention. So there were special elections
in Ohio's 6th district and California's 20th congressional district to replace retiring Republicans, including Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
Hilariously, Vince Fong.
Falling on his face here in California.
So the Trump-McCarthy-backed candidate for McCarthy's seat didn't get to 50%, which means he will now face a runoff, which means Speaker Johnson can't count on that seat, which is just delicious. So again, the Republican presidential primary is over, but we
still have people voting in Florida, Illinois, Ohio. There are some exit polls we can dig into,
but do you do any like big takeaways from these other states and races?
Yeah. I mean, I think the first one is the Trump, you know, hold on the party continues. And we saw
obviously leading into Ohio in particular,
that that was the narrative that was out there. But 50 to 33 or whatever you said is a pretty
big win. And elsewhere, we saw Trump's endorsed candidates win. So again, I think that's mostly
a good thing for Democrats in November. It also is high risk, high reward, right? If some of these
folks, if Bernie Moreno becomes a senator, that's very, very bad. Honestly, the other thing I saw from yesterday is Nikki Haley still getting in the teens
everywhere, everywhere, including Kansas, including Florida. She dropped out before
voting. Yeah. And it's not, you know, DeSantis only dropped out whatever a month before her
and is not getting nearly as, as much vote in his, in his home state, let alone in these other
states. And, you know And everyone is talking about how,
and rightly so, how President Biden needs to consolidate the Democratic Party. But we consistently have now seen over the last month that Republicans, a good 10, 20% of Republicans
are coming out to vote in a primary that is over to express their displeasure with their candidate more than what is happening
with president Biden. And so it's an undercover story. I think it's interesting that to see if
that continues as the Haley dropout becomes further in the rear view. But I even saw exit
polls yesterday from Ohio that showed that 10 to 15% of Republican primary voters might not vote
for Trump in the general or might vote for Biden. And so Ohio is one thing, right? Is it going to be on the map in the fall? Maybe, maybe
not, probably not. But if you extrapolate that to the Arizonas and Georgias and North Carolinas and
Pennsylvanias of the world, that's a not insignificant number of people that could
swing back to the Democrats and are expressing their displeasure despite voting in a Republican
primary. Yeah. I mean, just to give the exact number. So in the Ohio exit, seven in 10 GOP
primary voters will definitely back Trump. One in 10 will probably back Trump. Two in 10
are leaning Biden or third parties. So yeah, that definitely shows. That's a lot. That's a lot of
people. Again, Republican primary voters. These are people who are the base in theory of the
Republican party. You mentioned Nevada and Arizona. So since the state of the union,
President Biden's been on the road, he's been going to swing states. This week,
he's stopping in Nevada and Arizona. During the trip, his campaign launched a national program to mobilize Latino voters. They also released a new TV ad targeting Latino voters, though the
issues they highlighted were very familiar. It was the cost of insulin and abortion access.
Biden also did some Spanish language interviews where he said Trump despises Latinos. That was an exact quote. So
strong words there. Adisu, there's been a lot of polling showing President Biden slipping with
Latino voters. Why do you think that's happening? And what do you think the Biden campaign needs to
do to fix the problem? So a couple of things. First, I don't think that's actually much
different from what's happening sort of across the board. I think we? So a couple of things. First, I don't think that's actually much different
from what's happening sort of across the board.
I think we're seeing a lot of people
who are coming to grips with the fact
that we have a rematch of 2024
in every demographic group.
They may be, you know, costs are higher,
things are difficult in the world, et cetera.
They're generally upset
with the way the country is going.
We know the right track, wrong track numbers
aren't great across the board.
And so the president bears the brunt of that, regardless of who he, hopefully someday she is.
So I think we're seeing a lot of that.
Other thing I would say is Latino vote, I think about this a lot, not just with the Latino community, but particularly with that community, is almost like a phrase that doesn't mean anything because a first generation Cuban American in Florida and a third generation Mexican American in Nevada,
like they're Americans and that's, I'm sure they have other cultural similarities, but like,
they're so different. And so I think, I think the better way to think of it is the way that
the Biden campaign thought of it this week I've seen, which is there are states where the Latino vote is
going to be particularly critical swing states to the path to 270. And those are in particular
Nevada and Arizona, but there are pockets in other places as well. How do they get there? I mean,
I think the first thing is show up, which I know is a trite thing to say, but I think it's true
in that community. It matters a lot. Physically show up and do it early. And it is still March. And the president is already out there doing this in a trip to Nevada yesterday,
I think Arizona today. But I think, and you mentioned this in the ad,
fighting Trump on the character and culture issues, I think in the Latino community in particular,
is probably not where we should be fighting our message war. It's on the issues that, you know,
when you talk to Latino voters and focus groups and polling, and you ask what issues do you care about?
It's,
it's certainly the economy and jobs,
but increasingly it's abortion access.
It's gun violence,
which I've seen pop a lot.
Um,
not just since you've all day,
but we've seen it crime,
crime,
et cetera.
And so,
and they trust Democrats on those issues,
two to one,
three to one,
four to one. And so show up and trust Democrats on those issues two to one, three to one, four to
one. And so show up and talk about issues and don't get sucked into the back and forth about
Trump and the, the, the circus around him, which for us drives, you know, liberals and people like
me crazy, but I don't think is what a swing Latino voter in Arizona or Nevada is, is not what's
going to drive their vote decision come November.
Yeah. I mean, to your point, uh, Axios did a survey in June of 2023, where they found that
a plurality of Latino voters now say that neither party cares about them. Democrats still have a
basically three to one advantage because 30% of Latino voters think Democrats care more about
them. 11% think Republicans, but to your point, I mean, I think people don't feel like they're being spoken to about the issues. They actually matter to them.
And in 2020, President Biden, I mean, I think I ran a campaign against him in the primary
and Bernie Sanders and others really focused on this. I think Sanders and Biden did a better job
than any of the rest of us in talking to Latino voters early. And once we got into the general,
even though it was early and mid pandemic days, they were up early on TV. They were, you know, talking
about these issues quickly. And I, I anticipate the same happening this time. And so eight months
is a long time in politics and that I hope, and I believe will sort of move things in, into, um,
into the president's direction. Reality is in a, an election where this, the margins are going to
be so close and they are,
everything matters.
We have to do it.
We have to,
we have to run every play and run every play well.
Yeah.
One thing I just wanted to flag just cause I know you're a geek about
polling like I am.
So the folks at Pew released this interesting report about bad data.
That's coming out of a type of polling called online opt-in polling.
That is an online survey.
That's not a random sampling of Americans.
They're not dialing through the phone book.
It's people who choose to take a poll
because usually they get compensated in some way.
Yeah.
So the folks at Pew noticed several recent studies
that found large errors
in these kinds of online opt-in polls
because a bunch of people were just, I guess,
ripping through the questions as fast as they could
to get paid.
To get their $25 check.
Yeah, to get 25 bucks.
So in particular, the polling, these types of polls tend to
overestimate what would normally be a rare belief. For example, there was a recent opt-in
online poll that made big headlines when it found that 20% of US adults under 30 think the Holocaust
is a myth. Pew tried to replicate that survey with different methodology. They found 3% of adults under 30 think the Holocaust is a myth.
So it was a totally wrong poll.
And to test it further, in February of 2022, Pew did a survey asking respondents if they were licensed to operate a nuclear submarine in the opt-in survey.
12% of adults under 30 said yes.
24% of Latino respondents said yes.
In reality, statistically
0% is the answer. So what does this mean? We don't know. It doesn't necessarily mean that
young people are the ones skewing these polls or that Latinos are. It could just be like
everyone taking them as lying. Yeah, it's true. I mean, if you offer an incentive, I mean,
it's the downside of offering an incentive people. It doesn't really matter. You're not offering them an incentive for the result. You're offering them
an incentive for participating. And if all you have to do is click, click, click, click, click,
that's probably what's happening is click, click, click, click, click. But it's part and parcel of
the broader issue, which we've been talking about since 2016 about polling. It is becoming more
difficult. It is becoming more expensive. And to do it it well you have to have a good sample and to get a good sample you have to spend money to go find people to be representative
of of the um of the electorate at large and make some assumptions about it and you everybody who
is listening to this who's reading polls for the next eight months you should pay attention sure
look at the number on the top line first but like the second thing you should do is go look at the methodology or the, and then look at the averages and all those
things because the methodology can really make a difference in, in, in serious ways when we're
talking about nuclear submarine. Yeah. A lot of, uh, nuclear sub captains out there in America,
but yeah, the, the, the moral of the story is right. Don't freak out about anyone full,
or especially some like outlier sub sample of all young people now oppose abortion rights.
That's probably not true.
Two quick things before we go to break, Adisu.
First of all, do you like soccer?
Love soccer.
Okay, I got a new podcast out.
You'll never walk alone.
Thank you.
I'm a big Liverpool fan.
Are you a Liverpool fan?
I sure am.
Okay, someone made me, Roger Bennett from Men in Blazers, my co-host in the series,
made me like Everton, and that has not gone well.
I got a series out.
It's called World Corrupt.
It's our second season.
We are focusing on how Saudi Arabia got the 2034 World Cup, how they are pouring money
into the Premier League, into the Saudi League, and just like fundamentally changing the entire
sport of soccer.
It is a lot of fun.
We're doing four special episodes.
It's on the Pod Save the World feed. You can get it now. Check it out. I will listen. There's lots of fun jokes and banter
and soccer content. British accents. Yeah, British accents. Also, some great news. So you've heard
us talk about our Vote Save America anxiety relief program, raising a bunch of money for
great organizations. That includes organizations like Down Home in North Carolina and Western Native Voice in Montana. They hit 100% of their end of month fundraising goals
because of you, the listeners. We supported Power to the Polls and their efforts to engage
50,000 voters in Milwaukee. And we supported Ohio Organizing Collaborative's efforts to register
250,000 new voters in Ohio. So thank you to everyone who contributed. Help us
keep that momentum going. Go to votesaveamerica.com. Consider making a recurring monthly donation if
you can. Gives everybody certainty and it helps us fund these great organizations. Paid for by
Vote Save America, votesaveamerica.com. Not authorized by any candidate or candidates committee.
The other big push during Biden's trip and since the State of the Union has been to highlight his housing agenda. That includes urging Congress to pass legislation aimed at opening up the housing market for first-time homebuyers and making renting more
affordable. We both live in California. Housing prices are and have been a huge issue politically
and personally for people for a very long time, especially with young voters. So this is no
surprise, and it's good that Biden's focusing on this. But there is basically zero chance,
I think, that Congress is going to do something. So what do you make of the strategy of highlighting housing and what can we actually
do here? I think, I think it's brilliant. I think, look, every piece of research I have seen for the
last two years, cost of living is the number one issue. It does not matter the demographic. It does
not matter the geographic. It is the number one issue for everybody in the
sort of post pandemic era. And what is the line item on everyone's budget? Pretty much everyone's
budget that is taking up the biggest chunk of their money. It is their rent or their mortgage
or their housing costs. And so while, you know, the cost of get, we talk a lot about the cost of
gas and the cost of groceries, because you see it every week when you go to the store, it's dynamic.
Exactly. It, it actually is at the bottom line the you know it's the thing that's
driving a lot of costs and we we were on the vanguard of that here in california because
we've been seeing that for longer i think than the rest of the country certainly pre-pandemic
because of our housing shortage so i think the president is doing a really smart thing that may
not particularly here in the west i think where we've had these problems for longer, but even in most urban areas where we've seen rents and housing costs go up,
to talk about an issue that is hitting people in their pocketbooks and trying to do something
about it. And I think I said this last time I was on the show, we're not going to be able to
convince people that the sky is green when the sky is blue, if costs are high and if the economy
isn't in a different place come November, but we certainly can.
And I think people are willing to believe that the president is trying to do something
about it.
Yeah, fighting for you.
He's trying, he's fighting for you and Donald Trump is not.
Yeah, understands and cares.
So that's what this is about.
That's exactly right.
Just so folks know, Biden's also in Arizona to cut a big check to Intel from the CHIPS
Act for a new manufacturing plant, which would create a bunch of jobs.
So they're still sort of working
to get him credit for things he has done play as well.
In terms of the polling, look, I mean, Arizona,
some recent surveys, recent Emerson poll
has Trump up four.
He's up more if you include RFK Jr. in that
and some of the other candidates.
There's a big Arizona Senate race.
Ruben Gallego is beating Kerry Lake by four
at the moment in the most recent poll. And then again- I really want to meet these Trump-Gallego voters. candidates. There's a big Arizona Senate race. Ruben Gallego is beating Carrie Lake by four at
the moment in the most recent poll. And then again- I really want to meet these Trump-Gallego
voters. I would love to meet them too. They're out there. They're out there. There are a lot
of Trump-Kelly voters. Yeah, you got to find them. Yeah, you got to find them.
And then in Nevada, Trump is up between three to five points. So tough states right now.
Yeah. I think the map is, look, there's no sugarcoating it.
It is a tough environment out there right now, but we're also in a pre-campaign period.
We're really at the starting gun, right?
I don't know what, use whatever analogy you want.
Spring training.
It's spring training.
Maybe it's the first inning.
Maybe you can call it the first inning.
Yeah.
Certainly the first quarter.
There you go.
Yeah.
Let's go March Madness.
It is, it is the first quarter of the, of the first quarter of the play in, what are they?
What were those?
The play in games?
Yeah, the games that happened before the first four.
The games that get into the tournament.
Yeah, those ones, right?
So we're at the beginning.
And the president, like I said earlier, is the incumbent and takes all the slings and
arrows that come along with it.
We have to change this election from a referendum on the president to a choice between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. And that is what the campaign is all about. That's what the
next eight months are all about. And so polling is polling. It's a snapshot in time. It means
something, but it is not predictive of the outcome. The outcome, there's a lot of twists and turns.
And we cannot predict, honestly, what's going to happen between now and November. That is out of our control, and we can only do the things that are in our control.
So I'm not worried about the polling, honestly.
But do I think this is going to be an election decided by a couple thousand votes in a couple
states?
The answer is yes.
Me too.
Yeah.
After Labor Day, we all get to freak out.
Yeah, exactly.
You can freak out about the polling.
Have me back in October.
Then we can freak out.
Promise.
We will.
So the key states this time around
will sound very familiar to anyone
who lived through 2020.
Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, Michigan,
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin,
maybe North Carolina,
hopefully North Carolina.
I think North Carolina.
North Carolina has got a big governor's race.
The Attorney General, Josh Stein,
is running against a genuinely frightening
extremist Republican Lieutenant Governor
named Mark Robinson.
We've talked about him a bit before on previous episodes, but here's a quick sampling of this guy just to prepare us
for this segment emotionally. America is still the greatest nation on earth, and I don't care
what these communists say. I don't care what these socialists say. I don't care what these
blue-haired freaks say with a tackle box in their face at the college
campus. This is the greatest nation on earth. And it's all because of God. He's the one that
made it possible. So we give him thanks first and foremost. How about that shit?
So Adesu, like, okay, let's be hopeful. Let's start with North Carolina. Let's go on offense
here. So Obama won the state in 2008. We haven't won again since.
There's a Marist poll out this morning.
That's not great.
Again, Trump at 51, Biden at 48, snapshot in time.
We'll set it aside.
But as compared to the 2020 exit, it seems like Biden is gaining support among white
voters, but losing ground with black voters.
What do you think of our prospects in North Carolina generally and whether it's worth,
you know, I think it's a pretty expensive state, right?
Yeah, it is. It's a much bigger state than I think, even as I was thinking about this cycle,
I forgot, I think 16 electoral votes. I mean, that's big. Not quite Pennsylvania, but bigger
by 50% than Michigan and Wisconsin, for example. So a lot of money has to go into it and you have to feel confident that you can win it.
I definitely think it's on the map.
100% think it's on the map.
I think whether Robinson's lunacy
helps drive people into the Democratic camp,
I think is an open question.
I don't think it's a certain thing,
but the map is wide right now, I think,
because 51-47, right?
Again, snapshot in time, whatever it might be.
That's in play, right?
That's not, it's not out of, it's not out of touch or out of reach, I should say.
And whether it be North Carolina, Georgia, I also think it's true on the other side,
right?
We have to make sure we keep an eye on the Minnesotas and Colorados of the world that
could fall the other way.
But I think North Carolina is squarely in the battleground map.
I think Georgia is squarely in the battleground map and they're going to have
to be some tough decisions from people over the Biden campaign and others come
the fall about resourcing, right?
And this is where everybody talks about fundraising, vote, save all the things
we're doing. Like those are,
when you're a campaign manager and you sit down and the rubber meets the road and you say, okay, I have X amount of money to invest in X amount of places.
That X number gets bigger. If you have more money, it gets smaller if you have less. And so it's
going to ultimately be a resource decision, but of the eight States that could tip this election,
North Carolina is one of them. Yeah. And you have X amount of candidate time and you have to decide
where that person goes. So we mentioned the governor's race, Mark Robinson, the Lieutenant governor of the Republican. He's a genuinely frightening
person. He has a history of posting anti-Semitic conspiracies. He said the film black Panther was
a plot by agnostic Jews and satanic Marxists did not know that, uh, he wants to erase boundaries.
Effective then. Cause I really enjoyed it.
It's a great movie. Yeah. Uh thinks church and state should be synced up.
No boundaries there.
Like this guy, look, he's dangerous.
And it's, in my view, another reason I think,
I hope the presidential will actually invest
in North Carolina to at least to boost Stein.
But he's so extreme.
He's made so many outrageous comments
that he's Trump-like.
It can be kind of hard to know like where to shoot at,
like what things to focus on. What do you do with a guy like this you know that's a good question I don't I
said this earlier I don't think that Trump is a replica model I think Trump is is one of one
yeah oh yeah um most famous person yeah and you know I I think about something Chris Christie
said back in 2015 I'll never forget it,
where he said,
I didn't realize I was going to be running
against 15 years of The Apprentice
and not just Trump the candidate.
And I think that that is,
or something like that.
And that's what Trump is.
It's not just the politician Trump
that came down the escalator in 2015.
It's everything that preceded that.
Mark Robinson doesn't have any of that.
And so I think you go straight at the extremism. I do not think that swing voters or moderate, independent, whatever you want to call them, voters in North
Carolina are feeling the Mark Robinson thing the way they might feel the Trump thing. Because again,
there's more to Trump than just the last eight years in a lot of their minds in terms of his
brand. So I think you go right at it. Still think you can't, you can't avoid talking about
the bread and butter issues as it were, but I think he is so far out of the mainstream and so
not well-defined in the electorate that you can run right up the middle and, and, you know,
we could see a Mastriano Shapiro, which is, you know, the Pennsylvania governor's race where
Shapiro won by what? 15 points.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean, Robinson Love really liked to post on Facebook, which I think he probably regrets.
Yeah.
Oops.
Speaking of Georgia, Georgia's looking a little tougher.
Again, in the Marist poll out today, it's Trump winning 51% of the vote.
51 Trump, 47 Biden.
Again, snapshot in time.
RFK Jr. isn't on the ballot yet in Georgia, but Trump also wins
if you include him. So it's clear that RFK Jr. is not helping Biden anywhere. Marist's write-up
of the poll notes that Trump is gained with younger voters as compared to the 2020 exits.
That seems to be a trend we're seeing in a lot of places. What do you think is going on in Georgia?
And do you think it's still like a top swing state this time?
I do.
I think it is different because there's no Senate race on the ballot.
There's nothing else on the ballot.
Yeah, no Warnock.
No Warnock, no Ossoff, no Stacey Abrams.
And that, you know, Amanda Lippman talks about reverse coattails and run for something a lot.
And I think that there is something to be said about that, particularly with Warnock, um, as an African American, you know, from Atlanta and how he,
I think helped Biden in 2020. Um, so, but I do think it's still on the, it's still squarely in
the, uh, in the battleground map, similar to, to, uh, uh, to North Carolina. If I'm being honest,
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan are still the blue wall.
Like they just are. And they're also, I think the states that probably Biden is currently
strongest in and you win Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and New Hampshire. And I think the
Omaha congressional district and you get 270 electoral votes. I'm not suggesting that is
the only path, but it's probably the path of least resistance right now um and so I think that I would put the Arizona Georgia North Carolina the other
um swing states that Biden may have won some some of which he won in 2020 in a in a second but close
second tier right so like a 1a yeah um you so you mentioned Michigan Wisconsin Pennsylvania so
you're right the the best state for Biden in the RCP polling average at the moment is Pennsylvania.
I think he's, it's tied basically.
He's down like 0.6.
Then it's Wisconsin, then Michigan.
There was a Quinnipiac poll the other day that had Biden down about three points in
Michigan in the head to head and down five if you include RFK and other candidates.
Biden has gotten some good news recently in terms of endorsements from labor unions. He was out on the picket line, but like, what do you think? I agree with you. These are
like the blue wall States. What do you think he needs to do to win these voters? Same as what
he's been doing. I think, um, you know, Pennsylvania in particular, I think it means a lot,
obviously to the Bidens, uh, and to the president personally. And he has a sort of unique connection,
I think with Pennsylvania, I think, with Pennsylvania.
But Michigan, Wisconsin, all those states are, they're blue collar states, you know,
and Joe is a blue collar guy. And I think, you know, they're disproportionately, at least certainly Wisconsin, and to some extent, Michigan, white, whiter than the Arizonas and Georgias of
the world as it were. And so you've just got to keep being-
Being Joe.
Being Joe, right? And, um, like I said
earlier, the, the costs are still the number one issue of the economy, but specifically costs and
cost of living. And the president has a record to run on there, right. And a record of supporting
labor and having, you know, working people in organized labor, get a, get a hand up and get
a leg up in this otherwise difficult economy, creating jobs, increasing wages, you name it.
And so I actually think that message sells in some ways even better in those upper or whatever you want to call them, the blue wall states, than it may in the Sun Belt.
But just keep doing what you're doing and deliver it.
Honestly, it's volume.
At some level, it's volume.
It's like you got to break through the noise
and that's what presidential campaigns do
when we're all talking about it,
when the media echoes with the paid media,
echoes with the candidate appearances.
A lot of paid.
Well, the Trump strategy seems to be a couple of parts.
It's one, he's just using immigration to demagogue issues.
He's trying to use immigration to split off Latino, Black,
and labor voters from the Democratic Party. He's overtly saying that Biden's bringing them in to
take your job. So that's one piece of it. And then today, actually, Biden rolled out a new rule
to ensure that all new passenger cars and light trucks sold in the US are electric or hybrid by
2032, something that Gavin Newsom has actually led on here in california obviously
that's hugely important for climate change but trump is trying to use that as a wedge issue to
say you know people don't want these electric vehicles they don't work we don't have plugins
for them he's going to tank the auto industry that was the bloodbath he needs to call his buddy elon
but yeah that's a conversation for another are you you worried about that? I am. If I'm going to be honest, I am.
I think, because again, the margins are so close, right?
And Trump is very, what Trump I think is best at in some ways in politics is driving a wedge,
right?
He really understands that, oh, this is the issue that touches the hot button.
He always finds it.
He finds it and he just digs in and he demagogues it and he finds a way to get attention for
himself, which will amplify it to the conversation we just had.
And so I am worried about it.
And I think there's an anxiety in the country, right?
And that is the interesting thing about this race is that despite that anxiety, it's not
really a change election.
It's like a stability election.
People want to feel like things are okay and order
election a little bit, but yeah, but Trump is going to make, try to make it a change in anxiety
election. And that means he's going to keep demagoguing that stuff. And so I don't know
what we can do other than counter it with our own message on whether it be immigration or,
you know, the jobs that come with a green economy
and what have you.
But it is definitely going to be a sort of clash of strategies and a class of messages
and, you know, may the best, hopefully liberal Democrat win.
You mentioned anxieties.
My anxieties are two things that are sort of writ large.
One, there's a national pullout today by Ann Seltzer,
who's the Iowa pollster, who was like the best in the business. The take home is Democrats have lost the enthusiasm advantage we had prior to 2020. Part of that, I'm sure, is whenever you're
the incumbent, people get mad at you for stuff that's happening in the world. I do think a big
chunk of that is Gaza and what people are seeing in the news every night and the frustration people
are feeling about President Biden's refusal to split from Bibi Netanyahu, take a harder line,
cut off weapons to Israel. So I'm going to keep pounding that hobby horse.
But also, there's this cultural thing happening. And I feel like the Democratic Party is kind of
missing out on this sweeping anti-establishment feeling that you see in a lot of ways you see it in people mad about cancel culture you see people mad about
vaccine mandates people who are psyched about crypto and wanting to burn the financial system
down right it's like it crosses into that weird like manosphere mma space uh i know exactly you're
totally right yeah it's like the rogan podcast world. Yeah. The Barstool sports and like, this is like ill formed idea, but I just, I hate
that we Democrats are like the establishment party now, and I think for
young men in particular being for Trump is anti-establishment and it's cool.
They feel like the system has screwed them and Trump can help them burn it all down.
You're seeing like LA comedians and actors endorsing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for some reason.
And like that kind of strain of feeling and sentiment
is really worrying me.
And I don't know that Joe Biden is the guy
who can speak to that.
I mean, I'm happy to be your therapist on this today.
Thank you very much, I appreciate that.
No, I think about it a lot too.
And I think you're right,
particularly, honestly, young white men, I think.
I think young men of color are also susceptible to it.
But the sort of feeling of, you know, the anxiety and the feeling of loss of power that I think is a status, I think, is also fueling a lot of that.
And look, the president is the president, first of all.
So it's really hard not to be the establishment when you sit in the White House every day.
And he's, you know, been around for a long time, right?
So it's going to be hard to be the insurgent
when you are sitting in power.
It should be hard for Trump too,
but somehow he pulls it off.
But I do think here would be my number one pushback
on all of that is the populism.
The villains are actually the corporations
who are taking advantage of us. Partially response to the elites, the The villains are actually the corporations
who are taking advantage of us.
Partially response, the elites,
the people who are partially responsible
for the high costs that we're seeing out there
that are, you know, gouging us
and taking their sixth home in whatever,
San Tropez instead,
while workers, you know, are on the line
working harder for less.
And I've seen UAW President Fain and others sort of really harp on this.
And the president has leaned into it, into it, too.
I think we have to have our own villain, I guess, is kind of what I'm saying.
And I think that is every every story has to have a villain.
And that is the I mean, the actual villain.
But I also think the one that is the most, you know, the big farmers and big oils is the one that is the most authentic to who Joe Biden is and who Democrats are at this point in time. And so we lean more
into that and associate Trump and the Republican party with that, which voters are, I think,
inclined to do. There's still the party of big business, I think, in the minds of most voters.
It will help us push off as, you know, in our own anti-establishment.
Yeah. I mean, I think some of those big pharma companies paid $0 in taxes last year because of the
Trump tax cuts in 2017.
And that's just a story we have.
And Joe Biden beat them.
And now we have insulin at $35, right?
That is a, that is a story that fits into a 30 second ad and is a real, I think can
be really effective with those people who might otherwise be disillusioned for whatever
reason.
One place Biden is winning big is in this fundraising race. He raised more than $53 million in February, and now Biden and the DNC have $155 million on hand. The Trump campaign
and the RNC have $40 million on hand at the end of January. I don't believe they've reported their
February numbers yet. Maybe I'm wrong. But so as we speak, Adisu, the Biden campaign, they're putting
ads on TV. They're opening offices in swing states. I think they just opened like 40 plus
offices in Wisconsin. Just remarkable and early. They're investing in staff. The Trump campaign
and the RNC, they're paying off legal bills. They're installing Laura Trump to run the RNC.
They're doing a red wedding for the rest of the staff. The Republican state parties in Michigan
and several other states are just a fucking disaster, like election deniers and insurrectionists
leading them. But how much do you think money and organizing at this stage or the
presidential level generally matters?
I think it,
I think it matters on the margins,
right?
If this is,
if it's a wave election,
like 1984,
right?
Yeah.
Or Reagan,
one fit 49 States.
Like there's only so much you can do.
Uh,
campaigns can move things on the margins,
right?
A couple of percentage points here or there, but you can write this down in ink. Like this thing is going to the margins right a couple percentage points here or there but
you can write this down in ink like this thing is going to be decided by a couple percentage
points in a couple states and so it really matters and i think in addition to having the bully
pulpit of the of the white house as a huge advantage the the the money and organizing
and the sort of the fact that the democratic party, despite our challenges and our divisions inside,
like we kind of got our shit together right now,
like as best as you possibly can.
Certainly if you compare us to the other side.
Right.
And so it's a,
it's a good thing.
It is definitely a good thing.
Is it going to be dispositive?
I don't know.
Right.
But I'd rather be,
I'd rather be us than them.
Yeah.
Me too.
Just to put a little more meat on this bone. So the New York Times says that outside groups have pledged over a billion
dollars to help Biden's reelection. There was some strategists in this article that said they think
the full total of outside money just for Biden could hit between 2.5 and $3 billion. And we're
talking about like a league of conservation voters pledged 120
million.
The Biden campaign itself expects to raise and spend 2 billion.
The future forward Biden super PAC reserve $250 million in ads.
It's just like the list goes on and on.
It's just,
it's a staggering amount of money.
Yeah.
We'll see if it all happens,
but I think,
I think these pledges don't always come true.
I mean,
we'll see.
I think,
have me back on December and we'll see, you know, what happens, but I think, uh, I don't always come to, I mean, we'll see. I think have me back on December and we'll see, you know,
uh,
uh,
what happens.
But I think,
I think that first of all,
there's well intention behind them.
Second of all,
some of them are real,
right?
We've seen reservations already go up,
but it really does matter.
You know,
it's hard.
I came up through field.
Like I'm an organizer at heart.
My first 10 years of my career,
I was grinding it out in field offices and Hammond, Indiana. God knows where else, West Des Moines, Iowa. But I do think
that as the media environment has fractured so much and people get their news from so many
different sources, the importance of both individual contact and paid media has actually
gone up and both of those
things cost a lot of money.
And so,
I mean,
do I think that $3 billion is,
I mean,
I hope if,
if somebody told me that $3 billion is actually going to be spent on Biden's
behalf,
like I could sleep better at night about the results in November.
Again,
not necessarily dispositive,
but it would really help because it's hard to communicate with people.
Even in organizing,
it's hard,
right?
It's hard to get people to answer the phone or to answer the knock at the door these days.
It's hard to get media in front of them because they're not necessarily watching broadcast television or cable.
They're watching streaming or maybe they're watching YouTube or maybe they're watching TikTok, which you can't advertise on.
So we need as much resources as we possibly can so that we can reach people in any number of different ways.
It's not just going to be broadcast television like it was even probably 20 years ago, right? Where it's just like
just pile money on TV and like you see the numbers move. Yeah. The other sort of near-term advantage
is, you know, normally after a tough primary, the campaigns try to mend fences. You know,
Biden did this with Bernie Sanders in 2020 and everyone else was running against him.
Trump is just not even trying.
He's still attacking Ron DeSantis with his nicknames.
Poor tiny D.
Yeah, he's telling Haley voters that they're blacklisted if they give her money or they're
not welcome.
I mean, look, the cynic in me worries a bit that we're just a polarized country and eventually
we sort into camps, but I don't know.
It's weird, right?
It is weird.
It's just, it's textbook Trump.
I mean, like we said earlier, what, 20% of Ohio Republicans are thinking about not voting for their party's nominee. So I do think people
come home at the end, particularly in presidential campaigns, Democrats and Republicans. So I
wouldn't put too much stock in it. I don't know. What do you think? I think it's, I think
it's wishful thinking that a Republican in Georgia is going to vote for Joe Biden, a hardcore Republican voter because they're mad about a primary.
One thing that does worry me, though, about the Trump team this time around is his campaign has been far better run.
They've organized well.
Their negative campaign against Haley on Social Security was really effective.
And they've done it with less money.
They've done it with a lazy candidate.
They've done it with a candidate who's in courtrooms all the time. So it's impressive.
But those of us who miss the chaos and incompetence of the 2016-
Guess what?
Guess what? Then of course they did win, but they're bringing back Paul Manafort,
Corey Lewandowski. Manafort was Trump's campaign chairman. He was convicted of felony bank and tax
fraud and at one point employed a Russian spy at his polling firm.
Don't forget about that.
Trump pardoned him.
Corey Lewandowski was Trump's first campaign manager.
He was accused of physically assaulting a female journalist and eventually pushed out of that job.
More recently, he was pushed out of a pro-Trump super PAC
after the wife of a donor accused him of making unwanted sexual advances.
Why bring these guys back?
What is happening?
The guy just wants to surround himself with ass kissers.
Like it's what it is.
And I think when the rubber meets the road, he's going to bring back the people that to
your point, he believes helped him win the first time.
Right.
And who submit to his every whim and he wants everybody to kiss his ass and be under his
thumb and Manafort and Lewandowski are willing to do it.
And so there you go.
Um, I think it's, I think, I mean, I don't want to sound, I feel like I'm sounding too
positive in some of this conversation, but like, here's what I'll say.
I couldn't, yeah, you edit out some of the good stuff.
So we get to the tough stuff, but they've run a good campaign.
They've run a really good campaign.
I like, again, as a, as a practitioner, they've run a good campaign. The way they went really good campaign. Like, again, as a practitioner. They've run a good campaign.
The way they went after Haley and DeSantis was very smart.
Destroyed DeSantis.
Destroyed them.
And it is, from a practitioner's perspective,
a better quality campaign to date than I think 2016 or 2020.
And so bring back the clown show.
Like, God bless.
Like, can we have more mess?
Like, sure.
I love mess, as- I do too. I do too. Ricardo said. Like, God bless. Like, can we have more mess? Like, sure. I want, I love mess.
I do too.
Marie Kondo said.
So bring it on.
I do wonder if there's part of Trump at the moment
where he's just like railing against the justice system, period.
And he's like, yeah, anyone who was convicted for being around me
was, you know, set up by Joe Biden and the DOJ.
I mean, Peter Navarro, Trump's former trade advisor,
reported to prison on Tuesday for contempt of Congress because he wouldn't give testimony to the January 6th committee
hearing. So he's going to do four months in the clink. Also coming back though with some old
messaging, January 6th has become a key part of Trump's campaign messaging. Last Sunday,
he played a version of the national anthem sung by the January 6th rioters who are currently in
prison. It's wild.
It's wild.
I mean, that is just wild boy shit right there.
Wild.
He calls them hostages.
He's talking about pardoning them.
Look, it's enraging that January 6th didn't permanently end his career, right? Like it's shocking that we're still talking about this guy.
But again, we know from polling that pardoning these people in particular is wildly unpopular.
Are you surprised that he's doing this? Why?
He has no impulse control. I mean, everything I just said about the
execution of his campaign has been around him, not him. And one of the biggest frustrations for
me and probably a lot of the listeners is that the crazy shit that he said over the last six
months of this primary and even in this first sort of couple of weeks of the general election is not as prominent
as, um, yeah, we'd like it to be, right. There's, it's funny because we complained about him getting
too much airtime in 16 and now it's like, where, where are we? Where are we? But, but it's true.
Um, but he is, he has no impulse control. He cannot help himself. And so I don't think he's
doing this for political reasons. I think he's doing it because this is how he actually feels,
despite the fact that it hurts him politically. It's our job to drive the message. Do I think
that should be at the exclusion of all the things I talked about before?
Economic stuff, yeah.
Stuff, et cetera. The answer is no. Like it can work with some people
and it can work as a contrast message
with, you know, President Biden
being the statesman that he is
and Trump being whatever the fuck
you want to call that.
But the core of the message
I think still needs to be,
I am trying to make your life better
with real things like insulin for 35 bucks
and healthcare costs are down.
And like, it might be tough right now out there guys, but like,
I'm on your side and this guy is on the side of that's where you might be able to reference it.
Right. This guy's on the side of insurrectionists and corporate robber baron.
Yeah, no, I agree. I think, you know, the Biden message will probably likely be what he's done
and what he wants to keep doing and how he's fighting for you. And then all that super pack
money we talked about earlier, I hope to God, they are cutting ads with Mike Pence saying he's done and what he wants to keep doing and how he's fighting for you. And then all that super PAC money we talked about earlier, I hope to God they are cutting
ads with Mike Pence saying he's not going to endorse and talking about January 6th and
just reminding people the horror that day, because it is shocking to me what we're able
to memory hole in this country within days, if not weeks.
But I still think that, I don't know, I think back to where I was on January 6th,
like sitting on my couch.
I was going to say,
I remember it well.
13 months in a row,
tweeting,
screaming at the Twitter machine.
But I do think it horrified most of the country.
It did.
It did.
And I think,
but you're right.
The memory hole thing is super real.
Like voters do not have memory for politics.
They don't remember who is president.
Well,
you know,
who all sorts of things, right?
And I don't blame them.
They've got more important things
to think about
on a daily basis,
but it's our job
to remind them, right?
And that's what,
that's what we got to do.
And luckily,
the whole world
is going to turn
its attention
to this competition
come the fall.
And that's where
it's all going to shake out.
Most of the country right now
is like, what?
Yeah.
They're gearing up for March Madness.
Just like me.
Me too,
man.
Adisu,
thank you so much for coming in,
for doing the show.
This was a blast.
And we're going to take you up on this offer to come back.
Yeah.
I really,
I honestly regret that decision.
No,
I'm just kidding.
I'll be back.
You're not leaving this room.
All right.
Take care,
man.
Thanks.
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