Pod Save America - Biden Campaign Unloads on Trump's Conviction

Episode Date: June 18, 2024

The Biden campaign puts big money into a new ad slamming Trump as a convicted felon, fraudster, and sexual predator, and painting Biden as a fighter for working families. Trump courts the Black vote i...n front of a mostly white audience in Detroit, and CNN announces the final rules for next week’s debate. Plus: Jon, Lovett, and Tommy talk about who’s up and who’s down in the race to be Trump’s VP.To preorder you copy of Democracy or Else, visit http://crooked.com/booksFor tickets to upcoming live shows and book events, visit http://crooked.com/eventsFor 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)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Jon Lovett. I'm Tommy Vitor. On today's show, the Biden campaign launches a big ad campaign that goes hard at Trump's felony conviction. Trump courts black voters in Detroit, but a new poll shows many black voters aren't sold on him or Biden. The rules for next week's CNN debate are set, and more details trickle out about Trump's VP search with just a month to go. But first, Lovett, welcome back. Great to be back.
Starting point is 00:00:43 Your first full show. Yeah, this is it. Now that you've prepared and read the news. But first, love it. Welcome back. Great to be back. Your first full show. Yeah, this is it. Now that you've prepared and read the news. Yeah, my takes have been kind of in the cask, developing their flavors, pulling that sort of oaky vibe. So you can look forward to that. Wow, exciting. So we gave you a quiz about the news last week.
Starting point is 00:01:02 Then you got the rest of the week off. It's really nice just easing back into it here. Yeah, like a warm tub. We do have a second assignment for you. Oh. Democracy or Else, this book, it's out a week from today. A week from today. A week from today.
Starting point is 00:01:15 As a reminder, this is a book that you wrote. Yeah. With me and Tommy and Josh. And Josh, yeah, yeah. Is that ringing any bells? No, no, it is. It's right here. You want to do a pitch?
Starting point is 00:01:24 Yeah, sure, I'll pitch it. Do a pitch. Listen, all right. We worked really hard on this book. And yes, all the profits from this book go to Vote Save America and organizing on the ground to help protect our democracy. Even if it weren't going to a good cause, you would really like this book. It is actually funny.
Starting point is 00:01:40 I feel like there's a lot of people who are really funny and cynical about politics, and there's a lot of really earnest doofs out there crossing the Delaware in every goddamn tweet. But we worked really hard to try to make something that was helpful, useful, entertaining, funny, hopeful, without being kind of saccharine. You know? Like a lot of the
Starting point is 00:01:59 content out there. And it's illustrated. You know? So you can just flip through it. Like what we all do with The New Yorker. we know there are articles in there but whatever i was gonna say this is 160 mostly funny pages this is 171 pages plus illustrations so illustrations and the and the font type is pretty large and i feel like when we're all going to be paying attention to the news in a way that can suck the soul right out of your body like this is a really fun way to remember why you cared about politics in the first place how about that you're supposed to ask tommy what his favorite part about writing the book with
Starting point is 00:02:37 you is oh and tommy what's your favorite part about writing the book with me every minute i think the end when it was over uh here's the thing i think people like about this book uh everyone has their own unique amount of politics they can stomach or that they want you might just be looking to get better informed you might be trying to figure out how to vote you might be trying to figure out how to give uh donations more efficiently or maybe you want to run for office yourself. We got you covered step-by-step in this book. There's a chapter for you.
Starting point is 00:03:10 So read it and you will laugh along the way and you'll learn something. Also, there's some embarrassing stories about us. And there's really smart advice from people who are a lot smarter than us. And I'll just say one more thing. If you're listening to this and you've been listening to us for a long time,
Starting point is 00:03:26 just do us a goddamn favor and buy the book. We've been doing this podcast. We'll give you a refund for every episode. Oh, that's right. It's free. We were losing to Kristi Noem and Bill Maher at one point on the rankings. Because if we get this,
Starting point is 00:03:40 because we want to get this on the New York Times bestseller list because that's how the book gets into other bookstores and in front of a lot of people that might not otherwise come across it so and that's how democracy is saved ultimately yeah it's it's saved at the democracy or else the airport hudson goddamn news it's democracy or else and uh and right now else is ahead so yeah else is let's get going pretty good crooked.com books uh check it out wherever you like to buy books and you can pre-order it right now.
Starting point is 00:04:05 All right. Enough of that. Let's get to the actual news. We have spent a lot of time on the show pontificating about how hard Biden campaign would go at Trump's conviction or whether they'd really do it at all. Monday morning, we got a pretty clear answer. Campaign announced that they're putting 50 million dollars behind a new ad buy that features this new spot called Character Matters. Let's listen. In the courtroom, we see Donald Trump for who he is. He's been convicted of 34 felonies, found liable for sexual assault, and he committed financial fraud. Meanwhile, Joe Biden's been working, lowering health care costs and making big corporations pay their fair share. This election is between a convicted criminal who's only out for himself and a president who's fighting for your family. I'm Joe Biden and I approve this message.
Starting point is 00:04:57 Spicy. A lot of bass, too. And I didn't hear as much bass when I watched it at home. There's also Trump's mugshot in there, which I know that the Trump campaign likes and the Biden campaign likes. Everyone likes the mugshot. And I like that the voice, that there's a deep kind of like Baron Harkonnen voice doing the thing.
Starting point is 00:05:12 Yeah. That's a movie trailer guy. Yeah, it's cool. Sounds like. Tommy, what'd you think of the ad? I mean, I liked it because I think it not only mentions the 34 convictions, but also they draw on the E. Jean Carroll case.
Starting point is 00:05:22 They draw in the financial fraud issues. And so the ad in its totality perfectly dovetails with Biden's message that this is a guy who's in it for himself. Joe Biden is working for you. What is missing from this spot is a Joe Biden second-term agenda, but you can't get everything into a 30-second ad. So that'll come later. You're right. They're going to spend real money. I don't know if it's necessarily on this ad, but in June, they say $50 million. That's a good thing. But the Biden campaign has spent $53 million so far this year. It hasn't really moved the needle yet. So that's kind of the other side of that coin. So we got to see these numbers move a bit.
Starting point is 00:05:56 Love it. I like that a lot. I also, it just does all speaks to, I think, the challenge you're trying to address, which is they know they need to make salient for people the threat that Trump poses, remind people who Trump is. But also they have this catch-22, which is there's a lot of concerns about Joe Biden's age, especially among people who don't know what Joe Biden achieved. If you don't know what Biden achieved, you might think it was because he is too old. I think show through a contrast not just who Donald Trump is but trying to get it slowly kind of seed in people's minds uh that that that an affirmative case for Joe Biden is one people will get behind they're also uh solving the issue of do you talk about his accomplishments or do you talk about his second term agenda with the gerund which you'll probably hear a lot more of you know
Starting point is 00:06:43 it's he's he's helping lower healthcare costs, which he did do over the last four years, but also wants to do more of. And he's making corporations pay their fair share, which of course is his entire tax agenda, some of which he has been able to enact, but a lot of he hasn't. We all know the power of the gerund. When you're in your house and you know you're going to be late to meet a friend you're coming you're coming there you go i would bet that this ad tested very well particularly because it is a it is a contrast ad and just for people who don't know they've been testing all these ads and you know all these democratic groups progressive groups and it turns out like there's the positive ad about biden There's a negative ad about Trump. And
Starting point is 00:07:25 then there's the type of ad that contrasts Biden and Trump. And those ads always do the best. So you don't want just the positive. You don't want just the negative. You want a little bit of both. And that's what this does. And it's great that they broadened it out from just, hey, he's a convicted felon and that's all there is to talk about. He's in it for himself and Joe Biden's in it for you. And here's why, you know, so I thought it was a really good ad. It's definitely an evolution from earlier messages from the Biden campaign about how the only way to keep Trump out of office is at the ballot box, which I think was one of their their first reactions to Trump being on trial. How do you guys think they got from
Starting point is 00:07:59 there to this ad? Yeah, well, so I feel like I feel like there's two pieces to it. One is just they especially early on need to remind the kind of people that will be donating, volunteering, paying attention that they can't rely on the justice system, that actually we need to make sure that everyone's doing everything they can to to feed Trump in the election. But also, I do think like they are grappling with the challenge of, yes, a big part of the case against Donald Trump are his character flaws, his his racism, his xenophobia, his lack of discipline, all the all the things that Americans hate about Donald Trump, the chaos and the noise and all the rest, while at the same time knowing that a critical part
Starting point is 00:08:44 of the electorate that they need to reach are people that have already decided they can't stand Donald Trump, but are cynical about politics and dissatisfied with both options. And I think like in this ad, you see them kind of finding their way to a message that tries to think about both. Yeah. So it's been a little more than two weeks since the conviction, which is usually how long it takes for big news events to permeate the electorate and start showing up in the polling numbers. What are you guys' takeaways from the latest polling, Tommy? So the most important finding I think I've seen was from a recent Politico poll that found 21% of independents both said the conviction was an important factor in their vote, and it made them less likely to support Trump. So with people who are persuadable voters, they care 20% about, fifth of them, basically, care a lot about the fact that he was found guilty and are turned off
Starting point is 00:09:36 by that fact. Overall, it's a little more of a mixed bag. You've got, you know, a third of respondents saying it won't have any impact on their vote. A third say it will make them less likely to support Trump. 17% said it will make them more likely to support Trump. So there are definitely some, some MAGA types who are energized by this, but there's hope there that this could help move persuadal voters. However, it's clear also that Trump's message has resonated where he calls it rigged because you've got 43% of voters saying the rationale for the case itself was to help Biden. It's not a majority, but there's enough people out there who think, you know, this is lawfare.
Starting point is 00:10:10 This is just, you know, Trump's critics going after him through the courts. Yeah. Love it. Yeah. No, I thought the same thing. And I also like in looking through the polls, I kind of put a lot of numbers together and I kind of like you kind of just have for me anyway. I'm just like throwing away the kind of republican side and democratic side of the poll because it's like what does it mean to say to a democrat who's fucking fully anti-trump in their bones is less likely to vote for trump or nothing i think about that all the time if someone if i took a poll and someone said does the conviction make you less likely to vote for donald trump i would say no no i'm 100 i was never going to vote for him ever
Starting point is 00:10:42 right but which i'm sure is what the bulk of Republicans and Democrats are saying, both on opposite sides. Right. They don't even know what they're I feel like it's a question that it's like philosophically has no answer. And so I think some Democrats are trying to be good polling respondents and being like, I'm even less likely than I was before, even though I fucking donated to Pete Buttigieg. But but I do think Buttigieg catching strays. No, no, no. That's a pro Buttigieg point. That's not anti. But I just got to keep keep an eye because I know I've made my mistakes, but, he's got a list. Uh, but, but, uh, yeah, even 44% of independents thought the case was brought to help Joe Biden. And also, by the way, even though like I, like almost like almost every person has heard about this trial, still a third of independents say they don't understand the
Starting point is 00:11:23 case well. So I do think, yes, like the trump noise has really mattered so two polls uh recently came out about this blueprint polling 94 percent of voters have heard i think that is probably surprised me that surprised me too now it is a touch lower with the groups that are probably going to be the swing groups in this election who are not paying as well much attention who Biden's struggling with. So only 89% of independents, 85% of 2020 non-voters, 84% of Latino voters, and 89% of younger voters. Still a lot of people, but like slightly less on those groups. Yeah. I mean, it sounds like I've heard of Bridgerton and I just know they're hot and have sex. So really, am I informed? You know what I'm saying? There's also some reporting that gets done there. News gathering. News gathering. In Bridgerton. In Bridgerton, they do news sex. So really, am I informed? You know what I'm saying? There's also some reporting that gets
Starting point is 00:12:05 done there. News gathering. News gathering. In Bridgerton. In Bridgerton, they do news gathering? Yeah, yeah. Lady Whistledown. Wow. Fascinating. I'm getting some nods from the couch. Thank you. Great. Thank you. The groups that were overperforming on less likely to vote for Trump, so more than the overall number of 29% in the blueprint poll. 2020 non-voters, which again, is the ones that Biden's was struggling with. Young voters, Black voters, 51% of Black voters in that poll said less likely, and 39% of Latino voters. Blueprint also did something interesting, which is they juxtaposed two statements
Starting point is 00:12:37 and said, which is a more persuasive reason to vote against Donald Trump? He tried to repeal the Affordable Care Act and wants to again, or he's a convicted felon and doesn't have the character. I would have, if you had had me guess on that question, I would have said that the ACA would have won out big time. And with some voters it did, but independents were split on that. Non-voters, ACA. Black voters, conviction by a big margin. And Latinos were split as well, which I thought was kind of interesting. Yeah, it does go to the conversation we were just having too about like, how do you talk about this when some of the most important people you need to reach have already kind of decided that they find Donald Trump personally abhorrent, but are much more worried about like the actual policy stakes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:24 the actual policy stakes. Yeah. So the big lesson is that, you know, I think we live in a world where we assume that just hearing about this verdict automatically tells you that this is disqualifying for a person to be president of the United States. And that's just not how this information is being received by a lot of the electorate. Like you really have to message what this means, what it says about Donald Trump, his character. It doesn't have to be some super complicated, sophisticated messaging, but Donald Trump is going to just say, this was rigged. I was set up. It's all political. It's not real. They're fighting for, you know, they're going after me because I'm fighting for you, that kind of stuff. And we have to counteract that. Yeah. And look, I don't necessarily know if his messages, that message is working,
Starting point is 00:13:56 that it's rigged. But clearly what you're hearing from some voters is like, yeah, he's a convicted felon and he sucks, but I already knew he sucked. And if I have a problem, it's because like, you know, cost of living or this or that or whatever, immigration, whatever the reason you're not for Joe Biden is. And we haven't talked about the polling overall, but, you know, Biden gained a few points in the polls following the conviction. I think right now, as we're recording this, it's pretty close to where it was before the conviction maybe biden's still like a half a point up and seltzer best pollster in the country a plus rated poll out of iowa trump's winning iowa 50 to 32 he's got an 18 point lead over joe biden in iowa just for reference trump won iowa by eight points that would be bad eight points in 2020 so a 10 point swing in iowa makes you worried
Starting point is 00:14:46 about wisconsin which has a very similar electorate other midwestern states michigan to a lesser extent pennsylvania to a lesser extent but um that's a that's a yikes that's a that's a not good yeah because that poll is usually fairly accurate so and again it's trump is at 50 sort of close to where he got what his number was and. And Biden, as in all these polls, his number is the one that is much, much lower because you have a bunch of people either who are fine voters saying, I'm going to vote third party or I'm not going to vote at all or I'm unsure. Yeah. And by the way, like all of this, like the fact that when a former president is convicted
Starting point is 00:15:21 of multiple felonies, there's an entire media or apparatus and a ton of Republican politicians who go on television and just shrug it off. Like those shrugs matter, right? It becomes then just a part of the political process, a part of the debate. And this is now something completely and totally unacceptable, just becomes another piece of sort of partisan back and forth. And for somebody who's not paying attention that much and not thinking about politics every day, I think it's like not hard for that to be internalized. I mean, you don't some of the most engaged reporters in the world have internalized it. So it's not hard to imagine people that aren't consuming this all the time are like, well,
Starting point is 00:15:56 you know, nothing is fucking changing. Trump was unacceptable yesterday. He's just as unacceptable today. Yeah. It's also the difference between something being done to Trump and Trump doing something that could hurt actual voters. Right. And so they can see the conviction as something that has happened to him, something that he did bad, but not necessarily as something that he is doing to someone, which is why I think that Biden ad made the turn to like he's only in it for himself. So some evidence that the conviction may hurt Trump with certain groups of voters, including black voters. But Biden's weakness there is still one of his biggest challenges. And the Trump campaign is doing everything they can to exploit that. On Saturday, Trump visited a black church in Detroit and then spoke at the Turning Points USA conference. The audience at the church appeared to be largely white people, and TPUSA is known for its ties to white supremacists. So that's a big to-be-sure clause that I just threw in there. But Trump has never been a fan of consistency or discipline, as you can tell from
Starting point is 00:16:58 some of his remarks at these events. We don't need votes. We got more votes than anybody's ever had. I think you should take a cognitive test like I did. I took a cognitive test and I aced it. Dr. Ronnie, Dr. Ronnie Johnson. Does everyone know Ronnie Johnson, congressman from Texas? And the people coming over the border, all those billions of people, they're inflicting tremendous harm to our black population and to our Hispanic population. Lovett, what do you make of the Trump campaign's emphasis on black and Latino outreach this time around? We've talked about this a lot in the last couple of weeks. This is your first go at it. We should note, though, that Trump got the name of the doctor wrong when he was demanding that Joe Biden take a take a cognitive test and then talk about how he is it's ronnie jackson it is i'm glad you pointed that out in case for just for listeners
Starting point is 00:17:49 who weren't sure who ronnie jackson is yeah that's you're not wrong when you're going to accuse someone of cognitive decline you want to get the the doctor's name right yeah look i think trump is trump and the trump campaign are exaggerating their support because they know it's in their interest to kind of make the case that they're doing well amongst younger, not just black voters, younger, they're younger, white men, younger black men, younger Hispanic men, right? Because that's a big part of like, they don't need to, they don't need to do what they claim they're doing. They just need to do better than they did in 2020 for Donald Trump to win. And they also, by the way, like they're just putting him out there, right? Like he's just going to places
Starting point is 00:18:29 that Joe Biden isn't going. Yeah, they're getting the headlines. Yeah. And so they're getting these stories and they know that it is obviously like great fodder for the political media to be talking about this issue. And by the way, there is real weakness in the polls that justifies this debate and this conversation. So I think that that's what's going on here. Yeah, I think Trump's not necessarily doing better with black voters. I think Joe Biden is not doing as well as he needs to be, is really the story here. Trump is making inroads with younger men. And I think that's because of a deliberate, smart, concerted strategy that involves a lot of different things. There's kind of like the MMA angle. There's a crypto policy angle. We can talk about that more later. But I think if you talk to the Biden campaign, they will tell you that they
Starting point is 00:19:09 are essentially maxed out in their support with white voters, but they have a lot of work to do to persuade voters of color, especially black and Latino men. And it's good that they know this. It's a big change from a lot of recent elections where Democrats have often been criticized for not communicating with voters of color until the very end of a campaign, and then just doing so with a get out the vote message. Now they have to focus on persuasion and they have to do it early. And that's good. You know, it's good that they figured that out now and that they're course correcting early, but it's still a challenge to win back these voters because, you know, they're frustrated by the same things everybody else is, the economy, inflation, they're, they're frustrated by the same things everybody else is the economy, inflation, uh, they're concerned about president Biden's age, et cetera. And he's got to win their
Starting point is 00:19:48 support. And I think some Democrats might ask like, well, but don't they understand how fucking racist Donald Trump is? Right. He, he went to turning points USA, this, this conference in Detroit where, um, white supremacist Nick Fuentes was turned away. He showed up with his supporters and they finally they've let him in in the past. They finally got smart and decided to turn him away. But, you know, Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Points USA and introduced Donald Trump in Arizona just last week, you know, he said he thinks twice about flying with black pilots. He said the Civil Rights Act was a huge mistake. And then Martin Luther King Jr. was awful. This is like the big organizing group for the Trump campaign. So, you know, there's that.
Starting point is 00:20:29 But like, I do think that and, you know, we've Tommy and I have both talked to Terrence Woodbury, who's done a lot of focus groups with black voters. I did for the wilderness. You did for Pod Save America. And he'll say that, you know, a lot of black voters like, yeah, of course, he's racist. We know that he's racist. We're not like, but like, right now, our lives haven't changed that much over the last four years. And we're still worried about high cost of living. And so maybe they're not backing Trump, but they don't know that they want to back Joe Biden. And so it really is incumbent upon Joe Biden and the campaign. And they know this and Democrats to not just be like, oh, don't you know that Trump is racist, but to be more like, actually, this is what Joe Biden has done and this is the work he's going to do. Yeah. I mean, if you look at the polls, there's not some ideological shift going on. Donald Trump remains incredibly unpopular among black voters. Barack Obama reigns incredibly popular amongst black voters. The argument that Trump's making that somehow because somehow he considers himself a victim
Starting point is 00:21:26 of the justice system, that somehow that's going to create some groundwell of support just as unpopular as Donald Trump is. So it is pretty clear. And it's like, I feel like what we've been talking about this whole episode, like there are just a lot of people who need to be persuaded not just to vote against Donald Trump, but to vote for Joe Biden. Also, it's just worth noting that Trump's message in Detroit was demagoguing immigrants. He said, you know, they're coming across the border, all these millions of people, they're inflicting tremendous harm to our Black
Starting point is 00:21:52 population, to our Hispanic population. So he's using this divisive anti-immigrant rhetoric to try to appeal to both Black and Hispanic voters. It's also worth noting that behind the scenes, Trump and his allies are doing everything they can to make it harder for voters of color to actually vote, to register to vote, to turn out on election day. They're trying to shrink the number of days you can vote. They're trying to get rid of vote by mail in some states. And so, you know, they're definitely like doing a public messaging effort at the front by going to certain venues. And, you know, I guess apparently saying TPUSA is a, you know, African American outreach event. But, you know, the truth is they're actually trying to suppress voters of color primarily. But, you know, your point, Tommy, about the anti-immigrant message, like, first of all,
Starting point is 00:22:37 there's a long history of Republican politicians doing that and trying to drive a wedge between black and Latino communities, usually with immigration. By saying, you know, immigrants are coming to take your jobs. It's also now there is some evidence that it's working with Latino voters who, if you look at polls of Latino and black voters, their views on immigration are broadly in line with a lot of white voters, certainly not Republican white voters, but white voters overall. We saw this with, you know, support for Biden's border move, right? Which there was no difference between racial groups when they pulled that. And so, you know, Trump knows what he's doing, but I also think he's, the Trump campaign, I don't think they believe that Trump is going to get, you know, 20% of the black vote this time, as some of the polls show. But I do think that they are doing this to encourage and fuel cynicism among black and Latino voters who may have voted for Joe Biden in the past or may be undecided now. And either they want them to go third party or they want them to stay home because that's still a win for them, right? It's not as good as voting for Donald Trump. But that's why you also heard
Starting point is 00:23:49 Trump in these events. He started hitting Biden for his crime bill back in the early 90s. He brought back super predator, right? Like part of this is just, you talked about actual like legal voter suppression efforts, but part of this is just don't bother, you know, neither of these neither of these two guys are good. Might as well just stay home. Yeah, I feel like there's two parts. I feel like that that is the argument that that that is just purely just kind of like muddy the waters, create noise out there. But then I think basically for a broad set of voters that they view as kind of like less likely voters generally, not just of all races, of all age independence. Like there is this immigration, the border.
Starting point is 00:24:29 It all becomes a kind of strong versus weak argument, crime, all of this for like less ideological, less engaged voters that Joe Biden's age, that inflation and costs, the chaos of the border, all of that is a collection of things that prove a kind of weakness. And Trump, you know, they have a lot of amnesia about what happened. There's a collective amnesia about what Trump was like, but that Trump, for all of his sins and for all of his failures and for all of his vices, was tough, was strong. And I think that's like kind of a big part of what he's doing when he does these events. He says the word strength 50 times when he speaks in front of these audiences.
Starting point is 00:25:04 And I think that's like a big part of it for him. Yeah. Yeah. And those and look, USA Today Suffolk polls, which it's great that a pollster did polls of just black voters in Michigan and Pennsylvania, because then we've been talking about these tiny subsamples and larger polls, which aren't really useful. So the fact that they did this is helpful. And, you know, Trump did gain in these polls a few percentage points with black voters in Michigan and Pennsylvania, but the majority of Biden's steep decline, which, you know, it was 76% said they voted for Biden in 2020. And of those voters in the poll who said that, it's now only 56% are supporting him in Pennsylvania and 54% in Michigan. He's done 20 points in both states.
Starting point is 00:25:43 Yeah. So that is not great. And again, these same voters, cause it's, are they, did they suddenly become conservative? No. Obama's approval rating in those states among black voters they polled is 88% and 84% in Michigan and Pennsylvania. So a lot of work to do on that one. We got ourselves a debate next week, guys. Kudos if you could hear that sentence without getting a pit in your stomach. I truly, I still can't believe it. It is fucking June. Is it really going to happen? I guess it is.
Starting point is 00:26:10 I think. I mean, it seems like this is really happening. CNN, which is hosted in the debate, just reported that the rules have been finalized, agreed to. This is what the rules are that both camps have agreed to. 90-minute debate with two commercial breaks. No talking to advisors during the breaks. No props. No notes written in advance.
Starting point is 00:26:29 The podium position are designated by a coin flip who goes on what side. No studio audience to play off of. And mics automatically muted except during a candidate's allotted time to speak. It also looks like RFK Jr. will not make this round. CNN says he's only at the required polling threshold in three national polls instead of the required four. And he's definitely not yet on enough state ballots to be able to actually win the presidency,
Starting point is 00:26:56 which you need to do to be able to make this debate. So do any of these rules, do you think they should change the way joe biden prepares uh for this debate do you think you can like do hand signals like a third base coach oh yeah or maybe like go to the bathroom ahead of time and like leave a little note on the urinal and put it under the toilet seat remember when that remember that chess player was accused of having uh messages sent via morse code through some sort of anal device? Yeah. I'm just, I'm not. Was that true?
Starting point is 00:27:27 Was that false? No, it's true or false. It's a great idea. Well, George Bush was accused of having like a battery pack on his back. They never explained that shirt, that jacket. We never got to the bottom of what was going on back there. We got a truth there. I mean.
Starting point is 00:27:40 What was on that jacket? If Joe Biden is judged the winner of this debate, there's a matter about these rules. I mean, the conspiracies will be just everywhere. Yeah. Rules. Here's my question on the rules. So whether or not the mics are muted, I'm just imagining. I mean, I wonder how far away they are from each other, because you have to imagine Donald Trump is going to be just shouting whatever it is he shouts through the duration of Joe Biden's points.
Starting point is 00:28:09 And it's going to be incumbent on Biden to not let that r rattle him not interrupt himself which he likes to do a lot joe biden often interrupts have to take the take the earpiece out right yeah there's there's that honestly i also thought too about uh like you know there's not gonna be an audience but are a bunch of trump staffers gonna still try to applaud and pull shit like that oh i don't think they'll let i think they they're going to be pretty. I hope so. I hope they'll just, I'm just, look, the last time these men debated,
Starting point is 00:28:31 Trump literally tried to kill him with COVID. I'm at the point where I'm like, will they release a fucking sack of minks in there? Like, I don't know what's going to happen. Who will enforce the rules
Starting point is 00:28:39 is the question. Honestly, I have more faith in Jake Tapper and Dana Bash and CNN than i do the fucking commission on presidential debates that both campaigns said fuck off to once and for all jake and dan have like a ruler slapping hands setting up jim lara's bones and just letting these people yell at each other for two hours it's better this is better i think the big thing that the no i think that the biggest i mean the no mics or the mics muted is a big deal i kind of
Starting point is 00:29:03 the audience is an even bigger deal no audience because there's always an audience where they're like, we've told everyone not to applaud or whatever, and then it never works, right? So you just got to get them out of there completely. But with no audience, it makes the debate zinger like a lot less important. Because when you deliver the zinger and no one is laughing and no one is oohing or on or applauding like it doesn't really make the zinger that important at all let's leave it every week there's a reason sitcoms have laugh tracks yeah that's right and like neither of these guys is both of these guys need crowds to uh to react to like any attempts at humor and so i do think that that's you know you got to put the zingers away at a time like this.
Starting point is 00:29:46 Yes, I do think on the other side, I do like, I remember the debate between John Edwards and Dick Cheney. And it was this very staid and collegial affair that I think ultimately benefited the Republicans because we were trying to paint them as dangerous and extreme in all the ways that they were at the
Starting point is 00:30:05 time back when that was the worst they could do. And I do worry too that like not having it like we have seen multiple kinds of the Donald Trump that the campaign wants is the Donald Trump that was in Iowa kind of controlled, talking about being a husband and father, being very kind of generous. The Donald Trump that Donald Trump wants to be is the guy in New Hampshire, the like ranting and raving, going after all of his enemies. And I do worry about like there is a kind of unintended consequence of having this kind of a debate where if he can kind of keep himself together, he ends up seeming like the kind of Donald Trump his campaign wants him to be.
Starting point is 00:30:42 I do worry about that. For sure. I mean, if I was if I was of Donald Trump his campaign wants him to be. And I do worry about that. For sure. I mean, if I was preparing Donald Trump, which, you know, allegedly the Trump campaign's like, we're not preparing anything. He doesn't need preparation. He's just ready to go. But if I was preparing Donald Trump, I would say like, everyone is expecting you to lose it,
Starting point is 00:30:57 to go after Joe Biden, to talk about Hunter, to do all the shit that Trump does at the rallies, do your whole rally performance, right? And if you just go there and talk about how inflation is bad, people are struggling, Joe Biden has failed as president, he's too weak to lead, and then just stick to that message and don't sound too crazy, like you're going to win this debate. That's how I prepared Donald Trump.
Starting point is 00:31:17 And maybe Donald Trump could do that for the first five minutes. But I think that how long can he do that with no notes prepared, no one whispering in his ear, nothing like that like that. And for Joe Biden, then I think the prep is you've got to you want to speak directly to the American people and talk to people and not get into it like, you know, fistfight with Donald Trump. But you want to also get under Trump's skin. Like he's got to say he's got to have a few lines that that they know will really trigger Trump and then and reveal the Trump that we all know and despise. You gotta bring out the Twitter feed. We can't have the guy up there who is smart
Starting point is 00:31:49 and is endorsing Larry Hogan in the Maryland Senate race, even though Hogan said, you know, we should respect the jury verdict in the New York Hush Money case. The other thing that worries me for Biden in this is, like, there's all these reports. Look, it's very hard to be critical of your boss, no matter what, when your boss is the president states. There's lots of reporting that it's even harder for the Biden team to bring up issues with his family, in particular Hunter's recent legal challenges. up in some way that it may be hard to predict. And Biden needs to be, he has to respond in a way that is calculated and on his terms. Now that can be angry, but you can't just flip out or scream
Starting point is 00:32:33 or let it get in your head. Like it's gotta be really well thought through and you need to practice that. Did you hear Trump last week say, they asked him about Hunter and he said, it's a real sad thing for a father. That's all he said. And again, I'm sure they like if they are smart, if Trump is smart, that's the kind of answer he'll give, which would shock everyone. Yeah. And not play to type. Will he be able to if he feels like he's losing the debate? Right.
Starting point is 00:33:00 Then all bets are off and he's going to be the Trump. He's going to be the Trump we expect him to be. But I think for Biden also, it's like, smile, look alert, like overdo it. Because you know, everyone's going to be looking for a moment where you're staring off into space, or you're looking down, or you're tired. So like super alert the whole time. I do think he should address Trump when he's attacking Trump. He should address the cameras otherwise. And again, I think you want Donald Trump to try to complain when the mic is muted, because then he'll just sound like you'll just hear like little bits. It might be distracting to Biden, but for the audience, if they just hear this other guy, I just don't know how much you'll hear it. Cause it's a mic like 10 feet away. That's designed to pick up the person right here. So might just be
Starting point is 00:33:39 heard by Biden and not at home. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. I don't know. The other thing that Biden needs to do is just he does this thing where he often starts a sentence and then he cuts himself off i don't want to get started don't get me started he says get started doing that yeah start and then finish yeah and and the biggest problem and this was obama's problem in the first debate with romney is do not be defensive about your record this is not a debate where you are finally going to litigate all of your accomplishments and make sure that everyone knows. Of course, he should talk about what he's done that people might not realize
Starting point is 00:34:13 and how it's actually affected people. Hopefully not with like, we did a billion dollars here and $15 billion here. Like talk about the number of people you've helped, a number of student loans you've relieved, like the bridges you're building, whatever it may be. Talk about it that way. But when Trump challenges you or Jake and Dana challenge you on this, do not be defensive about the record. I think that's one of the bigger challenges. Or make sure... It's very likely that Trump will spend a lot of time attacking CNN, attacking Jake Tapper, attacking Dana Bash, attacking the media generally. Joe Biden just can't be the guy who does that too. And there's a lot of media criticism that
Starting point is 00:34:49 comes out of people like us and the White House. And I hope that it doesn't come out of Joe Biden's mouth. Particularly about like, the polls are just, polls are just wrong. Have you ever taken a poll lately? It's too hard. They're landlines only. We didn't need the poll and stuff. Leave that to Trump. Trump will do plenty of that if he needs to. I'm sure. We just talked about an ad that we think we really like. And I just like, this is an opportunity to deliver the message of that ad. Well, you were in court. Here's what we were doing. And here's what we'll keep doing. And by the way, that will have the effect of getting under Trump's skin. And like Joe Biden can do it very matter of factly. Yeah, you were in court. I know you were dealing with the law. I was out there trying to again, I hope it's economic stuff
Starting point is 00:35:26 and not like, I was in Ukraine. I was in Europe at the G7. We don't need that. Sorry, Tommy. I'm sitting right here. He was energizing the quad. He was facilitating an AUKUS agreement. Let's just submarine technology
Starting point is 00:35:42 going all the way to Australia. They're going to let Tommy into Bay Prep. Oh, the Indo-Pacific has no seat at this table? Pivot to Asia, anyone? Pacific Rim. That's a movie. Do they still wear the shirts? Which who?
Starting point is 00:35:54 When they go to the... The silly ASEAN shirts? The ASEAN shirts where they all wear the shirts. They do that really funny leader's photo where they all dress up. I like when the leaders have to dress up. Globalists. All right.
Starting point is 00:36:04 One thing before we go to break. Some people think he means juice when he's like yeah yes one thing before we go to break love it hey it's so good to be back i love that there are toilets here uh and people have to laugh at my jokes because they work here uh and i'm hitting the road love it or leave it is going to North Carolina starting tomorrow through Friday we'll be in Charlotte and Asheville we have some amazing
Starting point is 00:36:27 shows lined up with Tressie McMillan-Condom Sydney, Washington T.S. Madison Congressman Jeff Jackson and a lot of other amazing guests and then John, Tommy and I
Starting point is 00:36:36 we're doing our book tour the book's coming out and we have book events in New York next Tuesday June 25th that's the night before our Brooklyn show and in Boston next Thursday
Starting point is 00:36:44 on June 27th. And they're early, so you'll be home in time to watch the debate and hope your eyeballs don't fall out of your head and it's your hands. Or hope that they do. Maybe do that part beforehand. Get your tickets.
Starting point is 00:36:59 Please come see us at crooked.com slash events. Okay, before we go, we are treating ourselves to a little veepstake speculation since Trump's decision is rapidly approaching and there's been some new reporting about who he might pick. Reminder,
Starting point is 00:37:23 Trump has said multiple times he'll announce hisp at the convention instead of in the weeks before and that's now just a month away from the republican convention the campaign has sent vetting paperwork to eight people according to politico but really it's down to the the top tier is three but of all the uh possible contenders um a couple were out on the Sunday shows yesterday. Here's an idea of what you missed. Because this guy is tireless. He's committed. He's smart.
Starting point is 00:37:51 He's funny. He's nothing like he's portrayed in the press. And so if you asked me that same question today, I'd be like, absolutely, I would do business with him. Because, I mean, think about how successful he's been, whether it's a whatever it is. Look, I think that I would have an ability to step in. I'm actually pretty intelligent. I can sift through issues really, really well. It's about judgment. It's about logic streams. It's about how you make decisions at the end of the day. Under Joe Biden, we've seen the movement to defund the police, leaving communities like the one I grew up in, devastated and ravaged by a wave of violent crime that we have not seen literally
Starting point is 00:38:26 in five decades. Actually, Senator, as you probably know, the latest stats on violent crime and on the murder rate, they're actually down this past year. So not quite literally. That was first Doug Burgum, and then it was Byron Donalds, a congressman from Florida, talking about how we can sift through information and logic streams and then and then the last one was tim scott uh just lying about violent crime insiders are saying that of those three only bergham is on the real short list which apparently is just him jd vance and marco rubio the anonymous trump allies quoted in the pieces about this warn, as usual, that Trump
Starting point is 00:39:05 could always change his mind or just throw a curveball, but they're also not waving off the idea that for now it's these three finalists. All right. Giving you guys a chance to revise your lists or keep them the same. Who do you think is at the top of the campaigns list? Who do you think is at the top of Trump's list? And who are your dark horses, if you have dark horses? Can I tell you my favorite quote from all the reporting on this? Yes. Which was in the bulwark, I believe,
Starting point is 00:39:28 where Trump was bemoaning that his candidates weren't hot enough. He said, where's my Cary Grant? Yeah. But he, and, and. Listen, here's the thing. You don't want to fuck your vice president. He's not swiping right yet.
Starting point is 00:39:39 You're not, you don't know the right guy. That's how it works. You got to really want to get in there. Like, like, you know, he's kissed Joee arpaio but he knows he can do better what was your question it is pride your list what do you think the campaign wants him to do what do you think trump deep down in his dark soul wants to do and then are there any dark horses that were just that are not these top three that we're we're missing i mean it doesn't seem like the the hardcore maga culture warriors all want J.D. Vance.
Starting point is 00:40:06 I treated myself to a couple right-wing podcasts this morning, as one does. They love J.D. Vance. They love that he fights their culture wars. They're worried that he's very young. He's 39. That hurts. I saw that. I was like, 30?
Starting point is 00:40:20 He's 39? It hurts. First year older than the baseball players, then you're older than the vice presidents, then you're older than the senators, and you're dead. Remember when Barack Obama got shit because he was in his late 40s and he was a U.S. senator? J.D. Vance has been there. He just got elected. He's 39 years old.
Starting point is 00:40:38 Two years in. Yeah, I mean, at least Stefanik is 39 as well, so there's a couple youngins on this list. But J.D., will he get it and he is he is your slash and burn put him on fox news go hard to your opponents every day probably maga did you guys read the uh long jd vance interview with ross duthat in the new york times oh no i'm sorry i haven't had the same for the plane i will say he present, he really is the smarter Trump. You're scary.
Starting point is 00:41:08 And like, he still sounds very, everyone's pulling out the January 6th stuff and the, and the try to steal the election stuff. And he sounds very bullshitty on both of those topics, but he actually makes Trumpism sound more reasonable than I have seen it uh in print or heard of it and um it's interesting too he said to the people on the left i would say whose politics i'm open to it's the bernie bros that's who i'm that's whose politics i'm most open to he's like but generally center
Starting point is 00:41:35 left liberals who are doing very well and center right conservatives who are doing very well have an incredible blind spot about how much their success is built on a system that's not serving people who they should be serving and it's like that is a again we can all poke holes in it and it's all bullshit but it is it's i do i do wonder if jd vance being so smart and such a favorite of the uh maga crew is like going to give trump any kind of pause because he doesn't remember trump doesn't like anyone outshining trump and so there is that i about that. And I wonder about the inexperience thing. But he also called Trump America's Hitler at one point. Well, no, but he was saying, yes, but it was sort of like a can't beat him, join him sort
Starting point is 00:42:14 of a thing, that statement. But I find it really hard. Like, I think Trump doesn't know. So how could we know? But I find like it hard to get past the thought process that if you go with Rubio, you're making the same mistake you made with Pence, which is someone who's fealty is ultimately not going to be with Donald Trump, but to his long-term interest, a kind of squish. So that I find a bit confusing.
Starting point is 00:42:37 I think Doug Burgum, without the money, is he still as appealing? He is kind of boring and kind of stayed in a way that won't outshine trump but um i'll tell you my i i like you played the clip of byron donalds that was his worst moment in the interview he's actually pretty good that yeah that question the question was like are you ready to be commander in chief on day one and the fact that he didn't go hell yes i am he kind of kind of he actually seemed like he really thinks about the questions he's being asked and then tries to answer them which i think is a huge liability. But what I found interesting about Byron Donald is, you know, unlike a Rubio or a Burgum or a Tim Scott or any of these other people, he's able to deflect questions about Trump in a way that seemed less political.
Starting point is 00:43:23 I thought he was like a very, very good interview. And like, I thought he did. And I actually, when I saw it, I was like, oh, wow. Like if like, if Trump is watching this, I think Trump is much more in favor of someone like this than some of the more political people that are maybe higher up the list. I think that the, the Trump campaign is trying to be cautious. They think they're winning. Trump thinks he's winning. And you're in that situation, you go with the safe pick, and you go with the pick that's not going to upset the apple cart, and I think that's Doug Burgum, and he's rich.
Starting point is 00:43:56 And Trump likes rich people. Trump likes, you know, apparently there's reporting that he feels closest to Doug Burgum. He knows he's going to get complete loyalty from that guy. He thinks he looks good good i don't know if he wants to fuck him but he does think he looks good he apparently also said that his wife looks his wife is attractive and you know trump likes the hot wives that's a big deal so he's happy he wants to see how it all looks on tv right doug bergham and his wife and trump and melania he likes that so i could see i could see him just going bergham and it's like is it exciting? Is it going to shake anything up?
Starting point is 00:44:26 No, but Trump doesn't want to shake anything up. That's a good point. Yeah, no, of that list of three, I find it like the easiest to believe that it's Doug Bergman. I do too. But then I do wonder too, if he really is going to hold this for the convention,
Starting point is 00:44:37 like, is he trying to do something more interesting? Look, there's a three-person short list that we're talking about now. There's also sort of an eight-person longer list. There's only one on those on the eight person list, which is shocking, at least Stefanik. So that does tell you about the path they're going for, which is they're trying to reach young men, particularly young men of color. Given that, I mean, Rubio would be the smart pick, I think, because, you know, you think he could maybe make inroads with Latino voters. But I do get the sense that you do love it. That's like, I wonder if he really passes the loyalty test. And there's also the 2013 immigration reform experience where Rubio tried to be thoughtful and reasonable and actually solve the problem.
Starting point is 00:45:18 And the right-wing base has never forgiven him for that. The question I have on Burgum- And he's a neocon. And he's a neocon on foreign policy. MAGA people don't love the neocon. Rubio's got some Haley vibes. Yeah, both Rubio and Byron Donalds would have to move out of Florida
Starting point is 00:45:33 because you can't live in the same state as the president. The question about Burgum is, I wonder if there's a deal where you're like, all right, Doug, come on board, but you got to write a $100 million check. I'm sure you will. Oh, that's a perfect third impeachment. A direct purchase of vice presidency. that wouldn't surprise me at all i also think like
Starting point is 00:45:50 trump ultimately like he's a racist and he like likes his peers he looks like old men who he thinks are successful in business and that's yeah i wouldn't be surprised if the campaign or outside advisors like your kellyanne conway's are pushing Rubio um I think she is yeah you know because I do think like Rubio out there and he's like fluent in Spanish he can he just did like a Telemundo interview completely in Spanish the only you know major party candidate that can do that so you know I'm sure they're pushing on that but like I don't know deep down could just be Doug could you I mean it's a very Mike Pence pick yeah if he does that Rupert Murdoch apparently likes Doug Burgum.
Starting point is 00:46:25 The only thing about him is he's really boring. He's not vetted. Which Dakota is he from? Maybe he killed a dog too. Maybe he killed a couple. You never know who he's killed. You can get elected statewide in some of these gubernatorial races and not really get a tenth of the scrutiny
Starting point is 00:46:41 you get once you're a serious presidential contender. Doug Burgum, though, does answer the question, hey, why do all these no-name idiots with no shot run for president all the time? It's because you might end up the VP like Doug E. Fresh here. And he was my guy from the beginning.
Starting point is 00:46:57 You loved him. No, we know that. That's our show for today. We will be back with another show on Wednesday. It's going to be Lovett and me and Kate Shaw from Strict Scrutiny. Isn't that exciting? A lot of legal news. A lot of legal news.
Starting point is 00:47:13 All right, everyone. We'll see you later. If you want to get ad-free episodes, exclusive content, and more, consider joining our Friends of the Pod subscription community at crooked.com slash friends. And if you're already doom scrolling, don't forget to follow us at Pod Save America on Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube for access to full episodes, bonus content, and more.
Starting point is 00:47:32 Plus, if you're as opinionated as we are, consider dropping us a review. Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production. Our show is produced by Olivia Martinez and David Toledo. Our associate producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safari. Reid Cherlin is our executive producer.
Starting point is 00:47:47 The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick. Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer, with audio support from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis. Writing support by Hallie Kiefer. Madeline Herringer is our head of news and programming. Matt DeGroat is our head of production. Andy Taft is our executive assistant. Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Mia Kelman, David Toles, Kiril Pallaviv, and Molly Lobel.

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