Pod Save America - Biden Digs In
Episode Date: July 9, 2024President Biden stays on the offensive, calling into his favorite morning show to excoriate the naysayers, rallying support among old allies, and vowing to everyone who will listen that he’s staying... the race no matter what. Jon, Lovett, and Tommy lay out President Biden’s strategy and size up whether it’s working so far. And as the fight over Biden’s future moves to Capitol Hill, Lovett talks with Rep. Ro Khanna—a key Biden surrogate—about which way House members will go, and what Biden could be doing better. 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 Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
Happy 4th and welcome back.
We're back.
You guys managed to unplug for the holiday weekend? Stop thinking about politics?
I know you're joking. I really did try.
I really did try.
No, I see every once in a while I go into the box of screams and I'm like,
there you are with your megaphone, screaming with everybody else.
Screaming with a bunch of blue check marks, calling us traitors and funny fonts.
Good stuff. Good stuff out there on Elon's internet internet yeah what about you yeah sure yeah no i uh i will say i was not uh i was not too offline while i was in maine for the week but uh it was a nice place
to be staring at my phone the whole time that's what i thought and i did uh as emily likes to say
you know saw all
of my in-laws live there all their friends and she's like you've basically done the pod a couple
times a day for uh for everyone here in bit of a pool because it's all anyone could talk about i
don't know if you guys got this i've never that we were we've been worried for a long time about
attention on this race people's attention is now focused on this race.
Oh, yeah.
Big time.
In a way that I have not seen in a long time.
And look, we'll get to some of our critiques, and we have a few.
Yeah, wish it was in other circumstances, for sure.
In fairness, the Biden strategy of using the debate to draw more attention to the race has succeeded.
That's what, yeah.
It absolutely worked.
Checkmark.
Checkmark on that one.
Okay.
So it's been almost a week since our last episode,
so we got a lot to catch up on.
On Friday, Joe Biden sat for a taped 20-minute interview
with George Stephanopoulos
in an effort to dispel concerns about his age and fitness,
explain why the debate went so wrong,
and reiterate that he isn't dropping out.
We'll talk about how well he did in a bit.
The president then did a few fiery campaign events
over the weekend in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, where he focused his attacks on Trump and the people
urging him to step aside. He doubled down Monday morning when he responded to the small but growing
group of Democrats in Congress who've called on him to drop out with a letter to all House and
Senate Democrats that said, while Biden's, quote, not blind to the concerns people are raising,
he's still the best person to beat. Trump has, quote, rock blind to the concerns people are raising, he's still the best person to beat
Trump, has, quote, rock solid support from the base and elected Democrats, and that bowing out
of the race would overturn the will of the primary voters who chose him overwhelmingly
over the course of the spring. He then called into Morning Joe, as one does, to hit the same themes
and belittle the people calling for him to go. Biden does not have plans to campaign this week
because he's hosting the NATO summit in Washington,
including a Thursday press conference
where he's going to get asked about all of this yet again.
And then I believe he's going to have some campaign events this weekend.
So, Lovett, you're going to be talking later in the show
to Congressman Ro Khanna of California,
who is a key Biden supporter and liaison to the progressive community,
about where things stand on the Hill. Khanna of California, who is a key Biden supporter and liaison to the progressive community about
where things stand on the Hill. Now that a few more Dems have come out with statements of support
for Biden just before recording, there's others who are no one. Adam Smith, I believe, called on
him to step down today, Monday afternoon. And then some senators now are saying like, hey,
this is serious. We need to figure out who's going to beat Trump.
And so we're not going to say more, but let's just have this conversation.
They want to meet in person. The senators are all like, we're now finally in Washington. We want to get together and talk.
Yeah. And so Lovett's going to talk to Ro Khanna all about that in a bit.
But let's start with the Stephanopoulos interview from Friday, especially since more than eight million people watched it live,
which is far more than any of the other events
Biden has done since the debate. If you haven't seen the interview, here's some of what you missed.
Did you ever watch the debate afterwards?
I don't think I did, no.
Well, what I want to get at is, what were you experiencing as you were going through the debate?
Did you know how badly it was going?
Yeah, look, the whole way I prepared,
nobody's fault of mine, nobody's fault of mine.
I prepared what I usually would do,
sitting down as I did come back as foreign leaders
or the National Security Council for explicit detail.
And I realized about partway through that,
you know, all I could quote at the New York Times had me down at 10 points before the debate,
nine now or whatever the hell it is. The fact of the matter is that what I looked at
is that he also lied 28 times. I couldn't. I mean, the way the debate ran, not my fault, nobody else's fault.
No one else's fault. And if you stay in and Trump is elected and everything you're warning about
comes to pass, how will you feel in January? I feel as long as I gave it my all and I did the
goodest job as I know I can do. That's what this is about. Look, George, think of it this way.
You've heard me say this before. I think the United States and the world is at an inflection
point. But the things that happen in the next several years are going to determine what the
next six, seven decades look like. And who's going to be able to hold NATO together like me?
Who's going to be able to be in a position where I'm able to keep the Pacific Basin in
a position where we're at least checkmating China now?
Who's going to do that?
Who has that reach?
Who knows all this?
We're going to have, I guess, a good way to judge me is you're going to have now the NATO conference here in the United States next week.
Come listen.
I didn't realize we were on the verge of checkmate against China.
That's huge.
Knock that queen over.
Reaching that key Pacific Basin voter constituency.
It's Joe Biden calling for a love-in.
I don't think so. Is he with Mika? It's Joe Biden calling for love. It's after six.
I don't think so.
It's after six.
Is he with Mika?
You hear mine?
Let's try that again.
I think we should leave that in.
I don't want to leave that in.
Great.
Okay.
So what did you guys think of the interview?
And how are you feeling in general since you guys and Dan talked last week?
Excellent pod.
It was great to just be a listener.
You basically produced it because you were sending so many goddamn clips to the staff. It was great to just be a listener. You basically produced it
because you were sending so many goddamn clips.
I was, that's true.
Well, you know what?
You did a great job.
Tommy, why don't you kick us off?
I thought it was bad
and at times very hard to watch.
And in fairness to Biden,
I don't think that that interview
could have solved the political problem
that stemmed from the debate.
It could have stopped the bleeding.
For me, it made me more concerned.
And here's the reason why. Every time I've seen President Biden speak off a teleprompter
recently, he has struggled to communicate clearly. And I don't mean it's a bad message. I mean, like,
struggle to speak in a clear, coherent way. The sentences run together. They're hard to understand.
And I think we just heard it in that clip. All of us were wincing. It was hard to listen to.
And that is separate and apart from my concerns about the message itself, which is Biden just mostly being very defensive about his
record and not articulating a second term agenda that is compelling and makes me want to vote for
him over Donald Trump if I'm a swing voter. But the explanations for why the debate went badly
range from having a cold to jet lag, even though he'd been back for 12 days to blaming
debate prep. But like, I just don't think any of those answers fully explain how bad the debate
was. And so I don't know, it was hard to watch. The cut shots are not kind to him. He's consistently
misstating polling data about himself. Like, I don't know, I came away very concerned.
Love it.
data about himself? I don't know. I came away very concerned. Love it. Yes. So the interview itself, before he's even taken a question, I think it was a hard setting for him to succeed,
even at his absolute best, because it's hard to justify why it was more than a week after the
debate that it was so brief and he was only doing one. That's the first problem. The second problem
is the debate wasn't just a bad night.
We all saw it.
And it is barring an explanation, which he keeps denying.
He keeps denying outs, right?
Like that he was very sick,
or that he has some condition that has been repaired, whatever.
The explanations are kind of vague,
and they're about having a cold,
or having been jet lagged, or having been run down.
But that doesn't do enough to assuage our concerns about what we saw that night, right? And so
the explanations don't offer anything. But even with those caveats there about why his job
is so difficult, if you were going to raise the stakes on one interview, it can't be another
example of you being hard to understand, not because he's soft, not because he's mumbly, but because his train of thought doesn't make sense. And so you've now told us that he's up
for this job. Everyone's saying, why isn't he out there? Why isn't he out there? Why isn't he out
there? He goes out there and he offers this middling performance and it ends up being the
absolute worst of both worlds because he's right, right? The stakes are incredibly high.
Trump is an incredible threat, but either he will prosecute that case or someone else will.
And right now we get neither. Yeah. I heard some people say that it was more coherent than the
debate. I do agree with that. I thought he looked better than the debate. I thought he sounded a bit more coherent than the debate for sure.
But I came away thinking, all right, they had a week, sorry, it took a week to do another sort of
live fire event like this, right? Where it wasn't a, he gave a couple of rallies,
he did a couple of rallies that weekend as well, or he had just done a rally in Wisconsin
and energetic, just like the North Carolina rally on a teleprompter okay and then but they've had
a week to prepare for this interview and even if you go through the transcript right and because
some people were like well the sound was off and maybe maybe there's you know a lot of conspiracy
theories out there maybe abc was fixing the sound and this, forget it. So you just read the transcript and say you do him a favor by cleaning up all the garbles
and all the syntax issues in the transcript.
You are left with, what is his message?
And of course, it's difficult to deliver a message when George Stephanopoulos is asking
you multiple times, well, are you okay to serve?
Do you feel like you're cognitively okay, right? But as you're preparing for that interview,
you would think that your staff,
and I'm sure they did, would say,
okay, so you say, I had a bad night.
I know why people are concerned.
I'd be concerned if I saw that.
And I blew a big opportunity for sure.
You know what?
I feel okay.
I'm going to prove in the next several weeks
just how energized i am and how important i see this race and i'm going to make the case everywhere
i go and this is the case and then you just keep pivoting back to that but like that didn't happen
and i do think that like as we were saying he's back to a defense of his record which at times
before we criticized for being a defense of like all the
economic accomplishments when people weren't sort of feeling the recovery that would have been better
than talking about august careful i know tommy i'm sorry but you even the world i'd love to hear
what the world is talking about august talking about the pacific bent nato and i'm just like
what i don't i just that the urgency was not there. And it made me
really worried that he's going to be able to prosecute the case going forward and and make up
for the debate. Because guess what? He was behind before the debate. And now he's still behind by
more whatever you think about the polling, even his own internal polling has been behind right
now. So the question is, what are you going to do to win over?
Say you don't lose any voters.
Say you don't lose any Biden 2020 voters from the debate.
You're still behind.
What are you going to do to win over voters who were undecided between Biden and Trump
when you have that message with George Stephanopoulos?
Yeah, I mean, we went from NATO to AUKUS to getting the Japanese to spend more, I assume,
on defense was the context.
I mean, like just to level set, in July of 2020, Joe Biden was up nine points in the
polling average of national polls.
In July of 2023, Trump is up three points.
So that's a huge swing.
If you look under the hood, it gets worse.
70% of the electorate, if not more, thinks Biden is too old.
His disapproval rating is 57% in the 538 average.
There was an Emerson swing state poll that came out today that has Biden down in every single
swing state. And CNN found that 75% of voters think that someone else would do better and
get more likely to win. So for Joe Biden, the question of whether I should step aside is a
very difficult one, no doubt. But if you were stripped away the names and the emotion and just kind of looked at it based on the data, it seems like a very clear cut choice that we'd
have a better chance with someone else. But like his perspective here seems to be that, you know,
I'm only going to listen to the almighty. Well, Tommy, also the campaign was touting the set of
Bloomberg morning consult swing state polls that also came over to the
weekend that showed Biden doing better than their last set of polls. And, you know, they're tweeting
them with like, there goes the narrative. And this is just Twitter being Twitter again. And look at
how great Joe Biden's doing. It's a set of polls that have him losing to Donald Trump by two,
down seven in Pennsylvania and 55% of voters in the swing states saying that he should step aside. And
that's the poll that the campaign is saying proves that he's like on the rebound.
I find it's like, so, you know, he's not delivering the message effectively. If you
actually watch that for the first answer that you played, what you kind of see is, oh, like,
I see what he's pulling from, right? Like like i see there was some argument about how his polling wasn't that impacted that
the times has him down now but had him down before and you see he lied this many times here's what he
lied about what you see in that interview is actually a campaign that's being let down by
the candidate right like that's what this is about this is a campaign that is being and a white house
that is being let down by their principal over and over and over again. I would be very comfortable having a conversation about like, how are the polls moving? Is it not as bad as it looks? If the Joe Biden we were seeing was more like the Joe Biden we were seeing at the State of the Union, or even a slightly worse version of that.
State of the Union, or even a slightly worse version of that. But the Joe Biden we have seen in the past couple of outings, other than when he's on teleprompter, and even there, he's not,
he's, I mean, better than this. Like that George Stephanopoulos interview was painful to watch.
We were sitting here listening to the clip. I actually was thinking, oh, should we cut this
down so people don't turn off the podcast? It is ridiculous. I know. And I read again, it is ridiculous that we were talking about this interview in a series
like it was a terrible interview. He did a terrible job articulating why he's in the race,
what happened at the debate and why he's the person to beat Trump. He's doing a terrible job.
I know. And I read it. I read the transcript on the plane home last night because I was just like,
again, I'm just going to try to read the transcript, because his voice sounds whatever.
And it just did not make much sense.
And to your point about the campaign,
the campaign knows what they have to do.
They know the case they have to prosecute
and the message that works.
You can tell from their Twitter accounts,
from their press releases.
TV ads, surrogates.
Their ads, right, yeah.
Over the weekend, they've been talking a lot about Project 2025.
We're going to get to that in a bit.
And there were a lot of people complaining,
why aren't we talking about Project 2025 more?
Why isn't the media covering Project 2025?
Joe Biden, in front of an audience of 50 million Americans at a debate,
did not once mention Project 2025.
Then, in an audience in front of 8 million people with George Stephanopoulos, not once mention Project 2025. Then, in an audience front of 8 million people
with George Stephanopoulos, did not mention Project 2025. The campaign knows that what
Joe Biden has to do and what they have to do is talk about what Donald Trump means for the next
four years and the danger that he represents, and then what Joe Biden will do and fight for
the next four years. You didn't get any of that from any of his appearances.
What you get is he calls Donald Trump a liar, which every poll shows a vast majority of Americans already believe Donald Trump is a liar.
And he's still ahead in those polls.
You get that, you know, Joe Biden did something amazing on the economy, which we've already said most voters do not believe.
And so you've got to prosecute that case better.
And then Joe Biden kept NATO together, which no one, no voters fucking care about. said most voters do not believe and so you got to prosecute that case better and then joe biden
kept nato together which no one no voters fucking care about i'm sorry or at least not at least not
the critical voters you need to win well the the problem with all of this is some 70 percent of
people believe joe biden is too old donald donald trump is only getting between 45 and 50 percent
of the vote right what does that tell you? That
means there's a sizable group of people out there that right now believe Joe Biden is too old,
but they're still going to vote for him, right? There's a lot. And that tells you something like
Donald Trump is baked. People know who he is. They're looking for reassurance about whether
or not Joe Biden can do the job. And Joe Biden is not right now at all able to persuade people
that he's up to do the job. His outings are, and a campaign rally, I would say fine, like maybe
assuage some people, but his interviews, his off the cuff conversations, the videos that are
circulating online are damning. And he's got those people, you know, I mean, a lot of people are,
well, I think he's, I think he's old and I'm, I thought the debate was awful, but I'm still
voting for him. It's like, yeah, no, he's going to get 90 something percent of voters who he got before, like us, who were like very worried.
But if it's Joe Biden, Donald Trump, they're going to pick Joe Biden.
That's not the race now.
Right. That's why the focus on how little or how much the horse race number moved is kind of silly because it's a polarized country.
And the more concerning numbers are under the hood of the questions about age and fitness to do the job. Yeah. So that interview happens Friday
over the weekend. A bunch of news stories hit about Biden's age and health and potential decline
over the last year. Olivia Nuzzi did extensive reporting in New York magazine. It was titled
The Conspiracy of Silence to Protect Joe Biden. The president's mental decline was like a dark family secret for many elite supporters.
The New York Times interviewed a current senior White House official who said they worked with Biden during his presidency, vice presidency and 2020 campaign, but now believe Biden should not seek reelection.
seek re-election. And the quote is, the official who insisted on anonymity in order to continue serving said Mr. Biden had steadily showed more signs of his age in recent months, including
speaking more slowly, haltingly and quietly, as well as appearing more fatigued in private.
Small group of people that could be that worked with him as vice president 2020 campaign and then
now senior officials currently serving in the White House. Then just before we started recording, we got quite a story from the Times about how a Parkinson's disease
specialist from Walter Reed Medical Center visited the White House eight times from last July to this
past March, which is the end date for that batch of visitor logs. All visitor logs in the White
House are made public. So if you visit the White House, your name is on the visitor log. White
House spokesman Andrew Bates responded, quote, a wide variety of specialists from the Walter Reed system visit the White House complex to treat the thousands of military personnel who work on the grounds.
And that Biden has only seen a neurologist once a year as part of his annual checkup and that those exams have, quote, found no signs of Parkinson's and he is not being treated for it.
There was a medical report released in February from the
president's last exam that does say that about Parkinson's and other neurological conditions.
It is worth noting, though, that the statement did not flatly say that these visits were unrelated
to Biden and his care. And White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre refused to answer
that question during the White House briefing. She cited unspecified security concerns as to
why she couldn't get into that. And privacy. Yeah, and privacy. So that's a lot. What did you guys
make of the Olivia Nuzzi story and the Times interview with the senior White House official?
Let's start there and then we can move on to the Parkinson story. I mean, I think big picture,
I sort of found the kind of voicey first person reporting less compelling than like this anonymous official quote in the
times who worked with joe biden over the years and said that he shouldn't seek re-election i mean i
think that is very damning i think the problem the challenge like for the pine campaign to push back
on quotes like that is that they are backstopped by the fact that joe biden hasn't really been
campaigning right we had this this rough debate on when when was it, a week ago now, a week plus, and his schedule has been relatively light. So,
you know, I don't know. And then we should get into this Parkinson's
story because it consumed the White House briefing today.
Yeah. So the problem, like, I'm just being very cynical about this and it's like, okay,
there's a, there's a, like a feeding frenzy right now, right? There are people that have,
there are reporters going to people that work there trying to get whatever they can how old does he seem
does he seem too old like there's a and and people are speaking in a way they maybe weren't speaking
before it is hard to tell in these stories the difference between wow biden is really showing
his age he is slower more lethargic but stillus mentis, still up to the task of doing the most important parts of his job and stories that are insinuating something worse.
And I think part of it, right, is that if you're somebody interacting with Joe Biden once in a while, right, like you're saying, oh, that was he's he's older than I expected.
But is that is that him on his best day? Is that him on his worst day?
You know, like we went to the White House
before the Correspondents' Dinner.
And...
And I thought of this story reading Olivia's piece
because Olivia ends with her seeing Biden
the night of the Correspondents' Dinner
and feeling like, oh gosh.
I mean, she describes it in much more vivid detail.
But we saw him the night before.
Yeah. And the experience of seeing him was, oh, wow, like he is he's slower. His speech was halting.
He kind of gave remarks that were like a little bit like I think there was one point where he kind of went back to an anecdote, kind of did it twice.
And you kind of you know, you see people that, you know, like, oh, you know, he just got back from, I think it was either the G7 or Ukraine. He just, he'd been on a long flight. It's,
it's a Friday evening. The president has a, every Friday evening is an evening in which the
president is exhausted. And you're like, okay. Giving remarks, some random group of people.
He doesn't even know why he's there. That's every president. No, that's every president.
It was confusing. I don't know who the group was it was like us some some uh influencers some other people it was a weird mix of people so
i'm sure when joe biden comes down and has to give like 15 minute marks he's like who the fuck am i
talking to right now right and so you're in there you're like obama would have felt the same thing
of course and so you see this and you're like uh i don't know like that was pretty bad but
he what is this event he's probably exhausted you chalk it up to that. We were saying to each other,
like, hey, maybe there's like,
is there a national security thing going on?
Like he seems real.
I remember that was the first moment
that I was like, wow, he really seems,
it doesn't seem great.
I had seen him, I've told this before,
but I had seen him in December of 22
when my whole family was at the White House.
He like brought us up to the Oval.
He was incredibly kind.
He recognized Emily's mom from meeting her in in 2018 that's because she's so hot
marty's gonna she's gonna listen yeah she's gonna leave that in um and he recognized her and he was
like telling details of the bork nomination fight to my father-in-law as a federal judge and it was
you know we left being like that's joe biden tells a lot of stories a lot
of details long-winded but like seemed i was like you know what people call him he's with it he's
with it the the night before the correspondence center i was nervous then i remember going home
and then watching the correspondence dinner night on tv and seeing him there and i wasn't nervous
because i was like oh well he he seems better right this the same thing happened when we all
went all three of us went to the fundraiser in LA that has now been talked about a lot.
And he looked, it was really bad.
It was like debate style bad.
And I remember thinking after that, like, well, the debate's in a week.
Either he'll do great in the debate and we'll all be like, well, you know what?
He was tired from doing two trips to Europe.
And that's why he was bad at the fundraiser.
Or he'll be like, this is the debate.
And then everyone will be talking about it.
And here we are.
Yeah.
I mean, just we all walked out of that fundraiser here in LA,
and we're talking to each other and to people around us who are, you know, in politics,
and we're like, that was chilling.
It was very, very, very unnerving.
And especially, like, we follow this all the time.
Emily and Hannah were there, and they do not follow it all the time,
and they do not see Joe Biden all the time, and they, more than us even, were like, what was that?
And now, look, the reason I think I want to, it's important, I think, to tell these stories
is because there is a growing narrative, too, that there's been this, like, cover-up by
everyone who's ever talked to Joe Biden or, like, everyone who was a Biden supporter.
And I think it is, as you pointed out, Lovett, it's difficult when you see someone once in a while where you're like, is it showing signs of age? Is it just like a president's job is is really brutal and they're traveling all the time and sometimes they're just off and like Obama when he was tired, his remarks would be terrible. Like this happens all the time. And so you just don't you don't know. It's more of a gradual thing, I think. Well, I think that's part of the issue here. And I think part of why even his ability to
explain it in these interviews is so difficult and why I think some of these stories are not
dishonest, but are also a bit over-torqued in terms of like a conspiracy of silence.
If Joe Biden we were seeing in the last couple of weeks was the Joe Biden we were debating whether
or not to nominate or whether there should be a challenger. I think that conversation would have been different. The facts have changed. The information has changed.
Do I know how much, how often these kinds of moments where he seems like he's lost a step
to the point where you worry about him being the candidate? Do I know that these weren't happening
frequently in the past? I don't. But my sense of just watching this is everyone collectively has been watching a slow
decline that came into stark relief when we saw him at the debate that put other moments where
we saw him in better context. That doesn't mean like the reason I think we didn't sort of say,
oh, we have to talk about a new nominee after we see him with Julia Roberts and George Clooney is
because I don't know, maybe he's having a bad day. We'll see him at the debate, right? Like you don't know what his best
and his worst is. You don't know what his median is. Well, in the LA one, he'd specifically gotten
off of a plane from, I think the G7 that day. So everyone's like, oh, he was exhausted. Same
thing we said after the White House thing. This is why the White House is in such a terrible spot
is because where you, before you might've gotten some grace in moments like that. Now everyone is
looking for the conspiracy because some reporters feel misled. They feel like the White House came down too hard on the Wall Street
Journal story from a couple of weeks back about his age. And I guess, you know, the Olivia Nuzzi
piece was like emotional and well-written as all her things are. But I thought like she made a lot
out of, for example, Jill Biden giving her a look without having really any idea why Jill Biden was
giving her that look. But like now the
White House briefing today was consumed top to bottom with questions about why a doctor who
specializes in Parkinson's research visited the White House eight times. And there's just no way
for that to be a good thing for the White House. I mean, poor Corrine Jean-Pierre was up there for
45 minutes trying to deflect questions. They said they wouldn't comment on why the doctor was there,
privacy issues or something or security. It's just, it's not
going to stop the questions. And I mean, I went back and I rewatched the ABC interview.
It seemed like their Biden said he had not gotten a cognitive test. Karine Jean-Pierre today said
he'd gotten one every year. It seems like there's some inconsistency here in the story that's being
told, or at least in precision.
Well, yeah, I was going to say, I couldn't tell if it's the difference between a neurological exam and a cognitive test, which I believe are two different things.
But it is hard to, again, because Biden is not necessarily clear in his comments.
And then also, you know, there are, of course, there are privacy concerns here and there when a doctor visits and you don't want to start.
concerns here and there when a doctor visits and you don't want to start. But like at this point,
it's going to be, like you said, it's gonna be very hard to just keep saying we have a report,
medical report from February and that's it. And that's all we're doing. It's just,
it's a hard thing to do. I watched that entire briefing and actually, it was actually kind of very difficult to understand what the name is in a public log. The question is, did this person
see the president? And then the answer is, oh, there are privacy concerns because this doctor could see other people at the White House. And maybe there's
a way I'm not understanding it. I also don't put it on the press secretary because this feels like
an incredibly impossible position that Joe Biden has put everyone around him in. But the issue here
is those questions won't stop because Joe, first of all, it's wild to me that Joe Biden isn't
Those questions won't stop because Joe, first of all, it's wild to me that Joe Biden isn't doing everything he can. You know, he's writing letters to members of Congress about how the stakes are totally selling morning Joe.
The stakes are the stakes, the stakes, Joe Biden. We can't let die.
So the stakes, the stakes, the stakes. But then, OK, well, then get out there more.
Right. Like nobody would give a shit about when his last neurological assessment was.
If he had spent three days mixing it up with reporters,
shaking hands with voters, talking to journalists,
being the Joe Biden of three or four years ago,
who would certainly be doing that right now.
So he can't, he's not out there.
He's saying, oh, the cognitive test is me being out there,
but he's not out there.
They're getting these confusing answers
about what test he is getting.
It is as if their response is designed
to continue this morass, like to keep us trapped in it.
Yeah, no, I mean, it's tough.
And I get it.
Like, say they have nothing to hide on this, right?
The reason they're probably avoiding answering more questions aside from whatever real privacy and health concerns there are and guidelines and rules there are is like, if they say, sure, he'll take another test,
then it's like they're thinking,
then we lose more news cycles focusing,
waiting for the test.
And you're giving an inch.
They won't give an inch.
They don't want to give an inch.
That's exactly right.
From a campaign perspective,
Biden's strategy seems to be punching back hard at critics who want him to step aside and making appearances with his strongest supporters.
He spoke at a black church in Philadelphia this weekend and did events with John Fetterman and Governor Josh Shapiro.
Biden's also trying to rally support among older black Democrats, consistently his best demographic group in all the polling.
Democrats consistently his best demographic group in all the polling. Jonathan Martin reported in Politico this morning that he's counting on his relationships with unions and the Black political
establishment to be a kind of firewall against calls for him to drop out. Jay Mart reports that
Congresswoman Maxine Waters told a gathering of Black voters in New Orleans over the weekend that
the nominee will be Joe Biden full stop, and that she told other congressional Black caucus members,
particularly the younger ones, in a Friday conference call that they need to get in line behind Biden.
Today, the CBC chairman, Congressman Steve Horsford, was one of the members issuing statements
of support for Biden.
As we mentioned, Biden also sent that letter to all congressional Democrats and then took
a page out of the Trump calling into Fox and Friends playbook by calling into his favorite
morning show, Morning Joe. Let's listen to how that went. We're not going anywhere. I am not
going anywhere. I wouldn't be running if I didn't absolutely believe that I am the best candidate
to beat Donald Trump in 2024. Who else do you think could step in here and do this? I expanded
NATO. I solidified NATO. Ask your brother about it.
Remember all this talk about how I don't have the black support? Come on, give me a break.
Come with me. Watch. Watch. I'm getting so frustrated by the elites. Now, I'm not talking
about you guys, but about the elites in the party who they know so much more. He said, well, as long as I did the best I could do, that's the most important thing.
That's caused Democrats concerned who believe that losing is not an option.
What would you say to those who are concerned by that answer?
It's not an option and I'm not lost.
I haven't lost.
I beat him last time.
I'll beat him this time.
If any of these guys
don't think I should run against me,
go ahead, announce the president.
Challenge me at the convention.
I thought AI Joe Biden
did a great job in that interview.
I think that whoever was on those buttons,
like the Zoo 100,
did a pretty good job.
What do you guys,
we can get to the morning Joe of it all in a second, but what do you
guys think about the overall strategy of sort of using his closest supporters as a firewall
and dismissing his critics as a bunch of elites?
Nothing says I don't care about elite opinion like a phoner at the morning Joe.
It's basically like a mainline.
It's the Beltway's brain.
I think, look, on the one hand, I'm sympathetic to, like, Joe Biden cannot show any daylight
on whether or not he's dropping out or it's over.
Right.
Right.
So they're 100% in until they're not.
But I do think that a lot of the pushback has been inaccurate and some of it has felt
pretty cynical.
The inaccurate part is the idea that only people in Washington care about his age or
his ability to do the job for
four more years. The polling shows the opposite. This is an issue with every voter in all
demographics, age, race, gender, Democrats. Majorities of Democrats in some of these polls
have concerns about his age. And sometimes Joe Biden kind of is a bit of a polling truther when
he's confronted with this reality and pushes back on polls and sort of cites ones
that he says his internals are better. And it's just, it's not accurate. And then the cynical
part is the suggestion that it's somehow racist to tell Joe Biden to step down or disrespectful
to black voters when, you know, the most likely person to come after him would be Kamala Harris.
I mean, I'd find that the cognitive dissonance there to make that argument is hard to wrap your head around. I laughed at first when I
read it because I was like, what? I just think also, but like what I resent is the attempt to
silence the conversation about whether he should drop out by saying, shut up. You could silence us
by doing a one hour press conference at a bunch of campaign events and
knocking the cover off the ball. And then I'll shut the fuck up. That's how I'll shut up. But
like the, the idea that people shouldn't have this conversation, given what we all know the
stakes are in the selection, I find offensive. If I thought that Joe Biden attacking elites,
attacking media critics, attacking whatever it is, if I thought that wase biden attacking elites attacking media critics attacking whatever it is if i
thought that was an effective strategy to beat donald trump i'd be like go for it man call us
whatever the fuck you want i don't care hit us every single event put make that make it part of
the stump speech all the elite like it's my kink it's not i don't i don't feel hurt and who cares
you know it is but it's coming from the voters the concerns are coming from the
voters and look it's not just post-debate either like let's just want to pre-debate let's talk
about where we were before the debate the polls right before the debate right and there was the
new york times sienna poll but this was all the polling averages right think of where we were
donald trump was convicted on may 31st for a month, for several weeks straight.
We had nonstop coverage of Donald Trump, Donald Trump in courtroom. Donald Trump is a conviction.
The Biden campaign is out with tens of millions of dollars of ads in the swing states, mainly on their own.
The Trump campaign was not spending in the swing states. So you got the Biden campaign. Joe Biden is out there campaigning.
He's campaigning. Donald Trump's a convicted felon everyone's talking about it all the press that everyone's
that a lot of people are complaining about now that's not covering trump they're all covering
trump for a whole month and then the polls right before the debate show in the new york times poll
showed trump 48 biden 42 they asked do you think b Biden should be replaced as nominee? 64% of all voters said
yes. 55% of black voters, 66% of Hispanic voters, 48% of Biden voters, people who said they were
supporting Biden. And then do you think Biden's tool to be an effective president? 69% of all
voters, 62% of black voters, 68% of Hispanic voters, 55% of Biden voters. Now that's the
New York Times poll. Maybe that was an outlier. There are similar numbers in every single poll. And we know from now from post-debate
that the campaign's internal polling, their own polling, even though they think that polling is
broken, they do a lot of internal polling. And guess what? They don't think it's broken
when you talk to them. Their internal polling had the race closer, but still like extremely
close, if not behind a little bit in the battleground state.
People are more worried about Joe Biden's unfitness because of age.
And they are Donald Trump's lack of fitness due to his criminality and abuses.
That is such a damning fact about where the electorate is, not where the elites are.
And this idea, even just like this, this is not a strategy to persuade. It's a strategy to embarrass people into silence. That letter
was about provoking cowardice. It was about provoking cowardice on the part of House
Democrats to let them know, don't go out there too far on that tree branch. We're going to saw it off.
So as much as you're texting each other and talking to each other and telling reporters
anonymously that you're terrified of Joe Biden as the nominee, not just because of what it
means for Trump to be president, but because you're afraid of the down ballot impacts for
the Senate and the House, as much as your honesty in private is telling you that Joe
Biden shouldn't be the nominee, keep your mouth shut because
I'm not going anywhere and it will only hurt you. I've heard people make two arguments as to why
critics should shut up right now. One is it's pointless because Joe Biden is the one making
the decision and Joe Biden has already said he's in it. So why are we wasting our time?
And the second is the criticism is hurting him more. It wasn't the people around him.
If the people around him are taking the temperature of the voters and swing, again,
forget the elites, forget the pundits, look at the voters, look at the polls.
And if people around him on his campaign team see the numbers really drop,
or they have real concerns that they're hearing from Democratic Senate campaigns,
House campaigns, that not only could Joe Biden lose, but those Democratic Senate and House
candidates could lose. Yeah, then maybe they'll have another conversation with Joe Biden before
the convention. So I don't think it is useless. The second one that is hurting is just so our
BSG polling, which is Joel Benenson's polling group, Mike Kulishek, who is a pollster there,
worked with us on wilderness stuff.
He did a set of polls before the debate and a set of polls after the debate.
And he said that we could share this. So voters who watch the debate, who watch the debate, prefer Trump over Biden 51 to 46.
Voters who did not watch the debate are split 43 percent for Biden, 40 percent for Trump.
watch the debate are split 43% for Biden, 40% for Trump. And voters who just heard about the debate also favor Biden over Trump by 53, 45, an even bigger margin. So the idea that it was the
criticism and reaction and press narrative after the debate is not borne out by the polling. It
was the people who watched the debate in its entirety. Those were the people who moved
against Joe Biden, even if it wasn't by a huge margin, but they did. So the one thing I also,
I feel like, I think one reason this has been such a kind of heartbreaking and anxiety provoking
experience is that we all feel like two things are happening at once, which is on the one hand,
it's like, this is just Joe Biden's decision. It's entirely up to Joe Biden. Whatever happens is up to Joe Biden. But on the other hand, the feeling like-
We all own it.
We all own it. And it's our-
That's the problem.
Yeah. This is that his decision has great effect on all of our lives and we don't want to feel
powerless in this process. And so I do think, by the way, members of Congress are going to be important in this because if if if a
bunch of House Democrats and a bunch of senators start saying that they want Joe Biden to step
aside, it'll be harder for Joe Biden to ignore that. That will move him. So if you think that
Joe Biden should not be the nominee and you want your member of Congress to represent you in that
fight, you should call them. And by the way, if you think that all of this is insane and that we're doing more harm than good than having this conversation.
So angry with us, then go call too. Yeah. But I really, I really think it is like,
it's only Joe Biden can make the decision. Yes. But he's going to make that decision in the world
as he finds it. And I think it is incumbent upon all of us to remember that we should act as if we have agency in this fight and remind our
members of Congress that they may be right now worried about the fallback if Joe Biden is the
nominee, but they should also worry about their voters who are watching and who care about what
happens in this election and that none of us is going to forget what members of Congress did when
all of them are privately wringing their
hands and then telling reporters on background that think Joe Biden should step aside while
putting out dumb statements that say Joe Biden had our back, so we got to have his back, even
though you don't believe a word of it. It's a very big coalition, a very broad coalition that
defeated Donald Trump in 2020. People who are fans of AOC and Bernie Sanders all the way to Mitt Romney and Liz Cheney. That's a big coalition, and all those people want Donald Trump in 2020, people who are fans of AOC and Bernie Sanders all the way to
Mitt Romney and Liz Cheney. That's a big coalition. And all those people want Donald Trump
to lose. And defeating Donald Trump is the number one most important priority. And everyone shares
that priority. But if that's our number one priority, then we have to be strategic and smart
about the best way to do it. You said this on you said this on on the on the last pod which is like loyalty what what is loyalty loyalty is for like personal relationships and friendships loyalty
is not for politics the loyalty like that's a side loyalty identity record it's it's about who
can win that's it that's the only thing that matters right now i just one thing i just want
to say about this morning joe interview it was a good idea to have done a week and a half ago you know what i mean this is the kind of thing you do to
kind of staunch the bleeding among elite opinion like the day after a debate that was that bad and
you know what joe biden really really cares about elite opinion he watches morning joe he reads tom
friedman he reads the new york times like that stuff matters to him he doesn't listen to this
dumb bullshit that we're doing right now but that's fine that's okay he's 81 but like again on the on the interview itself like it was not like there were times when biden was like reading
from talking points and even that part wasn't coming out like crisply you know mika said to him
how can you ensure you won't have another night like you had at the debate and his response was
look at my career i've not had many nights like that and it's just like that's not how aging works you know
so like it's just his his proof point is like watch me you know if someone underestimated
neurologically you know i've been out campaigning everything's fine he's barely been campaigning can
i also this this the second piece of this which is like oh this is causing harm you're doing harm
because joe biden's not going to go anywhere you're doing harm i Joe Biden is not going to go anywhere. You're doing harm. I think like two points about this. People have been really antagonizing the media about this. You're right. The Times, these op ed pages, they are talking about Joe Biden in a way they didn't bother doing about Trump.
because they believe that Democrats are subject to pressure and have like a fundamental respect for democracy and free inquiry. So yes, you're right. They believe that they will be taken
seriously. And B, they believe Joe Biden is decent, that Joe Biden is ultimately guided by
decency, that this argument is worth having, that we're having this argument, even if it is ultimately
up to Joe Biden, we believe Joe Biden wants to do what's best for the country. And that-
I don't think it has anything to do.
They're doing their job.
They're covering a story.
Mental fitness of the president matters.
It is not about decency.
It's not about, uh, both sides ism.
Like I see liberals out there being like, we need to go hard.
The fucking media, they should be doing project 2020.
No, this is a story that should be covered. I'm talking about the op-eds calling for him to withdraw when they, the criticism, the
idea that, oh, they're writing op-eds about Biden withdrawing, but they never called on Donald Trump to withdraw. I'm just, I think that there's a, that, that like that the, the media does focus on Democrats and treats Democrats like they have agency and responsibility in a way they don been kicking Donald Trump's ass this cycle. I mean,
it was, we had nonstop coverage of the motorcade leaving Mar-a-Lago to the core. I mean, what,
what are we talking about? Right? Like, and also why do we think they're doing this now? Because
Joe Biden and his team took the biggest risk they could have possibly taken by asking for a debate
in June when they could have waited and done asking for a debate in june when they could
have waited and done one in the fall or got out of it all together maybe and they took this big
risk and then in front of 15 million people joe biden gave the the worst debate performance
maybe in presidential history and like the news media is going to be like one bad night let's
move on to project 2025 that's fucking nuts nuts. But this is the point, though.
Let's say the media did that.
Let's say we all shut the fuck up and moved on and stopped talking.
Did what everyone did.
Did what the fucking Internet Delaware crossers wanted us to do and just get on the boat and
shut the fuck up.
You think the right wing is going away?
Do you think that the TikTok videos of Joe Biden looking too old that already had had
a huge impact is going away?
Do you have any idea what this fucking Republican convention is going to be like?
The TV doctors they haven't they haven't they've barely spent any money on their ads.
They've the Trump campaign and the RNC have barely spent their budget.
One of the lessons of the last decade is you don't the right wing media is going to do what they're going to do.
We need to talk about this now because that's coming.
Regardless of what we say now, age will be the defining issue if Joe Biden is the nominee,
even if we all fall in line, which we will do. You're yelling at like four Twitter users.
Well, no, I'm not because I'm having a nice conversation. You're right. But one did have
a back right now. Unbelievable. One of the frames we obviously keep hearing from biden
is that he's the only candidate who can beat donald trump of course the only person who can
hold nato together the other the other the other the other most critical part of this election
that's it one person can hold nato by the way by the way the other thing too is like oh it's it's
it's it's somehow uh uh you're not being respectful of the voters when he joe biden tells uh morning
joe and mikaika that who else could
do this job? Slap in the face to your vice president. Great segue. That was my next sentence.
Great. So it does. It does. All of this raises some questions about his views and his campaign's
views on the very, the very qualified vice president he chose, Kamala Harris. Most Democratic
officials believe that if Biden does change his mind at this
point and step aside, which again, running out of time, Harris as nominee would be the most likely
possibility, if not the only possibility. Others have suggested various open convention scenarios.
I would suggest Ezra Klein wrote a great piece about Jim Clyburn's sort of one-off comments
last week. Every once in a while, Clyburn just says something else that's like a quick comment. You're like, whoa, that was kind
of a big deal. At some point, Clyburn said that if Biden stepped aside, Democrats could hold a
quote, mini primary. James Carville wrote in the New York Times today, he suggested a series of
town halls hosted by Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, where the two former presidents would apparently
also choose the participants and candidates,
possibly with the help of the country's Democratic governors.
So here's how this works.
It's like a draft.
So basically, those are two-hour town halls.
And after Barack Obama and Bill Clinton finish their opening remarks,
each candidate will have between two and three minutes to speak.
And it'll be an incredible event.
It'll be an incredible event.
We'll hear about energy policy
from Clinton for about 20, 30 minutes.
It'll be awesome.
And there's just a bench
and it's like Whitmer and Shapiro
and Kamala Harris.
And they're just sitting there like,
is they going to stop yet?
That's all the time we have.
All the mini primary proposals
would benefit from less detail.
Well, and then...
Spell it out less.
Here's the best one then.
A semaphore reported on a memo
floating around from a few Democrats
who proposed a, quote, blitz primary
that would involve weekly forums moderated by cultural icons like Michelle Obama,
Oprah and Taylor Swift. Sure. No bad ideas in a brainstorm. Taylor Swift was in Budapest getting
a shiver. She doesn't really know why. I feel like my name was mentioned in something I don't
want to be involved in. It does seem like as of this recording, at least we are quite far from
a scenario where we're Biden steps down. But if he changes his mind, what are your thoughts on the
pros and cons of either anointing Harris, the nominee, or holding some version of an
open convention primary that, that does not involve Bill Clinton and Taylor Swift.
I mean, I, well, I think the mini primary idea is a great one. I realized it could be chaotic,
but I also think it would be really interesting and people would tune in and maybe it wouldn't
just be like hardcore Democrats that watch the
conventions for once. And I, you know, some people worry that it would get ugly. I kind of doubt that
it would. There's not that much time. You're appealing to like 4,000 delegates who probably
like all the candidates in the mini primary and they will get turned off if you're super mean.
It would allow for some vetting of candidates' backgrounds in this compressed period of time.
Not enough, but hopefully enough to expose any real big problems.
Is it risky?
Yes.
But I think that candidates and parties benefit from competition and throwing punches and
taking punches.
Think about Obama.
He was a way better candidate after slugging it out with Hillary Clinton for months and
months than he was before.
And it was a very good thing for us that the Reverend Wright story came out early and not
in October before the election. So welcome. The elephant in the room is obviously the vice
president and sort of like what she is owed in this moment as next up if Biden were to resign
as president. But I think like for her, the optics of competing and winning the nomination is really
good, even in a weird like ad hoc process. It's better than the party seeming to dictate an
outcome. I don't think people like that. I worry a lot about it seeming like the party dictates an
outcome, especially after the party's nominee steps aside because of, you know, and then there's
all these stories out there. And has anyone been
hiding age stuff? So already people are going to start feeling distrustful, right? And if you then,
and I think this is about Kamala Harris, I think this if someone came out and said,
here's our here's our Governor Whitmer, Josh Shapiro ticket, it's here for you. And we're
giving it to you, right? I'd feel the same way. Like, I don't think at this point, that the party
itself, senior leaders can just come out and say, here is the person. I think that Kamala Harris would be the overwhelming favorite in this scenario,
but I think she would emerge as a stronger candidate in the general if, like Tommy said,
there are a series of town halls, interviews, debates with some of the other potential
candidates. And I think that that would also sort of blunt a very easy line of attack from Trump and the Republicans that like the cabal got together that was propping up Joe Biden.
And then they just gave us this person. And like, you know what?
She again, debating makes you stronger. And the whole everyone just assumes the chaos and division.
If this happens, Joe Biden steps aside, the Democratic Party will have taken the biggest gamble ever this close to the election where the stakes are total.
And I think once a nominee is chosen, talk about people getting in line.
Everyone is going to be like on their best behavior.
There are very few ideological fissures in the potential candidates that we could that we could see at this point.
We're not going to have like ideological divisions like we've had in the past.
It's people are going to be like, I'm on board.
You're already seeing like the Bernie bros and the K hive and the never Trumpers
all get together. You know, it's just, it's, it's already happened. And it's, and honestly,
it's beautiful. It's beautiful. Think about dumb, the ideological divisions of 2020 where it was
like, how fast are we going to implement Medicare for all? And what fantasy reality are we really
fighting about? And that's, and that those kinds of conversations are never going to happen.
So yeah, I, I do think that like, like the best way kamala harris could be the
nominee is to be the nominee after some kind of an open process i am not like i think what you're
saying makes sense but if you told me that the way this shakes out is that the monday after the
republican convention joe biden calls a press conference and says i've decided to step aside
and i'm throwing my support behind my vice president. I always said I would pass the torch. Voters across the country voted for our ticket. I'm going to respect the will of the voters. I would be 100 percent fine with it. And by the way, like it isn't people in a background choosing because the Democratic primaries unfolded and she was going to be on the ticket. So it's like, there's, there's, and there's an argument made that too, like the money goes to her. So like that, that the, that the kind of, she is the vice president.
It is, it is, it is rightful that given the fact that there can't be a primary,
the primary already took place and selected her as the backup. And if that is the way it goes,
I will be completely happy with that. I am not persuaded that the risk of the mess that could
happen in the weeks before the convention
is better than that moment, which I think will be just as interesting and exciting to the press
for the three weeks before we get to the convention. I just start with this, the same
principle that we're applying to this whole conversation about Biden, right? Which is
winning is all that matters right now. Beating Donald Trump is the only thing that matters.
all that matters right now. Beating Donald Trump is the only thing that matters. And we have to put forward the candidate in the Democratic Party who has the very best chance of beating Donald
Trump. Are we going to know who that candidate is with certainty? Absolutely not. You can never
know for certain. You're never going to have the data that gives certainty. But data can help.
Polling can help. Interviews can help. Debates can help. That can give delegates information that they
wouldn't otherwise have. And I do think it would help to make at least an educated guess about
what's going to happen. I'm not saying this with any confidence whatsoever. My concern with this
whole idea is it may not be possible in that short span of time to get an amount of
information big enough. Basically, what we're trying to figure out is what are your liabilities?
You know, are you our Jeb Bush? Are you our Ron DeSantis? Are you our Wes Clark? Whatever.
And given that, I don't know that four weeks is enough time to get that. And Kamala Harris,
like, you know, there are goofy clips of Kamala Harris. Like, we kind of know Kamala Harris, like, you know, there are goofy clips of Kamala Harris.
Like, we kind of know Kamala Harris's liabilities right now.
We could think through what those are.
She has been vetted on the national stage.
She's been attacked on the national stage.
We know what they'll try with her.
We know what they've said.
So I, like, I am, I am.
I mean, the counterpoint to that is that her 2020 race went very badly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know?
So, I mean, I'm not, look, again,
I would be thrilled if she were the nominee. I'm just saying, know, so I mean, I'm not, I'd look again, I would be thrilled
if she were the nominee. I'm just saying like, well, we should talk about the downside. Like
her polling is not great. Her disapproval is at 51% in the five 38 average. Uh, you know, there's,
you talk to people who do a lot of focus groups. They say swing voters don't like Joe Biden and
they also don't like her. She might get tagged with some of the policy, uh, Gaza, immigration,
She might get tagged with some of the policy failings, right?
Gaza, immigration, inflation.
She could get pulled into recriminations about whether she knew of this, you know, allegations of an effort to cover up about Joe Biden's age.
I'm just saying, like, there are downside risks.
I agree she is the most vetted because she has been the vice president.
There's also benefits, which is a lot of smart people think that she would be able to use all of the Biden campaign's money and infrastructure. I don't totally get how the campaign finance system works,
but it sounds like it would be more plug and play. Women and black voters are the base of the Democratic Party. The hope would be that she would energize those voters. She's been very
effective prosecuting the case on abortion and in the Dobbs opinion. So there's a lot of upsides to
Kamala Harris. And also, she starts as the front runner in this process and i think that in some ways that gives her a
clean slate to say yeah you know you saw these clips last couple years whatever i'm going to
prosecute the case against donald trump she was at the essence fest she was great yeah she was great
in a very tough situation the night after the debate in those interviews right we saw her at
moments in the 2020 campaign which you're right did not go well but like on the debate in those interviews, right? We saw her at moments in the 2020 campaign, which you're right, did not go well, but like on the debate stage where she, you know, gave it to
Joe Biden pretty good. Like she, she definitely has the capacity. I think it would, like I said,
I think it would benefit her to go through the books. Yeah. I think that we were all so shell
shocked from the debate itself that I feel like we saw her interview with, I can't remember if it was
CNN or MSNBC. I think she did both right after you could.
It was hard to see it outside of the context of Joe Biden.
But going back and watching a clip of her talking about abortion and trying to make the case about Donald Trump, it was excellent.
One other just point about this, too, is, look, again, an open process may be the best thing.
I actually could be I probably have a different opinion tomorrow.
But also like, you know, every day Joe Biden's out there is being like, no, no, I'm telling you, I still got my fastball. We're like, throw it. He's like, I'll throw it tomorrow. But also like, you know, every day Joe Biden's out there is being
like, no, no, I'm telling you, I still got my fastball. We're like, throw it. He's like, I'll
throw it tomorrow. He's like, no, no, I'm still on my fastball. You'll see. You'll see. And it's
like another couple of weeks of Democrats talking amongst ourselves instead of one person out there
day after day after day articulating the case against Donald Trump, which as Adam Schiff
pointed out is excellent. Yeah. That would be 90% of the mini primary though. It would be like
90% attacks on Trump, 10% about yourself and your bio and what you do. That's true. That would be 90% of the mini primary though. It would be like 90%
of tax on Trump,
10% about yourself
and your bio and what you do.
That's true.
That's true.
By the way,
Hakeem Jeffries and AOC
both are coming out
in support of Biden
as we've been recording this.
Interesting.
See where the party's going.
Are they,
Biden is the nominee statements
or are they full throat?
You know what I mean?
There's like these categories
of statements now.
There's the like.
Hakeem Jeffries says,
I support President Biden
and the Democratic ticket. My position has not changed uh aoc is he's a nominee i'm making
sure that i support him and i'm focused on making sure that we win in november yeah those are those
are still in the i don't know it's tough some of these statements i think everyone's just trying to
figure it out well we're going to find out more about what's going on in congress because right
after this uh love it is going to talk to california congressman
rocana but before we do get to that conversation guess what guys what democracy or else is
officially number one on the new york times bestseller list which means all of you who
bought the book and helped it get there also contributed to vote save america that's a lot
of money to vote save america and that means that a lot of campaigns,
grassroots organizations that are going to help elect Democrats up and down the ticket and register voters in 2024 are going to get more money. So good for you guys.
And even more importantly, for the rest of our lives, we get to say we're number one New York
Times bestsellers. I know you are. I saw you trying to get around it. Thank you for enduring
these housekeeping updates.
If you didn't buy the book, if you did, thanks for buying the book as well.
Also good news, guys.
The Democracy RL's tour is headed to the Orpheum Theater in Madison, Wisconsin on Friday, July 19th,
day after Trump's speech at the Republican Convention.
We'll probably have some stuff to talk about.
And on the 20th, Love It or Leave It will also be in Madison at the Barrymore Theater.
It's been great to see all you out there these last couple weeks.
You've been fantastic.
The Boston show is like one of my favorite shows.
Very fun.
Especially for like a bleak day after the debate.
It was one of the most fun shows.
It was really, it was, we were exhausted.
We had watched the debate the night before.
And it really was one of the best live shows we've ever done.
And I think it, I think like it was nice being with everybody when the news was so bleak.
Because all we could do was gallows humor. It was nice. Head to cricket.com slash friends to grab
tickets. And when we come back, Rokana. So yeah, no, I turn on my phone and the first thing i see is a message from you telling me that trump
was convicted by the way you like whoever's sending texts for you has like hacked the mainframe
and i'm just gonna tell you i'm report you've been reported as junk from so many different numbers
and you're still in my fucking inbox i don't know what what to do. I can't get rid of you. I am glad I had a chance to bring this up. So many texts. It's unbelievable. Yeah.
Yeah. Laugh all you want. Well, it's good to see you, Congressman. Thank you for taking the time.
I think we can jump in. Are we good? All right. If you're ready, I'm ready.
Joining us now needs no introduction. It's Congressman Ro Khanna. Thank you so much for making the time.
There's a lot happening, and it'd be very helpful to have your perspective.
So after Joe Biden's debate performance, you posted,
Rocky wasn't the most eloquent in speech, but he was a fighter.
His character conveyed his eloquence.
Our message, Biden's character is his eloquence.
And you know that Rocky gets beaten half to death and
loses, right? I do. I grew up outside Philadelphia, so I watched too many Rocky movies. The Creed
ones are even better. So jokes aside, I'm curious what your reaction was to the George Stephanopoulos
interview. But when the American people are very clearly concerned, in part because of how Joe
Biden is unable to convey his message, if your character is your eloquence, how do you dissuade
people of their concerns about Joe Biden's age? Well, first of all, you acknowledge that the concerns are valid. You don't go on calling people bedwetters for raising concerns
that many Americans feel. And by the way, it's not just rich donors. It's activists. It's
grassroots folks. It's ordinary people in coffee shops. So this idea that we're going to attack our own supporters is not effective.
The other thing you don't do is go to war with the press. I mean, Napoleon once said that
four hostile newspapers were a bigger threat than a thousand people with bayonets. And I know
John recently has been complimentary to the Biden campaign team, but whoever made the decision to go to war with The New York Times is malpractice, should be fired.
I mean, who goes to war with The New York Times? Go do an interview. Who goes to war with The Washington Post?
Like, have the humility to engage the press. Don't go to war with the pod save guys either. Not a smart strategy. So all of this, I think, is a correction that the Biden campaign needs, which is to say, let's have an honest conversation. I understand it. I am not as articulate as when you're aging. But I still have the values. I still have the
judgment. I have the wisdom. And this is why I'm running. And let's make the contrast to Donald
Trump. So President Biden sent a letter to you and your colleagues today, basically explaining
his position in that letter. He says any weakening of resolve or lack of clarity about the task
ahead only helps Trump and hurts us.
It's time to come together and move forward as a unified party.
Now, I saw that you posted the comments from former Attorney General Eric Holder, who said
that it's actually appropriate for Democrats to be having this discussion.
So I take it based on what you're saying here and what you said there,
that you disagree with that part of the letter. I disagree with the tone. And I do think it's
important to unify, but you don't unify by suppressing conversation. You don't unify by
suppressing dissent. You unify by acknowledging people's concerns, being vulnerable and acknowledging the truth,
and then offering a way forward. It's your job to inspire unity, not to demand it. And when you look
at great leaders in our history, whether that's Abraham Lincoln through the force argument or
Barack Obama, they didn't say, oh, come on, unify around me because I'm the nominee. They said,
let me persuade you. Let me inspire you to unify. And so I don't think actually it's going to unify around me because I'm the nominee. They said, let me persuade you. Let me inspire you to
unify. And so I don't think actually it's going to unify the party by being over the top in
demanding something. Did you see the George Stephanopoulos interview? I did. And you think
that that performance is one that would help Joe Biden assuage people's concerns? I thought the
Morning Joe interview was better towards that. I thought the Stephanopoulos
interview, he didn't have any clear flubs. But I also thought there were answers that
weren't that great that people have talked about. I mean, saying that I, you know, I'll just give it
my try and I'll be okay. I know what he was trying to get at. You know,
you do your duty. We can't control larger things in life. But it came off as he wasn't fully in
the fight. There were other answers that were meandering. And so it wasn't one of his best
interviews. But I don't think that it was disqualifying that interview. And I think
he's got to do more of it. Have you talked to Joe Biden directly since the debate? Have you heard from him about what happened?
I have not. I have not tried to reach him. And I came out pretty early on saying that
it's his decision. He, you know, one part I did agree with on the letter is he won the votes.
We have a process. We have a primary process. He is the nominally unless he says otherwise.
And I made that pretty clear to the senior people around him.
So he's got their 218 people in our House caucus.
Their other calls probably were worth his time.
You're not the problem right now.
So, you know, you I have to say I've been quoting you for a long time because of something you actually told me on on Love It or Leave It about a year ago.
Can we play that clip, please?
So yes, President Biden is old. You can't have anyone assume the presidency, even Democratic
politicians we've had, and not have something that you could say, well, I wish he was 65. Sure,
I wish he was 65. But look at what he has achieved. He has extraordinary experience.
He has done a lot.
He can win in the Midwest.
And I think he deserves a second term.
By the way, you know, all this polling, someone said, oh, there's a poll showing Nikki Haley up.
You know, we didn't have President Dukakis.
We didn't have President Gary Hart.
Like the polling right now is kind of irrelevant. He has the humility to know that the party changed. He listened to young
people. He listened to Bernie. He listened to AOC. He listened to Elizabeth Warren. He listened to
the moderates too, but he went where the median of the country was. And that takes a lot of
actually wisdom to say, look, I'm not going to be the same person. I'm going to
listen to where the country is moving. So I wanted to play that for two reasons.
One, you made the point that age was Joe Biden's biggest liability, and we know it.
We know that is his biggest liability, and it's every candidate would have one. And the second
was that one of Joe Biden's great strengths was that he knew how to listen and he knew how to learn and change. And that was a really impressive part about his presidency. At what point do we
decide based on the polling? At what point does Joe Biden decide based on what he's hearing
that the time has come to listen to the people, the majority of voters, the almost the full
majority of Democrats now, almost majority of Democrats, almost the full majority of Democrats now,
almost majority of Democrats now that think he should step aside? At what point
does Joe Biden need to show that kind of humility that made him such a good president in his first
term? A couple of points. First, he should not deny the polls. I mean, arguing that the New York
Times poll or other polls are wrong and he's actually up, I think you should just
acknowledge these four points, five points down and say, look, there are other candidates who've
been down and I'm going to come back. I mean, that's not an insurmountable margin. But denying
the polls is not a great look. The question about whether to run is such a deeply personal
decision for someone who's been the nominee, who's gotten
millions of votes. And that's a decision he and his family and his close friends will make.
I think he owes people the ability, the opportunity to listen in terms of his platform,
in terms of what he's going to do, in terms of listening to their concerns about what he needs to do to win the race. But I don't know
if you can expect someone who's won the votes to say, okay, now that the polling shows that the
majority are opposed to you running, that I'm just going to give up. I mean, I think that's
asking too much of listening. Yeah, I don't know. I just do you really think that if the voters of
the Democratic Party saw the Joe Biden we saw at that debate, that he would be the nominee right
now? Do you believe right now that the Democratic voters who voted in basically an unopposed?
They won't, you know, if they saw the Joe Biden at that debate,
Joe Biden would not be the nominee. Do you agree with that?
I agree with that. And I agree with that. But and so we're bound, you know, bound to what happened
before. Like, let's say Joe Biden, he's not nothing has gone terribly wrong with his health.
Let's hope that that's the case. But he's had an inexorable march of time. The inexorable effects
of age have now come to a point where people have these deep concerns that are far worse than they were two years ago. We are bound to what happened in basically an unapproved primary, even though the
voters today have given another chance, would want something else. I think that the question is
that you're going without any contest, without any polling. I mean, if it was something that was
clearly, obviously disqualifying.
And I guess my point of view here is that you have reasonable arguments on both sides.
I don't think this is clear cut.
Like, I don't think, you know, Joe Biden went and committed some criminal act where on our side it would be clear cut.
On the other side, it's not.
I don't think this is a case where, God forbid, Joe Biden
had a stroke that was incapacitating and where he couldn't recover. I think this is a case where you
have a large chunk of the party that still believes that Joe Biden, because of the incumbency
advantage, because of his connection with African-American voters, with the Midwest,
because of his record, has a very good chance to win and
is one of the best chances to win. Now, we could debate whether that's 30 percent, 25 percent,
40 percent, and what the other side is. But you can't, I don't think on that ambiguous a record,
you can say, OK, you know, you just need to quit the race. I think what you can say is please consider
this very seriously. Please talk to your friends, your family, please consult outside folks. But
ultimately, I think this is still a judgment that Biden himself has to make. I think he would do
himself favors to recognize the ambiguity of it and that it's not a clear cut decision. By the way, if it was a clear cut
decision, you would have people like Barack Obama and others coming out and saying that
he shouldn't run. So I think that the fact that you've had so many people that the party respects
being ambiguous about it suggests that there's real ambiguity.
Does that, is that what that suggests? I mean, tell me if this is wrong, that behind the scenes,
members of Congress, even members of Congress that are currently saying Joe Biden is my candidate,
and he had our back, so I have his back. They're full of shit, right? Behind the scenes,
they're terrified and think he's going to lose. Is that right?
Not all of them, honestly. I'd say quite a few of them. Quite a few of them think that. But
they're two camps. Some of them may think that and think it's still a bad look to take away the
Democratic choice from a candidate who's won the primaries. I get that they were unopposed,
but one of the reasons they were unopposed is not like some committee said, don't run. It's that
candidates at the time looked at Joe Biden's poll numbers and said he couldn't be beaten in a Democratic primary. And I
think they were right. I don't think that Joe Biden, if a year and a half ago, would have been
beaten in a Democratic primary. And so there's a process and some people are reluctant to undermine
that process. Some folks genuinely think that he has a better chance than someone who had just come up for four months in a presidential campaign, untested against a huge brand name. It's unclear to me that two of the great Democratic presidents, I disagree with some of their policies on some things, but I don't think either Bill Clinton or Barack Obama thrust into a general election campaign four months before a
general election would necessarily have won. I mean, maybe they would have. I mean, maybe they
would have given some great speech and done it, but it's not an easy thing.
Yeah. But if Joe Biden decides not to run and he goes and throws his support behind Kamala Harris,
I have every confidence that you personally will be one of the best and
smartest advocates for Kamala Harris making the absolute best case for why she could win, right?
And I think she's absolutely qualified to be president. I think she is very warm in person.
Having just met her a couple of weeks ago, she was asking about my family. She's much more charming than the media gives her credit for. I would unambiguously
1,000% support her. And I think she would have a reasonable chance to win. But that judgment
is something that President Biden and Kamala Harris together have earned the right to make.
And I think they, you know, I guess my view is, well, let me ask, put earned the right to make. I mean, I and I think they,
you know, I guess my view is, well, let me ask, put the question back to you. Do you think Biden
is why do you think he's staying in? I mean, do you think he doesn't think that he's the best
candidate to beat Donald Trump, which is what he says? I don't know. I don't know. I find I think
that there's something a little bit insulting towards Kamala Harris when he says to Morning
Joe, who else could do this? Who else could hold NATO together? I think it's insulting to the many other Democrats waiting in the wings who you would be an I didn't, you know, did you watch the debate again? He said, I don't think I did,
which was a perplexing answer. I don't know what it's like to be 81 years old
when you're not president, when you are president, when the stakes feel so high,
but it's not really about him. Like, I don't, you know, I feel like it's incumbent upon all of us
to advocate for what
we think is going to put us in the best position to defeat Donald Trump.
If that's Joe Biden, then he has to put these stories to rest.
If Joe Biden called you and said, what do you think I should do, Roe?
Would you tell him to stay in the race?
I would say, first of all, Mr. President, it's your decision.
But I would say
I think one of your most endearing qualities is your humility. I think some of your recent
interviews where you're attacking your own supporters, where you're calling anyone who
questions you as an elite, where you're stifling dissent within the party is not a good look.
I understand that you believe and you have been a great president,
and probably anyone who runs for president believes they're a person of destiny and only
they can do it. But that also, I think, undermines your brand as someone who's a humble public
servant. And I would say, you know, you need to show the American people you don't need this.
You don't need another term for the presidency. Why do you need it at 81? But you're doing this because you deeply believe that you have as the incumbent and given your
economic record and given your ability to win over people in de-industrialized parts of the country,
the ability to win this race against Donald Trump. And I would talk about, instead of attacking your
supporters on Morning Joe, I would say, you know, Joe Scarborough, you know what came out today? That of the de-industrialized counties in America that Donald Trump said he was going to
turn around, we actually did. For the past three years, we've had more job creation there than
we've had in the past 20 years. This is what I want to continue doing. And I'd focus on that.
And I'd say, Mr. President, get out there. If you want to run, get out there and don't,
you know, if you make mistakes, people understand that, but you got to look like you're fighting and trying and doing everything you can and do the editorial board
interviews, do the town halls. That's, that's what I'd say. And then he says, and I'm sorry to keep
putting on this, but then he says, wow, that means a lot to me. That means the world to me, but
I'm just honestly not sure I'm the right person. Would you write, do you think it should be me?
Or do you think I should step aside and pass the torch to my vice president? Like I said,
I would do when I first ran. Well, if he said that, I would tell him to pass the torch,
but I don't think he'll say that. And the reason I would tell him to pass the torch is even when
you run for Congress, if you don't think you're the right person and you're having self-doubts,
you're not going to win the race. So if someone was saying, I'm thinking of running for president and I'm not sure, I'd say, yeah, probably you shouldn't run. I mean, you've got
to have a conviction of steel. This guy's good. This guy's good. That was a good answer.
I can't say that. Just stepping back a bit, when I, when many of us worked for Barack Obama in 2008,
we thought after Obama, there would be a generation of people like
Hakeem Jeffries, that there were going to be young, new generation leaders, that this was the,
this new era that was being ushered in. And in that sense, at least I and many were wrong. I
mean, after that, we had Hillary Clinton, and then respect to the great public servant, but that
wasn't going sort of forward in terms of a generational change. And
then we had Joe Biden. And I think we have to ask why. And part of the reason is that this country
is grappling with something very difficult. We're becoming a cohesive multiracial democracy. There's
a lot of change, technology, economics. People want the familiar. They want also what is
understandable. And we got two old guys arguing about their golf handicaps, and half the country thinks they're totally out of touch. But some of the country thinks, you know, I understand that these folks are familiar. And that's the debate we're having as open way. But it's not a cop out when I'm
saying it's there's I don't think there's an obvious truth, clear answer on either side.
And I and I criticize the president's team and him for squelching the dissent. But I also think
people are like, well, Biden obviously can't win. Let's remove him. I think that also is that's a
point of view. But I don't think it's OK okay, this is clearly obvious that that should be the case. And right now you don't have a preference
between those two? You, right now, you sitting there, you're not sure if Joe Biden should or
shouldn't step aside? You don't have a preference? Me, my view, no, I do have a preference. I mean,
my view would be first that it's, that he has earned the right to make the decision, and
I trust him to make that decision with sufficient input.
But I would be on the side that he can stay in, and we need a strong economic contrast
message, that we should be bold in the contrast with Donald Trump and have everyone around
the country be a surrogate for
making that message. Have people talking about Project 2025, have people talk about
Trump's hollowing out the working class, have us focus on a few key, bold economic policies,
and I think the president can win. Now, do I think he's the underdog? Yes. Do I think that
absent Michelle Obama coming in, that someone else, whether it's a Kamala Harris or a Whitmer or a Newsom or a Shapiro, would start out with significantly higher odds than Joe Biden? I don't. This is my own view.
If I could be convinced that, you know, you told me Michelle Obama is running and we all had a commitment, then I'd say, yeah, of course, it's a no brainer.
But I don't think that the alternative is worse.
I certainly think Kamala Harris could win.
I think Whitmer could win.
Gavin could win.
I mean, I'm not, but I don't think it's significantly better if Joe Biden runs a good
campaign.
And I think we're capable of running a good campaign.
You're saying you don't believe someone like Gretchen Whitmer, Gavin Newsom, Josh Shapiro,
Wes Moore, Raphael Warnock, Kamala Harris. You don't believe that their ability to just be out
there day after day from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. day after day. You don't think that that is enough
to overcome the liability of starting with someone new. And you don't think that's enough
to overcome the age liability that Joe Biden brings. That's what I don't understand.
I think they'd be better messengers than Joe Biden, all of the names that you mentioned.
I think some would be spectacularly better as messengers. I don't think being a messenger is
all that it takes to be president of the United States. I think there is a deep authenticity,
there's a trust you have to establish with the American people. You have to convey why you're doing it, what your vision is. And it's unclear
to me that any of those folks untested in four months would be able to do it. I'm not saying
they couldn't, but there's a reason that we had, look, unknown candidates or relatively unknown
candidates can win. People like Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, but they take two
years to earn that trust. They don't just come in with four months. And there's almost
something I think maybe it's people say we want the fresh or maybe people will say, well, this
Donald Trump guy, he's overcome convictions for two years and he's been at it and he's been fighting
and he's and now we're just going to hand the presidency to someone who's campaigned for three
months. I don't know. I mean, I don't know how it would cut, whether people think you've got to earn people's votes. I realized that when I ran for Congress,
I lost the first time, two years, and then I won 60-40 the next time. A lot of people said,
you know, you stuck with it. We like your grit. We like the fact that you were willing to earn
that vote. And I guess I don't know anyone who's come out of nowhere and won without that slog
and without really earning it over a long primary
process. What a time to be alive. I think, look, I am hopeful about this time. And the reason I'm
hopeful is because I view it as that we're on the cusp of doing something incredible in this
country. You look at the freshman class of Congress. You look at people like Jasmine
Crockett, Maxwell Frost. You look at the fact that now, I mean, I'm biased because
I'm Indian American, but you've got six Indian Americans in Congress. John, when I was growing
up, my family couldn't meet a staff member to a member of Congress. It's like we're growing more
diverse. We're growing in spite of ourselves. We're becoming this cohesive multiracial democracy.
And so if we have a moment of generation saying, you know, we want to go for the familiar,
we're still unsure, you know that we've got to win. But I am so hopeful about the next generation
in this country. And I believe that what Biden should have said is if for some chance Donald
Trump wins, I'm going to be the first one to continue the fight. I mean, Donald Trump, the one thing that drives me crazy, and look, I understand Donald
Trump is a threat to American institutions, Project 2025, voting rights, women's rights.
But the one thing that drives me crazy is when we just sort of say, oh, Donald Trump wins,
that's the end of American democracy. Give me a break. You think Abraham Lincoln thought like
that? FDR thought like that? John Lewis thought like that? We're not going to lose democracy to a buffoonish billionaire. We have to have the conviction and the fight to continue to fight for what this country is going to be.
Well, you know, we also could have an Indian American president, you know, if we play our cards right, right? It's sitting right there.
I mean, you know, only if my texting program continues to annoy you. Well, that's the key to this. Well, I get it all. Yes. Listen, you you're,
you know, obviously, Indian American conspiracy, we control we have so many people in tech at
Google and the tech. Well, and the vice presidency and the vice presidency.
Congressman Khanna, thank you so much for taking the time. Thanks for taking these questions.
I think a lot of people feel a little bit, this has been a very, I think, upsetting.
They understand the stakes.
They are scared.
And they feel both that this is on somehow Joe Biden's decision, but also collectively
a decision that should belong to all of us.
What do you say to people listening
that are wondering what they should be doing right now? Do you think that if somebody believes
Joe Biden should be the nominee or shouldn't be the nominee, that they should be calling
their members of Congress? How do you think people should be responding to this rather than
just being on their phones and they want to feel like they have agency? First of all, I say that
I hear you and I think you're absolutely right. And where I think our party has failed is by making people feel unheard, making it feel like
it's either you get behind the president or somehow you're not loyal or somehow you're not
a good Democrat or somehow you're engaged in bedwetting or a circular firing squad.
Where our party has failed is trying to deny the obvious, what people saw,
where our party has failed is trying to deny the obvious, what people saw,
or trying to pretend like Joe Biden is something that he's not. And I think we have to welcome the conversation. We need to say it's very legitimate. And I don't think, okay, we're
having this conversation three, four weeks. I don't think that's like, okay, we can't win.
I think it's better that we air it out. I have full confidence, John, whether it's you or
whoever is saying that we should have a different nominee if Joe Biden is the nominee come August,
that we'll all rally around him. And I don't think there's any problem having a conversation
in the meantime. And I would encourage people to talk to their members of Congress, to be a voice
on social media, to talk to people you may know at the White House, and to have your view.
And I will say that if I did have an opportunity to talk to the president, the biggest thing I
would say is, you know, Mr. President, politics is ultimately about persuasion. Let's be in the
business of persuasion. Let's not just be employing the tactics of criticizing the media and calling
people elites and rallying our base.
That's not the best of democratic politics.
Congressman Ro Khanna, thank you so much for your time. Really appreciate it.
Hope to talk to you soon.
Thank you.
Okay, before we go, we figured we should talk about the other guy in the race, Donald Trump.
He must resign. He should step down.
Absolutely.
Just want to get on the record.
He's been doing his best to stay out of the spotlight and let the Democratic invite and consume news cycle after news cycle.
Though apparently his discipline only goes so far because tonight he's going on Hannity.
That should be fun.
A few things have happened in Trump world, even without the candidate being out there.
The Republican convention is next week.
On Monday, apparently at Team Trump's urging,
the RNC platform committee voted to remove a call
for national limits on abortion, according to Politico.
The final ratified platform is basically just
one page of vague statements,
seemingly recycled from Trump's stump speech,
like seal the border, stop migrant invasion,
carry out the largest deportation in American history, end inflation is one.
Just end inflation.
Nice.
And then my favorite one was, unite our country by bringing it to new and record levels of success.
That's like a, that went through the, that just went through the whole, that was a plank.
That's a plank in the platform.
What kind of process do you think this thing went through?
This comes after Trump decided, seemingly out of the blue, to distance himself from Project 2025 in a post on Truth Social that reads, I know nothing about Project 2025.
I have no idea who is behind it.
I disagree with some of the things they're saying and some of the things they are saying are absolutely ridiculous and abysmal.
Anything they do, I wish them luck, but I have nothing to do with them.
He knows nothing.
The things that they're saying are bad,
but he knows nothing.
I don't know anything about it.
I also hate it.
But good luck.
And what parts, the parts you hate?
I have no idea who's behind it,
even though 16 of my former administration officials
are behind it.
Yes.
I know everybody's been sharing the hot dog meme,
all right?
But this is really more of a,
I can't believe there's gambling in this casino situation.
Honestly, it seems like they've realized that Project 2025 is getting a lot of attention and that it is terrifyingly unpopular.
How do you think the Democrats should handle this? First of all, we get a vague watered down convention platform and Trump trying to distance himself.
So I was I was actually noticing before Trump put out this statement that, that we were starting to hear about project 2025 from non-political sources, like Taraji mentioned
it at an award show, like love it or leave it on Tik TOK, love it or leave it. Guests have been
bringing it up. And what I, that, that like comedians have been bringing it up. Like they're
worried about, Hey, you don't know about this, this thing, project 2025, project 2025. And I
think we finally have what the right normally has which is
they have a secret conspiracy yes exactly fucking awesome they have a secret plan to destroy the
country all these powerful figures have a secret plan and they're all working on it at their
conferences these these powerful elites a kind of illuminati that's gathering in the
desert night in smoke-filled rooms to come up with a plan to destroy the country and it's real
yeah it is real and i think that like look trump's going to try to walk away because he's got advisors
being like hey man you're on the path to victory here just and everyone's like trump hasn't why
hasn't the media been talking about how trump's been out of the spotlight for 10 days he's been
hitting balls yeah of course he's out of the spotlight for 10 days? He's been hitting balls. Yeah.
Of course he's out of the spotlight for 10 days.
He's smart.
Every time he finishes a round of golf, his poll numbers improve.
Yeah.
Either he's gut smart, he's become smart, or they got him in a cage somewhere.
They got like a shot collar on him.
I don't think he's just one.
He's got decent political instincts.
He was watching this car crash.
He couldn't believe his luck in that today.
He's hanging out. And I think that's why they want to walk away even though
project 2025 stephen miller part of it his trump's current press secretary she's in a video for it
uh russ vote is like the architect he was the head of omb at the office of management and budget
under trump could be the next chief of staff like give me a fucking break it's the trump plan it's
the trump plan this is what they will implement. The people that wrote
this, all the advisors will be staffed throughout the administration. This is Trump's denials are
meaningless. This is their plan for next. We should just be moving forward under the correct
assumption that this is their plan for 2025. And it is definitely moving beyond the junkies
to the normies. A friend who doesn't follow politics at all,
really,
and doesn't text me and be like,
dude,
have you heard about this 2025 thing?
They're trying to ban porn.
It's like,
oh,
now you're,
now you're involved in the election.
Now you're paying attention.
It's the fucking,
it is the,
it's the whole,
the whole barstool audience.
He's like,
what the fuck?
He's like,
I think that Biden's kind of old,
but like the porn, it's going to be.
So anyway, Project 2025.
You know who should talk about it more?
Joe Biden.
Joe Biden.
All right.
Thanks to Ro Khanna for joining us today.
We will be back with a show on Wednesday afternoon.
We'll talk to you then.
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