Pod Save America - Biden Takes Action on the Border
Episode Date: June 5, 2024President Biden issues an executive order temporarily closing the US-Mexico border to migrants. Tommy and Addisu Demissie discuss Democratic backlash to the action and why Republicans, despite having ...killed a bipartisan border bill, are claiming it’s too little, too late. Donald Trump joins TikTok, attends a UFC fight, and exploits MAGA backlash to his conviction to close his fundraising gap. And Tommy sits down with Michael Tyler, Communications Director for Biden-Harris 2024, to chat about upcoming presidential debate and how Trump’s new felony status has presented challenges and opportunities for the Biden campaign. 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 Tommy Vitor.
I am Adisu Demesic.
Dan was supposed to be hosting today, and he was going to get to see Adisu in person up in the Bay Area.
But unfortunately, Dan is feeling under the weather today, Adisu, so I'm stepping in.
Apologies in advance to Pfeiffer Nation.
I even repped the Golden State Valkyries.
I was trying to really lean into the Bay Area takeover of Crooked, but alas, stomach bug.
I went to a Warriors game with Dan once.
It was very fun,
but it was an old arena.
Go Warriors.
I guess go Celtics if I have to.
Thank you.
If I'm in mixed company here,
I got to do it.
Yeah, you are.
You are.
We have a great show though.
On today's show,
we're talking about Donald Trump
who celebrated his New York hush money case verdict
by going to
a UFC fight. He joined TikTok and he raised a ton of money. So we'll get into all of that.
And then I talked with Michael Tyler, the Biden campaign communications director about the
evolution of the Biden campaign's messaging on Trump's legal challenges, how to reach voters.
Love me some Michael Tyler, man. One of my best friends, a great dude.
One of the DC's best buddies and a colleague from the Booker days, among other campaigns,
right?
Indeed.
That's right.
So I pressed him on, you know, how they figure out how to talk about these legal challenges
that Trump is facing, how to reach voters who are getting their information from non-traditional
news sources.
And then a little bit on how you're preparing President Biden for a debate against Donald
Trump that is supposed to happen at Vesu in 22 days.
I know. Let's see if it does. I hope it does.
But I hope.
You never know, man.
I want it to happen. It'll be good to have it happen.
We'll see. I'd put nothing past the former president of the United States.
Yeah, me either.
Especially given his, let's say, current problems.
Yeah, he's got some issues.
And then we talked a little bit about progressive blowback to Biden's immigration executive order. But first, let's talk about
that. So yesterday, President Biden signed an executive order that prevents migrants from
seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border when crossings surge to above 2,500 a day. Here's a
clip from President Biden's remarks announcing the EO. I've come here today to do what the
Republicans in Congress refuse to do,
take the necessary steps to secure our border. We came to a clear, clear bipartisan deal.
It was the strongest border security agreement in decades. But then Republicans in Congress, not all, but walked away from it. Why? Because Donald Trump told them to. So today, I'm moving past
Republican obstruction and using the executive authorities available to me as president.
Frankly, I would have preferred to address this issue through bipartisan legislation
because that's the only way to actually get the kind of system we have now that's broken,
fixed, to hire more border patrol agents, more asylum officers,
more judges. But Republicans have left me with no choice. So I will never demonize immigrants.
I'll never refer to immigrants as poisoning the blood of a country. And further, I'll never
separate children from their families at the border. So President Biden clearly pretty frustrated
there that Trump forced Republicans
in Congress to walk away from bipartisan legislation that would have done a lot more
to address the challenges at the border. Biden's executive order would be the most aggressive
immigration enforcement action taken by a modern Democrat. Many moderate Democrats praised the bill.
It was criticized by a lot of progressives. So listeners should just know to set the table on this, that the fate of this executive order is uncertain, if not shaky. It is not clear how the
administration would be able to implement this EO without additional funding, without additional
resources. And those resources are allocated by Congress. It is also going to face immediate legal
challenges and very well may not survive those challenges as a lot of
Donald Trump's immigration efforts didn't. So really, this may amount to essentially a messaging
effort by the Biden administration to show voters that he is concerned about immigration and that
he's willing to shift his own policy views to address those concerns that he's hearing from
voters. So Adisu, let's start with the
political environment in which President Biden took this action. Earlier this year,
we saw concern about immigration skyrocket in a lot of polling. How much does this, you know,
this border security and immigration generally matter to persuadable voters?
It matters a lot, point blank, period. I think I wouldn't rank it as high as cost of
living issues, economic issues, abortion rights, probably, but it is in a top tier. And that's true
in the Democratic base, in the Republican base, and with swing voters, obviously,
for different reasons and in different ways. But I think most voters across the political spectrum
support the basic outline of what the president
put forward earlier this year. He actually proposed on his first day in office, which
is comprehensive immigration reform. That includes tough border security, securing the border first
and foremost, and then pathways to citizenship, pathways for folks who are already here solving
the problem of dreamers, et cetera. That's a plan that as the president just said, mega Republicans killed in Congress. And he,
you're right. Frustrated. I didn't realize until you just said it, that that was frustration,
you know, in the president's voice. Cause he's pissed off basically that he tried to solve this
the right way, the way that he over years of experience was taught to do things, these things.
And because of Donald Trump and politics, Republicans killed it. So anyway,
bottom line is it is an issue. It is a real issue. And I think putting aside for a moment,
whether you agree with the specifics of the policy, I think there's a clear political imperative here, right? It has been the Democratic Party position for as long as I've been in
politics that securing the border is part of a broader immigration reform strategy, but it's a part, it's not, it's not the whole thing. And president Biden is trying
to solve this as best he can potentially, you know, piecemeal here because he doesn't have a
partner in Congress to do so. But, you know, I've said before on this podcast, I think on this
podcast with you, the first time I was on earlier this year, I don't think this is a change election.
I think this is a stability election. And I think the situation at the border, whether we like it or not, the perception of it
is that it is unstable. There is disorder. And thus, what President Biden, I think,
politically is trying to do here is, to your point, send the message. He's going to do something
to get control of the situation. It is not the be all and end all of its policy. It is a piece of the policy, but I do think it's a prerequisite
for most swing voters out there, border security, and then we can talk about the rest.
And that's true of, again, I don't think that's just true of your sort of white Republicans. I
think that's true of moderate Democrats, swing Latinos, you name it.
Yeah. Remember that President Trump did really well in border communities in
the 2016 and 2020 election. I mean, I just think on the policy, I think the status quo is not
working for anyone. I think your big picture, I want everyone who asked for an asylum screening
to get one. But at the moment, there are not enough asylum officers to conduct the interviews
required to assess whether a migrant has what's called a credible fear of returning to their country of origin.
So that means you have people with totally legitimate asylum claims who can't get an
interview or get stuck in this Byzantine process and kind of lost for years and years and years.
And then on the flip side, you have bad actors, you have traffickers, you have cartels, you
have others who are trying to exploit loopholes in the policy or in our laws.
And in the process, they're putting people at risk who are trying to flee desperate circumstances.
So the status quo is very bad.
And it's unbelievably frustrating that Congress won't act because you cannot solve this problem
via an executive order.
You will need an action from Congress.
And the president was extremely clear about that yesterday, right?
You know, in every statement he made and everything that the White
House put out, it was clear that he was not saying this is the solution or the only solution
to the problem. It was a part of the solution at best and done in the only way he could do it,
which is by himself because he didn't have the cooperation of mega Republicans in Congress,
thanks to Donald Trump. Yeah. So there has been reporting that this executive order was under consideration for
months. What do you think he did this now, sort of early June?
Yeah, I was thinking about this last night. I honestly don't know. I mean, I think
everything is politics, but some things are actually policy and legal. And I'm going to
assume that this was in the works for a very, very long time.
It is complicated, to your point, policy. It is already being challenged in the courts,
and so they had to make sure that it would pass legal muster, et cetera, et cetera.
So I wouldn't assume that the motivations are exclusively political, but I think it's pretty clear better to do this five months out from an election in the wake of the Trump conviction than
one month out. I think it gives the president something proactively to speak about at the debate that
he's doing on border security, which I think, as we saw earlier this year in the New York special,
people were talking about this, the one that Tom Suozzi, Congressman Suozzi won.
When we can go on the offense and are not just playing defense on border security issues,
it can be beneficial to Democrats. So the politics line up, but I'm not, I wouldn't presume that that was the only
reason it was done. Now. I also wouldn't assume this is the last we're going to hear on this
issue, right? It is to my earlier point, piecemeal. And yeah, there can be other EOs coming to try to
resolve some of these other pathways of citizenship and other issues down the line. So,
you know, I would guess this is like the first in a series of actions that he's going to take that have to pass or try to
pass legal muster that can try to solve this temporarily as best you can through EO.
Yeah, I think that was my sense too. I mean, certainly they probably took as much time as
they needed to strengthen the executive order legally to try to make it survive these lawsuits.
I don't know that it will,
but I imagine there was a pretty deep legal scrub. It's also just the case that president Biden, um,
is known to kind of chew on decisions for a week or two, or, you know, right. Like sometimes he takes his time to do these things. I also imagine though, getting this done before the debate was
probably a legal imperative. I mean, when, when Donald Trump came out and
killed the bipartisan immigration bill, he was like, blame me. Um, right. And Republicans at
the time were like, oh, you have all the authorities you need, et cetera, et cetera.
Uh, and so I think, you know, he's probably going to call their bluff.
The frustrating thing about all of this, you know, that I keep returning to that word is
the president's trying to govern, right. And he's not, he's doing things that are probably difficult for him, not everything he wants, not everything that the other side wants.
I mean, he obviously came to that deal with Senator Lankford, that a Republican from Oklahoma
that got killed in Congress, that probably was a painstakingly long negotiation and finally got
there just to have Donald Trump, you know, kill this thing with
one tweet or truth social or whatever the hell it was. So that, you know, but trying to govern,
this is Democrats problem in so many ways. Like it's not a problem. It's our strength,
but it's also our political weakness is that we want to solve problems and Republicans don't have
an interest in solving this problem. Responsibility gene is a, is a pain in the ass. So president
Biden has faced some criticism from progressives about this policy, both the bill that was tanked by Trump in Congress and
now this executive order. How concerned do you think the Biden administration should be about,
you know, criticism that this is a Trump like policy or a general sense among progressives
that, you know, they're not going to be as motivated to go out and vote for him or volunteer
for him in the wake of this EO or, you know,'re not going to be as motivated to go out and vote for him or volunteer for him uh in the wake of this eo or you know you're starting seeing similar sentiment
uh among progressives about gaza as well i mean are you worried about the the the progressive
base getting demotivated of course i mean when we're talking about five months from today like
i'm worried about everything right and so anything that causes folks who are otherwise on our side to, um, be less interested in actually, you know,
checking that box or filling in that bubble, I'm going to be concerned. I do think it's,
it's lazy and a little ridiculous to compare Joe Biden to Donald Trump on this. I mean,
you heard the last part of his quote when that, that we played played earlier. He's not trying to separate families from their children.
He's not, or mothers from their children, parents from their children.
He's not sending the military in to round up and deport people.
He's not banning people from the country based on their religion.
This is not, I can get why you're frustrated in the moment, but to compare it, take a little
bit of settle down juice.
We're talking about comparing Donald Trump and Joe Biden on immigration
policy, but that said the politics of this are obviously difficult. I mean, the politics of
pretty much everything, if it gets to the, the resolute desk are going to be, are going to be
tough. And the president I think is doing on balance the right thing electorally, but I'm
not sure that's the sole motivation here. I think he
actually wants to, well, I should say it's certainly part of the calculus, everything,
everything is politics, but he is trying to do the best he can to solve a real problem that
the MAGA Republican base is preventing him from solving. And even some Republicans seem to be as
frustrated as he is with that. So I respect that he is trying to govern even in the midst of a very
difficult and very tough election. And, you know, that's what we should expect in our president.
Yes, that's what we should want.
That's what we should want, yeah.
So one of the Republican arguments about that bipartisan border bill that Trump scuttled was,
again, that, you know, they said, oh, yeah, Biden already has the authorities. He needs to close the
border. He just doesn't want to do it. Some of them went even further and they were like, oh, this is part of the great replacement theory, right?
He's trying to bring in new voters from across the border.
Nonsense.
So Biden issues this executive order.
He does what Republicans want.
He uses the authorities they claim he already has.
So let's hear their reactions to this aggressive step he took.
I'm sure they praised it. They loved it. Extremely effusively. Let's hear their reactions to this aggressive step he took to do what they want. I'm sure they praised it.
They loved it.
Extremely effusively.
Let's hear.
I will make a prediction, Jesse.
In the next few months, we're going to see the numbers drop down a little bit.
And this is just like what Biden did with gas prices.
They're trying to fool the voters into ignoring his disastrous record.
He wants this invasion, and so does every other Democrat.
Now, suddenly now, oh now, he wants to issue some weak executive order.
One, by the way.
And we don't know what's in this.
The devil will definitely be in the details here, I can assure you.
So I have an issue with 2,500, 5,000, or whatever the number is that we've seen before.
If that number can be 2,500, why not make it zero? Well, first of all, it's a nothing that he did and
allowing massive numbers of people still to come in. And it's just misinformation, disinformation,
and just another hit job. So that was Ted Cruz, Speaker Johnson, Congressman Juan Siscomani,
and Donald Trump, obviously.
Adisu, I don't expect these guys to praise Joe Biden, but it couldn't be more obvious
that Republicans actually don't want to fix the immigration system because they want to
run on it.
How do we show that to voters who are upset about the border and have been fed a steady
stream of Fox News clips that say, oh, this is what the Democrats want.
It's only their
fault. But when the reality is there was a bill on the table that could have passed if Republicans
hadn't spiked it. So I think two things. I think one, that is the political upside of this
announcement that, you know, 22 days from today, when the president stands across from Donald
Trump, he can say, I did something on this. And it's something that my base didn't love.
It's something that I may not have loved, but I'm trying to solve a problem. You are just trying to
create an issue here. And it's a communications challenge, honestly, is how do we tell the story
that Democrats are trying to seriously address the issues at the border that are of serious
concern to voters, and Republicans are trying to create a political issue. And I think, you know, for a lot of our, of the last decade, I think we have,
as Democrats lost the thread on, we've been playing defense on this issue a lot
and just taking the incoming about the caravan and all this stuff and saying,
oh no, it's not us. And, but going on offense as the Swazi campaign. And I think the lesson
that the Swazi campaign and earlier this spring the lesson that the Swazi campaign earlier this
spring taught us is that when we are affirmative, when we state our affirmative beliefs, and those
can be humane border policies, right? The EO yesterday has exemptions for unaccompanied
minors. It has exemptions for people with medical emergencies, things that are, but still has some
stricter, tougher policies. We can say that out
loud. And that actually can be something that persuades voters that we're serious about the
issue and allows us to open the door to do the other things we want to do, like solve the dreamer
issue and expand pathways to citizenship, et cetera. So I guess bottom line is we need to be
able to make an affirmative case about what our immigration policy is and not just treat it as a third rail and a cudgel that
Republicans are going to regardless beat us over the head with if we don't say something
positive ourselves. Totally agree with that. You have to be talking about what you're for,
not just trying to duck the issue or criticize Republican policies. Before we take a quick break,
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Well, let's take a minute and talk about what the former president has been up to and how he responded to being convicted on 34 felony counts.
He, you know, of course, reacted with his usual sobriety and seriousness of purpose.
First, he went to a UFC fight and then he joined TikTok.
So the first TikTok was a video of Trump
and UFC CEO Dana White walking into this arena I think in Newark to what at least sounds like It's just like a kid rock song running for president.
The Trump campaign, the RNC also announced that they raised $70 million in the 48 hours
after the verdict for a total of more than $140 million in the month of May.
To put that number in perspective, it's near three times what Biden and the DNC raised
in April.
So Adisu, you guys are
doing a ton of research on the issues that move swing voters. How much do you think this Trump
guilty verdict matters with the persuadable universe? Okay. First thing I have to say,
because we talked about this in the last time I was on a couple of weeks ago, is anybody who
thinks that this is a good thing
for Donald Trump needs to go outside and touch grass. Like it, it is the, for the former president
of the United States, the nominee or soon to be nominee of his may have a major party to be a
convicted felon on 34 counts is a bad thing for his political future. It just is. And sometimes
I think Democrats, we forget, we forget how to like take the W it's like sometimes a win is a bad thing for his political future. It just is. And sometimes I think Democrats,
we forget how to like take the W. It's like, sometimes a win is a win. Like this is a win.
With that said, I think the scale of the win is what is debatable, right? I think if in a world,
in the world that I live in, the world that you live in, the world that most of the folks
listening to this podcast live in, you would think that a felony conviction
would be disqualifying for a nominee for any office,
let alone president of the United States.
But the reality is, and this is just how it is,
it's not how it should be, is it is not.
It is just not disqualifying.
It is not the only thing that is going to be
the silver bullet that kills the Donald Trump candidacy here.
So is it over? No. Does it help us? Yes. And then the question becomes, how do we use it, right?
And to me, I think the biggest and most effective use here is on the communication side is it allows
us to make the case very credibly, I think, that Trump is running for himself and not for you.
And the contrast, I think the fundamental
contrast of this election is that Donald Trump is running for president and wants to be president
for selfish reasons. And Joe Biden cares about people and is trying to do the right thing by
people. And this is just as clear evidence as it is. He wants to pardon himself. He wants to stay
out of jail. He wants to use, you know, the federal apparatus to punish his political enemies,
who he feels like mistreated him, even though it was a state case and not a federal case, whatever.
And that is why he's running for president. That has nothing to do with your pocketbook,
your daily life. And Joe Biden, say what you will about him, but he is at least trying to help you.
And so that frame, I think, can change minds, right? And to John's point from a couple of podcasts ago, it only needs to change
a couple of people's minds, right? There's 80% of the electorate who's not changing their minds,
regardless of what happens. But in that 20, if this really can move a significant portion,
that could be the margin of victory or defeat. Yeah, we need some tens of thousands of people
in places like Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, et cetera, et cetera. But I mean, I think you made an
important point there because I think for a lot of people listening to this show or kind of like
in the progressive space, just the fact of this verdict to us is like, it's obvious,
it's disqualifying, it's over. But I do think the messaging around the verdict, like the messaging
fight started, it started long before the verdict happened. But in some sense, Donald Trump has a head start on us, right? Because he's been
consistent in calling this case rigged and unfair and a kangaroo court, et cetera, et cetera, for
months and months and months. And Democrats were trying to be, or at least President Biden was
trying to be more responsible and wait for a verdict and then point out, okay, this guy was
found guilty by a jury of his peers. And I think the broader point that you're making here about, you know, this is another proof point about where
Trump only cares about himself and is running for office to get out of trouble. We have to
advance that message. And we have to beat back the Republican message of, you know, that this
is a politicized attack led by Joe Biden's DOJ, et cetera, et cetera. Obviously,
that's wrong. But getting that message to people is not easy. And back to the TikTok point, I mean,
with only a few days, after just a few days of getting on TikTok, Trump's account had more than
5 million followers. And that intro video that we just heard had 80 million views. And so I talked
to Michael Tyler about this too. But I mean, Biden does the worst with voters who get their news from non-traditional media sources like TikTok or social media generally. And Trump's advantage in those places only seems to be increasing. How worried are you about this explosive growth on TikTok for Trump and this sort of general challenge of like getting information to voters who are looking to those places for news?
I'm really worried about it. I think anywhere, you know, the thing that has changed the most in the time that I've been in politics, that you've been in politics is how people consume
political or any news information, right? It used to be pretty straightforward about how you sort of
mainlined information to the voters and tried to move public opinion. And now it is not.
about how you sort of mainlined information to the voters and tried to move public opinion,
and now it is not. And even over the last four years, TikTok has exploded in how it is now a real platform where voters, particularly younger voters, get information about everything. And it's
harder to track, and it's harder to influence, and it's harder to move because it's algorithm-based
and all these things. And so the fact that, uh, you know, the Trump campaign, and I think the right wing in general is very active on, um, on that platform
gives me a lot of pause. And I'm honestly, I'm surprised they didn't get on there sooner.
You know, I think it was the super bowl, right? When, uh, when the Biden campaign and president
Biden got on there. So that's five, four, whatever, four months ago. But it's no, it's, it's to have a fully owned and operated broadcast channel for free where you, you know,
is essentially what TikTok is, is a valuable asset for the, for the Trump campaign. And we
have to take it seriously and compete there. Yeah. And you know, you're, you're right that
Biden got on, I think around the Superbowl several months ago, but I think they only have about
350,000 followers.
I tried to get, you know, Michael Tyler to engage me on this question of whether the follower,
the follower count question. No, the question of like, look, Joe Biden signed a bill to ban TikTok. And then, uh, Donald Trump used to want to ban TikTok, but then his, one of his biggest
donors, uh, had a meeting with him. And, uh, that guy owns a huge stake in bite dance, which is the
parent company of TikTok. And wow, what a surprise. Now, Donald Trump no longer wants to ban TikTok and Trump does
really well on the platform. And Biden is struggling. I'm not saying that's the only
reason why, like obviously communicating on the platform has been greatly complicated by the war
in Gaza, for example. But, you know, it's concerning that we just don't really know why
Trump's seen
this explosive growth and favorable pro-Trump content has. I think, A, they've invested a lot
just infrastructurally in building a sort of right-wing echo chamber. I think some of it
is structural in that it's easier to be the opposition. And so it's easier to make critical
content than it is to make and share critical content than it is to make and share supportive content of the incumbent president.
And it does better.
And it does better, right?
So, you know, I think some of it is strategic.
Some of it is structural.
It is what it is.
But I think I know that the Biden campaign and allies are acutely aware of this.
And it's not just the official accounts.
Like, sure, Biden has fewer followers than Trump. But this is a network's not just the, uh, official accounts. Like sure. Biden has fewer
followers than Trump, but this is a network problem. You need to have accounts to share.
You need to solve the algorithm and God bless whoever is the content, uh, strategy director
for the Biden campaign. Cause like, you know, you don't have, you've seen their, their accounts with,
uh, 30 followers that go super duper viral because the content is really good. And so
some of this is a content strategy question where we might have fewer followers on our side,
but if we have better content than whatever that mess is with data, data white and Donald Trump,
like it'll be the algorithm go viral. We'll have influencers to amplify it behind the scenes and
so forth. So it's an entire like battlefield that is just new, new to me,
right? I ran a campaign for president four or five years ago, and this was like kind of on the radar
screen. And now it's like squarely in the middle of the battle for hearts and minds.
Yeah. And just on that content strategy and how communications have changed. I mean,
you know, like we kind of set up Trump going to a UFC fight to show that like he wasn't taking the verdict too seriously or at least not too hard.
But listeners should understand that like going to a UFC fight is a message event.
Right.
Like we think of message events is like real people, you know, at a table about health care.
The press corps.
Right.
Yeah.
This is very different.
Like Trump walks into a stadium with 16,000 people.
They go nuts for him.
The TV cuts
to him. He's buddies with Dana White who runs the UFC. So he gets the star treatment. Trump walks
around the arena. He says hi to a bunch of kind of influencer types, almost entirely male, but who
talk about that interaction later. Maybe they're on podcasts. Maybe they just post about it on
social media. And so I know it can sound a little silly, but I think this is actually a great use of
time when you think about the voters he's trying to reach and turn out.
Yeah, I completely agree.
I think, you know, we have to think about content differently nowadays, or I should
say, we have to think about reaching voters and persuasion and mobilization differently
via content.
It is, you know, paid advertising is exceptionally important.
I think even more important this year than it has ever been because you just need volume
to break through the noise.
But the way to organically, what we call, you know, organically for free reach people
is, is like this, right?
It's doing things that will on their own, take on a life of their own beyond, beyond
the exact moment.
And so in the old days, it was,
you do a rally in a swing state, you get local press to cover you, which I'm not suggesting is
a bad thing. That's a great thing. Right. And you get some local influencers maybe to come,
um, uh, you know, so they talk about it in their neighborhoods and it fires up your base and
volunteers. So you can knock doors still an incredible part of the strategy, but, or an important part of the strategy,
but this is just that, the social media version, right?
It's, and it's got to be a part of what every campaign and certainly at the presidential
level does going forward because it's how people engage with politics now.
Yeah.
And I honestly, I just, I don't know what the kind of progressive version is of a UFC
fight in Newark well i mean you know
went to nba games right all that's true right like they were just i think the ufc base is
yeah it's a little whiter a lot maler um i shouldn't say that it's actually pretty
white and latino which i think is um most sports. It's diverse. It's just very male.
It's diverse, yeah. But certainly very male. I think a little more looks like the Republican
Trumpy base. NBA, more diverse, more black. So it makes sense. So we have our own kind of
sports strategy that I think mirrors it. But that is not small potatoes, to your first point. It is
actually showing up at a,
whatever it might be is not a, uh, the OTRs as we used to call them. Uh, maybe they're still
called right off the record stops are like, they're not, they're not little stuff. That's
actually can be really big stuff. And I think this was smart, honestly, for the Trump campaign
to do this, to go to a place where he's adored right after he, you know, got convicted of 34
felonies. Yeah. And, you know, you sort of helped me get to my, my last question here, which is
about fundraising. So today, you know, the Biden campaign has been out raising Trump by a lot.
Trump, you know, keeps spending tons of money on legal bills, which isn't,
was not ideal if you're the campaign manager and trying to think about, okay, what do we have for
ads down the road? But what do you make of those, those Trump numbers?
I mean, I was a little, um, I expected him to get a bounce, but not that big of a bounce,
to be honest. Yeah. I think the same. I, I certainly, his base is feeding grief, you know,
it's a grievance base and it has been since 2015. So this is the be all and end all of grievance politics, right? And our leader,
our savior is being persecuted is a great, easy pitch to your base to ask for money. So it's a
little more than I would have thought. Yeah. But how much of it is going to program that's going
to reach voters versus, you know, some law firm bottom line is a question I, you
know, I don't know. Um, but I'm going to assume is not insignificant amount. So, um, we have to be,
look, we, this is still going to be a close election, even in the wake of a felony conviction.
You know, like I said earlier, if a, if a significant percentage of a quarter of the
electorate is now open to being persuaded
or persuaded by the conviction, we still have to do the work to persuade them.
And not to mention the folks who might be in our base, less motivated to vote, et cetera,
et cetera.
That all costs money.
And the bigger advantage that we have in being able to do all of that, the more likely it
is we're going to win.
So the more money they raise, the worse it is for us.
Batter.
The worse it is we're going to win. So the more money they raise, the better, the worse it is for us, better, the worse it is for us. And, uh, uh, that to me is like the,
in some ways, the only silver lining for Trump in this crazy conviction situation is that,
you know, he's kicking gin up his base and, um, try to offset the bad politics with,
you know, more spending and more money. And just, you know, for our audience,
like who are hyper engaged in
reading these headlines and trying to constantly compare the Biden's results with the Trump
results, just know that not all fundraising is equal. Money to the campaign itself, like
federal hard dollars are actually more efficient because of the rates you get on advertising down
the road. Donations to like the DNC, for example,
the RNC, you can take way bigger checks. So it's easier to raise money into those accounts or state
party accounts. And then there's the super PAC side where donors can cut, you know, basically
unlimited checks based on how much cash you have. But those ads are not going to go as far down the
road when the advertising environment gets really tight.
Yeah. Yeah. Far dollars are definitely the most efficient dollars and you also can coordinate it with your candidate and there's all, you know, you can spend it on your offices or your field
staff, et cetera, et cetera. But it is not, you know, we should not take, take this lightly.
And if there's one sort of piece of advice I can give to the audience here
is we should not be spiking the football based on this conviction. We should celebrate it as a W,
as I said before, but this is, we've got five months left and we're going to have to run through
the tape for these five months and use this as a tool in our arsenal to persuade voters. But
we got to make the case. We can't assume the case is being made for us just by the facts
that happen to be on our side.
Yeah.
Well, that's a great place to end it.
Adisu, as always,
great to see you.
I'm sorry, everyone,
for not being Dan.
I say that all the time.
It's all good.
Most Monday pods.
But he will be back,
hopefully, Friday.
If not, maybe I'll be in here.
Are you guys going to let me leave?
We'll see.
But thank you again, Adisu.
Great to see you. My pleasure to be here always, man. Have a good one. And stick around. We're going to take a break. When we come. Are you guys going to let me leave? We'll see. But thank you again, Adesu. Great to see you.
My pleasure to be here always, man.
Have a good one.
And stick around.
We're going to take a break.
When we come back, you're going to hear my interview with Michael Tyler from the Biden
campaign.
And you will not want to miss that.
Joining me now is the communications director for the biden harris campaign michael tyler michael it's great to see you thank you for having me it's great to be on all the way live
from wilmington you got a nice backdrop there we see some joe signs some baby blue everything's
very nice it's very professional setup i just want everyone to know that so thank you for joining
it's been a wild week or two in
this campaign. Obviously, President Trump or former President Trump had some legal challenges
that came before last week. President Biden and the campaign have gone from declining to comment
on Trump's trial in New York and various legal challenges to you and Robert De Niro going down to the courthouse the other
week where Trump's trial was happening for a press conference where you guys focused on January 6th
to releasing campaign statements on the verdict itself. Can you just walk us through like the
evolution of your strategy and messaging and why you guys decided to weigh in when you did?
Yeah, no. So let me back up and talk about during the trial. You know, during the trial,
of course, the president in this campaign was never going to comment on the substance of the
trial while it was underway. It's very important that we respect the rule of law, that we respect
the integrity of the justice system and let that process play out. What we did last week when we
went down to the courthouse was, I'm sure you know this, and everybody who listens, who watches
cable news knows this, that every single day since Trump's criminal trial began, news media
cameras were camped out there 24 hours a day, seven days a week, incessant coverage where they
were showing nothing but NYPD and security guards outside the courthouse steps. A lot of the news
media coverage was about the personal stakes for Donald Trump and not necessarily what the stakes are for the American people in this election. So when we went down
there, we went down there with that precise message that Donald Trump is a threat to the
American people and to our democracy, echoing what the president said when he challenged Donald Trump
to the two debates that we're now doing starting on June 27th for the things that he wants to talk
to Trump about as relates to the threat that he poses to the American people, right? The role that he played in overturning
Roe v. Wade, the political violence that he continues to sow, the failed economy that he
wants us to return back to, right? Those are the things that Donald Trump, when he's not stuck in
a courthouse or not down in Mar-a-Lago, when he actually goes out onto the stump, those are the
things that he is talking about every day. And we want to make sure that the conversation going into the first debate and going into this general election,
as more people start to tune in, is about the fundamental stakes. And so that's what we were
focused on then. That's what we're going to be focused on for the next month here leading up
into the debate. And it's what the president is going to talk about every single day between now
and November. Yeah, I think that's a good sort of peek behind the curtain into sometimes how basic communication strategy can be. It's like, hey,
the cameras are all here. Let's go to the cameras, right? Like Chuck Schumer made a political life
out of having press conferences on Sunday because like the New York media needed something to cover
and talk about. You guys, you did that to your press conference. I mean, you said directly,
those reporters, like we're doing this because you're here, right? We're doing this because
you're focused on this trial. Later, I saw
the campaign express some frustration with the fact that Trump's trial was getting more coverage
than some of President Biden's events. Can you help us understand the frustration there? I mean,
isn't it a good thing when your opponent's legal troubles are getting like roadblock coverage?
Well, certainly now the American people know that we're running against a convicted felon who's going to do anything to regain and hold on to power to serve himself. Like that is fundamentally true moving forward here. I think the problem through a lot of the news media coverage, and it's not just related to Donald Trump's legal trials, it's related to, you know, the overall sort of media ecosystem that we're dealing with, right? It is far more interested in process, in horse race, right? Rather than the actual issues and the substance and what
the personal stakes are for the American people, their families, their communities, uh, their lives.
Uh, and so what the campaign and what the president understands is that we are going to have to
circumvent that a lot of the time, right? So sometimes that means going down to the courthouse
to bring your message, uh, directly to the shiny object that the media is incessantly focused on. Sometimes it
means going and when the president does a speech in a place like Philadelphia, not just doing the
speech, but actually sitting down around a kitchen table with the family, bringing our own cameras
and then chopping it up and using it for our digital platforms, right? To have personal
conversations about the fundamental stakes for this specific family. I think you saw us do this in North Carolina a while ago when we first launched our TikTok account.
You actually had a kid who posted it on his own account. We then amplified it from there,
right? Got far more coverage than any speech we would give on any single day. So we understand
the challenges of the news media environment that we're operating in. So we have to find
creative ways to get around that. Yeah, no, I think people don't totally understand that last mile problem with all communications and messaging and politics.
It's like you can you can edit that speech for as long as you want. But if nobody covers it and
doesn't get it to the listener and to the voters you need, it doesn't really matter.
There is a broader like constant debate about messaging focus. Some strategists will go on
cable news all day and say President Biden should only focus on economic messaging because people are mad about inflation and you got to meet them where they're at.
Others say President Biden is going to win this race by going negative and disqualifying Trump
every day. Obviously, every campaign is a combination of both positive and negative.
How are you guys thinking about that balance? Because you just had this verdict that is this like unprecedented, enormous outcome that, you
know, a lot of voters don't know about yet. And it's your job to communicate it to them.
Yeah. So a couple of things, right? Number one, every campaign always has to do both,
right? Regardless of the dynamics, regardless of the circumstances. I think particularly as it
relates to the 2024 election and the work that Joe Biden's campaign understands it needs to do is that we're doing quite well with a lot of voters who are paying a lot of attention.
You listen to this podcast, you watch cable news, you read the New York Times, you're media environment, an electorate that has been through a lot since going back to 2016 and is tired and
has been rejecting politics and not necessarily tuning in, actively resisting politics. And so
what we have to do is address the information gap. So yeah, we've spent a lot of time going
back to August of last year, communicating the president's historic record of accomplishment, everything from the 15 million jobs he created, 800,000 of those being manufacturing jobs.
The work that he has done to lower costs for Americans, capping insulin at $35, $2,000 out-of-pocket prescription drug cap for our seniors.
in intransigence and in a Supreme Court that tried to get in his way of reducing the student loan debt burden to the tune of almost $170 billion, like relentlessly communicating the
record of accomplishment, while simultaneously addressing the fact that Donald Trump,
outside of the last few weeks, has just not been in the spotlight. So the emotional reality that
the American people live with, the sense of anxiety, the chaos, the fear, the violence that this man inspired, right, has
not been front and center in the lives of the American people. And so we absolutely have to
not only remind people of the record of accomplishment, the vision for the future,
but we need to remind people of the fundamental stakes now that we are running against a guy who
is a convicted felon, who is out for himself, who is running a campaign of revenge, of retribution, who is literally in the wake of his criminal convention, once again, talking about
jailing his political opponents, sowing violence, sowing chaos. We have to remind people of what's
at stake in this election. So we're going to do both from now until November. Yeah, I think you
made a point that is really important for listeners to understand, which is that there's a lot of data
showing that President Biden does really well with college-educated voters and voters who are getting
their news from traditional media sources, like vetted good information. President Biden is doing
less well with non-college-educated voters and voters who are getting their news from social
media or just generally not paying attention to politics. So the good news for the Biden-Harris
campaign is that voters who understand your record tend to like it more. The bad news for the Biden-Harris campaign is that voters who understand your record tend to like it more.
The bad news is the voters we are losing, the Democratic Party are losing, are the hardest to reach.
There was a data for progress poll that showed swing voters are actually the least likely to have heard about Trump's conviction, which is troubling.
How are you thinking about the best ways to communicate with those voters, especially to inform them about the guilty verdict if they're not listening to the Paz de America or reading the New York Times or traditional news?
Yeah, absolutely.
So you got to use every tool at your disposal.
That's why a lot of our work, as I said, began as far back as August to sort of fertilize the contrast for what we knew was coming.
That continues right now. We continue to run paid
advertisements. But again, to address the information gap, making sure that we're not
simply running TV ads, but that we are over-indexing on things like streaming, Hulu, YouTube TV,
et cetera, et cetera. So when people are sitting down in front of their screens, we're actually
hitting them with our messaging. It means that we're doing digital organizing. A lot of the
lessons that we learned from 2020 still apply. But frankly, even more so now in 2024,
now that we've put the worst of the pandemic behind us,
thank you to Joe Biden,
we have to get back to some of the old school,
like boots on the ground organizing.
So the work that we are doing in the month of June,
for example, is scaling up our organizing apparatus.
We now have 200 field offices
across all the battleground states. We are doing things, not only traditional door knocking, phone banking,
but we're working with small businesses, for example, right, in black and brown communities,
not just doing visibility, but doing things where our canvas launches will actually launch out of
these places. So if you're going to get your hair cut, like you're already going to run into a
canvas, right? And that's your opportunity to open up the door of the campaign, get involved, volunteer,
right? And so increasingly making sure that we are tapping in to local grassroots organizations
so that we're not simply relying upon broadcast media to communicate our message is going to be
the thing that helps us continue to address the information gap over the summer as more and more
people continue to tune in. Do you think we'll see, you know, information about the Trump verdict in campaign ads?
Stay tuned.
Stay tuned.
Do you think we'll see Al Pacino doing a press conference?
Are we just going for that kind of generation back here?
Look, I mean, here's the thing.
Whether it's De Niro, Pacino, or anybody else who understands the stakes, now's the time
to understand what's at stake here and sign up. Al Pacino wants you to go to JoeBiden.com. Not only donate, but to volunteer.
I texted you that morning. It's like the fact that you had to stroll up with those guys and
like launch that press conference must have been intimidating as hell.
It was a very New York day.
It was a very New York day. Speaking of social media, ever since President Biden signed a bill
to ban TikTok, it seems
like there has been an explosion of pro-Trump content on TikTok.
He got on, Trump recently got on TikTok.
He got massive follower growth almost immediately.
Are you guys at all worried that they could, you know, put their thumb on the scales over
there, given that, you know, this is an existential election for the company itself?
Well, listen, I think we're under no false illusion that there's going to be all kinds
of issues that we have to deal with on these platforms.
From Trump, from foreign actors, everywhere else, we've seen it going back to 2016.
That's absolutely going to be a factor.
I think that's why this campaign understood it was even more incumbent for us to not fight
with one hand tied behind our back.
Like, you have to be on these platforms.
You have to communicate with your own voice,
with your own message across TikTok and other platforms.
So we're going to continue to do that.
We launched our own TikTok account going back in February of this year.
So we're going to be on that platform and all others.
Of course, I'm getting a phone call during this conversation
to make sure that we are leaving no stone untouched, right?
Was it Biden? Was it Joe Biden?
You can take it if it's him.
Just conference him in.
We'd love to get him on.
Sorry.
So, yeah, like there are going to be barriers, right?
There's going to be misinformation.
There's going to be just direct disinformation.
But it's on us as a campaign and the entire ecosystem to combat that, right?
It takes, frankly, like a deluge of our own messaging to overcome that.
So that's why we're on those platforms. That's why we're excited that our allies understand the need to be on those platforms,
because we have to use every single tool that we have at our disposal.
Yeah. And then this is one that's really on not just the Biden-Harris campaign,
but literally everyone listening. Like if you're concerned about a flood of Trump content on social
media, then you got to get on social media and push your own positive message. We are all messengers
here, as Dan Pfeiffer likes to tell us.
Correct. You cannot rely upon the content moderation. We have to flood the zone with
our own messaging. Yes, absolutely. Switching gears here. So President Biden is supposed to
debate Donald Trump on June 27th. That is ridiculously soon. How are you guys preparing
for this? Are you going to do like the standard debate prep camp?
Like what does that look like? Yeah. So we are prepared to debate on June 27th. I think it's
an open question on if Donald Trump shows up. Like there's one candidate here who has a record
of complaining about the debates, then skipping out on them. That's Donald Trump. He got beat by,
you know, the president twice in 2020. He hasn't shown up to a debate since. So
Joe Biden will be in Atlanta on June 27th, but we'll see what happens with Donald Trump.
The president's going to be ready.
He's going to be well prepared.
The campaign is also, as you know, we're crisscrossing the country right now, sort of setting the
table for the debate, for the questions that Donald Trump is going to have to answer for
when he takes the stage.
You have victims of his extreme level of abortion bans that are crisscrossing the country. You have Capitol Police officers who put
their lives on the line to protect and defend our democracy on January 6th, who are doing the same,
crisscrossing the country. And so we're going to make sure that when he takes the stage,
that the American people understand that in Donald Trump, you have somebody who presents
a persistent and growing threat to the American people, to our economy and to our democracy.
And that Joe Biden, as you're seeing every single day, is somebody who wakes up every single day
fighting relentlessly for the American people. So the president's going to be ready and the
campaign is certainly going to be ready. My tip is get that COVID vaccine booster
like pretty soon, you know, because you don't want to get sick from that fucker again.
Exactly.
Trump has repeatedly tried to suggest in the wake of his his verdict that his legal problems will actually help him with black voters.
He has suggested that black voters relate to his mugshot.
He said that repeatedly yesterday.
His son, Donald Trump Jr., posted a photo of George Floyd with the text
Democrats and then said, quote, I don't know how you can support a felon. The suggestion being that,
you know, Democrats who say that, you know, Donald Trump being an unrepentant felon makes him
unqualified for the presidency is somehow compared to not wanting George Floyd to be murdered by
police,
I guess, is what they're trying to get at. Marjorie Taylor Greene recently said that,
quote, Democrats are still worshiping convicted felon George Floyd. All of this strikes me as
shockingly cynical and racist messaging. But I was wondering, you know, if you guys are seeing
data or hearing from voters directly about these kind of comments from President Trump?
And if you have a response to Marjorie Taylor Greene or Don Jr.
Yeah, I don't. I certainly don't have a response for them. I think my response to the Trump
campaign's entire outreach strategy here, it's ridiculous. It's offensive. It is, in fact,
racist. Like the idea that you're going to associate black people with criminality as
the basis of your outreach strategy is just abhorrently racist.
But frankly, it's in line with who their candidate is, who he's been his entire life.
Right. This is a man who stepped into public life in many ways by falsely accusing the Central Park Five and continue to do so even after we knew them to be the exonerated five.
This is a person who, as you very well know, stepped into the political mainstream by taking
birtherism and bringing it mainstream, right? And then this is a person who, when he was in power,
like his entire policy agenda was incredibly racist, right? Like his tax policy, for example,
gave double the benefit to the typical white household than it did the typical black household.
This is a person who fumbled the bag on the COVID response, which left Black people disproportionately dead, left Black businesses disproportionately
shuttered. So it's no surprise that they can't figure out an intelligent way to actually
communicate with Black voters as we head into 2024. I think the way that you can and should
is the way that Joe Biden is doing it, right? Which is reminding people what you've actually
done, making promises and keeping them, right? And so things like Black wealth increasing by 60% since before the pandemic, record low Black unemployment during the first
term of this administration, Black child poverty cut in half through the child tax credit, which
is something that we're bringing back since MAGA Republicans cut it out, and the work that we're
continuing to do into a second term. That's how you earn the respect and earn the votes of Black
voters. That's what this campaign is actually doing. That's how you earn the respect and earn the votes of Black voters.
That's what this campaign is actually doing. It's certainly not what the Trump campaign is doing.
Yeah. Black women on the Supreme Court, the vice president.
The list goes on and on and on.
Final question. Yesterday, President Biden announced an executive order that will allow
him to effectively shut down the southern border after a certain number of migrants
cross or seek asylum. He got some pretty quick blowback from
progressives like Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, who argued that the EO was modeled after Trump's
immigration policies. I wonder if you have a response to that and if you guys are worried that
this executive order could further anger progressives who maybe are frustrated about
other issues like Gaza or demotivate the Democratic base at a time when we're trying
to bring it
together going into this election? No, listen, I think what the American people are going to see,
what progressives are going to see, what all voters are going to see is a president who takes
seriously his responsibility as the president of the United States, right? As a president who
worked relentlessly towards a bipartisan border security deal, one that was on the table,
that was ready to go until Donald Trump came along and blew it up and said, blame me. So like, we will continue to do that. We will
continue to blame him on this issue. The president himself remains committed to bipartisan comprehensive
immigration reform that not only addresses the border, but treats people here humanely with the
dignity and decency that they deserve as human beings, that provides for a pathway to citizenship.
All of that stands directly in contrast to what we know our opponent is going to do, right?
This is somebody who is not actually interested in border security, certainly not interested in bipartisan, you know, comprehensive immigration reform.
This is somebody who is telling us out on the stump every single day what he wants to do.
He wants to erect mass deportation camps. He wants to bring back family separation, separating kids from their mothers.
He wants to end birthright citizenship, something that's been foundational to the U.S. Constitution, going back to Reconstruction.
So the contrast is pretty clear here.
It's between a president who is fighting relentlessly for solutions and a chaos agent in Donald Trump who only cares about his own personal self-interest.
Well said.
Michael Sire, thanks for doing the show.
Good luck with that debate
prep, man. My experience is presidents don't love doing it. You get kind of used to everyone
standing up when you walk in the room after a couple months in the job, and all of a sudden,
you're at some debate prep, and someone's telling you your answer sucks, and Barack Obama's like,
get out of my face. I have better things to do than talk to you, David Axelrod or whoever.
But I'm very excited to see how this goes.
And, you know, root for you guys.
Thanks, man. We're looking forward to it. Thanks for having me.
Thanks again to DCU for being here.
Thanks again to Michael Tyler. And we'll talk to you guys on Friday.
Take care, everybody.
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