Pod Save America - Biden's Fiery State of the Union
Episode Date: March 8, 2024Jon and Dan break down the highlights of what might be the biggest speech of Joe Biden's re-election campaign so far, from his hits on Donald Trump to his defense of reproductive rights and tax fairne...ss for working families. Then, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre stops by to talk about the new policy initiatives Biden will be pushing in the months ahead. 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 Dan Pfeiffer.
And we just watched the State of the Union, Dan. It's late. It's 845 Pacific Time.
I don't know how people on the East Coast do this.
I mean, we used to do it.
I know. We were a lot younger.
We are fortunate to have White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.
She'll be joining us a little bit later.
But first, Joe Biden just give a humdinger of
a State of the Union, Dan. He really enjoyed himself. I think he likes doing this. He likes
giving the State of the Union. That was my first impression. He was energetic. He was forceful.
He picked a lot of fights. Dan, if a Biden skeptical friend who didn't watch the speech
asked you about the speech,
what would you say?
Watch the speech.
I mean, that's sort of the point, right?
Is all of the concerns we hear about the president's age, his fitness, his job, all of that
are offered by people who most likely have not seen him give a speech in three years.
And so what you see of Joe Biden is what you hear about an 80-year-old man and the sort of
self-fulfilling prophecy of people saying they're concerned about his age, so more people are
concerned about his age. Or you see out of context, largely unflattering TikToks of the president,
watch the speech. I think anyone who watches the speech would feel very good about his ability to
do the job. He
certainly wildly surpassed the expectations. A lot of people are very concerned about his ability to
do the job. He wildly surpassed the very low bar of expectations set by the right-wing media and
Donald Trump and the Republicans. And I also think there's a lot in this speech for people who
are concerned about costs, the border,
just whether the president's going to fight for them.
So this is one of those things you would do where you would take clips from this speech.
You would show that if they would watch the whole speech,
God bless them, they must be a really good friend.
But if not, there's a lot of really important moments
we're going to talk about to them
that we should show people.
And I think that was the sort of thing
that would begin to change people's impressions
of the president.
Yeah, it started at 9.26 PM. It was a little delayed. I was getting a little nervous there. Where did you think he was?
I don't know, but we were just waiting and waiting. I was like, let's start this thing.
Maybe the most surprising thing about the speech, I thought, is the first State of the Union I've
ever heard where he directly went after the guy he's running against. Now, of course, nothing is normal about this situation.
We have two former presidents who served in two consecutive terms who are now running against each other.
You know, Donald Trump's going to run again.
This is the third time he's running for president.
And so he looms over the entire night, particularly because he is basically the boss of the Republicans in Congress right now.
particularly because he is basically the boss of the Republicans in Congress right now.
But Joe Biden, over and over again, I thought it was going to be like oblique references.
He just called out his predecessor.
He calls it my predecessor many times in the speech.
Let's listen. My predecessor and some of you here seek to bury the truth about January 6th.
I will not do that.
Many of you in this chamber and my predecessor are promising to
pass a national ban on reproductive freedom. My God, what freedom else would you take away?
Over 100 million of you can no longer be denied health insurance because of pre-existing condition.
But my predecessor and many in this chamber want to take this prescription drug away by
repealing Affordable Care Act.
I'm not going to let that happen.
My predecessor told the NRA he's proud he did nothing on guns when he was president.
After another shooting in Iowa recently, he said, when asked what to do about it,
he said, just get over it.
There's his quote, just get over it.
I say, stop it.
Stop it, stop it, stop it.
So what did you think about that?
I was surprised. Were you surprised?
I was impressed that they got that through the lawyers.
I mean, like we know, you know, when Obama gave the 2012 State of the Union, heading into that campaign,
you wrote that speech.
We did not yet know Mitt Romney was definitely going to be his opponent, but we had a pretty
good idea.
And that speech was written with the idea that we were going to be facing Mitt Romney,
a private equity executive who made a lot of
money buying companies and firing the employees and was promoting policies to cut taxes for
rich people like himself.
And remember in that speech, there was a lot about economic inequality.
That was the Buffett rule, which was the rule that said that there was based on the idea
that Warren Buffett used to say that his secretary paid a higher tax rate than he did.
And so I expected it to be all about Trump.
I didn't expect that they would directly mention him, than he did. And so I expected it to be all about Trump.
I didn't expect that they would directly mention him, but they did. That's great. Like, let's just,
why, no reason to like dance around it. I kind of hate when you don't, when you don't just say the thing and they said the thing, and I think it's great. And because he did that, I think this
is the most important part about this is it will get more attention. And one of the things that the president has really struggled
with because of the sort of structural deficiencies that the Democrats have in the media is grabbing
the nation's attention. And one way to do that is to just is to break some eggs, right? Have some
conflict. And this speech will get way more attention because he went directly after Trump
than if he had kind of sort of given a very good speech that just was an implicit, a subtle implicit White House counsel approved contrast, just going after the president,
I think it was 13 times in the speech, was a smart move.
I also think we should say, Hatch Act doesn't apply to the president. So that's in terms of
the president's speeches. Yes. Yes. President can say what he wants. But what I thought about
when listening to him go after Trump and really
just the entire speech, the energy level, the feistiness, like Joe Biden is not going to
let Donald Trump return to power without a real fight. Like he feels this. He genuinely believes
that Donald Trump is a threat to this country.
And he has heard the worries and the criticisms and all that kind of stuff. And he was up there tonight and he was feisty. He was as energetic as I've seen him. And here's the thing too,
it was not perfect, right? His stutter, which he has been struggling with his entire life,
in which we saw him struggle with in 2020,
it was definitely like there were moments tonight
where he swallowed his words like he usually does.
And I think I've made this point before, but it was okay.
It's okay if he mumbles through some stuff
as long as he is showing energy and fight
and expressing himself in a way that makes you believe it, right?
And I think that there was a lot of times tonight where he, probably more times than
his staff would like, that he went off script.
But even those moments when he went off script, it was something that he deeply believed.
And so I think that the performance of the speech tonight, the delivery was something
that he felt deeply.
And I think that goes a long way with people.
And so then if you flub some lines here and there and you mumble through some words, people don't people don't penalize you for that because they know that what you're saying is authentic to who you are and what you believe.
And I think that's what he what he demonstrated tonight.
Those are the sort of not even misstatements, but sort of speech delivery moments that voters don't care about, right? It's really only people
like us and reporters and close political observers who look at every single word a
politician says. Voters have a much more human approach to the way people talk. That's always
been true of Joe Biden. And it's just the way he delivered the speech was strong. And it got so important,
right? It felt like a fight. It felt like the battle for the soul of the nation, if you will.
But he really was fighting. And that's important because the age concerns are often sometimes
become a proxy for strength concerns. And if he's out there fighting and seeming energetic,
it just goes a long way to making people feel much more comfortable that he can be the strong leader they want and in times
that feel chaotic. I'll just tell you the chyron on Fox News on Sean Hannity's show. It's got a
video of Biden at a rally somewhere. And then it's got uh biden at the speech tonight
and it just says jacked up joe not his normal self tonight sure great i'll take it great
jacked up joe absolutely all right so there's another thing that i had not seen in a state
of the union before he started with ukraine at the beginning of the speech. He had a message for Putin.
Let's listen.
We will not walk away.
We will not bow down.
I will not bow down.
In a literal sense, history is watching.
He did say history is watching quite a few times.
I was wondering at first when I heard him, like, oh, it's interesting that he's starting with Ukraine.
And the reason I said that is because if you ask most Americans their top concern, they're not going to say the war in Ukraine, even though they a majority of Americans support Ukraine and support sending additional aid to Ukraine to stop Putin.
So he's, you know, public opinions on his side, but it's not the most salient issue.
But then that clip that we just heard the message to Putin after he said that he got applause from Democrats and Republicans.
It was one of the few times during the speech that everyone stood up to applaud. So I'm betting
that's why they they did it first, probably because Joe Biden thinks it's very important
that we support Ukraine. He genuinely believes that, you know, if if Putin is allowed to
take Ukraine, then he'll roll through NATO next. But it was interesting that they started with
that. Yeah. I mean, as I said to you earlier, in every state of the union I've ever worked on
or watched, I always go pee during the foreign policy section. And so-
Really reeling that for you.
He had a mild panic attack when he started with that. But I think there was, he had a bunch of
really big things really fast. And I think it's actually a had a bunch of really big things really fast.
And I think it's actually a pretty savvy understanding of both how people consume media right now
and how political narratives are set.
We remember this from debates, right?
What happens in the first 15 minutes of a debate is if you start out a debate super
strong, almost nothing happens in the last five minutes of the debate hurts you, right?
But if you start out weak and then you get better than the narrative says, it doesn't matter. So he started with several big,
strong moments, lots of applause, seeming very strong. And it sort of set the stage for how
people were going to think about the debate going forward. So that was smart. It was good.
Well, so it was Ukraine. And then he went to January 6th. And then he talked about
Roe v. Wade and IVF. Let's listen.
he went to January 6th, and then he talked about Roe v. Wade and IVF. Let's listen.
If you, if you, the American people, send me a Congress that supports the right to choose,
I promise you, I'll restore Roe v. Wade as the law of the land again.
So that is all right at the beginning. Ukraine, January 6th, Roe, the campaign has been saying,
and Democratic strategists have been saying for some time now that the election is going to be Dobbs and democracy. And I guess that was the
signal for the beginning of the speech that they're going to be campaigning on that. And
that's going to be the central focus to the campaign. Yeah. And it's also an acknowledgement
that while abortion has been has driven Democratic victories ever since the Dobbs decision that there is work to do. You guys
talked about this a few days ago. There's work to do in helping voters understand how responsible
Trump is for every single one of these abortion bans. Yeah. Did the speech tell you anything new
about Biden's reelection strategy? I don't know if it told me anything new, but it sort of clarified,
I think, some of his top priorities. First is
definitely trying to reestablish some of his populist credentials to demonstrate that he is
fighting for middle and working class people. That's something that he did very well on in 2020
and he has fallen behind Trump in the polling on and Trump has like a 10 point advantage on it in
the CBS poll that came out this weekend. And you saw that in the policies on shrinkflation and corporate price gouging and raising taxes
on corporations that he said, I'm going to fight like hell for a more fair tax code.
And so I think that that is one of the main things that he was doing there.
And abortion is obviously another huge part of the agenda.
And the third thing is that he is going to draw a contrast between the progress that
he has made, which is strong progress, not triumphant progress, but strong progress against the chaos of the
Republican House, which I think is serving as a proxy for Donald Trump in this, which is why he
hit them on refusing to pass the border security bill, refusing to pass Ukraine aid, and trying to
really stroke a fight with them over a whole bunch of different things to sort of show just how sort of chaotic and overly political they are.
You mentioned that you talked about taxes.
He went into a section after sort of that opening that we talked about where he discussed sort of where the country was when he took office, the economic progress we made.
He sort of touted a lot of his accomplishments.
He took office, the economic progress we made.
He sort of touted a lot of his accomplishments. And then as he spoke about his economic agenda going forward,
I think that his section on taxes was probably maybe the longest section.
It was certainly one of the feistiest sections in the economic section.
Let's listen.
Folks at home, does anybody really think the tax code is fair?
Do you really think the wealthy and big corporations need another $2 trillion tax break?
I sure don't.
So that is not going to be the sexiest section for media coverage, I would imagine.
But I haven't seen focus groups yet.
I haven't seen dial tests yet.
I would bet that's one of the more popular sections.
dial test yet, I would bet that's one of the more popular sections.
And the subtext here, which I think is worth pointing out, is that the Trump corporate tax cuts that lowered corporate tax rates gave huge benefits to the wealthiest people expire at the
end of the next president's first year. So if we elect Donald Trump, he's going to renew those.
If we elect Joe Biden, he will let those expire and raise taxes back up to a normal,
more fair level
for corporations. Yeah. And I think it's going to be a great contrast with Trump. He's going to be
able to kick the shit out of Trump on this. Trump already passed one of Trump's few domestic policy
achievements in his first term, was passing a giant tax cut, mostly for the wealthy, which
skyrocketed the deficit. And Biden's going to say, I want to raise tech.
He talks about no billionaire should pay a lower tax rate than a teacher, a sanitation worker,
or a nurse, much like the Buffett rule that you mentioned. One of these days, we're going to get
a pass. So I do think when he talks about his economic agenda, when he's out on the campaign
trail, I would imagine that his tax agenda is going to be something that he really focuses on.
And we have seen in polling and a lot of message testing that when you ask a lot of working class
voters and a lot of these gettable voters who are persuadable, who haven't made up their minds yet,
their biggest concerns about Trump are both what he might do on taxes and then also what he might
do on Medicare and Social Security. And I thought Biden had a great back and forth
with Republicans, similar to the one he had last year and last day of the union
about Social Security and Medicare. Let's listen.
If anyone here tries to cut Social Security, Medicare or raise the retirement age,
I will stop you. That's the proposal.
Oh, no, you guys don't want another two trillion trillion tax cut? I kind of thought that's what your plan
was. Well, that's good to hear. You're not going to cut another $2 trillion to the super wealth.
That's good to hear. They are going to do that. That is their plan. That's their plan. That's
Donald Trump's plan. They're going to cut Social Security and Medicare so they can pay for a giant tax cut for rich people. They also want to defund the IRS so that
rich tax cheats can continue being rich tax cheats. That's what they want to do. Look, I love
the whole campaign to be fought about. In normal times, this is what we would fight a campaign on.
This is what we fought the 2012 campaign against Mitt Romney about. And they
are good issues for Democrats. It is since then it has been very hard. It was hard for Hillary
Clinton in 2016. It was hard for Biden 20 because of covid to have an economic message breakthrough.
But I do think that Democrats have an advantage on taxes against this Republican Party that wants
to give tax cuts to the wealthy and that wants to cut Medicare and Social Security. And it was good to see Biden really zero in on that tonight, I thought.
So he talked about the border like we thought he was going to do. He did not announce any new
executive actions on the border. He did whack the Republicans for having, you know, and Donald Trump
for killing the bipartisan border deal that came together in the Senate. And then it was an interesting moment where Marjorie Taylor Greene, who she's like wearing her MAGA hat, she's got like a T-shirt on
and she gave Biden a button when he walked into the State of the Union. And it was a button about
Lakin Riley, who's the young woman from Georgia who was murdered by an undocumented immigrant from
Venezuela. And it has been this gigantic story. You probably have not heard about it, but it has
been a gigantic story on the right. It's been all over Fox, all over conservative media. She gave
him this button. And as he's going back and forth with Republicans about the border, he picks up the
button and he says, you know what? He's like, it's horrible that this
young woman died. And he says something to her parents, who I don't think were there. Maybe they
were there, but he mentioned something about her parents. What did you think about that sort of
ad lib where he went off script to talk about that? That was certainly not his strongest part
of the night. Obviously, the use of the term illegal, which he did once or twice, was unfortunate
and not how he would normally, he would usually use the term undocumented. So that,
I think he was a little flustered in that moment. But I think, you know, the back and forth is
usually good for him. That one was less good. But in the whole of the speech, I don't think it's a
huge, huge moment. But I think we are now hitting a transition period where every state of the union
is going to be like this now. Yeah. Where it's, you know, they sort of started, we've been getting
there. There was such backlash when Congressman Joe Wilson yelled, you lie to Obama. And then it
was everyone's on their best behavior for like a decade. And then last year they got into a thing
with Biden, even though Biden won that exchange. Now I think every one of these members is going to try to get some attention from doing it.
So this is the future.
If Biden is reelected, he has four more of these.
Democrats probably do the same thing to Trump.
So I think this is par for the course going forward.
I will say, like, obviously, him using the word illegal is just evidence of him being from a different generation.
That's what people said, even people who supported immigration way back when. So that wasn't great. But it's very Joe
Biden to take on like Marjorie Taylor Greene hands on this button. And instead of being like,
fuck off, I'm not going to talk about this issue. The fact that he's like, yeah, no,
that my position is it's, of course, horrific that this young woman was murdered. But what I
want to do is secure the border and also give a pathway to citizenship for the millions of immigrants living
here who make this country stronger and not set up mass deportation camps like donald trump wants
to do and he also you can tell he he enjoyed the you're right that the back and forth is going to
be the norm from stathamians from now on. But he really enjoys it.
He's like, like, you could
see the guy would be very
comfortable in the British
Parliament.
That's a question.
Right.
Like he liked the back and
forth.
He wanted to talk to them.
He's like, you know, he's
like talk.
He mentioned Bob Casey and
his his bill about
shrinkflation at one point.
He's like, pass Bobby's
bill.
Bobby is in the prepared
remarks.
Bobby is in the prepared
remarks.
Well, he said pass Bob Casey's shrinkflation bill.
But he, you know, he-
Pass Bobby's bill.
Calls out Lindsey Graham later.
And it's just very, it's very Joe Biden.
He loves legislating.
He loves governing.
He loves Congress.
Like that's what he wants.
That's what he likes to do.
I'm sure the staff was not super excited
when they saw him going into his pocket
to get the thing that Marjorie Taylor Greene gave him.
But he navigated, other than that one flub that we mentioned, he navigated that moment fine.
I know that we are not Tommy and Ben, this is not Pod Save the World. So we will not get deep
into the policy. But obviously, the president announced the opening of a pier in Gaza to get more aid in,
humanitarian aid. It seemed like a very specific effort to speak to the voters
unhappy with his approach to Gaza. What did you think of that section of the speech?
I thought that that was probably the politically worst part of the speech. I think he,
that that was probably the politically worst part of the speech. I think he, from a policy perspective, he's trying to do something to speak to the people, and I think within the administration
themselves, who are incredibly horrified by the humanitarian crisis happening in Gaza without
changing the actual policy and approach to Israel. But the rhetoric that he used, the way he talked about it was, I think, you could just
see it online that people reacted very negatively to it. I think he seemed more concerned about
being considered insufficiently supportive of Israel than insufficiently supportive of trying
to help the people in Gaza. And I think that that is just like when you say
being of a different generation, that is of a different generation. That is a different political
world. It felt not a two. It is certainly if the policy was designed to, I think, actually do what
the United States can to deal with, obviously, this crisis. But the announcement of the policy
and the preview was designed to speak to the people in his 2020 voters in our base who are very unhappy with
what's happening there, the uncommitted voters in Michigan and Minnesota and elsewhere. The
rhetoric around that policy, I think, certainly didn't help things. It may have made them worse.
Yeah. In that moment, I really felt for his staff and I could see what they must have gone through over the last several months because you know he gets in in the prepared remarks he gets to a but Israel must do its part
must allow more aid in to leadership of Israel I say this humanitarian assistance cannot be a
secondary consideration or Barton goes on and on but before he gets to the but he the only ad lib
in that section was saying like and no one has been a stronger supporter of israel and i
challenge anyone you know like and i imagine that over the last several months since october 7th
there have probably been several instances where whether it's secretary of state blinken whether
it's jake sullivan whether it's other people like who are probably trying to get him to be a little
more forceful but he isn't he is we've talked about this before and tommy and ben have like
he is a president from an era where israel's security was so threatened all the time that i do not think on that i mean
he talks about whether your ideas are old or not i think on this issue he is still he is a man of
the past and he is you know it's i didn't like it i didn't love it okay so um end of the speech
he used the end of the speech to take on the age issue directly,
which I thought was interesting.
Let's listen.
I know you don't want to hear
any more, Lindsay,
but I got to say a few more things.
I know it may not look like it,
but I've been around a while.
When you get to be my age,
certain things become
clearer than ever.
I know the American story.
Again and again, I've seen the contest between competing forces in the battle for the soul
of our nation, between those who want to pull America back to the past and those who want
to move America into the future.
The issue facing our nation isn't how old we are, it's how old our ideas.
Hate, anger, revenge, retribution are the oldest of ideas.
But you can't lead America with ancient ideas that only take us back.
You lead America, the land of possibilities.
You need a vision for the future and what can and should be done.
I thought it was great. I thought it was a great way to take it on and uh you know it was a slight joke it was the end of the
speech uh i do think the uh the best sound of him taking on the age issue um was not in the prepared
remarks it was caught on on a hot mic when he was talking to Congressman Jerry Nadler after the speech.
Let's listen.
Nobody's going to talk about cognitive impairment now.
You were on fire.
I kind of wish sometimes I was cognitive impairment.
I kind of wish sometimes I was cognitively incognitive decline.
I love that.
That's just great. That's just great.
That's just real.
That's real.
What did you think of the end there?
Well, he road tested this.
It's not my age.
It's the age of one's ideas on Seth Meyers a few weeks ago.
Or last week, I guess that was.
Time has no meaning anymore.
And I think that's the right thing to do.
You're not going to keep...
And it's also, I think, an acknowledgement that he has taken a transition on this.
I think he was very dismissive of people's concerns for a while.
I think he was annoyed by them and frustrated by them.
And he's – I mean, as he mentioned tonight, he was elected to the Senate when he was 29.
They wouldn't let him get in the senator's elevator because they thought he was like an intern.
And so he's always been the youngest person.
And now all of a sudden, he's the oldest oldest person that's kind of how i feel on this podcast
but see and you make a joke about it you make a joke about it you feel better yeah yeah it's fine
yeah but now is he's sort of going on offense a little bit with it and it's just like ultimately
what the words are not going to solve the concerns it's just going to be how he performs over the
next eight months here.
But to the extent when you talk about it, if you can just pivot into offense and then because what he is when you do this, not in the speech per se, but like in the Seth Meyers interview, it's the age of his ideas.
Look at all these things he wants to do is to take us back to when women didn't have reproductive freedoms, when gay people can get married and just go right at sort of the the revanchist maga agenda and it
makes a very easy pivot point and you go from defense offense very quickly as opposed to just
being incredibly defensive about it which he was in that in that robert her report press conference
a few weeks ago ron barnstein had a very smart piece in the atlantic uh today where he talked
about sort of the the three options for for this race uh for how to
define this race he talked about it could be a referendum on biden right which obviously
biden does not want it can also be a choice between whether voters think that donald trump's
term was better or joe biden's term was better and he was saying it is clear that the trump people
want that choice because right now they are benefiting from short memories and people forgetting how bad Donald Trump was.
And so they are judging it by the last four years, which, you know, we're pretty happy with.
But a bunch of people in the country apparently are not happy with.
And the other choice is to make it about the future and about what Donald Trump is going to do and what Joe Biden is going to do in the next four years and where Donald Trump's going to take the country and where Joe Biden is and Donald Trump's policies and old ideas and Joe Biden's policies and ideas that will take us into the future.
You're definitely going to need to do some looking backward to remind people how bad Trump's term was, particularly 2020.
Not a great year.
At least Stefanik the other day said, are you better off than you were four years ago?
Four years ago right now, everyone was about to be locked in their homes, like thousands of people dying a day in April.
And then the year ended with a fucking insurrection.
So not a great year.
So there's going to be going to have to be the campaign is going to definitely do some work reminding people of how bad Trump's term was and also remind people what Joe Biden has achieved over these last four years. But I do think
the bulk of the campaign is going to have to be what Biden wants to do versus what Trump will do.
And, you know, he he basically set that up at the end of the speech. And I think he did that
throughout the speech. You know, he did that throughout the speech.
There's still a little heavier on the accomplishments than I would like.
But I like that at least at the end and at the beginning and with a lot of the policy
he laid out, he is setting up a campaign where he can talk about, maybe I'm pretty old, but
I'm the one who wants to take us into the future with the policies that I have already
enacted and the ones that I'll be fighting for if you give me another four years.
And Donald Trump will take us backward and it'll be chaos and disaster.
And it's all there in the plans that he he wants to enact if he's president again.
Yeah, I thought the accomplishments was pretty good.
I thought you have to do it.
You know, there's polling that shows that it's actually incredibly influential with some of it with the double. With the double haters, the people who disapprove of both of them, which makes up quite a large
swath of the electorate this time around.
That they are, and particularly, and this is the one he did it for a lot tonight, is
there is no policy more popular than the law having Medicare negotiate with the prescription
drug companies to get lower prices and capping the price of insulin at $35.
Polls show that upwards of 80% of voters love it. Also, polls show that less than 50% of voters
know about it. So talking about those things is important. But what I thought the tone was
right for people's mood right now. People are a little more optimistic about the economy,
they're not yet giving the president credit for it, but it was not so triumphant. He really got to where I
think he needs to be, which is we inherited a shit show. We've made some real hard progress.
We did it even in bipartisan ways, and we're making that progress, and we're going to get
there, but we're not going to get there if Donald Trump and these fucking extreme yahoos get in
power and they take us all the way back. And I And I think that was sort of the tenor, the subtext and the tenor of the speech.
And I thought that was good.
He did not do, we passed all these amazing things and everything is perfect.
The greatest economy of all time.
Right.
There was like, obviously a little triumphalness and there should be, but I don't think he
overshot the runway at all tonight.
Yeah, no, I, I think a campaign that is Donald Trump is consumed with his own past and getting revenge and Joe Biden is consumed with the future and what kind of country he can leave to his grandchildren and everyone else's.
That's that's a good choice. That's that's a fight that they're going to want to have.
And I think they did a great job setting that up tonight. All right.
Katie Britt, Republican senator from Alabama.
All right. Katie Britt, Republican senator from Alabama.
She gave the response and I've never heard one like this before.
Let's let's listen to a clip. Mr. President, enough is enough.
Innocent Americans are dying and you only have yourself to blame.
And you only have yourself to blame.
Fulfill your oath of office.
Reverse your policies.
End this crisis and stop the suffering.
Got the Oscars this Sunday.
A late entry from Katie Britt.
That's a good joke.
She sounded like she was on a bad Netflix teen drama.
It was like the shaky, the overacting was just, it was wild.
It was the only, I can't even tell you what she said because I could not, I couldn't focus on anything. But the quiver in her voice and the fact that it was so obviously inauthentic in acting, it was horrible.
Yeah, it's one of the worst ones ever.
And that is saying a lot
because they're all pretty terrible.
A lot, because they're all bad.
Yeah.
They're all bad.
You knew it was going to be bad
when Jonathan Swan of the New York Times
tweeted this out,
that her allies have already put out talking points
before the speech was given.
Comparing it to Ronald Reagan's
Berlin Wall in City on a hill speeches.
She hadn't given the speech yet.
This is like,
you're compensating for something there.
People you've seen the dress rehearsals and,
and MAGA people do not like it either.
Charlie Kirk tweeted.
Did you like Katie Britt's speech?
And go check out some of the replies.
Way too dramatic,
bizarre,
very babysitter reading a bedtime story.
These are all the like blue check MAGA people.
It was bad reviews, bad reviews from Katie Britt.
And then, of course, Trump was doing a in real time truthing of the whole speech where he just he really zeroed in on Joe Biden coughing a lot.
He said, don't don't shake his hand.
He's coughing, which is interesting.
As someone on our team said,
this is the guy that exposed everyone to COVID,
almost killed a few people.
He's very worried about receiving germs,
not giving them to people.
Yes, that's right.
Anyway, enough with Katie Britt, enough with Donald Trump.
It was a great night for Joe Biden.
Have you seen any of the dial tests?
I have not seen any dial tests.
Have our team seen it, seen the CNN or CBS polls yet?
I haven't gotten a chance to dig into all the dial testing.
I think some of the flash polls were were quite good for the president as they as they
often are after State of the Unions.
But that's great.
We'll take it.
I'm interested to see all the data.
I would not be surprised, though, if if this speech really energized Democrats, wavering Democrats and probably, you know, picked up some ground with independents as well.
Yeah, I think this I think whether this moves the polls or not, I don't want to set expectations too high, but I think it sets the stage.
I think he's going to get a 10 point 10 point bump.
You heard it here. State of the Union bounce, something that we argued against for years in our previous life but no i look i think this was a great night for the president
he should feel very good about his team should feel very good about it i think this is the kick
off the general election campaign and he kicked it off in a really good way yeah we should say
the only the only real uh presidential approval bump after state of the union uh in the last
couple decades was barack obama three points after the 2009 state of the
union which i can only imagine is because we were going through the worst financial crisis since the
great depression and he was a brand new president so they were like all right let's give him uh
let's cut him some slack for a little bit and then that quickly went away as we all know but
just to just to set the baseline usually these things don't actually move presidential approvals.
It is unlikely to change,
but it sets the stage for change later on.
Yes.
And it is a blueprint for a message
that he can deliver throughout the campaign.
And also, it was good to see him have a lot of fight tonight.
Okay.
Before we go to break,
two quick items.
We're announcing new tour dates
in just a few days.
Pre-sale tickets
will only be available
for Friends of the Pod
subscribers starting on Tuesday.
So make sure to join
for access to the best seats
in the house.
Head to cricket.com
slash friends to sign up.
Also, if Biden's remarks
didn't calm your anxiety
about the year ahead,
you can pre-order our book,
Democracy or Else,
right now at
cricket.com slash books.
And we're going to be donating the profits to support Vote Save America,
its partners and other organizations which are mobilizing around the 2024 election.
It's a fun book, lots of illustrations, pretty short,
a good guide to how to get through this election and other elections if we have them.
And again, it goes to a good cause, VSA.
So pre-order your copy of Democracy or Else Now
at crooked.com slash books.
I've read it.
It's great.
Dan has read it.
I've read it.
I've pre-ordered it.
It is a short read, which is real.
That's a plus.
You're going to learn a lot.
That's what we want.
You're going to laugh a lot.
It's not going to take too much of your time.
Go for it.
That's what we need.
That's what we're looking for.
When we come back,
White House Price Secretary,
Karine Jean-Pierre.
Joining us tonight, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre. Karine, welcome to Pod Save America. Welcome back.
Thank you so much for having me back. What a great night. What a great night. It's good to see you both.
You too. So you're the White House press secretary. What's your dream headline for the speech?
What are you hoping to see Friday morning?
You know what? I think what we saw tonight, as far as a headline, is you saw a president stand up
and fight for the American people. And it was a
president who stood up for our democracy, who stood up for the middle class, who stood up for
our rights, who stood up for our freedoms and laid out his vision for moving this country forward,
not going backwards. And I think that is what you saw. It was a probably one of the best State of the Union speeches that I think
we've seen in some time. And he was incredible in the sense of taking it on. He just took it on
when House Republicans were trying to give him a little bit of a hard time. He's like, oh, yeah,
you want a little bit of this? I'll show you Joe from Scranton, you know? And, and so, but, but, you know, you saw a leader
drawing a stark contrast between the vision of this country and that of those who are trying to
block our progress. Right. And he started from that, from the beginning, right? You, you know,
you can't, I mean, there's some great, there is some great lines that he had in the speech. Let
me see if I can, I wrote some of them down. Let me see if I can if I can share some of them that I thought that was really, really good, which is the state of our union is getting stronger and stronger.
You don't love your country. This is the first I think the first thing that he said, which was so powerful.
You don't love your country only when you win,
only when you win. And so it was exactly what he needed to do. He met the moment of where we are as a country. He met the moment of where we need to be going. And I think one of the way he ended
it is so Joe Biden in an optimistic way, talking about the future,
the possibilities of America.
It's not betting against Americans.
And that is something that is so quintessential Joe Biden,
that optimism of who he is.
He is in his DNA, he's optimistic.
And also let's not forget,
there's a commander in chief component of it as well,
discussing what America's role around the world and the threats that we face
and where we stood. You know, the first thing he talked about was Ukraine and called out House
Republicans for really not moving on that, not moving on that national supplemental deal that
passed 70 to 29 in the Senate. And if it was put in the floor by the speaker
who was standing obviously to his left,
it would get overwhelming support.
And this is about not politics,
but about our national security.
And we have to help the brave people of Ukraine
as they are defending themselves,
defending themselves against a tyrant
as they're fighting for their democracy.
I mean, it was a jam-packed speech,
but it was impactful. And let's not forget about one of the number one issues that we hear about
over and over again, especially over the last couple of years, which is reproductive rights,
fighting for women's health care. I think he gave one of the most strongest remarks on that
and the reason to make sure we protect reproductive rights. He did that
in a really forceful way. And also our democracy, our democracy. We got to fight for our democracy.
So that is what I saw last night. I think that's what other people saw. I got so many texts from
people saying, wow, what a powerful speech. He was great. This is exactly what we needed him
to do. And I will say one more thing. The fact that he talked about his age at the end and took
that head on and didn't back away from it and said, look, there were a time where people thought
I was too young. There were times where people thought I was too old. And I think all of these
things are important because he answered and leaned into things that we keep hearing about,
right? And I think that was incredibly important as well. I think he did a great job. I think he
was fantastic. So here's my question for you. John and I worked on a lot of State of the Unions
together. Yes, I was going to say, I was thinking that. And one of the great impediments to progress in any State of the Union is the White House
Council's office. I know you guys take the Hatch Act very seriously. Yet somehow there were,
by my count, 13 references to an unnamed person. Is the White House Council tied up in a basement
somewhere? How did you guys get that done? Here's the thing. I mean, he did say the former president, right? And Donald Trump was a former president. And I think there are
real things that have happened in the last three years, even before then, obviously during his
presidency that I think the president was able to lean into and talk about. And here's the thing,
you know, there is extremists in the Republican Party that follow this former president.
I mean, he talked about the border deal. Let's not forget that border deal that we got from the Senate, which is a bipartisan deal.
Republicans and Democrats, we worked with them for two months. And this is not normal.
We don't normally get bipartisan deals, especially bipartisan deals that is supported by the Border Patrol
Union or the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Like that's not something that happens here in this political discourse.
That was we were able to land that.
And what happened?
The former president stepped in and said, do not move this forward because Joe Biden
will win and it will be a political gain for him.
And I don't
want that. And they rejected the deal. They rejected the deal. And so the president had
always said he was going to be very honest about that, take it directly to the American people.
I mean, the reproductive, right? You think about Roe v. Wade, the Dobbs decision. That happened
under the former president when he, as you all know, you've covered this very, very well, what he did with the Supreme Court.
It leans very much conservative. And because of that, and he was really clear as why he was doing that, because they wanted to overturn Roe v. Wade.
And that's what happened. So it is everything that we're seeing right now, everything that we're seeing right now with this country, with Republicans,
it's tied in to the former president. But you're right. You I know you're right, Dan,
you've been a communications director. You were a senior advisor here for for the former
former president, President Obama. John, as a speechwriter, I you know how much of a massive
undertaking it takes to write these types of speeches.
You're right. It has to go to the House of Council.
It's a lot of fun.
It's always a lot of fun.
But I think he was able to make his point about where we are politically and where the Republicans, how extreme they are.
And it is being led by the former president.
That is just the reality that we're in right now.
You mentioned the section on when he challenged Republicans on passing
the bipartisan border bill. There had been some rumors that the president might announce some
executive actions on his own. Did some reporting on that. Is that something that you guys are
thinking about in the next several weeks? He didn't mention it tonight. What was the thinking
there? So the president, look, we always, as you know, working in an administration, you always have to be prepared, look at all of the options on the
table. And we're doing that. We're always going to look at the options on the table.
What we believe, what this president believes, and this is what he said today in the speech,
and this is what he's even said privately, is he wants to get this bipartisan border deal done.
He believes there's still a chance to get deal done. He believes there's still a
chance to get this done. He believes it's the best way to move forward with a broken system,
a broken immigration system. He believes it's the best way to actually deal with the challenges that
we're seeing at the border. It is tough, but it is a fair piece of legislation. And it's not
very often that you come to this space in a bipartisan way. So he wants to continue fighting for it. Let's not forget, that was the bipartisan infrastructure legislation. People said we wouldn't get that done. It was a joke in the last administration. It was, you know, a punchline infrastructure week, and the president was able to get that done. The Chips and Science Act, the PACT Act, right, that helps veterans and their families. Nobody thought we would be able to get that done. And we were able
to get that done. Obviously, Congress, the makeup of Congress was obviously different. But the
president, again, optimistic guy, he wants to get that done. As it relates to any executive action,
we don't believe any executive action would be as strong as the deal that we have currently. So he wants to continue to work towards that.
But of course, we're always going to look at all the opportunities, options that we have in front
of us. But we want to try, right? We want to try and get to see if we can move this at all,
move this at all. This State of the Union for every president running for reelection is usually the speech where
as the president did tonight, you sort of lay out your agenda for a second term. President Biden
certainly did that as he is going out on the road talking to crowds in the in the next several weeks
and months. What do you think are the like the big ticket policy initiatives that he talked about tonight that that he's going to really emphasize and focus on in the months to come?
It's a great question. So two things that we talk, actually three things that we talked about this week, as you know, as we go into the State of the Union, which this week obviously was on a Thursday.
We try to we try to lean into a couple of policies, a couple of new things to kind of lay out the ideas and
what he's thinking about for the rest of this year. And we did a drug, we focus on pharmaceutical
drugs this week, right? What can we do to make sure that we continue lowering costs, right? He
talked about Obamacare, right? ACA and how important it is to protect that. So healthcare
costs are really important So healthcare costs are really
important. Drug costs are really important. And it's actually very popular, very important for
the American people. So we talked about that. He brought together his competition council,
right, to talk about more junk fees, ways that we can get rid of junk fees. And so that is something
that Americans really, truly care about. And so these are things that are that we think that are important. All of this really goes under lowering costs. And so that is critical. And that is that is I think you're going to be in Philly. On Saturday, he's going to be in Atlanta,
Georgia. We're going to be announcing a lot more trips. And you'll see that theme, right? The
economy, making sure that we're growing the economy from the bottom up, middle out. That
is something that the president wants to continue to do, not leave anybody behind.
And those important pieces of laws, legislation that he signed into laws, like the like I mentioned, Chips and
Science Act and the Inflation Reduction Act. We got it and bipartisan infrastructure legislation.
We have to implement those and protect those because Republicans want to repeal, for example,
the Inflation Reduction Act. So those are the things that he's been talking about this week
that we're going to continue to move forward on.
And so that's going to be kind of what you're going to be hearing from him throughout this month.
And also making sure we're protecting, we're fighting for reproductive health, women's health care. And so that's kind of what you're going to be hearing from the president this month.
Thank you so much for staying up with us.
I know it's a late night
and a big night for you and for the president and for everyone at the White House. So we really
appreciate you jumping on with us for a little bit. It's my pleasure. Happy to do it again,
guys. Thank you for everything that you all do. And talk to you all soon.
Talk to you soon. Congratulations on a big night.
Thank you. Bye, Dan. Bye, John.
bye John thanks to Kareem
for joining us
and everyone
have a great weekend
we will talk to you
next week
bye everyone
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