Pod Save America - "Bienvenidos a Orlando (with Will Smith!)"
Episode Date: March 1, 2021Democrats debate a path for the minimum wage now that the Senate parliamentarian has ruled against using budget reconciliation. Donald Trump gives the first speech of his ex-presidency at CPAC, where ...Republicans spend more time talking about Mr. Potato Head than about the pandemic. And Will Smith joins Jon F. to talk about his new docuseries on the 14th Amendment, “Amend: The Fight for America.”For a closed-captioned version of this episode, please visit crooked.com/podsaveamerica. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Levitt.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
On today's pod, I talk to Will Smith. Yes, that Will Smith about his new docuseries on the 14th Amendment.
And before that, we'll talk about the next steps on COVID relief now that a $15 minimum wage may not be included in the final legislation. We'll also talk about what went down at CPAC over the weekend, including Donald Trump's first speech since leaving office and his threat to run again.
Donald Trump's first speech since leaving office and his threat to run again.
But first, a few quick housekeeping notes.
Lovett, tell us about the show this weekend.
Look, I've said it before, but this was really a barn burner episode.
All right.
Ike Barinholtz, Shea Serrano, Fran Lebowitz.
Why would you burn the barn?
I don't know why a barn burner is good.
I don't either.
But it was.
Fran Lebowitz tolerated me.
She made some headlines.
Yeah, she did.
She did.
She did not know what Star Wars was about based on the title when she saw it in the theaters.
So something.
But it was great.
So check it out.
Check it out.
Be sure to also check out the latest episode of Rubicon where Brian Boitler and Matt Iglesias have a thoughtful, informative discussion and debate
over President Biden's promise to forgive student loan debt. And over on our YouTube channel,
check out a fantastic new video featuring our political director, Shaniqua McClendon.
She interviewed representatives James Clyburn, her former boss, Alma Adams, and Cori Bush about
their experiences at historically black colleges and universities, her former boss, Alma Adams, and Cori Bush about their experiences at historically
black colleges and universities shaped their perspectives and impacted their careers.
Check it out.
Can I just say that Shaniqua's video is fantastic.
I found Brian's conversation about student debt to be informative and eye-opening.
But can we just talk about interviewing Will Smith?
Like, I don't know that I could be normal.
Like someone, I feel like I've known him so well for decades on TV.
I don't know that I would be able to get past it.
It was hard because I felt the same way.
I was actually talking with Tanya about this before, right after the interview.
Like, I feel like so much of our childhood, just we're that age, was Will Smith.
Fresh Prince, all of his movies.
There's famous, then there's like Will Smith famous, which is-
Welcome to Earth.
Friend.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fantastic movie.
Anyway.
I try not to be too starstruck and just stick to the question.
You were just mean to him.
I am a serious, I'm a serious reporter.
You're a journalist. Serious reporter. We're. I am a serious reporter. You're a journalist.
Serious reporter.
We're journalists.
I'm a journalist.
I'm a journalist.
We're three journalists.
I tried to play it cool, but, you know.
John had him signing the Harper's letter by the end.
It was good conversation.
Look, we have the same job as Jake Tapper and Barack Obama.
That's just the reality of our experience.
Oh, boy.
If we don't hear from Jake,
it'll prove he doesn't listen to us.
Right, right, right, right.
Please don't snitch tag him.
Thank you.
Let's get to the news.
Early Saturday morning,
the House of Representatives
approved President Biden's
$1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan.
It includes $1,400 direct payments, an extra $400 per week in unemployment benefits through the fall,
a tax credit that would cut child poverty in half, and hundreds of billions of dollars for vaccinations, schools, and state and local governments.
The bill passed 219 to 212 with zero Republican votes and two Democratic defections.
Were you guys surprised that not a single House Republican voted for a piece of legislation supported by nearly 70 percent of Americans, not even the Republicans who represent districts
that Biden want?
Lovett, what do you think the calculation was there?
I was a little surprised.
I didn't expect some massive influx of Republican support, but I figured if there's, you know,
a couple of votes for removing a criminal president, there might be a couple of votes
for helping people during the pandemic.
We talked about this last week as the Republican message changed from kind of arguments against
the bill writ large and more arguments seemed designed to keep Republicans in line. And I guess it worked. I, you know, I was surprised that there
weren't a couple of defections. Tommy, what do you think the calculation was there for like
someone in a moderate district that Joe Biden won if you're Republican voting? No,
I suspect what happened here is the Republican Party has decided that their strategy is just going to be opposing everything Biden does. They're running the exact same play that they ran in 2009 against Obama.
there are Republicans in states who vocally support the legislation, right? Like the Republican governor of liberal West Virginia supports this plan and actually criticized the Republican
version. There was a letter signed by 31 Republican mayors urging approval of the bill.
I believe it was led by the mayor of liberal Oklahoma City, right? So the Republican base isn't even worked up about the COVID relief package.
So, you know, it wasn't like a CPAC conversation. So I think what happened was in Washington,
you have a bunch of members of Congress who get whipped really hard by Republican leadership,
and they're scared to go against those leaders because they can be punished in a variety of ways.
And they're all just making this big long-term bet that blocking Biden from getting anything done is the way to run against him in 2022.
And I don't know, maybe that's a smart bet.
But, you know, I bet it creeped up on them how popular this bill has become.
Because as we've gone on, you're seeing numbers in the 70s all of a sudden when you talk about the approval.
And I wouldn't want to be against anything with 70% approval personally.
I think you're right on the obstruct Biden no matter what strategy, which is, of course,
the same strategy they ran against Barack Obama in 2009. And you can argue with some success,
of course, in the 2010 midterms. I think on this legislation specifically, they're thinking if things don't improve by 2022, if like the vaccination rollout does not go smoothly, if the pandemic is still around, if the economy is still bad, then if you voted no, you can blame Biden and this bill and say that you had no part on it.
If things do improve, then you can just pretend the bill never happened and you can fight on other issues that are more politically favorable to you, like some of the issues that we're going to talk about that were raised at CPAC.
That seems to me the calculation there. So the $15 minimum wage was included in the version of
the bill that passed the House, but it may not survive now that Senate parliamentarian Elizabeth
McDonough has advised that the provision does not have a big enough effect on the federal budget
to qualify for the reconciliation
process, which allows legislation to pass with 51 votes instead of a filibuster proof 60.
Lovett, why were Democrats, especially Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders,
cautiously optimistic that the parliamentarian would rule in their favor on this?
So one big reason was that the parliamentarian had previously ruled that drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge was a measure that wasn't incidental to the budget, but actually impacted
the budget. And a minimum wage increase has a much bigger impact on the budget and is much
less incidental in the sense that when you raise the minimum wage, people that make the minimum
wage pay more in taxes. And more importantly, companies no longer get subsidized by taxpayers
to underpay their workers while they get public benefits. So there was some hope that given the
big impact this would have on the budget and how much that's been part of the message, actually,
that the parliamentarian would let it through. Yeah. And even more specifically, the Congressional
Budget Office concluded that raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour would increase the budget
deficit by $54 billion over 10 years. So I just, I guess I am baffled by how these parliamentarians
make decisions if $54 billion is seen as merely incidental in terms of its impact on the budget.
I just, the more I learn about this process, the more nothing makes sense.
It's like, everything's got to pass these birdbath provisions unless they don't, in which case you
just ignore them. It's like, what are we talking about here? You have to know Bernie's mind. You
have to know Bernie's mind. He was, yes, there was a big budget impact, but that wasn't his goal in
his mind in the provision. We had the CBO on our side. side we will we'll see your senate procedural nerd yeah and we'll
raise you a cbo uh cbo score congressional budget office also a non-partisan scorekeeper as we used
to say in our speeches for barack obama the non-partisan scorekeeper at the cbo and then
you'd be like oh yeah well everyone has to pay attention to that person republicans were like
yeah fuck that we don't care but. But not us. Not us Democrats.
When the Senate parliamentarian speaks, okay, that's it.
A bunch of rule followers over here, yeah.
She came down from the mountain with the tablet and it said it does not qualify.
Democrats not a fan of the take some money when you're on free parking monopoly rules.
They really, they go by the book.
So question is what happens now? Democrats have
a few options. One, Vice President Kamala Harris in her role as the Senate's presiding officer
overrules the parliamentarian, which Democrats and Republicans have both done in the past,
as recently as 2013. Two, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer can replace the parliamentarian
with someone who will give Democrats a favorable ruling, which Republicans did to pass George Bush's tax cuts in 2001.
Three, Senate Democrats can vote to eliminate the filibuster and just pass the whole bill that way.
Four, Democrats can try Ron Wyden and Bernie Sanders idea to tax big companies that don't pay a $15 minimum wage and incentivize small businesses that do, though they have now reportedly abandoned
this plan. Or five, they can all give up and try to do this some other time. Tommy, what do you
think? What are the pros and cons of some of these options? And what do you think they should do?
We should say that right now it looks like they have chosen five to give up and try again.
I think the guiding principle should be do things that help people and then stop caring about the process for how they get done. Right. I mean,
one of the biggest process fouls in recent history was Mitch McConnell stealing a Supreme Court seat
from Barack Obama. And not only did he not pay a political cost for it personally, but the Republican
Party benefited enormously in the long run by getting another justice on the Supreme Court.
So like all things being equal, if I were to
start this minimum wage process from scratch, I would say get rid of the filibuster first,
because that is one process change that unlocks the minimum wage increase and then a whole bunch
of other stuff that you really want to do. Creates this one big explosive moment for Republicans to
complain about and the press to report on. And then going forward, you just do stuff. But, you know, since we're debating this right now, I am intrigued by this
option of having Vice President Harris just ignore the parliamentarian. Again, this to me
underscores how stupid this whole process is. Like you can only pass things through reconciliation
if they're ruled in order with a Byrd rule, unless you just ignore the Byrd rule. It's absurd to me. I guess the challenge becomes, can you get all 50 Senate
Democrats to vote for it in that case? I'm not sure about Sinema. I'm not sure about Joe Manchin.
Now, the data for progress polling on the minimum wage increase found you can get up to like 61% or
62% approval when you describe
all the things that it does. So it's quite popular. But they also found that that support dips into
the high 40s if you do it through reconciliation, I assume because it's perceived as more of a
partisan effort. I just think the most likely outcome is that 90 plus percent of the country
never knows or never cares about how this thing is passed.
And they just see that in five years, the minimum wage is maybe closer to where it should be.
And that people really ultimately just care about the outcomes, not how you got there. But
those would be my recommendations right now. Lovett, here's what I don't understand. So I think that on the option
where you either fire the parliamentarian or overrule the parliamentarian from the Biden
administration's perspective, they're thinking, OK, we can do that, but we still we still have
to face Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema. And even if we can get it in the final package, what if those two say,
we're going to tank this whole bill because you overruled the parliamentarian or fired the
parliamentarian? We don't think, you know, we're trying to uphold norms here. That's what they're
big on, the norms. But, so I get that, but why not try and then sort of just put the ball on their court? Yeah. All right. Like
you know, you know, you have to do that, like because to me, it seems like, you know, and Jen
Psaki at the briefing today said we don't intend to overrule the parliamentarian, which I guess
firing the parliamentarian would not be the Biden administration. Schumer can do that on his own.
Again, these things have been done before by Democrats and Republicans in recent history,
2013, 2017, 2001 for firing a parliamentarian.
George Bush did that.
The world didn't end.
Everything was fine.
Things got passed.
We all moved on.
No one remembers the great firing of the parliamentarian or the overruling of the parliamentarian.
So why not just try it and then let Manchin and Sinema take the heat?
So I don't care at all about any of this rule stuff.
Like, we should do whatever we can. Like, none of it's real. The rule is you need 50 votes to pass things in the heat. So I don't care at all about any of this rule stuff. Like we should do whatever we
can. Like none of it's real. Like the rule is you need 50 votes to pass things in the Senate.
Everything else is a culture and pretend. That's it. It's 50 votes. That's what's in the
constitution. Those are the rules to me. It's, I think the only argument I'm for trying and doing
everything we can and having as many conversations about, about the minimum wage as we possibly can
until we've raised it. Uh, the argument against The argument against it would be the problem right now is not
the parliamentarian. The problem isn't the filibuster. The problem isn't anything having
to do with Kamala Harris's role as presiding officer of the Senate. The problem is there
aren't 50 votes to abolish the filibuster. There aren't 50 votes to violate the parliamentarian's
ruling. And there aren't 50 votes, most importantly, to raise the minimum wage to $15.
the parliamentarians ruling. And there aren't 50 votes, most importantly, to raise the minimum wage to $15. We don't have those votes. And so the argument against doing it is you create a
controversy and a tough vote for two people you are going to need on a host of things.
It doesn't happen. It raises the salience of the failure on the minimum wage. You jeopardize a
giant COVID relief package, which, and you end up where you would have been had you not pushed that
vote in the first place, which is a big COVID relief package that will help
tens of millions of Americans that does a host of things we need to do without a minimum wage
increase. Because, you know, to me, like, where do we want to be in a year and a half? We want to
pass this big COVID relief bill. There's another big economic bill that could be through
reconciliation around infrastructure and a host of other economic policies. We want to pass H.R. 1. We want to pass
the John Lewis Voting Rights Act. Among immigration, there's a host of other really important steps we
need this Congress to be in a position to take. And that is going to require unanimity amongst
Democrats in the Senate. That's going to require Manchin, that's going to require Sinema. And so we need to strike this balance between putting a ton of pressure on them to understand
the stakes around the filibuster and around the minimum wage, while not making it harder to pass
things without actually getting anything done because of votes to kind of, I don't know,
teach the controversy, create the argument. I think that's why even people like AOC have said,
if the minimum wage is not on the bill because Democrats were weak and Democrats gave up,
that's one thing. But if it's not on the bill because of the parliamentarian,
we might need to support this bill and go for a standalone minimum wage fight after.
And then you can have that fight. You can make it about the filibuster. You can make it about
the minimum wage exclusively and kind of do it until it's done, I guess. I guess what I don't understand is you're
right that there's just not the votes for a $15 minimum wage, no matter how many parliamentarians
you fire, overrule or do whatever. You're not going to get a $15 minimum wage because Joe
Manchin said he's against it. Therefore, that's it. But Joe Manchin did say he would possibly be
for raising the minimum wage from around $7, what it is now, to $11, I believe.
So I sort of wondered why the Biden administration and progressives just didn't sort of sit down with Manchin and Sinema and be like, OK, what level of minimum wage would you be comfortable with?
And then, like, how can we all get there together? Right.
Because I'd rather take it. I take an $11 over what it is now,
even though I want 15, you know, I think that's better than nothing. So I'm sort of,
unless they're just going to live to fight another day. But you're right that all of this comes down
to like, unfortunately, the system we have right now, it's like what Joe Manchin and Kyrsten
Sinema and possibly any other Democratic senator want, they get. Like, if it's indexed to inflation, I think that's a very important step over the
long term. Here's my question. Like, do we want to call their bluff? Right. Are you really going
to vote against a one point nine trillion dollar COVID relief bill over a minimum wage provision?
That's a very tough vote. Now, that's usually the kind of vote you would force on your opponent,
not your ally. What I don't understand is why Chuck Schumer can't sit down with Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema and
say, OK, both of you need two things. You need to deliver for your constituents and you need to
look like you're bucking the Democratic Party every once in a while. So you look independent.
We can engineer a process that does both of these things and gets all of us what we want here,
which is this big covid relief package, a minimum wage increase, all of the above, some sort of future promise on filibuster reform so
that the Senate can be unbroken and they can actually legislate and not jam everything to
budget reconciliation and like chart a path forward. I'm hoping that's happening behind
the scenes. We're just not privy to it. It's not in the press, but like that seems like the path
that needs to happen for the next four years,
not just for this bill. The other thing Joe Manchin wants is to not give up the power that
he has on the very first time he would have to use it, right? Putting Joe Manchin in a position
to say, yeah, you'll talk a big game and then vote with the Democrats no matter what on a big
COVID bill. Like, I guess I don't know what happens in brinksmanship over this bill
to test Joe Manchin,
to test Kyrsten Sinema on this
when we have till mid-March
when unemployment benefits expire
to get this done.
So like, I don't know what happens
if you end up in a situation
where Sinema and Manchin
are voting against this.
The bill is thrown into doubt.
Maybe you go right again.
You can pass it without the minimum wage increase right away or delays it. I don't totally understand
what happens next. But I think what is clear is they're trying to avoid that kind of a
Democratic infighting set of votes before passing this sort of emergency measure.
What I find persuasive from some of the progressives in the houses,
it always seems to be the progressives who have to back down and compromise and sort of get in line.
But they have power here.
Like Nancy Pelosi lost two Democrats on the first bill, not progressive Democrats, but to more moderate Democrats, moderate to conservative Democrats.
But like she doesn't have that many votes to spare.
She doesn't have that many votes to spare here.
So if a couple of progressives in the House get together and say, if you don't try to overrule the parliamentarian or you don't try to put some kind of minimum wage increase
in this bill, we're not going to vote for the final bill.
Then it's not just caring about what Manchin and Sinema want and the more moderate to conservative
Democrats.
It's saying like, OK, we got to keep the progressives happy and we got to keep Joe
Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema happy.
Now, Lovett, I do agree that like, is it helpful and productive for all of this to play out
in public? Probably not. But like everyone can get in a room or get on a Zoom and, you know, all the Democrats in the House and the Senate and work it out and try to figure this out. There's another reconciliation bill that will happen. There's other non-reconciliation bills that will happen. So maybe progressives want to sort of hold their fire for next time.
But at some point, progressives will probably exercise as much of their power as Joe Manchin
and Kyrsten Sinem will exercise their power.
Yeah.
And they should.
Yeah.
I mean, the COVID relief part of the bill is extremely urgent for obvious reasons.
The minimum wage increase is also critical and important,
but it is less urgent because it is phased in over time, right? So you could pass it in another bill
and there might be no actual impact on people's lives, you know, when they actually get this
increase. But yeah, but, you know, I think we all worry about delaying, delaying policy successes
because anything can happen. We could lose a member of the Senate.
Like there's a million ways this could go badly. The confrontation over the filibuster is coming.
It is coming. It's going to happen now. It can happen in a few weeks. It could happen in a few
months. But fundamentally, there are really important things we need to do. They cannot
happen as the rules of the Senate currently stand. And that is a confrontation that is going to
happen with Sinema. It's going to happen with Manchin. And it's going to require incredible, I think,
progressive solidarity. It's going to require a lot of Democratic infighting and Democrats in
disarray. And it's coming. I just don't know if right now is the best way to get to the outcomes
we want, which is not just this COVID bill, not just minimum wage, but a host of other pieces of
legislation. And I should say, you know, we're all $15 minimum wage supporters, and I'm going to be
very disappointed if it doesn't end up in the final bill. But it's a great bill. I mean, it is
a recovery package that is double the one that we passed in 2009, cutting child poverty in half,
the expanded unemployment benefits through the fall. I mean, this is a really, really progressive,
ambitious bill, even without the minimum wage.
It's going to help a lot of people and it's going to hopefully get done really fast.
So that is something to think about as well.
Let's talk about this weekend's conservative political action conference in Orlando,
where Donald Trump delivered his first speech since leaving office.
Even before the former president showed up, CPAC was nuttier than usual.
The pandemic relief bill was barely mentioned.
The pandemic itself was barely mentioned at the indoor event.
The theme of the conference was America uncanceled.
And as The Washington Post's Dave Weigel pointed out, quote, the Republican Party on display at CPAC was anti-monopoly, anti-free trade, skeptical of foreign wars, girded for economic conflict with China, and frequently invested in things that aren't true.
Specifically, most speakers continued to spread the big lie that Donald Trump actually won an election that was rigged and stolen from him by Democrats.
Just two months after that lie led a mob of Trump supporters to launch a terrorist attack on Congress.
And of course, the speeches were mostly filled with your crazy uncle's Facebook memes come to life.
Here's a sample. We love President Trump. And I'll tell you, I will confidently say that President
Trump from his desk at Mar-a-Lago will accomplish more for America in the next four years than Joe
Biden and Kamala Harris could ever dream of.
Speaking of bombing the Middle East,
have you seen Liz Cheney's poll numbers?
This month alone, they've banned the Muppets.
Right?
I mean, if there's things that you thought
were sort of above cancellation, you would be wrong.
Look out, Mr. Potato Head. You're next.
I'm sorry. I think now he's going by Potato X.
Can't be Mr. Potato.
See, to me, the whole concept of the Mr. Potato Head was he could move the parts around.
I mean, Mr. Potato Head was America's first first transgender doll and even he got canceled orlando
is awesome it's not as nice as cancun
but it's nice in the immortal words of william wallace freedom that was ted cruz doing his best howard
dean impression from horrible also making a joke about cancun you have to be so far in the weeds
to even get some of the references i didn't even get the whole muppet thing what the i don't know
what happened with the muppets oh you don't want to know no no i don't i don't know if i want to
know it doesn't matter what happened with the muppets here's the they're but but they but they Oh, you want to know? No, no, I don't. I don't know if I want to know.
It doesn't matter what happened with the Muppets.
Here's the there.
But but they but they continue.
The Muppets exist and they have not been canceled.
Don't worry about that.
That's all I wanted to know.
Before we get to Trump, Tommy, what do you think about the rest of CPAC and particularly what it said about the message Republicans intend to run on in 22, 24 and beyond?
You know, look, the Muppets, the Mr. Potato Head
bites that we just heard are absurd. But I think the most important takeaway from CPAC and from
most of these Republican events is that these these cancel culture wars that they think they
are fighting are everything to these guys. Like it is the party. This is their base. Like Donald
Trump Jr. carved out time in his 12 minute speech to complain about the Muppets and Mr. Potato Head.
We progressives hear this stuff.
We see it on Twitter.
We see them on Fox complaining about it.
We think it's absurd that this is what, you know, Tucker Carlson is focused on every night on his show.
But it is what animates the Republican base.
show, but it is what animates the Republican base. A lot of it is also just complaining about the media and whining about being treated unfairly or silenced by social media platforms.
But I think that I sort of jumped out at me is that Trump is, you know, he's taken over the
Republican Party. CPAC is the most MAGA version of the Republican Party. Like this event itself
is literally rigged for Trump by this scummy
lobbyist named Matt Schlapp. Matt Schlapp's wife worked in the Trump White House. Right. And the
whole event becomes about kissing the Trump ring, which is why some of the polling we'll talk about
later actually probably isn't great news for Donald Trump. But we'll get into that later.
The two policy areas that got some attention were immigration and then anti-China rhetoric.
I saw that there were six panels at CPAC about how China is really bad.
There was only one panel about the Middle East called Dealing with the Threat of Iran.
So some of the usual demagoguing of radical Islam and terrorism has all been shifted to China.
Everybody hates big tech, but I don't know that that's really policy as much as just complaining about losing Twitter followers.
There was a lot of that happening on stage as well.
But, you know, to me, it was like these culture wars are going to be the whole thing for four years.
Love it.
My view was we'll talk about Trump in a second, but whether or not he leads the party, it's his party.
It's his issues.
a second, but whether or not he leads the party, it's his party. It's his issues. It's 100% culture wars, identity wars, anti-elite, grievance politics, anti-democratic to the core. Like,
if you are pissed about something, no matter what the issue is, it's Democrats' fault.
The whole, the party of like Paul Ryan and Mitt Romney that cared about like,
you know, no regulations and tax cuts.
That is fucking gone.
That is way, way gone.
There's none of that shit that animates that party anymore.
Well, and maybe it never did.
Maybe it really it never did.
Because what I was what is striking about CPAC is so CPAC.
I think CPAC has gained dark significance since Donald Trump became president, but it has existed very similarly for a very long time. I think it has moved, it has gotten even more radical and racist and unhinged, and it's more openly embracing of conspiracy theories and white supremacy.
of conspiracy theories and white supremacy. But what is striking about Donald Trump,
it's not that Donald Trump remade CPAC in its image, it's that there was a Donald Trump shape hole in CPAC for a very, very long time that he filled. And, you know, Trump thanks
like Rush Limbaugh, thanks Rush Limbaugh in heaven. And you see like, oh, you know,
Republicans like Paul Ryan were deluding themselves for so long about what their party
actually was. This was it. This is the Republican National Convention. This is who controls this party. This is where you have to go to gro and dance on stage and pretend to be the next Trump to win the approval of these people. So I think it is, I think it is striking
how little honestly Trump has to do with it. These people have been there. This is what Trump
figured it out. Trump cracked it. Yeah. But, but this was there. Rush Limbaugh made this happen as
much as Trump did. It was there, but Mitt Romney won the CPAC straw poll four times back in the day.
Like it is,
I think that it has gotten
more and more Trumpy
and more racist
and culture-y over time.
I mean, there was a,
there was a golden statue of Trump
that they were hauling
around the place.
Yeah, I'd say it was,
I'd say it was pretty Trumpy.
Looked like a Koons,
which I found insulting to art.
Is it camp?
That was the second reference that you did one in our ads the other week.
You really?
I'm going to kind of cover it.
So we're going to talk about the polling Tommy mentioned with Trump in it,
but they also did one version of their 2024 straw poll without Trump.
And the big winner was Florida Governor Ron DeSantis with 43 percent. South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem had 11 percent.
Don Jr. had 8 percent. Mike Pompeo, 7 percent. Ted Cruz, 7 percent. Tucker Carlson, 3 percent.
What was your reaction to those results and what they say about sort of where the party is going?
Love it. What do you think? Well, first of all, they're in Florida.
So I'm not like, I don't know.
I don't, I don't know.
I don't know if there's a lot of DeSantis stands out there or if this is just sort of
name ID and the governor that they like, cause it's stuck to the libs and on COVID.
But you know, known being on that list, one of the most disastrous COVID policy.
She runs around like she's some
successful governor, one of the worst impacted states, South Dakota. You see Don Jr. Don Jr.,
just by having the name Trump, like all of Pompeo's like wheedling and working and fighting
to be this sort of base guy. Same with Ted Cruz. They can't crack Don Jr. They can't beat Don
Jr. So I would say it's chilling to the core, John.
Tommy, I thought it was almost as interesting who wasn't on that list who didn't make the cut.
Yeah. Nikki Haley, Marco Rubio, Mike Pence.
I wondered about the DeSantis home court advantage question, too, but that didn't help Rick Scott or Marco Rubio, who got like less than one percent.
help Rick Scott or Marco Rubio, who got like less than 1%. But yeah, I mean, the big takeaway to me was there is no love, there is no loyalty for Josh Hawley or for Nikki Haley or for the former
vice president. I mean, I guess we should have known that when a mob of fascists were chanting
about hanging him. But yeah, like, I mean, all of these Republicans, like the people that are doing well, like Kristi Noem, the path to success remains constant Fox News hits and preening about culture war
stuff.
It has nothing to do with your record of success.
There's nothing to do with the number of people who got COVID in your state.
It is all this complaining about social media, cancel culture, whining bullshit.
No, it's actually an inverse relationship with how many people got COVID in your state.
More COVID cases, the better.
DeSantis and Christine O. just crushing it.
In fairness to the Republicans, we Democrats have idolized some jackass governors
who have had lots of COVID patients in their state.
So, you know, maybe it cuts both ways here.
Like the guy in New York there?
Yeah, that really terrible guy in New York.
Tommy no longer identifying as a homosexual.
Never did.
Never did, never did. Something that Trump seems to have unleashed too is just like
permission to not have to care about the boring stuff. Like we don't care about economics.
We don't care about the stuff that makes us uncomfortable like the pandemic.
We can just talk about the fun stuff. We can just talk about cancel culture and liberals and Muppets
and we're fine. This is a party and we don't need a policy platform. We just need to complain about
the fact that they're voting illegally and be owning the lips.
We've said this. Owning the libs is the platform. That's the driving force of the party. You just
own the libs. They don't care, owning the libs is the platform. That's the driving force of the party, just owning the libs.
They don't care about policy outcomes at this point.
Trump himself took the stage on Sunday night
to deliver a 90-minute speech
that was somehow boring, terrifying,
and enraging all at once.
First 45 minutes or so were focused
on attacking President Biden, Democrats,
the media, immigrants, and transgender Americans,
to whom he was particularly cruel.
And that was the on-message part of the speech
that his advisors reportedly wanted him to deliver.
Things really went off the rails
when he repeated the lie that the election was stolen,
attacked the Supreme Court,
attacked every Republican who voted to impeach him by name,
and then announced that he may run again in 2024.
Here is a compilation from Trump's speech.
God bless the USA.
We can never let this or other abuses of the 2020 election be repeated or happen again.
Can never let that happen again. We need election integrity and election reform
immediately. Republicans should be the party of honest elections.
They didn't have the courage, the Supreme Court. They didn't have the courage, the Supreme Court.
They didn't have the courage to act.
They should be ashamed of themselves for what they've done to our country.
They didn't have the guts or the courage to make the right decision.
They didn't want to talk about it.
Democrats don't have grandstanders like Mitt Romney, Little Ben Sasse, Richard Burr, Bill Cassidy, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Pat Toomey.
And in the House, Tom Rice, South Carolina, Adam Kinzinger, Dan Newhouse, Anthony Gonzalez. That's another beauty.
Fred Upton, Jamie Herrera Butler, Peter Meyer, John Katko, David Valadao. And of course, the
warmonger, a person that loves seeing our troops fighting, Liz Cheney. How about that?
Who knows? I may even decide to beat them for a third time. Okay.
Woof. General reactions to that tour de force of lunacy.
Love it.
I'll say, first of all,
first time I'm hearing it at 1.0 speed
because as has been my rule for many years,
which continues now that he is no longer president,
is I wait for these things to be over
while you two are live tweeting.
And I then watch it at 2x speed so that I can get through it
faster. But even at 2x speed, it took me 45 fucking minutes. 45. He was up there for 90
minutes. Did not mention. I mean, I think the most important thing, honestly, is what he didn't
mention is that he did not mention the COVID relief bill. Didn't mention it. Didn't come up.
Nothing having to do with any of that. It was all just the kind of the old hits and the big lie.
didn't come up nothing having to do with any that it was all just the kind of the old hits and the big lie um but uh in general it was just you know same shit same shit no job
what do you want i don't know so yeah like i to me it was like i watched him and i thought to
myself okay what is's supposed to talk about
versus what does he want to talk about? And you could see in the beginning that he's like reading
all this carefully scripted language about, you know, this really vicious anti-immigrant rant.
He had this cruel, bizarre attack on transgender athletes that I think we're going to hear a lot
about going forward. There was a bunch of criticism of Joe Biden, right? This argument that the country has like gone to shit in a month. But
what he really wanted to talk about were the lies about the election, that it was stolen from him,
and he wanted to rage at these Republicans. And to me, the big news that came out of the event was
he's going to lead these primary challenges against all these people who oppose them.
And he wants to siphon donor money away
from Republican campaign committees to his own PAC and to his own organization. So he got up there
and announced that he's not starting a third party and it was all fake news. But he's trying
to husband all the power within the party and just fully run it himself. I mean, I'm so surprised.
It's been a Trump cult for a long time. But, you know, you guys, all the Republicans in
the Senate could have ended this by voting for impeachment. But this is this is how it's going
to be now. There is so far and we have a long way to go. There is zero indication that this man is
going to skip the 2024 election and bow out of this. This is like this is his party. This is
what animates him. And it's like
you said, love it, because he doesn't have to, and the party doesn't have to talk about the boring
issues, the serious issues, the issues that may be unpopular for them, like the COVID relief bill.
All they have to do is, it's all about talking about the fun stuff, talking about the grievances,
right? And I did think to myself as I watched this, you can sort of see why Joe Biden and his administration is focused solely on, you know, fixing the pandemic and fixing the economy.
Right. Because things go well, things get better over the next couple of years.
Then all of this grievance from Trump doesn't really matter as much.
It's not as powerful because people are just feeling that life is back to normal
and their lives are better.
But things don't go as well.
The economy doesn't improve as quickly.
Then Trump's best shtick is,
I'm the outsider just fucking throwing bombs
and saying that everything
that's fucked up in the country
is the president's fault
and Washington's fault
and the establishment's fault
and the elite's fault.
And I'm going to be your champion against all the people who are screwing you over. That's
what he does well. He's better as an outsider out of office than he was defending himself when he
was president of the administration. And basically his bet is if things aren't going great in the
country, I'm your guy. The I think they're like the the immigration rhetoric where he basically
says, you know, Joe Biden is keeping your kids out of school, but educating migrant kids, like, the immigration rhetoric where he basically says, you know, Joe Biden is keeping your kids out of school but educating migrant kids, right?
It gives you a sense of, like, the kind of, the place he's going to go for a while.
You know, he's giving, he wants your kids from him because he's giving everything away to the teachers union.
The attack on transgender people is another version of this.
It's just going to be this kind of, like, Biden has sided with the radicals. He's sided with these people. He's putting immigrants version of this. It's just going to be this kind of like,
Biden is sided with the radicals. He's sided with these people. He's putting immigrants ahead of you. He's putting, you know, lefties and communists ahead of you. He's putting transgender people
ahead of you. And he will. And so it's like, okay, well, if we can pass this bill and schools
are open, not going to have much. If schools are open, you can't complain that schools are closed.
And so it really does hinge on how much he gets done on the big stuff.
And on that just vicious, bizarre diatribe he went on about women's sports and transgender
athletes, there was just a vote in the House on the Equality Act that would add protections on
the basis of sex and sexual orientation and gender identity to the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
which banned discrimination on race and religion.
Eight Republicans voted for a very similar bill to the Equality Act in 2019.
A whole bunch of them switched their vote, including like Elise Stefanik, right?
Someone who was seen as some sort of moderate Republican who decided to go all MAGA.
Stefanik, right, someone who is seen as some sort of moderate Republican who decided to go all MAGA.
So you can see the way that Trump's rhetoric is not only describing how he views the base and what they want to hear, but also the direction the party has been pulled in over the last couple of years.
All of it is very, very depressing. Though on that issue, too, I would say that is an issue that is absolutely going to animate the like Fox News loving base and pulls people like Stefanik towards Trump's position on that.
That is not an issue, I think, that you like go into the suburbs with as a winning issue for Republicans who are like trying to win back some of these moderate districts.
And that's just going to be a thing that like, you know, it's like the cancel culture stuff, right?
Like this is if you're if you're just mainlining Fox News, this is what gets you. I hope that's right.
But like, you know, Trump has taken actions previously to discriminate against transgender
people. But this he made it a focus of this speech. It has become something that Republicans
are talking about more and more as an attempted wedge issue. So they're going to bigotry in all
its forms to animate their base these days. I think they wedge issue. So they're going to bigotry in all its forms to
animate their base these days. I think they are going to use, they're going to use trans people
the way that the Republican Party under George W. Bush used gay people. They're going to try
to find ways to find wedge issues. They're going to try to find ways to pass legislation or ballot
measures at the state level to target trans people.
And I do think that's coming.
And I do think it's very dangerous.
It's very dangerous.
It's very dangerous.
It has backfired on them before, most notably in North Carolina.
But they're going to do it for sure.
So in addition to repeating the big lie, Trump specifically attacked H.R. 1, the For the
People Act.
Tommy, I saw you tweeted about this.
Why do you think he singled out a piece of legislation that is both extremely popular and largely unknown? Yeah, I thought it was it showed concern among the Republican Party about
what H.R. 1 could do to their electoral prospects. I mean, the way the Republican Party
is going to stay in power, if they can, is by using the big lie around the presidential election and all
these ridiculous claims that votes were stolen from Donald Trump to pass voter suppression bills
in state legislatures and to gerrymander the hell out of the district so that they can win back the
House in 2022. If we Democrats can get rid of the filibuster and pass H.R. 1 and make it easier to vote in this country and
block some of these voter suppression bills from being passed, I think that we will win.
I think Democrats will increase their power in the House and we'll be able to do more things and
get more voters out. But it's clear that the Republican Party, including Donald Trump,
is worried about any effort to keep them from, you know, voter suppressing their way to minority
rule. So, you know, that should tell us something about what they think is important should be what
we think is important here. Well, and, you know, we've been talking about sort of what animates
the Republican Party now and its grievance and it's a lot of these cultural issues. But
CPAC also polled their attendees about what issues are most important to them. Election
integrity topped the list at 62%,
beating issues like immigration, reopening the economy, Second Amendment, taxes,
and abortion by 30 to 50%. It was a landslide. So this is why they don't want to have a debate
on a lot of these issues, because their whole thing is like, we just want to make it so that
it's harder for people to vote. They just want to overturn an election. That's what's animating them. So like, and again, progressives understand how important H.R.1
is and for the People Act and people who paid close attention to it. But again, you know,
we've said this before. Our biggest challenge here is like we've got to get more people to know
what this what what what the stakes are, what this bill is, what's in it. And of course,
like the only way it's going
to get passed is if the filibuster is removed. Republicans are not going to vote for this bill.
So this is going to be the titanic fight over the next year. Yeah, I mean, look, we even in how he
talks about it, right? Like we saw it in our own polling, the polling we did with Data for Progress.
Republicans on issues like mail-in voting specifically have been radicalized by Trump,
right? This is going to, we know where this base, where the Republican voters will be on this
issue by the time HR1 comes up for a vote.
They have been radicalized against democracy and everything about what you're saying about
like how that politics for them is about grievance.
It's about feeling everything in Trump's rhetoric around the big lie beyond just the,
just the made up, the lie, you know, the lie is this notion he's telling them, which is
how could I possibly have lost?
Didn't it feel like we won?
Shouldn't, didn't it feel like we were going to win?
That feeling is all that matters.
Like the feeling that you want to have about your country is the only thing that matters.
And if you don't feel good, something is wrong.
Right.
Well, and that goes to, I mean, Tommy, you mentioned this polling earlier, you know,
so that the, the straw poll with Trump in it, first of all, he had a 97 percent approval rating among the thousand or so attendees at CPAC. Not really
a surprise there. Sixty eight percent said they wanted him to run again. Fifty five percent said
they'd vote for him again in the primaries, given a list of other choices. You think those numbers
are good or bad for Trump? The thing that jumped out at me was getting 68% of the most diehard
Trump fans on the planet, I actually don't think is great, especially when 95% said they wanted to
vote for the Trump agenda. So what that suggests to me is that even among the like hardest of
hardcore MAGA people, you could find a lane where you are running to continue the Trump agenda.
You continue the culture wars, all his divisive stuff.
But you argue for giving someone else a chance to execute on it because he failed last time.
It suggested to me there was like a sliver of space in there for someone who is Trump
like, but maybe you can make a pitch that they could be better at the job.
Well, so I had the same thought as you when I saw the numbers. And then I was like, the key,
and you just said this, the key is because he failed at it or he didn't do as well or you could
do better. And what I'm trying to figure out is, like, say it's Ron DeSantis, say it's Kristi Noem.
What is the, eventually they're going to have to make an argument against Trump in the primary?
And what is that argument if, according to like according to every Republican in the official edict from Fox News and the right wing media, Trump rightfully won the last election?
So he wasn't a failure. Like, how do you make an argument against him? I just don't know.
They've they've created a real problem for themselves by going along with
this big lie. I mean, it's the same exact collective action problem we saw in the 2016
Republican primary. No one wanted to attack him. You know, Ted Cruz would say, you're trying to
drive a wedge between me and Donald, but I think Donald is terrific. And then, you know, when Trump
accused his father of killing JFK and said his wife was ugly, he decided it was time to stand
up for himself. And it was way too late.
It feels like we're set up for the exact same kind of, you know, path.
It seems to me that the way that you would have to do that is by being an extraordinarily adept,
charming and charismatic politician with the ability to carefully walk this delicate line
between defeating Trump and embracing what Trump stands for.
You know, let's see how Pompeo does.
Look, who knows?
But by the way, one of the thing is, you know, we could have Tish James marching Donald Trump down Fifth Avenue in handcuffs.
There's a lot of things that can happen between now and then.
I do think it's...
Maybe it's set up for Don Jr.
Who could just be like, look, you like the Trump agenda.
You like the Trump name.
Try a new trump i i do think it's i think the numbers are fascinating because it like
the fact that he only got 55 percent um in in the poll does mean that there's 45 percent that are
like you know i like donald trump i'm i'm on the trump train yeah he won the election great but
i would i would try something else and i would love to know from those people, what is it about him that you didn't like? Because that's the message
for another Republican to use, even if it's subtle. It's a poll conducted by Trump's pollster
of people who are so in such intense fans of Donald Trump that they're willing to go to an
indoor event in Orlando during a pandemic. Like, you gotta be a fan.
Gotta assume though,
gotta assume based on just the demographics alone,
we got a lot of people in the vaccinated groups
heading to that ballroom.
That's true.
But regardless, it doesn't,
what you learn from CPAC is it may be someone,
it may be Trump, it may be someone like Trump.
The point is you can't get to the end of this process without being a monster.
It's a monsters only.
It's a monsters only primary.
Yeah, everyone who's got all these people who are like, I'm going to run to be the non
Trump and to take back the Republican Party and save it like good for you.
I wish you well, but it's you're not going to do well.
Nikki Haley sounded so reasonable in Politico.
Guess who doesn't care?
Republican voters.
Yeah.
Guess who immediately kissed Donald Trump's ass after his speech?
Nikki Haley.
Great job, Nikki Haley.
Do you think the people at CPAC didn't get to the bottom of that Tim Alberta piece?
You think they didn't get all the way to section three?
Nikki Haley just put on a master class you're telling me that the people at CPAC
didn't see the kicker I gotta not see the kicker Mike Pompeo tried to tell a couple jokes that
landed so flat I cannot wait to clip all of them for pod day of the world tomorrow he is just the
worst he's the worst the worst all right enough about cpac when we come back uh my interview with will
smith will smith is host and executive producer of amend the fight for america a docu-series which
is now available on netflix welcome to pod save America. Hey, man. Thanks for having me. I'm very excited to be here.
So I'll admit when our producer first said that Will Smith is doing press for his new project,
my reaction was, why the hell would he want to talk to a couple of political dorks like us?
And then he told me it was all about the 14th Amendment. And I started watching and it is moving and insightful and beautifully produced.
What attracted you to the project and how did it come together?
You know, a big part of it was, you know, I was like everyone else, you know, sitting home on on lockdown when the George Floyd situation happened. And, you know, at that moment,
I just, I felt like I wanted to be a part of the healing and the future of America, I was feeling the the change that was happening in our country at that moment.
And there's a friend of mine who was he is a constitutional scholar.
And, you know, we had been talking about the issues.
And he mentioned that the 14th Amendment was the most cited amendment in American law.
And I found that hard to believe because I didn't know what it was. So if I don't know
what something is, it can't be the most anything. But I was shocked and appalled by my ignorance around the 14th Amendment. And he began to educate me that the 14th Amendment is essentially the center of what we think of when we think of ourselves as Americans. The 14th Amendment is like the
all-inclusive amendment that makes clear that all Americans are equal under the law.
And I was really blown away when I started getting educated about the history. And I thought it was going to be a really critical thing for the healing of our country to retrace the steps of the second
founding of America and the 14th Amendment. What did you learn about the full history and reach
of the 14th Amendment that most surprised you that you didn't know before the series?
The idea that in the fight for equality, almost every marginalized group in almost the history
of this country from the late 1860s its ratification, has used the 14th Amendment
to fight for equal protection under the law. And, you know, from, you know, it started with
the former slaves, and then the, you know, striking down of the Chinese Exclusion Act, you know, Native Americans, women, women's rights, back through the civil rights movement, like literally every marginalized group has fought and won using the 14th Amendment. The 14th Amendment is like this magical amendment of the American
Constitution that doesn't lose a lot. Right. So the first episode is interesting in that it,
you know, rightly centers Frederick Douglass as the American most instrumental in fighting for
abolition and freedom and ultimately the 14th Amendment. You know, you point out that Lincoln's belated embrace of the Emancipation
Proclamation was more pragmatic than anything else. How did you all think about telling America's
history in a way that was honest, even if it didn't always comport with the airbrushed version that's been taught in a lot of schools over the years.
Right. One of the major things for me and and I came at this project and I come at all projects.
Where I want to sit in the world is no attack.
Right. No one responds well to attack, right? If somebody
attacks you, you don't care if you're right or wrong, you want to hit them back. So the thing
that was really critical to me was a multicultural, multiracial group of people taking an honest look at the history of America
and being able to say honestly that this is a country that was established by white men for
white men. And that's how the country was established. It was established by white men for white men. And that's how the country was established. It was established by
white men for white men. And now on the back of the 14th Amendment, America is becoming
the world's greatest, almost only multiracial, multiethnic democracy. So that's a really critical adjustment. And I just wanted to
lay out the patterns of what happens in that kind of adjustment, establishing and clarifying the
patterns so we can all relax a little bit and recognize even
while things are not perfect, we're finding ourselves in really familiar patterns so we can
make different decisions to have America recognize the promise in our practice of being Americans. Yeah, what's always been fascinating
to me is that even though we have consistently failed to live up to the ideals embedded in the
Constitution, they are embedded in the Constitution and specifically in the 14th Amendment. And so
even we don't live up to them, there are these documents saying, well, this is
the North Star, which is which is quite valuable. How did how did the last four years of politics
affect your perspective on 14th Amendment and debates around citizenship and equal protection You know, the's always been misinformation.
But, you know, some part technology, some part intention of negative doers.
But for the most part, the truth as much as I possibly could.
I really wanted to do my part in that.
And Buddha had a great quote.
He said, good people have to wake up every day and try to empty the ocean with a ladle.
You know, that is what it feels like, especially over the last four years, a big ocean and a small ladle.
You are you are one of the biggest, most successful celebrities in the world.
You've also lived the experience of growing up as a black man in America.
How have your personal experiences with racism and prejudice and discrimination sort of shaped your worldview?
I always, you know, I'm writing my book right now.
So these things are fresh in my mind.
You know, so I've been called nigger to my face probably five or six times.
And fortunately for my psyche, I've never been called nigger by a smart person.
called nigger by a smart person. So I grew up with the impression that racists and racism were stupid and they were easy to get around. I just had to be the eyes of a racist and saw anything that I perceived as
intellect. So, you know, as I got older, I saw that was less and less true. And as I went into
Hollywood, I started seeing the ideas of systemic racism.. Um, but at the core of it, I noticed a difference
between ignorance and evil, you know, now they're, they're, they're, they're twins for sure.
You know, they are twins for sure, But ignorance can be educated.
And evil is a much more difficult problem.
And fortunately, ignorance is more prevalent than, you know, blatant evil.
So I've always been encouraged that the process of education and understanding could alleviate some of the more dangerous and difficult aspects of racism that have unfortunately been embedded in the very fibers of our country.
I mean, I want to talk about that process. You know, you mentioned this earlier, but, you know, you spoke up during the protests after the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor
about how the world was, you know, finally paying attention to racial injustice in a way,
you know, you hadn't seen before. What would you say to young activists
who, you know, might be frustrated and angry at the pace of progress since even this summer when
the protests took place? You know, that was one of the major
hopes that I had and still have for amend, right? It's like, you have to see the patterns.
You have to recognize the patterns, right? So, you know, Barack Obama becomes the first Black
president. And then the next president is Donald Trump, arguably as polar and opposite as possible.
That's what happens. If you just watch the patterns, that's what has happened historically
with the 14th Amendment. After Lincoln was Johnson, right? So that's how the pendulum swings around these things and around these issues.
What I would also say to young activists is that we are in an unprecedented place in American history right now that really demands delicate attention to the movements of what's happening.
You know, over the summer, the entire globe stood up in a way that they never have before and agreed that Black Lives Matter.
That's never happened before. Activists in the late 1800s and early 1900s
would have to get on boats and go and give speeches in England. And Frederick Douglass
had to travel to try to make these speeches to get people to understand. And we're in an unprecedented place with many dangers, but also a lot of new
possibilities. You sound fairly hopeful about where we might end up at this moment is that right the i i am wildly hopeful in my study of the the patterns
um we are beyond the tipping point right black black lives aren't going to go back to not
mattering right you know there is a momentum. There's a momentum
behind this movement, and not just for Black lives, for in terms of
equality for all individuals under the 14th Amendment in America. You know, the the the lessons of reconstruction, I think, have been learned
sufficiently and significantly enough that those mistakes aren't going to be made again in the same
way, at least. I'm just I'm very hopeful, not just for, you know, blacks in America, but I'm very hopeful for America as a whole, as an idea, as a country.
I'm very hopeful for our future.
You've talked before about potentially getting into politics sometimes talked sometimes joked what
what has made you think about entering politics and running and what so far has prevented you
from taking the leap i think for now i'm gonna let the that office get cleaned up a little bit
and then uh i'll i'll uh get the deep get the deep clean and the vaccination.
Yeah, I'll consider that at some point down the line.
I don't know. It's like I absolutely have an opinion.
I'm optimistic. I'm hopeful. I believe in understanding between people. I believe
in the possibility of harmony. So I will certainly do my part, whether it remain artistic or
at some point ventures into the political arena.
at some point ventures into the political arena.
Okay. Okay.
So I have to ask,
what was the conversation between you and my old boss, Barack Obama, like,
where he gave you the okay to play him in a biopic?
Yeah.
Yeah, he, you know, the idea came up
and we kicked it around and he looked me up and down
and he said, well, you've certainly got the ears for it.
Of course he did.
Well, that is I mean, that is the seal of approval right there.
You don't need anything else. That's good.
The the docuseries is Amend the Fight for America.
Will Smith, you're the host and executive producer.
Thank you so much for coming on Pod Save America and take care.
Thanks for having me.
I hope to see you again.
I love your energy.
Thanks to Will Smith for joining us today.
Come back anytime.
Will Smith can co-host the pod.
Yeah.
When one of us are out.
How's that?
That's great.
We'll bring him on the road next time.
This is Will
Smith the pollster not the
actor there's a pollster
just be fitting with our
thing all right yes all
right we'll see y'all
later show bye
hot save America is a
crooked media production
the executive producer is Michael Martinez.
Our associate producer is Jordan Waller.
It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Kyle Seglin is our sound engineer.
Thanks to Tanya Somenator, Katie Long,
Roman Papadimitriou, Caroline Rustin,
and Justine Howe for production support.
And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn,
Narmal Konian, Yale Freed, and Milo Kim,
who film and upload these episodes as videos every week.