Pod Save America - Could Trump-Curious Black Voters Swing the Election? (Ep. 3)
Episode Date: June 9, 2024Jon is joined by pollster Terrance Woodbury and Lavora Barnes, Chair of the Michigan Democratic Party, to talk about the black voters who may cast their ballots for Trump this November. Who are they? ...Why are they leaving the Democratic Party? And how can we bring them back into the fold? Jon, Terrance, and Lavora dive into focus group tape, the Trump campaign’s strategy, and Biden’s recent speeches to find a message that works for these voters and then John Taylor, co-founder of Black Male Initiative Georgia, reminds us that the work of organizing should always begin with love. Take action with Vote Save America: Visit votesaveamerica.com/2024  Pre-order Democracy or Else: How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps at crooked.com/books or wherever books are sold. Out June 25th.
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We are not choosing our champion.
We're choosing our opposition.
We're not choosing Trump over Biden.
We're not choosing Biden over Trump.
We're making very strategic, calculated analysis about who's going to put more food on our table.
Moreover, we're choosing the landscape upon which we're going to fight.
We're asking ourselves critical questions
about which one of these structures
is going to result in the best wins,
the greatest advancement for our people.
Black men chase after no one.
We lead, we build, we grow.
But in order to do that, we must be heard.
John Taylor is a co-founder of the Black Male Initiative, an organization based out of Georgia
that's all about empowering Black men through grassroots organizing. We called him up to ask
what's happening with Black voters this election cycle, a question that seems to be confounding
almost everyone in politics right now.
Since the Civil Rights Act, Black voters have supported Democratic candidates more than any other group of voters in America.
That was true again in 2020, when increased Black turnout in states like Georgia made all the difference in a race that was decided by about 40,000 votes.
But since 2020, there have been some warning signs that Democrats may be losing
support among the party's most reliable constituency. In the 2022 midterms, Black
turnout declined by nearly a quarter compared to the 2018 midterms. And right now, even some of
the highest quality polls are showing Biden losing support among Black voters, especially younger Black voters and younger Black men.
The latest New York Times set of battleground polls found more than one in five Black swing state voters say that they're even open to voting for Donald Trump.
Could that really be true? Or is it just a bunch of noise in an election where most voters still aren't tuned in?
That's what we're going to try to figure out in this episode. And more importantly,
we're going to talk about the most effective way to persuade Black voters who still haven't made
up their minds. Because even if they're a smaller group than the polling suggests,
Joe Biden and the Democratic Party can't afford to lose many votes from anyone,
anywhere. And that's even more true
if they lose those votes to Donald Trump. Of course, you may be wondering, why on earth would
that happen? Here's John Taylor again. We are not a monolith. All brothers don't vote together.
We have varying interests. But with brothers, again, all of a sudden the fear is somehow Trump's antics, somehow his misogyny, somehow his paternalistic patriarchal BS appeals to Black men.
And you got to ask yourself, why is that what you think Black men are interested in?
Because it's not. Will there be Black men voting for Trump? Yes. But if they vote for Trump,
it's not because he appeals to them. It's because the narrative about where economics are coming,
where jobs are coming from, where access is coming from, where we're going to get
the best possible opportunity to feed our families, that narrative is being pumped out in the streets
as if somehow Trump is an economic savior. Maybe you understand this sentiment. Maybe you're
bewildered by it. Either way, it's a reality we have to deal with if we
want to beat Donald Trump. And grappling with that reality requires putting ourselves in the
shoes of voters who, for whatever reason, just don't follow politics as closely as we do.
And in the case of many young, Black, struggling voters, it requires putting ourselves in the
shoes of people who just haven't seen the system work for them, no matter who's in charge, Republicans or Democrats.
And it's up to us to convince them otherwise.
Show me how Black people survive,
and I'll show you who Black people will vote for.
And if progressives want to win, they have to do the hard work.
John's right.
And that hard work involves reaching out, listening, and knowing
what to say to undecided Black voters, some of whom may very well be your friends, your family,
your co-workers, or your neighbors. And that's why I wanted to talk to two people who are absolute
experts on this topic, Democratic pollster and political strategist Terrence Woodbury
and Michigan Democratic Party Chair Lavora Barnes.
You'll hear our conversation next, followed by more from John Taylor
on what lessons we can learn from the work his organization is doing on the ground in Georgia.
I'm John Favreau. Welcome to the wilderness.
Terrence Woodbury and Lavora Barnes, thanks for being here.
Thanks for having us.
Happy to be here.
So this season, we're talking about the most effective ways to persuade voters who we need to beat Donald Trump, but aren't yet sold on Joe Biden.
And I wanted to talk to both of you about Black voters.
We, of course, know that Black voters have been the most Democratic-leaning group of
voters for decades now, and that has not changed over the last several elections.
That said, there have been signs in both election results and polling that a potentially
decisive number of black voters who've supported Joe Biden and Democratic candidates in the
past may not do so in 2024,
either because they're considering voting for Trump, a third party candidate, or sitting this
one out. And these voters appear to be disproportionately younger and male. Terrence,
you've conducted countless focus groups with Black voters in your work with HIT, so you probably have
a better picture of what's going on than almost anyone. Lavora is chair of the Michigan Democratic Party. You guys have had a historic string of
victories since 2018 and also have a really good story to tell about black turnout, especially in
the 2022 midterms. So let's start there. How did you all manage to have a smaller drop in black
turnout than almost every other battleground state in the midterms?
neighborhoods. We're in the barbershops. We have community offices open that stay open. We have staff that stays on staff who lives in those communities. So this is not a party that shows
up at the end. This is a party that's there all the time, talking about, learning about,
listening to folks talk about the issues that matter to them, and then pointing directly to
the work Democrats have done to address those issues. It's a conversation that we think you
have to have all the time, not just near the end and not just because there's an election on the ballot.
So we do it all the time. We're doing it now and we are going to keep doing it.
And what are the what are the big challenges that keep you up at night when it comes to November?
Oh, so many of them. So many. You know, I always worry about turnout.
It is just a fact of life when you're a state party chair that you're going to worry about whether or not the folks you need to get out the door are going to get out the door. We now have some of the best voting laws in
the country. So we know that we've given people all of the access and all the ways to get to the
polls and get their election taken care of and get their votes counted. We just need to do the work
to get it done. We're ready to do the work. We've got people fired up to work hard and we're going
to do it. Terrence, obviously there are many differences in how different groups of Black voters view
politics.
Some of those differences fall along lines of age and gender, as I mentioned.
But you've gone beyond simple demographics to understand how different groups of Black
voters see politics right now.
Can you talk a little bit about that?
Absolutely.
You know, when we look past the simple demographics and begin to cluster black voters by some shared characteristics and values,
we've identified at Hitch Strategies five key black voting segments.
One is this black civil rights voter that a lot of folks think of.
This is the most likely voter in the electorate. They're over the age of 50.
They are the most likely voters and the most likely Democrats.
They're over the age of 50. They are the most likely voters and the most likely Democrats. But then you have these other two groups in the middle that if you just look at them by demographics, they look very similar. This next gen optimist, who is very similar to the rightful cynic, they're all under the age of 50. They're all black, but their attitudes about politics is so different. The next gen optimist has missed half of recent elections because they
just didn't know they were happening. They think they vote in every election. They tell us they
vote in every election, but they didn't know half of them happened. Unlike the cynic, John,
who has also missed half of the last of recent elections, but it's not because they forgot.
It's because they hate Democrats. They hate Republicans. They hate the system.
They hate all of the institutions that have failed them.
We've heard this rightful Senate group often referred to in the media now as double haters because they hate both candidates.
Well, the fact is they hate institutions that have failed them.
And because of that, they are more likely to swing in and out of the electorate or to swing across partisan lines.
And that is what we have to solve for in this
election. Sounds like the first group you talked about is much more of a traditional turnout
challenge, reminding them when the election is, letting them know what's going on, just giving
them good information. And then the second group is much more of a persuasion challenge, it sounds
like. That's exactly right. We have to both convince them to vote in this election and convince them to vote for Democrats. They don't fall in the ideological lines that
many of the other Black voting segments do. And so we have to give them a reason to vote and to
vote for Democrats. Considering what you've heard in your focus groups, how concerned, just an
overall question, how concerned are you at this moment, five months out, about Joe Biden's support among
Black voters? Look, we have seen some erosion from Joe Biden's 2020 Black voters support level,
specifically amongst younger Black voters. You mentioned this, John, that the gender gap amongst
Black voters has in fact shrunk since 2020. And now the gender gap is only about four points.
The difference between how many Black men are supporting Joe Biden compared to how many Black women are
supporting Biden is only four points. The generation gap between young Black voters'
support for Joe Biden and older Black voters' support is 40 points. That is where I am the
most concerned, because those young voters are emerging as the largest voting bloc, even though they
remain the least likely voters. Lavor, what about you? Are you hearing and seeing similar concerns
on the ground in Michigan? Yeah, I will tell you, we've got a whole group of young Black folks who
work for this party and who are working on our campaign, working hard to talk to their colleagues,
their friends, about the importance of this election and about the issues. And yes,
there is definitely a gap in knowledge, a gap in understanding, a gap in desire to participate
among the young folks. And one of the things that our folks are doing is like finding different ways
to get in the room with these folks wherever they are. If that means a dance party, then let's have
a dance party, right? If that means we go to a bar or a club, we go to a bar or a club. You've got to go to find
the people where they are and remind them of the importance of this election and the importance to
their lives, to their futures of returning Biden and Harris to the White House. And they're
receptive once you get to them. And I think this is the key to the work that we do here in Michigan
that so many other states and, frankly, campaigns need to ping off of. You need to be having these conversations all the time. This is not about
just showing up in September to do turnout the way we have traditionally done it. That'll get
you that first group of folks Terrence talked to us about. But these folks, we've got to persuade
them. And that means you've got to go find them where they are and have conversations with them.
You can't just show up on
Election Day and drag them out the door the way we used to do it. This is a much bigger job that
we do now all the time. And everybody ought to be doing it. Obviously, there must be a ton of
different kinds of conversations that you're having with these kinds of voters. Are there
common themes that come up when you first ask them? Are you thinking about participating in
this election? What do you think
about Joe Biden? What do you think about Donald Trump? Like, what do they tend to say that's
that you're hearing most often? There absolutely are common themes. And the economy is one of them.
People talk about money. People people think Donald Trump wrote them a check. I heard this
yesterday. I was in a club in Detroit yesterday with a group of black men who said, I'm hearing
all the time people think Donald Trump gave them money. Trump wrote me a check. So economy, age, obviously.
These young folks are like these guys, neither of them, right?
Know who I am, know anything about my struggle, know anything about my life.
They are not me.
And this is why it's so important that we talk about who the messengers are too, right?
Because it is not about me sitting down with folks.
It's not about, you know, Joe Biden.
It's about colleagues, friends, neighbors, moms and about, you know, Joe Biden. It's about colleagues, friends, neighbors,
moms and dads, you know, having these conversations with these young folks about the importance of
this election and tying things like jobs and the economy directly back to the administration and
the work that they've done, that administration here in Michigan and that administration in D.C.,
Biden and Harris. And, you know, we were talking to a guy from the Carpenters Union yesterday who
talked about how many good paying jobs there are out there for young folks who want
to come show up and get trained. That's because of the Biden and Harris administration. And that's
the kind of thing we have to keep telling folks. We've got to get in these rooms and have those
conversations. LaVor, I saw that when there was drop off in black voter turnout, especially young
black voter turnout between the midterms in, between the midterms in 2018 and
midterms in 2022, there was not as much of a drop in Michigan. And I think I read that abortion
was one reason why. Does that remain sort of a central issue? And is that an issue that is also
you've seen persuading some people who might not be decided about the
election to actually get involved and go vote? Yes, abortion and the erosion of any rights,
like the combination of watching folks try to roll back rights that we have worked so hard to get,
and the fact that it could happen again with abortion, with voting rights. We've done so
much good work here in Michigan, and it's all at stake, and people need to understand that. And I think when we're having those conversations, we get a lot of
nodding of heads. People are understanding that, you know, we've done a lot of good work here,
the country has done a lot of good work, and that Trump and the Republicans are a threat to that
good work around rights. And absolutely, abortion is one of them. We had really great conversations
in 2022 with Black voters about
supporting their Black sisters, mothers, and friends in the abortion realm. And frankly,
you know, Black men don't want unwanted pregnancies either, right? And so these are
the kind of conversations that we were able to have around abortion. And we're still having those
because it's still a threat. It's still out there. Terrence, I've seen some pollsters and pundits
talking about the potential for a racial realignment in 2024 based on public polls showing some truly wild swings among black voters.
There was just a Fox News poll this week that had Trump winning 25 percent of the black vote in Virginia.
The most recent set of New York Times polls showed more than one in five black voters in swing states open to voting for Donald Trump.
I'm guessing that you don't believe this to be completely true.
But what's your what's your best guess as to what the hell is going on with all the polling this cycle?
Yeah, you know, there is a better and worse way to poll black folks.
And we are seeing some of the worst ways driving media coverage.
Look, there's a couple of things that we find wrong in polling, specifically with voters of color.
One is when the sample size is too small.
You can't talk to 100 or 200 black folks and predict what the community is going to do because it underrepresents the diversity within the community.
The other is when we just present a forced choice between Joe Biden and Donald Trump.
That is false. There
will not be only two names on the ballot. In any of the 50 states, will there only be two names on
the ballot? And so when you force that choice between two, you're going to over-represent the
support for both of those candidates. And then the last is the third-party erosion, the third-party
threat here that is not being counted in a lot of the public polling, I think is measuring some of the frustration and discontent that when black voters say that they're either undecided or considering third party, what confidence in the administration is because they don't think enough has happened. And that is just demonstrably untrue. We have to do a better job demonstrating the progress that's been made on their top issues, including student loans, climate change, the economy, criminal justice reform, and others that the Biden administration has made tremendous progress on.
Lavora, are you encountering any new or surprising Trump curiosity among Black voters in Michigan?
You mentioned some saying, well, he sent us a check. Are there other reasons that you've heard
for people supporting Trump that have surprised you or thinking about supporting Trump? Or is this
a phenomenon that you're noticing? Or is it more sort of like what Terrence was just saying,
that there's just a lot of unhappy voters with both parties and both candidates?
Yeah, I'm running into more unhappy voters. I rarely run into someone who tells me that they
are going to support Trump. Now, of course, I'm the Democratic Party chair. I'm probably not going
to be running into a lot of folks who are going to tell me they're going to run. They're going to vote for Trump. But I have run into a
lot of folks who talk about being offended by the way Trump is trying to reach them. The suggestion
that holding up an ugly ass pair of gold shoes or, you know, telling me that the black folks like my
mugshot, like that's the way to get my vote. People are offended by it. People understand when they are being used in that way and they don't like it. But most people that are talking to us
about the issues and about their concerns are really just straight up concerned about whether
or not either of these two men have done or will do anything that make their lives better. And
that's why, as Terrence says, it's such an important part of our role to make sure we're telling that story, pointing directly to the things that the Biden-Harris
administration has done and will do. And of course, pointing back to who Donald Trump was
as president, who Donald Trump continues to promise to be going forward as president. And
I think that those are conversations that really are what people are having with us here at the
party about this election and about Donald
Trump, not about I think Donald Trump is my man. That's not happening. I want to add something here
because while I do think that public polling is over-representing Black people's support for
Donald Trump, he will very likely win more Black people's votes in 2024 than he did in 2020. Not
20 percent, not 25 percent, but more than he did in the last election. I think
that there are some things contributing to that. And one is that Democrats have to reclaim some of
the values that Black people hold very, very dear. Values like spirituality, masculinity,
patriotism, values that not Joe Biden, but that Democrats more broadly have been
ceding to the Republican Party. And there's a way for us to message our very, very progressive
issues, issues like abortion, like gender and sexuality, that we can message those progressive
issues through black ass values. And there's examples of that, like, you know, if God is
granting all of us
freedom of choice, then why should government grant women any less than that? Or as the head
of my household, I must protect my family from intrusive governments that tell them who they
must be or when they must start a family. Those are, you know, that head of household and spiritual
values that folks like my father hold very, very dear and don't want to see to
Republicans, even though he's never going to vote for them. And so that's a part of the work that we
also have to do here in our messaging. That brings up an interesting question,
because when you talk about Democrats reclaiming values like spirituality, patriotism, masculinity,
a positive version of masculinity.
It's not all toxic.
Right, right.
It's not all toxic.
But it does make me, my gut instinct on that is that reclaiming those values would appeal to older voters of all races, really.
And it's interesting to me that the gap you're seeing with black voters, and I think obviously older black voters still have a lot of ties to the civil rights movement and connect the Democratic Party with the civil
rights movement. But what do you think is going on with the generation gap and some of these
younger voters and these younger voters who may be turning away from the party or Joe Biden?
You know, you talked about how they don't think that he did anything for them.
How are they seeing sort of these values that you're talking about in terms of patriotism
and masculinity and spirituality? Are those values that would resonate with
younger voters who may be turning away from the party?
I mean, hyper-masculinity certainly does. You know, that's a part of the cultural appeal that
Donald Trump is trying to make with,
you know, with the rappers that he's assembling with the, you know, it is an effort to appeal
to that hyper masculinity. But a lot of when we see a swing of young voters towards Republicans,
like we saw in a state like Florida, where Ron DeSantis increases margins amongst young Black voters by almost 10 points,
a lot of that is being driven by drop-off of young voters.
When less young Black people are participating in the electorate,
then it is giving conservative Black voters a higher and disproportionate representation in the polls.
Let's talk a little bit more about the third party threat. And of course, we don't know which third party candidates will be on the ballots in which states yet completely. We know that RFK Jr. is out there, Cornel West, Jill Stein. in 2020, but are at least contemplating supporting a third party candidate in 2024.
Let's listen to a clip.
That Trump will win the White House because Biden and Cornell will split the vote and then Trump will win.
And I want to get a sense, Howard, what's your reaction to that?
Will you still vote for Cornel West or whoever your independent person is?
The numbers,
I'm not going based off the numbers.
I'm going based off what I feel like
that person is going to bring to the table.
Even though I know the math
Donald Trump's probably going to win, I'm still going to
vote for who I feel like would bring
something to the table. Anyone else in Howard's position
say, I would still vote third party
over Joe Biden if that third party person aligned with my policy positions better than Joe Biden
does. Anyone else that they would do that, given the calculus we talked about with President Trump
possibly running. So one, two, three, four, five, six. So all of us are saying we're on that side
of saying that as well. So that was eight of eight. LaVore, I want to start with you here.
Was any of that surprising
or does it sound similar
to what you've heard in Michigan?
And how are you all approaching
these potential third party voters?
Yeah, we have heard it before.
You know, we've experienced
the third party candidate on a ballot,
look at 2016.
And I will tell you this,
that what we do know is that, just as Terrence's work there
showed, telling people that voting for the third party is how you're going to make the other guy
win is not convincing. What is convincing is reminding people of the value of having Biden
and Harris in the office. We've got to tell our story. This is not about why not to vote third
party. It's about
why to vote Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. There are, of course, some things about those third
party candidates we can share that might help people make a decision. And we will be sharing
those things also. But it is so important instead to be very focused on the good story that we've
got to tell and make sure we're doing a good job telling it. And I think that anybody who thinks
that the way you get someone to choose not to choose that third party, not to make that choice when they're
looking at these two men thinking, neither of these two men will represent me, maybe this one
over here will, the answer isn't to say, you're going to make me lose. The answer is to say,
here's why I need you to help me continue the work that we've been doing. Look at what we've been able to accomplish so far because you voted for me last time.
I need you again to make sure we can keep doing this work.
And that's the message that we're going to be saying all over Michigan from now until November.
This is why we need to send Biden and Harris back.
Terrence, obviously, that group was from a year ago.
Now that the race is set, more people are paying attention, more people know that it's Biden versus Trump, that those are going to be the nominees. Has that kind of sentiment changed at all in focus groups that you're hearing?
One, to your point, they were before Donald Trump was the presumptive nominee.
And two, they were a group of black men that had previously voted for Biden and were unsure about who they were going to vote for.
And so some of that is represented there.
After 2016, we conducted third party focus groups. Right. And the point of them was to determine if we can create some voters remorse amongst those third party voters.
They're like, look, now that Donald Trump has won and we've had six months of his administration and we can show you what Jeff Sessions has done and we can show you Muslim bans and we can show you all of the awful things that we anticipated.
If the election were today, how would you vote different?
And the way the confusion and those voters, when they were forced to answer that question
and they had to look up and say well what if we wouldn't do anything different
and we realized there that um that creating this remorse this idea that the reason the other guy
won is because of how you voted that that would not be disqualifying and so we are going to have
to give them to the horse point not just a reason to vote against them, but a reason to vote for us.
And that reason has to be specifically because their lives have improved.
And that is incumbent upon Democrats, upon Joe Biden, and upon campaigns to demonstrate how our votes have made our lives better.
Our votes have made our lives better.
Well, that's a good segue into the next thing I want to talk about, which is what it will take to persuade some of these voters to ultimately support Joe Biden again.
The president has given several speeches to black audiences just over the last several weeks.
He spoke to the NAACP in Detroit. He delivered the commencement at Terrence's alma mater, Morehouse.
He was in Philly with Kamala Harris at a very big event there, kicking off their black voter outreach program.
Here's some of what he said at these events.
So I came today to speak the truth.
Truth about promises made and promises kept.
I promised to put racial equality at the center of everything I do.
Because you voted,
we're invested more than ever
in the black families and communities.
A promise made and a promise kept.
What is democracy?
If black men are being killed in the street,
what is democracy?
Betrayal of broken promises still leave black communities
behind. Most of all, what does it mean, as you've heard before, to be a black man who loves his
country, even if it doesn't love him back in equal measure? Lavora, what do you think about the
promises made, promises kept message?
Does that resonate with folks in Michigan?
We use it all the time.
Yes, it does.
We use it to talk about our legislature because, you know, we made some promises.
We got a trifecta here, a governor and a state house and the state senate, and they have
gone about the business of keeping those promises.
And we use that language all the time.
People get it.
You do have to then follow it by reminding them what the things were that we promised and how we kept those promises. And we use that language all the time. People get it. You do have to then follow it by reminding them what the things were that we promised and how we kept
those promises. And we do that part as well. But it is it works because I think people love to hear
that's right. You did tell me you were going to do that and then you did it. And we use it a lot.
We're going to keep using it. Folks seem to respond to it. Terrence, here's my challenge with the promises made promises kept message is all of the research,
all the focus groups, all the polling, just talking to people. You get the sense that
I'm not feeling the progress in my own life, right? That the economy, I hear great things
about the economy. I hear all these statistics. I hear about the stock market. I hear about unemployment, but it's I'm not feeling it in
my own life. How do you help people understand what the president has accomplished when they
might not be feeling it in their own lives? And you want to make sure that it doesn't
sound like it's out of touch, that he's saying promise made, promise kept. And they're
thinking, well, I don't feel like there's been any promises kept yet because, you know, I'm still
paying too much for groceries and, you know, whatever else their concerns may be.
So in transparency, I was fortunate enough to help contribute to some of those speeches.
I didn't know that before this interview, by the way,
but I could tell.
Let me tell you.
You can hear it.
Because I've now talked to you enough
and read enough of your research.
So yeah, that's great.
You know, some of the stuff that we hear
that really resonates there,
promises made does begin to cut through the cynicism,
reminding people of what he promised
and how he has delivered.
And the other thing that I think resonates there, John, and we've talked about this before,
is it's changing the hero of the story, right? It's taking the cape off of Joe Biden
and putting it on these voters. And when I hear him say, because you voted, we have been able
to do X, Y, Z, it's empowering, right? It reminds voters that, again, our lives
are improving because of our votes and not just because of some hero in Washington that's there
saving us, but that we are in fact delivering the progress. And then the other thing that I
heard there is that he's acknowledging the pain. You know, what is democracy if black men can still
be killed in the streets? that a part of us demonstrating
progress is not appearing to wave a mission accomplished flag, that black folks are still
in pain, that groceries are still too damn expensive, that black parents are still having
to talk with their kids before they get behind the wheel. And so he's acknowledging some of that
pain. And a part of what I think the campaign is going to have to continue to do and to your
question of how do we make this progress resonate to folks that don't feel it?
I think there's two things.
One, we have to change the messengers, right?
They need to hear from people that look like them, right?
It's different to hear the president say, your life is better because than it is to
hear someone that has your shared walk of life say,
because of that student loan forgiveness, I was able to do X, Y, Z. And that's important because
Black folks have a very high perception of shared fate. And so when we see other Black people doing
well, doing better, it does reinforce that one, we contributed to that with our votes,
and two, that progress is available for me as well.
One, we contributed to that with our votes.
And two, that progress is available for me as well. Yeah, I've heard you talk before about the difference between defending democracy and then talking about fixing democracy.
And it does seem like obviously democracy is going to be central to the message between now and November.
That's by necessity, since that's what's under threat right now by Donald Trump and MAGA Republicans.
But it was interesting hearing him in that Morehouse speech sort of alluding to the fact that, yeah, maybe democracy, maybe you don't think democracy necessarily works for you.
It's not just him saying that he will defend democracy, but actually giving a defense of democracy as a system that is worth voting for and fighting for.
Do you think that's sort of important for him to continue to do?
Absolutely. The problem with the frame of fixing democracy is that folks that have had mixed results from democracy aren't that interested in fixing it. You know, folks, especially millennials who have now voted in several elections with the person that got the most vote also lost.
It is obvious that the system, that this current democratic system isn't working the way it's supposed to.
It's not working for everyone that's participating in it. And so what we see the president doing there, moving from just encouraging people to vote and defend democracy, is acknowledging the parts of it that aren't
working for everybody. And I think that that is important, especially for the cynics,
the cynics who feel like these institutions have failed them. He is right to acknowledge
the ways that it has failed them and the ways that he can enlist them. Not that if we elect him,
he can defend it and fix it for us,
but that we have to enlist them in the fight and in the process of fixing it and making it work
for everybody. I love that. And we talk about it here a lot about how the vote is the first step
in your participation in the democracy. It's not the whole thing. And I think this is an important
thing that we can all talk about as we're talking to young folks about participating in this democracy. Yes, vote, but also continue to participate beyond that vote.
Continue to show up and ask for the things that your community needs and you needs from the folks
that you just helped elect. Participate all the time, not just on election day.
Yeah, that's powerful. So we've talked about how to frame President Biden's accomplishments.
Lavora, is there a way to talk about the choice between how Biden and Trump will handle economic
issues over the next four years that you found resonates with voters you've talked to and are
trying to organize? Yeah, I think one of the things that we do and President Biden and his
team do this as well is remind them of the failures of the Trump administration. I think
that the distance between then and now
causes some folks to not quite remember. So we can do a lot of looking back at what life was like
under the Trump administration, infrastructure week that went on and on and on, and yet no
infrastructure happened. But the Biden-Harris administration has been able to make that happen
about the COVID response and how that left people hungry and some people dead, right? And that sort of going back in time to remind folks of who he is, who he was, and who he will be.
And of course, sharing the story of the work that the Biden administration has done on behalf of folks
to grow this economy, to grow the infrastructure, to bring good-paying jobs here,
to bring good-paying union jobs to Michiganders and support that sort of work that we're doing here in Michigan
and that our governor, our terrific governor work that we're doing here in Michigan and
that our governor, our terrific governor and lieutenant governor are doing here with partnership
with Biden. It's a good story to tell, but an important part of it is to go back and remind
people of who Donald Trump was as president of the United States. He's got a record and we need
to remind folks of it. Terrence, what about you? I mean, you know, the cliche is that elections are
about the future. And especially if you're an incumbent president, you don't want the election to be a referendum.
You want it to be a choice. I keep waiting for the Biden folks.
And, you know, I'm sure they'll do that this summer and into the fall to sort of come out with like a proactive agenda for the next four years.
proactive agenda for the next four years. Do you think that's important to some of these voters?
Or do you think right now we're sort of building a story that talks like what LaVar was just talking about of, all right, this is what this is what Biden accomplished. This is what Trump
did during his four years. And that's the choice. Or when do you think it starts moving forward?
Yeah, you know, I've been torn here because, you know, the voters that I'm laser focused on are those cynical, drop off, low propensity, less engaged voters.
Right. And for some of them that we are going to have to demonstrate progress on the last four years before we make promises for the next four years.
And so that's I think that is the campaign and the president's number one priority right now is
demonstrate the progress okay connect them to the progress specifically on the economy you know
we talked about this John that this is this is a cost election as much as it's an economy election
economy means a lot of things to a lot of people. What voters mean when they say economy in this election overwhelmingly is cost. And that's why some of the indicators like job creation and stock market, some of that isn't resonating because the cost is still too damn high.
cost of prescription drugs and brought down cost of college education and brought down cost of housing and continue to challenge airlines and junk fees. And that's the cost story that we have
to continue to lean into. But the other thing that we have to do in the economy, and that we've seen
the president and the vice president who's on an economic tour right now, is moving from discussing
the economy as poverty reduction and discussing it more as wealth
creation. And that has also been a part of the appeal of Donald Trump is that they think that
he will make them rich. Whether there's any evidence of that or not, a part of that. And we
do have a story to tell there about what this administration has done to increase Black wealth
by 60%, to increase black businesses from
5% to 11%, that we have to start talking about more of those things as well.
Lavorre, one last thing on Biden's Morehouse speech before we move on. A handful of students
turned their back to Biden during his remarks to protest his handling of the war in Gaza.
In Michigan, of course, you guys had 100,000 people vote uncommitted on primary day. Just
this week, the NAACP called on Biden to halt arms deliveries to Israel.
How much of an issue is Gaza among voters in Michigan?
And what have you found is the most effective way to talk about the war with 2020 Biden voters who may now be upset with the president's handling of it?
It is definitely an issue.
We're keeping an eye on it.
We talk about it a lot here in Michigan, of course. We've been doing what we call listening sessions, right? I am not the president of the
United States, and I'm also not a foreign policy expert, but what I am is an ear and occasionally
a voice. So we are listening to the communities that want to talk to us about this issue and
making sure that they know that we hear them and that we're passing their information and their
messages on to the president and the president hears them. And I think that's where we have to be right now
as a party while the president does the foreign policy work he needs to do. And we have seen him
move. We've seen his language change. We've seen his policies move. And I think that a lot of people
are seeing hope in that movement, but also people's lives have been affected. People's families have
died. This is
serious and we take it very seriously and we hurt with them and we cry with them. But what I can't
do is fix it because I'm not a foreign policy expert and I'm also not the president. But what
I can do is remind folks how important it is to continue to express your voice and that we're
listening. And, you know, that First Amendment right to protest is absolutely yours and I respect
your use of it.
And as long as you're doing so without harming anyone or harming anything,
please continue to use it. And we'll continue to pass the message on to the president. And I know he's listening. I think that's a really thoughtful answer. I wish more people
online would give answers like that. I agree. I wish they would.
I want to ask you both about an issue that certainly feels like it should be important to voters. A jury finding Donald Trump guilty of 34 felony counts.
And yet Trump and his campaign
see this as a development
that may help him with voters,
particularly black voters.
Here's an Axios headline
from a few days after the verdict.
Guilty verdict fuels
Trump's push for black voters,
quote Senator Tim Scott,
potential VP,
saying, quote,
as an African-American
born and raised in the deep south
who had concerns
about our justice system
as it relates to race,
I'm now seeing it play out from a partisan perspective.
The campaign has also been sharing clips like this from this one's from The Breakfast Club, which is a wildly popular black radio show.
Good morning, brother.
Peace, TK.
What up, Charlamagne?
What up, Jeff?
What up?
What's your thoughts, brother?
Well, I'm going to tell you, man, I feel like Trump's got Dave dirty.
I don't trust the system at
all you know i mean um especially being through the system i'm gonna say when i called yesterday
about that dog situation so it's like after you've been railroaded by this system and you see that
when you walk in the courtroom they want you to be guilty you're gonna be guilty i don't got no
trust in that process at all you know i mean i rock with trump i feel like that he um he way
better than biden you know biden i can't stand Trump I feel like that he um he way better than Biden you know
Biden I can't stand him fighting the devil man fighting the same one y'all remember them
policies from the 90s I know y'all got family members that was victim of that
the 86 the 86 mandatory minimum citizen 88 uh crack law 94 crime bill yeah yeah yeah for sure
so I I don't know if that's necessarily someone who was
undecided before the verdict. But Terrence, do you think that that's sort of an isolated
kind of comment? Or does it reflect does any of it any of that comment reflect a sentiment you've
heard in focus groups from voters? So I actually spoke to black voters in Florida the night of the
conviction. And first, I had to break the news to them.
While it was the only thing that any of us were covering or observing, none of them even knew it happened.
And I think that that is the that's my biggest takeaway from this verdict is that it's simply not as impactful as many of us pundits and operatives believe it is.
There just wasn't a lot of new information. They
knew about Stormy Daniels. They knew about Trump's legal issues. You know, being indicted 109 times
or being convicted 34 times, it just ain't that much of a difference to people. And the other
thing that I didn't suspect was that it wasn't that unprecedented, right? That their observation
is that there are always criminals in the political
system. There's been mayors and governors and all kinds of folks that have been convicted.
It's unprecedented to us that it's never been a president, but that just wasn't that unprecedented
to them, that there was precedent for that. Now, the last thing I'll say is what I heard that
young man say on The Breakfast Club. I do think that there is a there there. Not in that Donald Trump can
convince black people that he's like them because he's been convicted, but there is the possibility
that he can appeal to people who think the system is already broken. That's what I was wondering.
That's what I heard that young man say. The system doesn't work for me. And look at that. The system doesn't even work for someone like him.
And he's rich and powerful and white. So it's definitely not going to work for me.
You know, that that line of messaging, I do think could be more effective than look,
I'm like you because I have a mugshot. That's crazy and insulting.
LaVor, how are people responding to the verdict in Michigan?
It is not something folks are talking about. We care about it. We talk about it. But the voters,
I think, have not yet. They're just not paying attention. Let's remember, of course, it's June.
A lot of the voters are not paying attention to all of this yet. But they certainly have not paid
attention to that. I will say, I think that there's this because the system has been broken for folks who look like us for a very long time, whichever way that verdict came out, that would have been someone's response, right? Because, because if he had been found not guilty 34 times, it would have absolutely been because of his position in the system because of his white rich white man-ness.
position in the system because of his white, rich white man-ness. And so I think that that cuts both ways in terms of what that conviction means or would have meant if it hadn't happened.
But in the end, I think, you know, people need to think about whether or not they want a convicted
president. But that is not a conversation folks are really having right now. Folks are very focused
on what's happening in their own lives, right? Not what's happening to Donald Trump. And that's part of our job is to get them focused on Donald Trump. And we will get them there. It is June. We've got some time to be talking about it. And we are absolutely going to be talking about the convicted felon who's running for president. But I don't think folks are thinking about it right now, frankly.
think folks are thinking about it right now, frankly. It's such a good point. And this is what I've been thinking on this is that to the extent that people will care about this,
it's the idea that there's one set of rules for Donald Trump and another set of rules for everyone
else. And back to our conversation about Joe Biden, defender of democracy, I think one of
the biggest challenges for Joe Biden or really any Democratic president in this political environment is they are being asked to defend democracy and defend our institutions at the very time when trust and faith in our institutions is at its lowest.
And so even though that is an incredibly important task right now, you're the defender of something that's very unpopular, whether that's the criminal justice system, whether that's the economic system, whether that's the political system.
And I wonder how Democrats and Joe Biden sort of navigate that at this time of increased cynicism
and sort of there's so many low trust voters. And that's particularly true in the black community,
in the Latino community, with young people, with sort of all the groups of voters that Democrats are having
trouble with. You know, I think Terrence gave us a clue here when he told us that folks need to
acknowledge that the system doesn't work the same for everybody. We've got to step into those shoes.
And frankly, messengers who look like us are better messengers for that than
some other folks. But we've got to be honest about the truth about the reality. When I talk about how
life is a little different for me because I was born with this color skin than it is for some of
my counterparts who are state party chairs in other places, that's real and people get that.
And that's the kind of conversation that we need to have. And we need to be using messengers who
can have that conversation, who can acknowledge the reality of life as a person of color in this country
and acknowledge the reality that we're not there and that there's so much that still needs to be
fixed. And then, of course, segue directly into it ain't going to get fixed by Donald Trump.
That's right.
But you know who can fix it is if we return Biden and Harris to the White House. It's that kind of,
and maybe we can't say they can fix it, but they can absolutely work on it.
They will absolutely be on your side.
We spend a lot of time talking about
how they have our backs
and we need people to understand
that they do indeed have our backs
and they will continue to have our backs
when we need them to
and when we even we don't know we need them to.
Last couple of questions, proof points.
Terrence, I hear you talk about proof points a lot. And considering the voters you guys have been talking to, and specifically undecided black voters who probably tend to be younger, maybe tend to be a little bit more male, on the Biden-Harris record of accomplishment, what tend to be the proof points that resonate most with voters? Terrence?
that resonate most with voters.
Terrence?
Look, I've been asking this question in focus groups,
especially from voters that express frustration that nothing's been done.
My immediate probe is,
what did you expect to happen that hasn't happened?
And the list that they give us is a list of unawareness.
It's student loans,
despite him forgiving more student loans than any president
in history. In fact, I think he's the student loan president. It's criminal justice reform,
because he hasn't passed the George Floyd Police Reform Act, despite appointing 100 Black women to
federal benches, banning the no-knock warrants that would have saved Breonna Taylor's life and the chokeholds that would have saved George Floyd's life and implementing
mandatory body cameras. In fact, he might be the criminal justice reform president.
You know, it's climate change that he hasn't made enough progress on despite re-entering into the
Paris Climate Agreement and making the largest investment in climate change in American history, in the world's history, he might be the climate change president.
And so, you know, what they are the most frustrated about are, in fact, the areas in
which he's made the most progress.
And that is a that's a that's a gap in communication.
I think we have some time to close that gap and we will hopefully we surely have the resources to close that gap. We just have to prioritize and get in front of
the voters that need to hear it. LaVora, what about you?
I think Terrence has just ticked off that this is my job, right? Telling that story that Terrence
just told. And it is absolutely true. Those are the things that folks say. And then when you can
answer with that happened, sometimes I get a quizzical look on the face
and sometimes I get sort of a shaking of the head like, nope, that didn't happen.
And yeah, it actually did.
Right.
I can show you.
We've got receipts.
But Terrence is right.
Our need is to make sure that we are telling the story in the places where the folks who
need to hear it can hear it.
And this is where I say things like TV ads might not be the way, folks.
And so we need to be talking to people in the places where they are and not necessarily in the old school places that we're accustomed to communicating.
And that's that's my charge to everybody. Like, let's find these young folks where they are and have these conversations with them.
And let's hire a bunch of young black men and women to go have those conversations with these folks all over this country. On the other side, what are some of the most persuasive arguments or proof points about
Donald Trump that give people pause about another four years of Trump?
I think reminding folks of the things that have come out of Donald Trump's mouth about Black
people specifically, about people of color in general, about immigration and immigrants,
specifically about people of color in general, about immigration and immigrants, all of those things give people pause, all of the hateful rhetoric that has come, the reminders about
the things that didn't happen during that administration that he promised folks.
Like here in Michigan, he stood in Michigan and promised that he was going to save the
autos, he was going to bring jobs back, and instead he allowed jobs to leave the state
like never before. A promise made, but not a promise kept. Those are the kinds of things that
we can and will continue to remind folks of and that resonate with folks. Like, all right, that's
true. He didn't do any of that. But you know who did? And you know who did come to Michigan and
walk a line with union workers? Joe Biden. You know, John, one thing I know that is not disqualifying of Donald Trump, we've known this
since 2016, and I hope that Democrats don't waste money on this messaging, and that's racism.
It is just not disqualifying. I know that it's counterintuitive. Black folks care a lot about
racism, but they are not disqualifying Donald Trump because of racism, because it's expected.
It's built into the system, right?
I hear it in focus groups all the time. They're all racist. The system is racist. So they're not
going to disqualify him because he's racist. The difference is though, while his racism is not
disqualifying, we are finding that the impacts of that racism is disqualifying. Racial violence,
right? Black folks ain't going to tolerate proud boys and oath keepers
standing back and standing by and promoting political and racial violence. It's, you know,
not just his rhetoric about immigration, but it's those kids in cages. Black folks ain't
tolerating that. It is attacks on DEI programs that we just saw last week with the fearless fund ruling that determined that black people can't even, you know, use their own money to increase venture capital towards black women.
That all of those impacts, those programs and policies that will put black bodies in danger, that will reverse the progress that's been made.
That's what we have
to remind them of. Not just that he like says bad things, but that when he says those bad things,
we get hurt. Last question for every episode I'm doing this one. All right. So for you guys,
say you have a younger black Biden 2020 voter in your life who's not sure they want to vote for him again.
This is in the cynics category. You have a few minutes to persuade this person to get out and
vote for Biden. What do you say? Terrence? So listen, as far as I can tell and through all
the research I've done, this administration, because of the votes of people of color,
because we voted together and marched together and protested together, we are beginning
to see the progress that we need. We are beginning to see the material difference,
that we have seen Black wealth increase and Black incarceration rates decrease. We are seeing Black
poverty decrease and Black home ownership increase. While the job is not done, the progress
is being made. And that progress is only possible because of you. And that progress can only
continue because of you. That's good. LaVarra? That's really good. I would lean in there. I would
also lean in, frankly, on his vice president. I would remind folks that he has standing beside him
and behind him a strong, smart black woman.
And that in a world that is as messed up as this one is, we know that it's black women who carry us on our shoulders.
And here's a black woman carrying you on her shoulders.
And you need to support her and get this done.
Terrence Woodbury and LeVore Barnes, thank you so much for chatting with me.
This was very instructive.
And I'm just so thankful for all of your very, very smart thoughts on all of this. Thank you so much. Thanks with me. This was very instructive. And I'm just so thankful for all
of your very, very smart thoughts on all of this. Thank you so much. Thanks for having us.
What stuck with me after talking to Lavora and Terrence is the huge gap between us political
junkies and most normal people.
Not just in terms of what we've heard and know about Joe Biden, Donald Trump, and various political issues,
but in how we think about democracy and politics and the act of voting itself.
It's easier to defend a system that has mostly worked for you.
It's harder to even participate in a system that hasn't always worked for you.
And if we want to convince more people to give that system a chance,
we need to meet them where they are.
Lavora talked about having conversations in places where politics aren't usually discussed,
like a Michigan nightclub.
John Taylor and the Black Male Initiative are trying something similar in Georgia.
When we talk about grassroots organizing, what we really mean is direct, deep relational engagement on the ground that is going to places that most folks have written off.
It is going into jails.
It is going into youth detention centers.
It is using the platforms and mechanisms that are germane to our culture and our people
and not shying away from political conversations in those spaces.
So will we hit nightclubs? Yes, indeed.
Strip clubs? It's a possibility.
Show up at your local neighborhood grocery store?
I'm going to be there too, because that's where the real work happens.
Yep, he said strip clubs.
First for everything here on The Wilderness.
But what may be even more important than where these conversations take place
is how we approach them.
John has some profound thoughts on this that I want to leave you with.
There's always three things.
So thing number one is simple.
Give grace.
Don't assume or expect that you know what other people are going through.
As much as you respect yourself and your ideas,
respect the fact that other people don't agree with you
and that they don't have to.
And it's not our job to convince them
to do the right thing and go vote because we say so.
But it is our job to work with them
and show them how using every tool in the toolbox for their liberation is something they might want to consider.
Number two is that all of this work, when it's said and done, is a drop in the bucket.
Voting is the beginning.
It is your entry fee into the show.
But there's a lot of work to do to make the show happen.
So your civic participation, your volunteer hours, your recruitment of other folks, spending time, making sure that people understand not just who to vote for, but what voting for those folks means.
And then number three is it starts with love and it
ends with love, right? I can disagree with you all day long. I don't care what you think.
I care that you think. And when we talk about getting Black men to vote. Most of it is just listening to what they think and feel,
not trying to shut them down, not trying to tell them they're wrong. And no matter what the outcome
is, I need you to love them at the end of the day. Because let's be honest, I am proud to be a black
man. I will sing it to the hills. I said, somebody were to wake me up tomorrow
and say, you can choose any race, any gender.
You can start over.
I'd still be right here.
I love being me.
But I also know the pressure, the trauma,
the ongoing stress that comes with walking
through this world in this skin.
So when you see someone who is riddled with trauma and pain,
self-medicating in whatever way they choose,
don't write them off.
Give them love.
They are someone's son.
They are someone's brother, someone's father, someone's uncle.
They are someone's brother, someone's father, someone's uncle. They are someone's baby.
Most of all, they are human.
And they deserve your love and respect.
Now that's some of the best advice I've ever heard.
Not just about how to talk to Black voters.
Not just about how to talk to black voters. Not just about how to talk to all voters.
About how to talk to and treat and see other human beings.
And if we could all do just a little bit more of that,
I'm pretty sure a better, saner, kinder politics would follow.
We'll see you next time on The Wilderness.
We'll see you next time on The Wilderness. And Farah Safari is our associate producer. Sound design by Vassilis Fotopoulos.
Music by Marty Fowler.
Charlotte Landis and Jordan Cantor sound engineered the show.
Thanks to Katie Long, Reed Cherlin, Matt DeGrotte, and Madeline Herringer for production support.
To our video team, Rachel Gajewski, Joseph Dutra, Chris Russell, Molly Lobel, and David Tolles, who filmed and edited the show. If the wilderness has inspired you to get involved,
head on over to votesaveamerica.com slash 2024 to sign up and find a volunteer shift near you.