Pod Save America - DeSantis DeShakeUp
Episode Date: July 18, 2023Ron DeSantis gives us the first campaign shake up of 2024. Joe Biden gets good news on fundraising and the economy. RFK Jr. is caught on tape at his infamous fart dinner saying covid may have been tar...geted to spare the Jews. And later, Rahna Epting from MoveOn and Matt Bennett from Third Way stop by to talk about the diverse coalition that’s trying to stop No Labels from a third party bid that could elect Donald Trump. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
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Welcome to Pate of America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm the bar reader of these two Oppenheimers, Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor. It's great to be back, guys.
Tommy, welcome back.
Hey, Tommy, I missed you. It's nice to see you.
He was not here last week.
I was not here last week.
I just talked to him too much.
Yeah, it was double your own voice.
Sounded great.
On today's show, Ron DeSantis gives us the first campaign shakeup of 2024.
Joe Biden gets good news on fundraising and the economy.
RFK Jr. is caught on tape at his infamous fart dinner saying COVID may have been targeted to spare the Jews.
What a sentence.
And later, I'm joined by MoveOn's Rana Epting and Third Way's Matt Bennett
to talk about the diverse coalition that's trying to stop no labels from a third party bid that could elect Donald Trump. But first, there were two events over the weekend and some new fundraising disclosures
that have made it very difficult to argue that the Republican nomination is anything
but Donald Trump's to lose.
You say with a little sort of, I don't know, sadness in your voice or something.
The criminal, well, the whole thing is sad.
The criminal defendant front runner was the only
major candidate to skip a big evangelical event in des moines but he did get some help from tucker
carlson who uh emceed the event fresh off his very friendly interview with uh self-proclaimed
misogynist andrew tate recently indicted for rape and human trafficking that interview was fucking
wild by the way i don't know if anyone caught it on tucker's twitter show but i absolutely did not yeah sorry my vacation i watched i did something i watched black mirror
talk about thing talk about talk about infuriating things it's pretty was entertaining the jail cell
i think he's under house arrest in romania yeah anyway great uh tucker tore into mike pence and
grilled tim scott and nicky haley over their opposition to Putin's invasion of Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Trump and some other candidates spoke in Miami to Charlie Kirk's Turning Point USA,
a group so far right that the crowd booed Fox News, heckled other Republican candidates who spoke,
and gave Trump 85.7% of the vote in a straw poll.
Nail biter.
Talk about Putin. Those are Putin numbers right there.
Trump focused his remarks on Ron De desantis let's listen we lead the field by 50 points among young
voters think of that with trump at 64 and a gentleman named ron desanctimonious at 14 14%. He said 14%. And I don't know why he's not here this couple of days, but he should be here.
The sanctimonious and his establishment handlers are wasting such precious time and resources to
divide the party. They're dividing the party. Although he's dropping so quickly, he's probably
not going to be in second place much longer. Not only does it seem like there were no consequences for Trump skipping a major
evangelical event in Iowa, he seemed to get much better coverage than any of his
competitors coming out of the weekend. What were your takeaways from the two events, Tommy?
So my big picture takeaway, I watched all of the Iowa, the Bob Vander Plaats event in Iowa.
Making fun of you for watching Tucker's Twitter show for seven minutes.
Not to brag.
This guy's just mainlining right-wing nonsense during the weekend.
In fairness, he tuned in to see Nikki Haley and he just had to watch the rest of it.
Right, right.
I caught Tim Scott.
I got the bug.
It used to be that candidates would go to Iowa, talk to local activists and press, create some local buzz, right? And that, you know, you
get a polling bump in Iowa, it creates this groundswell of support that gives you a national
narrative bump, right? And maybe you do better nationally. That was sort of how Jimmy Carter
did well in Iowa. Obama, Mike Huckabee won Iowa back in 2008. People forget. I know you didn't.
Not me. Not us.
Mike Huckabee. To me, watching this event showed me how that order is flipped and how now the national
narrative has completely changed the early state campaigns.
We heard about this from Democratic candidates in 2020 as well.
But this was this big cattle call event in Iowa run by a conservative activist named
Bob Vander Plaats.
Tucker Carlson moderated it.
The Blaze was their media sponsor.
I didn't hear a single Iowa specific question.
There was nothing about farm subsidies. There was nothing about ethanol. They barely even talked about abortion or gay rights or things you'd expect Christian conservatives to talk about.
Also, an abortion. Kim Reynolds signed the six-week abortion ban at the event.
And yeah, exactly. And Mike Pence tried to bring it up, and Tucker basically scoffed at him and
changed the subject. It was very intense. So instead it's Tucker asking about things like, was January 6th an insurrection?
Should electronic voting machines be trusted or banned? All this Ukraine stuff. He asked Ron
DeSantis about red tide in Florida. He also asked Asa Hutchinson if he'd been vaccinated
and whether they would pardon Julian Assange. So it was just, it was like bizarro world. In
addition to the six week abortion ban that Kim Reynolds signed, Trump is apparently now attacking her on Truth Social
because she hangs out with DeSantis too much. So it's just like, it sort of upended the way
the early states normally work in the process to me. That was my takeaway.
Oh yeah. You missed the Trump attacks, the governor of the first state to caucus
cycle last week where he just went on a tear.
He really got mad.
So DeSantis did have one comment on abortion.
And what he said was about his six week ban.
If I had a chance to do it again,
I do it every day of the week and twice on Sunday,
which is just, okay,
well there's another perfect quote to put in an ad
that will be devastating for him in the future.
We're so desperate to try to get some kind of traction. He's trying to find something he can do.
And it's ironic that it would hurt him so much in the general, that quote, because
it was seen as a subtle hit on Trump because Trump said, I don't think that was a mistake.
Like, I don't, we follow this for a living. I couldn't even follow why.
I didn't know it was a subtle, I didn't even understand that it this for a living. I couldn't even follow why to say specific words.
I didn't know it was a subtle, I didn't even understand that it was a subtle hit on Trump.
It was.
I think he was trying to duck the question because the question was, would you do a national six-week ban?
And he didn't say yes or no, but then he said that quote, which is just as bad.
Well, this is why, like, this is why Pence is like, you know, he was so indignant after.
He's like, oh, you know, the Tucker Carlson kind of had him on the ropes.
And it's like, you know, Pence is going there to try to distinguish himself on abortion. It is true that Pence is unequivocally coming out in
favor of a national ban, but they're all, they've all embraced an incredibly unpopular and extreme
position, even as they try to kind of, Trump and Haley and DeSantis all try to kind of weasel out
of any opinion on a national ban. My overall take from the whole thing is, if I were Donald Trump,
My overall take from the whole thing is if I were Donald Trump, I would probably skip most of these events and most of the debates. He can completely control his own message by holding his own rallies, his own events. He can do his own interviews with his own sycophants. He's got plenty of them. One of them was just moderating the Iowa event in Tucker Carlson. And Trump is doing that.
He's going to have a town hall
with Sean Hannity Tuesday night
in Cedar Rapids in Iowa.
So he's like,
he can still campaign
in all these early states
and spend a lot of time.
He doesn't need to be on stage
with any of these people.
Well, it's wild.
Like there's no consequences
for him skipping any of these things.
So Trump is in Florida doing this event that's just built around him,
this Talking Points USA event.
Turning points, but that's a good,
it's a good slip of the tongue.
Yep.
And this, I just-
It was not Josh Marshall's outfit.
Oh yeah, I'm surprised.
Josh Marshall's heel turn has been a real surprise.
No, but I just was struck by just how feral
the crowd has now gone at these events. It
was always bad. The CPAC crowds were always bad, but there used to be a little bit of a,
there was just a little bit of more of a positive feedback loop from the more serious people that
would either go or not go. And these people are just unleashed by these events now. This is from
the Times. At the conference, attendees could attach sticky notes to
cutouts of the Republican candidates' heads. First of all, guys, you knew what you were doing,
all right? What do you think I was going to say in those sticky notes? Freedom? A man placed one
with a homophobic slur on the face of Mike Pence. Later, it appeared to have been removed, but a
number of stickers branding Pence as a traitor for refusing to overturn the 2020 election covered his
face on a cutout of Nikki Haley, the former South Carolina governor.
One sticky note said,
woman in politics, cringe.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
TPUSA is the like dubstep strobe light,
like wannabe cool version of conservatism.
The Iowa summit was this traditional sort of white nationalists,
super boring brand of conservatism.
I think Trump also skipped it
because Bob Vander Plaats,
the guy who organizes it,
hates his guts. And I don't think he's endorsed DeSantis, but he is very anti-Trump.
Yeah.
Vocally so.
Although he would have faced a pretty friendly interviewer in Tucker Carlson, right?
Oh, absolutely. I mean, I think the better move would be to show up to that and show how tough
you are and how you can stand up to everybody.
He's just competing on a different field than these people. And the other question is,
you mean, you just talked about how the attendees at the tp usa thing were uh not so nice to some
of the other candidates these candidates like tucker carlson goes and does this the series of
interviews mike pinch shows up nikki haley shows up tim scott shows up they all show up for the
asa hutchinson showed up to the tp usa thing got heckledled. Yeah. He had a tough time in Iowa too.
But it's like, what are they all doing? Are they trying to win? Are they trying to make a point?
I don't know what all these people are doing. Well, I do think this is like, whether Trump
goes or not, the crowd is the crowd at both of these events. Tucker asks Mike Pence about Ukraine,
his position, which is probably a 60-40 position in the country, gets him nearly booed off the
stage. So the challenge for all of these candidates, Trump goes, Trump doesn't go.
These crowds are Trump's crowd wherever in Iowa, in Florida.
His interviewers, his party, his crowds.
Every once in a while you get a Bob Vander Plaats that doesn't like him, right?
That's like the exception, not the rule.
The rest of the party is his party.
Yeah.
And frankly, you know, this same event in 2015, Frank Luntz was doing the questioning
and that's where Trump made the infamous remark about John McCain and liking people that didn't
get captured. So even then the whole event became about everyone denouncing Donald Trump because of
these comments about John McCain. It didn't matter. They all still liked it better. And
poor Mike Pence, he got a raw deal here. I mean, I'm not usually a fan of the guy,
as you guys know, but it was quite clear that Tucker Carlson hates his guts. Let's listen to the exchange that everyone's talking
about with Pence and Tucker. I'm sorry, Mr. Vice President. I know you're running for president,
and yet your concern is that the Ukrainians, a country most people can't find on a map,
who've received tens of billions of U.S. tax dollars, don't have enough tanks. I think it's a fair question to ask, like, where's the concern for the United States in that?
Well, it's not my concern. Tucker, I've heard that routine from you before,
but that's not my concern. You recently met with Zelensky,
according to news reports. And I'm wondering if during that meeting, as a prominent Christian
leader, which you are in addition to your political views,
you broached the question of his treatment of Christians within Ukraine.
What I can tell you is I asked the Christian leader in Kiev if that was in fact happening, and he assured me that it was not.
Now, let me take a break here. I know we disagree on this strongly.
I would think you would have greater concern for religious liberty in Ukraine.
And I'm surprised by your answer.
I told you I raised the issue of religious liberty.
No, you spoke to one person who's clearly on one side of it.
And there are many, many news reports that are not disputed by anybody
that many clergy have been arrested.
I'm not Russian Orthodox, but you can't arrest clergy for having different views,
period. Because if you do, you violate the basic tenet of religious liberty.
Look, I won't, look, I want to be clear with you. I won't stand by it. I won't stand for it.
So Pence got booed, later tweeted that he'd been taken out of context,
and one pastor who was at the event later said his campaign is over. Why do you guys think that evangelicals and seemingly every other Republican has turned on Mike Pence?
So I just don't know that that's the case.
Like, I think Tucker Carlson, he started asking about whether January 6th was an insurrection.
He asked about electronic voting machines.
He asked like six questions in a row about NATO and Ukraine and clustering munitions and this and that.
And like, it did not go well at all.
I think the question-
Did you say that Mike Pence refused to say that January 6th was an insurrection?
Yeah, everyone was horrible.
He said, all I could say for sure is that it was no good.
Yeah.
All I could say for sure is that they almost hung me.
He said, I never used that word. Then he called it a riot. I think the question is still whether,
obviously, Pence's performance to that audience didn't go well.
I also want to be clear that I don't think Mike Pence's candidacy is going anywhere. He raised
$1.2 million in the second quarter, but he did try to start his comments at that event by talking
about Iowa's six week abortion ban and basically got cut off. And the question still remains whether
there are conservative Christian evangelicals in Iowa who want to hear about the stuff that he's
going to talk about ad nauseum at all these events going forward and whether he got tanked by Tucker
Carlson or whether the people in that room just think he's a loser with no momentum and that's
all they care about. I'll take that one. Yeah. I mean, look, odds are. But I just think Tucker
Carlson roasting you because he hates your guts at one event is it's a little too early to say he's done. I think there I think there's like a the problem though is the way Mike Pence thinks that he's gonna differentiate himself
From this group of people that don't care about policy at all is he's gonna say even though everyone on this stage is
Praising a six-week abortion ban. I'm for a six-week abortion ban and I'm for a national ban
all these other people refuse to say whether or not they're for a national ban. And just, there's just no evidence that has gained him any traction. He's been saying
it for weeks. It is his position. Uh, he, it, it just is, uh, uh, he's, he got, he's too creepy
to make that enough to, to get him over the finish line. I mean, he's not exciting. His,
his name, everyone knows who he is, his name ID, because he was vice president. So his name ID is
through the roof when they break down polls by asking, because he was vice president, so his name ID is through the roof.
When they break down polls by asking,
they do demographics, evangelicals.
Donald Trump is way in the lead with evangelicals. When they ask for, they do a specific subgroup
of Republicans whose top issue is abortion.
Donald Trump, way out in front on that issue too.
You mentioned the 1.2 million.
It is rough.
He is not qualified
for the debate stage yet.
The former vice president
of the United States
has not gotten to 40,000 donors.
He has almost full name recognition.
He cannot get 40,000 donors.
Meanwhile, as he's getting booed
at the Tucker event,
Vivek Ramaswamy says that
every other candidate in the field
besides him is indistinguishable
from Joe Biden on Ukraine
and then got a standing ovation in the room when he left. In the clip you played about Trump doing
his punditry around what was happening in Iowa, the next sentence was that he thought, he says,
DeSantis may not be in second place much longer because he refers to Ramaswamy. I think because
Trump, we and Trump consume clips in the same way, and he consumed the clips of the Iowa that showed him getting the standing of Asia.
Vivek Ramaswamy, I think, has a Tucker Carlson-like view on Ukraine that I think Tucker really
liked.
What was interesting is Nikki Haley and Tim Scott have a more Pence-like Ukraine policy,
and Tucker just didn't even come close to going after them the way he did Pence.
He hates Pence's guts.
I think the harder part was just dealing with January 6th probably for Pence than anything else.
Which I think, by the way, is at the core of why people don't like him.
Oh, for sure.
Right?
For sure.
I also think that, like, I mean, he said in an AP interview last week that he would force women to give birth to babies even when they knew the baby would have no chance of survival.
He, like, it's sociopathic. And so then the question is, what is the constituency that,
cause you're right,
you're not getting that position
in the national abortion ban
from many of these other candidates right now.
So what is the constituency
that wants that so badly
that like,
they're like,
okay,
Mike Pence is my,
is my guy.
And I just don't know.
I mean,
who knows?
There could be one,
but his bet is look,
the last couple of winners
of the Iowa caucuses on the Republican side
were Ted Cruz, Rick Santorum, Mike Huckabee.
It was just sort of the most right wing, the most religious, the most sort of fake Reagan
sounding people.
So that's his bet.
And I don't think he's going to win that bet.
But I think that's.
Well, I think he'd have a better chance at that bet if Tim Scott and Ron DeSantis weren't
in his way.
Tim Scott talks the talk really well.
He quoted like seven Bible verses, right? He knows what these people want to hear. Yeah. And look,
and Mike Pence might have more support than those two, but you got three people in that lane of
trying to get the evangelicals and that's tough. It's also, there's a group of people who are
celebrating the biggest victory they have had in half a century.
They won on abortion. They are fat and happy on abortion.
I don't think they're fat and happy at all. I think they want more. I think they want a six-week ban everywhere.
These people in that room, that's what they want.
But they are not making abortion the issue by which they are deciding to vote between these candidates at all.
There's no evidence that they view someone who is going to do a national abortion ban as a reason that they're going to come out to vote for somebody.
There's not. It's just not anywhere.
The polling John just said shows the same thing.
I think that they're mad at him because he didn't help overturn the election.
They want the interaction.
So the only Republican candidate who had a worse weekend than Mike Pence was Ron DeSantis, who's now given us 2024's first big campaign shakeup story.
He fired about a dozen mid-level staffers,
though more layoffs are expected in the coming weeks,
according to NBC News.
Everyone's campaign finance reports were released this weekend,
and DeSantis has apparently spent
almost half of the $20 million he raised,
which is quite a burn rate.
The campaign will change up its media strategy
of not talking to reporters
by having the candidate sit down with Jake Tapper this week,
because voters just need to hear more Ron DeSantis. That's what we're missing.
In the pantheon of campaign shakeup stories, this one seems relatively small to me,
but I don't know. What do you guys think? It's so minor. It's 10 staffers who do event planning.
This is nothing. And it sounds like they're also trying to get them over to a PAC, which does tell you, forget the shakeup itself, is about the weakness in their fundraising, which is they did better at the very beginning and then it trailed off.
And they clearly have some giant donors that are able to put millions of dollars into the campaign, but not in the same way, in a sustainable way, into the actual sort of small dollars they need for the campaign itself.
Yeah, I think there's, look, they spent $8 million in six weeks.
That's a lot of money to spend. They have more than a million dollars of payroll, 92 staffers. It's also a lot of staffers for a campaign early on.
It's a lot of staff for this early. canvassers in Iowa and across the country already knocking on doors. So they are basically trying to cede the entire campaign operation to the super PAC, which has some advantages,
but also a lot of disadvantages because you can't coordinate with the super PAC.
As Jeb Bush about all the disadvantages that come from not being able to control your super
PAC spending. And the Washington Post had a hilarious story about DeSantis' super PAC,
paying people like 20 bucks an hour to can to canvas for him and doing horrendous jobs.
And there's ring videos of these dudes on people's portraits,
like pissing them off.
It's great.
It's very worth reading.
So Never Back Down is also running an ad now.
It's the first ad that the super PAC is running
directly against Donald Trump in Iowa
for Trump attacking Kim Reynolds.
Let's hear the ad.
Governor Kim Reynolds is a conservative champion. She signed the heartbeat bill
and stands up for Iowans every day. So why is Donald Trump attacking her?
I opened up the governor position for Kim Reynolds and when she fell behind,
I endorsed her, did big rallies and she won. Now she wants to remain neutral. I don't invite her to events.
Trump should fight Democrats, not Republicans.
What happened to Donald Trump?
Never Back Down is responsible for the content of this advertising.
Tommy, I didn't expect the beat to drop so hard there.
Tommy, you have, you are the master of AI voices in political ads.
Oh, is that AI?
Yeah.
Couldn't you tell?
That's AI.
I'm kidding. I also just like, was that AI? Yeah. Couldn't you tell? That's AI. I'm kidding.
I also just like, there's an Iowa Republican who's paying attention right now who's like,
I like Donald Trump, but I didn't know he was capricious about loyalty and that that
mattered so much to him.
I'm shocked.
I'm shocked by this.
If you're so offended by his treatment of the governor, you probably heard about it.
I mean, this is probably just an attempt to create a little earned media off of this fake
ad.
Yeah.
I did hear Sarah Longwell talk about
how in the Iowa focus groups,
she was surprised at just the level of approval
that Kim Reynolds had with Republican voters.
Like, they love her.
They think she's the great people
who bring her up all the time.
But I do think there's a difference
between I love the governor
and, oh, I love Donald Trump,
but now that he attacked the governor,
I'm going to go vote for Ron DeSantis.
It seems, you're right, Tommy.
I think it's probably just,
it seems like a media play.
But it does just go into their,
like what happened to Donald Trump?
They're still stuck on this idea of like,
I love Donald Trump,
but something's not right the way he used to be.
It's exactly the same.
Remember early on when he did like
the Ron DeSanctimonious or the Ron DeSanctus,
you could feel like trepidation in the audience now they know it's coming they expect that they laugh
along with it like they get used to it all i mean i am guessing that if the super pack went and spent
some money on this maybe they saw something in the data that this isn't i mean it may i'm trying
to make their argument just to just for fun here but like it may speak to not just the love that
iowa republicans have for kim Kim Reynolds, but one thing that people
don't like about Donald Trump in the Republican Party, one of the few things is like, he's always
causing chaos. He's always, he's undisciplined, right? So maybe it leans into that. I don't think
it helps DeSantis necessarily, but who knows? What do you think about the shift in DeSantis'
media strategy? Like what are, what are they hoping to achieve with a sit-down with Jake Tapper?
Like, can't you just see this, what happened, right?
Like, things are going badly.
All the donors are calling Ron DeSantis.
They're calling his wife.
They're calling his top strategists.
That's getting everyone really spun up.
They have a big meeting.
They pound the table and say,
you guys are fucking up.
How are we going to fix this?
And they're like, I don't know.
Talk to the press.
Well, I do. It's funny. They pretend it was such? And they're like, I don't know. Talk to the press. Well, I do.
It's funny.
They pretend it was such a long time.
Like they don't care about elite opinion.
This doesn't matter.
We're not going to do any interviews with these people.
We're going to go right to the people.
We're going to be on the ground.
We're only going to talk to Twitter spaces.
To Twitter spaces.
And we're only going to talk to people that are kind of on our side.
And clearly that's not true.
And I do think, I was thinking about this.
And it's like every day Ron DeSantis goes out there and he gets questions. Reporters are at these, you know, public events. They grab him on the line. And every single day his questions are, why are you failing? What's wrong with your campaign? People don't like you. Are you weird? Whatever. Bad question. Bad question. And it's basically like, would you like to fight a thousand duck-sized Jake Tappappers or one jake tapper sized jake tapper yeah
you know what i'm saying it's like tapper on the rope line or tapper in the studio he's getting
tapper every single day in little bits and he can't get out of it so it's like fuck it let's
just let's just get in there i do think though it's like you got to work your way up to a sit
down with jake tapper you've faced no hard questions he's talked to he's talked to no one
challenging in so long.
You're going to start with Jake? You're going to start with a, you know, that's a tough level.
I do wonder if part of the strategy here is to pick a fight with Jake.
Yeah, that's what I would do.
You know, and then say, oh, look at me. I picked a fight with fake news CNN's Jake Tapper,
that lib over there. And now he can go tell the Republican base how tough he was
and prove that he's got the right enemies just like them.
Yeah, that's exactly what I was thinking the same thing.
I think that would actually be a smart strategy,
create a little bit of a spectacle.
But, like, come on, man.
We've got to go for Chuck Todd to meet the press.
I mean, he's got to do it.
He's not one I took on the media and they didn't applaud away.
He's not one away. He's going to do this again and again and again i mean i can't wait i listen
yeah no i'm in i'll be watching i'm in i'm in uh any other it's like it's like maybe jake will
leave some coke it's like jake's coke at the white house just getting ready for this thing
uh parody jake just kidding uh any other takeaways from the republican fields fundraising reports
to get into those numbers well the pence only getting 40 000 not getting not not being sure
he can get to 40 000 is uh pretty desperate doug bergham lent himself 10 million vivek ramaswamy
lent himself 15.25 million since entering it says he will spend 100 million first time i saw that
number my god can you imagine i didn't first of all i didn't know he was that rich i didn't know who he was really i didn't know he was uh he's gonna spend a hundred
million dollars on his on his race he's gonna be in here for a while i'm telling you there's
gonna be a state where viparama swami finishes ahead of ron de santa i don't know if you there
you just sort of put picture of all these consultants that are just sort of just siphoning
money out these people and just like attention and pick I pick pockets. What was the James Carville quote in 93?
The Ross Perot's race
was the single most expensive act of masturbation
in the history of the world.
Gonna take that record.
Vivek and Doug
are both gonna be competing for that.
Good luck, gents.
The cash on hand numbers are sort of interesting.
Tim Scott, 21 million.
My boy.
DeSantis, 12.2 million.
Tim Scott, 6.8 million.
Tim Scott, because he transferred 22 million.
Watch this space.
Watch this space.
Watch the Tim Scott space.
It turns out transferring yourself a shitload of money before you start is a great way to do it.
Trump, 17.7 million on hand, but raised more than $35 million.
Where's the rest?
Legal bills, maybe?
A 10-Z on a big pockets.
That was interesting. joe biden's
fundraising numbers look pretty great to the president's biggest political challenges have
been enthusiasm in the economy he got good news on both this week biden campaign raised more than
72 million dollars this quarter which crushes trump's 35 million dollars and together with the
dnc they have more than 77 million dollars on hand. Nearly one third of all Biden donors are new
since 2020. So that's interesting. There's also been some pretty great economic news over the
past few weeks. Inflation has now dropped to its lowest level since March of 2021.
Wages have now risen faster than inflation for the last four months in a row. Unemployment remains
at historic lows. And consumer confidence, we got a report last week, it's now the highest it's been since September of 2021.
Economists are starting to change their recession predictions, with Goldman Sachs cutting the
probability down to 20%. Let's start with the fundraising numbers. New York Times ran two
stories about Biden's numbers. One headline called it a substantial haul. Another talked about,
quote, sluggish small donations. What's your take?
So I went and looked. The Biden campaign is saying they have 394,000 donors, about a third of which are new. You go back and look at Obama at around this time in, you know, spring, early summer of
2011. He was at 480,000 donors. I like that comparison. I love that. I was like, in the
grand scheme of things, would you like Biden to be to be higher sure but you're going against someone who changed politics
in part by attracting a massive support of of small dollar of small donors so i was like oh
that's that's that's that was hopeful to me also small dollar donations are down across the board
for republicans and democrats one reason because the fucking email
and text yeah uh industrial complex are so annoying yeah and it's getting harder for people
to open emails harder for people to respond they're just not like it's down for everyone
i will pitch out again to the ether my idea for democrat plus where you can sign up and then you
never get a message and you just pay a monthly amount i don't know how it's going to work but
they're smarter people than me.
They can get on it.
Type, type, type.
Code, code, code.
You referred to them earlier as small donors.
And I really like that.
Like Danny DeVito is on our team.
They're small donors.
We bring in this week.
Carrie Strug.
Also, it's hard to compare to Obama in 2012 because the limits have changed.
So you can now donate more money thanks to an awful Supreme Court decision.
There's no limit to how much you can donate to parties and PACs.
Right, right, right, right, right.
So that makes all the comparisons impossible.
It's all apples and oranges.
And it's also hard to compare to Trump and the RNC in 2020.
They raised $105 million because Trump started in January fundraising and Biden didn't start
till April.
So it's pretty, it's just a good, it's a really good haul.
I just want to say that I've completely lost the thread on how much money you need to compete
or win. Yeah. The numbers sound big. It is so much money. Like
Clinton outspent Trump two to one and lost. Biden raised over a billion dollars in 2020.
Trump raised 774 million and Biden obviously won, but it was tight. Like clearly Biden's gonna have
a ton of money. Big donors are not holding back. They're all supporting him. He's also not trying
to raise a lot of money. He's like doing a ton of events right now.
Yeah.
So I think this hopefully augurs well for the future.
The small dollar donor stuff, I'm sure they would like more of those.
But to your point that they're down everywhere.
Yeah.
I think money is one of those things, especially now, where it's not going to guarantee a win by any means.
If you have more money, as you pointed out with Hillary and Trump.
But if you don't have it, it could be a real problem.
So I think this is this is enough. This is just like some breathing room for the Biden campaign.
I'm happy about this. It's not going to like assure that they win, but it's it's good.
And also in 2016, one of the things that the Hillary campaign would say, I think, correctly over and over again is in the end, a lot of the outside money did get behind Trump to make up some of the difference. Yeah. But the democratic outside money
was still bigger than the Republican outside money. She's like just overspent him, outspent
him big time. The crazy thing to me was Biden has only hired four staffers. Everyone else is
chilling at the DNC. Yeah. So they're frugal, which is great. I mean, this is very Joe Biden.
Like be frugal. Yes. But the point of a campaign is to spend it to
win so ultimately you're going to spend every dollar of it so i don't know doing that calculation
for smarter people spawning like field organizers and uh yeah and uh ads than uh people at the dnc
field organizing benefits from an early start but dnc is probably doing that on the economy
should biden and democrats start telling a more hopeful story about the progress we've made?
Or will that piss people off who still might be struggling to pay the bills?
I know we have debated this many times before, but it does seem like the underlying facts have changed.
Who's got to take?
You know, so James Suricki, there's been a couple of pieces that basically say some version of the data is good, the vibes are bad, right? And that is, you've just sort of seen that as a trend. And one point that he made is that there industries that play an essential role in shaping public perception, finance, tech, and the media have been going
through a much tougher time than the rest of the economy.
So that's one piece of it.
The other piece of it is if you look at the actual polling on approval of the economy,
it's at 34%, according to this AP poll that just came out.
Overall, that's 34%.
It's down to 60% among Democrats, which is pretty low.
It's 10% among Republicans.
There's a little bit of a
partisan. So consumer confidence, economic confidence, approval, all of that flows
with partisanship now, but it flows more for Republicans, right? There's just a bigger headwind
in polling around the economy because Republicans know that it is a signal to say,
I don't think the economy is doing well. But all of that isn't to say that independents aren't
giving the economy low approval rating and there isn't just a really sort of sour mood about the economy still, even,
you know, as inflation numbers are going down, unemployment numbers have stayed down. There's
just still this sort of residue of dissatisfaction. And I do think that your options are to let that
scare you away from making an argument. But if you don't do it, if you don't actually make
the argument, there's no one out there making the case. So he has to make the case. I think,
you know, we grapple with this in the early days of the financial crisis. You know, how much do
you say you're making progress versus recognize what people are going through? I think it's a
balance. I think Biden going and giving that speech about Bidenomics is a signal that they
understand that they have to shift the balance toward not declaring victory, but declaring progress and saying they're making headway and
pointing out the good numbers in the hopes that those good numbers start changing perception.
Yeah. I mean, like if economic data and feelings about the economy has now become polarized by
political party, like everything else, then you might as well deliver a message that bucks up
your side. I do think that message should be, here's how things are getting better. Here's the
rest of what I'm fighting for. Here's what the other guys are going to do
to make it worse, tax cuts for rich people. The underlying economic situation,
hopefully we're going to get a soft landing. That would be amazing. I think economists
increasingly believe that inflation was driven by pandemic, the pandemic weirdness, and the Fed rate cuts have helped
along the margins to bring down some prices. You never know if there could be a lag effect
to these Fed hikes or some unforeseen event like the SVB collapse that we all thought was going to
send the economy into a tailspin for a while. But I do think, to your point,
you have to make the case or who's going to make the case.
Yeah. I think when we were talking about this before the midterms it was really tough to tell
people inflation was in their heads when inflation was really high even though unemployment was low
so you'd have a lot of liberals online being like what are you yelling the media yeah why are you
talking about people who can't afford milk when
we have the lowest unemployment in years, you know, but like there's a disconnect and they
were really feeling inflation. Now we're actually seeing a lot of improvement in inflation itself.
And we're seeing consumer sentiment, like these surveys of consumer sentiment are higher than
any time since September of 2021. At the time before the midterms, consumer sentiment was quite
low. Right. And so now since the underlying facts have changed, I totally agree that you do need
to make a case. And it is worth trying to affect people's psychology about the broader economy
with a story about how Bidenomics is working. And notice I said is working, you know, and not
has worked, right? It's in progress. And I think, as you mentioned, Lovett, we dealt with
this all through the early years of the Obama administration. But by 2012, when he was running
for re-election, we tested that jobs chart, the famous jobs chart that showed all the jobs that
were being lost when Obama came into office, and then all the jobs that were being created. And we
tested that with focus groups. And it worked really well by 2012. And partly it's because
it was just so stark looking
at that chart and i think you know there's a there's a chart that they have now with job
growth that they've been sending around there's a chart that shows that inflation started going
down right after the inflation reduction act passed like gonna be a whole bunch of fact
checkers on that but it that's the chart it's follow behind me fact checkers we're doing better
than other countries yeah and. And I think the other
challenges, a lot of these indicators have just changed in the last, has shown real improvement
in the last month or so. And a lot of these polls are, polls are tend to be backward looking by
their nature. So I do think it's still going to be polarized bipartisanship and stuff like that
and sentiment. But I think now is the time to start making the case. One, one, I think sign that
there is like sort of room to move is Biden's approval.
If you just say economy is lower than if you say jobs and economy.
Yeah.
Which tells you that like that's just talking about inflation.
And, you know, that's the inflation.
Inflation is it always has been.
Yeah.
I do think, I mean, obviously it's going to take more than one speech or a whole series of Biden events.
Like they might need some sort of paid element or some big surrogate plan to get people out. I just to reach the people who need to hear this
message is going to take a lot of work. That's always the problem. Surrogate plan is and this
is like a very everyone in campaigns when something goes wrong, they're like, where's our
surrogates? But if it's just Joe Biden out there and the White House talking about Bidenomics,
that's one thing like the entire Democratic apparatus, Democratic people in Congress,
groups, allies, media organizations, us every right, like volunteers knocking on doors like thing like the entire democratic apparatus democratic people in congress groups allies
media organizations us every right like volunteers knocking on doors like it's really got to be
the whole party and all the party's allies out there talking about talking up the economy because
if it's just joe biden it's not gonna yeah i also do think a piece of this which is hard to measure
in data is this is also a country that's coming out of two and a half years, three years of a
pandemic that either a lot of people lost jobs, a lot of people were working from home, a lot of
people had to go to work despite it being dangerous. A lot of people saw sort of uncertainty
and confusion and changes that are still kind of playing out. There was no clean moment where
anyone was able to say, all right, we're in the recovery, we're post-pandemic. And a moment to
sort of talk
about the progress that has been made since the pandemic on the economy, like that signals a
shift I think could just have a bigger impact. I agree. Because the GOP gloom message, it goes
well beyond the economy. They're wrapping all of it into one thing. And you can tell too, I mean,
all this aside, the reason they're not just fully celebrating is because there's also potential
problems on the horizon. They have to watch out for you know gas prices the saudis could
fuck with us before the election uh student loan payments are going to happen start happening again
in september the pause on on student loans is going to end uh it could be a government shutdown
in the fall seems likely and then of course we don't know what the fed's going to do like there
could be another one more rate increase yeah war r war, Russia. And also, you know, now you sort of see some signs that wages may be going up faster than
inflation, but that doesn't make up for the months and months and months in which inflation
was higher than wages.
And people still feel that.
Maybe they'll start feeling it shifting back in the other direction.
But we're not, you know, no one would go and say, oh, this problem is solved.
We have made good progress.
There is more to do.
All right.
Before we get to my interview about no labels, there was unfortunately more news over the weekend about another potential spoiler.
At the famed polemic fart dinner we talked about on Thursday, RFK Jr. floated a completely unhinged offensive conspiracy theory that COVID was a genetically engineered bioweapon that may have been ethnically targeted to spare Jewish people and Chinese people.
You got to hear it to believe it. Here's a clip.
COVID-19, there's an argument that it is ethnically targeted.
COVID-19 attacks certain races disproportionately.
The races that are most immune to COVID-19 are because of the structure,
to COVID-19 are because of the structure, the genetic structure, or genetic differentials among different races of the receptors,
of the ACE2 receptor.
COVID-19 is targeted to attack Caucasians and black people.
The people who are most immune are Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese.
And we don't know whether it was deliberately targeted or not,
but there are papers out there that show the racial and ethnic differential
and the impact to that.
We do know that the Chinese are spending
hundreds of millions of dollars developing ethnic bio weapons and we are developing ethnic bio
weapons. That's where all those labs in the Ukraine are about. They're collecting Russian DNA,
they're collecting Chinese DNA so that we can target people by race. First of all,
where on earth did that conspiracy come from?
It's Russian disinformation.
Literally.
No, that's literally Russian disinformation about these labs in Ukraine that they started putting out in the beginning of the war.
Part of what the Russians were saying when they invaded was they needed to save all of us from these bio labs.
of all of us from these bio labs?
Look, I think there's been a lot of debate as to whether or not COVID emerged from a wet market
or some kind of government facility.
These are both red herrings.
It was from Wuhan's only delicatessen.
That is where the Jewish doctors,
which is a lot like saying ATM machine,
as well as the Asian people that conservatives claim
had their spots at Harvard stolen by black people,
got together and cooked this whole thing up.
And I, for one, think that Goivid 19...
Oh, there he is.
...is finally something that's being exposed.
And do I wish it was by someone who wasn't a crank,
who sounds like the character in a movie
who's dying in a desert
and telling someone where a treasure is?
Sure, I do.
Did you come up with Gojven 19?
No, several people texted it to me during our meeting
when I was trying to come up with what to call it.
I was trying to do something with
shiksa and i didn't land on anything that's funny too yeah i do like that i like the
cats i mean so that you know he he in response he attacks the press he said it was supposed to
be off the record and then they showed the clip and they had the clip uh he said that he doesn't
believe and never implied that the ethnic effect was deliberately engineered.
It seems fairly obvious in the clip that that's not really what happened at all.
And then he tweeted a link to a paper.
The paper he shared, by the way, which is like a study, a health study.
And it speculates that certain genetic mutations may increase COVID severity, but that they are, even if they are maybe in some ethnic group, they are extremely
rare and have no bearing on public health or the broader, or have any broader conclusion
that there are, forget about deliberately targeted, that there are ethnic groups that
because of genetic mutations are more or less immune.
It's just completely of a process.
As usual, if you like dig into all of his sort of covid vaccine conspiracies
what he does is like he takes these these studies these scientific studies and he you know
intentionally or not completely misreads them jumps to conclusion and then they get mixed in
with other complete fabricated conspiracies like the russian disinformation that you mentioned
so it's like this this stew of like there's a little bit of piece of something in a study
and then it's mixed with something crazy
and then he just says it.
R.K. Jr. is the final boss of doing his own research.
That's what it is.
It's just, you know, I'm not saying it.
Go look up the studies.
And he tweets the study and everyone's like,
well, this looks like a legitimate study.
And all his fans are like, oh.
And like, he is a good, like, it is good to,
he is a good example to point to because he is the he is the most crank like, you know, on the spectrum of flat earthers to I don't know, like kind of mainstream conservatives.
He is sort of closer now to the flat earther side.
But all of those people in this sort of misinformation swamp, your Jordans,, all those guys, like this is what they do.
They find the study,
they say they have facts and backing
and all this information,
but it's just a sort of fusillade of lies.
Well, even the referencing the study,
I think there was some reference maybe
to like Ashkenazi Jews or Sephardic Jews.
There's a cohort.
This receptor.
A million people in China died from COVID.
Clearly this wasn't genetically engineered
to protect them, right? what like it's just a it's these nesting dolls of bullshit on top of
bullshit that weaves together these conspiracy theories it's impossible to fact check it was
like what jake tapper was telling us about the piece that rfk jr wrote for rolling stone uh yeah
and some other outlet was it slate i can't remember um cherry picks piece of information
fabricates other parts and then uses language like furin cleave docking site, but has no real idea what he's talking about.
But his fans want to believe it because they're like, ah, yes, there is some big bad other out there pulling the strings and trying to control us.
And when you believe that kind of conspiracy theory, you are inevitably going to end up blaming the Jewish people because
that is what's happened for thousands of years. If you followed any like really good doctors and
researchers during the pandemic on Twitter, these poor people spent most of their time
trying to correct idiots who would read these studies and like just misread them either like
intentionally or not.'s it's tough because
like these scientific studies are like they're they're a little dense you know they're not
they're not very easy to understand all the time they're not written for twitter they're not written
for twitter right and then what happens is people on twitter idiots on twitter pick out some small
part of it out of context and they spread it around to everyone they get everyone scared and
it happens all over the place and he is the final boss of it well it's funny though because like you know john you and i especially like i
know we i know because you and i we we like we had the experience of feeling as though the way
research was being interpreted even by mainstream outlets was also confusing and misleading and
cherry picking and you and i would go back and forth like with studies but like not in the way
that like we would just read them and be like,
this is what someone else is saying.
This is what this expert is saying.
They'd be like, Tommy, don't get vaccinated.
And then we'd be like,
we got to ask Andy Slavitt about this.
Yeah, we go right to Slavitt.
Let's get Dr. Wachter on the pod.
We got to go to the source.
We got to get the raw data.
Most scientific research papers
are profoundly unsatisfying
because you don't come to
definitive conclusions.
It's like you take 10,000 of them
and then you have a body of research
that leads you in one general direction
that's mostly right.
But it's funny.
It's like there was just a week of headlines,
but it is the kind of noisy,
the noisy information environment
that also helps these people take off
because there was a week of stories
about Diet Coke causing cancer
that everyone was thrilled to tell me about
because they know I love Diet Coke
because everyone has a Freudian death drive and they're like ruining something cool for me
from my from my cold refreshed dead hands you know what i mean but you have to go in it's like no that
is an overstatement of what the study said actually no they're not saying this it's actually compared
to that and like that is that is the it's only if you're vaccinated and it's only if you're
vaccinated no this is all us talking about know, trying to debate things with rational people.
Media Matters put together
a compilation of what actual
anti-Semites and Nazis,
how they responded to
RFK Jr.'s clip.
Yeah, dark.
One neo-Nazi said,
based RFK Jr. says COVID
was genetically engineered
to spare Jews.
A hilarious thing to say
and I totally support it.
Another Holocaust denier.
RFK is 100% correct.
A neo-Nazi site.
I fully support any presidential candidate saying things like this that make Jews upset
and on and on and on and on.
So had that effect, which is just wonderful.
Terrible.
Wonderful that he's doing.
It's been a while since Camelot.
Well, then, you know, the Kennedys were out in full force on Twitter denouncing him today.
Kerry Kennedy, his sister, Joee kennedy oh what a mess little thanksgiving this will be yeah it's also
a little late what a mess yeah the the the neo-nazis quote you read i'm not going to name
him also said i don't even really understand what exactly this means but clearly the implication
so this guy's like i don't know what this guy is talking about but but I love it because it's anti-Semitic. That's how
Nazis hear what he's saying. Yeah, the perfect combination
of just ignorance and hate.
Okay, two quick housekeeping notes.
We got some new merch in the Cricut store.
If your patented Joe Biden 5-inch
inseam shorts don't have enough deep pockets
for all your stuff, check out our new
On The Go belt bag. It's a sleek
black pouch with four different
phrases on the strap you can choose from
fruity fuck bands let women run shit for a week and it's qvc he's got a product out so i just
want your keys hush money i like the one that's phone keys hush money that's the one i have and
i want you guys to know something this was placed on my desk with a card and i will tell you what
the card says it says uh john qvc this bitch during housekeeping so that's what I'm doing
I was told to do it
that's what Ari brought into the office
cool so I've done it
it's been QVC'd
head to cricket.com slash store to grab one today
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We'll be right back to talk to Rana Epting and Matt Bennett about the left-center-left alliance that's out to stop no labels from electing Donald Trump.
And we're back. A few hours from now, Democrat Joe Manchin and Republican John Huntsman will headline a town hall in New Hampshire hosted by No Labels, the third party group threatening to get on the ballot in 2024.
Joining us today are two people who represent a broad coalition of left to center left opposition to no labels plans to potentially play the role of spoiler in the next election.
Rana Epting of MoveOn and Matt Bennett of Third Way.
Rana and Matt, welcome to the pod.
Thanks.
Thank you.
So people listening know how I feel about no labels.
But let's start here.
We know that, you know, we've got a closely divided electorate.
There is a critical and potentially decisive group of voters who identify as moderate, complain about partisanship, prioritize unity, don't want a Biden Trump rematch and, you know, may like the idea of a younger moderate Democrat and a younger moderate Republican running together.
And maybe they think that ticket can win or maybe they just think it's it's worth a shot.
Matt, as someone who spent a long time at a moderate center left Democratic organization,
what do you tell those voters about a no labels ticket?
I tell them that it is an incredibly bad idea and they should stay away from it like it is the plague. First of all,
I don't have to tell you or your listeners that this is probably, we say it every cycle,
but this is the most important election of all time, particularly if Trump is the nominee,
which looks like he's going to be. And what we have to understand about what No Labels is
pitching here is that they're not offering up a protest candidate.
I mean, Jill Stein wasn't telling the world she was going to be the next president of the United
States. Ralph Nader wasn't saying that back in 2000. The last guy to say that really was Ralph
Perot in 1996, sort of, but really in 1992. And he didn't come anywhere close. He didn't win a
single state. The problem with what No Labels is offering is they say they're offering a choice between these two guys that you may not love.
But what they're offering is an illusion, an illusion that somehow their candidate is going to defy history, going to do what no one has been able to do before.
There's a guy carved into Mount Rushmore who tried to do this and he failed and they're going to win the election. And if you buy that and you and you put you give them
your vote, you might help reelect Donald Trump. And that would be a catastrophe.
So Nancy Jacobson, who's one of the No Labels co-founders, she wrote an op ed for the New
Hampshire union leader where she argued Democrats and anti-Trump Republicans are working to deny voters the chance to vote for a third
party candidate, which is particularly ironic for Democrats who talk about defending democracy
and voters' rights. Rana, what's your response to that argument? Yeah, No Labels consistently is
purporting out there that them offering a third party presidential candidate
is about giving people choice or it's about saving democracy in some way. But in fact,
it's not. It's exactly the opposite. It's as if Matt says it will definitely swing the election
towards a Republican, which is most likely Trump in this case. And if it's not, it'll be some other nominee that will be beholden to a very extreme MAGA base here.
And if they are so interested in protecting and safeguarding American democracy,
then this is not the strategy one would choose to do that. If you're so interested in doing that,
you would work to make President Biden and influence
President Biden and his agenda to be a pro-democracy agenda, which is exactly what many of us across
the Democratic coalition have been doing the last couple of years. And it's been effective. You've
seen him govern in a very bipartisan fashion, in a very moderate fashion fashion and use the leverage and the power of his office to ensure
that government delivers for people. So I just don't buy it. And I think the most generous
interpretation of no-label strategy is that they're ill-advised. But the other version is
they're not telling the truth. I'm not quite sure why they're actually running this campaign, because every strategic reason they're putting out there doesn't pass muster.
spoiling the race for Trump, spoiling the race in favor of Trump, actually just shows that they have a solid floor in the polling and that they will grow from there. So their argument is we're not
a spoiler. We can win this thing. We don't even have candidates yet. Once we get candidates,
there's enough voters who'd be interested that we could actually win this thing. Matt,
what does your polling say about that? And what's the general argument that makes you guys believe that that is dead wrong?
Well, every poll that we've seen on this, including the no labels poll, shows the exact same thing.
Either Biden is narrowly ahead in a two way race with Trump or it's basically tied within the margin of error.
That's what their poll showed. That's what the prime group poll that came out last week showed. That's what all the public polling shows. And then their poll shows that when you add a
third party candidate, in their case, it was an unnamed independent moderate. So kind of a,
you know, a pony or a unicorn or whatever you want to make of that. That candidate ends up in a
distant third place with about 20% of the vote.
That's what the prime group found.
That's what the public polling finds.
And that is going to be the high watermark because, of course, if you tell someone, would
you like to vote for someone unnamed who is an independent moderate, that sounds a lot
better than here's a person with lots of flaws who've done lots of things in their career
that you don't like.
And maybe you like Bernie and maybe you like bernie and maybe you like joe manchin and you have this fantasy in your head of what that person may
be like so the support is at a high point when you don't name the candidate it goes down from there
no label says the opposite they say it goes up from there and here's how they do it in their
poll they come in a distant third but they say okay, okay, but there's 18% of the voters undecided, and we're going to win 70% of the undecideds. That's what they say, which is insane. That has never happened.
of the Trump voters and 4.5% of the Biden voters. That is to say people who pick Trump or Biden in a three-way race a year and a half before the election. So all of that is bananas. Not a single
pollster worth their salt would ever suggest that that is possible. And that is the basis
for their entire case. It also seems like even if they won every single swing state that's competitive,
in order for a third party ticket to win the presidency, they would need to win either deep
blue states or deep red states, which is pretty impossible considering that partisans tend to vote for their party.
And if you have a state where the majority of the electorate
favors Democrats or favors Republicans,
it's very hard to win a state like that, right?
I'll just, you know, one more comment on this
and turn to Ron, but if you haven't seen it,
I beg you to look at the map that they put up,
the electoral college map.
You know, everybody can create their own maps now.
They put one out. They put their states in gold. And to your point,
the problem for them is if they win all the swing states and they win all the states decided by 10 points or less in 2020, that gets them to 187 electoral votes, which means they're way,
way short of 270. And even though that in and of itself is a fantasy, then they get
into real wish casting, like they're going to win Delaware, Joe Biden's state. They're going to win
Hawaii and Rhode Island and Illinois, states that Joe Biden won by 30 points or more. They're going
to win Alaska that Trump won by 20 points or more. So it is, if you know anything about politics,
their map is laughable on its face.
No independent analyst will even dignify it with a response because it's so crazy.
To Matt's point, he's basically something that I've been astonished by is just imagine
bringing this strategic proposal into any election room in the country, you'd be laughed out in a
second. And so I'm trying to
imagine why is this being taken so seriously? And I think the only reason is because they have
tens of millions of dollars behind them. But I think it is an ill-advised effort. It is not
strategic. Yes, we want more choice in this country. Yes, we want democracy to thrive in
this country. This is not the strategic way to do it. And the only reason this is actually a
threat is because there's some donors in a room that they've convinced this is a smart strategy,
or there are donors in a room that actually want to sway the election to Donald Trump.
Either way, this is a mess and we have to stop it.
Rana, No Label's put out a policy platform over the weekend. And of course, they've got this town hall with Huntsman and Manchin. Do you all plan on making an argument that no labels policies,
their platform and their potential candidates would be bad for the country? Or are you mainly
focused on the argument that no labels can't win? And I ask that because for voters, just telling
people, oh, if you if you vote for these candidates who
maybe you're interested in or want to give a shot, we have polling, we're experts, we have polling
that says that they're not going to win and that we're just going to throw the election to Trump.
Or do you tell them, by the way, this is what no label stands for. This is the positions they've
taken. And by the way, these are the candidates they've chosen. Well, how do you think about that?
This is the positions they've taken. And by the way, these are the candidates they've chosen.
Well, how do you think about that? I think it's both. So first of all,
on their agenda, number one is that they just made it up. They went in a room in D.C. and they created this policy agenda. It's not tied to actual real people on the ground. They don't
have a membership base. They don't have really any genuine connections to voters in this country
beyond, you know, polls developed by consultants.
So this is a fictitious agenda they've created. And once they actually, if they get to the point
where they actually name candidates, those candidates, as they have said themselves,
will develop their own agenda. Number two, if you want a bipartisan agenda that most Americans can agree on, look at President Biden's agenda. I mean,
he has passed dozens of bipartisan bills across the policy spectrum from gun violence prevention
reform to the CHIPS Act, to the PACT Act, to the bipartisan infrastructure bill. And he's leveraged
the power of his office through reconciliation to provide some of the most sweeping green jobs and climate friendly legislation that this country
will ever see that will really reconstruct the economic and build the economic infrastructure
across this country in communities that have been under under resourced for decades. So if I don't
know what what policy agenda they're going to be creating, but the one
they presented today is not based in reality. It's not based in the current Congress that this
president has and what's viable. It's not based on the number of votes that they can get in the
House or the Senate. It's just based on a wish list that right now, I think just really has no
bearing or no relevance to the to the discussion.
It also completely skips taking a position on abortion, which was one of the most important issues for voters in the midterms.
Rana, what do you make of that?
Look, abortion is one of the most, if not the most mobilizing factors in the 2022 election.
It will be one of the most mobilizing factors in the 2022 election. It will be one of the most mobilizing factors in the 2024 election.
And I think at the end of the day, we live in a two-party system. There will be two major parties
contesting for power in the presidential election. And Joe Biden has made his position clear that he
believes it should be the right of women and people that can get pregnant to decide what happens to their own
bodies. And that's the position that most Americans approve of.
Have either of your organizations done polling on the most effective argument to voters
against no labels and what they're trying to do?
We haven't done that because, to tell you the truth, this isn't a conversation happening with the broad electorate.
It is among people interested enough in politics to listen to this podcast or watch MSNBC to
some extent.
But mostly this is happening among the donor class and the people around no labels who
might end up on their ticket.
So we haven't done anything around that.
But I will say, first of all, I very much agree with everything Ronna just said. But the other thing to your question about that voter out there who says, don't tell me about the polls. I'm going to decide based on what I feel. I think it's just vitally important that we make one distinction.
Joe Biden and Donald Trump so much that you cannot bring yourself to vote for either of them.
Okay, recognize what you're doing. You're issuing a protest vote. You're voting for somebody who isn't going to be president, but you just can't stomach the two guys from the major parties.
And that's a perfectly legitimate thing to do if that is where your politics take you. However,
if you're voting for somebody because you love this agenda they put
out, not only is it fake, as Rana just pointed out, it isn't going to be the agenda of the
president because there is zero chance that person will be present. So we just have to make sure
voters understand what they're doing. So no labels keeps claiming that they don't want to be a
spoiler. They don't want Trump elected and that they will drop their plans if it looks like they'll hand the race to Trump.
Matt, do you have any idea what their criteria is for making that decision?
And when would they decide that?
So they have articulated about nine different criteria, many of them conflicting. What they
have said is, if Joe Biden is way, way out ahead,
we will not run a candidate. Now, no one's been way, way out ahead in a presidential race since
1988. So that isn't going to happen. Second thing they've said is, well, if Ron DeSantis is the
nominee of the Republican Party, we won't run. Well, that's clarifying. Then they seem to really
like Ron DeSantis and Republicans.
Third, they've said, if it doesn't look like it's happening in August of 2024, we won't run.
That's impossible because they won't control the candidate at that point. And in fact,
early voting starts in September. So their candidate's name is going to be on those ballots, whether they want it or not. But the big one they've said is they're going to do a big poll in March of next year after Super Tuesday in the Republican primary. And that poll will determine
whether they go forward or not. Now, we don't know why they would do that because spring polling is
notoriously bad. Spring polling showed Barack Obama losing in 2012. Spring polling has showed all kinds of results that did not happen. And it is especially bad with third party candidates. Ross Perot was leading the race in the spring before the 1992 election. He ended up winning zero states. So we don't understand any of those criteria.
those criteria. Rana, you were mentioning this earlier, but how much do we know about the people behind No Labels and the people funding that organization? And are those answers part of
the argument you're making to donors, political strategists, and other political nerds?
Yeah. Well, first of all, I'll say we don't know enough. But what we have found out is not that promising. It's very concerning. We know that the very notorious Harlan Crowe, the right wing donor to Supreme Court Justice ClarenceSantis have given to No Labels. And we know that there are a number of
folks that were on the more Democratic side that were associated with No Labels that are now
dropping off, either publicly or quietly. So they may not be donors, but we know members of the
Problem Solvers Caucus, this caucus of Democrats and Republicans that want to come together to do
bipartisan work over the last two years. Many of the folks associated with Problem Solvers Caucus have come out and saying, we
denounce this effort at a third party presidential ticket. This is not what we're talking about.
We're talking about creating a bipartisan governance structure. So I think all signs point to this effort is much far, much more leaning in the
Republican direction. But we are digging in to see who is behind it. And that is really important.
And if anything, all that we're finding time and time again, it's just raising more eyebrows.
And Ronna, I mean, they also endorsed Trump in 2016, I believe, right? No labels did?
I'm not sure, Matt. Is that true? Well, it depends on what you mean by endorsed. But yeah,
sort of. They held an event in New Hampshire in 2016 where they gave him, I'm not making this up,
the problem solver seal of approval. Right. That's what it was. I remember that.
Yeah. I mean, well, that raises a question.
And Ronna, you sort of got to this earlier, too.
Like, do you think these people believe what they're selling or are they actually malign actors?
OK, so I like to give people the benefit of the doubt.
That's generally my orientation in life.
my orientation life. But when you look at their polling, you look at their strategy,
you look at the facts at hand, there is no way you could deduce that their intention is truly what they're saying it is, which is to advance democracy and give voters a choice. It doesn't
add up. It makes no sense. And so it just leads me to believe there is an ulterior motive here that we don't know. And all we can surmise is that they actually are OK with swinging the election towards
Donald Trump.
So it sounds like to me they'd rather have their third party candidate and they're just
hoping they win through a wish and a prayer because the strategy isn't there.
And if they don't, they're fine with Donald Trump being president.
That's not what most folks are signing up for. And that's not what they wanted in 2020. It's not what most
voters wanted in 2022. And it sure as heck won't be what they want 2024. Matt, I want to talk a
little bit about what both your organizations are trying to do here, because I take your point that
it's too early in the process to be delivering a message to voters since, you know, they're not on
the ballot yet everywhere. Are you guys trying to shame no labels? Are you trying to get prominent
political leaders to speak out against no labels? Are there any big names who haven't yet who you'd
like to take a stand? What's what's sort of the goal of this effort? What we really need to do
ultimately is ensure that credible candidates don't agree to run
on their ballot line because we're not going to be able to separate them from their money.
They're very, very good at raising money, and they already have raised a whole bunch
of it.
And it's a free country.
If you have enough money, you can buy your way onto ballots because you can hire people
to gather petitions and do it the right way,
and they're going to be on the ballot. The only thing we can do is try to convince the people
like Joe Manchin and Larry Hogan and others who are toying with us, try to convince them that
this would be a terrible way to end a very successful political career. You don't want to go,
Joe Manchin, just remember what Joe Manchin has done. He won statewide twice in a state that voted for Trump by 39 points two times. So they went Trump by 39, Manchin, Trump by 39. That's pretty amazing.
as a Jill Stein level loser getting 3% of the vote. And that's what we really need to convince him and everybody else who's thinking about this. Even if they don't care, as Rana says,
if they're not motivated by the fact that reelecting Donald Trump would be a catastrophe,
maybe they're motivated by the fact that they will go down in history as a loser.
Well, I know Joe Manchin's a huge fan of this podcast, so hope he's listening to this episode. Rana, is there anything that people listening can do to help?
Yeah, I mean, I'm going to make a shameless plug, but you can go to moveon.org
slash no labels and sign up there. We are doing early work around educating millions of MoveOn
members across the country around what no labels is trying to do. Because I do think it's a story,
if you're not paying attention, that you could buy. I mean, you could buy this as a legitimate
third party candidate. Finally, finally, we've got a third party candidate that really can win.
But what we're telling, we're showing the data to our members. We're showing basically everything
Matt went through in terms of their strategy. It doesn't add up. So that's super important. And we'll also be calling on members of Congress and U.S.
senators to denounce this effort and doing much, much more. So folks can sign up with move on
dot org slash no labels. And that's where folks across the country can take action to stop them
in their tracks. Matt, no labels is currently on the ballot in Colorado, Alaska, Oregon, Utah,
and I think the scariest state because it's the closest, Arizona.
Where else are they getting close to getting on the ballot or, in your opinion, likely to get on the ballot?
We don't know exactly. All we know is anecdotally where someone is intercepted by a ballot signature gatherer.
But I can tell you that we know they're actively gathering in Wisconsin and Michigan and
Pennsylvania, obviously in the swing states. We know from looking at their map where they feel
like they have to win. I don't think they're going to try to get on the ballot in small,
super red states like Idaho, because they won't win there and it's whatever, three electoral votes.
But they're going to be actively trying to get on pretty much everywhere. Under the law, and remember, the laws vary by state, but under
state laws, they can do this ahead of having a nominee in 35 states. There are 15 others where
they have to have nominated someone to kind of be a political party first. But the other thing I
think to remember about what No Labels is doing is they're doing this as a 501c4 organization. And that means that they do not have to disclose their donors.
As Rana said, their donors are secret. The donors can give an unlimited amounts and they're
competing against the Democratic and Republican parties who have to disclose their donors and
their donors can only give up to $2,900. So they are gaming the system and they're doing it very effectively.
So I think they're going to be on in a lot of places. Last question for you. You work for an
organization that has for a long time tried to chart a middle path between progressives and
conservatives. Has it been hard to turn around and make an argument like, don't trust these people
when the ideological thrust of what
they're trying to do is roughly in line with what you guys have tried to do for so long?
Yeah, I mean, our middle path really isn't between the left and conservatives. It's just
kind of a center left approach. And since the right has lost its bloody mind, then, you know,
they haven't been really relevant to us in a long time. But yes, the answer is yes. One of the people that Rahana was hinting at, who has left No Labels, is a guy named Bill
Galston. He's one of the kind of intellectual forefathers of the center-left movement. He
worked very closely with President Clinton. And the people who run No labels were our allies and our friends. And it's been very difficult for us to take this public fight with them. But we think that there's nothing more important. And we are proud to be allied with people all across the spectrum who are standing up in opposition to this.
And Ronna, last question to you. And I know you're familiar with this probably because of MoveOn and the constituency that you all represent.
How concerned are you about the Cornel West third party candidacy as a potential Green Party candidate? You know, we love Cornel. We've worked with him for years. I think he's a wonderful person, good intentions.
person, good intentions. Cornell doesn't have 70 million plus dollars behind him. Cornell knows how presidential politics work. At the end of the day, he's going to do the right thing. And really,
we're really focused on no labels, third party candidate, because these guys are serious. They're
driving a very dangerous strategy for this country. They're doing a lot of damage,
even though they're not on the ticket yet or on a ballot yet. And that's where we're focused. So Rana, Matt, thank you so much
for joining Pod Save America and for the work you're doing trying to avoid this catastrophe.
So appreciate it. Thank you for having us.
Okay, quick thing before we go.
The most anticipated movie of the summer that's not about a nuclear bomb
is out this week.
Barbie.
And since everything is politics all the time,
the trailer has already caused quite a stir.
In it, a map of Barbie World
showed a nine-dotted line coming off of China.
It's eight dots in the screen.
It's eight dots. The non-dotted line is off of china it's eight dots in the screen it's a it's eight
dots yeah the non-dotted line the non-dotted line is what they claimed it is just sorry continue
you were supposed to put together this segment show the map this is your this is your responsibility
correct me leave all of this in oh that wasn't great i'm telling you right
i want to see the map anyway this go ahead let's see the map and then 8-2, but it was hard to tell if it was just from far away.
Yeah, we don't know.
So this map has prompted Republicans from Ted Cruz to Marshall Blackburn to accuse the movie of cozying up with the Communist Party of China.
So I saw the reports about the conservatives claiming that this was a communist map before I saw the map.
And they basically say that Warner Brothers has included the nine dotted line.
Tommy, can you explain what this is?
The nine dash line.
Nine dash line.
It was how China draws a map in the South China Sea where they claim to own about all of the territory, essentially.
Like a thousand miles off of their coast, they draw this dotted line to claim all this territory. And everyone else in the world, especially the Vietnamese, the Philippines,
Taiwan, Malaysia, and Brunei say, no, that's not the case. This line takes our territory and gives
it to China and violates our sovereignty. It looks like remember when Trump drew the
hurricane line further away, it actually, it looked, it just sort of like dips all the way
down. So anyway, the Conservatives claim
that they've put the nine dash line
on this map
because there's a dotted line
that leaves a cartoon map of Asia
on the screen.
But I really think it is drawn
in such a way
as to truly make it unclear
if they were trying to do it or not.
Well, there's a couple other dotted lines
on the map as well.
Is Greenland complaining
about the one that's going to Canadaada i mean the thing that's that that that's the
response or the one that seems to be going from uh i don't know columbia to is that florida there's
also no europe on this one which is what are we doing what is happening well it's not just
republicans that were mad the vietnamese said they were investigating the issue they're kind
of trying to punch back.
Are they banning the movie in Vietnam?
They're going to blur it.
They talked about banning it.
They're going to blur it, I think.
Yeah.
But like, this has happened before.
In 2019, there was an ESPN broadcast
that showed a map of China
that included the Nine Dash line.
And people were like,
why is this happening?
And obviously, Disney has a lot of movies
they want to have aired in China.
So there's all this kowtowing
to the Chinese Communist Party,
even by US media organizations that want access.
So that would be the motivation
for actually doing this.
Oh yeah.
Well, there's also, I mean,
like there was a kerfuffle over the new Top Gun movie
because they changed the back of Tom Cruise's jacket.
I saw Mission Impossible and 10 out of 10.
My Thetans loved every moment of it.
But there's a moment where they refer to this villain
that's attacking countries all over the world
and they refer to Australoasia
instead of actually referring to China, I believe.
It's a little strange.
I've never heard of.
My favorite example of this is from 2021 when John Cena
recorded an apology to the Chinese people because he referred to Taiwan as a country.
The quote was, Taiwan is the first country to watch Fast and Furious 9. That led him to record
this hostage video that I think he did in mandarin maybe yes
no he did and it was very it's very comfortable let me read you guys a quote from it i must say
right now it's very very very very very very important cena said i love and respect china
and chinese people i'm very very sorry for my mistake wow yeah so there's some real groveling
when you screw up and maybe get locked out of the Chinese market. I will say this is a very funny map to be upset about, though.
Yeah.
You guys going to see Barbie?
I have my Oppenheimer tickets.
I don't yet have my Barbie tickets.
You know, my last shot to really see a movie in the theater when Emily and Charlie were away was this weekend.
And I really hoped it was the weekend.
I just missed it by a weekend.
You should go see Mission Impossible.
I almost did, but I didn't want to support that Scientologist.
I'm going to see Oppenheimer.
I had to go to one of the theaters that had the 11-mile IMAX.
The 9-dash IMAX?
It's 70 millimeters IMAX, and the movie is so long
that the actual film is 11 miles long.
At the Chinese theater they had to like
build a bigger projector area
to show it and I just
think it's amazing
that Christopher Nolan has somehow
managed to
I'm ignoring it, has somehow managed to convince
a studio to give him like a hundred million dollars
to make a three hour biopic.
Also it's really funny, it's about obviously the creation
of the nuclear bomb.
They don't... He said all the effects are practical.
And it's like,
I'm sorry,
did you go to North Korea
and did it...
He's like,
it's all practical effects.
Did you do a nuke test?
Is that a term for not digitally?
Yeah, they didn't add...
I think they blew up some stuff,
but it's actual explosions.
I don't yet believe
Christopher Nolan
has achieved a nuclear bomb. I do not think his nuclear program has gotten far enough. I don't yet believe Christopher Nolan has achieved a nuclear
bomb. I do not think his nuclear program has gotten
far enough. I look forward to his apology
if he did. He's very, very, very,
very, very sorry.
Okay, well, I'll see Barbie. It seems fun.
I'm probably gonna wait till it's at home, though.
It does seem fun. I'm in.
Whenever I can. Alright, thanks
to Rana Epting and Matt Bennett for joining
us today. We will be on Discord Tuesday night for the Trump Town Hall.
And we'll talk to you again on Thursday.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production.
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