Pod Save America - Fear and Unity in Milwaukee
Episode Date: July 17, 2024Donald Trump's former rivals compete to see who can praise him the hardest and who can spread the most vile lies about immigration and crime, as a smiling Trump looks on from the audience. Trump's pol...lster claims Republicans have put solidly blue states like New Jersey in play, and Trump himself tries to convince RFK Jr. to endorse him by spewing nonsense about childhood vaccines in a recorded call that Kennedy's son leaked. Then, Jon, Lovett, Dan, and Tommy talk about the DNC's plan to hold a virtual roll call vote on Joe Biden's nomination as early as next week—and what that would mean for the prospects for Democratic unity. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Levitt.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
I'm Tommy Vizor.
On today's show, the Republican convention wraps up its second night
with a parade of former Trump critics and opponents bending the knee to their MAGA god.
Trump tries to get RFK Jr.'s endorsement with some anti-vax pandering in a leaked video of the two men chatting.
The Trump campaign now thinks they can put states like New Jersey and Maine in play. And the effort to convince Joe Biden to step aside appears to be
coming back to life in response to the DNC's plan to officially nominate the president as early as
next week. But let's start with day two at the Republican convention, where the theme was making
people afraid of immigrants and making former Trump opponents compete to see who could get
their head the farthest up his ass. We'll let you be the judge. Here's some of what was said by Ron
DeSantis, Vivek Ramaswamy, Ted Cruz, and Nikki Haley. My fellow Republicans, let's send Joe
Biden back to his basement and let's send Donald Trump back to the White House. If you want to make America great again, vote Trump.
God bless Donald J. Trump.
Donald Trump has my strong endorsement, period.
All right.
Under the heading of we watch the convention so you don't have to.
Did you guys see or hear anything notable from the stage tonight?
Tommy, let's start with you.
Jim Justice, the governor of West Virginia, brought his dog out.
Really?
Baby dog Justice.
Interesting that he brought the dog out the night after Kristi Noem spoke.
Yes.
Oh, you're the first person to make that joke today.
You know what?
I've been trying to fucking... It's a good dance slam.
It's a dance slam.
I've been trying to produce the show.
I didn't even know.
I didn't even know that was a fucking joke.
John, it was a good joke.
I was also reminded that Vivek Ramaswamy is a person who exists,
and he has a repellent personality.
That came out today.
Jim Justice has the kind of...
We're going all in on the Jim Justice speech analysis, huh?
It's the most interesting by far.
CNN went crazy for the dog
yes everything else was pretty boring on stage
he has the kind of demeanor
of the villain
in a Matlock episode
that's relatable
somewhere
Joe Biden gets the finger on the cultural pulse
I just want to say
I think ideology
partisanship aside the speeches
are so bad boring very boring so bad paint by numbers it's just like there it's i don't know
can people give a good speech anymore no it's like it's all recycled lines all cliches all
shit that you've heard before not like the music back in our day. They knew what rock and roll was back then.
Even like George W. Bush could give a good speech back in the day.
Nikki Haley came like maybe the closest to giving an okay speech.
Eh, is right.
You guys are out of the office.
Dan and I watched Carrie Lake.
She did a much more muted version of herself.
Everything was a little toned down you know the
the previewing that it would be less crazy this convention than the last one was has been true
so far her rhetoric is now sepia toned is what i would say yes yeah their rhetoric has been is
they're shooting the rhetoric through the gauze i mean they didn't have placards that were saying
like biden border bloodbath and uh they're you know they used the term weekend at bernie's
presidency well that's i'm talking about like as a sort of violence right like they also uh they talked about ted cruz did a whole thing
that basically said democrats purposely released undocumented immigrants who went on to commit
rape and murder because they wanted their votes so he they're all they all did the replacement
theory that's you know so that that stuff was not very toned down.
Yeah, and then also just like the,
just at least Stefanik getting up there
and talking about the Biden crime wave.
And it's like, you know,
we all know that crime has been going down
since it peaked in 2020,
but you wouldn't know it by watching it,
but it almost seems like beside the point.
I mean, it was interesting that Donald Trump
was in the arena again to
watch. Of course he was. Just sitting up there
like someone who wanted to be Roman Empire just watching
his former... He wanted to thumbs down
Ron DeSantis so hard.
He enjoys nothing more than watching people
just discredit themselves
for him. Yeah. Nikki Haley finished
speaking and he stood up and he said, give it up for Birdbrain!
Give it up for Birdbrain, everyone!
He loves it.
It is a conflict. Tiny D! Let's hear it for tiny d it's a conflict right because he enjoys
people uh uh supplicating themselves before him but he is also quite bored because he has to
pay attention so that was a struggle the most interesting moments were offstage. One was Matt Gaetz harassing Kevin McCarthy and then a
bystander harassing Matt Gaetz and calling him an asshole. And then Matt Gaetz turns and faces that
guy and goes, I don't even know who you are. And that guy's like, I don't care if you know I am,
you're an asshole. And Matt Gaetz just walks away with his sort of defeated by it, which I loved.
Good hit.
And then Rudy Giuliani got into a fight with a row of folding chairs and lost.
You see this?
He kind of just careened over a set of folding chairs and-
Thurber for the grace of God.
Well, that's, sure.
And, but I felt bad for, you see it.
Did you?
It wasn't just that he fell over.
It was how long it took them to get him back up.
And I've, ever since he told someone at Mar-a-Lago, and it was overheard by Page Six, that he feels as though he's trapped in a living nightmare, I feel bad for him. she got cheers no booze for Nikki Haley she started off by saying Donald Trump has my strong endorsement
period which you know she had obviously said before that she was voting for him it was not a
full-throated endorsement before so now she has decided to just leave it all behind just she's
back she's back she said you don't have to agree with Trump 100% of the time to vote for him
we must expand our party certainly the only speaker so far at the convention that has
said anything like that. Will anyone care? Will any swing voters tune in and hear that? What do
you think, Ted? No, I don't think they will tune in. I don't think they care. And Nikki Haley
speaking at this convention is not Hillary Clinton speaking at the 2008 convention. It's not Bernie
Sanders speaking at the 2016 convention. Nikki Haley is nothing more than a basically generic
vessel for anti-Trump Republicans. They don't care about Nikki Haley. They don't have Nikki Haley is nothing more than a basically generic vessel for anti-Trump Republicans.
Yeah.
They don't care about Nikki Haley.
They don't have Nikki Haley signs in their yard.
They don't have Nikki Haley bumper stickers.
Many of them can't pick her out of a lineup.
Many of them didn't even know she had dropped out of the race when they voted for her.
A lot of them voted after she dropped out.
It was just a protest vote.
Yeah.
The whole, the narrative, like what will happen with the Nikki Haley voters?
Like they'll probably vote for Joe Biden again like they did in 2020. We hope. Right. Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's, that's the best case.
They're still a persuasion target, but their affiliation with Nikki Haley tells you nothing
about them. Right. It's not like she has a hold on a section of the party, like a Bernie Sanders
did like a Hillary Clinton did in a way. Yeah. I think that goes to why the speeches feel so
ineffective more broadly, even that statement. Like, like, he has my strong endorsement, period, as if she's saying that in defiance of some media campaign to say that she hasn't endorsed him. Well, she hasn't, right? She hadn't actually endorsed him. It was an open question as to whether she would. She did dodge it for a long time and there's a way in which both her and and desantis
and ted cruz they're performing this version of themselves that is just so completely phony
and it leads to them with these kind of grandiose overwritten speeches that all feel pretty empty
because none because none of them are none of them are saying what they really think they're
they're they're putting on a show for uh for java yeah all i could think when i all i could think when i saw ronda sanders come out was he might be the biggest loser of the jd
vance pick in terms of people getting leapfrogged for for next up to be well and you because his
speech is just like he just he is not cut out for this he's not cut out for the for the for the for
the big stage like a bunch of lines you can tell that like some consultants or advisors
or speech writers wrote him
like, you know,
he did our enemies
don't consign their designs
to between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Right?
America can't afford
four more years of a weekend
at Bernie's presidency.
Right?
So he did that.
But he's like his voice
still with the voice
too fast, too annoying,
too yelly.
He's yelling the whole time.
He's a little sweaty.
He's just not. He doesn't have it. The one thing I thought
watching this convention is they are so
lucky that they have Donald Trump
because so far
there's not one other Republican that's taken the
stage that you're like, oh, I'm worried about that person.
That person has gravitas.
It just...
No one has it. In fairness, we left
right as Eric Schmidt started speaking.
The here to for unknown Senator from Missouri.
Not the Google guy.
Who was like, who was like, my presence on this stage is unlikely.
I'm a tall white guy from Missouri.
What are you talking about?
This spot has been held for your whole life.
It's the likeliest presence of anyone.
All right.
So another group getting speaking slots today were the Republican Senate candidates and key races.
All right. So another group getting speaking slots today were the Republican Senate candidates and key races.
We've talked a lot about Democratic Senate candidates and how they're all polling ahead of Biden.
But it also seems like the Republican Senate candidates in these swing states are polling behind Trump.
Dan, what do you think's going on there? In most cases, they are pulling behind Trump because they are thoroughly unknown.
Yeah. Right. Right. Eric,
they,
Eric Hovde is that how you say his last name in Wisconsin,
San Brown in Nevada,
David Cormac,
a little more well-known because he at least had run their Republican primary,
but they're just that he lost once already.
So they don't have any real name ID.
And so there are a couple of different ways to look at these races,
right?
You have a handful of incumbent Democrats like Sherrod Brown,
John Tester, Tim Tammy Baldwin, Bob Casey, who have independent, strong brands,
and they are running well ahead of Biden. Their coalitions look much like a traditional
Democratic coalition. They don't have Biden's same struggles with young voters or independent voters
or black voters or Latino voters, whatever else. They look like a 2020 Democrat.
or black voters or Latino voters, whatever else. They look like a 2020 Democrat.
Then you have Jackie Rosen in Nevada and Alyssa Slotkin, who is running for an open seat in Michigan, who are basically running as generic Democrats, right? Jackie Rosen, not well-known.
They are still pulling ahead of their Republican candidates, but they are pulling at about Biden's
level, right? Their top line number is in the low 40s. There is a poll out today,
which has one poll that has Slotkin up in the high 40s,
but that's the first one of something like that.
And then you have the Arizona Senate race,
which is unique because Ruben Gago,
who's not super well-known,
but he is running against Carrie Lake,
who is incredibly well-known and incredibly unpopular.
And so she's sort of functioning
as the incumbent and anti-incumbent race there.
And so there's a bunch of different things happening there.
There's reasons in some of those incumbent races to have hope for
democrats no matter what happens at the top of the ticket where you have a lesser known democrat
that's where you there could be drag if biden doesn't perform strongly in those states and you
would imagine that once the trump campaign republicans really start spending money in some
of these senate races on tv that like at least Trump's number in these states is achievable
for a lot of these Republican Senate candidates who aren't like a Carrie Lake, right? Who is well
known and crazy, but some of these were just, you know, the Republicans did a decent job getting the,
I won't, they're all, they're still pretty crazy. So they're still pretty extreme. A lot of these
Republican Senate candidates, but they didn't do a 2022.
They're more generic than they have been in the past.
And it's worth remembering that in the states that are swing states in the presidential, Joe Biden has been on TV fairly heavily and Donald Trump has not.
So tonight's theme was making America safe once again.
We're doing once. We haven't talked about this yet.
Everything is making America wealthy once again, making America safe once again, making America great once again.
I think you don't need the once. You could have gone
make America great again.
They tried that.
It was tough.
What was 2020?
Make America,
keep America great. He did roll out
make America great again.
Keep America
great again.
It was just CAag right just cag
so the tonight's theme featured a bunch of quote uh everyday americans talking about things like
immigration and crime it you know got really dark and awful how persuasive do you guys think that
was for voters beyond the maga base the ted cruz took a lot of this, right? He kept doing every damn day and then he would
tell another story of someone who was murdered by an undocumented immigrant. Tommy?
Well, it's a grisly crime stories are a feature of most Donald Trump events. I'm not totally sure
how effective they were tonight. It's worth noting just for context. I mean, in November of 2023,
there was some polling on this, I think from Gallup, that found 77% of Americans said they believe there was more crime in the US than a
year ago, including 55% who said the same about their local area. So it was a national issue in
their mind and a local issue. Now, again, since 2002, that annual poll has found that a majority
of Americans think crime is on the rise every year, even when it's
falling, usually sort of in the 60% level or not. So it's not clear to me how much of a vote driver
crime will be this year as opposed to every year. It may be that we Americans just always think
crime is a problem and on the rise. In reality, violent crime has decreased year over year,
but those statistics aren't as
lurid as the stories you were hearing out of someone like Ted Cruz. So I just, I don't know
how salient the issue is compared to a year ago or two years ago when crime really spiked.
I mean, the rubric that Donald Trump wants in this race is strong versus weak.
And that only works if people are scared, right? It's the famous Bill Clinton line about someone,
you would rather have somebody strong and wrong than right and weak.
And that works when people are scared and insecure and afraid.
So you have to gin up fear, right?
It's basically the entire reason that Fox News exists
is to scare the living shit out of people that a terrorist, an immigrant,
some other person is going to come to your community and your family is at risk
so that you will then put aside other things you may care about like higher minimum wage,
more fair tax system, access to abortion in order to vote for the candidate you think,
multiple criminal convictions to vote for the candidate that you think will keep you safe.
Fear and unity. Those are the themes.
That's actually basically-
But it is.
Fear and unity is, that is fascism like
right that's what it's unity for us and then be afraid of the people who aren't like us and to
your point minimum wage abortion those issues haven't really made an appearance yet you don't
hear about those a lot of this convention so they have done i mean it boiling it down to just
strong versus weak it also reveals like there, do you hear anyone talking about policy,
what Donald Trump's going to do,
what to do about the immigration,
broken immigration system,
what to do about inflation last night?
No, it's just like Donald Trump is strong.
He will get in there and things will be better.
We heard some build the wall chants.
Yeah, there was some talk of mass deportations, right?
Yeah, but not a lot of solutions from this crowd.
I would say watching this for two days now,
one, I want to apologize to myself for that,
but this is a party that desperately wants to win.
Oh, yeah.
They are on script.
The union thinks mostly bullshit,
but they have tempered the crazy from like a 15 to like a seven.
I don't think I've heard a single thing about the 2020 election
in any of these speeches.
Me either.
Right.
They know that is a massive vulnerability for Trump and they're not talking about it.
Like they, they want to win.
Donald Trump wants to win and stay out of jail.
And that sort of discipline is throughout the speaker line appears boring and lame as many speeches are.
They are not doing damage to the effort to elect.
Right.
Yeah.
Like I don't know necessarily that they're moving voters to their side, but you're right
that they're not doing any damage because to the extent that they're saying crazy stuff,
which they all are in their speeches, it's, it's all language and rhetoric that we've
heard before from them.
It's not anything new and extreme or new and right.
Like it's all sort of warmed over crazy.
Well, they, they feel like they're winning and it's, and that is, and that's pretty unifying.
Nothing brings a team together.
Like a feeling like they're, they're winning. There've been a bunch is and that's pretty unifying nothing brings a team together like a feeling like they're they're winning there's been a bunch of reporting from
different from different places about reporters being surprised by just the feeling of being on
the ground in milwaukee that they expected a kind of darker scarier version of republican politics
but after the assassination attempt given how poorly joe biden is performing and the fact that
uh uh the polls look so good for him in these swing states.
It's a joyous affair. They're having a fucking blast.
Well, we'll be the judge of that because we'll be there tomorrow.
Yeah, we will.
Speaking of polling, here's some interesting convention news.
Politico reported that on Tuesday afternoon,
Trump pollster Tony Fabrizio talked with the Florida delegation
about just how good the campaign thinks the map looks for them.
Fabrizio said that the Sunbelt states are locked up for Trump,
Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, North Carolina, and Florida.
But he also said that they now think Minnesota, Virginia, New Mexico,
and New Jersey are toss ups. He claimed
that the campaign might even make a play for Maine. Fabrizio also reportedly bragged that
the campaign is this competitive without having done much in the way of TV ads, which is true.
And he said, quote, Get ready. They're coming. How much of this, Dan, do you attribute to Trump
world cockiness and how much of it do you think is real? It's not Trump world cockiness.
Like there is a strain of thought
in Republican politics
that goes back to Lee Atwater,
which is you should always
look like you're winning, right?
It is a theory,
is a wisdom of crowds approach to politics.
It's why Bush sent Cheney to Hawaii in 2004, right?
To make it look like you're winning.
You're always on offense.
I do remember that.
And also claimed New Jersey was in play.
Yep.
We're always claiming New Jersey
was in play in every election.
And who knows?
I don't know if it is here or not, but it's worth remembering that Phil Murphy barely
beat a heretofore unknown truck driver, I think, new to politics in the 2021 gubernatorial race.
I don't want to like depress people or scare people, but what Tony Fabrizio was saying about
New Mexico, Maine, Virginia is showing up in private polls that Democrats are passing around
everywhere. Yeah. Yeah. We haven't talked about Martin Heinrich, who's the democratic center from
New Mexico and people associated with their, they're worried about his race because Joe Biden's
polling so poorly there. You look at all the polls, we can debate the size of the margin of these, but there is a consistent theme, which is that Biden struggles
with a certain number of groups, black and Latinos, primarily men and younger men, Republican
leading independents, the Trump Biden voters and young voters in the states that we're talking
about here are ones that over index on a lot of those groups. It's why Virginia is in play,
even though the reason that it turned democratic for Barack Obama in 2008, became a safe Democratic state years after that,
or the same reason that Joe Biden is struggling with it, because of the demographic change in
that state, which used to benefit Democrats and is now hurting us, if Biden continues to struggle
with those groups. Do you think Democrats will have to spend money to defend some of these states like New Mexico, Minnesota?
We shouldn't. I mean, if we do, it's a huge deal.
Yeah, that's what folks need to understand is there's not unlimited money out there.
You're budgeting. You're budgeting for really expensive ad spends in a lot of big major cities.
And all of a sudden, if you're putting ads on air in Washington, D.C. or the Twin Cities, that is going to impact everything else you do.
You can't, right?
I may be the only person who will remember this, but in 2012, when we were running for re-election, we knew we were going to be massively outspent by the right because it was the first pro-Citizens United presidential campaign.
And the right had raised hundreds of millions of dollars into super PACs.
We did not have that apparatus.
So we knew the Republicans would outspend the Democratic side. And so Plouffe and Axelrod and
others made the decision that we were not going to run ads in Pennsylvania, Michigan,
and Wisconsin. Because to get to 270, we had to get Ohio and Virginia. And there's no way,
the states are correlated. And so if you are losing
Pennsylvania, you're not winning Ohio. And so in order to husband our resources so that we could
compete in these states, including Florida, which was a big, important state for us, we said we were
not going to spend money in the states. And we did not do that other than one brief period of time
when we had to go up in either Michigan or Wisconsin at the very end briefly. And so if you're in the Biden land, you can't afford to be in all those
states. So you're going to have to spend all your money on the blue wall states because that seemed
and, and, and the second district in Nebraska, if you were losing Maine or Virginia or New Mexico,
you're winning nowhere. It's, um, look, ads, um, don't just fall out of a coconut tree. They exist in the context of all that came before.
But no, if we are talking about spending money
in those places,
we are talking about Senate candidates
and House candidates who are running away from Joe Biden
and trying to save themselves.
We were talking about Joe Biden
after having spent tens of million dollars in ads
that haven't seemed to change the dynamic in this race,
suddenly facing an influence of Trump money, tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars in ads that haven't seemed to change the dynamic in this race, suddenly facing an influence of Trump money, tens, if not hundreds of millions of dollars
in money from Trump's backers. There's been story after story in the past couple of days of all of
these people from Elon Musk on down deciding they're going to pour money into this race.
So, you know, if we're talking about the Biden campaign and whether or not they should be
spending in Virginia, we're talking about senators everywhere desperately trying to
save themselves and running away from the Democratic
ticket and saying how they will be a check on Trump. Like that's the world we'll be living in
in the fall. And these things sometimes change over the summer, right? A lot of these states
that are traditionally Democratic or Republican revert back to the mean as more people to do the
race, right? In that undecided pool. So we may be just like Trump may certainly outperform
his 2020 numbers in all of these states and Biden might still win all of them.
By a couple of points, yeah.
Yeah, just to be clear, I'm describing a scenario. I'm not claiming it as what's happening.
So Trump's apparently feeling confident enough that he took a crack at getting
RFK Jr. to endorse him. The two reportedly met in Milwaukee on Monday.
Trump also called Kennedy on Sunday and Kennedy took the call on speakerphone while his in-house videographer,
according to Kennedy, was rolling for something else. You can hear Trump saying on the call that
the bullet going past his ear sounded like, quote, the world's largest mosquito, that he had a nice
call with Biden, where the president asked him how he managed to duck out of the way. Trump also
asked for Kennedy's endorsement and then told Kennedy how much he agrees with him
on childhood vaccines.
Let's listen.
I said, I want to do small doses, small doses.
When you feed a baby, Bobby,
a vaccination that is like 38 different vaccines,
and it looks like it's meant for a horse,
not a 10- 10 pound or 20 pound
baby and do you ever see the size of it right there it's just massive and then you see the
baby all of a sudden starting to change radically i've seen it too many times and then you hear that
it doesn't have an impact right but you and i talked about that a long time ago
is trump like a pediatrician?
He's seen it all the time.
He watches them get the vaccines, then he watches the babies change.
You know babies, 10 pounds, 20 pounds.
Look, I've seen babies by the hog's head dealing with this kind of problem.
Metric tons of baby experiencing these kinds of problems.
So RFK Jr.'s son posted and then deleted the video with an apology.
The Biden campaign put out a statement saying the video is proof that Trump can't be trusted
to protect Americans' health care. Kennedy reportedly declined to drop out and endorse
Trump, at least for now. Trump was talking in that same video about like, maybe there's a big
job you can do, a big, like he's trying to give him a job, get an endorsement. He's trying to
do something here. Let's start with Trump's anti-vax pandering which he's also been doing in a stump speech it's not
like we needed a secretly recorded video he's out there saying i'm not giving a penny to any state
that has where schools have any kind of mandates not just mass mandates but vaccine mandates or
anything have you interpreted that to not mean covid vaccine but for all all vaccines he he said
it repeatedly he has said it repeatedly he will no vaccine mandates of any kind,
half funding for education,
get rid of the Department of Education.
That is his position. He has not
characterized it as COVID, and I don't think we should do any work
for him. If he ever sat down...
I'm mad at the situation.
Well, if he ever sat down for an interview with
a reporter that was not like a right-wing
reporter, maybe they would ask him that.
Perhaps if he had debated someone who could have brought that up at the debate we could have learned
it there too but yeah no he will not he has tried to skate over this by just making it seem like it's
covid vaccines for people like that but also nodding to and pandering to the anti-vax crowd
which is what he did here on this call with rfk dangerous obviously also kind of dumb in a general
election although i don't know what do
you guys think to just be out there doing vaccine being against all kinds of like childhood vaccine
well first of all just my reaction is like whenever you hear trump in context where he doesn't think
he's being recorded or it's for public consumption he's just like i gotta call that fucking rfk guy
what is he like oh yeah he's crazy about the vaccine so i'll just tell him the vaccine thing see if that works maybe try to get him a job
just very transactional very simple back to that speech where he was like oh see i just talked
about tax cuts and no one's clapping and then i was talking about this trend stuff and you're all
you're all clapping and applauding that used to never be like that a couple years ago i guess
i'll keep saying it right it's fucking it's just like is the most yeah it's like pure cynicism we're
losing we're losing to
a skinner box he is
actually more of a
politician yes any
politician else a
big outsider no it's
like you know you just
tell any single fucking
person exactly what they
want to hear and then
you do not deliver in
any way shape or form
that's it that's like
that is trump to his
core I think that
anti-childhood vaccine stuff
is like a marker of extremism for a lot of voters. And so it's good to do. It's also
just funny, like what it's like to work on a campaign is like the Biden folks have to put
out the same one. They want to just say it's like that shit's weird. Well, I do think like I think
like I think the reason Project 2025 took off is that it plays into something we don't often get
to play into. There is a secret recording of Donald Trump colluding with one of his opponents to try to defeat the Democrats and
to take away childhood vaccines from schools. Like, I feel like we're not making enough of the
secret leaks caught image. It looks bad. It looks sinister.
Yeah. I mean, at the end of the day, I think the Trump campaign views all of the third party
candidates as tools to help them. They're trying to get Cornel West on the ballot in various states. They are clearly colluding with RFK's campaign and having him continue to run because it helps them. I think one of someone who a top person on RFK's campaign essentially said as much in another leaked video a few weeks back, which is basically like, we're all in this to defeat Joe Biden. Now, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a narcissist with a
massive ego that wants to promote exactly these insane anti-vaccine views that we are now
discussing. So win-win for him to stick around and do Trump's bidding until the time when they
deem him no longer useful and maybe he drops out. But clearly he's angling for some sort of elevation of the issues he cares about,
some job for himself.
I mean, this is working for him.
How much do you guys think a Kennedy endorsement of Trump would matter, change the race?
I think it would matter.
I actually do.
Like the Joe Rogans of the world will not have Donald Trump on the show,
but he will have RFK Jr. and he believes and trusts Robert F. Kennedy.
RFK going on that show and endorsing Trump would be a big deal, in my opinion.
Yeah, I think that's right. I mean, Kennedy's, he had been at as high as 15% in the polling average
a few months ago. He's down 8% now. That'll probably continue to go down. But I mean,
that's four times the margin right now. Right. And there's probably some of his voters that
don't like Donald Trump, but if, you know, they're parking their votes for Kennedy and if he if he think he's telling them it's OK to be for Trump, you know, he's obviously Trump's not going to get all those people because they've already decided they don't like Trump. But get some. You only need a little, you know, and he's already ahead. the political space Donald Trump has because of the support among Republicans that he has.
Like, it is inconceivable to us that Joe Biden would call, and he shouldn't call RFK to get
his endorsement. Like, it is such an assumption that Donald Trump can say whatever he wants,
appeal to whoever he wants. Like, that, like, freedom to move is an advantage he has. And it
just, I don't know, just sucks. just sucks yeah lying is an advantage in politics for
sure right but also lying and the fealty he has of his base that just trust him yeah no matter what
he says or does all right just quickly before we go to break like we said we're going to be in
milwaukee wednesday and thursday uh and then on friday july 19th we're hopping over to madison
yeah we are uh for a live show at the orpheum Theater with co-host Aaron Haynes and guest Ben Wickler.
And on Saturday the 20th, Love It or Leave It will also be in Madison, joined by special guests Thomas Lennon, Victoria Vincent,
former Lieutenant Governor Mandela Barnes, and State Representative Francesca Hong at the Barrymore Theater.
I'm going to have four days of dairy and then I'll fly myself home.
Glad I'm not on that plane.
Glad I'm not on that plane. Glad I'm not on that plane.
Safer than a Boeing.
And more reliable.
Speaking of loose nukes.
Head to cricka.com slash events to grab tickets now.
When we come back, we'll be talking about the Biden campaign
and why the DNC is planning a virtual roll call ahead of the convention. Okay, last night we talked about whether the effort to
replace Biden was dying out. Pretty clear after today that it has not. The Times reported this
morning that Congressman Adam Schiff, the Democratic nominee for Senate in California,
just told donors at a fundraiser in New York over the weekend, quote, I think if he is our nominee, I think we lose and we may very well lose the Senate and lose our chance to take back the House.
That's according to someone who saw a transcript of the event. He also told the crowd that the Biden team isn't listening to opposing views right now. An anonymous House Democrat also told Axios, quote, the replace Biden movement is back. One member talking about this on the record
is Congressman Seth Moulton of Massachusetts, who Tommy interviewed on Pod Save the World today.
Here's what he said. Very early Sunday morning, the first phone call I got was from a colleague
who agrees with me, as the majority of Democrats in Congress do,
but like most hasn't come out and said it publicly. And he just said, what do we do?
It's even more urgent now. I mean, Trump is going to ride this assassination attempt right into the
White House. The only chance we have is a change at the top of the ticket.
Tommy, what did Seth say about what his colleagues are saying in private? And does he think more will come out or?
Yeah, I mean, I asked him, I think the question that we've all had, which was, it felt like
there was growing momentum in Congress from Democrats calling on Biden to drop out.
And I asked him if that momentum had stalled out after Saturday.
And he said, actually, no, in private,
concerns have only increased. People are even more worried that Trump is going to ride this scary assassination attempt to victory and use it for political advantage,
and that people are talking about it even more. They're just not all together right now. I think
they're all home. So this is happening on text. So I do think these efforts that we'll talk about in a minute to potentially move up the nomination vote have pissed off a lot of people. There might be some more, you know, momentum might be picking back up in terms of people coming out publicly to call on Biden to drop out.
what's the point of being in politics if you're not going to say what you think?
You know what I mean?
Like, how can you possibly say you're concerned now and sit on your hands and then wake up after election day and live with yourself?
Well, so let's talk about the development that also restarted this conversation,
which is the DNC's continued push to hold a virtual roll call vote on the nomination,
apparently as early as next week.
This is not a new plan exactly,
on the nomination, apparently as early as next week. This is not a new plan exactly. And it originally had to do with making sure the Democratic ticket appears on the ballot in
states like Ohio that have deadlines in early August before the Democratic convention. All of
this is because the Democratic convention is quite late this year. And some of these deadlines are in
early August and obviously the Democratic conventions in late August. But even though Ohio just passed a law, Republican legislature, Republican governor, to give Democrats more time to get on the ballot after their convention, the DNC is still moving forward with the virtual roll call vote, which is leading some Democrats in Congress to believe that it's all about nominating Biden as quickly as possible in an effort to end the conversation about him stepping aside. Congressman Jared
Huffman, one of the members who's been vocal about the challenges that Biden presents,
is now circulating a letter for other Democrats to sign that asked the DNC to call off the roll
call vote. We don't know how many members have signed on, but we do know that several frontline
members, including Susan Wild of Pennsylvania, Mike Levin of California, Pat Ryan of New York, plan to sign it. Huffman told the Times the DNC
forcing the roll call would be, quote, a power play of the highest order. Former DNC chairs
Donna Brazile, Howard Dean, and Terry McAuliffe sent their own letter today in favor of the DNC's
virtual roll call vote. They don't mention Biden, but argue that this is the best way to ensure the Democratic ticket is on the ballot in every state. Dan, who's right?
Both, sort of, and no one. I mean, prior to the debate, the plan that DNC was putting in place
makes sense. Even if Ohio has changed the law, you want to be extra careful because it's not
just Ohio. States like California and Washington have their ballot access certification deadlines at the outset of the Democratic convention.
20th, 22nd, 23rd or some of those states.
And there is a turnaround time between when Biden is actually nominated and you get all the signatures, notarized, et cetera, and filed appropriately.
et cetera, and filed appropriately. What has happened in previous years is you basically send a pledge to that you're going to send the real stuff and they will swap them out when you send
the real stuff, like almost an IOU for notarized signatures. That's been fine. People are very
worried that in this new world of insane MAGA election interference, they're going to try to
deny Democrats ballot access. So in a world where Biden's obviously going to be the nominee,
this is all pro forma, just do it early, get it done.
They came up with this.
And not because, not even because the concerns are like,
it's better to be safe than sorry.
Why not?
Why would you even risk it?
Belt and suspenders, right?
And then, and the timing makes sense too,
because it is a relatively complicated process to get all these people.
You have to get a majority of the delegates
to vote. Their votes have to be certified in some way, shape, or form. That takes time.
So they're going to give themselves-
Several thousand people.
It's almost 3,000 people. They give themselves time to do it. They put that plan in place,
debate happened, debate about the debate happened, and now they're proceeding with the plan as if
they were. And they're in this position that is very challenging because if you change the plan, you're acknowledging the legitimacy and possibility that
there could actually be a change at the top of the ticket, which is very hard for the DNC,
which is run by Joe Biden to do. But if you go with the old plan, you further inflame the division
within the party that has come since the debate. And so we are sort of- Which is why you get these
talking points from DNC chair, Jamie Harrison others that that sounds so bullshitty because they're only what he has decided as well.
I'm going to blame the Republicans in Ohio and say that, like, you know, even though they passed a law to say that Democrats could be on the ticket, we're going to make people believe that maybe they'll change their minds and pass another law.
You know, like it doesn't really pass the smell test.
Now, it's true that Republicans in the Ohio legislature are not the only problem here.
There could be random conservative groups that file suit.
A number of legal scholars were like, well, I don't that that doesn't that wouldn't carry really carry any water.
But, you know, we might be the same people who are in immunity.
They're letting the president do whatever they want.
So, like, yeah, people are people are a little worried about that.
But the other option here is to have the virtual roll call vote as close to the deadlines as possible and not starting next week.
Right.
Well, the thing that I have trouble wrapping my head around is, okay, so doing this next week feels like the worst possible option because it tries to silence
a debate that isn't done in a way that will be as... Yeah. And whether it's intentional or not,
that's what it does. That's what it does. And it will be, I just to attend, like, I'm just looking
at this Republican convention and the energy and enthusiasm we're seeing and imagining the kind of enervated slog that would be a democratic convention in which this debate was silenced
by procedure. I think it's just, it's not, not a very optimistic experience, but if you,
it's just a horrible, I'll see you guys in Chicago. It's just, it's what it is. I don't
know. We're, we're, we're fucking around. around it's horrible but so then it's like okay the virtual roll call can be has to be later so there can be space for
there to be this debate and the possibility of another nominee but it seems hard to imagine
that actually taking place until the convention actually begins right it's like it's just hard
to wrap your head around how you can act like jo Biden himself, whether aware or unaware of what the actual plan was, said, if if you think I shouldn't be the nominee, challenge me at the convention.
The convention is the place where everyone's in everyone's mind, broker convention, that this is where it would play out.
If the lawyers are saying that that's dangerous, it leaves everybody in a very confusing position.
That was rhetorical. No, no, I know. I know. I'm, that was not a- That was rhetorical bullshit. No, no, I know it was rhetorical. I know, I know. I'm just, I'm telling the listeners.
That was rhetorical bullshit.
The thing that I do think complicates this conversation is I'm looking at a story on
NBC News right now that's talking about the debate over whether Biden should drop out.
And here's a couple lines from it.
By the end of last week, the president and his team had settled on a strategy forward.
The five people familiar with the internal discussion said,
that strategy is described by multiple Biden aides and allies is to run out the clock. No shit, huh? And if you reduce the amount of clock outstanding,
of course, people are going to act like, okay, you're trying to rig the system.
This continues to be part of the problem coming from some of the people advising Joe Biden right
now is they seem to be so committed to being the nominee that they're willing to sacrifice being
reelected president to do so. Because let's say Joe Biden had been challenged. It had a real primary. This is the exact moment when you're
doing what the Republicans are doing, which is you're trying to unify the party. You're bringing
your opponents in the party into your coalition. It's when Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders got
together, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, right? That is how it happens. But because
Joe Biden was not officially challenged, even though 50% and sometimes more percent
of Democrats wanted a different nominee or didn't want him to run, and then he did well
in these very low turnout, non-competitive primaries against Dean Phillips and Marian
Williamson, he and his team have been operating under the illusion of party unity.
Because there had been unity before the debate, at least publicly, from all the elites in
the party, all the elected officials, all the pundits, everyone else, but the electorate was not
there. And so the process here, if Joe Biden is going to be the nominee is not just to run out
the clock, it's to unify the party behind him. So as the nominee, he can win. And this is
counterproductive to that. Yeah. I mean, I don't know. And it sounds as of now that, that they're
going forward with it. I could see them saying like, yeah, maybe we'll we'll push the final date of the voting to like. But like either way, we are running out of time. Right. And Joe Biden's strategy of running out the clock is it's it's it's going to be effective. Right. And I think the only thing like people have made their voices heard. We certainly have. According to every poll, the voters have. Democrats
have. At least half of Democrats in just about every poll, registered Democrats, want him to
step aside. A majority of Black voters, a majority of Latino voters, a majority of women voters,
majority of young voters. That is not broken through. Some members of Congress have gone
through. I think the last play here is, back to your conversation with Seth Moulton, that like if a bunch of House Democrats and Senate Democrats either go to Joe Biden or publicly talk about this or Pelosi, who there's a lot of reports has been behind the scenes wanting him to step aside.
Pelosi goes to him like there's one more play here, right, of people that Joe Biden has known for a long time and respected senators to.
He's a he was a former senator.
Go to him and make one last plea. And then if he says no, then he says no. And we're,
that's it. That's what we, everyone did what they could. But I do think for those representatives
who want this, you got to say it. And you got to do it now. And by the way, in the meantime,
I, the, like, I think everyone making clear that the DNC moving forward with a roll call vote this
quickly would be a fucking disaster.
I can't imagine something that will alienate more people that are the people that are very
nervous about Joe Biden, but are also the people that will donate and knock on doors.
They are part of the 14 million that voted for Joe Biden because there wasn't an alternative.
And by the way, would be proud to support him if he were the nominee who would feel so silenced
and pushed aside by the
decision to move ahead with a roll call vote this quickly. It's just as terrible a decision as I
could imagine. Yeah, I think it would feel sneaky. All of this is why another member of Congress I
was talking to yesterday said that's why they feel like they have basically from the day after
the Republican convention ends till like Monday or Tuesday to get a bunch of people to come out
publicly and say,
you know, you have to step aside. Cause I think members of Congress feel like they try. I mean,
Seth said this to me too. They tried to privately get a message to him after the debate that they
thought there needed to be a change and that was ineffective. So that's why all these members are
going public. Try to get a message through George Stephanopoulos, through Lester Holt,
through all those great reporters who ask questions during the NATO.
They're complex.
He keeps trying.
They took Morning Joe off the air.
They silenced Joe.
There's smoke signals.
There's polls.
They silenced Mika.
We have to do like a kind of,
to get through the inability to get,
we have to drop flyers over the White House.
Like we're trying to reach people.
Like the North Koreans.
Yes. Kamala Harris has been walking by him drinking from a coconut. flyers over the white house like we're trying to reach people like the north koreans yes
kamala harris has been walking by him drinking from a coconut
i don't know if we're gonna end this this is a this is a high note or not but one thing
not for us we noticed chris lasavita uh donald trump's senior advisor told everyone that uh for
his speech on thursday night to to buckle up because it's going to be at least an hour and a half.
An hour and a half?
I was thinking about why this is.
And here's why.
I think it's going to be an hour and a half.
Because what we're going to get...
English and Spanish.
Because I think what we're going to get
is the post-assassination attempt unity topper.
Like, I think they're just bolting...
We're getting a bolted on top and bottom and then the red meat division draft what i say back together the peachy the
peachy store up but yeah i do i do think it's gonna be we got there's no torn up speech don
trump does not start from page one he's not that kind of a worker so i think we get a new a new top
and a new bottom and the same fucking American carnage
right there in the middle.
That's my prediction.
I'm going to predict something.
A 90-minute speech is terrible.
How much time do they have with the networks?
Two hours?
Five days after Donald Trump was shot in the ear.
He could speak for 17 hours.
He could go full Castro.
He could be there all night.
Gaddafi, that shit.
Yeah, for sure.
They got to get to, you know,
modern family ruins. That's the last gasp of the... Yeah, for sure. They got to get to, you know, Modern Family Reworks.
That's the last gasp of the...
Plus, they've got to leave time for him
to read the Get Well Soon card from Melania.
Not speaking.
Again, in any other time,
I'd be like, wait, what? Not speaking.
Yeah, 90 minutes.
Here's a tip.
90-minute speeches, don't do it.
60-minute speech, don't need it. Anything past 17 is... Yeah, it's a tip. 90-minute speeches, don't do it. 60-minute speech, don't need it.
Anything past 17 is...
Yeah, it's not ideal.
Honestly, 20 minutes.
20 minutes, that's your outer perimeter.
I mean, in 1988, Bill Clinton got destroyed
for giving a 33-minute speech.
He had a 7-minute slot, though.
17-minute slot.
17-minute slot.
Anyway, that's our
show for tonight.
We will talk to you
from Milwaukee tomorrow
night.
We hope.
Yeah, we hope.
We'll see you there.
Bye.
Bye, everyone.
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