Pod Save America - “Game of Cucks.”
Episode Date: April 13, 2017Steve Bannon and pals have a bad week, Trump goes full Globalist, and still tries to hold health care hostage. Then, Obama pollster Cornell Belcher joins Jon and Dan to talk about the Democratic coali...tion, and Indivisible’s Ezra Levin talks about how you can get involved in the Tax March and Congressional Recess.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
Today on the pod we have Obama Polster, an author of the new book A Black Man in the White House, Cornell Belcher,
and the executive director of Indivisible, Ezra Levin.
First subscribed to all of our pods.
Pod Save the World.
Tommy's talking to Mark Warner this week and Colin Call about Syria.
Love it or leave it,
the juggernaut continues.
And with friends like these tomorrow,
Anna on Saturday did a live show in Pasadena
with evangelical pastor Jeff Chu.
And it was a great show.
And also she talks to Rick Wilson again this week.
So check that out.
That'll drop tomorrow, Friday.
So much happening in the Crooked Beauty empire.
There's tons happening.
It's, yeah, a lot of podcasts to listen to.
So we should probably just start by playing the game of cucks.
Who's up and who's down?
The thing we always love about Washington.
Let's go through that.
We're going to run through this rather quickly,
and we'll just do it based on who's had a great week
and who hasn't had a great week.
We'll start with who hasn't had a really great week.
And I think top of
that list is our friend Sean Spicer. Oh, Sean. Oh, Sean. Oof. So, Sean is at his briefing
on Monday. Everyone's heard this by now, I'm sure. But he delved into some off-the-cuff
Hitler comparisons, which is always...
Look, rule number one, if you're going to be a spokesperson, don't do Hitler comparisons.
It's very simple.
I don't think it's difficult to abide by.
Sean did.
He was trying to talk about Assad in Syria, although for some odd reason he calls him Ashad.
I don't know where that came from.
And he said at the White House briefing,
not even Hitler used chemical weapons.
So, you know,
when a reporter asked him to clarify because, you know,
gas chambers and all,
he said Hitler, quote,
was not using the gas on his own people
the way that Ashad was doing.
So apparently the Jewish people of Germany were not Hitler's people.
And then he continues to stumble.
And this was when I started just screaming at the TV, like, please, Sean, stop.
He said, oh, of course I realize that Hitler brought people to the Holocaust centers.
What? The Holocaust centers? course i realized that you know hitler brought people to the you know the holocaust centers what the holocaust centers you can't laugh because then you're laughing at the holocaust and that's wrong and also just i'm banking it to yourself do not name this pod gas chambers and all
i mean i'm laughing squarely at sean spicer for like, you could see the train wreck, you know, and he's like, he's just leaning into it.
You know, he just can't stop himself.
When he gets the follow-up question from Cecilia Vega from ABC, you can see he knows he's fucked up.
Like, there is legit panic in his eyes eyes and he doesn't know what to do
and now he doesn't it's like when he he just doesn't know how to get himself out of it and
there's also like at least up until later that day there's this mantra in the trump world that
you never apologize for anything so he can't admit he would just say like i misspoke so he has to quasi justify what he said
but now he knows he's in dangerous territory and i think he doesn't know what the quote-unquote
appropriate word is so he just like vomits out the term holocaust center and like that i mean i think that's also why he called them a shot aside uh
which is a great name um and i mean it's just look i do not think that proved that sean spicer
is anti-semitic but he's anti-smart i think is what it means he's's anti-smart, I think. But there were two larger problems with what he said, besides the obvious, right?
Number one, if Assad is worse than Hitler, why did the president fire a few missiles at an airfield and then call it a day?
You know, the policy of the Trump administration is to pretty much leave Assad in power.
So that seems like a fraught comparison.
Number two, the reason he did this crazy Assad-Hitler comparison is because it was floating around on right-wing conspiracy sites the day before.
So it was on Newsmax, maybe the Infowars people said.
I don't know.
All those wackos were talking about it, which means that the White House press secretary is getting all his news from these places.
Like, that to me is a pretty big problem.
I don't know why you would think that would be a problem.
But do you feel bad for Sean?
No.
I mean, I don't feel because if you take if you take the whole like Sean Spicer's decision to work for Donald Trump to support Donald Trump to allow this to happen, that is happening to our country. Like anyone who voluntarily participates in this, I don't really feel that bad for.
I think you sort of made your bed.
But, you know, if you isolated all the things that Sean Spicer has done before that moment, yes, as another human being who is just sitting there trapped like an animal and unable to get out of this awful situation that he's in.
Yeah, I guess I could say I feel bad for that.
I did want to.
I mean, I was tweeting like, stop, stop.
Please stop talking.
Run away. I mean, he did – like, I do not take this to your point that is evidence of some sort of anti-Semitism on Sean Spicer's part.
I have no reason to believe he's anti-Semitic.
I don't know him well enough to know that.
This seems just like a massive gaffe that is dramatically exacerbated by the strangely anti-semitic things that have happened
around the trump campaign the trump white house right and those things are true yeah if steve
bannon doesn't work there if they hadn't decided to put out a holocaust uh memorial statement
without mentioning the jews because the holocaust affected lots of people. Absent that, there's a context for this within the Trump administration
that exacerbates Sean's giant fuck-up, but he's still fucked up.
And so in the sense that he – I do not feel sorry for him in the sense that
he has made a decision to work for Trump and be part of this completely fucked up administration, which he knew – like he made this Faustian bargain that he's going to get famous and probably get to co-host The Five in a few years.
Right.
He's White House press secretary.
But so – but I do feel sorry for him in the sense that large swaths of the world think he is an anti-Semite because he said this.
Right.
That's unfortunate.
And he apologized.
He apologized.
Yeah, good for him.
Good for him for apologizing.
Like, you know, Washington loves a good apology.
You know, he's going to get invited to all the cocktail parties after he gets fired as press secretary.
Everyone's going to love Sean again because, you know, he's showing his remorse. So that's great. But pretty bad
week for Sean Spicer.
There is no such thing as a good week for Sean Spicer.
No such thing.
Every week gets worse.
No such thing as a good week. Another person had a bad week is Bill O'Reilly, who after
losing most of his advertisers announced he's taking a two-week
vacation. I'm sure it was long
planned and completely voluntary. What do you think?
Yeah.
I don't even know what to say about Bill O'Reilly.
Maybe if Sean Spicer gets fired,
he can just host the O'Reilly Factor.
Well, it looks like his predecessor,
Dana Perino, is filling in for
Bill O'Reilly.
So, I don't know if that's a step in the right direction.
Wonderful things happening there.
Couldn't happen to a worse person, Bill O'Reilly.
Yeah, really, really, really, really bad.
He is what Hillary Clinton would call deplorable.
Maybe irredeemable.
Two other people not having great weeks.
Carter Page and Paul Manafort.
Oh. Carter Page, man.
This guy is a true idiot.
So, Washington Post reports,
The Justice Department obtained a wiretap for the Trump campaign advisor Carter Page
based on evidence that he was operating as a Russian agent.
To get such a wiretap, you need probable cause for a court to approve.
We also found out that the FBI has basically been tracking him for years.
A Russian spy first tried to recruit Carter Page in 2013.
Man, that guy the fbi the fbi secretly recorded russian spies talking about mr page as an quote
enthusiastic idiot
you you many many people are saying that you're a communications uh pro would would, if you or one of your clients had just been caught on a FISA wiretap for espionage, would your first move to be do an interview with George Stephanopoulos on GMA, unprepared?
I'd book him on all the morning shows.
I'd say, look, in a situation like this, what you want to do is you want to go out and just speak as much as possible.
No talking points, just whatever comes to mind. I would just say whatever. I mean, you're in the middle of an
ongoing investigation, so certainly give some interviews. Definitely, definitely. You know,
he told, Stephanopoulos asked him if, you know, he's ever discussed easing sanctions on Russia
with Russians while he was part of the Trump campaign.
And his very well thought out response was, quote, let's see what the FISA transcripts say.
Referring to the transcripts of the secret surveillance that he was under.
I just, it makes me, the fact that the Russian asset might be this doofus really undermines the view of Vladimir Putin, nefarious, world-dominating puppet master who is just pulling the strings to advance Russia if the guy they have up in him is this doofus.
If the way the guy they have, I'll be able to assist do this.
Well, look, I mean, it goes to the theme of the entire Trump administration and Trump campaign, which is, you know, incompetence more than malevolence. Right. Like it's just a bunch of, you know, I think Mike Morrell said this former CIA director way back when.
It's not like Trump, you know, was secretly plotting with Vladimir Putin.
But Vladimir Putin saw Trump as a useful
idiot. And I sort of think like, I don't know, my guess is, if there are revelations about collusion,
it is sort of more caught up in Trump people thought they were making money from Russia
because they love money, and they were idiots, and they sort of got caught up with these spies,
and they're being used by this, but I don't know, Like, I sort of think it's more it's like it's a bunch of a comedy of errors that, of
course, led to horrible interference in our election and Donald Trump being president.
So not so funny.
But I think I think the story is going to be more idiots like Carter Page sort of getting
caught up in this, you know, I think useful idiots, the rapid rise and even more rapid demise of trumpism is
going to be a great title for the doris kearns goodwin book about this period in our history
agreed agreed um not to be outdone paul manafort wanted to get in on the action this week too um
we learned a couple things about manafort uh he received millions from a pro-russian ukrainian
political party off a secret ledger. This, of course,
had been reported during the campaign,
but more evidence came out that
his company was actually paid
this money, so we know that.
He now decided to register
as a foreign agent. Thanks.
He forgot earlier.
And then probably
the craziest thing. On the day
after he stepped down from the Trump campaign, Paul Manafort formed a shell corporation and took out loans worth $13 million from businesses that were all connected to Donald Trump, which is a crazy coincidence.
I read this story seven times in preparation for this pod.
Same.
And I couldn't figure it out.
I don't understand it out. And I do not understand.
I don't understand any of it.
I mean, I understand the sentence you just said,
so I'm not Sean Spicer, but I don't.
Like, why did these people lend him the money? Is it hush money for something?
Is it just he made these relationships
and they want to invest in him?
I just don't understand what any of it means like he's like a rich beyond rich consultant you know he's made plenty of money from dictators
all over the world why did he need 13 million dollars in loans what is he doing yeah i just
i just don't know none of it's good like let's be very clear this seems i don't know why it's good. Let's be very clear. I don't know why it's bad, but it seems bad.
I think Joy Reid reported yesterday that there was another source that said there was a second person who was wiretapped, connected to the Trump campaign, much like Carter Page.
Has to be Manafort, I think.
I mean, if there's someone in this whole thing that's probably going to jail, it seems like Paul Manafort is he's got to be up there.
You know, he's he seems like someone who has probably done some stuff that's wrong before, during and after his time with Trump.
Yeah. The other interesting thing I noticed in some of these stories is the Department of Justice basically said or sources within the Department of Justice said that during the campaign, they wanted to make sure they didn't get any FISA warrants to for surveillance on anyone that was with the Trump campaign.
So they waited until Carter Page left the campaign to start the surveillance on him because they were worried that if they started surveillance on anyone as part of the Trump campaign, that would look political and they didn't want to cross that line.
So I thought that was pretty interesting, too.
Yeah, that is interesting.
Well, and also, so Carter Page, Paul Manafort, you know who didn't do anything wrong that we found out this week?
Susan Rice.
What?
I thought I read on the front page of the New York Times that she had been accused of a crime by the most powerful man in the world, not named Vladimir Putin.
CNN story.
Quote, after review of the same intelligence reports brought to light by House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes,
both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have so far found no evidence that Obama administration
officials did anything unusual or illegal. Multiple sources in both parties tell CNN,
fuck you, Wall Street Journal editorial board, fuck you, National Review, Weekly Standard,
The Federalist, Fox News, all the rest of these people that for an entire week dragged susan rice through the mud
accused her of all kinds of shit crime wrongdoing called her a liar i can't man i just it is i mean
it is a truism of the world that when someone is accused of wrongdoing it's on the front page of
the paper and when they're exonerated from said wrongdoing,
it's on page D12 behind the Sears coupons.
You knew it was coming, too.
When all this stuff was happening with Susan,
I'm like, I know that two weeks from now
there's going to be a story buried somewhere
in the back of a newspaper
about how this whole thing was bullshit
because Devin Nunes was lying
and the Trump administration was lying.
And, you know, everyone just took it in face value.
I made this point about, you know, A1 versus D12 on Twitter yesterday,
and I got some aggressive responses from some members of the lamestream media.
And I don't think—it is not wrong the new york times put on the front page
that donald trump accused susan rice of a crime i don't know what and they did even though the first
headline they put out was wrong the when they fixed it quickly say without evidence
accused like if the president states accuses someone of a crime it is news like that is that's
the lesson here is not that people shouldn't write
it is that the president of the state should not accuse people of crimes right without evidence
full stop but but it's for to me it's not look i i said that my beef with the new york times thing
was and this was a very small thing like i was i wasn't sure why glenn actually used the word
crime in the interview to bait trump instead of just wrongdoing or did she do something unethical or whatever. But, you know, that's a small thing,
really. Like, you're right. The president accused him of crime. You put that in the paper. That's
a big deal. My bigger problem is with the conservative media and especially the conservative
establishment media, because, you know, we all, Infowars, Breitbart, all the real crazies,
they go on one side. But all these, like, supposed conservative intellectuals or conservative pundits, and a lot of them are never Trumpers, too.
Like, those people went all fucking in on attacking Susan Rice the other week.
And it is really gross.
And the Wall Street Journal editorial board, especially, like, the Wall Street Journal had reporting at the time that was saying she did did nothing wrong it was not unusual what she did
blah blah and then their editorial board was contradicting their own reporting in their
newspaper and just saying that like she would have had no reason to do any unmasking it's it's
really pathetic i i agree the wall street journal editorial board is terrible just i've always
thought that i still think that i will always think that it's just that all and
they're all so smarmy too like all the people the federalists and all this it's just it's gross um
anyway enough of that um the the biggest loser the biggest loser in in the game of cucks this week is
steve bannon do you feel bad do you feel bad for steve bannon, Dan? Let me read you. Yes, please.
Let me read you the lead of today's Washington Post.
When Stephen K. Bannon reported for work Wednesday, he did not act like a man who had just been publicly humiliated by his boss.
with President Trump and took a seat in the front row of the East Room for the afternoon visit of NATO Secretary General, flanked by some of the very same advisors with whom he
had been feuding.
It doesn't seem great for Stephen K. Bannon.
I thought you were going to read the part of that story that said, first of all, again,
Washington Post, we talked to Ashley Parker about this earlier in the week.
21 sources in this story.
They're trying to outdo themselves with each new story.
Including one Bannon friend who likened Bannon to a terminally ill family member who had been moved into hospice care.
That's quite a friend.
Yes.
What a great friend.
What? Yes. What a great friend. That reminds me of how people in the Clinton campaign are always described as friends of the Clintons, and then they always have the nastiest quotes about the Clintons.
Yes.
21 sources.
We are living in a time.
It's like a leak bubble that will burst one day.
bubble that will burst one day. Like, what do you think will happen when a normal person becomes president, hopefully in three and a half years, and reporters start calling around and they can
only get two sources for their story? I mean, yeah. Well, this is what happens when like,
none of these people are loyal to Donald Trump. No one's been loyal to Donald Trump
through most of his life. So it's not super surprising, you know.
most of his life. So it's not super surprising, you know. The other crazy thing in that Washington Post story is the well, this was sourced to a well-connected Republican operative,
quote, the fundamental assessment is that if they want to win the White House in 2020,
the Trumps are not going to do it the way they did in 2016, because the family brand would not
sustain the collateral damage
it would be so protectionist nationalist and backward-looking that they'd only be able to
build in oklahoma city or the ozarks man that's got to play well with the base huh
yes do you want do you watch scandal i do watch scandal so do you know the donald trump character
that they had this past season?
Yeah, I forget his name.
Where he gets caught in the end in classic Scandal fashion.
Right.
Olivia Pope secretly tapes him talking about how he was just pretending to be a racist dick so that the people in the Ozarks and Oklahoma City would like him.
Right, right, right. so that the people in the Ozarks and Oklahoma City would like him. This feels similar to that, except Donald Trump's not pretending.
Just his globalist cuck children are.
I can see that as true, too.
I mean, we'll talk about this.
The Jared and Ivanka and globalist Gary Cohn wing here,
these are like New York Manhattanites, right?
They're socialites.
They want to be on Morning Joe and invited to Davos and go to Aspen.
They like being establishment.
They want to be part of the establishment.
And so they are going to try to protect the brand that way.
That to them is going to be more important than whatever sort of revolutionary plan Steve Bannon has to tear down the administrative state and have a worldwide revolution of populists.
They don't give a shit about that.
All these stories say that getting rid of Bannon would hurt Trump with his populist nationalist base.
Do we think – I mean, it may hurt him with Breitbart and known populist and gazillionaire Rebecca Mercer.
But what – I find it hard to imagine the people wearing the MAGA hats who showed up at those rallies know or care who Steve Bannon is.
So I think, again, we focus – everyone focuses too much on personalities and not policy, which –
Well, that certainly didn't hurt us personally.
Right.
As we're going through our list of people that have had good weeks and bad weeks.
But look, I don't think it's Bannon that's going to get these people worried.
And look, there's some people in the MAGA hats who, as Trump said, he could go shoot one of his supporters and they'd still be with him.
Bill Mitchell would be one of those people.
But look, I think him deciding to move to the center on economic policy and have his economic policy run by a dude from Goldman Sachs and then sort of moderate his views on a lot of these other things.
Like, I think the Republican Party now has a working class base.
It's more than they ever have in the history of the party for a long time now.
And Trump flip-flopping on a lot of these positions and moving to the center economically.
And it's not really a center, I should say.
It's more like it's establishment, you know.
It's Goldman Sachs running the White House policy. And I think that could really hurt him.
I actually think, I mean,
I'm happy about this move, this move to the center. A, because, you know, the scariest parts
of Steve Bannon, we might not have to deal with. But B, because I think it is going to hurt him
politically, right? Like, they are now trying, just as he was trying to get the applause of the
people at those MAGA rallies, now he's trying to get the applause of the people at those MAGA rallies. Now he's trying to get the applause of the Washington establishment and the Washington establishment, they really aren't good at
politics. They don't have a great track record. So like, yeah, I know. So like, great. They're
going to start talking about them in a, in a positive way on morning Joe and like, you know,
Goldman Sachs, people are going to like them. Like, I don't think that's really going to help
them politically that much. I think that's right. Um, I don't think that's really going to help him politically that much.
I think that's right.
You said this, and we should – he's not moving to the center.
There are – in policy, there is left and there is right.
And then there are some general governing tenants that are kind of the same almost regardless of who is in the White House.
And China is one of those.
Supporting NATO is one of those. It's not really a Democratic or Republican position or conservative or liberal.
It's kind of just what – it's like the reality of governing, right?
it's like the reality of governing right you and he's reverting to some sort of normal mean on some set of issues that he probably couldn't have really broken from anyway like
we were not getting out of nato like that's not a thing that was going to happen we were not going
to put up a bunch of tariffs on china because all of those CEOs who Trump meets with every day would have
flipped the fuck out and for good reason right right and so like there's not like the every
because this has to be this you know game of cucks uh narrative about who's up who's down
is but let's not forget there's like a bunch of other horrible shit happening that that globalist
gary cone and javanka would be embarrassed to have to tell people at their manhattan parties like
there's a story in the post about the deportation force that jeff sessions is uh forming as we
speak yeah someone said this this morning tweeted this morning but um i think paul waldman did like
for all the talk about bannon the the most poisonous force in this White House right now is Jeff Sessions.
There's the deportation force.
He put out a memo the other day where he threatened to prosecute anyone who harbors undocumented immigrants.
Bringing back the war on drugs, cracking down on minor offenses made it clear
that he's not going to do anything about police abuse and basically throw away the report that
the obama administration did on you know systemic abuse and police departments uh disbanding a
forensic science commission that was there so glad you brought that up that is the craziest thing
un-fucking-believable there's a commission of scientists to make sure that when you accuse someone or when you try someone for a crime,
that the evidence is all scientific and that there aren't any wrongful convictions based on faulty science.
Why would you disband that?
The other things I find abhorrent and terrible and pretty dickish but they there is a position right the you can be against
criminal justice some of the criminal justice reform thing bipartisan justice reforms that
we worked on in the in the white house you can think wrongly but that the best way to deal with
crime is throw everyone in jail for as long as possible that is position it is not a position to be for shoddy forensic techniques that put people innocent people in jail like
that's not a position that is just i'm gonna walk or i'm just gonna be a dick like it's insane
jeff sessions is just bad he's bad you know who else is bad? Donald Trump. He is.
He's not just some vessel for either Steve Bannon or Jared and Gary Cohn and Dina Powell.
He is a bad person who is unqualified for the job doing bad things and using a Twitter account to threaten war with North Korea,
which seems concerning.
Yeah.
His sort of like diplomacy via Twitter and now his new, he's replaced sad exclamation
point with just USA at the end of all these tweets.
I don't know what that's all about, but interesting.
It's so funny.
No, I mean, look, on domestic policy, you have like Trump campaigned as this populist It's so funny. So the Export-Import Bank, which provides financing to companies that export overseas, is a favorite boogeyman of the Tea Party for years.
They said it just helps big corporations.
Trump yesterday said he liked it because he found out it helps small businesses, too.
He's now for the Export-Import Bank.
During the campaign, he said he labeled labeled China a currency manipulator because quote,
they are the greatest currency manipulators ever.
Um, this was always crazy because they hadn't devalued their currency for years.
Everyone knew that.
Um, he was just lying at the time.
And so now he finally realizes that, that they are not in fact currency manipulators.
But again, this was a more protectionist position that he took and now he's abandoned it.
Um, Janet Yellen said she was awful
as fed chairman now he respects her now he might keep her um so on all this economic stuff he's
going from campaigning as a populist which is you could argue one reason that um he won and and now
he's listening to globalist gary um and on foreign policy we're seeing that he campaigned as an
isolationist america first uh nate said nato was obsolete yesterday he said nato is no longer
obsolete and then the whole syria thing you know like he he how many times did he criticize obama
say obama should not attack syria should not get involved blah blah blah and you know he launched
his he launched his missiles by the way can we we talk about that Maria Bartiromo interview?
Oh, the chocolate cake.
The delicious chocolate cake that he was eating while telling the Chinese president that he
launched Tomahawk missiles at Iraq is what he said instead of Syria that is the best part about that interview is that he had detailed vivid
recollection of the cake but he was iffy on which country he lost them he launched the missiles at
I mean it was like the glee with which he described launching the missiles too was just very unsettling very unsettling um and maria
barromo by the way just like laughing and smiling and it that was talk about talk about softball
interviews jesus i mean she she was auditioning for either another interview or sean spicer's job
yeah well she could get it it. So the last really awful
thing that he's been doing lately that really is more of a, I don't want to say like traditional
conservative position, but certainly like the Paul Ryan position on healthcare. He's still,
he keeps saying to people he's going to do health care reform. Even though it continues to die, he keeps trying to bring it back.
So here's his latest.
Part of the Affordable Care Act includes a subsidy program that helps insurers pay medical bills for low-income customers.
Without these payments, without giving the insurers these payments, a lot of these insurance companies would pull out of the market. And that would leave millions and millions of people without
any options for an insurance company. It would raise costs for just about everyone. Costs would
go up. It would basically help melt down the insurance market. Of course, during the Obama
administration, Republicans sued and said that the administration didn't have the authority to make these payments.
That lawsuit remains in limbo right now.
So on Monday, Trump's Department of Health and Human Services said, you know what?
I think we'll probably keep the payments going because we realize it might melt down the markets.
Trump finds this out, gets ridiculously pissed, makes them retract the statement, and then
said he's using the payments
as leverage. He said, quote, I don't, he said to the Wall Street Journal, I don't want people to
get hurt. What I think should happen is the Democrats will start calling me and negotiating.
So basically Trump's position is, you know, if you don't, if you don't come to the table
and help me take away healthcare for for 24 million people i will take away
health care for 24 million people like i don't understand what this is yeah it i mean it's evil
it's horrible i don't want people to get hurt you sound like a fucking
like you're holding someone hostage that's what people who hold people hostage say. But it's also dumb.
Because why would Democrats...
I mean, what incentive would Democrats possibly have to come to the table there?
Yeah, come to the table to help me kick people off their health care.
It's basically like, I am going to light myself on fire politically
by single-handedly kicking people off insurance.
If they had passed ACHA, if you will, it would have been horrible, but it would have happened incrementally over the next months and years as they implemented it.
acts months and years whereas the as they implemented it here with one fell swoop they could do it right there with their name on it it like there is no democrats should have no political
fear over this and republicans in congress would theoretically freak the fuck out about it
theoretically yeah i mean look k Kaiser poll recently, 75%
of Americans want Trump to make the law work. And 61% said Trump and the Republicans are
responsible for any problems with the Affordable Care Act going forward, versus 31% who said they'd
blame Obama. So obviously, some people are gonna say, well, Trump's crazy base, he's just gonna
make them believe that it is the Democrats fault. Yes, of course, there are going to be some people are going to say, well, Trump's crazy base, he's just going to make them believe that it is the Democrats' fault.
Yes, of course.
There are going to be some people who that's going to work on.
It is going to be a very small minority of people.
Most people understand that the president of the United States, you know, and his party controls both houses of Congress, that if the insurance markets melt down because they didn't take a step they could easily take, then yeah, that maybe is their fault.
Yeah, this is not good.
But it's bad. I mean, I think it tells what it tells everyone is to keep the pressure up during congressional recess this week.
And, you know, we've already seen this at some of these town halls is people yelling at their representatives,
yelling at their representatives, particularly, obviously, their Republican representatives to, you know,
to not back Trump care or Ryan care or wealth care or whatever the fuck it may be now.
You're going to keep going with that wealth care thing to the very end.
You know, I just I threw it in because you never know.
You're a modern day George Lakoff. Until it's dead. When it's dead completely, it's Trump care.
When it's still alive, it's wealth care. That's how I'm going.
When it's dead, completely, it's Trump care.
When it's still alive, it's wealth care.
That's how I'm going.
And one more thing before we get to our guests today.
We should talk about the race in Kansas.
Democrat James Thompson lost by six and a half percentage points after Trump won the district by what?
20-something points?
Yeah, 20-something. 27 points, I think.
Yeah. So, here's the thing on this.
Like, I was pretty, I thought that's pretty good news that we came that close.
We were never supposed to win that seat.
It shows that, you know, if a Democrat can come that close in the reddest, reddest district, one of the reddest districts in the country, then, you know, that means that people are pretty amped on our side of the aisle and are ready to fight.
And it doesn't really necessarily predict what might happen going forward, but it should tell us, yeah, it's time to fight.
Now, there's a bunch of folks on Twitter who are just, you know, like, well, this shouldn't excite us.
We still lost.
And it's all the DCCC's fault and the DNC's fault for not paying attention to this race.
And if they had thrown more money in, then Thompson would have won.
Now, look, my reaction is like, yeah, I don't know why the DTRIP ignored this race.
I don't like, of course they should have, you know, but like, I do not
think, of course they should have helped out,
but I don't think that we
should all, this notion that we should
all hang our hopes
on the DTRIP, the
DCCC and the DNC to fix
everything, just, it's crazy
to me, you know, like, if
you're annoyed by them, if you think they're too
establishment, if you think they're ineffective, there's a million different ways to go around them and help these candidates win, you know?
Yeah, I mean, it was such an emotional rollercoaster on Tuesday night, which feels like when you and I were planning this pod, I had forgotten that Kansas happened because so much news happened basically on Wednesday.
I had forgotten that Kansas happened because so much news happened basically on Wednesday.
But at first, I had very low expectations for this.
Maybe we come close. And then you're on Twitter and Nate Cohn is saying how good the early vote is for the Democrat and you're feeling good.
And then much like other recent elections, I remember it
doesn't it doesn't end great. But then people are like, well, this is a great sign for Democrats,
because this means they're fired up. And there's been a shift against Republicans. And then
Democrats start shitting on each other. And it feels like the day after the election,
like, we can't be sad, like, it'd be better if we won winning is better than losing. Truth is,
you'd hold this seat.
This happens in special elections.
Sometimes you hold the seat temporarily.
It'd be much harder to win this in a non-special election environment in November.
But the winning would be good.
The winning would have, you know, probably a real impact on how Republicans thought about passing things like, quote, wealth care if they can't even hold candidates.
wealth care if they can't even hold Candace. There are 100 Republican districts that are less Democratic than this one. So if this were to hold through November, this sort of shift
towards Democrats, Democrats would take the House by a massive margin. I'm sort of torn.
I sort of followed the debate around the DCCC, whether they should have invested or not.
Some people were arguing – smart people who've worked the DCCC in other places but don't work there now, so I don't think they were speaking on behalf of the DCCC.
But we're saying that in a special election in a place like Kansas, it's a mistake to nationalize by having the Democratic Party come in. I'm not
sure I buy that argument. And I mean, the guy had a D by his name, he sort of, you know, it's not
you can, I don't know that they're going to sneak past people, he's a Democrat. And then the other
argument was, money is limited. So if they're going to spend a million dollars here in Kansas in what is a very long shot endeavor, there's going to be some race in a more winnable district somewhere down the line that they don't spend that money.
Yeah.
And there's some logic to that.
And I've made that – I'm in the course of defending things that the Obama political operation – and I've made that argument that you have to be strategic in your deployment of resources. I'm not sure in this case that money
is actually that limited for Democrats in the Trump environment. I mean, if John Ossoff can
raise $8 million for a special election in Georgia, it feels like we should test the
proposition that we can't raise enough money to do all the things we want to do.
I agree with that, too. I also think someone suggested, like, why doesn't the DCCC put a
poll in the field in every district, especially in a special election, just to see if, you know,
it's closer than you'd imagine from the last race. I think that's a completely fair argument,
and they should do that. I also think you're right. Like, money is, you can make a race a
big deal nationally these days easier than you ever could, right?
And OSF's a great example of that, $8 million going into that race.
So, yeah, I think there's a good argument that the DCCC should have done more, for sure.
But I just think letting your annoyance with the DCCC and the DNC, you know, make you decide that, oh, I don't want to pay attention and this isn't worth it and Democrats are awful and blah, blah, blah.
It's like if you want to give money to the race, give money to James Thompson directly.
Forget about the DCCC, you know, like we can and there's all like we're going to talk to Ezra from Indivisible.
There's Swing Left. There's all these grassroots organizations that are providing money, support, volunteers, resources to candidates all around the country.
Like, let's use them. you know, if the DCCC
isn't stepping up.
It's fine.
These organizations are not the be-all and end-all.
Yeah, I agree with that.
I mean, they play an important role.
Of course they do.
And they should, you know, do a better job.
There are other ways that you can support directly.
Just because the DCCC doesn't get involved doesn't mean you can't get involved.
Right.
These are not all powerful committees here.
But I agree that, you know, they should, maybe next time if there's a race like this, the DCCC would get involved earlier. I think that would be...
We have a Montana race coming up, in addition to Georgia on Tuesday.
That's right. And the Montana race, I think, is late May. We'll talk more about that in future episodes here.
Okay. When we return, we will have Obama pollster, Cornell Belcher.
This is Pod Save America. Stick around. There's more great show coming your way.
On today's pod, we have Obama pollster and author of the new book, A Black Man in the White House, Cornell Belcher.
Cornell, how are you?
Fantastic. Thanks for having me on your show, guys. Actually, that's not true. I'm depressed like most of Washington, both Democrats and Republicans.
We're all depressed. We're all depressed. Dark days. Tell us about the book.
You know, and thanks for bringing it up. I started working on the book actually in 2008,
you know, when we were working on the Obama campaign. I've been as part of that
fantastic polling team there.
You know, we didn't talk a lot about race in 2008, but we did look into how racial attitudes would, in fact, impact the vote and our electoral chances.
And, you know, so I started doing polling actually on my own around indexing racial attitudes.
And, Tim, I thought, frankly, over the course of Obama's presidency, we would see a lessening in racial aversion.
But, frankly, and I kept it going from 2008 right up into the primaries that just passed.
And I was really hoping to see a lessening of racial attitudes.
You'll remember there was a lot of conversation about a post-racial America after the 2008 election.
But the truth of the matter is, you know, there was a rallying point where Americans were proud.
But then we saw a bifurcation and a hardening of racial attitudes.
And we saw a rise of a group of people who felt as though they were losing their country.
And we heard the cries of take back our country was borne out of at that time.
Do you think that Trump sort of contributed to the racial polarization
more than Obama,
less than Obama's presence
on the ticket?
What are your thoughts on that?
Well, no, but I,
and I talk about this
in the book, look,
you know,
the Obama coalition,
and you cats know this,
like the Obama coalition
was unique,
you know,
but Obama coalition
took advantage of, or we as a campaign took advantage of,
the changing demographics in this country. I mean, a lot of people argue that demographics
aren't necessarily destiny. Demographics are destiny, particularly if we make them so,
right? One of the first conversations that we had within Senator Obama around a small table,
we had a conversation, and it was, you know, Senator Obama would talk about building a movement, right?
And we were going to build a movement to bring more people into the process
and make the electorate look that more like the emerging American electorate,
which, of course, is increasingly diverse.
And if you look at millennials in particular, you know,
the most diverse generation of Americans ever in our
history, and about 11% of our vote in 2008 were people new to the process, and about 6% of those
were those voters, these millennial voters, these younger voters, right? So for the first time ever
in American history, someone could lose the vast majority of the white vote while winning, right?
And it wasn't necessarily a, when you look at the numbers,
it wasn't like Barack Obama made a huge racial breakthrough
that was different from what Democrats had done before.
No, Barack Obama won while garnering 43% of the white vote,
while John Kerry lost, garnering 43% of the white vote.
And in 2012, you know, we got, what, 39% of the white vote, while John Kerry lost, garnering 43% of the white vote. And in 2012,
you know, we got, what, 39% of the white vote. So for the first time ever, because of demographic
changes, you know, we could win back-to-back majorities with a vast majority of white voters
breaking the other way. And that was, I argue in the book, a real challenge to
white political supremacy in the country in a way that it had never been before.
So the wolf was at the door with the Obama coalition, and you saw a backlash to that.
Cornell and Stan, how do you think about the rural white voters who voted for Barack Obama in 2008, 2012, but then switched to Trump in 2016?
You know, thanks for that. But I think we spend too much time on that conversation, right? And,
you know, were there Obama, Trump voters? Absolutely. But were there also Romney,
Were there also Romney-Hillary voters?
You know, absolutely.
Did Trump run up the score among blue-collar whites more so than Romney did?
Absolutely he did. But also look at the other side of that is, you know,
Trump didn't do as well with younger, better-educated whites as Mitt Romney did.
And in the end, it's almost, in the aggregate, it's almost a wash.
I mean, let me pick this for example.
You know, Trump, you know, what did Mitt Romney get in Florida, right?
He got 49% in losing.
Trump got 49% in winning.
If you go to Pennsylvania and you go to Wisconsin and you look at what Trump did, his coalition doesn't look that
much remarkably unlike from a percentage point from what Romney did, right? But it wasn't to me
about what Trump did. It was about what we Democrats failed to do. And we left a lot of
voters on the table. You know, you'll remember there's a lot of articles going into the election
talking about younger voters being disenchanted, right, in this protest vote. And they were rejecting the
binary choice of the lesser of two evils that we were trying to force them to make. And when you
look at eight or nine percent of millennials breaking third party, it's a real problem,
right? And when you look at, you know, 8-7% of
African Americans under
30 breaking
third party,
that's where the Obama coalition
dissipated,
right? To me, we're spending an awful
lot of time talking about how do we
gather more of
Trump's vote, which is a
less than a plurality vote, right,
as opposed to talking about how do we, in fact, garner and bring back together the majority of
voters who are out there, you know, this expanding, we have an expanding, you know, electorate that
is growing younger and browner and more in line with us on the issues, right?
And then we have a shrinking, increasingly older, more resistant electorate that is not
with us, right?
So from a market standpoint, if I was just running a business, where would I spend a
lot of my time and effort?
I would spend most of my time and effort at the expanding, less resistant marketplace
as opposed to the shrinking, more
resistant marketplace.
Should we do better with blue-collar white voters?
Absolutely.
Absolutely, we should.
But we better also try to cobble together back these younger voters who are not identifying
strongly with either party but did vote for Barack Obama.
Cornell, where do you think the failure was in 2016 with the, like, why was the Clinton
campaign unable to turn out the quote-unquote Obama coalition at a necessary level to win?
Look, you know, we've been all part of campaigns, and Lord knows we did a lot of things on the
Obama campaign that we took plenty of incoming for, and people call us idiots idiots about so I'm not going to beat up on the Clinton campaign living
you know for the most part they did an excellent job but but again they were
also sad up with the candidate who had incredibly high negatives right and then
you did have young people who thought that that regardless she was you asking
them to vote for lesser to evil but But I do think, and this is not just about the Hillary campaign,
I think for Democrats more broadly, look,
we have to spend more time and resources,
particularly with younger voters,
and we have to turn over and upset the apple cart
on how so many of, we run these campaigns
where we spend, what, 60%, 70% of our resources on television.
And Trump was absolutely right when he said after the election,
he was more effective in social media than the Clinton campaign was
with all their millions and millions of dollars of advertising.
And there are some studies out there that actually point to that being true.
I think there was also a miscalculation in that, you know, go six, seven months out from the campaign, from Election Day.
I think a lot of Democrats argue that, well, she doesn't have to hold the Obama coalition as tightly because certainly she's going to do better among white women, right?
Certainly, Cornell, she's going to do better among white women, right? Certainly, Cornell, she's going to do better among white women.
Well, she didn't really do better among white women because the electorate was so racially polarized.
So she actually had to hold that coalition tighter.
But it's also a problem for Democrats because, look, these younger voters,
and this is an argument I've been making, they were Obama voters, not necessarily Democratic voters.
We've got to work hard to bring them in line and keep them energized.
So I want to go back for a second to this emerging demographic majority. I think certainly
if you were running a truly national campaign, you would think there are more of our voters
than their voters, right? But in the states, do you think there's enough of these voters in states adding up to 270?
Do you think that we are in the right geographic concentrations,
like when you talk about Michigan, Ohio, some of these Midwestern states?
Do you think that within those states,
there is enough of the emerging sort of democratic coalition for us to, you know, win future elections?
In the battleground states, you know, look, the battleground states are actually where
most of the demographic sort of explosion is happening.
And we're having conversations about Georgia becoming a battleground state now, not because,
you know, because of demographic changes, right?
But look at, again, look at Florida.
I mean, to me, there's no more central battleground state, for better or worse, than Florida, right?
And Florida was actually browner, you know, this election than it was in 2012 for us, right?
If Barack Obama had won, had run in Florida this time around, you know, he would have won by a bigger margin.
order this time around, you know, he would have won by a bigger margin.
And overall, nationally, the electorate, according to Ethic Polls, were about two points browner.
So, you know, what has turned out down in some places, absolutely, particularly places like North Carolina, where it was, you know, they intentionally made it harder.
Right.
But I reject the idea that we didn't have the right electorate.
Because if you look at how younger voters made up a larger swath of the
electorate than seniors, which is different from
midterms, right? And if you look at
this electorate being two points browner,
I would argue that Barack Obama
had had this electorate, he would have
won with 52, maybe almost 53%
of the vote. And then you look
at some of these battleground states
where Hillary
won demographically the Obama coalition.
She just didn't win them by the same margin.
And it wasn't that they broke for Trump.
It was that they, you know, she's off Barack Obama's margins almost exactly the percentage that went third party.
Right.
So I think it's about cobbling together the coalition, again, and the battleground states.
Now, that's not House districts, right?
Because we know gerrymandering is real, and that's a real problem.
You have a House of Representatives that is not a representative body.
It is a fixed game, but that's different.
But from a national campaign standpoint, I think we have to spend a lot of time trying to cobble back together
this expanding, diverse, younger electorate, as opposed to trying to double down on going after,
you know, some of his 46 percent who actually bought into the argument that he was making,
right? You know, I think that the path of least resistance is actually going after these
younger voters who are on our side on the issue standpoint, but are so disenchanted with the
system and politics as usual. Interesting. So one last question, we'll let you go. You mentioned
Clinton-Romney voters. There certainly seems to be a lot of those in the 6th Congressional District of Georgia,
where there's going to be a special election on Tuesday.
John Ossoff's making a real play for it.
What are your thoughts on that race?
Well, in full transparency, you know, my company has done some work on the IE side for that.
Oh, I didn't know that.
But I think, look, first of all, you know, these are Republican districts, right?
And they're really Republican districts.
This should not be a swing district.
That it is apparently this close I think speaks to the problem.
Look, and we saw that in the special election in Kansas where it was a 20-point drop off in there.
So the Trump effect I think is real.
in there. So the Trump effect, I think, is real. And if Democrats are going to be able to pick up seats this time around, red seats this time around, I think it does look an awful lot like
these districts that they're in Georgia, where you do have a college, sort of a better educated,
more affluent white voter there. Because remember, during the campaign going into the 20th of
November, you know, a lot of people were arguing, well, she's doing better among, or he's doing affluent white voter there because remember in doing a campaign going into the 20 november you
know a lot of people were arguing well she's doing better among oh he's doing worse among
college educated white voters than typical republican candidate does right i think in the
end you know college educated white they did in fact break for him begrudgingly but you also see
in the public polling right now erosion there among the better educated, more affluent white Republican voter.
And if we can keep up the energy of our base, because you know this, look, the midterm electorate is very different from the general electorate.
They are older, more conservative, less diverse.
And that's been our problem.
That's been a large part of our problem in terms of if we can keep up the energy levels, and we see this with the marches, you know, weekly. We can keep
up the energy level and, you know, get some of these more affluent, better educated voters,
you know, to road away who are rejecting what they see in Trump. I think we have a great shot
if we have strong candidates. I think we do have a strong candidate there in Georgia.
Excellent.
Oh, we shall see on Tuesday.
Cornell, thank you so much for joining us.
We appreciate you coming on and come back again soon.
Thanks for having me.
We've got to catch up and grab a drink sometime soon and talk about old times.
For sure, for sure.
Let us know when you head to the West Coast.
Soon.
Thanks, guys.
All right, take care.
Don't go anywhere.
This is Pod Save America, and there's more on the way.
And our guest today, the executive director of Indivisible, Ezra Levin.
Ezra, welcome to the show.
Hey, great to be here. Long time, first time.
It's great to have you.
You guys are doing some great stuff out there.
Well, I appreciate it.
You're doing some pretty great stuff over there, too.
Well, thank you.
Okay, so Tuesday is the special election in the 6th Congressional District of Georgia.
What can anyone who wants to help John Ossoff, the Democratic candidate, do over the next couple days as we get into the homestretch here?
Yeah, well, so one thing I would say, you can't talk about Tuesday without reflecting on what just happened in the 4th District of Kansas.
That was my next question.
What's that?
That was my next question for you. Great. Let's do them both.
Okay, great. Well, I mean, that is a Republican plus 15 district that wins by only seven points to the Republican.
This is a district that Mike Pompeo, who is now unfortunately CIA director, won by 32
points last year.
This is an absolute disaster for Trump.
It's reminding every single member of Congress right now that, oh yeah, there are elections
next year, and oh yeah, people actually aren't in love with what Trump is doing in his first 100 days, let alone what
he's trying to accomplish over the next few months.
I think you're going to see a huge impact from that election on exactly what Congress
is doing in the weeks and months to come.
But so for what's happening in Georgia 6, you know, we're really excited about Georgia
6 for a couple reasons.
One is that there is a ton of energy there, too.
There are 19 indivisible groups spread across the three counties of Georgia 6, which is just crazy.
We started doing outreach there a month or two ago and doing coordinating calls.
So we've been doing weekly calls.
And you hear the individual stories of these groups down there, and they all have their own inspiring origin story.
One's a group of moms that formed right after the election.
They came together, 20 people in their living room, and now they've got 500 people, and they're basically building up an organization.
They've got a diversity committee doing outreach to the Latino and faith-based communities in the district, and they're doing GOTV trainings, and they're doing a whole bunch of campaign-related stuff
in addition to the advocacy work.
So here's what I would say.
If you want to get involved in Georgia 6,
you should do what everybody else in Georgia 6 is doing,
which is get together your local group.
Maybe that's an indivisible group.
Maybe that's a different group that's organizing an area.
That's fine.
But find your local group and participate.
This is an election that's going to be determined by voters, not by money, although it's nice
to hear that he's got a lot of money, too.
But money doesn't vote.
People vote.
And so whether or not this is an outcome we like the look of is going to depend on whether
people actually get up and go out and get the job done.
Ezra, talk to us about the tax march that's coming
up this weekend. Yeah, so we're excited about tax march. So we are smack dab in the middle of
congressional recess. And we call it congressional recess. It's a colloquial term. But actually,
what it's called in Congress officially is the district work period, right? And it's called
district work period because there are no votes or no hearings in D.C. People that members of Congress are expected to go back home to their home districts or home states and do district work.
That means listening to their constituents, asking about their concerns.
And we saw a lot of this going on in the February congressional recess.
That was the first one.
You know, I'm from Texas, so I love seeing this.
congressional recess. That was the first one. You know, I'm from Texas, so I love seeing this. You saw people with thick southern accents in Arkansas demanding that Senator Tom Cotton not vote to
repeal the Affordable Care Act, not vote to take away health insurance from 24 million Americans.
And we saw as a direct result of action during that congressional recess that especially quasi
moderate Republicans dropped off the bill
uh... did
uh... republicans like barbara com stocker leonard lancer represent
freeland height and there were
town halls going on during that that congressional recess in before where
people pressuring them and they change their behavior so the text much of
actually really exciting for that reason
to because
saturday april fifteen and for that reason now, too, because this Saturday, April 15th,
both in Washington, D.C., but also in 120-plus communities across the country,
there are going to be these tax marches.
And in addition to just people coming together to pressure President Trump
to release his tax returns, there are going to be town hall events
and public events with members of Congress.
And the reason why this is exciting is because, look,
I don't think Donald Trump is suddenly going to find Jesus and decide,
yeah, I am going to release my tax returns.
It's the right thing to do every president since Nixon has done it.
But what we do know is that Congress has the unilateral ability to get these tax returns.
There's legislation that's been on the books for 90 years that gives them the ability to do this.
And we know that they're responsive to their constituents because they care more about what their constituents think of them than anything that Donald Trump has tried to get done.
So the April 15 tax march is a real opportunity for constituents across the country to say, hey, member of Congress, you've got the ability to actually get these tax returns.
You need to use it.
And we've already seen,
actually, in this recess, that working. There's a story out of Florida. Representative Yoho,
who is not any kind of moderate Republican, conservative Republican, but he talked to a
local Indivisible member, and that Indivisible member changed his mind. He announced, yeah,
he wants to see Donald Trump's tax returns, too. Just today, actually, there was a
poll released. It was a global strategy
group and move on, issued a
poll, found that 80%
of Americans want Donald Trump to release his
tax returns, including 64%
of Republicans. This is not a partisan issue.
It's not just about
taxes, either, is what I would say. Taxes are boring.
You know, I did progressive tax
policy work and
did long for reports i understand that not everybody gets his jazz stuff about it as i do
but this isn't just about taxes it's it's international intrigue it deals with transparency
and ethics it's you know i don't know whether or not donald trump is engaging in white steel cover
up of his business dealings and his entanglements with Russia and other foreign dictators. But we do know that if we get his tax returns, which Congress can do, we can find out.
So I think that's why you see so much interest out there. And you're going to just see thousands
of people across the country finding these tax marches and participating. And just to give a
plug, you can go to IndivisibleGuide.com, type in your zip code, and find one of these tax marches,
or just go to TaxMarch..org and you can do the same.
Is part of the message of these tax marches also going to involve Trump's push for tax reform that's going to happen in the next couple of weeks?
Because I think, I mean, health care reform, as we saw for Trump and the Republicans, was about cutting taxes for rich people.
Tax reform is going to be about cutting taxes for rich people and also increasing the deficit
because they don't seem like they want to pay for it.
It seems like it's a pretty fruitful message to go along with.
You know, a lot of Trump's policy on taxes is going to benefit Trump.
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
No, absolutely.
And look, you say that Trump care was about taxes, that they're gearing up in a lot of ways to cut taxes for rich people.
It really seems like just about everything they're doing is ultimately what they would like to get done,
what Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell would really like to do, is just cut taxes for rich people.
That's their number one goal.
And so, yes, they were focusing on the Affordable Care Act because they had promised it to their base,
but fundamentally what they would like to do is just allow rich people to pay a lot less.
I think their plans for, quote-unquote, tax reform are no different.
When they talk about tax reform, what they're actually talking about is they really like millionaires and billionaires
to get a little bit of relief because their lives are just so darn hard right now.
They really need some support.
You know, what we see is that there's absolutely, well, I wouldn't say zero support,
but there's almost zero support for that kind of, quote-unquote, reform.
People do not think that millionaires and billionaires have it too hard right now.
And so, yeah, I think one of the messages coming out of these tax marches is,
look, we don't know how much Donald Trump
is trying to save himself when he tries to get behind some of these tax reform plans.
And we certainly don't want to see the social safety net programs and programs that support
the poor, the sick, the young, the old, the people that depend on public education, everybody
who depends on the services that the federal government provides.
We don't want to see those cut at the same time as you're cutting the tax.
The tax is for the uber-wealthy.
It makes no sense, and it's got no support.
So you'll see pushback during the tax march on that, too.
Ezra, thank you for coming on the pod.
Everyone go to Indivisibleguide.com,
form your own Indivisible group, find out where your local tax march is, and go get involved.
Thanks so much. We'll see you out there. Thanks, Ezra. Take care.
That's our pod for today. We'll talk to you soon.
Bye, guys.
Talk about Love It or Leave It?
No.
No.
Are you sure? What if right now the Love It or Leave It music
is starting through
the magic of podcasting?
Do you think maybe
that was funny
the first couple times
and now it's not as funny?
I don't care.
We plugged it
at the top of the show,
Love It.
And now we're doing it again.
Every time.
Who's on Love It or Leave It
this week?
Yeah, who is on Love It or Leave It?
I didn't know that.
Oh, see, now there are questions.
We have Rhea Butcher,
Mike Schur,
Zubin Parang. It's a great panel. People should subscribe.
Okay. We'll talk to everyone later. Bye.