Pod Save America - How Kamala Beats Trump (Final Ep.)
Episode Date: August 18, 2024On the final episode of this season of The Wilderness, Jon is joined by UCLA political scientist Lynn Vavreck and senior Harris campaign advisor David Plouffe. Lynn and Jon discuss why, despite all of... this election's wild changes, Lynn is still expecting a close outcome in November and then David Plouffe sits down with Jon to talk about what we can do to help Kamala beat Trump.Take action with Vote Save America: Visit votesaveamerica.com/2024 Â Order Democracy or Else: How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps at crooked.com/books or wherever books are sold.Â
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Okay, we made it.
We started this season in late May when Donald Trump was just slightly ahead of Joe Biden.
Democrats were worried, but still hopeful.
We end with Kamala Harris just slightly ahead of Donald Trump.
Democrats are hopeful, but still worried.
In a nearly three-month span, there were more seismic political developments than in maybe
any presidential campaign of my lifetime.
A felony conviction, an assassination attempt, a debate so catastrophic that an incumbent
president dropped out of the race just weeks before he would have been nominated.
Then his vice president picked up the torch, united the party, won the internet, energized the anti-MAGA coalition,
and will accept that nomination this week
on her way to potentially making history.
But the race is still close.
After all that, the race is still close.
And I've been wondering if it was always going to be close,
no matter what happened.
Because, electorally, we've been an evenly divided country
for a while now.
And today the two parties are as different
as they've ever been.
The choice may be hard for some voters,
but it's pretty clear.
But this shouldn't make us feel like nothing matters.
In a close race, everything matters.
The candidates, their campaigns, their messages,
and the volunteers who carry that message to voters.
Especially voters who haven't yet decided
what they'll do in November.
The question is, how much does all that matter?
Are we talking a few votes per precinct
and the closest swing states?
Or is the exuberance Democrats are feeling right now
about something more, maybe something bigger? precinct and the closest swing states? Or is the exuberance Democrats are feeling right now
about something more, maybe something bigger?
This is why I wanted to talk to Lynn Vavrik again.
She's the brilliant UCLA political scientist
and friend of the pod.
You heard in the first episode talking about a term
she uses to describe our deeply closely divided electorate.
So calcification sounds like polarization,
but we think about it as polarization plus,
and it makes politics feel stuck,
like calcification in the bones, it's rigid.
I figured Lyn could give us her take
on the state of the new race for president with 80 days left.
Not based on polls or media coverage
or how the campaigns are doing each day,
but on her analysis of our calcified electorate and what might persuade voters to break out of it.
You'll hear my conversation with Lynne next. Then, I figured we'd end the show by getting our
marching orders from the Harris Walls campaign itself. So I asked one of its newest members to
chat, an old friend who's managed two of the three successful Democratic presidential campaigns of this century
senior Harris campaign advisor David Plouffe
I'm John Favreau welcome to the wilderness
Lynn fabric welcome back to the wilderness. Lynn Vavrik, welcome back to the wilderness.
Thank you so much.
We had you on the first episode where you talked about how the electorate isn't just
polarized but calcified, which means it's roughly 50-50 between two parties divided
by identity-inflected issues.
And that's made the last several elections feel especially close-heated and, of course,
as we saw in 2020, even violent.
And we talked about in April whether there are any developments
that could break us out of those calcified elections.
Since then, we've had one candidate
who was convicted of a felony, won a debate,
survived an assassination attempt,
and is still getting roughly the same share of the vote
that he had before.
Then we had another candidate who lost the debate so badly
that he ultimately had to drop out of the race
and pass the baton to the first black woman vice president,
who is now leading the race for president by a few points
with less than 100 days to go.
I wish I were a movie producer and you were pitching to me
because I would green light this immediately.
This is great.
Or you'd be like, no one's gonna believe that.
So I wanted to have you back to know
how you're making sense of all this
and whether you think breaking out of calcification
seems any more likely now.
I will tell you that when all of those events
started to happen, the little voice in my head said,
oh boy, here comes the biggest test
of calcification we've seen.
Yeah, it's one of my first thoughts as well.
I love that.
Okay.
And then as the days passed and the weeks rolled on and crazier things, unexpected things
started to happen.
And as you just said, there was not a lot of movement in the polls.
And to be fair, nobody expected big movement.
But there really wasn't a lot.
I thought, wow, okay, calcification is really holding up well here,
and this is sort of the best evidence that we could have ever dreamed up.
So fast forward now to three weeks later,
how many weeks it's been, some short number of days since all of this started,
and you are starting to see movement in the polls.
But don't confuse that with,
oh, we're moving out of calcification,
because what is the movement doing?
The movement is taking us back
to where we thought we would be initially.
So we're back to, man, this is gonna be a close race.
So what did you initially think about the political impact of Biden stepping aside?
Like, what was your reaction when it first happened?
Well, much like I think everyone else, I was surprised.
And then you sort of have to work through, you know, wow, in my lifetime, I didn't think
I'd see anything like, okay, so you get through all of that.
Right, right.
But from, you know, a research point of view, I thought that a couple of things could happen.
My first thought was, boy, everybody thinks this is fundamentally going to change the race.
Mm-hmm.
And maybe it changes the veneer, but it doesn't change the landscape of American politics.
And so I wondered how long it was going to take for people to appreciate that.
And I think that I sort of like to talk about it this way.
Let's say we've all been to a really nice party and, you know, the music's good
and the company's good and the food is good and you're having a great time.
Or vacations are like this.
And you think, wow, if my life was like this, this would be great.
But you know that when you leave the party or you leave the vacation, you're going back
to your same old life.
And that's a little bit what's happening for Democrats.
We've been at a really nice party.
But the underlying structure of this contest hasn't changed for voters in terms of
what kind of worlds are on offer.
But I wonder if Harrison Walls can keep the party going.
You know, this like, we are the joyful freedom ticket and, you know, turn up
the music, get on the bus and just ride this thing into early voting.
Which starts mid September in some pretty key states.
Yeah. And I mean, wow, what a trick.
For people who might not know, like, what did you make of Kamala Harris' rise in the polls, right?
For context, I think that it was a close race and then the debate happened and then it wasn't a close race
and then now it's back wasn't a close race, and then now it's
back to being a close race. And you know, she's probably a little further ahead now
than Biden was even before the debate. Not much, but a little bit. So like, what do you
make of the moving polls?
Yeah, I think that two things are important to keep in mind. The first is that a lot of
those people who moved away from Biden after that debate performance, they were gonna come back.
And you don't think they're-
And what makes you think they're gonna come back?
Well, we've seen it in other elections.
And the sort of best parallel is 2012.
There were two moments like this in 2012.
And we know this because we had actual panel data.
We were interviewing the same people
over and over and over again.
And Mitt Romney said,
47% of Americans are never gonna vote for me.
And he lost vote share.
Now those people didn't go to Barack Obama.
They went to, I'm undecided.
I can't say I'm gonna vote for this guy anymore.
I'm undecided.
But then maybe a week or so later,
Barack Obama had a bad debate performance.
And those people, the same people who had moved away
from Romney just prior, they moved back to Romney.
And a bunch of people who were for Obama
moved into Undecided.
But Obama went on, he had great, he's Barack Obama,
and they came back to him.
And I think the same thing was likely to happen here.
These people who moved away from Biden after the debate, they didn't go to Donald Trump. They moved into, maybe I'll stay
home. That's a big thing that's happening this cycle. Or I don't know who I'm going to vote for.
They were probably going to come back if things, you know, equilibrated. They have come back
to Kamala Harris and some other people who are already
in those categories have come back. So it's different because the candidate is her. But
it isn't like those people were never going to come back.
Well, that was my next question, which is the big difference, of course, in 2012 is
it's a new candidate, right?
Yes.
But, you know, something that I've wondered for a while now, even before this switch happened, is in a very calcified electorate, how much does an entirely new
candidate matter? I mean, obviously that remains to be seen, but how are you thinking about
that?
My guess is not very much, but we cannot confuse that with it's not pivotal. So in this environment where the parties want
to build very different worlds and most people understand they want to build very different
worlds, the set of people who are voting in elections pretty much know which world they
prefer. Okay. So when I say like you can swap out that candidate and it's not going to make
much of a difference, if it makes a point, if it
makes two points, like these elections are very, very close. That point or two, that
could be pivotal. That could change the outcome. That could mean a different party is in the
White House. That could mean the world is different. So small, but potentially pivotal.
Yeah. The new development or or the potentially new development,
is you had mentioned a big thing that
was happening in this cycle, as some people saying,
I might not vote at all.
So now Kamala Harris is the nominee.
There is all this excitement, enthusiasm.
The crowds are reminiscent of what we saw in 2008,
haven't seen it since then.
How much does that matter in terms of the final outcome
when you think about the opportunity
that the Harris Walls campaign has
to maybe bring some new people into the electorate
who weren't just bummed out by Biden's debate performance
and might come back,
but hadn't even thought about being involved
because they were like,
oh, this is a rerun of Trump-Biden
and I just don't wanna to be part of this.
I think it's important. And anytime you can bring more of your 100% guaranteed your voters
into the electorate, that's a dollar worth spending. Because there's no chance that
person's not voting for you. So if you can spend that dollar to get a guaranteed voter out,
you should do that. It's a lot more efficient than spending that dollar to try to get that
persuadable voter who you think is 60, 40 for you, but you're just not sure.
Because there's some chance they vote for the other guy.
So I think this enthusiasm and just the whole party is for sure going to attract
more people than the rerun of Trump-Biden would have attracted.
It matters more than just good vibes and good feelings.
Yeah, I mean, you know, political scientists
always want to say, like, you know,
stop judging the popularity of these candidates by crowd size.
Even before Trump was obsessed with crowd size.
And that's true.
It is not a substitute for hard quantitative measurements
of people's preferences.
But you don't have to have gone to get your PhD
in political science to understand
that when you see all of those people getting excited
about this duo, that that means that there's
more enthusiasm out there and that more people who thought
maybe they were going to sit out this election may be reconsidering that decision.
You were talking about how voters who participate in elections sort of understand there are
two different worlds that they're choosing between, and they have a pretty good idea
of that.
Now we have a new candidate.
We have a very compressed period.
How do you think voters are making decisions about Harris, or at least making impressions
of Harris, based on four weeks of campaigning so far?
Well, part of this is really simple. So for the 40 whatever percent of the electorate
who consider themselves to be some kind of Democrat, those
people knew they liked her already because she's a Democrat.
So it's not so much that everyone's evaluating her anew.
A little bit of this is people's party identifications are going to color their impression.
So Democrats, as soon as it was clear she was the one, were all in.
So really the question is, what about these independents?
People who are undecided either about who they're voting for or whether they're voting at all.
Yes, exactly.
And this is a group of people that I've been particularly interested in for a while and in this cycle in particular.
And independents who voted for Joe Biden in 2020 really have moved away from saying they're
going to vote for him or Kamala Harris in this cycle.
And so I'm really interested in how many of these people they can get back.
And so I think that if you were going to script a rollout, this is a pretty good one.
It's hard for me to even think of like, oh, let's erase that day and substitute in a different one.
I think they've done a tremendous job
of looking like they know what they're doing,
which is huge.
Competence is huge.
There haven't been many missteps
and they've ended up with this really great
kind of freedom message that I just love because that is typically the
purview of the other side.
I was going to ask you about this because last time we spoke, we sort of ended the conversation
talking about Biden's focus on democracy.
Yes.
And I know, you know, and we've gone back and forth on this.
And I remember you saying like you weren't quite sure
about whether a democracy message was going to bring anyone
over who wasn't already with Biden.
I'm sure that's a kind paraphrasing of what I said.
Thank you.
Freedom seems like it may be different
or what do you think?
I think it's definitely different.
Even the walls line, you know, in Minnesota
there's a golden rule, like, you know, mind
your own damn business.
And we let people make their choices.
And even if we don't make the same, I mean, if you read to me, if we were on a political
quiz show and you read, you know, a candidate said these lines, are they a Democrat or a
Republican?
In the last 80 years, right, we'd all say, oh, that's a Republican.
Keep government out of our lives.
Less government. last 80 years, right? We'd all say, oh, that's a Republican. Keep government out of our lives,
less government. I know better what's right for my community than the government does.
And I just think it's been like this amazing feat that Kamala Harris, they've managed to
co-opt that exact argument and say, I want you to make choices about what goes on in
your community, in your household, in
your life, with your body.
That's you.
The government shouldn't be telling you, let's get government out of those decisions.
And so back to your original question, what does that mean for these independents and
undecided voters?
I think that is a pretty powerful attention getter because they have heard the same thing
from Democratic candidates for a while now.
Democracy is at risk.
When we're the United States of America, there's nothing we can't do.
This has been eight years of this, and this is a different idea.
And I think that's good.
It all works together with this turn the page kind of moment that I thought was a huge opportunity
when Biden said he wasn't going to seek the nomination.
And I, in some ways, think that I wasn't sure Walls was the right turn the page candidate,
but it's working out well.
Yeah.
No, I felt the same way. Let's talk about Trump.
I mentioned that he has stayed steady
in terms of vote share, even with all that's happened.
His favorability rating is higher at this point
than it was in even 2016 or 2020.
Is this evidence of Trump having a high floor
and a low ceiling?
What do you think's going on with Trump right now?
You know, I mean, like, I think most people understand who he is and what he wants to do.
And it's the same reason why, I mean, this seems like ancient history, but like, remember when he
was convicted of the 34th? It's the same. It feels like 10 years ago. But in that moment,
everyone's like, wow, why haven't his numbers moved?
And it's all baked in.
Now, the assassination attempt, I think, that's a moment.
And that's sort of a moment for the country.
It's not political.
It's wow, like this is a threat to America.
And so I think there was, you know, you can see in the polling afterward, more people say they're going to vote for him.
Now, this is all conflated with like the debate had just happened and there's a lot going on.
A lot going on in a three week period.
Yes. But so I don't obviously that's not baked in.
But this is all part and parcel of calcification.
At the end of the day, sometime between now and election day, unless the Harris campaign
can keep the party going, there will be a moment when the curtain gets pulled back and
we're like, oh, wait, we're still fighting over, you know, what's going to happen on the border?
Who gets to call themselves an American?
You know, do women get to play, you know, who gets to play on women's sports teams?
And all these things that they're very difficult topics because they're person-based.
Right.
And I feel like we're just, the reason I compare it to a party is,
we're getting a little bit, as voters,
a little bit of a reprieve from having to do the hard work,
from having to think about the really difficult questions.
And my friends like to say to me,
well, can't we just agree to disagree?
And that's always what you say to your kids, right,
when you're trying to teach them how to be grown.
You can agree to disagree. And so I feel like they you say to your kids, right, when you're trying to teach them how to be grown. Like, you can agree to disagree.
And so I feel like they think that they're being grownups
when they say it.
And I'm like, no.
Someone has to sit down and write a policy.
Who do you get to marry?
You can't be married on Monday and Tuesday,
not on Wednesday and Thursday,
and on Friday only if you want to be.
We can't agree to disagree.
You can get an abortion one day
and not get an abortion another day.
There has to be a public policy.
This is hard work.
And I think we've, as voters,
had a little bit of a break from the stress of that.
I talked to Anat Shankarasourio and Mike Podhorser
last episode.
They have made the case for a couple years now
that the most powerful force
in politics has been opposition to MAGA and Trump. And that ultimately, Democrats need to make this
election about MAGA in order to bring that coalition together in 2024 that won in 2020.
That was clearly the Biden strategy. What do you think of that now?
Because the convention's next week,
and she's gonna reintroduce herself
to the country on her term.
She's gonna define herself for people.
She's gonna talk about her agenda.
But then there's also this anti-maga stuff.
How do you see that?
Yeah, I think again, like the real magic trick
would be to take that set of people and that's really
what those guys were talking about. There's this majority of people who don't want MAGA
in the White House. So the real trick would be to get those set of people, but instead
of identifying the cutting line that separates them from everyone else as being MAGA and
anti-MAGA, if you could get them to think of themselves
in a different way, as a group, but in a different way.
Not as an opposition to.
Yeah, the freedom fighters. I don't know.
I'm making this up as we go along.
But like some way that is more centered on pretty clearly...
If you had told me that like, you know, Kamala Harris is going to end up as the candidate
and people are going to be talking about how joyful her campaign is, a lot of that's going
to be driven by her smile and her laugh, I would have been like, what planet are you on?
But that is literally what is happening. And I love that they're sort of leaning into it.
Mm-hmm.
And so you take that, politics doesn't have to feel divisive all the time.
And take that joyfulness and you just create a group
of those people that is more focused on her vision
of this contest instead of Trump's vision.
Right, when you're talking in your opponent's terms,
you're losing.
And so let's not be Richard Nixon fighting John F. Kennedy by sneering like,
oh, we've all been to new frontiers.
I mean, did we all know that was not the right answer?
Right.
Yes. So make the group something about their vision.
I find this so interesting because I obviously come from this tradition,
having worked for Obama,
but then in the ensuing years learned about sort of
the power of negative partisanship.
And it's so much of so many of these elections
and especially our calcified electorate
is driven by negative partisanship.
And I'm trying to figure out how to square that with
suddenly again, we have this,
let's build this sort of large coalition that is focused on something positive and
exciting and what we're for and not what we're against. You know I think that the
secret is elites matter and yes like negative partisanship which just so
everyone's tracking means that you really don't like the other side. You
like your side a lot and you really don't like the other side. You like your side a lot and you really don't like the other side.
And that has been increasing over time, 100% for sure.
And there's lots of great work on this in political science. Okay.
But that gets exacerbated in 2016 when Trump becomes
the leader of the Republican party and then moving through the COVID years into
2020 through that campaign. And then you've got Joe Biden, the leader of the Democratic Party, saying that those
guys, they are putting democracy on the ballot.
They're dangerous.
And that's negative.
So the messages, this is like, you know, we've known this for a long time.
The messages that elites, whether that's candidates or media, are sending really do trickle down and affect voters.
And so, you know, if she wants to go out there and be positive and hope, change, freedom, joy.
Turn the page.
Like, yeah. You know, that is going to have an effect on people.
And so, I don't underestimate the power of political entrepreneurship
and political leadership. Honestly that's good to know because otherwise it does
some of the calcification stuff feels like we're just all stuck and it's less
of an election than like a census and you just know who you are and who you voted for.
That's what that's what's going on. I just I want to caution you there because
calcification doesn't have to be dire.
You know, there's just a few good things.
People are paying attention.
They know what the parties stand for.
They know what they want so they can identify which party they'd rather see, which world
they'd rather have built.
Calcification doesn't mean the same party's going to win every election.
I mean, we've seen that's not true.
It just means the elections are gonna be close.
And so that's all, that's all.
It doesn't have to mean that we're fighting.
It doesn't have to be negative or confrontational.
Yes, the worlds are more different than they were
in the 1980s, 90s and early 2000s.
But that doesn't mean that it has to be
as divisive as it's been.
Well, calcification aside, last question, But that doesn't mean that it has to be as divisive as it's been.
Well, calcification aside, last question, Democrats have been talking, media pundits,
everyone, since I think maybe 2012.
Could this be an election where the fever breaks, right?
And the fever being sort of the more radical faction of the Republican Party that has now
taken over much of the party.
And we saw that with Trump, and it's really Trump's party.
If Trump is defeated this time, under these circumstances, after this many years, do you
see any possibility that maybe the fever breaks or that we get out of this?
I think that it isn't impossible, but it may be unlikely.
But it does depend a little bit on what the outcome of 2024 looks like.
So candidates want to win elections.
And the best way to do that is to have a strategy that you know has won elections in the past.
So if they lose and they lose very narrowly, there will probably be, maybe it will be JD
Vance, maybe it won't be,
depending on how sort of beat up he gets.
It's interesting to think vice presidential nominees
who are not on winning tickets,
they don't really reemerge.
Yeah, that's true.
But maybe it'll be him, but if they lose very narrowly,
there will be someone else who comes with the same,
I'm the heir apparent to this, maybe it'll be Don Jr.
Who knows?
If they lose by a bigger margin,
then the next candidate who wants to win that election
on the Republican ticket has to say,
people aren't really buying what we're selling.
Maybe we need a pivot.
But if it's close,
people are kind of buying what we're selling.
If we can tweak the rules a little bit,
if we can get out a few more voters in two states, we can win.
So it's a little too soon to tell.
And again, it's to your point, the candidates matter, the elites matter,
the message they send matters.
I think it all matters.
And winning big in this calcified election.
Very hard.
Doesn't have to be that many points. Well, big in this calcified election. Very hard.
Doesn't have to be that many points.
Well, that's true.
That is true.
Three points, you know, again, the electoral college is really what we're talking about.
So what is that margin of votes for electoral college wins?
Right.
And it's been, you know, 77,000 in 2016, whatever it was, 44,000 in 2020.
You know, it's been getting smaller and smaller.
Okay.
Lynn Fabric, thank you as always.
You're welcome.
For coming by and sort of giving us the bigger picture
where we're at right now.
Who knows what will happen between now and next time we talk.
Oh my gosh.
Not gonna predict anything.
Craziness.
Thank you for making us smarter as always.
Thanks so much for having me.
Okay, we got the lay of the land from Lynn and now we'll hear about what we have to do to win this thing from former Obama campaign manager and current Harris senior advisor, David Plouffe. David
Plouffe, welcome back to the wilderness.
John Favreau, it's always good to be with you.
Last time you were on, I asked you to scare the shit out of our listeners about the dangers
of a second Trump term. You're now trying to prevent that from happening by coming out
of campaign retirement. You've recently joined the Harris Walls campaign as senior advisor for the Path to 270 and strategy.
Tell me about what that role entails and how they got you to upend your life and join the campaign.
Well, John, it basically what it means is I do whatever General Malley, Dillon and Kamala Harris
asked me to do. So, you know, it's a campaign. You've been there. I have. So I think there's a lot of excitement, which is amazing. Obviously,
the race now, I think looks much more winnable than it did a few weeks ago. We're back to multiple
pathways to 270, but it's a really abbreviated timeframe. So she's got to introduce herself,
what the race is about, her ideas, and obviously continue to make the case about how dangerous a
Trump second term would be. So one thing that's interesting, you remember this from the early
Obama days, sometimes when you're faced with just a crushing calendar, it really quickens decision
making. And I think that's useful. There's just a lot to get done. So we, with the best evidence
and data we have and best instincts are making a bunch of decision, but Jen did a great job of
getting that campaign ready for general election.
Obviously enormously challenging to have a switch at the top of the ticket, but they've
kind of dealt with it without missing a beat.
I've been spending a bunch of time in Wilmington.
I'm super impressed by the team.
And here we are with a chance to keep Trump out of the Oval Office and elect somebody who
I think is a really exciting candidate would be a great president.
Yeah, I was going to ask, I mean, you've been on so many campaigns,
what's it been like launching a campaign
with an entirely new candidate with a hundred days to go?
Like, what are some things that would surprise people
about that?
Well, I think there's a lot of great things about it, right?
People are very enthusiastic.
I think a lot of people are signing up and they say,
hey, you know what, I can do everything I can
for three months, maybe not for two years. Obviously, I think, you know, the reality was there was a lot of
voters, Democrats, independents, Republicans, not thrilled about the rematch. And she's a breath of
fresh air. So there's a lot of excitement. Obviously, you've got to get ads out the door.
You have to understand where the electorate is, which is going to be slightly different in a
Harris Trump race than Biden Trump. Obviously, you've got to get new signs. You got a whole
Democratic convention that has to be kind of rewired to some extent. Trump did one debate. in a Harris Trump race than Biden Trump. Obviously you've got to get new signs. You got a whole democratic convention
that has to be kind of rewired to some extent.
Trump did one debate.
Now we got to get them to do at least one more debate.
So it's like multiple fire hoses aimed at you every day.
That means you got to prioritize what really matters.
What do we really have to dig into?
What do we don't?
But again, it's a great campaign team
and it's a mixture of people who were there in 20,
some people who worked with us back in 12 and eight.
You've got a lot of younger people who are bringing their great ideas.
Some of the best ideas are the people who might, this might be their first or second
campaign.
That's always the blessings of these things as you know.
And obviously the American people and people all around the country, I mean, the volunteer
signups in Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, every battleground state's been enormous. And a winter race like that, that matters.
I mean, you've got to have people out there talking to people,
registering voters, sharing content on social media.
The book you guys wrote is a great guide for how to do that.
And I think it's manageable for people to say, you know what,
I'm going to really give a little more extra time in this than I might normally
do because it's only 90 days. Hell, by the time this airs, it'll be down to 80 days.
So it's an achievable time for people to say, okay, I'm going to take stock of my life and
figure out how many hours can I give every week to this?
That's great.
Let's talk about the path to 270.
How has your thinking about the map changed from when Biden was the nominee to now that
Harris is the nominee?
Well, listen, I think at the end of the day's post-debate,
the Biden campaign really was down to Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin,
and the second congressional district of Nebraska.
And obviously, the numbers didn't look good in those places.
But, you know, you probably had a plausible path.
Maybe you would have a great debate, Trump makes some mistakes,
the economy recovers a little bit, you have a chance.
But Arizona, North Carolina, Georgia, and Nevada,
I think we're off the table.
They're back on the table in a big way.
So she can win the blue wall in Nebraska too and win.
I think she can win Nevada and Georgia.
I think North Carolina is gonna be really close
because you know, you and I went through these races
to win some of these states.
You're gonna have to really max out turnout,
max out vote share amongst
young voters, Hispanic voters, Asian voters, black voters, suburban women who have become
a base for us, but also do well enough with swing suburban voters and keep Trump's margins
down in some ex-urban and rural areas.
So far, the data suggests that she can do that.
There hasn't been a collapse from Biden where that was probably his strongest.
Rural areas, seniors over 65, even when he
was losing the race, he was doing probably what you'd like to see there or close to it.
So that's my view is, you know, you don't want to come down to having make every shot
to win the presidency.
You want to be able to say, you know what, maybe at two to three of the states we target,
we won't win, but we can still win.
But I think there's a credible pathway in all of them.
I think Nevada has changed quite a bit.
Georgia and North Carolina, I think are dead even right now, Arizona as well.
And obviously I think in the blue wall States, we've seen a pretty dramatic
change in those States from where it was.
So it puts a lot of pressure on Trump.
And so, you know, Hey, before the switch, Trump was running around
Minnesota and New Hampshire and New Mexico and talking about expanding the map.
I think those days are over.
I think we're back to the core seven
and that really important congressional district
in Nebraska.
And of course, listen, I mean, Florida, Texas,
there are states that are close,
but a presidential campaign has to be absolutely sure
they can win it.
And nobody's better than General Malley Dillon
about being careful about it.
She says, if you're gonna go into a state,
you gotta be all in.
And that was certainly always my view back. Head fakes aren't worth state, you got to be all in. And that was certainly always my view back.
Headfakes aren't worth shit.
You got to basically be all in.
You don't have a second to waste or a person to waste or a dollar to waste.
So I think that's the battlefield for now.
It seems like she has consolidated a lot of the traditional democratic constituencies
that had been flirting with either third party or staying home or in some cases Trump,
black voters, Latino voters, younger voters.
It seems like she's doing obviously much better
with those groups than Biden.
Do you think she has more work to do with older voters
or non-college white voters than Biden did?
I know you said that her numbers so far
seem like they're holding rural voters,
but are those groups of voters
that you guys are gonna be focusing on particularly?
Well, John, as you know, it's an hour-to-hour, day-to-day evaluation of that, right?
And it will shift from day-to-day, week-to-week.
But I would say as it relates to base voters, yes, huge improvement, but more room to grow.
So that's got to be a huge focus.
Keeping Donald Trump to 8% to 10% with a black vote is a lot different than him getting 15 to 16, getting
that Hispanic vote share. And when we think about like the black vote, Hispanic vote,
any cohort, what it matters is the battleground states. When you look at the national Hispanic
vote, that's going to be a little bit skewed because of the Cuban vote down in Florida.
But the Hispanic vote in these battleground states, you know, if you can get north of 60,
I mean, hell, it looked like Trump a month ago might be able to win the Hispanic vote in those states.
I think she can build a margin.
And the same thing with younger voters.
So I think there's still room to grow.
So that's incredibly important.
I think with swing voters as we traditionally understand them, which are of every race,
every ethnicity, but true swing voters.
I think her being a new candidate, kind of this turn the page moment will help with them. She's got a lot of work to do to close the sale, but I think she's got a better opening.
And then we just have to watch those rural voters.
Again, that was one of the reasons Biden won, as you know, in 20 was he outperformed
Hillary in the Erie counties of the world, which is a big county, but also some of those
small counties, just to use Pennsylvania as an example. I mean, the way to think about it, Donald Trump's
going to win most rural counties. And if he wins them by 34 rather than 44, it's a big difference.
And listen, some of those counties in 16, he was winning like 85, 15. You really want to prevent
those because those add up. So that's the thing I always tell people, like the math to win a
battleground state is just super complicated.
And when you're feeling good about one segment of the electorate, then you begin
to get concerned about another, like, you know, you're never all green.
I never was anyway.
There's always something that could go a little bit better on the dashboard, but
I think the early signs are quite good.
And, you know, we clearly, as it stated in polls, have an enthusiasm gap.
I think that's true in terms of fundraising.
Definitely true in terms of volunteer activity, where I think
Kamlo will have a huge advantage over Trump.
So, but we have big moments left.
Convention will be a big moment.
That first debate will be a big moment.
Trump is super lazy this time.
I mean, you remember in 16, he was out there humping it.
Yeah.
He wasn't 20 in part, cause he didn't give a shit about COVID.
So he was reckless, but his schedule is remarkably lethargic.
And there's two things, maybe both.
One, he may just not have the stamina or his team really believes he hurts himself when
he's in a state, but then I'm not sure you do these press conferences.
So that is a huge advantage.
I still believe that candidate on ground, you know, Kamala and Tim Walz are going to
be on a bus over this weekend, heading into the eventually going to be all over the battleground
States.
That matters particularly for a candidate like her, who a lot of voters, they might know her
name and that's it. So it's an opportunity to introduce your biography, your values,
and the contrast in this race. So to me, that's an important ingredient here as we think about
these battleground states is I think we're going to have a stronger ground effort with human beings
on the ground, like talking to their neighbors. But I also think it looks like we're going to have
more Canada. And listen, JD Vance is running around at a decent clip,
which is fine. I mean, he's the least popular vice presidential pick in history, including
Palin. And I will say this about Pete Vance, you know, I think a legitimate thing, you
know, Trump is now the oldest person ever to seek this office as a nominee. Certainly
in our research, we're starting to see more voters now recognize that, you know, Biden
kind of blocked that for him. You're starting to hear people refer to him as geriatric,
and he doesn't have plans for the future. And this is where JD Vance is relevant. If you're the
oldest person ever to seek the office as a major party nominee, it's fair to ask, what if something
were to happen to you if you got elected? And JD Vance is not a great answer for voters, particularly
women voters, but all voters. I mean, he's a huge problem.
And you can see when Trump gets asked about him,
it's super uncomfortable.
He'll say he doesn't matter or-
It's great.
So it's fascinating to me,
but there's a lot of different things here.
So that's one of the challenges of the campaign is
you got project 2025, you obviously have abortion,
you've got Trump's attacks on democracy,
you've got his age.
There's a lot of things that concern voters.
And our job is to make sure that, we deliver those message properly to the voters that care, but also to
deliver a really positive forward looking agenda for Kamala Harris. And she's going to start laying
that out starting Friday of this week with I think an important speech about her ideas about how to
cut costs for middle class families. Yeah, I was going to ask about sort of the mix of messaging,
like Biden campaign strategy, which I think was the to ask about sort of the mix of messaging, like Biden campaign strategy,
which I think was the right one, was to make the race about Trump, remind people of who
he is, what he did, what he'll do if he wins again.
Part of the necessity of that strategy was that voters know who Joe Biden is, and most
of them didn't approve of the job he was doing, so you want to make it about Trump.
Most voters know who Kamala Harris is, but they don't know a lot about her and what she'd do as president. How do you think about the balance between
making the campaign's message about Harris and making it about Trump?
Well, John, you asked about time, the benefits and some of the challenges of time. We don't
have much time. And you think about it, it's not just through election day. A lot of people
are going to vote ballots, start going out in battleground states Very soon. Yeah, you know in North Carolina, Wisconsin
So you've got to introduce her biography the things she's accomplished for people why she did them her values
What got her into public service?
You've got to talk about here's what I want to do on the economy on job creation on
Cutting costs on health care on protecting Medicare and Social Security, on foreign policy.
But you're going to have to do that, I think, as much as possible with a contrast with Trump.
So I think, yeah, she's got more to do than Biden did because she does have to introduce
herself, reintroduce herself, provide more depth there.
Super important.
You know voters, understanding where someone comes from, how they grew up, informs their values.
It's super important for voters. So we have a lot of work to do there. But we
also have to lay out a searing contrast. The way I think about it is you want as
many voters as possible to think, okay, I'm gonna compare Kamala Harris and
Donald Trump on the next four years. Let's see if they're both present. What
would that mean for me and my family? And I still believe in every battleground
state, there's more than 50% of the people,
all things being equal, that would not like a return of Trump.
By the way, I wish that number was 60 or 65.
It's not.
But it's enough to win the election.
And we've got to make sure we tap into those people.
But that's going to require not just the argument against him.
It's going to require, I think, building confidence and real knowledge about who she is and what
she stands for. I was going to ask about Trump because the guy over the last couple months, you know,
convicted of a felony, survives an assassination
attempt, wins the debate, and his vote share hasn't really changed.
Her vote share has changed from Biden and even just, you know, as the days go on.
His hasn't.
He's also like maybe more popular at this point favorability wise than he was in 16
and 20.
What do you think is going on with Trump?
Well, I think Republicans now, I mean, his takeover is complete.
So I think you see Republicans just giving him
on questions like approval, a stronger yes.
It has become the cult.
So yeah, I mean, he's guaranteed 46% of the vote
in every battleground state.
He won the presidency in 2016,
in some states under 47%.
That was his national vote share.
That was his national vote share in 20 as well.
He got under 47, but there was less third party vote.
So you know, he was not able to get 270.
I think that in some battleground states, he's at that 46.
There are some where he's 47, 48.
And that's the challenge of the campaign is to get him back to 46. Now to your point, the third party vote share is collapsing in the Harris Trump race. And
you'd like to think it's because, you know, RFK juniors eating dogs and throwing dead
bears in Central Park and all the things he says. But I just think this dynamic's different.
And there's some evidence that RFK may be taking a little more vote from Trump, although
I think it's too early to really know what that'll be like on election day. So I think, yes, there are some people right now
saying they're going to vote for Donald Trump. If they're a firm voter, they're not going anywhere,
but a bunch of those people are soft. And so, yeah, when you think about it, you have to obviously
max out your registration. You've got to max out your turnout. You've got to max out your vote
share across all these cohorts. You've got to win the majority of the undecided vote, then you've got to pull a little bit of off him. And I think
that what I've seen in the research is those voters who might be soft Trump, kind of flirting
with Trump, they're super curious about Kamala Harris. They're like, okay, a new entry now. I'm
excited about that. I want to learn more about her. And if she can answer the mail there in
terms of who she is and how she'll fight for them and that she will be, you know, a better president for people
like them, she can win this race. But yeah, we got to pull a little off of them. And I
think it's really important for people to understand that your question is super important.
It may not seem like a point, point and a half matters in terms of him being a little
stronger, but it does. does. And that's mathematically something
that has to be addressed.
You've got to get him down a little bit.
Now, what I've seen is there's some states
where he's already fallen kind of to the point
where he wouldn't win the election
at the level he's at now, but there's some other states
where he's still in that like 48, 49 range.
And you'd like to get him back down
to where he was in 16 and 20.
There was this thought some people expressed
during the Biden Trump race, where contrary
to popular belief, Democrats would actually do better if it was a lower turnout election.
If the electorate ended up looking more like a midterm election where Democrats have been
doing well for the last several years, it does seem like now we're back in a world where
increasing turnout, registering more voters is going to help us.
But how do you think about those sort of not non-voters, but people, occasional voters,
sporadic voters?
Right.
Well, so, you know, in politics, like in life, it's like important to delineate
between what you can control and what you can't control.
So what you can control is trying to register and turn out all the voters that
you're pretty confident would vote for Kamala Harris, right?
And so I think that's what you can not control,
but you can control your effort and your thought
and your resources there.
You know, I think the question would be,
so there was a lot of experts who were saying
in the Biden and Trump race that maybe turnout
would be quite a bit lower than 2020,
maybe let's say 130 million.
So let's say it is not gonna be 130.
Let's say it's 150, 155, 160, 165. The question is, okay, that
added vote, who's it going to benefit? And there's no doubt that Trump will get some
of that vote. Polls were showing that he was doing a little bit better, but I think Harris
is going to be able to bring a lot of new people out as well, do well with new voters.
Some of those are younger voters. They're excited about her. And I think we can, we're
already seeing some pretty encouraging data
in terms of registration since she became the candidate.
And I think that the campaign obviously
has a very good sense of who are voters
at risk of not turning out, who would support her.
So a lot of effort's gonna go in there.
And as you know,
campaign can have all the money in the world,
all the people resources in the world,
but if there's not enthusiasm,
it's hard to get that job done. You can't manufacture that. And right now we're seeing real enthusiasm for her. And I think
that's going to matter a great deal. So what you want is if there is going to be bigger turnout,
you just want to make sure that you've gotten your appropriate share of that. So you feel
comfortable that you can win the race at 130 million, 140, 150, 160. And you know, my guess,
it's a little bit early now to predict exactly what the turnout's
going to be battleground state by battleground state.
But by mid September, I think we'll have a very good sense of that.
Last question.
We spent a lot of time this season trying to arm volunteers with advice and messaging
that they can use when they're talking to people in their lives who haven't yet made
up their minds about November.
You're seeing all the research, you're talking to voters, you're figuring out what resonates with ads.
What advice would you give to folks listening right now
regarding what they should tell their family and friends
and even strangers to get them to turn out
for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz,
who aren't sure if they wanna do that yet?
Right, well first of all, I mean, I think,
listen, let's just use an example.
You and I today, I think on that awful platform X,
both lifted up this video of the Project 2025 founder,
basically saying, it's all bullshit, this is Trump's plan,
and it's a wink and a nod.
You and I did that.
Like, what I would say is,
anytime someone who sports Kamala Harris
sees something that moves them,
maybe it is something about Trump,
maybe it is an ad, you know,
she and Walls are gonna have this YouTube video, they're hanging out together, and it's quite a Trump. Maybe it is an ad, you know, she and walls are going
to have this YouTube video they're hanging out together and it's quite a warm, maybe
it's that. It's great. Maybe it's a friend or family member of them who made a video
say, you know, this is why I'm voting for Harris. Like don't underestimate the power
of we've all carry around these amplification devices, which are phones and laptops. So
whether you're on YouTube, Instagram, tick, email, list, text, share it.
And I always tell people like, the reason to do it is some of those people who think just like you will share it as well.
And maybe you live in California or Texas, but your cousin or your friend shares it and their friend in Pennsylvania sees it
and they share it in their cohort.
They have Fox and Breitbart and Sinclair, they have their command and control megaphone
system.
We don't.
I mean, we need people to share content that speaks to them and there's nothing more organic
say this is why I'm voting for Kamala Harris or this is why I've decided to vote.
And of course people should register on the Harris website and you guys obviously have
an amazing property with VoteSave to get more formally involved.
But everybody has the opportunity in the course of their daily life to share stuff that speaks
to them.
By the way, it doesn't even have to be Comla.
It could be that prescription drug announcement today from the White House.
Make sure people know about that. Yeah.
And that Trump basically just called that today in his press conference a con job,
lowering prescription drug prices. So I just think everyone's got to take it on themselves.
And I get that it can be an ugly task because you share that stuff publicly
and your MAGA brother fires back and it's ugly, but we just got to bull through it.
And everybody's got to basically use what devices they have in their life, particularly for Kamala Harris
who a lot of people don't know that much about right now. And so we got to fill in
those blanks, right? And I think that you never know how you're gonna reach
somebody. Even with all the money that's spent with advertising and targeting and
there'll be presidential debates, you never know if it's that little piece of
video or an infographic or something you shared
that somehow reaches its way to somebody
in Wausau, Wisconsin, or in Wilmington, North Carolina
that then goes around in that circle
and it reaches people and it has an effect.
Yeah, in terms of messaging,
it does sound like what you had previously said,
contrasts that
are future oriented seem to be sort of the most effective ways to persuade people that
like this is your life under Kamala Harris, this is your life under Donald Trump.
Yeah, let's, well, you know, project 2025 is Trump's blueprint.
So we got to make sure everybody knows about that.
What's in that?
The reason he's running away from it, and this is a guy who tends not to run away from
anything, he doubles down as he realizes how toxic it is.
This is what he'll do on abortion, obviously.
We got to also remember, you got to tell the whole story.
There are bands, Trump abortion bans in a third of the states because of Donald Trump.
It's the thing he's most proud about.
And if he's elected, the Republicans will pass a abortion ban nationally in Congress
and whatever he says he's gonna sign it.
Obviously IVF, contraception, they've talked about monitoring pregnant women. Trump even said,
yeah, I'd probably be okay if states do that. People have to know these things. And John,
you know this having worked on campaigns. The things those of us in politics, or at least those
of us that follow politics see, you go talk to 12 sort of undecided voters in Western Pennsylvania. Like I didn't know that. Yeah, no idea. Yeah. So
you got to assume a lot of these voters are not paying close
attention. So have a conversation with them. But
yeah, and then Kamala Harris, you know, plans to cut costs,
strengthen the Affordable Care Act, obviously really focus on
the care economy so important to so many people.
But yeah, that's going to be important. So I think, listen, if by, you know, the beginning of October, hopefully
most of the voters that will decide this election know what Project
Twenty-Five is and how it will affect them.
They are more concerned about what Trump would do as in a return
from a women's health care standpoint.
And of course we know that part of this is the way you bring the past is
he's the same angry, divisive, horrible person. Two things have changed. He's eight years older, he's the oldest person ever to seek this office. And now he has a plan. And you should be very scared because that's dangerous.
On that note, thank you, David Plouffe. Thanks for doing this.
And also the country thanks you for helping out.
We're all in this together.
You know that, brother.
Yeah.
We sure are.
We sure are.
We'll let you get back to work and thanks again.
All right.
See you.
So Plouffe brings us back to where we started.
In a close race, everything matters.
The candidate matters, at least I
think so, or I wouldn't have spent most of July pissing off a lot of people who rightly
love and admire Joe Biden. But clearly, Kamala Harris being the new Democratic nominee has
already mattered. Clearly, the decisions of the Biden turned Harris campaign will matter.
Any number of unforeseen events between now and November could matter.
There is literally nothing that would surprise me at this point.
But what we do matters too. And it potentially matters most. People make up their minds about
politics because they have countless conversations with friends, family, colleagues, or perfect strangers.
And unlike any of the factors I just mentioned,
candidates, campaigns, the crazy shit that keeps happening,
we can control whether we have those conversations
and how we approach them.
The vibes weren't great when we started this season.
Then they got worse.
Then they got much better.
But the vibes don't decide the election.
Voters do.
When most voters and most Democrats
weren't excited about Biden running,
it made sense to remind each other
that this election isn't about Joe Biden or Donald Trump.
It's about us and our future.
But the truth is, for all the excitement
we feel around Kamala Harris's incredibly promising
candidacy, it's still about us.
The people who haven't decided yet, the people whose votes will decide the election, they
want to know who sees them, who gets them, who will fight for them.
They want to know who will try to make their lives a little better and keep their families
safe.
They want to know what kind of country they're going to live in for the next four or eight years.
As we've heard from all the focus groups, some of these people can be really annoying.
They can be misinformed.
They can have a weird combination of political views that make no sense to you.
They can hold political views that make you really mad.
That's okay.
Judge them if you must.
But we need their votes.
That's how we win.
We win because we persuade people to take an action
that they otherwise wouldn't have taken.
Someone who was thinking about voting for Trump
or voting third party or even staying home.
All of those are hard conversations,
just in different ways.
They require us to listen, to be open,
to show empathy, to presume good intentions,
to give each other a little grace.
Maybe this sounds soft to you, but really, it's just math.
There's no easy path to 270.
I'd rather be us than them, and I'd definitely rather be us now than us in July.
But we're not just posting and memeing and vibing and partying our way to victory here.
This is going to be work.
This is going to be hard.
And the stakes haven't changed.
The threat of a more vengeful, more powerful Trump presidency is right there.
But so is the end of the Trump era in American politics.
It's right there too.
We can see the path out of the wilderness.
We can see the day where we finally get to stop talking about this fucking guy and move
on.
We just need to convince enough people that we should. We need to have those
conversations, lots of them. And even if you only persuade a few voters, you can be the one who made
all the difference. Because as it always has, everything matters. Now let's go win this thing.
The Wilderness is a production of Crooked Media.
It's written and hosted by me, John Favreau.
Our senior producer and editor is Andrea B. Scott.
Austin Fisher is our producer.
And Farrah Safaree is our associate producer.
Sound designed by Vasiliis Fotopoulos.
Music by Marty Fowler.
Charlotte Landis and Jordan Cantor
sound engineered the show.
Thanks to Katie Long, Reid Cherlin, Matt DeGrot,
and Madeline Herringer for production support.
To our video team, Rachel Gieske, Joseph Dutra, Chris Russell, Molly Lobel, and David Tolles,
who filmed and edited the show.
If the wilderness has inspired you to get involved, head on over to votesaveamerica.com
slash 2024 to sign up and find a volunteer shift near you.