Pod Save America - “It’s Joe Time.”
Episode Date: August 21, 2020Jon, Jon, Tommy, and Dan reflect on Joe Biden’s acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention, reflect on the week of speeches and moments, and look ahead to next week’s Republican Natio...nal Convention.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, please visit crooked.com/psa.For a transcript of this episode, please email hey@crooked.com.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Leavitt.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's pod, the gang's all here to share our thoughts about the entire Democratic National Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Jon Leavitt. I'm Tommy Vitor. I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's pod, the gang's all here to share our thoughts about the entire Democratic National Convention,
including the big speech that Joe Biden delivered last night accepting the party's presidential nomination.
We'll also preview the airing of petty grievances and nutball conspiracies to take place at next week's Republican National Convention.
One quick note before we dive in. Over a year ago,
during a very crowded primary, we all predicted Joe Biden would win. No, we asked you to support
our Unify or Die Fund for the eventual Democratic nominee. And thanks to your donations, Crooked
Media and Swing Left were able to send the Biden campaign over $1 million this week to help them train organizers, run some ads, and get out the vote.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Helping the campaign reach more voters is one of the most important things
that we can do for the outcome we want to see.
If you are looking for more ways to get involved,
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so check out votesaveamerica.com.
All right, guys. Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. formally accepted the Democratic nomination
for president last night in a speech that by most accounts was the finest performance of his
political career. His 24-minute address, the shortest in modern history, was delivered to
a largely empty room from a podium in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.
Biden used the speech to lay out an alternative vision of how he would lead the country through
what he called four major crises, the pandemic, the recession, racial justice, and climate change.
He also presented himself as the anti-Trump in how he would govern a divided nation.
Here are some clips.
If you entrust me with the presidency, I will draw on the best of us, not the worst.
I'll be an ally of the light, not the darkness. It's time for us, for we the people, to come
together and make no mistake. United we can and will overcome this season of darkness
in America. But while I'll be a Democratic candidate, I will be an American president.
I'll work hard for those who didn't support me, as hard for them as I did for those who
did vote for me. That's the job of a president, to represent all of us,
not just our base or our party.
This is not a partisan moment.
This must be an American moment.
It's a moment that calls for hope
and light and love,
hope for our future,
light to see our way forward,
and love for one another.
Guys, reaction to the speech? Tommy?
Well, look, the Lord of the Light doesn't have the strongest base outside of Westeros. So,
you know, we'll see how that one plays. Sorry. A few thoughts. Like one, Republicans and some
people on the left helped Joe Biden enormously by setting the expectations at him being able to leave his basement because he was in cognitive decline.
So I just want to remind those people that they are morons.
On top of that, Joe Biden delivered the hell out of that speech.
And it was especially powerful when he got to the coronavirus section.
He said that Donald Trump had failed in his basic duty to protect us.
And it's hard to argue with that.
So, you know, I think it was a he did an incredibly good job. The recent polling makes
it seem like the whole election is about the coronavirus. I think he did a good job explaining
that failure and his plan to do it better. He spoke directly to the loss. It was a good job.
Joe Biden did a great job. Love it. You've written some of these before. 24 minutes. That's the thing
that stuck out to me. How about a 24 minutes minute speech it was amazing we we had talked about this we i don't even remember we
done so much content i don't even remember when we talked about it but for uh for a campaign
speechwriters react campaign competitors to campaign experts react yeah i mean we're trying
to compete with youtube star i mean dan is coming to us live from his house that eric garcetti's
trying to turn the power off of that's how much of an internet sensation Dan has become.
It's just him just doing TikToks.
But yeah, it was short.
It was to the point.
I came away from the entire convention feeling incredibly pumped, incredibly excited.
I think the low expectations weren't just set for the media.
I think if we're all being honest, we set them for ourselves. And Joe Biden in the speech and in the speeches that led up to it,
I think showed me, reminded everybody what his strengths are as a candidate. And I think it
put us in an incredibly strong position going into the Republican convention and to the weeks after.
Dan, from a political perspective, what do you think Joe Biden sought to accomplish with that speech?
And what do you think the campaign did accomplish with that?
I think this speech is actually the culmination of a strategy that he's had since the virus hit that we probably don't talk about enough, which is Joe Biden is running what is essentially a Rose Garden campaign as the challenger.
He is filling the void that Trump has left as president
of the United States. Like that, as our friend David Axelrod tweeted, this was more of a presidential
address than a nomination speech. He's, he talked about bringing the country together and mobilizing
behind defeating this virus. He talked about healing the wounds within the country from having
lost, uh, 170,000 of our fellow citizens in five months. Like the sort of things that normal
presidents do and Donald Trump is incapable of doing,
Joe Biden did that.
And he's basically playing the role of president that Donald Trump won't do.
And I think that really stood out in his work frame.
If you look at all of the images of Biden, the speeches he's giving, and some of this
is obviously related to the restrictions related to the coronavirus, but he's always
in front of flags.
It's all very serious. It all feels very presidential. And I think this speech came
at the end of that. He had two tasks. One was to fill in the gaps in knowledge about him as a
person. And the second task was filling the gaps in knowledge about his policy. And that's what he
sought to do last night. And I think the two are intricately tied together and it's necessary
to do both. And I think he and his campaign should feel very, very good that he did exactly what he
needed to do on that stage last night. I really liked that it was simple. It was direct. There is
a tendency in convention speeches to check every box on every issue, go off on a lot of tangents.
He did not. I like that he framed it around four crises. He was very clear on what he would do
about the pandemic, on what he would do around the economy. His economic message was sufficiently
populist. I think aside from Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders. He was maybe the only one major speaker at the convention to talk about the economy
in sort of a serious way
and an economically populist way.
So I think that was very effective.
Look, they should all be 24 minute speeches.
I think part of the reason it was so good
and it's not going to be as talked about as much
because people don't think about this,
but like, you know,
Barack Obama's speech
was 40 minutes in 2008 Hillary Clinton's was 56 minutes in 2016 which is just like there there are
no attention spans for speeches like that now look all of the speeches were shorter at this convention
because there was no crowd um and we can talk about that a little bit later but like um I do
think that the shortness of the speech helped him focus it and helped the sort of simplicity and directness of the message.
I don't think he like he reached like a few rhetorical heights here and there.
But mostly it was it was a message to a country that had been that is scared by this pandemic that sees a president who does not care about them.
And his message was, I do care about them. And his message was,
I do care about you. And here is my plan to fix it. And I will be different. And like,
sometimes the election might just not be more complicated than that.
I think also no audience helps because it's just, it's more of a conversation. There's no
like shitty zippy lines designed for terrible applause, right? Like
con Don is about to be gone is something we probably heard during the primary. That may be literal. I also thought that his comments about patriotism were important
because there is a lot that is wrong in America, but people still don't want to feel bad about it.
And he painted a picture of what a better, improved America could look like, which I think
all politicians should do. I also came to this week knowing a lot about Biden's story and the
tragedy he'd endured, but I was still overwhelmed at times by the volume of it. And I just like, I don't say that in a critical way at
all. I just didn't expect them to center the family loss as much as they did, because I just
can't imagine how hard it is to relive that constantly. But I guess to understand Joe Biden
is to understand that loss and that tragedy. And so it was really beautiful the way they have the tribute to Beau and they really directly talked about all that he's endured.
I mean, I think it is the primary way in which I think Joe Biden views the world is through the
prism of the tragedies he has faced and how he's overcome them. I mean, his political career began
with a tragedy. His wife and daughter died in that car accident in between getting elected
to the Senate and arriving in the Senate. And as he talked about in that video, he almost didn't
go to the Senate so he could stay home with Beau and Hunter. And he probably, as he has talked
about, would be retired right now if Beau had not passed away and sort of propelled him into one
last chapter to sort of do this for Beau. And all of that,
which I thought Dr. Biden did an incredible job in her speech, ties together with why Joe Biden
is the right person in this moment to heal a nation in desperate need of healing.
Yeah. Her line, how do you make a nation whole the same way you make a broken family whole,
is basically sums up the entire
convention message and why Joe Biden is the right person for the time. Like, I think we may have,
you know, I think we've talked about it before, but the pandemic has really made Joe Biden the
right man for the moment in a way that might not have been true before. And now that those you can
really see why through this convention,
why he is the right person
to lead us through this dark time.
I just want to read a few reactions to the speech.
Quote, it was an enormously effective speech.
Chris Wallace, Fox News.
Joe Biden just hit a home run
in the bottom of the ninth, his best.
Dana Perino, Fox News.
It was a very good speech.
Karl Rove, Fox News.
Why do you guys think Biden's speech worked for all these Fox News goons? It sort of fits with what we said, I think,
when we were sort of anticipating what this convention would look like. It was what we
talked about earlier, which is that it was a speech sort of grounded in empathy, in larger
philosophical principles. There was a, you know, a strong policy section,
but for the most part, it was trying to tell a story about the kind of leadership we need right
now. And it was a very Biden speech in that, you know, he went back to his old favorites,
his Seamus Heaney and his sort of kind of, I think kind of his classics that are very much,
you know, America is a great country and we're better than this. And I saw a few conservatives saying things like, excuse me, how is this a country that has systemic injustice and yet
is also filled with decent people who want to build a better world? And I just want to be like,
you're so close. You're so close to answer the question. All you have to do is stop thinking
you've found a logic hole and just answer the question. And just to the point that John and
Dan were making about Biden being the right person for this moment, I think one of the
criticisms of Biden throughout, I think, the primaries, something that I would level, is that,
you know, oh, is he kind of able to adjust? Is he going to kind of reflect the moment that we're in?
But I think we saw in the convention the strength of having somebody who hasn't been particularly
buffeted by the news cycle and who knows who he is and knows the kind of speech he wants to present,
the kind of person he wants to be.
Because to John's point, I really think it does,
you know, it does speak to the moment that we're in.
Man, that list.
That list, John, is just such a brutal group of people.
Even mean, I loved the clothes.
I was like, who else?
Who else am I going to trot out?
Sorry.
To your point, Levitt, though,
it also takes discipline to have a convention speech like that where you go back and play some of your greatest hits.
Like some of those were lines that Biden has used before because pundits and reporters who have paid attention to your speeches closely will say, oh, he's already used that line. But 90% of the people watching that speech from home have never
heard any of those lines. And they worked for Joe Biden throughout the primary and the general
election. So he should say them again, right? And it requires discipline to do that. But the
Biden campaign usually has that kind of discipline, at least they've showed it so far.
There was, Dave Weigel tweeted from the Washington Post that there were zero mentions of Donald
Trump's name in Biden's speech compared with the 22 times Hillary Clinton mentioned his name in 2016 during her convention speech.
Tommy, this sort of goes to your point earlier about how there weren't a lot of like canned applause lines, which is in a bunch of Trump zingers, which to be fair, it's not just like Hillary Clinton that did that in 2016.
Like Democrats have been doing that throughout 2016, all the way through 2020. What did you think of his decision to sort of not mention Trump by name?
Yeah, I mean, it's an interesting question, because it was clearly a decision, right? I mean,
everyone knows who he's talking about when he says, this president has completely screwed up
the coronavirus response. But I suspect they did it because they think these attacks just land a
little bit softer when you aren't naming Trump by name. And as much as us progressives, pundits, like we enjoy political combat, we want to see
Trump get slapped around a little bit rhetorically. I do think you are often more convincing to swing
voters with a lighter touch. The coronavirus is probably the best example. If you walk into a
focus group of swing voters and say Trump has blood on his hands, he's responsible for 170,000 deaths. I think they think, you know, they give you the
Heisman and they say, relax a little bit. If you say Trump didn't create the virus, but he's
responsible for mismanaging the response. Everyone agrees with that. And I think it's a more effective
message. Yeah, I mean, I think I think the worst Trump is the less you have to point that out.
Yeah, it's really the whole, you know, like the fact that we have 170,000 Americans dead from a pandemic that the president hasn't been able to control, like, all and Joe Biden did this at the beginning of the speech, he said, all I have, I'm not going to go into a whole bunch of rhetoric about Donald Trump, like, about the president, all I have to do is just tell you the statistics of where the country is right now. And I think it does land a lot harder.
I do want to talk about like Trump's reaction to the speech.
He tweeted, in 47 years,
Joe did none of the things of which he now speaks.
He will never change.
Just words.
Which I thought it was really funny
that Benji Sarlin from NBC tweeted,
quick pivot from this geezer
can't string two sentences together to trust not his honeyed words sweet as they may seem did he really say of which
he now speaks yes okay cool i mean dan what do you think of that new message because i you know i do
think that joe biden's been around in washington for a while and hasn't changed anything is probably more potent for Trump than he's a senile old geezer who can't string a sentence together.
But I don't know.
I mean, he's invested a lot in that first.
Yeah, he I mean, there is still always been this dissonance between what Trump tweets or says at a press conference when he's angry and what the actual strategy of his campaign is. The ads his campaign is running right now are
about Joe Biden being a typical Democrat who will raise your taxes and be soft on immigration
and has been in Washington for nearly a half century. That is a much better message from
Trump. I'm not saying it doesn't necessarily work. But if there's anything we've learned
the last few months is that Donald Trump is incapable of convincing anyone that Joe Biden
is an antifa super soldier.
And Joe Biden's speech demonstrates the fatal flaw in a strategy that depends on Joe Biden not being able to deliver speech as well, because he just delivered one well.
And so I think it can work for Trump.
It does, and we may talk about this later, but there has been this debate about why did
the convention spend so much time talking about Joe Biden the person and maybe not as much as people may say about either Donald Trump
or Joe Biden's policy plans.
It's because voters, particularly skeptical, periodic, or non-voters, their default position
is that nothing is going to change if I get involved.
And that is particularly true for someone who is very vulnerable to being painted as their default position is that nothing is going to change if I get involved.
And that is particularly true for someone who is very vulnerable to being painted as a typical politician because he's been a member of the political establishment for so long.
And so in order to get their vote, you have to, before you can ever convince them about
the merits of your policy proposals, you have to convince them that you are a person who
will deliver on your word, who will follow through on the things you promised.
And that is what all of the Joe Biden is a good person who will help people, who understands
tragedy.
That's what all of that is about.
The personal characteristics and values are a predicate for any of the policy plans to
have any impact.
And it demonstrates to me that Joe Biden's campaign has learned some of the very fundamental
lessons from 2016, where the Clinton campaign felt
they could not convince people about anything new about Hillary Clinton. And so they focus on Donald
Trump, and to a lesser extent on her plans without selling people the idea that she would do what she
said she would do. I also think that, you know, 2016, Donald Trump is in many ways an abstraction,
he is a looming threat that we're trying to convince people is real.
And so I am less critical of the decision at the time to try to figure out how to paint a story
about Donald Trump. And also one of the lessons from 2016 is when the country at the time was
focused on Trump's flaws, focused on the Access Hollywood tape, focused on the chaos, focused on
the racism, his numbers did take a dip. It did work. It was that people had a short memory.
And by the time we get to the Comey letter and the focus returns to Hillary Clinton,
the effect of that seemed to wane. And so I wonder even if you can imagine a concerted
kind of focus on Donald Trump might have an impact at some point. It's certainly not now
at the convention. It might be later on. But right now, this is an opportunity for people
who already know enough about Donald
Trump to decide whether or not they're willing to go along with this.
In the Washington Post-ABC poll, 56% of Biden's voters are voting for Biden, mostly because
they oppose Trump.
And 74% of Trump voters are voting for Trump, mostly because they support Trump.
And I think Biden wants to get those numbers a little more in balance on his side. And that's what this convention is about. That is a selling people on Joe Biden is a bigger
strategic objective than selling people on why Trump is bad. I think the biggest difference
between 2016 and now concerning Trump is in 2016, there was a group of people who voted for Donald
Trump knowing that he was a cruel asshole because they thought,
well, he's a cruel asshole, but he might shake up things in Washington and fix shit and make
my life better.
Now, Donald Trump's cruelty and him being an asshole is making their lives immeasurably
worse because it is preventing him from addressing the biggest challenge in our lives, which is the pandemic and the recession.
And this call for racial justice and climate change and any number of issues.
And so now his faulty character traits are leading to consequences that are devastating for people.
Back in 2016, they thought that the faulty character traits were just something that they had to live with for some guy who's going to shake things up.
He's still in polling represents change.
And Biden represents more of the status quo.
He's still seen by a lot of people as someone who will shake it up.
Now, the context is incredibly different, the reasons you point out.
But that's why he wants to get back to Joe Biden is a typical liberal politician and he represents change.
Whether you can do that in the middle of a pandemic you're fucking up is a, I think that's a tall order, but that's probably the safest place
for Trump to be. Dan, I totally disagree. I think he should go back to attacking the host of Morning
Joe in deeply, deeply personal criminal terms. That would be my path. I mean, he missed a huge
opportunity with the primetime slot for the Morning Joe roundtable participant, John Meacham,
last night. We'll get to you, John Meacham, last night.
We'll get to you later, Meacham.
I'm just kidding.
Let's talk about the rest of the final night of the convention.
The two-hour show was emceed by Julie Louis-Dreyfus and featured remarks from Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms,
Tammy Baldwin, Tammy Duckworth, Cory Booker, Pete Buttigieg, and other Democratic candidates who ran against Biden in the primary.
The night also featured segments with Biden's children and grandchildren in a moving tribute to Biden's late son, Beau. But one of the most powerful moments of the week came when a 13-year-old from New Hampshire named Braden Harrington spoke about how Joe Biden helped him overcome his stutter.
Here's a clip.
We all want the world to feel better.
We need the world to feel better.
I'm just a regular kid.
And in a short amount of time, Joe Biden made me more confident about something that's bothered me my whole life.
Joe Biden cared. Imagine what he something that's bothered me my whole life. Joe Biden cared.
Imagine what he could do for all of us.
Kids like me are counting on you to elect someone we can all look up to.
Someone who cares.
Someone who will make our country and the world feel better.
We're counting on you to elect Joe Biden.
Was anyone not crying during that video?
I mean, yeah. You start in an emotional place because it's just inspiring to see a kid brave
enough to do that. This does tell you everything you need to know about Joe Biden. In the middle
of a presidential campaign, he takes time to read poetry to a kid and teaches them how to
mark up words to pronounce them more easily. The story is, it's heartwarming.
It's moving.
It's also not remotely surprising to anyone who has worked around Joe Biden because there
are literally countless stories like this of him just going out of his way to quietly
help people, to call a person he met in the West Wing basement who was getting a tour,
who lost a family member, calls them on their cell phone,
you know, a month later, just because that's the kind of guy he is. We heard it from the
rabbi in Delaware who was touched by Biden's kindness. There was the Amtrak story. There's
no political upside to any of this. It's just who he is. And I do think that a lot of people
who watch that probably agree with Braden when he said, you know, we need the world to feel better.
The flip side will be Trump, right? Who proudly has stormtroopers, brutalized protesters because he thinks there's a political
upside to that. So it's a contrast. Now, of course, there will be people who say,
I have seen them on Twitter. That's great that he's a nice guy. But shouldn't we be electing
people based on their policy positions and their ideology and what they're going to do? And if they
don't go far enough, you know, if you don't support Medicare for all, does it really matter if you're kind and
decent to people? What do you think about that, Lovett? I was, it's funny that I didn't even,
without even anticipating your question, I'll tell you that like, not as a sort of pundit,
but just as an, as like a citizen myself, as somebody observing this convention,
I am somebody that approaches politics a lot that way, right? I don't care that much about the sentimental aspects. You know, my cynical instinct is I absolutely believe
when I, you know, you see that video of Joe Biden talking to Braden long ago, and you absolutely do
see somebody who sees it and really wants to help and really wants to convey it, really wants to
kind of let that kid know that he can help. It feels incredibly sincere. It's also part of his political brand, right? That
he is the kind of person that does this kind of thing. And there is to me, political upside to
being, to making part of who you are as a politician, someone who cares and gets involved
with people in their lives. But that said, one of my lessons to me as just about politics over the
last six months is absent the empathy, the basic human empathy of a
leader, you actually come to see why it is so valuable, why some of the artifice of what a
president can do, some of the leadership, the kind of intangible, kind of ineffable aspects of what
we look for in an American president, derided by Twitter, derided by, you know, cynical people like me, has value in an emergency, not just because it makes people
feel better, but because it gets them to do things for each other, gets them to wear masks,
gets them to take stay-at-home orders seriously, gets them to look out for one another in a
palpable, real, tangible way, gets people to treat each other better rather than, you know,
racing golf carts at each other in the middle of the villages outside of Orlando, right? Like we have seen over six months why
empathy actually has real substantive value in a president. The other piece of this too is nothing
about this convention, nothing about John Kasich speaking at this convention, nothing about Mike
Bloomberg trying out soundbites has moved Joe Biden's policy platform to the right.
The policy platform is what it was at the beginning. It is what it was at the end. He has shifted to the left based on where the consensus of the Democratic Party has moved Joe Biden's policy platform to the right. The policy platform is what it was at
the beginning. It is what it was at the end. He has shifted to the left based on where the
consensus of the Democratic Party has moved. Yeah, I think character has consequences in
politics, particularly when it's the character of the person with the most power and the biggest
bully pulpit in the country. An empathetic, decent person isn't necessarily a good president,
but you can't have a president who's not an empathetic, decent person.
Yeah. Yeah, I think that's right. So what did you guys think of the final night? You know,
the final night and really the entire convention did a fantastic job testifying to Biden's character
and his broad coalition. We started to talk about this earlier, but like, do we think enough was
done throughout the whole week to highlight Joe Biden's vision and his plans, particularly his economic plans, knowing that, you know, every poll we've looked at, the one place that Trump is still hanging on is people think he's either as good as Joe Biden at managing the economy or potentially better in some polls? I mean, I guess I'm looking for something different. Like when there's polling in the next couple of days, I want to see if Joe Biden's
personal approval rating went up. I want to see if enthusiasm to vote for him went up as opposed
to what Dan was talking about earlier, which is enthusiasm to vote against Trump. Do people in
focus groups seem generally more aware of his bio and his character and his story. I get that people on
Twitter want policy. I think that people in voting booths want humanity and the whole fucking stupid
trope, someone you want to have a beer with thing. And so I think in that sense, the way they were
able to do, you know, tell his story through a bunch more taped videos than just speeches
was incredibly effective. And that's
what I'll be looking for in the numbers. Love it. I came away thinking that that was an incredibly
successful convention. And I think they did an incredible job adjusting to the format.
They turned it into an asset, a Herculean task. It could have been a disaster. It wasn't. It was
not just not a disaster. It turned the lack of a crowd into an opportunity for the seriousness of the moment to speak to people, to kind of be a gathering place at a time of mourning where we've never had that. We haven't had that for six months because we have a monster in the White House.
to interrogate my own feelings to say like, all right, what do I think was missing? What like,
yes, I'm in the tank. Like, what did I feel like maybe we could have seen more of, you know,
by the end of the fourth night, I felt like we were over-torqued on some of these Republican voices and these moderate voices kind of, there's a little bit of, I think Democrats are sometimes
afraid to be their own validators. Like I, you're right. I get having Kasich. I don't know if I need
Kasich, John Meacham, Cindy McCain, Mike Bloomberg. There was a lot of Colin Powell.
So I wonder about that. I wonder if there was enough for the kind of young progressives who
are more skeptical of Joe Biden. Those are the questions I have. I don't offer it as criticism.
I don't feel as though I know the answer because I think we need to see how it shakes out.
Dan, what do you think?
I think the main takeaway is they did an amazing job.
Joe Biden delivering it.
You deliver all the speeches were great.
The logistics of pulling this off and putting together a compelling show.
I think this is actually the most effective convention in modern American history when
it comes to persuasion, because the people watching on television actually got to see
the videos and to see some of the stuff that would typically be on the undercard, it would not have shown up
on television. And so they get a huge kudos. Yes. Did they do enough? We'll find out in November.
I don't know. If I'm looking for things to be concerned about, I am less concerned about
the absence of policy because I think, as I said before, I think the first task is
selling voters that Joe Biden will actually deliver on the things he's promising before
you talk about the things he's promising. I also think those are things that can and must be
communicated in paid communications targeted to voters who probably didn't tune in last night.
Where I have concern is the same one Lovett has, which is I am totally fine with
Republicans like John Kasich, as much as I don't particularly adore him, being there in order to
help make the case to Republicans who are thinking about possibly voting for Biden. I think that we
need that. That is the only path the 270s to have that. But there's the other side of that coin,
which is Joe Biden is currently, at least prior to this convention, underperforming Hillary Clinton's numbers with Latino voters,
particularly young Latino voters. He's right at Hillary Clinton's numbers with African-American
voters, underperforming Obama's numbers, particularly among young African-American
voters. And that is a set of voters that we are very likely going to need, not just in this
election, but we certainly need in the
long-term future of this party. And if I'm looking for something to worry about, it is
the balance between young progressives, particularly young progressive of color,
and older white moderate Republicans. Yeah, I have two little criticisms. I agree with that.
That keynote montage had a lot of amazing, exciting young voices. I do think it would have been great to break that up and give those people
more time. The other thing is, I think it was a real mistake to not have any Muslim speakers at
the convention. Like every Muslim in this country has been treated with suspicion since 9-11 and
it's unfair. And I don't think it's enough to be like, hey, we're the party that doesn't have a
Muslim ban. I think you need to actively demonstrate that inclusiveness by having them there. Overall, you know, I can't say enough about this convention in terms of what they what they pulled off in this situation.
wasn't carried as much throughout the week by other speakers, but it's, you know, the most important person to do that is Joe Biden. And I also think like, I don't know that voters go into
the booth and start casting their ballots based on a checklist of policies, but more like a feeling
that Joe Biden cares about me and will fight for me on a number of issues that I care about, right?
And so I do think that Joe Biden conveyed
in his speech and the convention conveyed that at a time of great challenge in the middle of a
pandemic and a recession, this is the guy who cares about you and the other person on the ballot
does not. And that's the ultimate choice. You know, and again, like like you said, Dan, I think
the campaign will probably run many ads with a lot more specifics about Joe Biden's economic plans.
I think Bernie Sanders did a fantastic job of listing some of the policies that Joe Biden would pursue.
And I hope they do that more between now and November.
I also think, too, like it is absolutely true that they sort of stripped out the kind of Trump zingers in part because there was no audience.
But the speeches from Bernie Sanders, speeches from Barack Obama, speech from Michelle Obama, there weren't zingers in those speeches. There weren't classic political hits,
but they were speeches about just how high the stakes were, how dangerous Donald Trump is,
that kind of put that sort of, we've moved so far beyond he's a reality show, you know,
his tweets. It was really kind of Bernie Sanders, Barack Obama, Michelle Obama,
making a kind of plea to people that like, this is, the stakes are total, right? And I do think
you didn't have to have Joe Biden make that argument because I think it was made so successfully
over the course of the convention. I mean, the best positive arguments for any candidate are
implicit contrast arguments against their opponent. And that's what the entire thing was about Joe Biden being decent, Joe Biden being someone who wants to unite the
country, reach out to programs. That's all about who Donald Trump is not. And that was,
even if you don't mention his name in the speech, that was abundantly clear to voters.
Just want to quickly talk about the entire week in terms of format. Obviously,
we had a convention without crowds and not in a physical convention hall.
There were four hosts, multiple locations, pre-recorded videos mixed with live speeches.
And one of the week's highlights was the usually boring roll call where each state officially nominates the winning and runner up candidates.
This year, we got a virtual tour of the United States and its territories.
Here's a clip.
territories. Here's a clip. Rhode Island, the ocean state where our restaurant and fishing industry have been decimated by this pandemic. We're lucky to have a governor, Gina Raimondo,
whose program lets our fishermen sell their catches directly to the public. And our state
appetizer calamari is available in all 50 states. The Calamari comeback state of Rhode Island
casts one vote for Bernie Sanders
and 34 votes for the next president, Joe Biden.
The Calamari comeback state, Rhode Island.
Calamari rules.
The unsung hero of the app community.
Nobody's mad when it gets to the table.
Nobody's mad.
Never, never.
It's the one thing, and it doesn't travel well.
So I haven't had calamari since the pandemic started.
That's true.
Yeah, I haven't had calamari either.
All right, what did you guys think of the format?
What worked in your opinion?
What didn't work?
What should we keep for the future?
What should we bring back once the pandemic is over?
I mean, I think the question criticizing them, but that's what
they were, right? I also think that the party will find value in gathering people in one place.
You speechwriters, I think, would agree that we're all addicted to big venues and big applause and
people like that. It feels like there's momentum. So the tape stuff was so powerful, but I'm
wondering how you can keep that in a post-pandemic world where there is a space where people are physically
gathering. I'm with you, Tommy. I'm a little short on the predictions of like, we'll never go back
again to the old time. I think that because of the seriousness of this moment, a lot of these speeches worked incredibly
well with no crowd, which is a very, very hard thing to pull off. I think Joe Biden's speech
pulled it off particularly well, and that was very, very hard for him to do. But I think in
the future, like, look, we definitely don't need 15 speeches from politicians in a convention hall
that just drag on all night. We do not need that.
The big speeches, I think you do need them in front of a big crowd that's going to be cheering.
And I think it will help those speeches in the future. I really do. But I love like I would do
a tour around the United States again for the roll call vote. I would do a lot of these pre-recorded
videos in lieu of some boring speeches for sure. Like I think there's elements to keep, but I do think once this thing is, uh, once pandemic's over, it'll be nice to gather
again. I don't know. What do you get with Dan? I'm a little torn on this because there are some
larger problems with how the conventions are set up because they are so expensive and you have to
raise all of the money before you have an actual nominee,
it ends up being a whole bunch of corporate money, and it's really not awesome.
And it often ends up losing money for the cities that host it.
You can see some upsides to why you want to sort of get rid of that.
There is definite, like, one of the losses here is if we had had,
like, this is something that I think our campaign in 08 really led with, which is we used our convention in Denver to, as a massive organizing tool to flip that state.
In Colorado prior to that was a pretty red state that we lost for a number of elections in a row.
And that's why Obama had his nomination speech in a giant football stadium
instead of in front of a bunch of delegates,
because you could get a bunch of volunteers in there
and get them to knock doors and do all these other things.
And I, like, you know that the Biden campaign,
generally dealing with their campaign managers,
one of the people who helped lead the effort
to do that for us in 08,
that she and Ben Wickler would have maximized
that Milwaukee opportunity to build their organization.
So you're definitely losing some of that.
I like, I did think like Tommy did, like there's no way the networks are ever going to let,
give their airtime over to Tracee Ellis Ross to say, the Biden campaign needs money. Text
30. But live events are the only things that drive real ratings on linear television anymore.
And so they probably will want that. It's, it's award shows, sports and political conventions and debates. And so maybe
they will like just run our propaganda, uh, in future years because they'll need, they need,
they'll need the ratings. We sure will. Yeah. If they won't, yeah. If they won't, we, we shall,
we'll be here. But, uh, yeah,, look, I think what actually happens is kind of,
like, in a sense, like sort of trivial, like, of course, we're going to take the best elements of
the taped versions and the at-home version and mix it in with a big live event. I think one of
the other pieces of this is it's not just the format, it's that the realities of not being in
one place and not having a big convention
hall required figuring out how to concentrate the entire convention into two hours every night.
And it meant that they squeezed in far more speakers, far more people. Right. Look,
I agree that we should have heard. I would keep the two hours a night for sure.
Well, I think one of the reasons I think that like even like the networks felt obliged to take
so much of it as opposed to in previous years where they might have taken one big hour and then had pundits in a circle being like, they're talking back there.
But about what?
Who can say?
It's because it's because every day and it doesn't matter.
More Van Jones.
Look, do I miss?
Do I miss the CNN grill?
Of course I do.
Of course I do. Of course I do. All right. Let's talk about next week's shit show. The Republican
National Convention was originally supposed to be held in North Carolina, then Florida. Now it's
Trump's speech at the White House with a mix of pre-taped and live events with the president
reportedly pushing to make as much of it live as possible because we are told he's a great showman, a producer at heart.
We don't have a full schedule of speakers yet, but the Trump campaign did confirm that the theme will be honoring the great American story and that Nikki Haley, Tim Scott, Joni Ernst and Kristi Noem will be speaking there are also reports that jared kushner may speak indicted former trump aide steve bannon who was arrested at sea this week by the postal service is still part of the program
and republicans have also invited the missouri couple who pointed guns at black lives matter
protesters and the covington catholic high school student who went viral for harassing indigenous
protester nathan phillips last year and then sued CNN for it.
Sounds fun.
What kind of vibe are we getting for the type of overall message we'll hear next week?
Look, I think the gun couple is exactly the message they're trying to send,
which is if you're rich and white and afraid, anything you do is justified.
Honoring the great American story. That's it it that's the theme yeah i mean the theme seems to be
i i just bet it's the most fiercely negative you're all gonna die fear porn like culture wars
suburban moms are morphing into you know jantifa i mean like there is no version of the republican
national convention where you talk to a bunch of adorable grandkids
who then humanize Donald Trump. His whole family hates him. He's a terrible person. He's a narcissist
and capable of empathy. So it seems pretty obvious that we'll be lacking that element.
I mean, it is kind of funny to see like Mitch McConnell is saying he can't make it,
which is so funny in a Zoom convention world. I can't make it. I'm busy. You're the Senate majority leader.
We've all tried that, Mitch.
It doesn't work.
It doesn't work.
Hard to turn down an invite.
I think Mitch McConnell
didn't get an invite
because Mitch McConnell
is the least popular politician
in almost the entire country.
And so I don't think
Donald Trump wanted him there.
Also, he's not a dynamic speaker.
That is true.
No.
I disagree with all of you.
I'm excited to see
what these dipshits come up with.
Me too. It's going to be interesting. We'll get to hate watch it so that'll be fun i just i
just love i just love the idea of like it's like a sweet video with music and it's eric trump like
uh like hunter biden being like and i'll never forget when my father introduced me to Melania. He said, it's going to be your mom if it signs.
So I do want to try to take it seriously. We should.
We should.
This is too much.
No, because who knows?
It could be great.
We don't want to set expectations too low like they did to us.
CNN reports that early drafts of Trump's acceptance speech closely resemble his first convention speech in 2016,
where he declared that he alone can fix things and his july 4th speech where he promised
law and order with the with my in front of mount rushmore there um kellyanne conway said it would
also be a progress report on his first term um they reportedly like the idea of finding
real people to deliver these messages. We talked about sort of the
Missouri couple, but they also, you're going to have Alice Johnson, whose sentence he commuted,
right? Like he's done some criminal justice pardons, not just of fucking Joe Arpaio and his
gang of goons, but of like actual Americans he's pardoned. I think they have a woman whose
husband is a police officer who was killed when he made a call during the racial justice protest, Black Lives Matter protest.
So I do think they're going to they're trying to convey a sense of like this.
You know, I think one of the Trump people said the inner cities are dangerous now and it's going to spread to the suburbs soon.
If you have, you know, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris as as, you know, in the White House.
So what do we what do we think about the efficacy?
Look, no one should underestimate the power of just vicious negative politics.
But a progress report on how the first term is going, we're going to do that.
Things are pretty bad, man.
Really bad.
There's a real progress.
I mean, after watching this for a few months, I'm pretty sure we're more dialed into the
Trump campaign strategy than Kellyanne Conway.
You're just constantly commenting from an entirely different universe than everything else that's happening. I will say, I think it's worth remembering too, like the Republican
convention in 2016 was a mess. It was a dark, negative kind of ugly affair with a bunch of
goober speakers and Donald Trump is president. So I do, you know, I approach this expecting it
to be a complete mess with a lot of, you know, fear mongering and lies and deception and,
and grievance politics. I think the question is only like, you know,
how little will it help Trump and how little will it matter, I guess.
Yeah, I mean, trying to put myself in the shoes of a voter who cast a ballot for Trump in 2016 and is disappointed with him, but thinking about doing it again or just thinking about doing it for the first time, I guess you would probably be wondering, OK, the guy's sort of been an asshole.
This pandemic is out of control. The economy, not doing well either. Like, I guess I would be asking, like, what is he going to do for me? How is he going to turn things around? And the question is, like, do we think the Trump campaign or Donald Trump are capable of presenting a agenda for the second term, a vision? Are they going to be able to talk about the pandemic? I mean, like, Dan, if you were planning this convention, what should they actually do? Like what message should scare us that they would potentially base the convention on?
That Joe Biden is a typical Democrat member of the political establishment for the last half a century.
Like what you have to do is Joe Biden is massively overperforming right now with people who have rarely, if ever, voted for a Democrat in their life. Because they think Joe Biden is different than the Democrats that they see on
Fox News at the time. They think he's different than Bernie Sanders or AOC or anyone else based
on the caricature of those individuals. And they associate him with Barack Obama, who has an 18%
favorable rating among Trump 2016 voters. And so you want to make him seem like the type of
Democrat that these people have been voting against their entire life. Like if Trump in a
different world with a different Trump, you would try to, you would talk about COVID, talk about
your response, talk about your plans coming forward, talk about progress on the vaccine.
He is incapable, I imagine, of doing that, right? That's just not, he cannot acknowledge the reality of what's happening.
So what, like, what among technically achievable strategies does Trump have?
It's to define Joe Biden and define him in a negative way.
Because when you look at the polling, people are not, he has been unable to make Joe Biden
someone that Republicans, base Republican, even base Republican voters hate. And he's got to turn
him into something that sort of stabilizes this election. Because I don't think, like Trump just
has to get the election close enough to steal, right? And I mean, steal through the post office,
I mean, steal through voter suppression, I mean, steal through the inherent Republican advantage
in the electoral college. And he's not that many points away from
that. And so just laying a little wood in a coherent, believable way about Joe Biden
could bring this election into the theft zone. Joe Biden, more of the same radical change.
Yes. Yeah, that's the problem, right? That is the absolute, that's why that tweet in front of
Biden, obviously Trump was insane yelling about Obama wiretapping him and not endorsing Biden. That is unhinged. Joe Biden, 47 years in Washington, Donald Trump did not compose that because he obviously has never used the term of which he speaks. That's not a turn of phrase commented Donald Trump. So that is planned. So I think you're going to hear a lot of what is Joe Biden achieved in 50 years in Washington. I do think it's the flip side of, Dan, what you said earlier,
that in many ways Biden is running and showing what a traditional president would do and kind
of in many ways like embracing the trappings of an incumbent. And Donald Trump's goal throughout
this campaign is to be a challenger, right? That COVID is a reset. It happened to him.
Now we're kind of at a baseline. Who do, who do you trust to get the economy back?
Who do you trust to deliver change?
Who do you trust to get things back to how they were before?
And, you know, it requires a great deal of misinformation and propaganda to get there.
But he has that at his back.
We should bleep what Dan said and then release the unedited audio in a week or so.
unedited audio in a week or so.
We do too much performance criticism,
but I am trying to imagine him doing a like low energy speech off the prompter in the Rose garden.
Like maybe to a smaller.
He's bringing a crowd.
I was thinking the same thing.
It's going to, yeah.
He's got to bring a crowd.
He's going to bring a crowd.
But I like, I don't know.
Those tend to just be weird, like sniffling messes.
But again,
like that's probably
caring too much about the performance i agree to me i think it's even with a crowd a crowd outside
for a crowd outside to sound really good and energetic you need like 10 000 people maybe
they'll pipe in noise like the nba at least a thousand i guess you've never seen me at the
you have a crowd of a couple hundred people
you have a crowd of a couple hundred people.
You have a crowd of a couple hundred people on the lawn.
I don't know that that's going to give him what he needs.
And he's going to sound like the danger for Trump is that Fourth of July speech. When he reads a Stephen Miller speech, you know, and it sounds like a fucking hostage statement.
And Trump just doesn't sound good.
Like Trump sounds much crazier when he's off just doesn't sound good like trump sounds much
crazier when he's off the cuff but he at least sounds more trump when he reads those prepared
speeches he sounds fucking terrible because stephen miller is not just a horrible racist
he's a bad writer expectation setting he's had a they had a week they had a week to look at this
i'm worried my no i'm worried that he's going to like I think that Donald Trump's going to have a bunch of doctors talking about how the vaccine and the treatments are right around the corner.
And if and if Joe Biden comes and raises your taxes and, you know, calls Antifa to the White House, like all of this is going to go away.
And we're so close to the cure and we're so close to the economy being turned around.
And Joe Biden's the only person standing between us and a cure and a better economy.
I think that's exactly right.
I think it's, what do you want America to look like
once we've defeated the virus?
And by the way, inside of this vial is what Putin gave me
and I'm gonna take it right now.
That's it, that's a surprise.
Look, I think, yeah, good luck selling that you, Trump,
are the key to curing the coronavirus.
I'm not sure there's a lot of evidence to substantiate that claim.
I expect a lot of raw racism from this.
I think that's unfair, Tommy.
He has done more to bring us to herd immunity than anyone else.
Sorry, you're right.
You're right, Dan.
You're right.
Oh, no, that's the slogan.
All right.
That's all the time we have for today, guys.
Great convention. Great job, people. I the time we have for today, guys. Great convention.
Great job, people.
I'm pumped.
I'm ready to go.
And everyone, if you haven't yet, by the way,
go to Vote Save America.
Adopt a state.
This weekend, we're going to be texting voters,
calling voters,
going to do all kinds of organizing this weekend.
So sign up and adopt a state first.
You go to votesaveamerica.com slash adopt.
We've got 70-something days, so let's make everyone count.
Bye, everyone.
Bye, guys.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production.
The executive producer is Michael Martinez.
Our associate producer is Jordan Waller.
It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Kyle Seglin is our sound engineer.
Thanks to Tanya Sominator, Katie Long, Roman Papadimitriou, Caroline Reston, and Elisa Gutierrez for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Narumel Konian, Yale Freed,
and Milo Kim, who film and upload these episodes as videos every week.