Pod Save America - Kamala Pitches Populism, Trump Hawks Watches
Episode Date: September 27, 2024Harris gives another big economic speech and sits for an interview about protecting consumers and growing the middle class. Trump, meanwhile, claims Iran is trying to kill him, accuses Harris of lying... about working at McDonald’s, defends newly indicted Mayor Eric Adams, and engages in yet another grift: selling branded watches. Jon and Dan break down all the latest, including Harris’s upcoming border visit, and chat with Strict Scrutiny’s Melissa Murray about her new MSNBC special on Black women and their potential to decide the election.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, Kamala Harris does a big sit-down interview
about her economic plan and heads to the border
as she tries to neutralize Donald Trump's advantage
on two big issues.
Meanwhile, Trump wants you to know
that he thinks Iran is trying to kill him
and that you can buy a new Trump watch
for the low, low price of $100,000.
That's so good.
And strict scrutiny's Melissa Murray stops by to talk with us about what she heard from
some undecided black women voters in her new MSNBC special.
But first, Kamala Harris has had another busy week with less than 40 days left in a campaign
that could not be closer.
She's headed to Arizona to visit the southern border.
On Thursday, she spent the day in DC being vice president, first at an event with Ukrainian
President Vladimir Zelensky, then at an event with President Biden to announce some new
steps on gun safety.
On Wednesday night, she sat down for an interview with MSNBC's Stephanie Rule to talk about
the economic plan she laid out during a big speech in Pittsburgh.
Here she is talking about price gouging
and responding to Trump's claim
that she didn't really work at McDonald's.
How do you go after price gouging
without implementing price controls?
Just to be very frank,
I am never gonna apologize for going after
companies and corporations that take advantage
of the desperation of the
American people. And as Attorney General I saw this happen in the midst of an
emergency whether it be an extreme weather event or even the pandemic we
saw it where those few companies not the majority not most but those few
companies that would take advantage of the desperation of people and jack up prices.
Yeah, I'm gonna go after them.
Yes, I'm going to go after them.
I just wanna ask you yes or no.
At any point in your life, have you served
to all beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese,
pickles, onions, on a sesame seed bun,
working out at McDonald's?
Yes or no, that's it.
I have.
Okay, now the other job.
Now the other job. But it was not a small job. Like, I did's it. I have. Okay, now the other job.
But it was not a small job, like I did the fries.
I mean, I, you know.
Yes, but I did.
Okay, for a small period of time.
But then let me ask about a big job.
But to your point, if you don't mind,
before you get to the big job.
It's a, there's a, part of the reason I even talk
about having worked at McDonald's is because
there are people who work at McDonald's in our country who
are trying to raise a fam.
I worked there as a student.
I was a kid who worked there trying to raise families and pay rent on that.
And I think part of the difference between me and my opponent includes our perspective
on the needs of the American people and what our responsibility then is to meet those needs.
She did fries.
Do you know, I'm not to derail this thing,
but do you know the origin of the conspiracy theory
that she didn't work at McDonald's?
Because Trump says it all the time.
Yes.
He, there was a, one of those dumb,
blue checked right wing accounts that pretends to be news
said that McDonald's to be news said
that McDonald's stepped forward and said that they have no record of Kamala Harris
ever working there.
And that's just not true.
It was just completely made up.
So he took the fake rumor or the fake news that McDonald's said that she never
worked there to mean that she was lying, but that just never happened.
Okay.
Also what sort of records do we think McDonald's keeps about
an Oakland franchise from 40 years ago?
That's the best part.
And then they like long ago, they accused her when she first said it, they accused
her of like not having it on her resume.
She like sent her resume out after law school.
Cause like, yeah, it's like, you know what?
I don't put fucking CVS on my resume.
Although I don't send a resume around quite some time.
Anyway, how do you think she did in the interview?
Great.
That was great.
I saw many thoughts on this interview.
One, not an easy interview.
Like this, I think the thought is MSNBC,
it's Stephanie Rule,
that it'll at least be a friendly interview.
And it wasn't unfriendly, but those were,
she asked tough questions.
And it was all about the economy.
It wasn't, I mean, she, she asked one question
on reproductive rights at the very end,
but most of the interview was all economy
and economic policy and details and all of that.
And it's like, it took her like one question to warm up.
And then she was just throwing fastballs the whole time.
It's just, it was when she asked the question
about why people trust Donald Trump more, she got,
you could see like a little fire in her eyes.
And she went like right hard at the contrast and it was really good. And I have two takeaways from this. One is more
interviews. She's really good at it when especially if it's an issue that she, when it's about
something real, right? A bunch of like the marginalia stupid bullshit that comes up in a lot of
like horse race stuff in interviews. That's hard for any politician when they ask you to be pundit,
but when she's talking about something she cares about, she's excellent. Second, I kind of think that if Trump
is unwilling to agree to this CNN debate, they should challenge him to an economic debate. Could
be on CNN, could be on other network. But think about, she just has, he has the advantage in
perception, but it's like a mile wide and an inch deep. And she has the better message, the better policies.
She's the better messenger.
The contrast is it moves vote share.
We've seen that in message testing and polling.
And so finding opportunity to go back and forth with Trump only on the
end, like he'll obviously do insane stuff, but primarily on the economy
for 90 minutes, I think could be a huge advantage.
I was watching this interview.
I agree.
I thought it was excellent.
I thought it was her best sit down interview yet.
Uh, since becoming the nominee, I realized she
hasn't done it in time.
I was going to say best of four.
Yeah, but I think it was the best one.
And you're right that she always takes a, like the
first question to warm up and she always answers
the first question by like thinking and she's like
looking, she can tell that she's like trying to figure out
what value statement to start with.
It's very clear that she has been through debate prep.
And we know this cause we've done this with Obama
and he hated this, but they tell you in debate prep,
no matter what the question is,
your answer should start with a topic sentence
that just communicates your values about the issue.
It doesn't matter what the actual question was, right? And she did that very well during the
debate. And I think that for questions that you don't really want to answer, or the answer would
be too politically tricky or whatever, it's a good thing to do. I noticed that as we got into the
meat of the interview, like she just sounded,
she sounded wonkier and more detailed, but I liked it.
It sounded less like a politician talking in cliches
and more like someone who just really knows the policy
and knows the issue.
And I think it just came across, oddly,
since it was wonkier,
but it came across more informal and colloquial
and just real, you know, than some of the,
like I'm, it's very good that she's talking about
her middle-class upbringing, very good that she's talking
about how she sees the economy,
but I would just like dial it a little,
I dial it down just a little bit,
which she did in this interview,
and just answer the questions
and start talking about the policy.
Yeah, you almost have to deprogram candidates after debate
because what is good for debate
is generally terrible for an interview.
Because you're told to not answer the debate question,
or you're supposed to answer it
with the answer you want, not the question was asked.
That can work in a press conference,
it can't really work in a one-on-one sit-down interview.
And so that first question was,
let me go big picture and do all of this. And then everything else is just like,
I'm just going to answer the question. And it just comes off more authentic and real.
And it was very, very good. And the further she's gotten away from the debate, I realize
I just proposed another debate, so I could be screwing us here. But
in each subsequent interview, her answers have been more on point to the question,
which I think is to her benefit.
Yeah, I think it's always the questions that she
typically gets tripped up on are questions about,
like they're hypotheticals, which are always annoying ones
to answer, but like Stephanie Ruhl asked her,
like what's gonna happen if you can't get Republican votes
for your tax plan, you know?
And then she didn't want to answer that question.
But I do think even on something like that,
it's like, well, what I'm gonna do
is I'm gonna propose a tax plan
and I'm gonna negotiate.
And what I hope is also that I have members of Congress
who are gonna work with me to lower taxes
for middle-class Americans and raise them on the rich.
And that's what I'm gonna try to do.
Like it's pretty.
Or we're just gonna win the Senate.
Right, or we're gonna win, yeah, or that's why we'm gonna try to do. Like it's pretty. Or we're just gonna win the Senate. Right, or we're gonna win, yeah,
or that's why we're gonna win the Senate.
Like I just, some of the,
I think some of these answers are easier
than she's making them out to be,
or maybe she thinks that like she's not supposed to say it.
Anyway, I thought she was great
through like 95% of the interview
and like the best she's been on this,
and she should do more.
What'd you think of the big Pittsburgh speech?
My take away from watching the speech was good speech,
poll tested through the roof.
Like it had the policy proposals are popular.
It wasn't just a litany of a bunch of like economic
white paper vomit on stage.
It was like an, it was, it was thematic.
It spoke to the broader theme of her as someone
with a middle-class background,
who's going to fight for middle working class people,
while Donald Trump's going to fight for the wealthy.
So that was very good.
I do watch these speeches now and still sort of wonder
what the impact of these big set speeches are
in this day and age.
Obviously it's in Pittsburgh.
If you're going to do it, do it someplace
where you're going to get lots of local coverage.
I'm sure we're going to see ads that take parts of that speech
and put it together for an economic message.
There will be some social media stuff,
but how many outside of the ads are gonna run for it later
or maybe the people watching Pittsburgh TV,
how many people who don't know about her economic plans
or wanna know more about economic plans
will actually consume that speech?
I think that's sort of a fair question in this day and age.
Yeah, I think it's, you know, she hasn't given
because she hasn't had the time to give a lot of like
major policy addresses.
So you want to give your big economic major policy address.
So that totally made sense for that.
It was a good speech.
I would love to see her do a version of that speech,
basically cut it down so that it's a punchy stump speech
on the economy and have a few more contrasts with Donald Trump.
Or basically she had a lot of contrasts with Donald Trump, but just kind of
whittle the speech down to just her plan contrast with Donald Trump, her plan
contrast with Donald Trump and make it punchy and for rally events, because I
agree, like I don't know exactly who's going to consume all of that, other than
the fact that you're right, it could end up in some 30 and 60 second ads.
But it was a good speech, you know?
And like you said, it wasn't wonky.
Again, there was a few times in that speech
where she would, she seemed like she was ad-libbing,
she was joking a little, and I really liked those parts
because it seemed, she was more authentic.
She seemed like hers, she seemed like she was having
a good time, she seemed like she was more authentic. She seemed like hers. She seemed like she was having a good time.
She seemed like she was connected with the material, with the audience,
with what she was talking about.
Like, I think she just needs a little more of that on the trail and interviews
because it's there and you know, I've seen her do it, but I think that's going
to help with connecting with voters who are still undecided.
There's obviously a lot to say about our economic plan.
Campaign also released an 82 page booklet
titled A New Way Forward for the Middle Class,
but for the people who may not have had the chance
to skim through that book.
What do you think the campaign wants to convey
about her economic agenda?
Like what are the big things they want voters to remember?
I think they want people to know that she has a plan.
This is like a classic tactic for a candidate
who's new on the scene.
Obama also released a plan.
We had a book in fact, an actual published book.
I remember editing the book.
I remember you enjoying that process thoroughly
and thinking what a great use of your time
while either writing or editing three rally speeches a day.
I know so many people read it. I think it was a best seller, John. Yeah. or time or while either writing or editing three rally speeches a day, uh, that going through that.
I know so many people read it, you know.
I think it was a best seller, John.
Yeah.
Honestly, anyone can do that these days as we know.
Um, so it's just like having a plan, right?
She has a plan.
That's one.
It is just notable in that speech that she's, she announced she's a capitalist, um, which
she said during the convention.
Yes, she did.
And I think there is a argument here is that she is a
mainstream middle-class Democrat who's gonna fight
for middle-class people.
Like that is all the policy undergirds that.
That's what it's all about.
They really want the footage of her standing up there
saying she's gonna fight for middle-class people
and that she's a capitalist.
And it's the pushback against the caricature of her
that is showing up on all these ads.
The Trump and the Trump super backs have a bunch of ads up.
They're pretty tough on the economy.
They blame her for what people aren't happy about the economy,
unfairly blame her, obviously.
And they have this audit,
they have this video footage of her saying
that Bidenomics is working.
So they're trying to make her the candidate
of the status quo, which you don't like.
And they're trying to sort of push back against that
in a pretty aggressive way.
And that's ultimately the political purpose of the speech.
There's a headline in the New York Times
that the Harris campaign was understandably
and excitedly sending around,
which was Harris tries a new pitch,
capitalism for the middle class.
I was like, that's it right there,
Capitalism for the Middle Class.
Where are we these days?
I know.
First of all, it gets them away from Bidenomics,
which was clearly not the best branding.
But yeah, Capitalism for the Middle Class,
she both gets the like, I'm mainstream
and not the comrade Kamala,
and also I care about the middle class.
And what I really liked, both in the speech and in the comrade Kamala. And also like I care about the middle class and what I really liked both in the speech
and in the MSNBC interview is that like when, when Stephanie Ruhl asked her about price
gouging, she was like, I'm going to make, and she's like, well, how, you know, there's
price gouging, but also how do you convince people that it's not price controls?
Cause they get nervous.
And she's like, I'm not going to make any apologies whatsoever about going after big
companies who take advantage of America advantage of the American people.
And I didn't look at my record when I was AG.
I did the same thing.
I went on after big banks.
So it was great.
So it's like, she's not like shying away and trying to be like a mushy centrist on the
economy.
But she's basically saying she's a capitalist and capitalism can work, but it has to work for everyone in this country because that's how the economy is strong and
big corporations shouldn't be taken advantage and they should pay their fair share.
I'm sort of curious about the polling that led them to have that line,
but then the convention in here,
it's not something I've seen show up in any polling that this is a real issue for her.
She obviously has an economic deficit.
We can talk about how she has significantly narrated
over where Biden was,
but even over the course of the campaign
and the Echelon Insights Poll,
she's actually up one on the economy.
And she's only down four on the economy
in the Pennsylvania poll that the Times put out last week.
So she has made gains there.
And I think that's one important thing.
Like when you sit up and say, I'm a capitalist,
that sounds like you're doing it from a defensive crouch.
And I don't think that's what,
this speech was not a defensive speech.
It was an offensive speech.
It was an economic, I don't know,
I don't know how much the campaign cares
whether they actually win on the economy,
but that they can make gains with the voters
they need to make gains with on the economy
by being aggressive.
And they sort of showed that in the tone and tenor
of the speech of being aggressive. And they sort of showed that in the tone and tenor of the speech and the interview.
I think there's like two different groups of voters here.
There's the sort of center right indies,
maybe Nikki Haley voters that they're trying to go after.
Also some young men too, who I think her saying
that she's a capitalist and she's no CEOs
and has worked with them
and all that kind of stuff,
that's gonna reassure those voters.
And then there's the sort of low propensity,
don't always vote, younger voters,
tend to be disproportionately black and brown,
women to non-college women that they're going after,
who I think that the more populist middle-class, here's what
I'm going to do for you, middle-class tax cut, child tax credit, and some of the homeowner
stuff like that, that's who they're targeting with that message.
So I think it's probably both those groups.
With all due respect to our green eye shade wearing economic policy nerd friends, it's
all about advocacy.
Everything.
It's who are you going to fight for?
That's the whole thing.
It's all these policies, these tax credits,
all these things that you talk about in the campaign
are just a way to answer the question,
will this politician fight for people like me
or are they fight for corporations or wherever else?
And that's the thrust of it.
And that works in what is so appealing about that
and so important is it works with everyone.
It works for those, Nikki Haley, very shrug about it.
And it works for younger voters, more progressive
voters, everyone else and everyone in the middle.
Yeah, I agree.
So this week she gave a serious policy address.
Stood next to a foreign leader who's at war, uh, Zelensky in Washington.
She announced a policy with the president at the white house.
She's going to the border.
I don't know if all this was intentional or just how the schedule turned out, but
do you think they're trying to sort of burnish her strong leader, commander,
and chief credentials with voters with some of these events?
I imagine just by the, having been involved in the challenges of scheduling
presidential candidates who are also in office at the same time, that this was more a quirk in scheduling that just happened to be this was the best time
to give this economic speech and Zelensky was going to be in town and he wanted to meet with
her. Trump announced this just now that he is meeting with Zelensky tomorrow or today if you're
listening to this on Friday. And so I think something you did. I think broadly speaking,
they want to do two things.
They want to show her that she's a strong presidential
leader whenever you're trying to elect someone
who looks unlike all the other presidents
who came before them.
It's important to put them in situations
that seem familiar.
It's why Obama went on that foreign trip in 2008
and met with world leaders so that people can imagine
him doing the things that presidents have done.
So I think that's part of the Zelensky meeting.
And going to the border is,
and we can talk a little bit about politics of that,
but it's also just, she is trying to show
that she is a mainstream Democrat
with policies and values that are well within the center.
And I don't mean center like centrist,
just that they're not radical, I guess I would
say, because she's being portrayed as this San Francisco radical, she's a black woman,
open borders, letting people in.
She has the burden of being part of the Biden administration, which has been in office through
these border surges.
And this is an opportunity to go to the border and speak about her actual policies and push
back against the characters. It's all of a piece, but I don't think this was a, I don't think there was a,
uh, like a, there weren't a bunch of post-it notes on the, on the message
calendar with this, like three weeks ago, then kind of came together.
Yeah.
I do think that, and we've seen this in some of the ads too, cause they have,
uh, images of her on foreign trips with foreign leaders, you know, walking by all kinds of world flags.
Like I think they are trying to, what you said,
like show her doing what presidents do.
And, you know, she's been vice president
for the last three and a half years.
So that's a helpful job.
It should be sufficient, shouldn't it?
It should be sufficient, right?
Yeah.
All right.
So she's going to the border.
She's reportedly going to give a speech about border security and her record prosecuting
cartels and human traffickers as a border state attorney general.
So obviously an issue where Trump has a big advantage and he tried to pre butt the visit
with a long and rambling press conference we're going to talk about in a little bit
today. But basically the line he's been using for the last week is, you know, when she tells you about the border, ask her just one simple question.
Why didn't you do it four years ago?
Uh, and he says that's true about every issue.
Um, so Harris campaign clearly believes it's important for the VP to take on this issue directly and go right at one of Trump's apparent strengths.
There's also an argument to be made that whenever
the campaign is about the border,
and that's where the media focus is, it's better for Trump.
What do you think?
I think this is the right thing to do.
It is, she's being aggressive.
She's willing to take on risk.
She understands that for some segment of voters,
this is a real question.
I mean, It's not just
far right Fox News watching MAGA voters who care about immigration. It's a huge issue in Arizona
and Nevada, two states that are absolutely critical to one of her paths to 270 electoral votes.
And so going there is important because she actually has a good message. Now I hope when she goes there, she mixes it with a message about a broader comprehensive solution to all of our immigration
problems. So it's not just border security, it's also dealing with finding a pathway to
citizenship and dealing with people who have been in this country for a long time,
dealing with the dreamers and pushing back also on Trump's proposal, his mass deportation
proposal and all of that. So it should be of a piece.
If it's just border security,
then I think you are playing on Trump's territory.
If it is going to the border to talk about border security,
what you would do to secure the border
and the broader proposals about comprehensive immigration
reform, I think that is a very good thing to do.
Yeah, I'm a big believer in, you know,
when a voter has a concern instead of saying,
well, I know you might have that concern,
but let's talk about this issue instead,
where you agree with me.
It's like not a good strategy.
I did Alex Wagner show this week.
She was in Michigan and she talked to a bunch
of union workers.
It was interesting.
Some of the older union workers were very pro
Harris and the younger ones, especially the younger men were a little more pro Trump.
And a lot of them were talking about, uh,
immigration as the reason why.
And, uh, you know, they were saying some of the
things you hear directly from Donald Trump and a
lot of the right-wing media that there's all these
illegal immigrants coming in and it's an invasion and they're taking,
and it was much more, they're taking our jobs than anything else and, or driving
down wages or making housing more expensive and all that.
And, you know, I was watching that thinking like, she, I'm sure, you know,
the campaign knows they need to be doing better with men and young men and in the Midwest and the, and, and like you said, and in the border states as well.
And I kind of think that you've got to be able to answer the mail on that.
And there's a lot of people who haven't even heard Kamala Harris's position on the border,
even though she talked about it at the debate, talked about it in convention speech talks
about it all the debate, talked about it at the convention speech, talks about it all the time.
And if you can have an image of you at the border
and delivering a few solid lines
and then that ends up in an ad,
then I think it's probably useful.
It is, you're right.
I think you're exactly right about that.
And it is just interesting going back to the question
about these speeches is back in the day,
the speech used to be the end in of itself.
You'd give the speech, it would get the coverage,
it would drive the political conversation.
And now it's the initial piece of content
that maybe people see, but they probably don't
that you then use throughout the rest of the campaign.
Like she's gonna do this at the border.
So I assume there are gonna be images you can use
that will be in these ads
because she's getting hammered with immigration ads
and her at the border with the image of the border,
talking about her policy is a much better response ad
than your sort of typical voiceover response ads
that no one really believes.
And I'm sure she's gonna kick the shit out of Trump there too,
right, and talk about how he killed the border deal,
which also gets it more attention
because then they can get in a back and forth.
Trump did his own economic event on Wednesday in North Carolina where standing in front
of a giant banner that read jobs, jobs, jobs, He went on a long rant about how he thinks the Iranians
are trying to kill him.
And he's mad that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris
aren't doing enough to stop them.
Here's how it sounded.
As you know, there have been two assassination attempts
on my life that we know of.
And they may or may not involve but possibly do Iran.
But if I were the president I would inform the threatening country, in this case Iran,
that if you do anything to harm this person we are going to blow your largest cities and the
country itself to smithereens. We're going to blow it to smithereens. You can't do that.
It may or may not have to do with, but possibly yes.
Yes.
It may or may not have to do with literally anything.
I am floating a completely unverified rumor
that may or may not be true,
but you should believe it's true.
So the backdrop here is that there's some actual intelligence
about Iran fucking with Trump's campaign.
I believe right before we started recording,
the Department of Justice indicted several Iranians
in trying to hack the Trump campaign,
successfully hacking the Trump campaign.
The Trump campaign also asked for an intel briefing
that they then read out to the press as containing
quote real and specific threats against Trump's life. There is of course no
evidence that no one's seen any evidence, no one's put forward any evidence that
either of Trump's would-be assassins has any link to Iran. We have known for some
time that Iran has been interested in assassinating former president Trump,
as well as various Trump administration officials
in retaliation for the Trump administration
killing Soleimani.
So that's true.
They also, I think intelligence also says that they were,
they've been trying to assassinate current members
of the Biden administration.
So that's all out there.
Why is Trump doing this at a rally?
This wasn't even like an ad lib kind of thing
where he just went off, it was in the prepared remarks,
his team previewed it to the press.
Like what is he doing?
There is a part of his remarks,
or it was not in that clip,
where he talks in some probably not totally accurate detail
about the FBI's inability to access the phones
and the foreign messaging apps
used by the individual who, in Butler and then in Florida.
It's the kind of stuff that is very good
at making people buy into conspiracy theories.
Like, hmm, that's weird, why can't they own it?
Oh, it's a far known one, hmm,
maybe there's a lot more questions to answer here.
It's like QAnon, anti-vax,
if it's like textbook conspiracy theory spreading.
And they want to spread this conspiracy theory.
And I know it is crazy
and it's weird to do it at a economic speech,
but this is straight out of the playbook
of tin pot dictators all over the world,
is to make themselves a victim
that's powerful forces somewhere are trying to take them out
because they're such a threat to the system.
Foreign sources, whips up some nationalism.
Like they're trying to get the USA and I am the USA, right?
Like that's.
I mean, this is why so many people on like online liberals
spouted very irresponsibly that this was a false flag.
This is why you would have a false flag
as for this purpose.
There was no evidence there was a false flag,
but he's basically like six weeks late
into running the second half of the play here after this.
And so it's crazy, it's poorly delivered,
it seems bizarre, but it fits with how Trump has
and people like Trump have sought power in the past.
I guess is the way I'd say it.
I think that they're also just trying to squeeze
all the political advantage they can
out of the two assassination attempts,
just to be perfectly honest.
We know that the campaign and the Trump believed that
like after the first assassination attempt, they thought they had basically
put Joe Biden away, that they saw Trump's approval ratings increase.
I think they're mad that that didn't last.
Right.
Because then there was the switch and Kamala Harris was the nominee.
And so everyone sort of the, the coverage of the first assassination
attempt faded away and then the second one happened.
And so they believe there's sort of a rally
around Trump effect and that he was getting some goodwill,
not just from his base voters, but from other voters.
And they wanna keep that in people's minds.
They're going back to Butler, Pennsylvania
where there was the first attempted assassination
on October 5th for a rally.
He keeps saying he's gonna go finish his speech.
I'm sure they're gonna make a big deal out of that.
Uh, I just don't know.
I don't know how much that, that gets you.
Uh, I think it's a little, it's a little weird to
keep talking about the assassination attempt,
especially after the, uh, after the convention
speech, the RNC convention speech, his acceptance
speech, where he said, uh, I'm only going to tell
this story once because it's too painful to ever talk about again.
I'm not sure.
We can stipulate that Donald Trump's campaign
is better in 2024 than it was the other two times,
but I don't think it's that good.
Yeah.
Just think about, just, this is the smallest point on this,
but this is the kind of stuff that I obsess over.
Why is he speaking in front of a banner
that says jobs, jobs, jobs?
Someone in the campaign knows that
that's the better message.
Well, yes, but even if,
let's say you're just doing an economic event,
the unemployment rates at historic low,
the, when you look at all the polling on the economic.
I could say like prices, prices, prices.
Yeah, exactly.
It's just concerns about jobs are way down
because the unemployment rates at at a historic low.
So prices, wages, there are all these other things,
lower taxes, all those things.
And so you pick jobs, jobs, jobs.
It's just very amateur, is what I'd say.
Well, let me tell you,
if you thought that that event was weird.
See, this is my segue.
The press conference at Trump Tower on Thursday. Woo!
We tried to grab some clips from it.
We were gonna do like a super cut.
Honestly though, most of it was too hard to follow.
We couldn't even figure out clips.
He spent over an hour rambling and lying
about Kamala Harris' trip to Arizona
and her record on the border.
One point he accused her of losing 325,000 children
to sex trafficking.
I couldn't even follow how or why.
He promised to liberate the city of Aurora.
Okay.
He also demanded an apology from ABC News for the debate.
He attacked moderators David Muir and Lindsay Davis.
He came back around to David Muir after the
first time, like 30 minutes later, came back
around to attack him again.
Uh, he called on Nancy Pelosi to be prosecuted
for insider training and for January 6th.
Um, and he talked about Nancy Pelosi because
he talked about her trying to push out Biden.
And he said that they, that Biden only stepped down because they were
threatening him with the 25th amendment.
It was this long tangent.
He started talking about how he owned property in San Francisco.
He said that Caracas, Venezuela had become a safe and wonderful city.
Uh, then he took a few questions.
This was all before he took the questions.
And then we took a few questions.
Uh, he took one about the news that New York City Mayor Eric Adams was indicted Thursday on
five federal charges of bribery, fraud, and soliciting illegal foreign campaign donations.
And here's what he said.
I will say this. I watched about a year ago when he talked about how the illegal migrants are hurting our
city and the federal government should pay us and we shouldn't have to take
them and I said you know what he'll be indicted within a year and I was exactly
right because that's what we have we have people that use the Justice
Department and the FBI at levels that have never been seen before.
So I wish him luck.
I don't know anything about what he did, but...
So there it is.
There it is.
Donald Trump defending Eric Adams, the Democratic mayor of New York, because, hey, if you've
been indicted, then you're on Donald Trump's side.
Doesn't matter.
Party doesn't matter at that point. And it was because of, and he defended him
because he said he was indicted
because he was tough on immigration.
And I just want the listeners to know
that this morning we had our morning call
to talk about the podcast.
And we said that Donald Trump had a press conference
scheduled for the day.
And we said, I wonder if it's about Eric Adams.
And John Favreau predicted almost to the word
what Donald Trump would say here about Eric Adams.
I knew it.
I knew that's where he would do.
I think it's time you reevaluate some life choices here.
I've spent too long with this man,
but it was so obvious.
Well, you could sort of see it online too
because all of the right-wing accounts
and the blue check marks and the idiots
that follow Elon Musk and Silicon Valley,
all those dumb asses, they were all starting with the like,
oh, the Democrats did this.
They had their conspiracies, right?
Because what they don't want to admit
is that the Biden Justice Department,
which they have accused of weaponization
and going after his political opponents,
has indicted the president's son, Hunter Biden,
Democratic Senator Bob Menendez,
Democratic House member Henry Cuellar,
and now the Democratic mayor of New York, Eric Adams.
So not doing a great job
of going after Joe Biden's political opponents.
No, it does not seem that way at all.
Quite an odd conspiracy that they're like,
well, if we're gonna go after Trump,
we gotta pick five or six Democrats at random,
including the president's own son to also go after.
It seems like a real complicated plot,
but their answer is basically anyone that they've
indicted it's because they haven't done, they haven't
done what the Biden administration wanted.
Right.
So mayor, so Eric Adams was too tough on immigration.
I just, I knew Trump would go there.
Plus he just gave a press conference about immigration
and I figured, oh, there's a perfect, it's a perfect
confluence of events, Dan.
I think the listeners can decide whether this is a
positive thing or a negative thing for you, but you
absolutely nailed it.
What was that press conference, by the way? You and I were both, we're like texting while we were listening to it. That was fucking nuts.
I know we say that about every single press conference, but it-
In the history of time, I'm not sure any man has been that crazy and that boring at the same time. Yeah, it is.
It's like, it was hard to follow.
It got really boring.
And no energy.
No energy.
And the fact that it was so boring sort of dulled
like the extreme shit he was saying about migrants.
Like he was doing a lot of the like,
the migrant, like the gory stories about like rape and murder.
And it was just, it was both disgusting and boring.
If that can be the case.
It's just, yeah, just terrible.
Just absolutely terrible to listen to, not interesting,
alarming that this man is a pointer to away from me,
president of the United States. it's just truly terrible.
And it was, I don't, he was looking at notes the whole time.
So did someone write 55 minutes of remarks?
I think he would like read a line and then sort of go off
on a tangent.
I have like a smaller strategic question, which is like,
why did he do a press conference
at Trump Tower the day before she goes to the border?
Why didn't, why not like do something quick after she goes
and like get in the news that it was just very weird?
It's just, he's not doing very much.
He's not even leaving his home.
So why is he in Trump Tower to begin with?
So he just walks downstairs and does this
as opposed to why does he go to the border today
and preempt her there?
He's old and lazy and his brain is melting before our eyes.
It was also amazing to me that he goes on a long defense
of Eric Adams, even though he doesn't know much
about the case or doesn't know Eric Adams well
because of this long thing.
The last shouted question he gets is about Mark Robinson,
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina,
nude Africa poster, uh, self-proclaimed black
Nazi says he wants to bring slavery back.
You remember that guy?
Oh, you mean Martin Luther King Jr.
on steroids, that one?
Martin Luther King Jr.
on steroids, which is what, uh, Donald
Trump calls him interested in his wife's sister.
Uh, according to nude Africa anyway Trump calls him, interested in his wife's sister,
according to Nude Africa. Anyway, asked him, like,
are you reconsidering your endorsement of Mark Robinson?
Donald Trump's response.
Donald Trump, who just had time to talk for 55 minutes
and give a long and rambling answer
where he was defending Eric Adams.
This is what he said about Mark Robinson.
I don't know the situation.
And then walked away.
Unfuck it.
I just, I couldn't believe,
how can he not just like throw Mark Robinson
to the wolves at this point?
It's not like Donald Trump has any kind of loyalty.
He never throws people like that to the wolves though.
Yeah.
I guess he doesn't wanna lose his,
he doesn't wanna lose the Mark Robinson voters.
Are there Mark Robinson voters? I think he doesn't want to lose his, he doesn't want to lose the Mark Robinson voters. Are there Mark Robinson voters?
I think he'll get 40%.
But are they Mark Robinson voters
or they're just people who would vote for any Republican?
That's true, yeah.
Yeah, so then why not?
Why not, I don't understand it.
I don't understand it.
Yeah, I mean, it's hard.
We're gonna lose a lot of sleep
trying to understand this man.
All right, before we go,
a note to all the collectors out there.
So you've got your Trump trading card NFTs.
You've bought Trump's coffee table book.
You got Melania's memoir
that she's out there hawking right now.
You've stocked up on Trump and son's private cryptocurrency
World Liberty Financial, their crypto platform.
And yet you still want more.
Well, today is your lucky day.
Take a listen.
It's your favorite president, Donald J. Trump,
here to introduce something really special.
I think you're gonna love it.
My new Trump watches.
This isn't just any watch,
it's one of the best watches made with
almost 200 grams of gold and more than 100 real diamonds. That's a lot of
diamonds. I love gold, I love diamonds, we all do.
Owning one puts you in a very exclusive club. I have watch number one and I'm
gonna keep it. It's mine and that's the way I want to have it. Each watch is
numbered and extremely rare,
a true collector's item,
and it includes a personal letter signed by me.
Get your Trump watch right now.
Go to gettrumpwatches.com.
It's Trump time.
The Trump watches are $100,000.
$100,000.
He's out there talking about Kamala Harris and Joe Biden and inflation and people
getting killed with the cost and he's a he's a populist the Republican Party under Trump.
There's a workers people's party. He's fucking selling $100,000 watches 40 days before an
election. What is happening? What are we doing? I think that Kamala Harris should speak about this.
I think she should like, next time she's in an interview,
she's at a rally, I would do an insert
in the rally speech, in the stump speech.
She should mock the $100,000 thing.
She should paint him as this rich guy
who doesn't give a shit about people.
She's already doing that now.
Now she's got something that's gonna make news.
I would put it in an ad that he's doing this.
Like, this is insane, insane.
I agree with all that.
She should hammer it.
The crypto thing is weird
and kind of hard to explain to people.
It's hard to make fun of someone for selling Bibles.
That's a little tricky.
The trading cards thing is weird
and hard to understand.
The sneakers, you left out the sneakers.
The sneakers you could do, the sneakers you could do.
The gold sneakers, but the $100,000 watch.
Obama, you know what, I should,
Obama wanted to do the sneakers in his convention speech.
It fell out of it, it fell out of his mouth.
Did you take it out or just?
I don't know where it went.
He had to make room for that.
He had to make room for, yes,
I think that's what happened, I think that's what happened.
But so the sneakers you could do,
but the $100,000 watches, I would be doing this.
I imagine our friend David Plouffe is salivating over this.
This is not the biggest point here,
but I think my takeaway from this is that
Donald Trump has fully become Fox News.
Like his speeches are-
He's gonna be selling Trump catheters.
Are Hannity and everything else
is just one long Fox commercial.
It's this right here.
Trump's gold sneaker.
Don't say that.
That's going to happen.
I know.
Somewhere, Dodd Jr. is working on that.
He and Mark Robinson are going to be up there together.
I don't know, man.
I don't know.
If you can't, like, if we're going to, if we elect this,
I mean, who knows where it's a tie race.
It's a tie race. And he's got an advantage on the economy is he's out there selling a hundred thousand dollar watches.
People are most upset that costs are too high. They can't afford a home.
Can't afford groceries.
Hundred thousand dollar watches. Who's buying that?
I want to list everyone to know our
Who's buying that? I wanna list the people who do.
I want everyone to know,
our, Reid, Reid, who produces this show
and writes this show, wants us to know
that the fighter watch can be yours
for as little as $500, that it's not,
there is a low price point for folks
who don't, who can't afford the $100,000.
So I guess just to be fair.
Did Reid just Daniel Dale us?
He was, he was, he was very concerned that, you know, we just to make sure that the $100,000, that's
the top, that's the top echelon.
That's the high price point.
Reid is remote, but I'm going to take a close look in the next couple of weeks to see if
he's got a fighter watch on his wrist.
Look, it does come with a handwritten letter from Trump.
So I do think that that's cool.
I'm sure he personally signed all of those.
All right, we have some pitching of our own to do
before we get to Melissa Murray.
On the latest episode of Inside 2024,
Alyssa Mastromonico joins me
and we talk about political rallies
since Alyssa has put together
quite a few political rallies in her time.
We're gonna talk about how effective they are in 2024
and talk about some of the best ones that she put together back in the day. To get access to
exclusive subscriber series like Inside 2024 and more, head to kirkadotcom.com slash friends now.
It won't cost you $100,000 and you won't be making Donald Trump richer.
You'll be supporting independent progressive media.
How's that?
When we come back, Melissa Murray.
["Dreams of a New World"]
Joining us today is our pal, Melissa Murray.
She's the cohost of Crooked Strict Scrutiny podcast, a professor at NYU Law and has a
new MSNBC special airing this Sunday at 9 p.m. with our friend, Simone Sanders Townsend.
It's called Black Women in America, Road to 2024.
Welcome back, Melissa.
Thanks for having me.
Great to be back.
So, I want to start with a clip from the special where you and Simone are sitting down with some young black women at a nail salon who have contemplated sitting out this
election. Let's listen. How are folks feeling about this election season? It's crazy to
say the least. Yeah, I'm feeling a little iffy. The first time that I was able to vote
was for Hillary Clinton. That was my first and last time because I felt like, okay, I felt hope that Hillary would win. I felt excitement from the community
around me. I just had so much hope and then look what happened. And so now I'm
like, did my vote really matter? I don't know.
Were you excited to vote before the switch or were you just gonna sit it out?
I was probably gonna sit it out as well.
Oh wow.
I agree, I was definitely sitting it out.
I was not voting at all before the switch.
I'm still up in the air, obviously I'm a Muslim woman.
So it's very nerve wracking and very scary for me.
It's already hard wearing hijab in public. So when you talk about things like Project 25,
it's kind of scary.
So I love hearing from undecided or persuadable voters,
even if what they say is frustrating or frightening,
which it often is.
How many did you guys talk to, where,
and what else did you hear?
Was that typical of what you heard?
So we talked to a lot of women.
I mean, these weren't focus groups in the way
that you and Sarah Longwell have done on other shows.
But we did talk to a pretty broad cross-section of women.
So there are women who were older,
like in their 40s and 50s.
And they had very distinct views.
This group of women were true millennials,
like 28 years old to 32 years old.
And we met at this nail salon, the Cosmo Beauty Bar
in Washington, DC.
And I have to say, I've never felt so old.
Like when they asked me,
what would you like to do with your nails?
It's like, I would like them short and finger colored.
And they're like, we haven't done anything
like that since 1994.
So I got a true education in all of the new nail techniques
that are available, but I also got a real education
about what younger women are thinking.
And one of the things that struck me
is that we are hearing constantly in the media
that black women are just ride or die
for the Democratic Party.
And I just don't think that's true.
It's not true for these women.
They feel overlooked.
I think all of the Black women that we talked to
felt overlooked by the traditional political parties,
that their votes were either taken for granted
or were overlooked entirely.
But for these younger women, they really
felt that no one was sort of speaking to them.
And to be really clear, some of their complaints
didn't strike me as being entirely plausible.
And that's not because they're wrong.
I think it is a failure of messaging.
So there was this one really interesting discussion
about how much they were invested in student loan
relief.
And student loan relief actually did happen.
And then it was sort of withdrawn by
the United States Supreme Court. And, you know, they hadn't really heard about it. No one that
they knew had gotten student loan relief. And in their view, the administration was not talking
about their successes in having student loan relief go forward. And then the failure of having
that eradicated by the Supreme Court in one fell swoop. So there are a lot of really interesting questions here,
some of it about messaging, but also some of it
about really appealing to these voters where they are.
What were some of the issues that they spoke most about
and some concerns they had with the administration?
So one issue that was a particular concern,
they lived in Washington, DC, most of them did.
Some were from other states like North Carolina,
but police violence was a big issue.
And again, it was hard to sort of understand
where they were coming from on this.
They wanted the administration to do more
and be more proactive about addressing police violence.
But I think there was a misunderstanding
about what any presidential administration can do
about the 18,000 police departments
that are actually under local and municipal control.
And in fact, the Biden administration
did a really big effort with an executive order
that provided lots of funding to local and state offices
to track police violence, to do better training,
things of that nature.
They weren't really clear on that piece of it.
And I think that is actually a failure of messaging
from the administration, maybe also a failure on the part
of those of us in the media.
Because for the last year and a half, all we've talked about
is Donald Trump and his criminality.
We haven't talked about some of the other things
that the administration has done to address
really pertinent and entrenched
problems like police violence. So that was one thing they talked a lot about. Student loan relief,
reproductive rights was a big issue and they all recognized that it was salient, but it still
wasn't enough to ensure that they were going to the polls. You talked about messaging. What do you
think Kamala Harris needs to do to sort of close
the sale with some of these voters?
So we spoke with these young women after the switch had happened. We spoke with another
group of older voters right after the debate. And that was actually a very interesting conversation.
But even after the switch had happened and Harris was the nominee going forward for the
Democratic Party, they wanted real specifics from her.
What are you going to do?
So I think this was a little bit before she started articulating some of the particulars
of her plan, certainly on the home ownership piece, but they wanted to know what she was
going to do specifically about reproductive rights.
And again, not a ton that a presidential administration can do without having a Congress and work
being done in other branches of government.
But they wanted more particulars.
How are you going to shore up Roe versus Wade?
What is that going to look like?
Can I get behind this?
And so that was really important, I think,
very, very particular to her.
They just felt she was a bit of a cipher at that point.
And they wanted someone to fill it in.
I mean, Democrats' struggles with young black men have been a major topic of conversation
this cycle. So I'm very excited to have something entirely new to worry about. So thank you for that.
But do you do you have a sense of whether it's similar dynamics going on with young black women?
Is there something different going on? Is there something specific Democrats should be doing to
address these concerns? Sure.
I actually do think there is a difference here.
And I, too, have heard all of the discussion
about how Trump curious young black men are.
I did not get the sense that these women were
Trump curious at all.
The woman who previously spoke who was in the hijab,
she was just very clear.
I am not voting for Donald Trump.
I don't like him.
I think he's a criminal. They were very clear. This was I am not voting for Donald Trump. Like, I don't like him. I think he's a criminal.
I mean, they were very clear. This was really more a question of, am I even going to get out of the
House on Tuesday, November 5th, to vote at all? And so this was really more, is there anything
that's going to animate me to get on board with Kamala Harris and the Democrats, not what is
pushing me towards Trump? So I think it's a different kind of conversation.
I think one of the things the Democrats really
need to think about is how they message what they've done
and also how what they've done is being received.
And we talk a lot about low information voters.
I think it's unfair to talk about them in that way,
because it sounds as though they are purposefully disengaged.
And that's not true.
But it did occur to me when I was talking to them
that these are young women who came of age after 9-11,
after No Child Left Behind, when we as a country systematically
stripped public education of superfluous things,
like PE and music and art and civics education.
So it's not surprising perhaps that they don't understand that the police departments don't
get dictated to by a presidential administration.
It's not surprising that they may not understand precisely that the president has to work with
Congress to pass a domestic agenda.
So we have really made them ill-equipped
to understand how government works
in a very particular way.
And that's a real problem.
I mean, an electorate that doesn't understand
how government work is an electorate
that can be preyed upon with misinformation.
And that's exactly what we're seeing.
Yeah, there is a conversation we had about how Democrats
talk about their accomplishments, what we say,
how we make it matter to people.
There's also the broader question of,
how do we reach these people?
Because I agree with you, low-information voters,
it's a pejorative way of discussing it.
But most voters, most people in this country
do not engage with news in a real way.
The distribution mechanisms of news are sort of broken.
Did you get any sense of where these people are getting
their political information, platforms or media outlets
that maybe the Harris campaign or other Democrats
should go on to actually inject themselves
in front of these voters?
So they talked about getting a lot of their information
from social media and podcasts and sort of YouTube shows.
So Hot Ones was mentioned.
And I think those are really important platforms.
I mean, it's not traditional news media.
It's not even cable news, which I think for a lot of them,
that seemed like my parents' media.
They're getting it from a bunch of different sources.
And I think it's important for her to meet them where they are.
And it's non-traditional media.
But I also think, again, it's worth thinking about. Is it the case that we can only understand
what the government does and how they do it if we go to law school, if we took constitutional law?
There's a real gap here and we are going to have to address that going forward. I mean,
it's all of a piece with these book bands and preventing people from having certain kinds of
curricula. It's all of a piece. You make it harder for people to understand what's happening.
You don't give them the tools to be able to critically assess it.
I think it's a lot easier to put one over on them.
I know you guys talk to voters and other black women in politics and leadership roles.
What was your main takeaway from the entire special? Like,
what did you walk away with?
So black women are deeply engaged with the issues. They understand that this election
is probably unlike other elections. All of them seem to understand the kind of existential
crisis that undergirds this election. I think some of the older women were just
much more explicit about it.
But even the younger women were like,
this is the election that I'm voting on,
because if I'm voting, I'm voting for my kids.
That was very palpable and very clear.
They are engaged.
Their levels of engagement are different.
But to a person, they all feel a little misunderstood
by those who are in power.
The women we talk to in the suburbs
say that when they talk about suburban women,
they're not talking about me.
And the younger women feel like
they've been completely overlooked.
The attention we're spending on young black men
talking about what animates them,
we're not spending the same kind of attention
talking about what is animating young black women
or what is keeping them at home
when they might be out there voting.
So this is a sector of the electorate
that's regarded as reliable and diehard.
But in fact, they're more wobbly than you think.
Yeah.
Well, I'm really glad you guys did the special.
Everyone should tune in.
It is Sunday night, September 29th, 9 p.m. on MSNBC.
And you can catch Melissa on Strict Scrutiny. Sunday night, September 29th, 9 p.m. on MSNBC.
And you can catch Melissa on Strict Scrutiny.
And Simone is gonna be our guest host at our Philly show.
We're gonna do a live show in Philly next Sunday night.
So check that out too, come visit us in Philly.
Melissa Murray, thank you so much for joining us as always.
And thanks for doing this special.
Thanks, Melissa. Thanks so much for joining us as always. And thanks for doing this special. Thanks, Mosa. Thanks so much for having me.
That's it for today's show, but Dan and I are going to stick around to answer some audience
questions from our Friends of the Pod subscribers and play some rounds of Take Appreciator.
No, we're playing one round of Take Appreciator, Elijah.
If you're signed up for Friends of the Pod,
this is already in your feed.
If you're not signed up, you can join at
krikat.com slash friends or through your Apple podcast feed
to get this and much, much more.
That's our show for today.
Thanks to Melissa Murray for joining.
Everyone check out Black Women in America,
The Road to 2024 on MSNBC Sunday at 9 p.m. Eastern.
And we'll be back with a new show on Tuesday.
Bye everyone.
If you wanna get ad-free episodes,
exclusive content and more,
consider joining our friends
of the pod subscription community at crooked.com slash friends.
And if you're already doom scrolling,
don't forget to follow us at Pod Save America
on Instagram, Twitter and YouTube
for access to full episodes, bonus content, and more.
Plus, if you're as opinionated as we are, consider dropping us a review to help boost
this episode, or spice up the group chat by sharing it with friends, family, or randos
you want in on this conversation.
Podsave America is a Crooked Media production.
Our producer is David Toledo.
Our associate producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safari.
Reed Cherlin is our executive editor, and Adrian Hill is our executive producer.
The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer with audio support from Kyle Seguin and Charlotte Landis.
Writing support by Hallie Kiefer.
Madeleine Herringer is our head of news and programming.
Matt DeGroote is our head of production.
Andy Taft is our executive assistant.
Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Phoebe Bradford, Joseph Dutra, Ben Hefkot,
Mia Kelman, Molly Lobel, Kirill Pellivive, and David Tolles.
Every weekday, NPR's best political reporters come to you on the NPR Politics Podcast to
explain the big news coming out of Washington, the campaign trail, and beyond.
They don't just tell you what happened, they tell you why it matters, how it might impact
you.
Join the NPR Politics Podcast every single afternoon to understand the world through
political eyes, wherever you listen to podcasts.