Pod Save America - “Kenosha vs. Convention.”
Episode Date: August 27, 2020The protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin after the police shooting of Jacob Blake provide the backdrop to a Republican National Convention where the party tries its hardest to stoke division and deny realit...y. Then Wisconsin Lieutenant Governor Mandela Barnes talks to Jon about police brutality, the protests, and what Joe Biden needs to do to win Wisconsin.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's pod, I talk to Wisconsin Lieutenant Governor Mandela Barnes about the latest
developments in the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha. Before that, we'll talk about
the first three nights of the Republican National Convention and what it might mean for the final
68 days of the election. But first, check out this week's Pod Save the World, where Tommy and Ben
talk about the poisoning of Russian opposition leader alexei navalny the foreign policy lowlights from the rnc and chat with a 26 year old politician
from brazil named tabata amaral who's been called her country's version of aoc and finally believe
it or not there are only 10 weekends left between now and the election. 10, Dan, 10.
Do you think that's a lot or a little?
I think it's a little.
I mean, it doesn't seem like a lot, but I don't know.
I mean, I feel like it should be a lot.
I don't know, 10 weekends ago?
What was happening 10 weekends ago?
Probably the same thing is going to happen this weekend
and 14 weekends from now and 20 weekends from now.
Nothing.
Anyway, make them count.
This weekend, our Adopt-A-State program is hosting a special weekend of action
to help Democrats take back the Senate.
Sign up to Adopt-A-State at votesaveamerica.com slash adopt,
and we will send you details about exactly what you can do to help from home.
Adopt-A-State.
Do not freak out.
Just help out. That's my new slogan for the last 68 days dan oh that that could fit on a koozie or something call the merch people i
actually although i do want to be sort of self-aware about this i think you can freak out
and help out because that's what i'm gonna do yes i'm not gonna be able to not freak out i was gonna
keep your secret for you but since you you just admitted that publicly, it's fine.
No, I always admit it. Yeah, I'm a fucking mess every day.
Okay, let's get to the news.
We'll dig into the Republican National Convention in a minute.
But at this point, I think the event has really been overshadowed by two major developments.
One is a catastrophic hurricane that's hitting Louisiana right now.
One is a catastrophic hurricane that's hitting Louisiana right now.
And the other is the protests that have taken place after video surfaced of a police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin, who shot 29-year-old Jacob Blake seven times in the back in front of his children.
On Tuesday night, as people took to the streets, a Blue Lives Matter supporter from Illinois who attended a Trump rally in January shot and killed two protesters and injured a third.
The 17-year-old has been charged with first-degree murder.
The police officer who shot Jacob Blake has been placed on leave while the case is investigated.
And the protests have spread far beyond Kenosha to professional sports,
where players on various teams in the NBA and Major League Baseball,
starting with the Milwaukee Bucks and Brewers,
chose to sit out their games and possibly the rest of the NBA season in protest.
There are a lot more details to the story. I tried to cram in as many as I could.
But I do want to stop here, Dan, and get your reaction to both the shooting and the scope of the protests,
which, you know, now includes some pretty bold action from a lot of professional athletes.
include some pretty bold action from a lot of professional athletes.
It's the whole incident is sort of embodies everything that is so horrible about this period in which we're living, right?
The shooting of Jacob Blake is horrifying.
The shooting of the peaceful protesters is horrifying.
The differential in treatment between Jacob Blake and the white shooter of the protesters
by the police is horrifying.
The comments by the law enforcement Kenosha blaming the protesters for being out past
curfew is horrifying.
being out past curfew is horrifying. The way in which the far right is now lifting up as some sort of hero, this 17-year-old who shot protesters is horrifying. And we will get into this. It is
in many ways a fitting backtrack to the convention that we are seeing in, I guess, DC or in the White House, wherever
it's happening, because a lot of the themes of that convention run headlong into this.
And I think I just want to say one thing about the protest more broadly is, I think credit
goes to the athletes in the NBA, Major League Baseball, WNBA, who are taking a really
bold stand. The NBA players or professional athletes sitting out a game in protest is
something that has not happened in history. And it seeks to, I think, raise attention to this
in a very real way. And I think it goes to something that is so
important is we are living in deeply dangerous, abnormal times. And it is easy to feel the pull
of normalcy because we want our lives to be normal. And frankly, watching NBA games,
even if they're happening in a bubble with fans on a screen and fake applause, it still feels like something resembling normal times.
And when LeBron James and the Milwaukee Bucks and the rest of these players say they're not going to play, that shakes that sense of normalcy that a lot of people are clinging to.
normalcy that a lot of people are clinging to. And I think that's important if we're going to confront all of the systemic racism that undergirds this incident and all the other ones we've been
talking about in this year and before. I think it's sort of the only way that we can really
confront it. I what, you know,
in many ways, it's just as horrifying, just as infuriating. But it's also a bit more dispiriting
because between the Floyd protests and now, nothing significant has been done, particularly on a national level,
about police brutality. There is legislation stalled because Mitch McConnell obviously
won't take it up in the Senate. In Wisconsin right now, the Republican legislature refuses
to come back into session to do anything about this. Obviously, there have been small and important victories around police budgets in many cities, but clearly
not enough. And I think to me, so long as we have a political system that is this broken,
with Donald Trump as president, with gerrymandered Republican legislatures all around the country,
with police departments that are run like they are, with a Senate that is run by Mitch McConnell.
So long as we have this political system, there will be protests, but nothing will give until something big changes.
And I do think that's why what the NBA, what so many people in the NBA did yesterday was so momentous because they are basically using all of the power of their platform to try to change this. And it's,
you know, it's a lot more than some of the sort of corporate moves you saw around George Floyd,
where there'd just be sort of like a, you know, a statement from a company or a brand, right? Like
this is a real action that these
NBA players have taken. And I hope a lot more people in different parts of society see this
and take similar action. So I'll talk about this more later with Lieutenant Governor Barnes.
And I have no idea what, if any, kind of political impact the shooting and these protests will have.
But I do want to talk briefly about how both campaigns are handling it. Joe Biden released a video where he said that Jacob
Blake's shooting made him sick, that he promised Blake's family that justice would be done,
that protesting brutality is necessary, and that burning down communities isn't protest,
but needless violence. At his party's convention, Donald Trump gave primetime speaking slots to a
rich white couple who pointed guns at Black Lives Matter protesters,
the attorney general who so far refused to charge Breonna Taylor's killers, and multiple speakers who attacked athletes for protesting police brutality.
What do you make of the different responses to Kenosha from the two campaigns?
The Biden folks seem like they wanted to emphasize both support for the protests and opposition to the violence. The Trump campaign didn't allow the incident to change
anything about their convention, their law and order message at all, and in fact,
did what they could to continue inciting this kind of division and violence.
It has been the primary political strategy of the Republican Party for decades to scare the
living shit out of white people.
And they see an opportunity to do that right here in the tipping point state that will likely decide the presidential race in Wisconsin. And that is what the convention is about. That is what
putting the McCloskeys, the St. Louis gun couple in prime time from their giant mansion,
speaking to a convention and treating them as heroes for pointing assault weapons at peaceful protesters.
All right.
The rule of the Republican – like the way the Republicans view this is white people can use weapons to respond in any way they see fit to defend themselves whether that threat is real or not.
to respond in any way they see fit to defend themselves, whether that threat is real or not.
But peaceful protests from black people presents a clear and present danger to the safety and security and sanctity of white people. And that is the message they have been trying to have.
They've been doing this long before Donald Trump ever rolled on the scene. This is 68. This is
Ronald Reagan. This is Willie Horton. This Palin this is a this has been the primary
strategy of the Republican Party and they it is on steroids at this Republican convention but that
is what is happening and they're not trying to hide it right like Kellyanne Conway this morning
said quote the more chaos and anarchy and vandalism and violence the better it is for the
very clear choice on who's best on public safety and law and order.
So they are openly talking about their political calculations around what's happening.
So I guess the question is, if you're the Biden campaign, how do you handle it?
I thought his video yesterday was a good start.
I know he was talking today, basically saying he used Kellyanne's
comments to say they want this, you know, like they basically want to pour gasoline on this fire.
Yeah, I think you're right. Always the best way with Trump is to call out the game, to explain
why they are doing things and why are they trying to divide us? What are they trying to distract us
from? And that is a much better way than being defensive about it and then sort of buying into the
language of the right in talking about some of the isolated incidents of violence that
may happen around these largely peaceful protests, whether they're in their Kenosha or elsewhere.
And so, you know, I think Joe Biden's campaign navigated the protests around the murders
of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and so many others quite well, right?
By doing this, by just speaking from the heart and not being defensive about it.
And that's what they're doing here.
And I imagine that's what they're going to keep doing.
And also, let's talk about what we mean when we say violence in Kenosha,
because the two major incidents of violence so far are a police
officer shooting an unearned black man seven times in the back and then a Trump supporter
from Illinois coming into Wisconsin and shooting and killing two protesters and injuring a third.
Someone who is a Trump supporter who was at a Trump rally. And so I do think like Donald Trump bears responsibility here
in the language he uses and how he incites people
every day on Twitter and at his rallies.
And I think that Joe Biden and the Democrats,
and I saw they started doing this today,
like this will not end until Trump is no longer president.
And there's no zero guarantee that it will end when Trump isn't president anymore.
But there's no chance of change with Donald Trump as president right now.
Like, you know, there will be there will be police brutality and there will be violence and there will be chaos.
As long as this man holds power and most Republican officials and continue to stoke these divisions. And I think that is the
clear message because, you know, Donald Trump's trying to say like, oh, if Joe Biden becomes
president, there'll be violence and chaos in our cities. It's happening now with Donald Trump as
president. Right. That's the fatal flaw in the Trump argument. Someone had said this on Twitter
and I apologize for not remembering who it was, but Donald Trump's message is that he's going to
stop all the things that are currently happening from happening.
Right?
Yeah.
No, that's the whole message.
That's the whole message.
We could not let it go without pointing out that,
like you were right,
Donald Trump bears responsibility here.
And not just Donald Trump.
Republicans up and down the ballot
bear responsibility for this
because their message is,
if your message is anyone who wants can buy an assault rifle.
Also, we're going to scare you with racist language about black protesters and immigrants and terrorists coming to kill you, when people take matters into their own hands with
the very weapons you're allowing them to get, in many cases without background checks,
you bear responsibility for this. It's easy to gloss over this as typical politics, but
at the same time, you're giving people access to deadly weapons of war and trying to incite violence at the same time.
That, like, that,
that is not normal.
That is not just part of politics.
That's not left versus right.
That is why people die.
That's why we have a huge,
unacknowledged right-wing
terrorism problem in this country.
Tucker Carlson,
Donald Trump's pal,
who advises him on things,
said last night on his fucking program,
how shocked are we that 17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would.
And Coulter, I want him as my president, talking about the 17-year-old who murdered two people in Wisconsin.
Murdered two people in Wisconsin.
That is what conservative media is beaming into the homes of millions of Americans.
That message. And the Republican Party, they go on those shows.
They get advice from those media personalities.
They take their cues from what happens on Fox News.
That is the Republican Party ecosystem right now.
And you cannot have a
conversation about how public opinion is changing and the politics of all this without acknowledging
how off the fucking deep end these people have gone. Let's talk about everything that we have
unfortunately seen at the upbeat and optimistic Republican convention, which has been a mix of video testimonials
and mostly pre-taped speeches at a podium
in front of an empty auditorium.
There have also been a few segments
where Trump surprised unsuspecting White House guests
with things like pardons and citizenship
as a way to juice those ratings,
because he is, as we've been told, quite a showman.
That's what we're told about Donald Trump.
Before we get into the specifics, what are your overall thoughts about the format of this convention compared to what we saw at the DNC last week?
I think it is less of a shit show than we probably imagined it would be.
Like it's, you know, it moves like there haven't been sort of technical glitches or anything like that.
It is certainly a greater opportunity to get coronavirus than the Democratic Convention, considering all the people without masks just hanging out together at Fort McHenry at the Penn speech.
There'll be a thousand people at the Trump speech tonight with where masks are optional and discouraged, apparently. And I think, you know, we can talk
maybe a little bit later about the strategy, but just in the day-to-day insanity of life in the
Trump era, like it all seems so stupid and chaotic, like there's no plan. And that is true when Trump
is speaking or tweeting, but there is a plan here,
right? And sometimes that's shocking to see when just for them to have even the basic bare bones
of a strategy to accomplish political goals. And that is definitely happening here. And so
like that is not, I'm just struck. I just can't stop thinking about 2016 when you and I were – I was at both conventions in 2016 and you and I did podcasts from them.
And I remember sitting in Cleveland.
I was doing it in the – I was talking to you for our Keeping It 1600 podcast then.
Sitting in the empty baseball bleachers at the Cleveland Indian Stadium, which is right next to the arena where the convention was.
And we were just like dunking on them and laughing at them and talking about
Antonio Sabato Jr. and all the absurdities and Michael Flynn's insanity.
And I remember a similar conversation in Philadelphia,
feeling great about the amazing Clinton convention. And it's just,
and I don't think those assessments were necessarily wrong,
but it's easy to overread one way or the other into it.
And so I just want to like, as we have this conversation,
take a step back and recognize that we don't know the impact of any of this
stuff yet. And we could be surprised by it one way or the other in both,
in both instances.
Yeah. And I always hold out the possibility that we could be surprised that, or maybe not surprised
that neither convention had much of an impact at all. Yeah. I mean, that's just the other,
which is, and that also could, we don't know that about 2016 either looking back on it,
right? Like how much those conventions had an impact on the final, on the final outcome.
Yeah. I mean, it's like, yeah, they're a long way from the election and a million things
happen between them. I think we can say with some certainty that the Democratic invention in 2020
was successful because we have seen data that shows that Joe Biden improved his personal
favorability ratings pretty significantly coming out of
those conventions. That was the goal of that entire program, was to further define Joe Biden
and Kamala Harris in the eyes of voters. They achieved that. We don't know what will happen
in this one. I will say something about the difference in format. I think the Democratic
Convention, the format acknowledged that we are
living through a pandemic, a global pandemic. They acknowledged reality, right? And so there were
speeches from all different parts of the country, right? Like you didn't go long in the Democratic
Convention programming without remembering that COVID is sort of like the essential fact of American life right now.
The Republican convention so far has tried very hard to make people forget about the pandemic
completely. And we'll talk about how that's true in the speeches, but it was also true in the
format, right? It's just like, here's a podium, here's a bunch of speakers, here's a bunch of,
you know, like a lot of the pre-taped
videos weren't about COVID, pretended like it had never happened, right? Like even the format
and production of the Republican convention sort of is strategic in that I think it's trying to
make people forget about the biggest crisis that we're facing right now, one that Donald Trump has
not handled well at all. I mean, it's a poor execution of it because the medium is the message, right? The fact that Joe
Biden and Kamala Harris are delivering these speeches in empty rooms, that this was all
happening by Zoom, was a very implicit reminder that Donald Trump has massively screwed up
the pandemic, which is forcing us to live in a world where people cannot be in the same room together. The Republican convention is trying, like there is some, you know, there is some rhetorical
toss to, well, we have more testing and we really have to talk about the China ban from
six months ago as if six months later, there weren't a thousand Americans dying every single
day, which seems to suggest that maybe that China ban was not as effective as Republicans
would suggest.
But even when you look at that,
like the head on shot of Mike Pence's speech in Fort McHenry,
that seems like a real event.
He's outside and there are signs and he's at a fort.
But then when they do the crowd,
it's like 45 people sitting together,
like kind of like golf clapping.
And like, so that you can't, it's like the worst of all worlds, right.
Is to try to pretend like something's not happening,
but do it so poorly that it reminds every,
that everyone knows you're trying to pretend like it's not happening.
So, you know, as you said, like, we,
we don't know the effect that this convention,
the Republican convention will have on voters yet.
Neither of us have spoken to any undecided voters yet this week. Maybe we can refrain from
pontificating with certainty about how they're reacting. I know that's a wild idea.
No, there's two types of data. There is polls and there's anecdotes on Twitter.
So, and they're equally valuable in assessing politics.
Look, it's important as a pundit to show that you know what swing voters are thinking and that everyone else around you is just a bunch of media elites who are just sneering down their noses at them.
But you know exactly what voters are thinking because you are in touch with voters.
That's how you pundit, Dan.
pundit, Dan. What we can do, even if we don't know voters' reactions, we can talk about what kind of voters the Trump campaign seems to be targeting with this convention and what they
want them to hear. What do you think? What have you detected as the strategy of this convention?
There's certainly two groups of voters that they are trying to attract or persuade with this convention. And it's an open
question as to whether you can do both at the same time. But one group is definitely
moderate Republicans and Republican-leaning independents who have left Trump. And the
message to these people is Trump is less racist than you think. He's actually a better president than you think.
He's more of a traditional Republican than you think related to that.
Joe Biden's more of a typical liberal Democrat than you think.
And so we know you want to come home to be with your Republican family, and we're trying
to create a permission structure for you to do that.
mission structure for you to do that. Second group is the large number of non-voting likely Trump voters in the Midwestern states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. And that is what the base
rhetoric is for. That's what the McCloskeys are for. That's what the Antifa, anarchy in the city
stuff is for, is you're trying to jack up turnout among those people. And you're not going to get
all the Republican-leaning voters back. You're not going to get all the Republican-leaning voters
back, you're not going to get all the new voters in, but a little bit from column A, a little bit
from column B could win you this race. And we don't know how many of those non-voters are tuning
in or have tuned into the Republican convention. But what I was going to say, what we do know
in general about sporadic voters, low propensity voters, whatever you want to call them, on both the Democratic side and the Republican side, and they're sort of different demographics on each side, is that they are very disconnected from the news.
They do not pay attention to politics as closely as all of us.
And so they are probably unlikely to have watched the convention. Perhaps they saw some
media coverage of the convention, but they don't even follow the news super closely either. And we
just know this because of past polls and research and focus groups about people who tend to not vote
in every election. So it is tougher to reach those people. But you're right that it's probably not as
tough to reach Republicans or people who voted for Trump in 16.
Either they were Obama Trump voters or they voted for Trump in 16 and now disapprove of him and are probably still Fox News watchers are probably still, you know, they still pay attention to a lot of Republican media.
So I'm sure they were a big target of Trump in this campaign.
So I'm sure they were a big target of Trump on this campaign.
And you're right.
For those people, a lot of the problem is like Trump has just been a bad guy and he hasn't been an effective president and he hasn't done great on COVID and he's too much of an asshole.
So maybe I won't vote for him.
And this whole convention was basically saying no.
I mean, I got a couple of messages out of the convention that I wrote down here.
One is Trump is the greatest president ever,
despite what, you know, the crooked media may tell you. A lot of media bashing about how,
you know, Trump is a victim. He's a victim of the media. He's actually the greatest president ever.
The next message is COVID is yesterday's news. Forget about COVID. It's already, it's gone.
It's something that we went through. It's past tense. Third is Republicans aren't racist or sexist and neither are you for supporting them. That's been every night of the convention. And then the final one is
Joe Biden, Kamala Harris are puppets of the radical left who will turn America into a violent,
chaotic hellscape where you may be canceled. That's another big, big part of the message.
Did I miss any or were those all the messages?
No, those were all the messages.
I mean, yeah, that's probably,
I mean, like there's iterations of those,
but that, I think that is right.
I do think part of it,
of like embedded in all of that
is they're really trying to make Trump
seem like a, more like a typical Republican, right?
That is what, that's why all these small business owners talking
about getting rid of regulations, that's what the discussion of the tax cuts and the judges are,
which is like, if you're a Republican, if you generally like Republicans, you should like Trump.
Because if you think about it, in polling prior to the pandemic, Trump was 75% of the Trump voters who voted for a Democrat in the 2018 elections were planning to vote for Trump in 2020.
Now, clearly by the size of Biden's margin, that number has dropped some.
has dropped some. If Trump gets that number back to 75 or a little bit higher than 75,
this is a very, very close race that he can win in the battleground states. And so he's got to get just some regular Republicans who typically vote for Republicans to vote for him because
the Electoral College has a four to five point Republican advantage.
I will say that the strategy of trying to turn Trump into a typical Republican, while it may or may not have been successful this week, but it was certainly a strategy this week.
I do think it's going to be harder for them to pull off long term because the one surprise for me from this convention based, you know, compared to how they were previewing it is how little Trump
there has been at the convention, right? So like Monday morning, Trump goes and gives like a 50
minute speech, you know, right after he gets nominated that says all kinds of crazy shit,
right? Since then, we've seen so little and heard so little from donald trump um he's in a few of these videos
at the convention but he's even not saying too much in the videos um some of the speakers some
of this the the the most well-received speeches that we're going to talk about barely mentioned
donald trump and so there's been to me there's been much less trump at this convention than i
thought there would be which i think could help trump long term, as soon as we go back to like Donald Trump doing his press
conferences and doing his crazy interviews and saying crazy shit on Twitter, it's going to sort
of move away from this idea that he's just another Republican. That is always the problem with Trump
is your best laid messaging will be upended by Trump. You raised the point like how
many of these periodic sporadic voters are watching this convention. Here's the math.
The math is that if I did this right in my head, 15% of the 2016 electorate is watching these
conventions, just kind of presuming the same ratings for the next night. And of that 15%,
you know that the overwhelming majority of that are
decided voters on both sides, either people who love Trump watching it or people who hate watching
it or people who are forced by professional obligation like us to watch it. And so you're
not talking to a lot of undecided voters. But this is, I think, the way to think about this strategy is how it plays out over time in the context of where they spend their money, what their paid media strategy is.
Now, I don't think the best paid media strategy with the best funded campaign ads can overcome the attention that Trump's own behavior gets.
But you don't have to make big shifts in the electorate to win a race because an electoral college race is one
on the margins in a bunch of very close states. And so moving things a few points here, shaving
a couple points off of Biden's margin with black voters, getting back some of those seniors,
and we're looking at something entirely different in a few months from now.
few months from now. Let's talk about the big speeches from the first night, which were from a former U.N. ambassador in South Carolina, Governor Nikki Haley, and South Carolina Senator
Tim Scott. Haley and Scott both focused on race, with Haley saying she doesn't believe the United
States is racist. And Scott told his own story while attacking Biden's record on racial issues. Here are two clips from their speeches.
There's one more important area where our president is right. He knows that political
correctness and cancel culture are dangerous and just plain wrong. In much of the Democratic Party,
wrong. In much of the Democratic Party, it's now fashionable to say that America is racist.
That is a lie. America is not a racist country. This is personal for me. I am the proud daughter of Indian immigrants. They came to America and settled in a small southern town. My father wore a turban.
My mother wore a sari. I was a brown girl in a black and white world. We faced discrimination
and hardship, but my parents never gave in to grievance and hate. Our family went from cotton to Congress in one lifetime.
And that's why I believe the next American century can be better than the last.
There are millions of families just like mine all across this nation,
full of potential, seeking to live the American dream.
And I'm here tonight to tell you
that supporting the Republican ticket
gives you the best chance of making that dream a reality.
Dan, what did you think of their speeches?
Annoying.
I mean, it's just like, it's all BS, right?
It's pretending that Trump is not someone that he is.
It's like in a vacuum in a normal world, they're totally fine, kind of okay written convention
speeches.
Scott's was better than Haley's.
But it's just something bizarre about the fact that these speeches were given as if
they could have been speaking at Mitt Romney's convention 2012 with no regard for everything
that has happened since, you know.
And I think that's most noted in Nikki Haley's speech, where she goes out of the way
to point out that America is not racist, and then talks about the reason Nikki Haley became a
national celebrity was her response to the racist mass shooting in Charleston, where what she became
famous for was removing the Confederate flag in South Carolina. But she alludes to it in the most
indirect way
possible, because you can't say that now in a Republican convention where Donald Trump has
been a backer of the Confederate flag. And so like, they're totally fine. And I think they're
probably effective. You know, if you are someone who in your gut wants to be for Trump, but you are
deeply disturbed by his rhetoric on race, and you see two prominent Republicans of color
saying nice things about Trump, that could get you in there. But they are detached from the
reality of who Trump is and deeply, deeply insincere. Yeah, I had two thoughts listening
to the speeches. I also thought that Tim Scott's was better and maybe one of the best speeches at
the convention, of course, relatively speaking. But I thought, one, if either of these two were
the nominee of their party, they would be formidable nominees. The media would fawn all
over them. I think they'd be more competitive than Donald Trump is with the Democrat.
And then my second thought was neither of these two elected officials would ever make it out of a Republican primary in 2020 or 2024, which would be their first shot.
They just wouldn't. They just wouldn't.
Because what they do not they did not hit enough of the Fox News right wing erogenous zones that the Trumps do all the time.
And I think like it was it was highlighted by two other speeches from the first night from Don Jr.
and his girlfriend, Kim Guilfoyle, which I believe we have a clip of that.
Just something, whatever that was. Here's a here's a clip of that just something whatever that was here's a here's a clip they
want to destroy this country and everything that we have fought for and hold dear they want to steal
your liberty your freedom they want to control what you see and think and believe so that they can control how you live. They want to enslave you to the weak, dependent,
liberal victim ideology to the point that you will not recognize this country or yourself.
Yeah, so it does seem like maybe Don Jr. and Kim are the, maybe that's the future of the party,
and not so much Haley and Scott, but what do you think? Oh, for sure. 100%
for sure that that is the future. Someone who is more like Don Jr. and or Kim Guilford is the
future of the party, not Tim Scott or Nikki Haley. I think like we were talking about what the
strategy is. And I think it's fair to say that the strategy in conception is not insane, right?
Like it matches up against where you see
Trump's deficits are among core sets of voters. There is a roadmap to 270 if you were to execute
elements of that strategy successfully. The execution, like all things with Trump, is not
awesome. And so like you go into that night, right? Like not the message that goes across
the chyron of CNN, but what is on your message board? What are you trying to achieve that night by putting Haley and Scott in prime time?
Is Donald Trump is not as racist as you think.
That is what you are trying to do.
So putting Donald Trump's Yahoo son, who is like a frat brother from Kappa Kappa Kappa,
in between them to just do a bunch of white nationalist angry rhetoric in the middle makes zero sense.
But the Trumps are so obsessed with themselves, they can't get out of their own way,
which is why 30% of the people at this convention are either related to or employed by Donald Trump.
Also, like, you know, I know that the sort of like the pundits on cable were talking about Scott and Haley's speeches.
But the viral moment from the first night was Guilfoyle.
Yeah.
That was those clips.
She instantly memes.
She was all over the Internet.
Like, you know, everyone says that the Trump campaign is like good about sort of, you know, viral content, digital strategy and all that kind of stuff.
content and digital strategy and all that kind of stuff.
But like they,
Guilfoyle was the shareable moment from,
from that first night,
not the two people who could have better testified or made a better case for Donald Trump,
Haley and Scott.
So the final speaker on the convention second night was first lady Melania
Trump.
We'll get to her speech in a second,
but just a few things to note before that she delivered the speech in the
Rose garden,
which happened after secretary of state, Mike Pompeo delivered a convention speech during an official trip to Jerusalem, which happened after the president issued a presidential pardon to a convicted bank robber and hosted a naturalization ceremony, both at the White House.
For those of you who don't know, there is a law called the Hatch Act, which bans all employees in the executive branch of the federal government, except the president, from engaging in most political activities. So Dan, you know, as soon
as it became clear that quite a few federal employees might have violated this law for
Tuesday night's convention, a few intrepid reporters and pundits rushed to ask the all
important question, do ordinary Americans really care about this potential crime?
What do you think? Did they ask the question and they just tell us? It was a rhetorical question.
Actually, that's right. Yeah, that was a rhetorical question at best, at best. Most of them just
asserted with all of the polling information that apparently they all they all took instant polls
right after right after Tuesday night. This made me mad, John.
It made me quite mad.
Because like one, this always sets me off.
And so it says, does anyone outside the Beltway think X?
The person who asked that question is always inside the Beltway and only talk to people
in the Beltway, right?
So like the truth, does anyone outside the Beltway care about a massive misuse of taxpayer dollars and illegal activity? Yes. Does anyone inside the Beltway care about it? Apparently not. And the idea, and I wrote about this today, but the idea that voters don't care about corruption, that that's not an issue voters care about, has no basis in history or polling.
The 2006 election was run. The primary message when the Democrats took the House and Senate
was about the Republican culture of corruption. It was a huge part of Barack Obama's campaign.
It's why the most successful candidates in 18 and 20 have foregone lobbyist and PAC contributions. It is a check on Trump's
corruption. It was a big part of the 18. It makes no sense. Voters care about this. Now,
voters will not care about it if we don't talk about it. I think it is true that people may not
care about this one very specific provision, but about the law, but that will, but that no one is
arguing that, that we're going to start running ads and say, Trump violated the hatch act with
like pictures of Orrin Hatch on it. Like, that's not what we're going to do. What you got to do
is you leave it. It's a data point that, that supports a larger narrative about Trump. And I
think it is insane that Trump is committing crimes on national
television and we are and people are making a big deal about it, either in the media or in the
Democratic Party. I also just think it's part of a larger disease that has afflicted the national
political press corps, which is this belief that part of their job is to let America know what
America thinks.
Without asking America.
It's important.
Without asking America, right?
Because I saw some reporters say, well, look, I've done all these stories and broken all this news on corruption.
I'm like, fantastic.
Great job.
That's your job.
That's the job of being a reporter is breaking news about stuff.
Good for you.
You did your job.
The job is not to hand wave something like this and say, well, I don't know if we're going to talk about it because people don't care about it. You did your job. Like the job is not to hand wave something like this and say,
well, I don't know if we're going to talk about it because people don't care about it. Like,
you know what? If you show me a poll that like no one knows what the Hatch Act is or people don't
really care, it doesn't move voters. Sure. I'm not going to be surprised by that poll. Like just
show me the data, you know, but like that's different than what your job should be as a
reporter when the president or when the president's employees may have potentially broken the law.
You should let people know that they did.
You should it should be a big story.
You know, like you should talk about it.
That's sort of the job of the political.
That's the fundamental job of the political press.
And if you tell people in advance that they probably don't care about it,
it's a self-fulfilling cycle that will lead people not to care about it.
Right. I mean, this all, a lot of the online debate about this had to do with a paragraph that made this point in pretty cynical ways about what voters care about in Politico playbook.
And people got very, very mad about it. In some cases, I would say disproportionately so,
Um, and people got very, very mad about it.
In some cases I would say disproportionately.
So, um, but yeah, but it's not, it's not the end.
This is not the end of the world, but it is indicative of a larger issue. And Jake Sherman, who is the reporter who won, he's one of the authors of the playbook.
I assume he wrote this paragraph given his response, but he went through and did this
laundry list of, uh, stories that he broke on corruption that led to huge political consequences
for the subjects of those stories.
It's like, I broke the story on Bill Schuster.
Bill Schuster resigned.
I broke the story on Aaron Schock.
Aaron Schock resigned.
It's like, yes, you're actually proving the point
that voters care.
Because if voters didn't care,
they wouldn't have had to resign.
I will, like, last thing I will say about this
is like, it is fun for us to yell,
but yell at the press about my,
it's not fun.
I would take that back.
It is not fun.
We can't help ourselves.
You have all the press,
but ultimately whether voters care about it or not has some relationship to
how reporters cover it,
but is mostly related to whether Democrats make the case about it.
Right.
That's where the self-fulfilling prophecy is.
Right.
Very fair.
Very fair.
If we decide in advance that we're not going to make an issue of it, then voters will not care.
Like we have agency in how we do that.
And I generally think that if the president commits crimes on national television, we should talk about them.
And not talking about them is a mistake.
Whoa, crazy.
It's crazy.
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Let's talk about Melania's speech, which was widely praised for being the first to acknowledge the pandemic and offer sympathies to people who are sick or lost loved ones.
Just insane stuff.
She was also applauded for acknowledging that people have been protesting racism and saying that, quote, we are not proud of parts of our history.
Groundbreaking stuff. Here's a clip of Melania's speech.
I want to acknowledge the fact that since March, our lives have changed drastically.
The invisible enemy COVID-19 swept across our beautiful country and impacted all of us.
My deepest sympathy goes out to everyone
who has lost a loved one.
And my prayers are with those who are ill or suffering.
I know many people are anxious and some feel helpless.
I want you to know you're not alone.
Dan, what did you think of this speech?
Well, John, I am not proud of Melania's history
because for all of her gauzy rhetoric
about racial reconciliation,
she was a 100% backer
of Donald Trump's racist birther conspiracy.
And so forgive me for not taking
this speech particularly seriously. The whole conversation around it bespeaks the incredibly low bar that Republicans have to step over in order to be applauded.
It's because Trump is so bad, right?
That like the bar was so fucking low for all these people that a number of them just like sailed right over it because Trump's the one who said it.
If you acknowledge that some people may be suffering from the pandemic that's killing
1,000 Americans a day, you get a Nobel Prize, right?
Like that's how it's being treated.
I know.
Like I know that it's like, you know,
to be savvy, you're supposed to say that like Melania
sort of like did the humanizing approach
and was like warmer in a way that Donald Trump is not
and all that kind of stuff.
I thought the speech was fucking all over the place.
Like it didn't have a, like,
it was like a bunch of disconnected stories.
I don't know that if you polled a lot of people, maybe who knows if anyone could.
I don't remember anything from the speech.
I remember that she acknowledged that COVID existed.
That's what I remember from that speech.
And she told a couple stories and she said that Donald Trump should be elected for four more years.
I can't tell you what else she said.
It was I don't think her delivery was that great. I don't think she was that passionate
about the speech. It doesn't, I just, it didn't, it didn't do it for me.
It's like, there is a deep desire in the general political pundit press world to find one Trump to
be nice to. And people thought that would be Ivanka for a long time because she was of their cocktail party circuit.
But then she turned out to be such a terrible grifter that she's been passed over.
And so if Melania.
I mean, look, though, we are we are recording this before Ivanka speaks tonight.
I will give you the punditry on Ivanka's speech already.
Please do.
Please do.
Secret secret weapon for the Trump campaign.
Humanized her father in a way no one else could.
Told great stories about him.
Spoke right to the suburban women that the Trump campaign is trying to get back.
If this is the message on the campaign trail from her, she could really turn some things around.
That's what we're going to get from tonight.
Thank you for making me preemptively angry.
I don't think there were many memorable moments from the third night of the convention which was
i guess last night what is it yeah that was last night it never ends the main event was a long
speech from vice president mike pence at baltimore's fort mchenry who like the first lady spoke in
front of a small crowd that hadn't been tested for covid and was not socially distanced uh pence
used the speech to do some trump ass kissing and some lying about Joe Biden. Here is a clip. Now, last week, Joe Biden said that no miracle is coming.
Well, what Joe doesn't seem to understand is that America is a nation of miracles.
of miracles.
And I'm proud to report that we're on track to have the world's first safe, effective
coronavirus vaccine by the end of this year.
Dan, what do you think Pence's strategy was
with that speech?
That's a great question, John.
I mean, obviously, like staying on the ticket. Yes. Paying respects to dear leader. Obviously, there's a lot of Trump is amazing.
At one point, his mother was in the crowd, his actual mother, not mother. And Pence said Pence
made reference to the fact that she might like Donald Trump better than Mike Pence, which is just really embarrassing.
I mean, you mean his elderly unmasked mother?
Yes. Yeah, right. That's seems seems like a smart move.
I do think that this just take a step back from Pence.
I don't think the Trump campaign recognizes how many Americans react viscerally to seeing unmasked people.
For the overwhelming majority of Americans, that's all you see.
And it is very notable if you are out and about and you see someone without a mask.
And particularly if it's a person who is likely in the vulnerable population.
And so when the camera spotlights Mike Pence talking about how much he loves his mother
while she is sitting in a vent where people who
were not tested for coronavirus are sitting around while she doesn't have a mask on because if she
were to have a mask on it would upset donald trump's view of the world like that is that is
fucked up i i feel like the main message we were supposed to get out of that was the line you won't
be safe in joe biden's america yeah he's supposed to hammer he hammered by and he did all the law
and order stuff it's just like to me you know you won't be safe in Joe Biden's America.
I mean, let's talk about Donald Trump's America where a thousand people are dying every day of a pandemic that he let rage out of control.
I don't know.
Are we safe?
Are we very, does everyone feel pretty safe in Donald Trump's America right now?
I mean, the fact that just in terms of the death count, we're having two 9-11s every single week in Donald Trump's watch.
I mean, you know, and like the clip we played where Pence talked about, you know, miracles and vaccines.
There was also the classic move from this convention, which is to talk about COVID in the past tense.
which is to talk about COVID in the past tense.
There's a really sort of odd decision that they had over this convention to basically,
their message on COVID is, actually, Donald Trump handled this better than you think.
Here's all the things we did great.
Instead of saying, here's our plan to get out of it.
And the closest Pence got was basically said, you know, we're going to have a we're going to have a vaccine by the end of the year.
Just that's just just said that just asserted that in the speech.
And that's the plan. There was nothing else.
Now, apparently tonight, Donald Trump is going to announce some faster testing that they are going to deploy.
But, yeah, I did not not much by way of plans for COVID at this convention. I mean, that is the dear leader aspect of this, which is you can't ever – to focus on the future is to implicitly acknowledge failures in the past, and Donald Trump is temperamentally incapable of that.
It's the same reason – like, he views any sort of focus on the suffering as an indictment of him because it's always about him, right?
Like, that is the truth, and that is the message. It is Trump first. And so you can't – like what people want to hear when you do something wrong is it didn't go the way we wanted. We messed up.
We apologize. Here's what we're going to do going forward. But they can't do that first part. The
first part gives so much credibility to the second because you can't tell people that reality isn't reality. I mean, there's a small percentage of Fox viewers you can do that too. But in general, that is not a political strategy that can work as messaging has to be credible. And what is happening in the world with regards to COVID is no matter what Mike Pence or Donald Trump or Kim Guilford or anyone says is readily apparent to every single person.
Kim Guilford or anyone says is readily apparent to every single person.
So related to all the hot takes about the convention and the effect it may or may not have had on people, there were two stories about the state of the race that I want to
touch on before we go.
First was by Jim Vande Hei and Axios, who wrote that, quote, it feels like August 2016
all over again because, quote, pundits are proclaiming Trump can't win.
Reporters are sneering at Trump voters on Twitter and cable.
Van de Heijlis, a number of reasons not to count Trump out, including the fact that he's doing better in some swing state polls.
Have you spoken to any Democrat or seen any piece anywhere that conveys the idea that Donald Trump is toast?
I have not.
No, I know none. I don't know anyone who works for the Biden campaign who thinks that, or the DNC,
or a random person on Twitter, or anyone in my life. No one thinks that. That is an impossible
thought after 2016. There will be people who, when Joe Biden has already taken the oath of office and is driving to the White House, who will still be nervous.
Like at the State of the Union, Joe Biden's first State of the Union, there will be people who are worried that when that Sergeant of Arms.
The Donald Trump's going to march into the chamber.
Yes, when they announce a president of the United States, Donald Trump will show up instead of Joe Biden.
Like no one is cocky.
Right.
Biden. No one is cocky, right? And it is just such an obnoxious strawman press argument to do that.
There's no evidence supports it. And kudos to the many, many, many reporters who responded to that Axios story by pointing out that they do a lot of reporting. They talk to a lot of Democrats.
I've never met one who feels that way. And so this is a very specific genre of arrogant contrarianism for the purpose of clicks,
as opposed to a broader narrative in the media about Democrats. Now, there's a narrative about
the race forming that we can talk about. But the part about cocky Democrats, I think, is
an isolated incident. Yeah, I think there's been a little conflation with Democrats criticizing the
convention and talking about how crazy
some of the speeches have been and moments have been which we have all done with and associating
that with a cockiness about the race overall which i think are very different things like i can i can
think that the convention might not be super effective at moving voters and still worry in tremendously about the state of the race
and polls tightening and a number of things going Donald Trump's way so that he wins,
which is where I am. I mean, can you know, I think we've we've talked about it before,
but do you want to sort of lay out the possibility that Trump can win the path for him to win?
You know, I did that. I think I did that last week. And several people on Twitter reached out
and said they were very unhappy with that. They said, are you trying to scare the shit out of me?
And I was like, yeah, I am. That's exactly what I'm doing.
My brother texted me the Axios story and he's like, should we be worried? And I said, yes,
Andy, we should be worried. And he's like, all right, I'm going to, he's like, should we be worried? And I said, yes, Andy, we should
be worried. And he's like, all right, I'm going to, I was like, I got to just figure out what
state I'm adopting. He hasn't adopted a state yet. Your own brother. He's been waiting to
figure out to pick just the right states. Okay. Well, I'll, I'll, I'll send him a note,
North Carolina. Yeah. This race is going to narrow at some point. It absolutely is. The point is probably now, because Donald Trump is underperforming his 2016 vote in
the polling average by five to seven points.
And he's going to get some of that back.
He's not losing 57-40, right?
He's going to get to, probably get to, and maybe even exceed his 2016 percentage. Now,
that was enough to win in 2016 because you had large numbers of voters who were voting third
party. There's no evidence that that is going to happen this time, but this race is going to
narrow. Donald Trump is going to get a convention bounce. Convention bounces happen for the
candidates who go into their convention underperforming.
You know who had the two biggest convention bounces of the modern era?
John McCain in 2008 and Al Gore in 2000.
John McCain got eight points out of that Palin convention.
I forgot about that.
Yeah.
Wow.
I mean, I don't know.
I can't even say if Donald Trump will get a convention bounce.
I just don't know.
I don't know either way.
I mean, I don't know. I can't even say if Donald Trump will get a convention bounce. I just don't know. I don't know either way.
I do think just based on all the polling data we've seen, all the research we've seen, like, you know, that I think I've sketched this out before, too.
But like if there's a situation where the number of cases of covid just fall a little bit, There are better treatments. There is faster testing.
Maybe there is a vaccine that's announced. And then people start to turn their attention to
the economy where Trump is, for some reason in polls, still trusted over Biden by a little
to handle the economy. And so people start focusing on that. And, you know, there's a
possibility that Trump makes, you know, as he's trying to pour gas on the fire of a lot of these
protests, that he continues to scare away some voters based on that, right? Like there's,
we don't know, but there's all these possibilities. And it's not hard to see, you know, an eight point lead nationally that Biden has now go down to a six point lead or a five point lead.
And then we know that in the swing states, that means it's an even smaller lead than the national lead. Right. It could go down to two or three points.
And so it's like and you have to think about like the fact that Hillary Clinton only lost Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan by, you know, 77,000 votes in three states.
So the idea that Joe Biden four years later would win those states by five, six, like he's up now in some of them is just probably not likely.
If Joe Biden won those states by two points or three points, that would be a huge swing from 2016.
Everyone should just know that.
So absolutely, this race can take.
And absolutely, Donald Trump can win.
Like, he can win this race.
We should all be aware of that.
We should have all been aware of that from the beginning.
And if you're worried about that, literally the only thing you can do is, like, get to work, right?
Adopt a state.
Organize. make phone calls,
text people, call all your friends, talk to everyone in your social network. Like the only
way to deal with this uncertainty that will be in our lives for the next 68 days and the fear that
will come with it is to work our asses off every single day. That's it. That's all we can do.
Yeah. I mean, this is going to be a very anxious time and it should be
right everything's on the fucking line but channel that anxiety into activism that's that's what we
did in 2018 and it's what we can do now and if we do that at the same level we will have the same
outcome okay when we come back i will talk to lieutenant governor of w, Mandela Barnes.
I'm now joined by the Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin, Mandela Barnes.
Thanks for being with us. I know you have a lot going on right now.
Hey, man. Appreciate you having me. Give me a chance to talk about what's going on.
So the state of Wisconsin has launched a criminal investigation into the shooting of Jacob Blake. The U.S. Department of Justice has opened a civil
rights investigation into the shooting. Jacob's father has expressed some doubt about these
investigations. What level of confidence do you have in this process? And what do you say to
people in your state who don't have faith that justice will be done here? Well, it's easy to
have doubt in these sort of situations because we've seen it play out before
where justice wasn't properly applied, even though there was a clear miscarriage of justice. So,
of course, there's a hesitation, a reservation, and that's totally natural. And people in Kenosha,
people across Wisconsin, people across the entire country probably feel the same way
because we've seen this before. This isn't some new thing. And it's not like every time there's
this instance of violence being carried out at the hands of police officers or white supremacists
that we see the law or justice equally applied to the person on the receiving end, the black community in general.
And so I personally, you know, I am always hoping for the best.
I'm a hopeless optimistic in that regard, man, because for, you know, for our state,
for this community, for this country to begin the healing process that we need to begin,
that we are, justice is so long overdue in so
many instances. I am hoping for the best outcome. And I am calling on the people who are leading
the investigation and those who are going to ultimately make the decision because after the
findings of the investigation, it still has to go to the district attorney in Kenosha County.
So I am I am very prayerful and hopeful that the right decision will be made.
So there's a clip going around of Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth saying at a 2018 press conference, some people aren't worth saving.
We need to build warehouses, put these people into it and lock them away for the rest of their lives.
Let's stop them from going out and getting 10 other women pregnant.
Let's stop being politically correct. How do you even begin to react to a statement like that
from a law enforcement official in your state? It's just all the worst stuff. And it speaks to
the culture of policing. And, you know, I get it. There are people still, you know, and I know
police officers personally have friends who are police officers. This speaks to the bigger problem of policing, not any individual good or bad apple. And if there are, you know, sheriffs like Sheriff Beck who would be so audacious to say stuff like that, it speaks to the need for us to have an entire culture shift.
an entire culture shift. Policing in America cannot continue the way that it is going right now,
because there are still people who are in charge who think this way. If there are people who are in charge who think this way, think about subordinates in police departments across
the country. Think about their far out wild ideas about how to handle a population. It's scary. And
I'm being very honest in saying that
it's scary, right? Because you take this title of Lieutenant Governor, I'm just another black
dude then, right? I'm 33 years old, got a couple tattoos. I'm walking down the street. Who knows
how they will handle me? So I think about that every time these instances happen, they take
place. Anytime you hear something as egregious as what Sheriff Beth said,
and, you know, there isn't a package of legislation that's going to change that.
There isn't necessarily, there isn't necessarily anything that a city council can do. This just
goes back to the need for us to update, you know, the reason why people even get into law
enforcement. What kind of situation should this person even handle? Imagine update, you know, the reason why people even get into law enforcement. What kind
of situation should this person even handle? Imagine this, you know, you go into a situation
that's already intense and your frame of mind is that people should be locked up behind bars
forever. That means you're so out of touch and you are liable to do anything. And if you feel
that you should be the police, judge, jury, executioner that, you know, decide in the fate of these people's lives, you know, imagine if you don't have faith in the court system that day.
You decide, well, yeah, I'll just take this person's life into my own hands.
I'll make the decision.
And that's how power hungry a lot of these leaders in law enforcement and far too many officers in general are.
So you mentioned, obviously, a legislative
response isn't sufficient, but it's where we start. You know, you and Governor Evers have
called the Wisconsin legislature back into session. What does a legislative response begin
to look like that might start dealing with some of these issues? But that's the thing. It takes
everything. There are so many smaller pieces, man. And I was I just got off of a faith call, actually. And I said, we need leaders in the business community, leaders in the faith community man. We are in the middle of compounded crises in
Wisconsin, and they still haven't met. And that speaks to, one, their advocation of responsibilities.
You know, they'll look at a fire and say, oh, man, there's a fire. Somebody should really put out
that fire. But they have the hose, and they don't want to share the hose. And that's them not wanting
to share their responsibility in governing this state.
And so the legislative response, I mean, that's a bare minimum, but there is opportunity for us
to do something meaningful. We look at Iowa, they unanimously passed their reform package
with a Republican legislature and with a Republican governor. So there is literally no
excuse for legislators in Wisconsin to sit on their hands.
And I'm not going to say legislators in the process because this is the Republican majority,
the gerrymandered Republican majority in the legislature that we're talking about here
in Wisconsin, who's being completely irresponsible while lives are being lost continuously,
whether it's COVID-19 or whether it's the two lives that
were taken because of this white supremacist terrorist who drove in from Illinois and killed
two protesters and injured another. And they are going to continue to sit idly by. And not just sit
idly by, they're going to be shameful on Twitter about it. That's the worst part. That's the worst
part because they always, they point fingers,
they blame everything on the administration and they get on Twitter and that's it. As if they
don't have the power, as if they don't have 63 out of 99 seats in the assembly, as if they don't
have 19 out of 33 seats in the state Senate. They have all the ability to change anything that they
want to any law, but they refuse to all blame no
responsibility um you were you were you were on a call with the milwaukee bucks last night as they
were deciding um to strike to not participate in the game what was that conversation like with the
bucks so this was actually after uh they decided to not go into court so they were still in the
locker room at this point and you know this is a team who's been committed to social justice. I had a chance to visit a correctional
institution with some members of the, with some players on the Bucs a little bit earlier,
several months ago. And we had a real honest conversation with people who were, you know,
had a real honest conversation with people who were, you know, behind bars, and they gave their testimonies about how they ended up there and how they look forward to being better,
better, better citizens being, I shouldn't even say better, how they look to be more productive
citizens once they return and warning people about how to not end up where they ended up.
And the Bucks, you know, I can't even speak to,
I can't even give them the full credit that's due to their interactions
when we were there as a part of that visit.
But this conversation was one about, you know,
them wanting to genuinely know what can they do after walking off the court
because they didn't want it just to be some symbolic gesture.
They didn't just want to walk off the court and that be it and nothing else happens.
And they were genuinely concerned.
They asked, they said, well, in the last several months, since in the wake of George Floyd's
killing, what's happened?
What's changed?
And I say that is a really good question because nothing has changed.
And in that time, the legislature still hasn't met.
really good question because nothing has changed. And in that time, the legislature still hasn't met. And there have been, you know, there've been some wins. A number of school districts
have voted to remove police officers from schools, things like that. And that's a small
piece of the bigger puzzle. And I told them that what we really need to change hasn't happened.
And one of the easiest, one of the most productive ways we can
start is with action with the legislature, but they refuse to meet. And, you know, they kept
asking questions, they kept wanting to know how is that normal for them to not meet? What would
get them to meet? And I said, well, you know, it would help if you all called on it, because we
have different audiences. I speak to an already
politically engaged audience. I have a few people, you know, who aren't necessarily that politically
engaged, but your audience is completely different. People are going to listen to you. And if you put
out a call for them to put out a call, it's going to be a much different response to me doing so.
That's good. So Trump and the Republican Party have gone all in on law and order at their convention this week.
They featured the couple from St. Louis who pointed guns at Black Lives Matter protesters.
Kelly and Conway.
Which is out of order.
Which is out of order.
Which is crazy.
So Kelly and Conway said this morning, quote, the more chaos and anarchy and vandalism and violence, the better it is for the very clear choice on who's best on public safety and law and order. How much responsibility does Donald Trump bear for what's happening in Wisconsin
right now? I'll tell you, man, they want this stuff to happen. They want things to be out of
control. They don't want to come to a peaceful solution. They see what's going on and they
haven't responded. Like you can look at, you can look at people breaking windows. You can look at
damage to property. But like I always say,
man, this stuff didn't just happen. People didn't just wake up and decide that this is the way we
want to carry out our grievances. It happens because people who have an ability to help
improve the living conditions of people in any community, if they aren't responding to the needs
of that community, that's how a community responds. And this comes from years and generations of trauma,
of ill representation, of being ignored. And so with Donald Trump in office, he's not solely
responsible for it, but he is absolutely the person that's going to, you know, carry this sort of chaos through the finish line.
And he is willing to wager our democracy and he's willing to wager also, you know,
civilized society on his reelection. Because, you know, any, any, any, they see this,
their calculus is that anytime a window is shattered, that's another vote for Donald Trump.
Anytime that there is some damage to property, that's another vote being banked for Trump.
And that is a dangerous campaign strategy, but they don't care.
And they have proven that they don't care.
that they don't care. Instead of bringing in people who are ready to come to the table with solutions, you know, they want to play to the worst parts of society. There is literally no
reason that that couple from St. Louis should have been given any sort of speaking engagement,
any prime time slot for any major political party. But it just shows that they are willing again to campaign on hate and division in any form possible.
So the New York Times and Politico this morning both have stories today that quote Kenosha residents and Wisconsinites of both parties, different races saying.
Yeah, I do blame me. I do blame me in that story.
Well, so, you know, there's there. Oh, yeah, that's right. In the New York Times when I saw that. And so, you know, they're either saying it's leading them to vote for Trump or it's leading people they know to vote for Trump. Right.
The last Marquette poll of the state showed that the approval of Black Lives Matter protests went from 61-36 to 48-48 in August. That was before Kenosha made up mostly of white voters changing their minds. What do you make of all this? And do you share some of these concerns?
So the thing that drove people to Trump
or the thing that people,
or the thing that, excuse me,
Trump used to attract voters
was fear in the first place.
Whether it was fear of immigrants
when he came down the escalator
and that was the first thing he talked about.
So he's going to continue to use fear.
And we can't let that guide us in our decision making because we've always, we should be,
I shouldn't say always, but we should be striving to be on the right side of justice, of fairness
and equality.
And it is a long and difficult road to get there.
So I don't think people should consider compromising values,
because when you compromise values, you are absolutely compromising people's lives and
livelihood. So it's not responsible for us to try to go down that path. And I've always said,
and I even got in a little bit of trouble two years ago when I said, well, you know,
if there are Democrats who voted for Obama, then voted for Trump in 2016, we may have lost them.
You know, we can concede that ground because there are so many people who just didn't show up to vote in 2016.
Those are the people that we need to be communicating with because these are the people who have not been heard.
These are the people who truly have not had a voice in our democracy.
And I still feel that way.
I still feel that, you know, this is nothing we should ever use for politics, these sort of instances.
But we do need to connect it to politics so people know who's making the decisions and who is literally sitting telling, you know, in your face that you don't deserve justice.
No, you don't deserve health care. No, you don't deserve to have fifteen dollar minimum wage and access to a union.
No, you don't deserve to have clean air,
fresh water to drink. No, you don't deserve everything that we should come to expect as Americans. And that is exactly what Donald Trump and Republican Party are his enablers.
That is what they are telling the American people. They are saying no to you and your
communities. We have to be more effective in communicating that we are on the right side
of not just history, but the right side of justice.
Well, so, you know, just to speak about politics, you know how to win in a state that narrowly went for Trump in 2016.
You and Governor Evers won in 2018. What piece of advice would you give the Biden campaign for these last 68 days in the homestretch?
68 days in the homestretch. Yeah, the last piece of advice I get to the Biden campaign is, you know, we have a base. And as fickle as some of the voters, like you pointed out in the
New York Times and political articles, as fickle as they can be sometimes, there are people who
would never vote for Republicans, but would potentially vote for us. And it's about
the message. It's about us communicating our need to drive this nation forward, to bring forward
the policies that will work to improve the lives. And I think, you know, I do think the Biden
campaign has done a pretty solid job, especially, you know, considering, you know, pre-Iowa to where we are
now. But I think that the messages about uplifting Americans in every corner of our society is going
to be the most effective way, but it has to be done in a genuine way. It can't be tokenizing.
And I posted on Twitter today that, you know, November 3rd is not a finish line. It's a mile
marker, an important mile marker. But we have to continue to organize. And I think that the Biden campaign has to has to do the best job that they possibly can at reaching out to the truly unheard and unheard and forgotten voters.
Lieutenant Governor Mandela Barnes, thank you so much for joining us. And thanks for all you're doing at a really tough moment for your state.
I appreciate you, man.
Things are tough, but this is something we will get through.
And Wisconsin will be stronger on the other end, as tough as these times are.
So I appreciate you giving me a chance to talk about this.
Thanks to Lieutenant Governor Barnes for joining us today.
And, oh, I guess we'll talk to you guys tomorrow for our post-Trump convention speech pod with all of us.
With Dan and Tommy and John are going to join us, too.
Right.
We're group threading tonight, so you should watch it with us.
That's right.
We will recap it for you tomorrow.
You people cannot get rid of us, is what I'm saying.
Nor can we get rid of the fucking Republican convention.
So one more day.
One more day.
All right.
Bye, everyone.
Bye.
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