Pod Save America - Law and Odor: Trump Trials
Episode Date: April 22, 2024Jon, Tommy, Dan, and Hysteria Co-Host Erin Ryan are live from the LA Times Festival of Books! As the first week of Donald Trump's Manhattan criminal trial ends, Trump defends himself by constantly vio...lating his gag order and—allegedly—farting recklessly in the courtroom. President Biden hits the trail to highlight his plans to help the middle class and pass legislation restoring Roe v. Wade. Trump reportedly narrows in on a VP pick, but rules out governors from states with the most restrictive abortion bans. And, Jon and Tommy talk about their upcoming book, Democracy or Else: How To Save America in 10 Easy Steps.Democracy or Else: How To Save America in 10 Easy Steps is coming June 25th. Crooked is donating its profits from Democracy or Else to support Vote Save America, its partners, and other organizations who are mobilizing for progressive outcomes in the 2024 election and beyond. Pre-order now wherever books are sold: http://crooked.com/books For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Erin Ryan. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Tommy Vitor. I'm Erin Ryan.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
Thank you all for coming.
Thanks to the LA Times Festival of Books for having us.
And thanks to everyone who's already pre-ordered our book,
Democracy or Else, How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps.
We'll be talking a bit more about the book later.
And if you haven't ordered yet,
you can do so at crooked.com slash books.
Okay, let's get to the news.
Now that we got 12 jurors and six alternates,
opening statements are set to begin
in the criminal trial of the Republican nominee
for President Donald J. Trump.
I mean, the end of the sentence was, who could face up to four years if convicted? I figured
like that would be, yeah, there you go. Don't clap till we have a verdict. Right. So New York Times
reports this morning that the prosecution is planning to call former National Enquirer
publisher David Pecker as their first witness. Could be as early as tomorrow if
opening statements are quick enough. Pecker is expected to testify about his agreement with Trump
to buy and hide stories that would be politically damaging to him, which is known as catch and kill.
There was plenty of drama last week in the trial, which ended with a man who tragically lit himself
on fire outside the courtroom,
while inside, several potential jurors broke down in tears over the risk of serving.
On a lighter note, there are unconfirmed reports that Trump has been farting in the courtroom,
which we are, of course, repeating purely for entertainment value.
We would never traffic in such rumors.
One thing we can confirm is that there is at least one gag order in place that the defendant continues to whine about. Let's listen. The gag order has to come off. People are allowed to speak
about me and I have a gag order just to show you how much more unfair it is. I have a lot to say to
you and I'm not allowed to say it.
And I'm the only one.
Everyone else can say whatever they want about me.
They can say anything they want.
They can continue to make up lies and everything else.
They lie, they're real scum.
But you know what, I'm not allowed to speak.
And I want to be able to speak to the press
and everybody else about it.
So why am I gagged? It's so unfair that the judge
won't let that guy speak because now we have no idea what he thinks about stuff.
It's just brutal. So Trump has nonetheless spent the weekend accusing Judge Mershon of having a
conflict of interest, calling the district attorney corrupt, and threatening to prosecute Joe Biden if he wins.
Tommy, do you think Trump is helping himself here legally or politically? You can pick either.
Sure, I'll take both, John. 500. We could do a whole episode on this farting allegation because it is hilarious. It is believable. It's probably not true or at least not confirmed in any way.
But also he'll probably comment on it
yeah and it uh tells us a lot about the media ecosystem that we all live in but back to your
question so i think legally it seems like he's probably just mostly pissing off the judge and
potentially putting himself at jeopardy of getting fined for contempt and then the punishment for
contempt could get escalated to potentially jail time if he continues to do it. I think he's viewing this, though, primarily as a
political fight. He is trying to not only shape the opinions of the jury pool, which is a process
that started many, many years ago, but also sort of shape the opinions of the electorate who
ultimately vote to make him president or not. So I think he has one speed in politics.
It's attack, attack, attack.
It doesn't matter if it's a campaign.
It doesn't matter if it's hurting his interests.
He just thinks that he'll be able to impact public opinion.
And, you know, in the past, he's been pretty good at it.
Propaganda doesn't have to be believable or savvy to be effective.
You just need to repeat it relentlessly.
Yeah, it feels too early to tell,
but I do wonder if any time voters turn on TV or read the news and see Donald Trump just like
whining like that about a gag order, like at some point, I don't know if that helps him.
Like, you know, some people could say that the trial is unfair, but it's the middle of a
presidential campaign. It's going to go on for, you know, six to eight that the trial is unfair but it's it's the middle of a presidential campaign it's going to go on for you know six to eight weeks and if all we get from donald trump
is just him complaining about the trial i don't know uh aaron what do you think and do you have
any other takeaways from the first week of this trial and thoughts on the fart
i i don't want to think about him farting. I truly don't.
I think that I've seen enough Mueller time T-shirts out in the wild that now are mysteriously vanished
that I am not counting on the justice system
to deliver any we got him kind of a moment.
The first week of the trial did kind of make me worry
about the safety of the jurors,
as a lot of jurors were worried about their own safety. It seems like there are some media outlets
that are really bent on doxing them or getting their personal information out there, possibly
intimidating them. I've heard Donald Trump has been trying to stare people down who uh or he was he was like glowering at them but i think he
has like resting glowering face yeah so i'm not sure if that's just like how his face goes when
he's not doing anything but still i mean it would be intimidating you're coming in you're supposed
to be a juror and you've got the former president with this like army of wahoos who will do basically
whatever he says and he's giving you the stink eye
like that's not great i he was doing little fist bumps if you read art of the deal too he's yes
oh god according to new york times one thing that i am a little bit worried about is that this is a
great event for like new york media because they know where it's happening and it's in new york
and it's easy for them to cover and i just don't want this to suck all the oxygen out of the room when we should be also talking
about what a nightmare it would be if he were reelected and how low quality GOP candidates are
across the country. Yeah. Dan, our friend Anat Shankarosorio has a new piece in Slate titled
The Trump Trial is Already Influencing
Public Opinion. And she's got a polling memo that finds a majority of voters already see this trial
as evidence of Trump engaging in a, quote, long-term criminal conspiracy. Do you think
that damage is already being done here? Or do you think it's sort of too early to tell?
You're not going to ask me a fart question?
I mean, that was going to be my follow-up, Dan.
Okay, sorry.
Sorry, I didn't read the script this week.
Also, apparently he was farting because he was falling asleep.
We know he's falling asleep, right?
That's like, Maggie Haberman reported that.
That's true.
And the rumor is that as he was nodding off,
then I think he was maybe, you know, farting.
Yeah, but who does that?
Who farts as they're falling asleep?
Is that a thing?
Let me tell you.
Look, I talked to Maggie today.
He'd wake himself up.
I talked to Maggie today.
Oh, wow. You did some reporting.
I did some reporting on this. She told me she could not confirm
that gas was passed
at this trial.
It seems to be potentially fake news.
Dan, you have something smart to say
some some resistant some resistance account got um hashtag odor in the court trending
on twitter that that's pretty good i'm not gonna lie because i love it could be worse
could be worse anyway sorry did i steal your pun what was the question again? Do you think the damage is already being done? Yes, yes, damage is
being done, right? I think ultimately, and this is, Aaron is right to be worried that the media is
going to focus on this trial to the expense of so many other very important stories in this campaign
in this country. Like, that's definitely going to happen, right? There's nothing the media likes
more than to cover something in their backyard, and New York is
their backyard. However, it is meaningful that last week, Donald Trump spent eight hours a day,
four days a week, in a courtroom in Manhattan, alternately sleeping and farting, while Joe Biden
was in Pennsylvania, in a battleground state that is a must win for both candidates talking about the economy, right? And that is really going to, there is a massive opportunity
cost for Trump here. Now, we also know that Trump being in the news is bad for Trump, right? He is,
I mean, there's a huge irony that he wrote- Are you saying he doesn't comport himself well?
Yeah, I'm saying he is not his best messenger per se and you know there's an irony to that
because donald trump wrote won the white house for the first time by dominating media and he
may win it a second time by not being in front of the cameras all the time or at least living in a
media environment where being in front of the cameras is a less dominant experience than it
was before it's just people don't see him as much. And the fact that there's a high-profile trial of a former president happening in New York,
he's going to dominate the news. And that is not good for Trump. Ultimately, all of that is going
to matter much less than what happens at the end of this. Is Donald Trump convicted of a crime?
Because the polling shows that there is at least some number of voters, including
a significant portion of people who voted for him in 2020 who that would make them much less
comfortable voting for him again and if he's acquitted he would have the opposite and less
exciting effect and so this is going to dominate time but what's going to matter is what happens
in the end more than anything else yeah i do think i mean was, of the four trials, the one that people thought was the
weakest case. Doesn't mean it's a weak case, but it's been talked about as a hush money case.
There's a lot of people who talk about it as an election interference case. In fact, the judge
said to the instructions to the jury was he's being charged with falsifying business records
to cover up trying to unlawfully influence the election.
And I do think the more, I mean, having David Pecker go first, who was at the National Enquirer
and did this deal with Donald Trump where it was basically like, any story that's bad
for you, we'll buy it, we'll bury it.
Like making the argument that he was trying to pay money to keep damaging information about himself from the electorate
so that he could win is, I think it's a stronger argument that just like, it's a hush money trial.
I mean, it just also speaks to how severe the other crimes were, that this is the weak one.
Right.
Right.
It's like, wait, which election interference trial is this?
Oh, this was the 2016 one, not the 2020 one.
Right.
But also just, if you say this paragraph to yourself out 2016 one not the 2021 right but but also just if you say this
paragraph to yourself out loud that the presumptive republican nominee is on trial for a felony crime
of falsifying business records to cover up an affair an extramarital affair with an adult film
star weeks before the election and you're like oh that's the one that's not as serious as the other two criminal trials, is wild, right?
And it seems like David Pecker,
the National Choir guy testifying,
you wonder if also part of that conversation or part of that testimony will be the allegation
that Donald Trump was able to basically write
fake headlines about his opponents,
such as Ted Cruz's father killed JFK,
which is something allegedly fakeedly fake. Allegedly.
Allegedly fake.
Prove it didn't happen, Tommy.
Right.
So, I mean, it's just... Typical, typical liberal media guy here.
Donald Trump definitely farted,
but maybe Ted Cruz's father didn't kill him.
It will be a fascinating look
into the way that organization worked.
Yes.
All right, so Dan and I talked on Thursday's pod
about Biden World's decision
to steer clear of talking about this trial, other than a few jokes and puns here and there.
Last week, the president was out in Pennsylvania, as Dan mentioned, contrasting his plans to
help middle class families with Trump's plans to help the rich.
He was doing the Scranton Joe versus Park Ave Trump thing, which I think is great.
This week, Biden's going to focus on abortion
with a big speech in Florida on Tuesday, hitting Trump for the state's six-week abortion ban.
This is after Kamala Harris gave a similar speech in Arizona last week. But it's not just speeches.
So far in 2024, 90 percent, 90 percent of the Biden campaign's television ads have focused on abortion, and the most aired ad is one
in which Trump takes credit for killing Roe, and Biden promises to pass a federal guarantee
to protect the right to choose. So, Aaron, Republicans are arguing that even if they have
the politically weaker argument here, that they don't think enough voters who are up
for grabs rank abortion as their top issue. What do you think? I think that all you have to do is
take a look at election results since Dobbs to find that that is not the case. Abortion has been
kicking ass in the ballot box, and it's an extremely important issue to a lot of people.
I think it's a motivating issue to some people who would otherwise not be excited about voting
for Joe Biden. We're seeing polling that shows that since Dobbs, people are still just as mad
about Dobbs today as they were the day that Sam Alito's smug ass handed down that opinion on the Supreme
Court. And, you know, it's a winning issue. It has been demonstrated over and over again that
abortion is a winning issue. And I think that Dobbs also helped people who didn't otherwise
think too deeply about abortion, who were trying
to think of themselves as moderates. It is deeply weird to have the government involved at all. It
is deeply weird for these people to be making rules about women's bodies when I don't think
they know the difference between the sizes of tampons. Like, I don't think these people should
be making rules.
And it's something that a lot of people are seeing more clearly now.
Exceptions don't really in any practical way work.
People who think of themselves as pro-life,
who would never get an abortion,
are finding that actually it's not such a black and white issue.
You don't know what medical care you're going to need,
and it is fucked up that state legislators get to make that decision for you.
This is something that people are realizing across the country.
It is a... I would take that bet.
It is a winning issue.
It has been wild watching some of these Republicans who are now backing away from their more extreme anti-abortion stances that they've had in the past, almost tumbling into the pro-choice
position, like Carrie Lake, who had said that she supported the 1864 Arizona ban, you know, that was a complete ban.
And then she's like, well, now here's the thing. I might be personally against abortion,
but I don't think I should make the decision. That's called pro-choice, Kerry. You're pro-choice.
You're almost there. So, Dan, you were the one who pointed out that 90% number on the Biden campaign's ads.
That seems like a huge amount of their ads, even for an issue that they do want to make central to the election.
What do you make of that decision?
And do you think they will sustain that level of spending on abortion-related ads?
I'm not sure it'll be 90-10 by the end of this campaign,
but I'd be willing to bet that at the end of this election, the issue that the Biden campaign will have spent the most money on will
be abortion, and it probably won't be close. And I think the reason for that is exactly what Aaron
said, is it is a motivating issue for a lot of voters. And ultimately, what campaigns are about
is trying to, everything they do, the ads, the speeches, the tweets, the
social media strategy, is about trying to influence what issues are top of mind when voters make their
decisions starting in October. And if what people are thinking about when they make that decision is
the price of groceries or the border, that's probably good for Donald Trump. If they're
thinking about tax cuts for the rich, abortion bans, and violent insurrect border, that's probably good for Donald Trump. If they're thinking about tax
cuts for the rich, abortion bans, and violent insurrections, that's probably good for Joe Biden.
And there's a very interesting poll that came out today from NBC News where they asked two
questions. One, what's the most important issue facing the country? And only 6% of Americans
cited abortion. It was like fourth or fifth on the list. Then they asked a follow-up question,
and this is the most important question
from the perspective of a campaign.
What issues are so important to you
that they could influence your choice?
And 19% of people said abortion, right?
And so what the Biden campaign wants to do
is make people think more and more about abortion
as they're making a decision
and what the very real dangers of Donald Trump
or the Republican trifecta would do
to the parts of this country
which don't yet have extreme abortion bans
or what President Biden and a pro-choice Democratic Congress
could do to pass a law federally, right,
to stop these abortion bans.
And so I think it's gonna be a huge part of the campaign.
It should be a huge part of the campaign.
And it is gonna be one where you going to have to put money behind it
because the press is not going to cover it continually this whole time.
It's like what you're exactly talking about.
What is one of the issues that's going to get lost because of this criminal trial?
We're talking about abortion demands in Idaho and Arizona and Florida
and places like that.
And so spending money on this is quite smart in my view.
Yeah, I also want to jump in and add that
I think something the Biden administration
hasn't been hitting as hard as they should
is that if Republicans take the White House,
the House and the Senate, we will get a federal ban.
That affects us in California. That affects people in
the bluest blue states who think they're safe, who after Dobbs were texting their friends and saying,
oh, it's so terrible what's going to happen over there. No, it's happening here. And there are a
lot of races here in California that could determine the balance of the House of Representatives.
here in California that could determine the balance of the House of Representatives.
And I think it is really important for us Californians, maybe some people who didn't vote in the primaries, to think about how important these local elections are.
We can determine who keeps the House.
Yeah.
I also think, I mean, you have Republicans out there who are trying to, you know, back away from
their positions and sort of muddy the waters. And they're like, well, there'd never be the votes
in the Senate to pass a national abortion ban. And then you have Donald Trump saying, I'm not
going to pass. Even if Democrats keep the House and the Senate, or flip the House and keep the Senate, he
could, just through executive action, ban Mifepristone, ban abortion medication, which
is responsible for, what, like two-thirds of abortions in this country.
So even just Donald Trump in the White House alone, with no Congress, could be bad, let
alone what would happen if there's a full Republican Congress.
I do wonder, too, Dan, if part of the reason that they're spending so much now on these abortion ads is to define
Trump before he tries to like back away from his position, like him saying, oh, I don't like the
Arizona ban and I'm not going to sign a national ban and just reminding people that he was the one
who did this in the first place. Do you think some of it's that?
Yeah, I think obviously you want to fill a vacuum,
and Trump's not on the air.
He doesn't have as much money.
This is the time to pressure advantage.
There are a couple other reasons for this too.
One is voters do not think, they think Trump's extreme,
but they don't think of him as extreme in a religious right sort of way.
We've said this many times.
He's this rich guy from New York who cheats on his wives.
He is not in the mind of voters who think about the sort of right-wing,
religious, Mike Johnson-esque Republicans.
Donald Trump belies that notion.
So you want to define him that way, and that's going to take money and time.
Just because he compares himself to Jesus Christ being persecuted
doesn't necessarily mean people see him as so religious,
but even like,
no,
there's not a person alive,
not evangelical,
not anyone else who believes Donald Trump on when he talks about his favorite
Bible verse,
or he's selling my was,
it's all wink,
wink,
not,
not right.
Yeah.
But the other thing is,
and this is something that's very interesting that happened since Dobbs is
Dobbs really was a singular tectonic shift in American politics.
And one thing it shifted was if you talk to people who are working on 2022 races,
the thing that Democrats have been talking about this MAG extremism argument for a long time,
MAG extremism, MAG extremism, we want to pay for Republicans as extreme.
Dobbs happened and that opened a door for people to see Republicans as more extreme on a whole
host of issues other than just abortion. And even on something like cutting social security and happened and that opened a door for people to see Republicans as more extreme on a whole host
of issues other than just abortion. And even on something like cutting social security and Medicare,
right, because of what happened with Dobbs, people, they were more open to the idea that
Republicans would actually do these really extreme things that they usually are pretty
skeptical politicians will actually do because they don't, they think it's kind of a bullshit
political attack or they don't think they can actually accomplish it to take this freedom or this thing away from me. And so
establishing Donald Trump's responsibility for Dobbs opens the argument to a whole bunch of
other things about how extreme he is. On that note, Tommy, the AP just reported that ever since Dobbs, complaints have spiked that
pregnant women facing medical emergencies are being turned away from ERs in states with abortion
bans, even though that's against the federal law. Do you think stories like that have the potential to broaden the coalition of
voters who might choose Trump or Biden based on this one issue? Yeah, I mean, I think what those
stories shows is that having a patchwork of state by state abortion bans that include laws passed
in the 1860s puts all women, all pregnant women at risk um and the story donald trump wants to tell about
abortion literally is he says democrats want to uh have to abort babies after they're born
which is it's illegal it's already illegal it's called murder we're talking backstage uh
murder murder murder i think that would be can't do that that's like that's the narrative he wants to to portray about democrats and the reality is um that abortion is an incredibly complicated
and painful decision and when you when you create these laws in places like texas or idaho and north
carolina where you have doctors or medical organizations worried that they could lose funding or be prosecuted or lose their accreditation if they treat patients you read
stories about women who are pregnant being turned away or told to drive to another facility nearby
and losing children on the way or being denied an ultrasound or not getting care that put their
their lives at risk and it's just just like, it's so unbelievable.
The abject cruelty of putting someone through that
undercuts the idea that there's anything about this decision
that is pro-life.
It is about controlling women
and telling them how to live their lives.
And like, you know.
Yeah, and I do think, I mean,
the stories that we've already heard since Dobbs and the Biden
campaign has, you know, I think one of their first ads on abortion was a story of a woman in Texas.
And they're going to be able to, there's so many of them, and telling those, that's going to have
an emotional impact with voters that I think you can't necessarily measure in a single poll or just by like looking at a big
sample and saying, oh, 19% say this or that. You have those ads running between now and November
and the whole country is hearing these stories. I do think that's going to have a bigger effect
than people. Yeah, I agree. I also think two things. First of all, abortion isn't always a
complicated decision. Sometimes it's the right decision and it's obvious and it's no going back.
But if you're going to an emergency room and the treatment that you need might include abortion,
then it is almost certainly a complicated and heartbreaking decision.
So states like Idaho and Texas, which have laws that ban essentially abortion at any point in pregnancy,
up until the point that the mother is about to die,
they are arguing that abortion is actually not medical care.
And they're arguing over the expertise of doctors, and they're arguing over the expertise of women.
So if you show up as a pregnant person at an ER, need an abortion, like these are the people that where it is absolutely, like you said,
Tommy, the most cruel and tragic circumstances that abortion occurs under. Yeah. What I was
sort of trying to get at is for a long time, the line from Democrats on abortion was safe,
legal and rare, which I understood like what the messaging politically, but it made it sound like
this was a choice that people were making that we wanted to prevent that choice from being made
through whatever policy. And I think that that is just wrong, because like what you were saying,
often it's a medical necessity. And it's often someone whose life is at risk or someone
who needs abortion care, because if they don't get it in that moment, then they won't be able
to have another kid in the future. And as someone who has sat through an ultrasound where, you know, you thought there'd
be a heartbeat and then there isn't, to take that moment and then deny a person medical care
is so unbelievably cruel to me that I almost can't fathom it. So.
All right. So we have two fun things to end the news section
um because you've all been so good i really i brought the i brought the tone up i wanted to
light it up for you guys the abortion disco siren we get some serious we get some funny it's the
show all right the first tommy picked clip out, it's a clip from Republican Congressman
Tony Gonzalez, who basically, I think, cut one of the best ads for the Democratic Party that I've
seen this year. So he was on CNN Sunday talking about how the House of Representatives beat back
the MAGA hardliners like Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz to pass aid and support for Ukraine,
Israel, the Palestinians, and Taiwan with a huge bipartisan majority.
And Representative Gonzalez said this.
I serve with some real scumbags. Look, Matt Gaetz, he paid minors to have sex with him at
drug parties. Bob Good endorsed my opponent, a known neo-Nazi. These people used to walk around
with white hoods at night. Now they're
walking around with white hoods in the daytime.
I mean...
Wow.
The Republican. Republican.
Tony Gonzalez,
he voted for impeachment, right?
I think he was one of the...
I think he was one of the few. I don't think he's on Donald
Trump's short list.
Well, not to get ahead of our next segment, but...
Yeah, that was wild.
That was wild.
Great clip.
Good for Tony Gonzalez.
We've seen that in battleground districts before long.
All right, so we're going to wrap up the news section
with some wildly irresponsible Trump VP speculation.
Just as a little treat. So Tommy and Lovett and I covered this a few weeks ago. Since then,
we learned some new information. First, according to the New York Times, Trump is focused on a
candidate who can help him raise money, since he seems to be a little short on cash right now.
him raise money, since he seems to be a little short on cash right now. Two, according to RFK Jr., Trump's team asked him to consider being his running mate, though
Trump's team says that's not true.
Hard to tell, all these people are liars.
And lastly, according to Puck, Trump has removed from his short list governors from states with the most restrictive abortion bans because he's worried about the politics.
If true, that would probably eliminate South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, who just said this today, Sunday, about her position on abortion.
Do you think there should be exceptions for rape and incest, for example?
And I think that every state's
going to look different. That's what's different, Dana, is that I've constantly looked and we rely
in South Dakota on the fact that I'm pro-life and we have a law that says that there is an
exception for the life of the mother. And I just don't believe a tragedy should perpetuate another
tragedy. Can I just say she's not used to her new teeth yet? That's mean.
It's mean, but she's a bad person, so I can be mean to her.
Because, you know, famously got some new veneers
in the Veepstakes race,
and they're not quite taking.
I think if you get the joke about Chrissy Noem's new teeth,
you reach a certain level of political junkie
that's very impressive.
She cut an ad for the veneers company.
She's hawking veneers.
She's the governor of the state.
Is that what happens? I don't know.
Anyway, Dan, what do you think?
We haven't talked to you about your VP speculation yet.
From a political standpoint,
who do you think would help Trump the most?
And, separate question,
who do you think he's most likely to pick?
I promise you those will not be
the same people i think it's important to note just i know our speculation is irresponsible
but i think we should just at least note for the record that there is almost no issue in american
politics that has talked about more but matters less than who someone picks as their vp nominee
i mean yes it matters that's why it's last on the list.
That's why it's our fun segment. Yes, that's right.
I mean, it certainly meant, like, who becomes
vice president certainly matters,
particularly for a candidate like
Donald Trump, who
can't stay awake in court.
But in terms of how much it changes
the race, I think it's on the margins
at
most. I think if I was thinking about this
from the perspective of Donald Trump's campaign, I would think, what segment of the population
can I separate? What segment of the Biden coalition do I have the best chance of bringing
some people over with me? Ultimately, we're an anti-MAGA majority in this country and
in the battleground states. So in order for Trump to win, he has to fracture that coalition.
And the answer is voters with veneers.
People with insecurities about their teeth. And so I think he would look at the place where,
at least in the polling thus far, Trump has had the most success bringing over,
where, at least in the polling thus far, Trump has had the most success bringing over, or at least separating from Biden, are men of color, right? So I would be looking at a black or Latino
man as my running mate. And now there are some constitutional complications to this.
But if you really wanted, I think, the pick that would be most impactful, you would pick Marco Rubio. Wow.
And now this would require Marco Rubio to resign from the Senate
because he'd have to change his residency to somewhere else
because they can't both be from the same state.
I mean,
we can applaud for Marco Rubio resigning from the Senate,
but he would be replaced.
No, no.
But then you don't pick him and it's hilarious.
I love this plan.
So I think you would do that.
Or you would do Byron Donalds, I think, the congressman.
Who would also have to move.
He'd also have to move.
From Florida.
As of right now, Mike Johnson couldn't afford losing that seat
because that would go vacant.
But everyone I think thinks...
What about Tim Scott?
I think this is where you get to
who Trump would actually pick.
I don't think Tim
Trump... Let me make the case
for Marco Rubio from Trump's perspective at least.
Trump loves a power
dynamic and he knows that he has
bent Marco Rubio to his will. He's basically
destroyed him and
he thinks Marco Rubio is kind of a chump and he definitely wants a chump.
I think the problem with Tim Scott
is Tim Scott is just a little too Mike Pence for him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think when push comes to shove and you need someone to overthrow the government,
I think he knows Tim Scott's going to turn to his Bible like Mike Pence and not be there for him.
You can't have a VP that bows to a higher God.
You know what I mean?
It's got to be.
There's only one God Trump wants them to worship.
Only one god.
Yeah, you don't want a VP pick
who people would trust
to babysit their kids.
So there was more reporting
on the Marco Rubio possibility,
especially because
I apparently think
that he could raise a lot of money
because he ran for president
and has a network of donors,
some of whom are still
on the sidelines, whatever.
So to the point where they were talking to Trump about what they do about Florida,
and they were like, well, it's easy for Trump to just change his residency to Bedminster in New Jersey,
where he's got a golf club there, or Westchester, or any of these places.
And apparently Trump was like, I will not do that because I don't want to deprive
the citizens of Florida from having me as a resident.
Or he would prefer to deprive the State Treasury of New York
of the additional tax dollars that would cost him to be a New York resident.
Exactly.
But what was your idea about what he,
that Tommy, this is a prank for Rubio?
Oh, yeah, no.
You tell Rubio to resign and then move and then you don't
pick him. It's hilarious.
Honestly,
it would be incredible to get that idea to Donald Trump
because I think that's fantastic.
Erin, what do you think? What are your thoughts on this?
Well, okay, so
Trump needs money, right?
And he never has
any original ideas. Everything is sort of
derivative. Even Make America Great Again was stolen from what, like Charles Lindbergh or right and he never has any original ideas everything is sort of derivative even even
make america great again was stolen from what like charles lindbergh or
who stole it from charles lindbergh anyway um i think he should pick paul ryan
paul ryan good at making good at raising money somebody else already had the idea it's like the perfect trumpian it's the
perfect trumpian pick i think that he has bandied about the idea of picking a woman as vp because
um i think that he thinks i don't know there's a whole like i'm not a psychologist i but i need
one to like break down all the reasons why he would pick this type of woman. He will pick a woman who is a Miss America type.
He will pick a woman who he thinks that other women want to be.
He'll pick the type of woman who would show up at like a Mar-a-Lago fundraiser.
And I would normally say like a Christy Gnome,
but she's kind of like flailing.
Also like everyone kind of missed out on that New York
Post report about her and
Corey Lewandowski having an affair,
which is kind of wild. How does he
keep getting such beautiful people? I'm just...
Hope Hicks?
Corey Lewandowski?
I don't know. It's weird.
I think he's going to pick somebody who looks like someone who would be
in a Miss Universe pageant.
And you think it'll be a woman?
I think it'll be a woman, because he needs a woman to go out there and be his attack
dog on this losing issue of abortion.
He needs a woman to be the one speaking out in favor of common sense bands, which we all
know are not common sense.
So I think he's going to pick, like,
if there is a Kristi Noem approximate type,
he's going to pick her.
And that's why Katie Britt would have been great until she did the Union response
and scared the hell out of everybody.
Yeah.
Although now I think because Alabama
was where the horrendous IVF decision went down,
he probably is maybe a no on Katie Brick.
Right, and Carrie Lake is out too
because of the Arizona thing.
So like all the Miss America ladies
are just one by one getting knocked out of the semifinals.
Nancy Mace.
What's that?
Nancy Mace.
Nancy Mace.
Yeah, she's a liar though.
I mean, that's a, you mean,
that's a good thing for him.
It's a selling point.
Tommy, last time we talked about this,
you had sort of like an outside-the-box idea with J.D. Vance.
And since then, there's been a lot of reporting
that Trump is moving closer to actually doing the J.D. Vance thing.
Well, yeah, I mean, I think if he just wants to bro out,
he'll go J.D. Vance.? Well, yeah, I mean, I think if he just wants to bro out, he'll go J.D. Vance.
I thought the one that was sort of the most interesting
in terms of just the narrative and the story you get to tell
is Tulsi Gabbard.
Because, because you can say,
you guys call me partisan?
She was, you know, she was a Democrat.
She was an elected Democrat, and I picked her. It would be an interesting splashy thing, but then she was a democrat she was elected democrat and i picked
her so you it would be an interesting splashy thing but then she's a weirdo well that's hard
that is a great segue to uh my question for you about the rfk junior story what do you make of
this whole uh rfk junior saying yeah they're the team called me they want he wanted to pick me
i believe it i mean i really do believe it. I think you've never disbelieved a single thing
RFK Jr. said. Yeah. I think it could have been a prank call. Somebody could have been doing their
Donald Trump impression called RFK Jr. And he was like, yeah, that's RFK Jr. He just completely
buys it. Yeah. No, he's like DTAP vaccine. Why would anyone take that? I'm like, oh, write that
down. So RFK Jr., obviously the only reason anyone's talking about him is because of his name,
right? But also the conventional wisdom was someone named Kennedy, someone with the record
as an environmental lawyer, might draw from Democrats. As time goes on, it's becoming more
and more clear that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is drawing more votes from Trump than from Biden.
There was an NBC poll out today.
People who were supporting Trump in the head-to-head were twice as likely to support RFK if he was included in the poll than Biden. And on top of that, if you just sort of look at
issues that RFK is out there talking about, it's anti-vaccine stuff. He's more hawkish than Trump
and Biden in support of the Israeli war in Gaza. He is in all the sort of, you know,
kind of right wing paranoid spaces, Joe Rogan all the time. He's talking to Tucker Carlson.
So you can imagine Trump wanting to sure up his base through an RFK Jr. pick and have a dude on
the ticket named Kennedy, you know, for like low information voters. That's pretty, it's a big new
story. It's interesting it
makes him sound more willing to reach across the aisle than i think the pick actually exposes him
to be so you can see it happening yeah i mean if those numbers this is like the nbc poll from today
is like the first time first major poll i think we've seen rfk take more from trump than biden
if that continues you could see trump starting to panic
and wanting to like bring him into the fold we got no all the little right-wing kind of influencer
types who used to have them on their shows kind of charlie kirks of the world etc now viciously
attack rfk jr trump's calling him you know kind of a radical left socialist democrat and tweets so
getting getting nasty yeah but do we really want someone with such strong
Leland Palmer vibes second on the major party ticket?
All the Twin Peaks fans, all five of you laughing at that.
Dan, what were you going to...
I mean, I don't know what you think,
but I would be scared shitless of a Trump-Kennedy ticket.
That'd be very worrisome, yeah.
Yeah, no, I think it would be...
Because if you listen to...
I would encourage people who
are sleeping too well at night to listen to
the focus group,
Sarah Longwell, the Bulwark has this
focus group podcast where she lists the focus groups.
She did one with RFK.
People who voted, one group of people who voted for Biden
in 20, one group of people who voted for Trump in 20
who are open to supporting RFK Jr.
And the reasons are
crazy, but there is this sense among voters that because he's a Democrat or was a Democrat and
because he's a Kennedy and he doesn't like either party that he has this like independent streak.
And if you put that with Trump, that would like the one, there are two issues in all these polls
where Biden outpolls Trump,
it's uniting the country in abortion. And I think this would help Trump, like Trump's divisiveness
is one of his greatest weaknesses with a lot of persuadable voters, and this would address it.
The good news is, there are two, I mean, there are two upsides to this scenario. One,
it is highly unlikely to happen because they're both megalomaniacal
narcissists um and two if it were to happen i do kind of think the debate with kamala harris would
be excellent television oh wow oh wow yeah she that's that's a good one that's a good one yeah
that would definitely be like the burn it down ticket and you could see a lot of people especially young people yeah that's what that's what i would worry about is that in an
election year where probably more people than usual are sick of both parties and when you start
polling voters who haven't showed up in previous elections and they are more they're trumpier or
they're more like willing to go third party And you wonder at the end of the election
whether those voters are going to stay home or turn out.
And you could see if it was Trump and RFK Jr.,
you could see a little bit of those voters peeling off.
Okay, when we come back,
we're going to talk about democracy or else,
how to save America in 10 easy steps.
Thank you. Okay, we are here at the LA Times Festival of Books
My friends and co-hosts here
along with John Lovett who
has a live show today so he can be here,
they wrote a book, Democracy or Else, How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps.
Everyone here has obviously pre-ordered it, so I don't have to tell you to,
but on the off chance you forgot or have not yet pre-ordered your second and third copies for your friends and family,
please do so now.
I would say John, John, and Tommy, they have a long history of doing a lot of
writing. They're excellent writers. They're very humble writers. They have not talked about this
book very much. They wrote it kind of quietly. Now it's here. You didn't know it was coming.
And so now is the time in which you're going to talk about this book, sell this book,
explain this book. Our first question comes from aaron okay so trees had
to die for this can you justify their death that's okay
audiobooks are a thing no um we read the No, we recorded the audiobook.
We recorded the audiobook, and I had to read a lot of jokes that Lovett wrote,
and it's not going to end well for me, let me tell you.
Oh, my God.
So, after the 2016 election,
I'm sure all of us got a million texts from your friends saying,
what do we do, how do we fix this, this is so fucked up, you worked in government saying what do we do how do we fix this this is so fucked up you
worked in government what do we do now and the honest answer was there was no one thing there
was no easy answer it was a million little things over time it was being more engaged in democracy
it was being paying more attention it was volunteering it was donating it was voting it
was getting your friends to vote um and so that's what the show
became is trying to help people figure out how to become an activist in your own life
and over the course of doing this Paz de America for what's seven million years now yeah um we've
talked to some of the smartest politicians organizers activists uh and they've taught us a
lot and we wanted to put all of that in one place to help
people figure out your media diet how to get informed how to vote how to figure out where
to donate how to figure out where to volunteer maybe run for office maybe work in politics so
you know one other option besides buying the book is going back and listening to seven years worth
of pod save america episodes you're welcome to do that as well we thought putting it all in one One other option besides buying the book is going back and listening to seven years worth of Pod Save America episodes.
You're welcome to do that as well.
We thought putting it all in one place was important, especially as we're heading into this election where the stakes just couldn't possibly be higher.
Yeah.
So talk to us a little about the process of writing the book.
John, you're a speechwriter.
Love it.
As a speechwriter, Tommy, you've done a lot of writing.
How did you divide up work here?
What was the process?
Well, since Lovett's not here,
I'm going to talk about the real process.
So we worked with a fantastic writer as well,
Josh Holloway.
Josh, are you here?
Yeah, there he is.
He's handsome too.
There he is.
Josh is a real comedy writer.
He writes for Jimmy Kimmel.
So we had a ringer.
So basically we came up with the 10 steps
because we know we wanted it to be a guide
and we wanted it to be useful for people.
And then I think, I'm trying to think of the process.
I think like Josh and Tommy and I would sort of like
write out the different sections and then Lovett would go through about a week after the deadline
we set for him a week is generous a week is generous and then would edit and then we would
all take another pass there was a google doc involved which is is always, you know, I'm old. I wanted to
like write in Microsoft Word, you know, but then there's like a bunch of people fighting each other
in the Google Doc. It was honestly, it was a great book came out of a process that was rough to do
with four people, one of them being John Lovett, who, by the way, I can say this because like I,
it reminded me of us being in the White House when Lovett worked for me.
He does not work for me anymore.
I'll tell you that much.
But in the White House, he worked for me.
And editing Lovett's speeches and working with him on speech edits was fucking brutal.
But he always made them a lot better.
He always made them.
And his jokes are very, very funny.
So that was the.
What do you have to say about the process?
I think you nailed it, John.
I think my job,
my job in campaigns in the White House
was, you know,
fighting with Jake Tapper all day
or whatever I did back then.
I was not a writer.
So my advice for people
who want to write a book
and are not sure if they're able is
partner with two of the best speech writers
in the history of democratic politics. is partner with two of the best speechwriters in the history of democratic politics,
then partner with someone who writes
Jimmy Kimmel's monologue every single night,
and it turns out it's pretty easy.
You know what I mean?
You just sit back and relax.
So my podcast, Hysteria, I have a co-host,
Alyssa Mastromonaco, who's written a couple
of books.
Incredible podcast.
Yeah, Alyssa.
And she and I have just, I haven't written a book because it sounds awful.
But she and I have discussed how sometimes once your book is cooked and out there, there
are things that you're like, oh, I wanted to put that in.
Or like, I had to cut that.
Was there anything that you personally fought for
or that you personally wish was in the book
that isn't in the book?
We really, I think we got it all in there.
Yeah, there's nothing I fought for
that I wish had gotten in.
The minute the PDF is locked
is when you start thinking of far better stories
than you thought to include in the moment.
So that's the kind of agita I have now but it's not it's not that we didn't include it it's just
you come up with things later yeah so it is a guide so there's 10 steps on like what you what
you can do to help you know improve politics we can say save democracy um and then we have a lot
of personal stories save america not stopping with democracy the entire enterprise the entire
enterprise right it's right here, people.
Like the pod.
Save the whole thing, yes.
But yeah, we have a lot of personal stories from both our time in the campaign and the White House.
And we also interviewed a lot of the people that, if you've listened to the pod, you've come to know and love.
And so we talked to LaTosha Brown on why organizing matters and Congressman Maxwell Frost on how to persuade
voters and Ben Wickler on state parties. So we included a lot of those interviews in there,
which is great. But it was hard figuring out which stories from all of our funny stories,
which we don't find as funny anymore, but they are. There's some good ones. You find out in the
book a couple of interesting things. Which one of us ran over a moose while campaigning? Which one of us performed secret gay weddings at the White
House in the Rose Garden? And you find out who Obama's favorite staffer is.
Also, which is a good tease.
The big tease, yeah.
Now, 10 is a very round number of lessons.
So what I want to know is, and I refuse to believe that you guys all sat down and you're like,
here's how we saved democracy and just ended at 10, just by chance.
Yeah.
So just for this audience, they're not going to tell anyone,
what was the 11th lesson that didn't make it?
I think we actually had nine and we needed an extra.
That's the truth.
I mean, the original sketching out of it was like literally we,
the early, early, early concept
that we got a little bit away from
was kind of a Boy Scout manual type vibe.
And I think we were just all in a conference room
drawing, we don't have a whiteboard
for some reason at our office.
We were drawing on a window
and it was a little sort of like elevator of going up the mountain. I think we got to 10
in those early steps. So yeah, you're right, Dan, it's a round number that might seem artificial,
but it was the right number. I mean, it was an actual edict, you would know this, Tommy,
from working in Iowa, that round numbers are not real numbers. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. If anyone ever
comes back from canvassing in their report that I talked to 100 voters,
you know they're lying.
It's never 100, right?
It's 101, it's 97.
Yeah, 19 steps to state democracy.
You're right, that is more believable.
You know, as you were talking,
I just had a thought.
Like, what if the Constitution started off
as like a Boy Scout manual?
Like, how to democracy in the colonies?
I'm sure, that's probably pretty close
yeah do you consider yourselves equivalent to the founders based on that question
we do go we do talk about the founding a little no we talk about the different um we write about
the different uh parts of the political system and like talk about sort of how easy it is to change
uh each part of the system.
The whole purpose of the book is really for people to focus their time and energy on what is going to be most useful and most likely to make a difference in politics.
And so it can answer questions like,
is it realistic to expect that we'll ever get rid of the electoral college?
What do we do about the Senate?
What do we do about gerrymandering?
And if you're going to donate to candidates, electoral college? What do we do about the Senate? What do we do about gerrymandering?
If you're going to donate to candidates, who is worth donating to? Which causes are worth
donating to? Which aren't? If you're going to volunteer, what's the most effective way
to actually persuade voters? Which is the best way to organize? How to give a good speech
at a local meeting if you're going to get involved in local politics.
So if you are just starting out and just wanting to get involved in politics,
definitely a book for you. But even if you have listened to us, God love you, since 2016,
there will be a lot of interesting things in there to help you become a better organizer,
volunteer in this election cycle, and hopefully
future elections if we have them. Speaking of 2016, if you had written this book in 2016,
how would it have been different? What have you learned since then that you included in the book?
I mean, the one theme that I think we tried to get through the book is, you know, the goal of politics isn't to make you feel better about how right you are.
The goal of politics is to get other people to see things your way.
your way. And I think when 2016 started and we were all sort of shell-shocked from Trump winning and scared and wondering what comes next, there was a lot of, and I know because I engage in this
too, there's a lot of sound and fury and people went online and they were yelling about this and
you know, and what we have learned over the years is the most important thing that you can do in politics, the best way to change the system, is to change people's minds.
And whether that means, whether you're persuading a Republican, an Independent, a Democrat who's
sort of sick of politics right now, or someone who hasn't ever voted before or might not
want to vote, figuring out the best way to bring them to our side,
to welcome them in, to give them the grace to change their mind, that is probably the
most important thing you can do in politics.
And I felt like that's what we learned from all of the organizers and volunteers and listeners
that we've talked to over the years.
And I think the skill set for doing that is
different than the skill set that's required to win an argument on social media. It just takes
a different skill set. And that's sort of a big theme throughout the book.
So we were serious about inviting Carrie Lake to participate.
Correct. Correct. Yeah. This is an olive branch to Carrie Lake.
Bring that soft gauzy filter you use on all your web videos.
Okay, so if you are, as you should be,
freaking the fuck out about this election
and you are trying to find ways
to channel that anxiety into productive action
along the ways John said, buy this book.
I have read this book.
I've read it twice.
It is excellent.
I highly recommend it. It is constructive. It is excellent. I highly recommend it.
It is constructive. It is hilarious.
There are drawings.
There's a lot of drawings.
Dan likes it because he's referred to as a sex symbol
in the book.
Which is the one edit of mine they actually took in the process.
So yeah, please buy our book.
Democracy or Else, How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps.
Crooked.com slash books
thank you for coming out today, thank you to Aaron Ryan
for joining us, go listen to
Hysteria wherever you get your podcasts
thank you to LA Times Festival of Books
thanks Dan for coming down, we'll see you guys later
if you want to get ad-free episodes, exclusive content, and more,
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