Pod Save America - Major Win for Democrats, Minor Debate for Republicans
Episode Date: November 9, 2023Democrats pull out critical wins for abortion rights in Ohio and Andy Beshear in Kentucky, and deal a big blow to Glenn Youngkin in Virginia. Jon, Dan, and Tommy discuss how Democrats did it, and what... it all could mean for Joe Biden next fall. Then, did somebody say "ship gap"?? The third Republican debate goes in some very odd directions—while the front-runner shows off his own brand of crazy at a Florida rally. 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 Dan Pfeiffer.
Dan Pfeiffer!
Hey, Dan. Good to have you down here in LA. I haven Jon Favreau. I'm Tommy Vitor. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. Dan Pfeiffer. Hey, Dan.
Good to have you down here in L.A.
I haven't seen you guys in 72 hours.
Yeah, Dan is sick of our faces.
No, we're not sick of his, that's for sure.
On today's show, we got a big election day for Democrats to talk about
and a somewhat meaningless debate for Republicans
who are vying for second place in the GOP primary.
The 2023 elections were excellent
for Democrats and those of us who want to keep abortion legal. In Ohio, two ballot measures,
one to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution and the other to legalize marijuana,
both passed by a margin of 57 to 43 percent. In Virginia, Democrats held the state Senate and
flipped the statehouse, which means Glenn Youngkin will not be able to pass the 15 week abortion ban that he and Republican candidates campaigned on.
And in deep red Kentucky, pro-choice Democratic Governor Andy Beshear defeated anti-abortion extremist Daniel Cameron by 53 to 48 percent.
Democrats came up short in the Mississippi governor's race, but only by about five points.
We also picked up a state Supreme Court seat in Pennsylvania and a few more seats in the Democratic governor's race, but only by about five points. We also picked up a state
Supreme Court seat in Pennsylvania and a few more seats in the Democratic-controlled New Jersey
legislature. As you can imagine, most of these results gave the pundits on Fox and Newsmax
a case of the sads. You know, ever since Roe v. Wade was overturned, pretty much every time the
Democrats have run on abortion, they have won. And was last night at a Harbinger for 2024, as you were alluding to, Aisley?
Absolutely.
Most people that are Republicans are probably pro-life.
But what's most important?
Republicans taking over and Republicans being able to keep our country.
What an epic failure by Governor Youngkin.
This is a huge loss.
What an epic failure by Governor Youngkin.
This is a huge loss.
It does seem like the Republican Party generally has a real problem with winning.
And you put very sexy things like abortion and marijuana on the ballot,
and a lot of young people come out and vote.
Thank goodness that most of the states in this country don't allow you to put everything on the ballot because pure democracies are not the way to run a country that was rick santorum the uh the winner of the 2012
republican iowa caucuses yeah have you guys noticed that steve ducey has been the voice
of reason on fox and friends a lot recently clip that yeah i'll put that out dan i'm just telling
it to you straight. People at home.
I love the hot take on Newsmax.
Republicans seem to have a problem with winning.
They sure do.
Rick Santorum.
Rick Santorum, democracies are the problem.
It's like we're getting that message from the Republicans.
And they have a plan to solve that.
We hear you loud and clear.
So it seems like the big headline out of Tuesday is that wherever abortion access is on the ballot, choice wins. Dan, is that your takeaway? Did you have other big takeaways from the night before we get into each state? politics has now actually transcended partisanship. You have the Democratic governor of Kentucky,
a state that Donald Trump won by 26 points campaigning on stopping abortion bans, who ran
an incredibly powerful ad opposing abortion bans without exception. You see it across the board in
all of these states. In Ohio, the initiative to amend the Constitution to protect abortion rights
did better in almost every single county than Joe Biden did in 2020.
It is a tremendously powerful and galvanizing issue.
Remains so today, 18 months after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, which is sort of stunning in our attention span of an amoeba media culture we live in.
And I think we will look back.
There are certain things in history that fundamentally shift the
way politics are conducted, that change electoral coalitions in real ways. And I think the Supreme
Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade is one of those things that has changed politics. It doesn't mean
the Democrats will win every single time, but it means that politics is different today than it was
before that day, because an unelected Supreme Court took away a constitutional
right for more than half of this country. And that is not something that has happened in American
history. Yeah. And there were, I saw a few takes before these elections that were like, will
abortion still have the same power it had in the 2022 midterms and some of these specials? And
by all accounts, it sure did. Well, in Mississippi, Presley, the Democrat,
was not pro-choice and he lost. And that is something that you can look at. One of the
things going into this election that we were worried about was we had this election in Louisiana
where Democrats did terribly across the board, had low turnout, didn't get to 30% in most of
the statewide races. And the question was, even though we'd all agreed to never speak of that, was that a warning sign that the sort of democratic
enthusiasm, the anti-MAGA majority had finally succumbed to the political gravity that we see
from traditional political gravity, from presidential approval ratings, people's
opinions of the economy. And that was a state where abortion was not the issue that is elsewhere
because the incumbent outgoing democratic governor was anti-choice.
Right.
Let's talk about a few of the big races.
In 2019, Andy Beshear barely won his first term as Kentucky governor by less than half
a percentage point.
Of course, it was an incumbent Republican governor at the time, Matt Bevin.
In 2020, Trump won the state by 26 points.
And now in 2023, Besheir wins a second term by five points
Tommy uh we were all in Louisville a few weeks ago knocking on doors Louisville Louisville Louisville
uh we're knocking on doors with Planned Parenthood yeah why do you think Bashir won few reasons one
because we knocked on doors that's because I was that was the answer I was hoping for because
love it chased down that woman with the golden doodle one uh. Two, it's really hard to beat an incumbent governor.
The Cook Political Report said that only two incumbent governors have lost re-election since 2018.
One of them was Bevin in Kentucky.
In Beshear's case, he's also extremely popular.
I think his approval rating was consistently in the 60s, which is insane to any of us who worked in national politics.
Most popular governor in America.
Yeah, he's also the son of a previous two-term popular governor.
That helps.
He is seen as competent, empathetic,
approachable by voters.
They all just call him Andy.
He did a great job responding to COVID
and all these natural disasters
that were hitting the state.
I saw Nate Cohn, I believe,
at the New York Times,
suggest that Bashir actually did better
in counties that had been hit hard by flooding,
which speaks to
maybe the response. We heard that from people in Louisville. I don't know if you guys were with,
I don't know who it was. I can't remember. Louisville. I can't remember who it was,
but some people who live there were saying that we've been through a lot in the last couple of
years, disaster wise. And he's just been there. And he's been there for the whole state and
everyone's sort of like rallied together.
For sure.
As you guys mentioned, he ran hard on abortion rights.
I do think his opponent, Daniel Cameron, made it easier to run that kind of campaign because
Cameron had an extreme position on abortion that made him susceptible to that messaging.
But also Bashir was smart.
He ran a Kentucky focused campaign.
He did not allow it to get nationalized.
He talked in his victory speech, he talked about how he
campaigned with Jack Harlow, who's from Kentucky, not Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who's from Arkansas.
Bashir also hammered Cameron on school vouchers and then organized labor, loves Bashir.
The president of the UAW local 862 said about Bashir, quote, I take a bullet for him. He's
that important to the families of my union. Wow.
He also, yeah. I mean, that's a hell of quote yeah uh he also raised a lot more money than his opponent so just all
around a hell of a candidate hell of a governor hell of a campaign so basheer 2028 that's what
people are saying that's oh many people are saying many people are tweeting that's great it's great
it's good news for uh good news for kentucky good news for andy good news for Andy Beshear. Virginia Democrats were predicted to hold the state Senate.
The statehouse was seen as a toss-up.
Glenn Youngkin went all in to get his trifecta.
His PAC spent nearly $8 million on these races,
including half a million of his own cash,
which he's rich enough that that doesn't seem actually so much.
Four of that was on vests, unfortunately.
Campaigned all across the state.
Campaigned specifically on a 15
week abortion ban by presenting it as some kind of a compromise that was the big great that was
the republican geniuses think that the 15 week abortion ban this is what lindsey graham tried
to do in the senate too they think this is the this is the solution for them their political
solution uh did not work in virginia dan what's your takeaway? And does this mean the Youngkin is 2024 GOP savior boomlet is finally over?
I know I tried to start that.
I know you did. I was wondering if you'd remember your take.
I remember all my takes and I just hope others don't.
I think it's probably the end of the, at least the 2024 Youngkin boomlet. What is interesting here is the Republicans in that state ran ahead of Trump in 2020, but behind Youngkin in 2021.
That's a little one piece of news that isn't quite as good as all the rest. When I dug the board, demographically, it models very well with the post-Trump Democratic coalition. It is a high turnout state because of for that very reason. And so it's one where Democrats should do well. But the fact that Democrats did well with a president of their own party in the White House is a huge aberration. It's very rare. Virginia always has these off-cycle elections. And usually-
Just how Young can win in the first place.
Exactly.
Usually the party of the president
fares poorly in that time.
And so this is a huge exception.
And that says, I think, a lot about
the power of abortions we're talking about
and also the failure of this Republican strategy.
Because I think these elections are testing grounds
for the national parties,
particularly in Virginia,
about what messages work and what don't.
This was the test.
If that had worked here, it would be every Republican would be adopting it by the end of
by the time you hear this podcast. That did not happen. And that says a lot about how far the
Republicans have to go to solve their abortion problem, which may be, frankly, insoluble given
Donald Trump's role in this, their long history on it. And that's a positive sign for Democrats.
I just saw before we started recording, J.D. Vance say, we got to try for this 15-week
abortion ban because of what happened. And that's the key. And it's like,
have you looked at the real, did you just see what happened to Glenn Youngkin and Republicans
in Virginia? I think you probably can't overstate how big of a tactical error it was for Youngkin
to come out for the 15-week abortion ban. If he had not proactively proposed that, there wouldn't have been much for Democrats to run
against. If they'd run some boring, bland, sort of economic-focused, inflation-focused campaign,
they very likely would have done better and potentially have won. But giving Democrats
this 15-week ban to rally against was an enormous shot in the arm.
And Youngkin has national ambitions, and it'd be very hard for a Republican governor in a post-Dobbs this 15 week ban to rally against was an enormous shot in the arm.
And Youngkin has national ambitions and it'd be very hard for a Republican governor in a post Dobbs world to not advance some sort of ban.
So he was trying to split the difference between being seen as a rhino and a
six week ban.
And that obviously did not work as voters understand what is at stake here.
And they,
and they see through the bullshit.
And you can tell that's why Donald Trump and all these other Republican
candidates have been have been so squirrely on a national ban and said things like,
oh, well, I don't I mean, whatever comes to me, you know, maybe I'll sign or else. But it's not
it's never going to get that far. Or worse, Trump said, I'm just going to make the best deal. I'm
going to make the best deal on abortion because, you know, Youngkin did this and it didn't work
out too well for him. Trump is dumb in a lot of ways. A lot of things he says are very stupid. But politically on this
issue, he's been very savvy in terms of just not letting this primary drag him further to the right
on an issue that he knows is toxic for him. And, you know, it's just worth pointing out that the
Democrats in the state ran on keeping abortion legal through 26 weeks and then the third
trimester allowing abortion access if you've got
three referrals from three different doctors. So incredibly onerous requirement for the third
trimester, but they did try to put some constraints on abortion access, which is worth mentioning.
I just think it's important that every single Democrat who's running for office,
who is talking to voters, assert that Republicansans if they get a trifecta are going
to pass a national abortion absolutely there is no way that senate majority leader mitch mcconnell
and speaker mike johnson of all people are not sending a national abortion ban to donald trump's
desk and there's no way he's not signing that no doubt well to i don't care how many pinocchio
someone gives you or that that is reality.
No, let's dig into it. Like to think that that wouldn't happen.
You would have to believe that either that Mitch McConnell would save the filibuster if he has the Senate, right?
If he has a Republican Senate would save the filibuster and then say no abortion ban because I'm keeping the filibuster or Mitch McConnell,
who is like a lot of Republicans in his caucus now aren't really where mitch mcconnell is like he's like the rhino republican and we think that if republicans take
the senate in 2024 and there'll be even more crazy trumpy republicans there like will mitch mcconnell
even be majority leader at that point there's a good chance mitch mcconnell doesn't run for
majority leader again that's what yeah and then the next person is going to be a MAGA person.
And of course,
they're going to get rid of the filibuster.
Mitch McConnell was like,
hold it, like pretending
that he was going to hold
on to the filibuster,
maybe because he thinks of himself
as some institutionalist.
But like, I don't see
this as a possibility.
I don't care if you,
you're right.
Like, even if you go fact check this,
like it's just,
it takes a lot to believe
that they would preserve
the filibuster
and not pass a national abortion.
The most likely person to be Senate majority leader, if it is not Mitch McConnell, is John
Thune. I worked on two campaigns against John Thune in South Dakota a long time ago,
and he's about as far right on abortion as it gets.
Yeah.
All right. So, Ohio, in the 2022 midterms, Tim Ryan lost the Ohio Senate race to J.D. Vance by about six points.
One year later, one year later, the voters have guaranteed abortion rights and legalized marijuana.
Fifty seven. Forty three. Tommy, what do you think's going on in Ohio? And does this give you more hope that Sherrod Brown could pull out another win in 2024?
So this result was driven by very strong Democratic turnout. I think I read that
self-reported Biden voters in the exit polls outnumbered Trump voters by two points. But again,
this is a state Trump won by eight points. However, it was low turnout.
Generally, 3.86 million ballots were cast on issue one compared to 4.14 million votes in that Senate
race, the Tim Ryan Senate race last year. So low turnout, but lots of Democrats. The margin of
victory was driven by really strong support from women, 63% of whom voted yes. Black voters, 83% voted yes. Latino
voters, 73% voted yes. And then young voters, nearly 80% of voters, 18 to 29, voted yes,
as opposed to only 45% of voters 64 or older. It was also driven by college graduates,
unmarried people. So in addition to this just being a really strong Democratic turnout,
there's a broader coalition of support for abortion rights than there was for Tim Ryan or
for Democrats on the ballot usually. I mean, issue one did better than Ryan did with unmarried men,
Trump voters, independents, and moderates. I think if anyone can recreate that group of
excited Democrats turning out and able to persuade traditional conservatives,
it is someone like Sherrod Brown. I do think, though, the electorate is going to be
completely different in 2024. I think I read that the electorate is likely to be 60 to 90%
higher, larger in 2024 than it was this cycle. So it's going to be really tough in election year to
win Ohio. But Sherrod's the kind of candidate that can do it.
Yeah. It's like another 2 million voters in Ohio over the midterms.
Yeah. It was almost 6 million voters in 2020.
Yeah. I mean, and also, by the way, the much maligned New York Times poll,
which we'll get to. In that poll, it has 40 percent of Trump voters saying that abortion should be always or mostly legal.
And I think that also helps explain there was 18 counties in Ohio that voted for Trump and it also voted for this abortion amendment.
Now, some of that is turnout differential. Right. Because so you look at a county like that, like a Trump county, and it's only Democrats in that county turned out for the abortion access.
That's possible.
But the New York Times poll also suggests that there are some Trump voters, which Trump obviously knows, who like Trump and will vote for Trump, but also want to protect abortion access.
Which, again, voters are fucking weird.
I've said it a million times.
24% of white evangelicals voted yes on issue one.
Wow.
According to exit polls.
Yeah. I mean, it makes you wonder if part of the messaging is libertarian as well,
and just sort of like keeping these decisions away from the government. Of course, the Ohio legislature already is saying that they're going to try to overturn the will of the voters on both
weed and abortion. Shocker. Please don't do that on the November 2024 ballot. Don't. Don't. And by
the way, the marijuana referendum was a total afterthought.
When we were in Cleveland, we were talking to some folks, some electeds, some folks of the state party.
They were not focused on this at all.
It just kind of got tossed on the ballot by, I think, a different group of activists and organizers.
And it just got pulled over the line, I think. I was reading that because it's not obviously an amendment like the abortion
amendment is, it could be easier for the Republican legislature to screw with the marijuana measure
by just like reappropriating funds and passing some law than it will be with the abortion
amendment. It's much harder to screw with the constitutional amendment, though they claim
they're going to try. So, of course. Yeah. Speaking of 2024,
there has been a lively debate on the Internet and cable news about what these results might mean for Joe Biden's reelection campaign. Our friends at Playbook laid out the two theories
of the case, as only they can do. Theory one is called time to chill out. Polls are one thing,
actual votes are another. These are not election returns consistent with Biden's 40% approval ratings.
Beshear won despite tons of GOP money that was spent trying to tie him to Biden.
So there's plenty of room for the incumbent to recover.
That's the theory that the Biden campaign likes.
We've been seeing that online a lot too.
Theory two is called time to freak out.
The polls are absolutely right.
The problem isn't the Democratic brand.
It's Joe Biden.
The anti-MAGA coalition that showed up in 2018, 2020, and 2022
is still intact, but it's not going to show up for just anybody.
Trump will bring his voters out next year,
and Americans are giving every possible signal
that they won't be happy if the alternative is Biden.
Dan, what do you think?
You got to pick one.
There is no nuance.
No, Dan.
Pick one.
Like everything else today. This is playbook else we're playing playbook rules there is there is black and white left and right that's it i love
the choices are everything is fine do not worry or everything is doomed give up there is nothing
in the middle there is so much to say about this i just want to start by trying to explain how it is possible that Joe Biden could be behind, tied with or behind Donald Trump in several swing states.
And at the exact same moment, Democrats can win huge victories in states like Ohio, Kentucky and Virginia.
in Virginia. And here is why. I think it's a very simple explanation, which is that voters that Joe Biden is having the most trouble with right now are less engaged voters. They're the voters who
did not show up. So in the New York Times Siena polling, this analysis that Nate Cohn did prior
to this most recent poll, in all of their polling to date prior to this one, Joe Biden is up by four points among people
who voted in the 2018 election. He is down by several points with people who did not vote in
the 2018 election. The turnout in 2024 is likely to be 30 to 40% higher than it was in 2022. So a
whole bunch of people who are telling pollsters
that they are currently not happy with Joe Biden
did not turn out on Tuesday,
did not turn out in 2022, but are going to return-
Didn't turn out in 2018?
Yeah, they're going to return to election.
We are now the part,
Democrats are now the party of the most highly engaged voters.
And because of the changes in the media environment,
particularly since 2020,
the chasm between the highly engaged voters and everyone else has never been greater.
And so that is why it is possible.
This is the entire theme of the last season of The Wilderness, in case you want to go check it out.
And I could like- Going to plug in what else we got.
Message box?
I have a fury-f fury fueled message box on this
coming out tomorrow uh but so the point here is special elections particularly off-site
elections like this are not great predictors of what is going to happen we'll take the example of
in 2012 democrats tried to recall wisconsin governor scott walker
In 2012, Democrats tried to recall Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker.
Walker easily won that election, easily defeated the recall,
only a few months before President Obama was going to take on Mitt Romney in that state.
Obama then won Wisconsin by seven points because the turnout was massively higher.
Wisconsin, a.k.a. Paul Ryan's home state.
Okay.
Who was on the ticket.
Yes, that's right.
Exactly. Thank you. I didn't feel like I needed to say that, but thank you.
But it doesn't mean that there isn't
relevant information in what happened.
Everything that happened yesterday, first, is good
for America. It's good for the people of those states.
There are people whose lives are saved
because these abortion bans will not go into place.
Which is why we started with all that. Right.
That's the most important thing from last night.
Right.
And if Glenn Youngkin had gotten his trifecta,
a whole bunch of really terrible gun laws
would have been passed in Virginia.
That did not happen.
But, so that's point one.
Point two is that it's also what is evidence
of some good news for Democrats of what to look at.
Right?
It's not a predictor, but it is an indicator.
And some of the good news in there is one, as we've talked about, abortion is still the number
one issue. That is very important, right? That is a wind at Joe Biden's back.
Well, for the electorate that showed up and for a good chunk of the Democratic Party,
it is an extremely salient issue.
But if you look at the Democratic voters that Joe Biden is currently struggling with, abortion is a huge issue for them.
For them.
Yeah.
So that means there's work to do there.
Right.
That's how we should view these polls as a roadmap of who the voters we have to talk to and how we have to convince them.
And to abortion is going to be a hugely important issue to reconstitute the 2020 coalition that elected Joe Biden.
Two, I think this is really important is that turnout is not an accident, right? These
election victories are not just the result of some sort of rule about who can vote and who can't.
It's the Democratic campaign machinery is working. And it is kicking Republican asses left and right.
And that is important. The other thing is, and this is not getting enough attention,
and you could write, Donald Trump is winning in that New York Times poll in those swing states,
but there's a lot of stuff underneath. And you guys talked about some of this in the Tuesday
podcast. That should be very alarming for Donald Trump and Republicans. They are terribly divided
on abortion. They're terribly divided on Donald Trump, who is actually less popular than Joe
Biden. Yeah. even in that poll.
Even in that poll.
Within his own party's voters.
Yes.
And the other thing is really important, and this played out in a lot of these races around
the country, is Donald Trump is forcing, at political gunpoint, a series of Republican
candidates to adopt his lies on the 2020 election, which kills them with a huge swath of voters.
And that is going to happen
up and down the ballot
in 2024 of Donald Trump's nominee.
Which in Tuesday night's results,
Republican secretary of state candidate
in Kentucky
was the only one on the ticket,
only statewide candidate
to like reject election denial.
And he's the secretary of state
and like ran on that.
And he did better than every other
republican on the ticket yeah yeah so once again election i mean interestingly look if you if you
locked a bunch of nerds in a room and you gave half of them you mean like what we just did right
here well what we're currently doing yes if you locked a bunch of nerds in the room and you gave
them only the polling potentially uh about these races these results are not surprising. If you lock those same nerds in a
room and gave them Joe Biden's approval rating in all these other states and told them there was an
off-year midterm election, these results would be very surprising, right? So this is the kind
of disconnect we're trying to work through. I think the challenge for Biden in that New York
Times poll is that a lot of the problems were specific to him in particular age and concerns about his
handling of the economy. And then if you look at the crosstabs, he has particular challenges with
young voters and voters of color. Maybe it's the case that if the 2024 campaign is all about
abortion rights, that that issue can bring back those young voters and those voters of color and
get them to turn out and not stay home. And
that's how you make up the difference in that times poll and you win reelection. But I don't
think that's a guarantee. I think obviously that the Biden campaign has a lot of agency here.
This is going to be something they focus on. But the other challenge is, as you said before, Dan,
the electorate is going to be incredibly different in 2024. You're going to have a lot of kind of
disaffected, less engaged voters.
They tend to vote against incumbents, especially when they're super pissed off.
And one thing we know from every poll is that the wrong track number is at like 70%. It's
historically high. And that's a really challenging setup for an incumbent president going into a
reelection. I brought up the wilderness, not just for the plug, but because I-
Also for the plug.
Also for the plug.
Mostly for the plug.
But also when I saw the New York Times poll and I've seen other polls since then, like it brought me back to the focus groups that I did for the wilderness.
And at the outset, I thought that the I did a focus group in Virginia of Biden voters who then switched to Yunkin.
And I was like, oh, those are going to be the tough voters because they voted Republican.
Those were the people who are most like, oh, I did it for whatever reason.
I'll come back to Biden.
I still like the Democrats.
I'm pro-choice.
They were the best.
The Pennsylvania voters who were like slightly disaffected, they were all like ready for
Fetterman, all that kind of stuff.
The voters that were most disappointed in Biden that were crankiest were the young voters
in California, the black voters in Atlanta,
and the Hispanic voters in Las Vegas, the very groups that Joe Biden's having a problem with.
And then I talked to like a ton of strategists and pollsters in the party who all agreed that
this is the issue. So this is not like Nate Cohn in the New York Times and some media pollsters
doing this. These are like Democratic Party strategists all know this. John Della
Volpe, Joe Biden's one of his pollsters in 2020 just had an op-ed in the New York Times that says
Joe Biden's in trouble about young voters. So Linda Lake has been talking about needing to
reconstitute, who's another pollster that we've had on this podcast and who also has worked for
Joe Biden. She's talked about it too. So this is not like, and I'm not saying this to like freak
people out, right? Like Joe Biden, we want him to win. We will do everything we can to get him to win.
Like I still think he can win. I think there's a clear path for victory here.
But like I don't think it does anyone any good to just sit there and be like, oh, the media said red wave and they're wrong again.
And every time that every time there's an election, they just prove the media wrong and all the pundits and blah, blah, blah. It's like, no, actually, the
polls have been right every single special election and midterm now for the last several cycles where
they've been off of the presidential races, which, by the way, are the races that have this completely
different, bigger electorate, which is harder to measure in polls. In which way have they been off,
John, in the presidential races?
Yeah, they've been more favorable to Democrats.
Yeah, copium is not a good drug to get hooked on. No one should. None of us want to repeat
this mistake to 2016. So no one's trying to bum anybody out or suppress her. I mean,
I do like I understand why Biden supporters are kind of taking a victory lap and dunking
on people who are critical of him because, you know, you get frustrated jobs, you care deeply about your candidate and you want to push back.
But, you know, I think we all should be clear-eyed. No one wants to repeat mistakes we all made in
2016 of thinking there's no way we could lose. One last thing, just how nice was it to not
have anyone contesting the results of the election? Even the craziest right-wingers,
like nobody was like, that I saw was saying that they're, Cameron was like,
let's all pray for Bashir.
They're all saving it up for 2024.
Also when you lose by five points,
it's hard to contest it.
Don't tell Donald Trump that.
I'll say one more thing about this pool of voters who are going to show up in
the general election that have not in the presidential election that have not
shown up in these specials and midterms.
Like if you look at the New York times polling and Nate Cohn says this in his
piece today,
the folks who showed up for these 2023 off year elections are like the Democrats that showed up are pretty favorable towards Biden.
You brought up the Ohio exit poll.
That's plus two Biden.
So it's not like it's there are specific problems that Biden might have.
But what I get nervous about is not just problems that Biden may have, but like this pool of voters, this disaffected pool of voters.
They're more moderate. They are younger. They're voters of color.
They're they sort of more cynical about politics and institutions.
They're harder to reach. They don't consume as much news.
They're harder to reach with ads like I just worry about them long term for the party because it's much.
I think it is easier for Republicans to make a case like, aren't you pissed about shit? And don't you want to like
tear institutions down that are like, it's just it's a longer term issue that I actually worry
about that goes beyond Joe Biden. We talked about this after 2020. There were obviously very
troubling signs among black voters and Latino voters, younger voters without college educations across the board.
And there was a big sigh of relief after 2022.
But we didn't really test the proposition because the voters we're most concerned about did not vote in that election.
They are not midterm voters.
And so we don't know.
Like this poll is consistent with the New York Times poll is consistent with that trend continuing.
Right.
And we'll see. Look, it's possible that a good chunk of these disaffected voters
don't show up in the presidential.
That's also bad.
Which is bad for democracy,
but also the electorate then could possibly look more like a midterm election.
Absolutely.
Low turnout?
I'm not rooting for low turnout,
but I'm just saying there's different scenarios where it's going to be okay for Democrats, right?
But it all depends on the shape of the electorate is our point here.
It depends on which vote.
It's apples to oranges comparisons to just say the media said this in 22 and red wave here.
It's like a presidential electorate is so, so, so different from midterm electorate.
We just used to live in a world, and this was true under President Obama and previous Democrats, was midterms were bad for Democrats. Presidential years were better.
And that has shifted under Trump. That has fundamentally shifted. And the reason it has
is because college-educated older voters, whiter voters, used to be heavily Republican. And that
has changed in the Trump era. Yeah, that's exactly right. And the last thing I'll say about this is this is very challenging in execution, but there has never
been a race where it was more clear on how you win. You know exactly who the voters are. You know
how you get them back as hard. But we do not have to go get a bunch of people who voted for
Republicans in the midterms. You don't have to get a bunch of people who voted for Trump in 2016
or voted for Trump in 2020. You just have to get the people who voted for Joe Biden in six states
to do it again. And that is not an easy thing to do, but it is a clear, clear path. And that means
we actually have agency here. And that Right. And that is a very,
very powerful thing, which is why you can have some more confidence about Joe Biden's ability
to win than the polls would necessarily suggest, because they are our voters. We have to get back.
They are not people who we previously never had before. And to get granular about it, like,
it's everyone has people in their lives who are not political junkies like you all are listening to the show.
And these disaffected voters, they don't just like live in one place like they're they're all around us.
And I do think that is going to what's going to make the difference there is going out, talking to people, persuading people, not being pissed off when someone just doesn't say like, oh, I might not
vote and yelling at them for it. Like it's really going to take some persuasive work.
At every live show Q&A thing we've ever done, people are saying, how do I talk to my MAGA uncle
Thanksgiving? Fuck your MAGA uncle. Find your Biden skeptical cousin, right? That's who you
want, right? Is your Biden skeptical cousin. What if you're married?
What if you're Mike Johnson? What's your accountability partner?
Biden. What if you're married? What if you're Mike Johnson? What's your accountability? Hey,
another bonus. There's a lots of a huge pool now of super well-informed Trump jurors that will be voting for the first time. Oh, wow. That's exciting. He's doing persuasion for us. All right.
Before we get to break, just one quick housekeeping note in case you missed it. Love it. Tommy and I
wrote a book and it's coming out june 25th 2024 guess
what i've read the book people dan read the book it's quite good thanks dan tommy's supposed to
have a whole script here but he doesn't have it oh yeah i don't want to read that
it's called democracy or else how to save america in 10 easy steps and we uh we just
revealed the official cover this week was Was that a big moment for you?
On every single book PR plan, the cover reveal is a huge moment.
Step one is buying it because Crooked's donating the profits to support Vote Save America,
its partners and other organizations mobilizing for progressive outcomes
in the 2024 election and beyond. Dan, you got any tips for us in promoting a book?
the 2024 election and beyond.
Dan, you got any tips for us in promoting a book? I thought putting yourselves on Mount Rushmore
as the cover art was kind of a weird choice, but...
Did we do that?
Oh, no.
Don't be worried for a second.
That was a big mistake.
You gave cover approval to love it and there we went.
God damn it.
We did do that, probably.
You're doing it right, people.
Well, check out the cover now
and pre-order at cricket.com slash books or wherever books are sold.
Exclusive signed editions.
What?
Let's get through this.
Are available from bookshop.org.
It's hard to believe, but we're only one year out from the 2024 elections.
Time flies when you're having fun and nightmares.
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The third Republican debate was Wednesday night.
It was hosted by NBC in Miami, Florida,
moderated by Lester Holt, Kristen Welker,
and Tommy's favorite pundit, Hugh Hewitt.
I mean, I could do an hour on that guy.
I know.
Why he should not be there.
The debate featured Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley,
Vivek Ramaswamy, Tim Scott, and Chris Christie.
And it was two hours of what?
What was that?
What was that we just watched?
I think we all went into this thinking
this debate wouldn't really matter much.
Anything happen to change your mind on that, guys?
No.
No.
A lot of obscure foreign policy fights,
which I enjoyed, kind of.
Yeah, Tommy was into it.
I was talking about boats and sanctions and getting jollies off, but no.
You know what my view of this debate was?
If we can just escape a second Donald Trump presidency,
we're going to beat a lot of Republicans all the time.
That's true.
Those people were not good.
They were not good.
I'm not afraid of any of those people.
The whole thing was surreal.
They all dressed up.
They wore ties.
The moderator showed up with serious questions on serious issues.
And everyone involved knew that none of those people were ever going to be president of the United States.
Ever.
They took time to ask them repeatedly with follow-up questions about the specific ships that they would commission in the U.S. Navy.
Whoa, spoilers.
Skipping ahead.
There's not a person listening to this who did not watch this debate.
So thank God for Lester Holt and Kristen Wilker.
I think they have been the best moderators so far.
I think they're both great.
And for anyone who's mad at the questions,
I seriously doubt that they wrote a lot of these questions.
I'm sure this was made by network brass and producers, etc.
But just in terms of controlling the audience,
controlling the candidates,
there was some clapping in this,
but then Lester Holt kept trying to calm them down,
and then they would really jump in
when the candidates started talking over each other.
I think they did a great job.
Thank God for Lester Holt.
He finally kicked off a Republican debate by asking directly about Donald Trump and what each candidate would say to Trump supporters whose votes that they presumably want.
And here's what we heard from from Ronnie D.
And Donald Trump's a lot different guy than he was in 2016.
He owes it to you to be on this stage
and explain why he should get another chance. He should explain why he didn't have Mexico
pay for the border wall. He should explain why he racked up so much debt. He should explain
why he didn't drain the swamp.
And he said Republicans were gonna get tired of winning. Well, we saw last night, I'm sick
of Republicans losing. In Florida, I showed how it's done. One year ago Well, we saw last night, I'm sick of Republicans losing. In Florida,
I showed how it's done. One year ago here, we want a historic victory, including a massive
landslide right here in Miami-Dade County. So honestly, for those who didn't watch the debate,
that might have been Ron DeSantis' best moment. And that was literally minute two.
Yeah, the top.
It probably would have been a one nikki haley complained
about debt donald trump uh you know racking up debt and he said that trump was getting weak in
the knees i think on ukraine on ukraine yep and uh she said we can't live in the past we got to
look at the future vivek went on this whole thing we've become a party of losers it's the establishment
he then called on rana mcdaniel to resign as our in-sieger which is fair yeah i mean she's not
done a great job he invited her to come on stage which would have been a cool moment he also said
that elon musk tucker carlson and joe rogan should be moderating oh yeah then he also hit the
moderators he attacked welker uh he said the media rigged the last election it was a whole
fucking show he mentioned hunter biden's laptop within the first nine minutes of the debate and
again to kristen welker's credit thisanting, raving lunatic is screaming at her
from the stage and she just smiled at him.
Yeah, she didn't take the bait.
And he looked so small.
And he wanted her to take the bait so badly.
Kristen and Lester did a great job.
We should be grateful for that.
These are also the first actual reporters to moderate a Republican debate.
Yeah.
I forget who the other moderators were.
They all work for Fox.
Oh, yeah.
Right.
Christy talked about Hamas, Putin, all the world on fire kind of thing.
And then he said Trump's going to spend the rest of his campaign in jail or in courtrooms.
Right. Right. He said, well, why are we going to nominate someone who who's just trying to stay out of a courtroom?
Which we said, fair point. And then Tim Scott, who someone gave a tranquilizer to before the debate was so slow the whole time.
All I wanted to do was like speed him up the whole debate. And he's like, he's talked slower than he has in previous debates. It was really weird.
But anyway, he didn't mention Trump at all. He pledged to attract independent voters,
restore faith, Christian values, blah, blah, blah. I don't know. I really tuned out a lot
when Tim Scott was talking. So here's my question. That was basically the only time
that any of the candidates drew any contrast with Donald Trump.
Again, the person who is leading in every single national poll and every single state poll,
not by a little, but by 20, 30, 40 points still. What was the strategy there? Was there a strategy?
Because I know these people have high price consultants, right? They sit in debate rooms,
they do debate prep. What are they thinking as they head into this debate?
I think what this boils down to is none of them think they're going to be president.
They're not trying to be president.
They're not doing anything to ensure they'd be president.
As best that I can tell, they like visiting Iowa and New Hampshire and spending as little time as possible with their families.
It's best that I can tell they like visiting Iowa and New Hampshire and spending as little time as possible with their families.
Dan and I also share a theory that Vivek Ramaswamy started running thinking it would be great advertising for his like anti-woke investment ETFs and financial products.
Caught a little bit of fire in that first debate and then slowly has been plummeting and doesn't realize yet that he's not got a chance.
Yeah, maybe.
He seemed to be trying, but he was mostly,
I mean, I wrote down a bunch of the attacks.
He mostly spent his time attacking Nikki Haley.
He, of all, everyone on that stage looked like he's auditioning for something else, for sure.
Whether it's like being a pundit,
whether it's like a spot in the Trump administration,
whatever.
I'll try something out on you guys.
And I think it's, Dan dan your answer could be very correct
here but i'm wondering if they're thinking okay the only chance we have is if again trump uh dies
gets convicted the poll numbers change whatever and in order to be the next choice the the second
choice of everyone in the republican Party, I need to maintain my
favorability rating by not attacking Donald Trump too much and also not attacking all the other
candidates too much. I don't want to be too nasty towards the other candidates. And so that's why
we got the sort of muddled mess. I don't know. Yeah, I think I think that is correct. But I think
that's less about beating Trump in some case.
Like, sure, if he were going,
Trump going to jail
is not going to really help them
since that is likely to happen
after all the delegates are allocated.
But I guess it's like,
what if he,
imagine a conviction in March, right?
And he's already got
a bunch of the delegates,
but suddenly.
How's he going to be convicted in March?
Well, the trial starts March 4th.
Yeah, so maybe convicted in April. Okay, so trial starts March 4th. So maybe convicted in April.
So he's convicted in April.
This is just a fantasy scenario.
Let's do it, Sorkin.
And suddenly the polls really change, right?
We saw in the New York Times poll,
there's a bunch of Republican voters,
a bunch of voters who said,
I would actually vote for Joe Biden
if Trump gets convicted.
And so we see all these polls change
and all the Republicans are freaking out.
And then one of these goofballs is thinking, this is my time.
in whatever comes next.
In the post, either Donald Trump wins,
and now you have to exist in Donald Trump's Republican Party.
Or 2028.
Or 2028, and you're going to need Trump's voters. So you're trying to play out the string here,
land this plane without lighting the rest of your political career on fire.
But it feels like that ship has sailed for DeSantis.
Well, I i mean kind of
he still has very high approval rate favorability ratings among republican voters higher than trump
in most cases yeah he has high approval and he's got a ton of money and he's got a bunch of advisors
sitting you know around him saying anything can happen sir stranger things have happened donald
trump could get arrested he could die whatever like you could catch fire in iran hampshire i mean
so i did come away thinking that desantis really was campaigning for something tonight i think nikki haley is too i
think chris chris christie's on a mission which is to attack donald trump and to get himself
invited into green rooms from washington to new york well even on that though i would say that
like what was chris christie doing Like if you're on that mission,
like he could have gone after Trump a little harder.
Like I actually think that some of his regular policy answers,
not to agree with him so much on domestic policy,
at least on some of the foreign policy,
like he sounded like the more reasonable Republican,
which I think is fine.
I guess that's just who he is.
But I was like,
what are you doing up here?
I thought your whole thing was like going after Trump.
I think he genuinely regrets not running for president in 2012. And he's just going he is. But I was like, what are you doing up here? I thought your whole thing was like going after Trump. I think he genuinely regrets
not running for president
in 2012
and he's just going to run
that campaign.
It's just 2012.
It's like,
this is what he would have done.
Fantasy camp.
It's what he would have done.
The only person up there,
I mean like Vivek previewed
with a reporter
that he was going to act,
what was the term?
Unhinged.
Act unhinged.
Yeah.
Said he was going to be unhinged.
Well done, sir.
Mission accomplished.
Nailed that one.
Tim Scott was the only one up there who I kind of wondered
if he was going to drop out of the campaign at a commercial break.
He's just sort of like seemed a little bit lost.
Even the goatee was off.
He seems like, I don't know.
It was really bad.
It was a really bad performance from Tim Scott.
He seems like a guy who's probably fundamentally like a pretty nice person,
and the world he's in on that stage is just horrible.
And it must be very hard play acting with those people.
It was really weird.
But it wasn't even like he, yeah, enough talking about Tim Scott.
There weren't that many fireworks between the candidates, except for the running will they, won't they bit between Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley.
Here's where it really got heated.
That's the choice we face.
Do you want a leader from a different generation
who's going to put this country first,
or do you want Dick Cheney in three-inch heels?
All right, Mr. Ramaswamy.
In which case, we've got two of them on stage.
Mr. Ramaswamy, thank you.
I'd first like to say they're five-inch heels,
and I don't wear them unless you can run in them.
We've got two of you on stage. The second thing that I will say is I wear heels, they're not for a fashion statement,
they're for ammunition.
Ambassador Haley, what is your take on more funding for Ukraine?
I am telling you, Putin and President Xi are salivating at the thought that someone
like that could become president.
They would love to see that.
The fact of the matter is she doesn't answer the question.
So this is what I will tell you is, first of all, let's remember, Swamy, you have your
time to talk, the ambassador has the floor.
So you might wanna take care of your family first.
Leave my daughter out of your voice.
Before three shits anybody else, your adult daughter, the next generation of Americans
are using it.
And that's actually the point.
You have her supporters pro using it. And that's
actually the point. You have her supporters
propping her up. That's fine. Here's
the truth. The easy answer.
You're just scum. She called him
scum and it just sort of was a throwaway
line at the end. I think
Ravake, he had a little moment in the first
debate. In the second debate, I think almost
everyone watching realized he has a repellent
personality. Going after someone's daughter. Yeah yeah and we should give you the give everyone the
context it was about tiktok there was like a back and forth about whether we should ban tiktok because
tiktok's just radicalizing all of our children to become hamas so that was the debate and then
he was like oh by the way you're you're tough on tiktok now but your daughter is on tiktok
so are you, Vivek.
Yeah, anyway.
It was really... It was bad.
He was really bad.
She does not like him.
She does not like him.
There were a couple other
kind of opposition research-based attacks
that frankly did not land.
Like Haley was attacking DeSantis
about some sort of Chinese
plane manufacturing company in Florida.
It was like she had clearly read
so deep into the opposition research file that she
knew it backwards and forwards but i guarantee you that no one listening had any clue what she
was talking about uh hayley attacked desantis about banning fracking that might play a little
bit again yeah uh vivek attacked hayley about attracting chinese businesses to south carolina
and like sending some welcome message to ambassador but but like it was not, most of those attacks were just kind of confusing,
but Haley genuinely despises Vivek,
which I'm with her.
I think it's her most relatable quality.
Why she's had this boomlet.
I mean,
the Haley DeSantis Vivek attacks are,
it's just,
it's all so poorly done.
We've sat in debate preps before.
The research people come up with these hits.
And so often they're so esoteric that the candidate cannot get them out with any context.
You have no, the audience has no way of saying.
And the consultant's like, do not leave that stage without delivering this hit.
And they just, they vomited.
Because in some focus group somewhere, they
tested it, and the hit was, people were like,
oh, we don't like that at all.
And then they make the mistake of translating
what that focus group said to a national
stage with no context.
It's like they were fighting, DeSantis
and Haley were fighting over a
economic development official
who scrubbed a website
about China. You got more than me. I missed
all that. It's just
like everything else, it's low
rent, poorly done. Yeah.
Can I just make a point about DeSantis too?
He sucks.
His performance tonight,
like, he probably had a better performance
than he has in other debates, like
if you're counting points,
but, like, just the paint by
numbers consultant stump speech like every single answer like i realized technically when you're
prepping from someone for a debate and like you're supposed to give the answer you're supposed to
give the topic sentence first and then you're but it was just so cheesy everything he says is so
cheesy like he sounded more like a typical politician
than anyone else on that stage
or maybe anyone in the Democratic primary in 2020
or anyone I've heard in a long time.
He is a poor imitation of a typical politician.
Yeah.
It's like a character.
It's not even like a poor imitation of Trump anymore.
It's like a poor imitation of any kind of politician.
Yeah, it is.
It is embarrassing.
The alliteration,
the,
from here to here,
it's just,
oh,
so embarrassing.
I'm not in it for you.
I'm not in it for me.
I'm in it for you.
It's just so bad.
I'll take the hits for you.
I'll take the,
yeah,
he kept saying that.
I'll take the hits.
I'll take the slings and arrows.
What hits?
What is he talking about?
Really terrible.
So the first full hour of the debate
was foreign policy.
Sure was.
Gaza, Iran, Ukraine, China, Venezuela,
and just a full 20 minutes of discussion about boats.
Yeah.
Tommy, what did you think?
Can you tell us what we learned from that?
Neo-con BC?
Does that work?
When you write it down. Con BC neocon bc like nbc but neocon
talk about things needing some context talk about talking about landing the plane yeah who told you
how to get that hit in you know uh so our good friends at nbc the liberal media spent a good 25
30 minutes maybe an hour trying to push every candidate on the stage into the most hawkish position possible on a whole bunch of issues. We talked about the use of military force against Iran in retaliation for Iranian proxy groups. We talked about restoring sanctions on Venezuela and attacking the current Biden policy.
Venezuela and attacking the current Biden policy. Ron DeSantis has a policy where he says he's going to send U.S. special forces into Mexico to attack cartels making fentanyl. And Hugh Hewitt's
question to him was not, hey, you realize that's starting a war with Mexico, right? Or like,
what's the legal basis for doing that, Ron? Or are you worried about the Mexican military responding?
Question mark? No, it was how many, many how often what does it look like and then
Rhonda's answer says we're gonna shoot them stone-cold dead. Okay, okay the face
Yeah in the face and then faux serious man Hugh he would ask the ultimate faux serious person question
Which is how many Navy ships are you going to build like these?
Every candidate got that question
339 he did not let candidate got that question. 339.
He did not let them off the hook on that one.
He followed up
and he followed up
and he followed up
and then because we weren't.
What's with the boats?
Is there something
we're missing here?
Is there a background?
The Chinese Navy's
building a lot of boats.
That's the whole thing.
The China hawk thing.
There's a boat gap.
There's a boat gap
and it's silly
because it's sort of
a silly debate
because there's these
ship killing missiles
that kind of render,
whatever.
This is boring.
I'm boring both of you.
I've lost the room.
I asked the question.
Ship-killing missiles is the most interesting thing
that's happened in this podcast.
I tried to watch this debate understanding
and I couldn't.
So this is why we have you here on this show right here.
And then our China Hawk friends
are talking about banning TikTok,
which we discussed earlier.
And then shortly after that segment,
they went to commercial
and we all saw some TikTok ads.
It was full circle.
There was like TikTok grandmothers
and a couple other TikTok ads.
A young woman who started a restaurant
and made a living with her family.
Yeah, this is when I, and now I remember,
this is when I thought Chris Christie
was being responsible because they were all competing
to see who could be the most bloodthirsty.
Yes.
About like, I'd tell BB Net and Yahoo to like-
Finish them.
Finish them, flatten them.
Finish them, finish them.
Like just see who could be the toughest there and then who could be the toughest on Iran and then who could be the toughest on China.
And like Christie was definitely Republican tough.
Like if he was debating some Democrats, we'd all have some critiques.
But he did. I was happy that he did not go there.
John Vivek Ramaswamy said, I would tell Bibi Netanyahu to smoke those terrorists on his southern border.
I'll be smoking terrorists on our southern border and then he was like but we need to end these endless wars in iraq
and afghanistan he really tried to right smoke them if you got them uh and then and tim scott
was talking about blood dripping from obama and biden's hands yeah he said he he talked about
blood a couple times it got weird for them it's so there was a section on the economy where the only policy
solution they had for inflation uh is to drill more and frack more that was basically it yeah
even though we're like at the we currently producing more energy than ever before most
of them want to raise the social security retirement age uh no disagreement there
and then they finally get around to a discussion on last night's election result and
abortion. They all tried to avoid answering whether they'd support a national ban, with the exception
of Tim Scott. He advocated for a national ban. He played Mike Pence because Mike Pence wasn't there.
What do you guys think of all the answers around abortion in light of last night's election results?
Well, I mean, it seemed like most of them were trying to avoid coming out in favor of a national abortion ban because they know it's horrendous politics. I
mean, I guess Ron DeSantis is already completely on the record about his six week abortion ban
support in Florida. But then I believe it was Vivek or no, it was Tim Scott challenged Nikki
Haley and Ron DeSantis on the 15 week ban. And Haley ended up saying, I would support
anything that would pass. Yeah. But she's like, let's be, she likes to use this line, like,
let's be honest with the American people about, I don't think we, whatever we have 60 votes in
the Senate for, because she's a filibuster believer, I guess. I remember watching her
CNN town hall with Jake Tapper a while back, and she definitely struck a more reasonable sounding,
moderate sounding position on abortion. But it kind of felt like she undid it in one second there
by saying I would support anything that would pass. Maybe she's said that before, but the context
here was clearly a 15 week abortion ban. And if I were running a campaign against her, let's say if
I were Joe Biden, I would use that clip as my evidence that of course she'll put in place a
national ban. Yeah, she said it before. It's very Weasley. I think she's never been put on the spot
like that on trying, cause she's done the, like, I'll sign whatever comes to me kind of thing.
But obviously Tim Scott pushed her on it. Yeah. And you know, cause she wanted to just get away
with her initial answer, which was like, I ha I don't judge people who are pro-choice. I hope
people don't judge me who are pro-life. I think we need to find common ground, but then it's like, I don't judge people who are pro-choice. I hope people don't judge me who are pro-life.
I think we need to find common ground.
But then it's like, yeah, but if you got a national ban, you'd sign it.
She's like, I'll sign whatever comes to me.
Well, what she did first is she just like turned into a punch bowl correspondent. It was like, well, there are only 45 pro-life senators and therefore could never pass.
And so her argument is it's a stupid conversation because it will never come to my desk,
which is very weaselly.
Don't get me wrong.
And then Vivek's like, speaking as a a man and i've been told the men have trouble
speaking about this i'm going to dance around the issue for the next 45 seconds and not actually
answer your question as far as i can he actually did one thing you may have not had trouble talking
about abortion yeah that's the problem he was like he was like he's like we're all in this
together men and women why are we and i was like oh are we? I do think that Nikki Haley's answer about not judging people who are on the other side of the issue and not pushing people is the sort of rhetoric that Republicans could adopt to sand down the edges somewhat.
Somewhat. down the edge is somewhat, somewhat. I think as we've seen from the results from the election we
talked about earlier, there are real limits to that, but that's the first time someone has
actually tried out different messaging that is trying to be more accepting of difference.
And there was a long time, not all of it was great, where Democrats were constantly reframing
their language, particularly in the nineties with Bill Clinton around making our position
on abortion seem more appealing to a series of anti-abortion voters who would otherwise support
Democrats. There are a lot of Catholic voters in Pennsylvania whose votes Clinton got. And now
you're seeing the politics have shifted. Republicans trying to do the opposite.
And I think that for DeSantis, too, it wasn't going to work too well because
he obviously signed a six-week ban and he was trying to do tonight the old,
some states are doing things differently and it's bottom-up approach right i mean then he said the word referenda a bunch of times so many times chris christie's like it should be decided by the
states clean answer got it vivek does the i'm gonna pound my chest and answer it as a man and
i'll answer your question at least nikki haley enters the answer as a human being she says my
husband was adopted i had trouble getting pregnancy.
So I understand that these are sensitive issues.
Now, listen, as someone who comes from a family
where you've had struggles getting pregnant,
that would lead me to allow people to have the freedom
to make these choices themselves.
But she went a different direction with this.
So I'd be like human answer in the start,
horrible policy outcome.
But I still think better than tim scott or
vivek probably or ronda santos well and i also think that there was a point where language around
this was important that point was long before dobbs and now dobbs has made it so that like and
this is where nikki haley ran into trouble it's like you're either for the national ban or you're
not i don't care what your language is.
I don't care how accepting you are.
I don't care whatever else.
You either want to ban abortion or you want to make abortion available.
And voters get that.
That's what we saw on Tuesday night.
Absolutely.
And if Nikki Haley were to ever actually become a threat
and become the Republican nomination, then she would get really pressured.
She's under no pressure now because no evangelical leader cares what she says
because she's not going to be in to position to implement those policies yeah so then they did
their closing statements which why do they do closing statements they were all boring there's
nothing except vivek really went off he ended by saying we must end this farce that joe biden is
going to be the democratic nominee he needs to step aside, end his candidacy. He's a puppet for the managerial class and just let Michelle Obama or anyone else, whoever's going to do it run. And it's like a very,
it was wild. People online were saying it's a very, it's like a, it's a very QAnon thing.
Oh, that makes sense.
That Joe Biden's just like a puppet is going to step aside and they're going to send out,
send out Michelle Obama or whoever else. It's real.
Yeah. He's just sort of like a walking Twitter reply guy.
He also calls...
He replied to my tweet tonight.
Really?
Yes.
Nice, man.
What did you tweet?
I tweeted...
I didn't realize on the heels thing that he had said,
and we have two of them on the stage.
I didn't catch it either.
So I said, was his attack about a dick chaining
at Three Inch Hills about Haley or DeSantis,
thinking I was making a pretty clever DeSantis heel joke all left here in the here in the studio and he responded both
no obviously thirsty it was not it was not vivek himself since it was during the debate you don't
know that fire in a way uh vivek also accused the biden i guess for the united states of
quote celebrating a nazi its ranks, a comedian in
cargo pants, Zelensky, in the context of talking about Ukraine. Again, he's calling a Jewish
president in Ukraine a Nazi. Really? That's just a shockingly weird thing. So that ended. Meanwhile,
elsewhere in Florida, Donald Trump held a rally because why the hell would he be at that debate?
And here is some of Trump's speech.
We haven't heard this clip yet, so I'm excited.
We have him coming in from jails, from all of the places that you wouldn't believe, mental institutions.
My people said, please don't use the term insane asylum.
That's silence of the lamb, right?
Silence of the lamb.
Hannibal Lecter.
Anybody ever heard of the wonderful Hannibal Lecter?
We got him coming into this country now.
We're doing like a VP search.
So that's the guy that's winning.
By a lot.
But you're probably going to be the nominee.
Any final thoughts on that?
That guy is up in five of six swing states,
according to the New York Times.
Oh my God.
The Trump team put
out a statement saying something like when president trump was in florida having a street
named for him governor ron desantis was being paved over at the debate which i thought yeah
it was pre-written but uh accurate so well that's all we got today guys well we had a great election
and a terrible debate terrible debate well you can't ask for much more than that. And Trump's skipping
the next one.
And Trump is skipping
the next one.
He announced tonight.
So there we go.
We're not going to get
Trump in a debate
until the fall.
Let's all skip it.
Let's all see.
We'll see.
This is content.
You can hear Elijah screaming.
All right.
That's our show.
We'll be in New Orleans
Friday night
and then you guys
will all hear that show
on Monday.
So we'll talk to you next
week bye guys bye everyone pod save america is a crooked media production our producers are olivia
martinez and david toledo our associate producer is farah safari writing support from hallie keifer
reed churlin is our executive producer the show is mixed and edited by andrew chadwick
jordan canter is our sound engineer with audio audio support from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis.
Madeline Herringer is our head of news and programming.
Matt DeGroat is our head of production.
Andy Taft is our executive assistant.
Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Mia Kelman, David Tolles, Kiril Pellaviv, and Molly Lobel.
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