Pod Save America - More Like GONE DeSantis (w/Gavin Newsom!)
Episode Date: January 23, 2024Ron DeSantis ends his campaign for president and endorses the man who relentlessly bullied him. Nikki Haley questions Donald Trump’s mental fitness after he has a few senior moments on the campaign ...trail. Meanwhile, Trump is up double digits in New Hampshire and winning all kinds of endorsements from Republican politicians. And later, Tommy talks with California Governor Gavin Newsom about Democratic messaging, the Republican primary, and his dream Coachella lineup. crooked.supercast.com 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.
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
Tommy's out today. He flew to Tallahassee to be with Ron and Casey DeSantis during their time of mourning.
Yeah, you gotta be there.
You gotta be there.
You gotta be there.
On today's show, Nikki Haley questions Donald Trump's mental fitness after he has a few senior moments on the campaign trail.
But he's still about 15 points ahead of her in New Hampshire and winning all kinds of endorsements from Republican politicians.
And later, you'll hear Tommy's interview with our governor, Gavin Newsom, who stopped by the studio last week.
But first, on Sunday, Ron DeSantis ended his campaign where it began, on Twitter, with a forgettable announcement to his tens of fans that after spending $150 million to get about 20,000 votes in Iowa, Lil Ronnie Ronnie Puddin' Fingers would be calling it quits
and offering his relatively useless endorsement to Donald Trump,
the man who accused him of being a pedophile.
Say what you will about Ron's political instincts,
he did predict this outcome at an event just six days before he dropped out.
Let's listen.
You can be the most worthless Republican in America,
but if you kiss the ring, he'll say you're wonderful.
And sure enough, here's Donald Trump on Sunday reacting to the news.
Before we begin, I'd like to take time to congratulate Ron DeSantis and, of course, a really terrific person. But as you know, he left the campaign trail today at 3 p.m.
And in so doing, he was very gracious and he endorsed me.
So I appreciate it.
He just said, will I be using the name Ron DeSanctimonious?
I said, that name is officially retired.
Yeah, I really I think that would have been awesome if he did it in a high school gym,
and they just put up the kind of like when they retire a player's number,
and they just brought up De Sanctimonious,
and he should have that at Mar-a-Lago.
There should be like the Marco.
Or like Hung Hunger Game style.
Oh, yeah.
Just do the boom.
Yeah.
Just a picture of Ron DeSantis over the Magic Castle at Disney World.
All right.
So we have been awash in DeSantis pre and post-mortems over the last week.
Dan and I did a little grave dancing on Thursday's pod because we figured this was coming.
But I'll let you join in the fun, love it.
What were your favorite tidbits from the weekend's deep dives about the final days of the DeSantis campaign?
I have three and i'm there they
and and i'm building to the finish all right and each one i i chose three that i thought signified
like the core problem right one wow one really put some thought into this one is the fact that
the campaign had no message they the the nbc story of there's so many obituaries it's like
they had them ready to go yeah uh in the n- Because there were rumors last week that this was happening, which I first-
I reported here on Plots of America.
I heard you reported the rumors.
Well, it looks like I was right.
It looks like I was right.
A blind mole, you know?
So the campaign does a message call with some of their biggest online influencers.
Oh, this is good.
And they get hammered.
I heard this one.
They get hammered. Like, this is good. And they get hammered. I love this one. They get hammered.
Like, what is your message?
Like, that announced,
that rollout on Twitter,
Spaces was a disaster.
They're all fumpering.
They don't seem to have a message.
And then Bill Mitchell,
our old friend, pipes up.
You all remember Bill Mitchell, I hope.
He was, yeah.
Bill Mitchell, big Trump guy.
Big Trump guy.
Actually, you know,
a bit of a Cassandra in a way,
in reality.
Yeah, in 2016, he was like,
Trump's going to win, Trump's going to win.
We're like, oh, these Bill Mitchell tweets are so funny.
Yeah, that was so funny.
Then he went from Trump to DeSantis.
Went to DeSantis.
Anyway, he interrupts the call to ask
if they'll call Elon Musk on his behalf
because he's shadow banned,
which I just like the mess of that.
All right, next.
At a campaign event in Iowa,
the first event after the new year, right, people are paying attention. He opened his speech with a lengthy criticism of the accreditation process for universities, and nobody really seemed to understand it. comes up to him and goes i don't know what you were talking about i think you said the word predators he's like i hope you said predators and he's like a creditor he's talking about the
college accreditation process just too online she was she was hoping for a q anon dog whistle
right he gave her some nerdy fucking anti-woke shit yeah that she couldn't know about yeah
because like everyone in iowa is concerned about the tenure process for faculty of University of Florida. Says a lot. But to me, truly an all-timer from NBC, which is that Scott Wagner, this is now, now DeSantis
made the innovative decision to try to put most of his campaign apparatus into a super
pack.
Scott Wagner is the head of the Never Back Down super pack. Scott Wagner is the head of the Never Back Down Super Pack. NBC reports that at the Never
Back Down headquarters in West Des Moines, Iowa, Wagner spent a significant amount of time in the
precious final few days constructing a plan, an ad campaign, a 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzle of a
landscape. Everyone at the campaign was taking pictures of this. He was
working on the puzzle for hours, and my
favorite part of this is that in a comment
to NBC News, Wagner noted that the office
puzzle was there when we arrived
and became a sense of pride for the entire
team, and everyone chipped in a few minutes
apiece to get it done.
Could you imagine? Can I ask you something?
Yeah. Uh-huh.
Fuck you. Fuck you. Say it. Say it. it's three names what were you doing what were you doing in the final days of the hillary clinton primary
i was in oh wait i'm it wasn't a puzzle i knew that's what you're gonna say i knew you were
gonna say that's why i had to take that side i i came into this thinking i was going to bring up the puzzle thing and i thought
you were going to say you know what it's okay to do a puzzle to relax once in a while in a campaign
you're pretty busy i thought you of all people would defend the puzzle obviously so now i had
to take the other side no look i'm a huge believer in self-care especially in the final days of a
campaign but you like as a campaign manager can't be doing you can't be doing a puzzle in
the middle even if you're a super pack manager yeah she wasn't even a campaign manager and you're
in iowa you're not like in tallahassee where nothing's happening go knock on some doors you're
in iowa go knock on some doors also i thought the most telling part of that anecdote was that they
had it confirmed by two not one but two anonymous staffers yeah which means that people were the
larger point of that story the puzzle story is everyone in the desantis campaign and that super
pack just wanted to shit all over each other and the candidate yeah i mean that's been like there
were so many breakdowns of what went wrong in the campaign with so many people talking you and dan
talked about the messenger story which would have been on the list of the only reason we're not
talking about the messenger story today is because this campaign was filled with so much infighting and disloyalty
that you could have written the obituary while the campaign was still running.
Like these people fucking hated each other and had no respect for DeSantis by the end.
This wasn't as much of a colorful, fun detail, but they had one former campaign staffer in
the NBC story that just said, what harmed the campaign the most off the bat was that
it didn't have a clear purpose and message.
I was like, honestly?
Yeah, you nailed it.
You really didn't need the rest of the story.
That was it.
Well, the other thing is,
but at least they had a compelling figure.
I mean, that's the thing.
It's like bad campaign, bad candidate, no message.
What are we doing here?
And for people wondering like why it ended when it did
they were it looks like they ran out of money i mean if that was all the reporting that they
ran out of money he sort of wanted to stay in it till south carolina uh he's been talking about
this with advisors since he came in second in iowa with just 20 000 votes they ran out of money
yeah there was one um there was one look if if you cared even a little bit uh you could almost
even find yourself thinking like is there some place to feel compassion for Ron DeSantis in this?
Which is that he made one final trip. I think I can't remember if it was New Hampshire or South Carolina, but he wanted to talk to voters one last time before he decided to pull out.
Which, yeah, that, you know, Ron DeSantis, he just needs to get in front of the people.
Well, he loves people so much.
No, no, no, no. I'm not saying it's because he wanted to spend time with people i'm saying it's because he wanted to go one more time to really to really
accept that he had no chance it was truly over that it was time to always back down uh in his
video no no never back down except one time except one time one time yeah one key back down plenty
uh so in his video de santa said that trump, has my endorsement because we can't go back to the old Republican guard of yesteryear, a repackaged form of warmed over corporatism that Nikki Haley represents.
I think we all figured that Ron DeSantis would endorse Trump eventually.
for New Hampshire and Shiv Haley on the way out for the guy who has just been saying the worst things about you, your campaign, everything you stand for. Again, he did accuse him at the
beginning of the campaign of grooming high school students. Yeah. Yeah. What's going on there? So
I don't know. I have three pitches. One, if the story is no one could beat Trump and a stronger
campaign candidate or message doesn't matter, then the harder and faster Haley loses, the better,
right? It makes that story more true. Two, it can't be me. It shouldn't be anyone except
the guy that insulted me for a year. I had fun doing it. Second, he's looking to repair his
relationship with Trump and to make sure that Trump doesn't make the split worse between
DeSantis and the base that he needs. And then the final, which I actually think probably explains
most of it, would be he's going to do it eventually. He'd rather do it fast and not
make it a whole new cycle and not face pressure and not face antagonism or seeming like he was
reluctant and being dragged to it. I don't know. Those are my guests. Do you have any other
guesses? Am I missing anything? No, I mean, first of all,
calling Nikki Haley a repackaged form
of warmed over corporatism
from Republicans of yesteryear, correct?
Yeah, sure.
I think that was an accurate description
of Nikki Haley and all those Republicans
from before 2016.
Yeah, it's also a fair description
of fucking Ron DeSantis.
Yeah, well, he's combined
the warmed over corporatism with some culture war. Yeah, it's also a fair description of fucking Ron DeSantis. Yeah, well, he's combined the warmed over corporatism
with some culture war.
Yeah, it's actually just like,
forget this warmed over corporatism.
What about corporatism
just fucking ice cold?
It is possible that Ron DeSantis
likes or genuinely supports
Donald Trump and his politics
and policies more than he supports
Nikki Haley and her politics and
policies like that is that is possible also did you hear what happened to Bob Good Freedom Caucus
Chair Bob Good have you been following this last couple weeks tell me what's what's going on Bob
Good Bob Good Freedom Caucus Chair right chair the chair of the crazies in Congress endorsed
Ron DeSantis one of his very few endorsements in Congress. In response to that endorsement over the last couple of weeks, the Trump campaign has threatened
to support a primary challenge.
Chris LaCivita, the senior advisor on the Trump campaign, basically said, when we get
done with Bob Good, he's going to be unelectable anywhere.
Marjorie Taylor Greene called him a MAGA traitor.
So I do think there's a little bit of, you made this point too, that Ron DeSantis is thinking like, I'm term limited as governor. I'm going to be a pariah
in the party. Like I, and if I wait and I just say I'm out and I'm not ready to endorse right
now, like Trump's going to, they're going to go after him. Right. And he's going to do it
eventually right before the convention of Trump as the nominee. So if he, if he waits, he doesn't
get anything for it. If he does it now, it's sort of, it's seen as early and it's seen as having it's worth something right now yeah just like stepping back from it though
that video is just such a testament to what a fucking zero ron desantis is like you just spent
a year of your life dedicated to this project of becoming president so did your wife so did
tons and tons of your college's worst young people.
And like, even in that moment,
like the reasons he lost are all evident in that video.
Like even in that moment, he doesn't have like the grace
or judgment or like bigness of spirit to not like,
no, but he doesn't, I'm just saying this is the reason,
it's obvious now, but you look at it and it's like,
he doesn't understand that this is not a moment to take a cheap little fucking
shot at your opponent, like make it a little bit bigger, make it a little bit grander.
But he just like doesn't have that instinct.
He started with this awful little Twitter space with Elon.
He ends with a slam on Nikki Haley and an apocryphal fucking Winston Churchill quote,
just a Winston Churchill quote made up from the fucking Easter.
The most online candidate we've ever had.
The Goodreads candidate, not Goodreads reads fucking brainy quotes whatever who cares just fucking bullshit
i liked it in the nbc story too it's like and then finally he emerged from a meeting with his wife
and he had already written a few lines of the announcement video announcing the end of his
campaign i'm like oh did he okay i'm glad he got credit for that because that
sucked just like everything else he said in the campaign it just was just again all ideology and
politics aside is just fucking boring trite bullshit from him at the from the beginning to
the end anyway i think one lesson um we can all learn from the desantis campaign is that you can't
win the presidency if you're missing a personality. Any other lessons you think we can learn from the DeSantis disaster? So I do think this whole thing was overdetermined
as we talked about bad campaign, bad message. Who knows what the world looks like if Republicans
hadn't spent a year defending and lying for Trump, right? We just have no idea. I will say,
I do think that there are three life lessons that we can draw from the failure of Ron DeSantis.
Here are my life lessons from Ron DeSantis. One, if you don't know who you are, be careful because other people will
decide for you. Two, the internet is a wonderful place to visit, but a terrible place to live.
And three, you can persuade people on a variety of fronts, but you can't convince someone to like
you. And the harder you try, the more you will fail. Those are my life lessons from Ron DeSantis.
Those are nice commencement speech lessons about ron desantis yeah i'm gonna give a that's a good idea you go down to florida and just like here the here's a commencement address
by a self-aware ron desantis that can never take place i have a few uh just sort of about
politics and campaigning too much money in politics and if you don't have a lot of money
uh people with a lot of
money get a louder voice than you right so money's bad but money isn't everything anymore in politics
because just because you have a lot of money does not mean you are going to win and that is certainly
the was certainly the case with ron desantis a corollary of that is there was a concern after
citizens united that like super PACs would start running campaigns
and you just have a few billionaires that fund the campaign and that those campaigns.
A super PAC running a campaign is not a very efficient or smart or strategic campaign.
Because if the super PAC cannot coordinate with the candidate and the candidate's closest advisors throughout the campaign,
you need
to coordinate together you need to have the similar message you need you can't have a feel
you can't outsource your campaign if you're running for office to a super PAC if you cannot
coordinate with them which you can't by law yeah I do I was thinking about that so first of all did
you see that in one of the obituaries there was some advisor to some some some someone tangentially connected this whole
fucking shit show basically saying like hinting that like like illegal shit was going on that
these guys were coordinating behind the scenes yeah it was like it was like a florida operative
long-time florida operative so i couldn't tell who it was but it was like i wouldn't be surprised if
if trump wins and the doj comes after them because they were getting very close to coordinating yeah
who knows but um i think that's all true, probably.
I do think that if you're going to outsource your campaign
to the super...
By the way, one other problem
is the only way they could coordinate was publicly.
So you end up with these public fucking spats
with these memos going back and forth
because the only way they can do it
is by doing it in the press.
But I do think that it was especially impossible
given that DeSantis had no real clear message.
Like if you had someone like Obama 2008, anyone could any smart operative could write an ad from the super PAC without coordinating because the message is like crystal clear.
Like I mean, it'd be true of Bernie Sanders, too.
Like you could it's the he was a uniquely ill suited candidate to try this because the campaign was so unclear.
And they're there. And by the way, they're not just message. Their strategy was so unclear that like, of course, they weren't going to be able to figure this out.
Yeah. Although I do think over the course of the campaign, just as you were saying that, I was thinking like, what if David Axelrod, who knew Obama very, very well by the time he ran in 2008 had just like gone over to a super PAC.
Well, he knows Obama and he would know the messages,
but there were so many times over the course of the campaign
where events happened where you needed a back and forth
between the consultants and the ad makers and the candidate
because there was all disagreement.
And so if that disagreement becomes like, you know,
you can't even talk about it because
you're you can only talk about it in public it's just a weird way to i don't know i you know i
don't think it's a um i mean i'm not saying it's it's useless and i'm sure a lot of people use
super packs to run ads and whatever but i don't think it's a uh it's a good way to to run it
yeah i also think that running to donald trump's right was so dumb. The guy was president for four years and nearly 100 percent of Republicans who voted for him liked most of his policies, liked him.
Even if they had problems with them, no Republican voter thought that Donald Trump was too liberal.
That was not their problem with Donald Trump after seeing him as president for four years.
I don't understand why it was so stupid.
Well, it goes to the it goes to DeSantis life lesson. He thought he convinced people to like him by proving his bona fides as like a right wing figure.
But then you look at what Donald Trump did as president, deregulation, massive tax cuts for the rich overturned Roe v. Wade.
He achieved so like he succeeded for these right wing voters.
right-wing voters like how do you how are you gonna like even that you know coming out for a six-week abortion ban like that all that did was serve to alienate the people uh that were
interested in something else or of lectability argument uh and then last thing i also thought
that you know desantis's anti-woke crusade animated a subset of very online right-wing activists
um who you know are the ones who showed up at the, you know, at the school board meetings
and, you know, protesting the drag and all that kind of stuff. Those issues are simply not high
on the list for most Republican voters, even if most Republican voters do agree with his politics
there. I kind of noticed this when I was doing a lot of the wilderness focus groups, too, among like in Virginia.
I did some with people who had voted for Biden and then voted for Youngkin.
And it's like they just some of them actually disagreed with the education stuff and some of the anti-woke stuff.
Like you never hear about I never heard about DEI, critical race theory, trans issues.
You do hear like Trumpy sounding views on immigration, on crime, on the economy, some on COVID even.
But like you just it's not it's definitely a subset of Republicans were very loud about it.
Yeah. And who were activists. But I don't think it's it's not what animates most of that party. All right, let's talk about New Hampshire.
We've got a primary Tuesday night where Nikki Haley is now the last woman standing against this guy.
How good did Elise step in at you?
And by the way, they don't work well in cold weather, but it's certainly not great for your climb, your climb, they call it, climate.
By the way, they never report the crowd on January 6th.
You know, Nikki Haley, Nikki Haley, Nikki Haley, Nikki Haley is in charge of security.
We offered her 10,000 people, soldiers, National Guard, whatever they want.
They turned it down. They don't want to talk
about that. Here's here's Nikki Pelosi's response. You said yesterday hearing this made you question
Donald Trump's mental fitness. Is that the first time you questioned his mental fitness?
If you look recently, there have been multiple things. I mean, he claimed that Joe Biden was
going to get us into World War II.
I'm assuming he meant World War III.
He said that he ran against President Obama.
He never ran against President Obama.
He says that I'm the one that kept security from the Capitol on January 6th.
I was nowhere near the Capitol on January 6th.
But Margaret, you don't be surprised if you have someone that's 80 in office.
Their mental stability is going to continue to decline.
That's just human nature. We know that.
What do you think?
So first of all, I think that's like his worst one yet, by the way, because he really couldn't
fix it. You know, it's funny when he did the one.
The climb it, climb, climb. It's like he was like, he sort of just like short circuited.
The one about Obama, a lot of these were like short-circuited uh the the one about obama
a lot of these were like kind of revealing right because in his mind in 2016 he was running against
obama in some way uh but like and then it's like he's confusing nicki haley and nancy pelosi because
like the grooves in his fucking brain like women i can't fucking stand it's like they're too close
to each other you know like it's just like the cart slid over one groove
and then he's fucked.
Can't get out of it.
He was about to start calling her Hillary.
Yeah, it's like Hillary, Nikki, Nancy.
Like he fucking hates these bitches
and they got him.
They got to stop.
So yeah, I mean, I thought it was, it was bad.
It was bad.
So after a bunch of polls dropped over the weekend,
the final 538 average in New Hampshire is Trump 50.8 percent, Haley 36.6
percent. What do you think? Why couldn't she close the gap with Donnie Dementia over there?
First of all, first of all, it's too early for past tense. All right. It's too early.
Just want to remind you in 2008, the final real clear politics average had Obama up by 8.3.
Hillary Clinton wins by 2.6 right that's an
11 point swing so we can light just like one last candle to um the patron saint of content
saint isidore i believe is the saint of the internet so we saw it closing though this has
been opening this his lead's been growing yeah i i do think that like you know you and dan talked
about this but they're kind of like
they're playing the expectations game
now they're going for a strong second
but
so that's not great I mean
she's running up a down escalator
you know like there's
she has an electability argument
but she's making it to an electorate
that A doesn't believe he lost and B believes
he's on track to win.
And there's no other no other argument is really broken through.
And she doesn't have a clean one to make.
Like I share the bewilderment of many political observers that she is not running like an urgent campaign in New Hampshire. She's not doing a lot of events. She's not like going around the clock.
She's not like making any new arguments. I get that.
She's not doing a lot of events. She's not like going around the clock. She's not like making any new arguments. I get that. I think that even if she visited every voter in New Hampshire, she talked to every voter in New Hampshire and campaigned like, you know, 24 hours a day, seven days a week Trump up 52-34. It's sort of like the average.
They broke out undeclared and Republicans. Haley is winning these undeclared voters 48-38. She's winning college graduates by a narrower margin, 43-39. But Trump is winning registered Republicans
64-22, non-college educated voters 60-27 27. Very conservative voters, 78 to 10.
She just hasn't made any inroads with the actual Republican base.
And even though 40% of the electorate in New Hampshire is undeclared, 30% is Republican.
Like that's still, Steve Kornacki was tweeting this today.
He said, just playing with scenarios.
He goes, just a sense of what Haley's up against in New Hampshire. Say 47% of the electorate ends up being undeclared. The previous
record in New Hampshire is, for a Republican primary of undeclared voters, is 45% of the
electorate. So she blows it out of the water, beats a record. Say she wins it by 43 points.
The previous record is McCain winning undeclared by 42 points.
That's John McCain.
In that Monmouth poll, she was up 10.
If she then hits 30% with Republicans, and that poll, she's in the mid-20s, low-20s,
then she could win by 0.1% with all of that.
It's just the math is like not, it's just too hard.
It's too hard, and there's no there's just no
there's nothing a person can do i agree this is like nothing a single campaign or person can do
to change like the fundamental dynamics that would have required not by the way not just one campaign
could even fix it it would have required an entirely different response to trump for years
by the republican party like that that is like the core of this problem she and like is it possible that a figure with like once in a generation
political talents could like and excite that kind of shift in the dynamic absolutely like that's
what great political figures can do nikki haley not one of that figure if you were her what would
have to happen in new hampshire for you to uh keep this thing going through the south carolina primary
which is a month from now it's just a win it a win. I mean, like they can they can say all they want,
like, oh, strong second, which seems like she is inevitably going to be able to say she had given
there's only two people in the race. I believe, you know, I was in the Axis powers finished in a
strong second in World War Two as well. But I don't know what the logic is for going on if you can't win outright.
I was looking at the states to come.
I think this is certainly the most favorable state.
I guess you could say D.C.
Who knows what these electorates would look like?
Vermont and D.C.
She'd also clean up there.
Yeah, but this is one of, if not the most favorable states
she's going to face, certainly for weeks.
The idea that she can then make up ground like
again it would just be a person waiting for some kind of like an exogenous event as tim miller says
hamburger from heaven or or like or you know some some i don't know i don't know yeah yeah no i i
don't know i mean the way she's been talking has been watching some clips today she's like
you know i'm just i'm just in this i'm gonna see how she does
have unlike desantis she does have some money so you could see maybe she's like i got the money
i came in second within i was within single digits if somehow she like loses by single digits i don't
know i give that like a 20 chance i don't think it's gonna happen i think that's maybe the only
like she just what does she got to lose what does she get to lose she's just sitting there
months she's gonna get embarrassed in south carolina yeah i mean it's not getting
embarrassed in your home state you're gonna you're gonna let you come in you come in second
in new hampshire the campaign moves to she's i think she's technically not even competing for
delegates in nevada for some reason she goes to new hampshire that's where she make her last stand
donald trump is campaigning across the state with her with with tim scott and a bunch of other south
carolina republicans who've endorsed.
She's down in the post-med weeks being kind of just sort of attacked mercilessly
in her home base.
Like it just seems like a pointless slog.
Yeah, that's why I would agree.
I'd love her to stay in
because I think not just for content purposes,
which I know of course is top of mind,
but also the more she attacks Donald Trump,
the nastier this race gets, the better.
You see the Biden campaign
just clipping all these comments about these comments about donald donald trump it's great
but i don't know if she'll do that for us do you think there's any chance she doesn't endorse
donald trump she's she's gonna yeah she already she already said she would yeah she's basically
already given this she's already said what she has to say i mean she's gonna say some version
of i ran a hard campaign you know this is who we've chosen i always said i would get behind
the republican i'll tell you what makes me nervous what's dangerous for our country is a term of some version of I ran a hard campaign. You know, this is who we've chosen. I always said I would get behind the Republican.
I'll tell you what makes me nervous.
What's dangerous for our country is a term of President Kamala Harris,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, disastrous debt.
We had to come together.
It's just done.
I'd like to make a case for her for not endorsing Donald Trump.
Okay.
At least not publicly right as she drops out.
She like, first of all, she's not getting VP.
Trump said she's not presidential timber. Now, when I say that, that probably means that she's not getting VP. Trump said she's not presidential timber.
Now, when I say that, that probably means that she's not going to be chosen as vice president.
He was very clear on that.
So she's not getting the VP.
She's not getting Magalov.
They all hate her now.
So she's not going back.
She does like being on corporate boards.
She likes the sort of corporate Republican.
You know, she wants to be like, you look at Kevin McCarthy.
Yeah. Kevin McCarthy, he's not getting invited to Davos and all these places now. He's not in with that crowd because he went full MAGA, you know? And so I think that Kevin McCarthy is like
a man without a home now. Nikki Haley could be like, you know, she could get invited to the
Harvard IOP. She could go to Davos, right? She could do all these things.
She doesn't have to.
She could just step back and say,
I don't like Joe Biden either,
but I said what I said about Donald Trump and I'm just going to not say anything.
I don't know what's the downside of that.
Well, yeah.
I mean, look, if we could figure out
what makes these people fucking sell their souls for this,
I would love to know.
I mean, she's already said,
like she's already said like she's
already gone to the trouble of saying publicly even if he's convicted which is gonna support
him wild even if fucking convicted which is like i forgot these people do not have like
they're terrible and like they don't even have they have said they're so buffeted by events
there's such a lack of like a moral center
that they can't even understand what's in their own interests. They can't, they,
they do not have perspective. So even though New Hampshire hasn't voted yet,
Republicans are all lining up behind Trump and then humiliating themselves when forced to answer
for it. Newly engaged, congratulations, vice presidential hopeful, Tim Scott endorsed Trump
over the weekend and then said this when asked about Trump going
full birther on fellow South Carolinian Nikki Haley. Well, I'm watching rhetoric on all sides
of the issues facing becoming president. What I mean by that is the rhetoric from Joe Biden is
terrible, but it is and it's salacious. Nikki Haley questions whether 70-year-olds should be
allowed to run for president. I think there is so much negativity and toxicity in this aim to
becoming president again or for the first time that we should be very clear and look at both
sides of the comments made. Yeah, absolutely.
And here's Haley's top endorser,
New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu,
responding to Trump's closing argument
that he should be able to literally
get away with murder as president.
You're going to have to give the president,
you're going to have to allow a president,
any president to have immunity
so that that president can act
and do what he feels
and what his group of advisors feel is the absolute right thing. Otherwise, you're going to have immunity so that that president can act and do what he feels and what his group of advisors feel is the absolute right thing.
Otherwise you're gonna have presidents that are totally impotent and
we've had enough of them already.
We've had enough of them already.
So having immunity is so important and
I hope the Supreme Court has the courage to do that.
Do you agree?
Should the president have total immunity even for things that cross the line?
Of course not.
The amazing thing about that clip is he was dead serious.
He wasn't even making one of his ridiculous jokes.
He was dead serious about that and that should get everybody.
I don't care what political party you're from, whether you're an extreme conservative or
socialist liberal, everybody should be concerned with that type of mentality going into the
White House.
And yet you are saying if he is the nominee that you are going to support him.
How can you say that you'll support him?
At the end of the day, I think most Republicans are going to get behind the Republican nominee.
I'm hoping that it's obviously Nikki Haley.
There's nothing we can do, Republican politicians.
We can't leave. We can't do it.
The voters are saying they want Donald Trump.
What are we supposed to do?
Tell the voters it's okay by saying that we're also for Donald Trump?
It's the only thing we can do.
There's nothing else we can do this guy must be stopped until he can't be stopped at which point we must unite behind him who are we to second guess the voters yeah i but yeah it's
like i saw i read about some arcane term i believe it's pronounced liator and i'm not sure what they
are but we don't have any and until some of these liators show up, there's nothing we can do.
Another South Carolina politician, Trump, also got an endorsement from Nancy Mace on Monday,
who said after January 6th that he needed to be held accountable for the insurrection.
Nancy Mace, I just want to say, Trump hates Nancy Mace so much that he backed a primary challenge against her, a primary challenge that Nikki Haley helped Nancy Mace fend off by going to her district to campaign for her.
And Nancy Mace said thank you by endorsing Donald Trump before just to embarrass Nikki Haley before New Hampshire.
Un-fucking-believable.
They're terrible people.
They're terrible people and They're terrible people, and they've seen
this before, and
if they all had the courage, they could
all stomp this, but because none of them does,
none of them can do anything other than just get behind them.
If more of them would do the right thing, a few more of them could do the right
thing, but because none of them are doing the right thing, none of them
can do the right thing. We could have played clips
forever, so I didn't include this one, but did you hear what
Elise Stefanik said when
they asked her about Trump confusing Nikki Haley and Pelosi what'd you say I missed it I can't it wasn't a
mix-up it wasn't a mix-up because Haley is relying on Democrats like Pelosi to win New Hampshire
Elise Stefanik is going to change her name to Elise Stepanek like what Trump called her just
so she can be VP I'm convinced yeah she's gonna change her name you know lookanek, like what Trump called her, just so she can be VP. I'm convinced.
Yeah. She's gonna change her name. You know, look, we've been
in this fucking thing for now
eight years. Nothing has changed
and Marco Rubio continues to
hold two positions at once, which is that Donald
Trump cannot be trusted with the nuclear weapons
and we must give him the codes as soon as possible.
Like that, that is the Marco Rubio position.
That is the Republican position. This guy
is unfit and he has my full support.
That's where they're at.
I do hope that, I think that it's a lot of these Trump comments
and the comments from people like Haley and Sununu
about Donald Trump, they're going to be useful
in the general for sort of independents,
moderate voters, swing voters.
The Biden campaign has been clipping
them and tweeting them and posting them everywhere. I think that's great. Putting
them in ads. I think I think that will be one benefit from this fucking pathetic shit show.
Absolutely. I think like the Trump, the Trump confusions are valuable, but even more will be
that those Nikki Haley clips, even Ron DeSantis saying that if we're bogged down in investigations,
we're going lose uh like
jamie diamond and davos being like there's some good things about donald trump there's a great
cnbc headline wall street opposition to trump collapses i was like i love that that's great
oh no oh no we're not gonna have wall street trump's with wall street's with trump oh because
he also said today uh he's excited to give them another big tax cut. Yeah, yeah. Collapse is like Tower 7. Inside fucking job.
I don't think we can use that.
No.
I'm just saying Wall Street is collapsing itself
in support of him.
I think it actually, intellectually, ethically,
it actually tracks.
So we can think about leaving it in.
But I'll just, yeah,
I don't even know what I was going to say.
Oh, what I was going to say is when Biden did his January 6th anniversary speech, one of the points he made, which I think was was was very good, was these Republicans know better.
But they that they've stopped telling the truth because of politics and because of money.
And I do think that's like a core of what they're saying, that Republicans know better.
And by the way, we don't just need to use the clips of Republicans to come around and endorse Trump. We need the fucking Republicans that were in his cabinet that have been attacking him in the Atlantic to start showing up.
ads videos with all of these Trump cabinet officials. And again, you know, people hear this.
Well, it's not going to do anything with his fans. No, of course not. We're past the fans now.
It is the these these Trump Biden voters or these, you know, Mitt Romney Republicans,
the suburban Republicans. And again, those aren't the only swing voters in this election. But that cohort we definitely need. And I think those voters hearing all of these people who worked
for Donald Trump, who supported Donald Trump, even people like Cassidy Hutchinson, who supported him right till the very end, saying like, this guy is dangerous.
Don't do it.
I think that will have an effect.
Yeah.
All right.
Before we head to break, two quick housekeeping items.
On April 25th, Love It or Leave It will be coming to Washington, D.C. for another barn burner of a show at the Lincoln Theater.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Friends of the pod get early access to tickets.
for another barn burner of a show at the Lincoln Theater.
Hell yeah.
Yeah.
Friends of the pod get early access to tickets.
You can subscribe now at crooked.supercast.com to get the exclusive pre-sale code today.
And in yesterday's episode of our digital series,
Political Experts React,
Dan Pfeiffer and former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki
go through a roundup of the best and worst ads
from the 2024 Republican primary.
This episode of Political Experts React just dropped.
Check it out only on the Pod Save America YouTube channel. When we come back, you'll hear Tommy's
interview with Gavin Newsom, which was recorded on Thursday. And even though that was right before
DeSantis dropped out, Newsom basically nails why he lost and gives us some behind the scenes color
on the great Newsom-DeSantis Fox News debate of 2023. They also talked about Democratic messaging,
culture wars, and housing.
I am thrilled to welcome to Pod Save America, the governor of the great state of California,
Gavin Newsom. Even if you're lying, thank you. I love living here.
Do you?
All right.
I like to hear this.
I thought I'm defensive.
No, no, no.
When you grew up on the East Coast, you get filled with anti-California propaganda.
People are like, oh, the traffic and Hollywood and all this bullshit.
And I think it's to keep people like me out of the state because you don't want too big of a population.
Is that correct?
Well, I'm not going to stipulate that.
But I mean, think about it. By the way, this state is larger than people don't fully too big of a population. Is that correct? Well, I'm not going to stipulate that, but I mean, think about it.
By the way, this state is larger than people don't fully appreciate this, including California.
The state of California is larger than 21 state populations combined.
It gives you a size of magnitude of California, just shy of 40 million people.
And of course, it's the temple of the U.S. economy. And so it is interesting, just the sort of the constant deluge of negativity that comes
from the anger industry and the anger machine that full-time bashing sort of the new Trump
derangement syndrome is the sort of California derangement syndrome that they're bashing truly
the innovation capital of the world, the entrepreneurial capital of the world.
Have you been to Boston in January? That's where I'm from.
Well, I love Boston.
Yeah, but you don't want to live there then.
The spring.
You want to live in Los Angeles there then. But I digress. So thank you again for being here. So
we're recording this on Thursday, January 18th. So we're after the Iowa caucuses,
but before the New Hampshire primary. Just wondering, I mean, you are, I imagine,
paying close attention to what's happening. Any takeaways from the election results so far,
or thoughts on how it might inform
a general election strategy?
No, well, I thought it was predictable.
What wasn't necessarily predictable or predicted
was Trump's relative strength.
And I know it's been debated.
It's, you know, everybody has an opinion
whether or not it was weakness masquerading as strength
because he didn't get 49% of the party
as a de facto incumbent.
But at the same time, a week going
into that election, we were thinking he may not cross the 50% threshold. So it depends what
argument you want to make. Look, I think this guy's strong and getting stronger. I think in
a Republican primary, he's a T-Rex. You're either going to mate with him or he's going to devour
you in a Republican primary, that is. And good luck i mean you know when when the headline
today is you know desantis closes in uh on trump because he picked up one percentage point in new
hampshire he's only down 44 percent uh in new hampshire primary uh gives you a sense of the
status of the race and i just can't honestly no bs i don't know one state if desantis stuck it
out that he can win not not one. And maybe Haley
has a chance in New Hampshire, though. I thought you get one chance, first impression coming out
of a state. She seemed to trip up a little bit. She's losing the news cycle a little bit,
a little of the momentum. And I mean this sincerely. I mean, she had some with her father,
and I really respect and appreciate the humanity of that. You have to deal with her family. But
even that being questioned and challenged, that is she sincere about this?
What's the closing argument? What's the narrative? Is she now positioning or looking to run for VP
or something? But that just reinforces my notion. This is Trump. And that means we need to gear up
and get ready here and just stop consuming ourselves, who's up, who's down, in the Republican primary and focus on the stakes of a general.
Do you have thoughts on the best message to run against Donald Trump if he's the nominee?
Well, I mean, we could talk about liberalism, illiberalism, a guy who lost the election and tried to vandalize democracy and try to light it on fire.
I mean, that's pretty powerful and compelling.
But I also think it's remarkable that we're allowing this guy to walk away on Dobbs.
He created it.
I mean, the idea that he can even lay claim.
I mean, it's interesting.
I'm applauding DeSantis and Reynolds, at least making the argument Democrats need to make
that he's sort of running away a little bit from the abortion issue and trying to appear
to be more centrist when, in fact fact he created the conditions that led to the
decision itself so this is if we can't allow that democrats can't allow that i i was hearing
elizabeth warren i texted her right after an msnbc a couple nights ago and and she nailed i mean she's
making that point we need to quadruple down on that point because it's still a dominant issue
you add those two together uh I like our chances. And
I'm not just saying that because I'm a paid spokesman for the Democratic Party. I'm not.
But I really feel very, very confident about November if we compare and contrast and keep
that frame and keep that messaging intensity. Yeah. You're the only Democrat at the moment
who has actually debated one of the Republicans running around DeSantis. It really is a two-on-one debate.
It was you versus Sean Hannity and DeSantis.
Yeah.
Any takeaways from that experience about the process from DeSantis himself?
Well, you know, I don't want to talk out of school.
And, you know, I try to say some nice things at the end because I actually meant them.
Like, it seems like a good father and husband loves his kids.
So there's a humanity to all this
and you sacrifice and you put yourself out there but there's a there's a there's he's uh he's wound
up there's no joy and it comes across it really does and he comes across in commercial breaks
and and that was what really surprised me like you know like when you walk up and say hello or
goodbye uh you know his was like, how much time do we have?
How much time?
He's like, it's just, there's this,
it's just, you gotta at least express some joy.
At least Trump looks to be enjoying himself.
He's having a blast.
There's a performative quality to it.
This guy doesn't have that.
And so, you know, that becomes the it thing.
There's a stiffness, there's a physical intensity.
I mean, it literally, it manifests, there's a physiology.
And it's just, there's no likability, like none.
And again, I went on Fox, I don't dislike anybody.
All of us need to be loved.
All of us want to be loved.
We all want to be protected, connected, respected.
None of us want to be talked down to.
The reason I go on Fox is, you know, with Hannah,
because I see that humanity.
I'm married into a Republican family. i love my father-in-law i love you know i just i don't i don't i don't like i don't like that side of the the political frame and so i was trying to find
some of that and i'll be just damn honest with you didn't find any of it and it doesn't surprise me
that it's accruing negatively obviously to, to his chances and the outcome of this election for him.
I had a similar experience, albeit not the same level.
I mean, I interviewed Vivek Ramaswamy out in Iowa.
When you see someone with their spouse, with their kids,
it humanizes them instantly.
And then I interviewed him, and he just felt like he was wound up and ready to fight.
And I was like, I don't know, man.
I'm just trying to have a conversation.
I watched all that, and I saw that. It was awkward. It was awkward, and you to fight and i was like i don't know man i'm just trying to have a conversation i watched all that and i saw that and it was awkward it was awkward and you were
trying to be you were trying to find that that that space and uh look every it's interesting i
mean you go on with you know what's the old phrase your dukes up you know my grandfather say come in
with the dukes up young man uh you know. And so I get everybody puts a mask on
when they come into the environment
where they feel like they're about to be judged
and criticized, particularly when I go on networks
like Fox or try to at least approximate
trying to find some common ground
when I enter in that lion's den.
But once you put on those airs, you get them back.
And that's, I think, what's missing sometimes
without some of these folks is
you know and at the same time you know these vivek at least attempts to at least associate
him sometimes sometimes with some at least rhetoric around finding some common ground
this guy desantis doesn't know uh desantis said nicki haley is more liberal than you
is that accurate that's a new talking point that's's used, I think, 30 or 40 times. No, but I think DeSantis is in some respects. I mean, he was out there
first on the anti-fracking ban in Florida. I applauded him for that. Sierra Club did as well.
He also came out very aggressively to his credit against offshore oil drilling. And I applauded
him for that. That sounds pretty good. Yeah, he campaigned on that and he signed an executive order right when he got into office.
You know, so, I mean, the guys, you can't make this up.
I mean, these guys just running away from their record, the sort of fraudulent nature of their current arguments based on their own records.
So, he may want to look in the mirror if he's going to attack Nikki Haley for being, quote, unquote, a progressive.
Yeah, maybe I'll tell him about the Green New Deal if he comes on.
Yeah, maybe I'll tell him about the Green New Deal if he comes on. Yeah, exactly.
I know you consume a lot of conservative media,
especially Fox News.
I know, you know, I went down a rabbit hole
listening to Steve Bannon's podcast for a while.
So I've been there with you,
but you also go on these shows,
you challenge these guys.
What did you learn from that experience?
Why do you watch a lot of Fox?
Why do you want to go on?
Well, I was really worried before the midterms
and we could take different lessons from the midterms. I mean, we outperformed the midterms,
just like we did in 2018, 2020, 2022, 2023. And that gives me, again, some confidence,
momentum, and directionally in terms of where we'll be in 2024. We keep winning. I mean,
it is remarkable. And we're winning in places large and small. Jacksonville, Florida, Republican,
was stronghold, a Democratic mayor,
just another example. But that said, I didn't think we're necessarily winning on the messaging.
And I was sick and tired of being on the receiving end of the Republican party talking points. And
after Dobbs, I particularly felt concerned about our party being on our heels, not on our toes,
and express that very publicly in a
way that wasn't necessarily universally well-received by the party, where I mentioned
Planned Parenthood after Dobbs, where the hell's my party? And it wasn't an indictment of any
individual. It wasn't an indictment of the DNC. Quite the contrary. Jamie's a friend. I respect
and really appreciate the work he's doing. It was indictment of all of us at all levels,
governors, mayors, local leaders, that we need to be more aggressive and stop being on the receiving end
of CRT or DEI or ESG or the anti-gay, anti-trans agenda and this banning and cultural purge that
was going on and continues to go on and the book bans and everything else. Like, come on, like,
how are these guys framing the debate on these issues? And so that's why I went on True Social.
I was a first Democrat to do that.
That's right, I forgot you did that.
That's when I did a 4th of July ad saying, seriously, freedom?
You're trying to make an argument about patriotism and freedom, Ron DeSantis?
As you literally signed a bill denying women that were raped or instances of incest that
could not access their reproductive rights.
That was the first bill he signed, remember, before the six-week ban.
And so I did that little 4th of July ad in Florida.
Make the case.
Spare me the notion of freedom.
And try to recast that a little bit.
And did the same thing with billboards in a bunch of states on reproductive freedom.
Texas, right?
And then I did ads in Texas against Abbott.
And it was iteration
and then boosting their economy yeah i mean that's it look i just i don't know in most of my life
democrats i just feel like we so there's a little timidity here we think there's sort of
intellectualization of the argument we're going to win but facts don't matter narrative matters
ship-shifting is in the narrative these guys it's illusion that that dominates i watch this anger
industry this propaganda network and the bullshit and information misinformation 24 guys, it's illusion that dominates. I watched this anger industry, this propaganda network and the bullshit and misinformation 24-7. And it's not just Fox.
You get it on One American News. I never heard of that until they tried to recall me. And then
obviously Newsmax and then all the residual and the derivative media in that space. And they
literally, I don't get angry with people that are misinformed because I know why.
I watch it.
I totally, sincerely understand why they say what they say and believe it and can't believe the facts because they think we're making it up as an alternative to the BS that these performative folks, and particularly Fox Primetime, throw out in the evening.
And so I just felt it was important to go on Hannity.
I did it a few times.
Got in the lion's den at the Reagan Library during the Republican debate.
That was some fun on behalf of the Biden campaign.
I was honored to do that.
And I had fun doing it.
And I felt like there was enough.
Sean seems to like you.
Yeah.
Are you guys friends?
Do you talk?
Do you text?
Yeah, we do.
We did.
We had a debate.
Did you do too well?
Well, no.
He just, yeah.
I don't know how fair and balanced, for those old enough to remember fair and balanced.
No, he was attacking you the whole second hour.
Yeah, it was, anyway.
I like Sean and still like Sean.
You know, it was not everything that was represented before that debate was manifested at the debate.
Let's just leave it at that.
Is Truth Social a good time?
Are you still on it?
It's so much fun.
I mean, it's just if you really are feeling down and out and you need some good feedback to close out your day.
Post a photo.
You may have a drink.
I just look at the threads in my feet.
It's wonderful.
I bet.
So turn to some California news.
I bet. So it turns to California news. So on March 5th, voters here in California will get to vote on Prop 1, which could provide billions of dollars for housing for veterans, for people
with mental illnesses, addiction issues, who are living on the streets. I want to dig into the
specifics of Prop 1 in a minute, but first we're just hoping to start with some basics.
What do you think, in your opinion, are the biggest drivers of homelessness
nationally and in California?
Well, affordability. It's the original sin.
And you're seeing the housing crisis manifest everywhere, not just here in the state of California, though.
California, we've led the nation in terms of high costs and nimbyism that's led to low production and led to supply-demand imbalance that is quite literally strangling the ability for middle class to make it in the state and impacting the dream.
Remember, there's two dreams, the American dream and the California dream when Ronald Reagan was president of the United States,
but going back in the 50s and 60s and 70s, particularly as it relates to the issues of
mental health. And that's coming home to roost. And I'll just give you some proof points in that.
It's interesting, in California in 1959, I know this is Black and White movie days,
but we have 37,000 mental health units and beds in this state. Last year, 5,500. We're down about 85%.
Now, you look at that historically, a lot of people attach it to then Governor Reagan,
who significantly cut the state hospitals and mental institutions. But it was also a bipartisan
effort. It wasn't just Reagan leading that charge just from a budgetary perspective.
People didn't want people to be incarcerated against their will.
There was an infamous 1975 decision, O'Connor versus Donaldson, that literally said you cannot exclusively incarcerate someone for just having a mental illness.
It has to be for broader issues.
So there was a push, bipartisan push.
So there was a push, bipartisan push.
But in the 80s, when President Reagan became president, he started to block grant a lot of the funding and the promise, the vision of the community alternatives never was realized.
So look, in California, it's a 50-year sin, a process that unfolded over the course of
decades that led to so much of the stress and travails that we experience when we see
people literally with their pants down in the middle of the street screaming.
And you're like, what the hell are we doing? Why can't we help this person?
And so it's the acuity of it. What's happening in the street population has really shifted in
the last decade or so. The encampments, the tents, people that are self-medicating with drug or
alcohol addictions, with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, paranoia, and the like. And
we're at a point where we can't play on the margins.
And that's what Prop 1 is about. It's about quite literally advancing the vision that was laid out
a half century ago, but never realized for community alternatives, 11,150 new treatment
beds and units, new zoning and siting reforms so we can deal with the regulatory
thickets so we actually could deliver on the promise, accountability, which is key here.
I'm a progressive, but more is not better. Better is better. We need to hold ourselves
to higher level of accountability and reforming the old Mental Health Services Act, which is a
point of pride in California, but no longer is relevant to the world we're living in. It was
designed in 2004 and never included the Mental Health Services Act, housing and
substance abuse.
So we want to incorporate the reform to require a billion dollars a year of ongoing money
focused on housing and focusing on those that are struggling with bipolar disorder, again,
as well as those who are self-medicating.
So this is an exciting reform.
It's scaled.
No other state in history has ever advanced.
It's a unity issue, bipartisan support,
and the legislature to get it on the ballot.
And it's a chance really to make a real dent
and address the issue that defines more other issues in the state,
and that's our failure to address what's happening on our streets.
You mentioned the encampments.
There's a Supreme Court case that the Supreme Court's
going to hear out of Oregon that could determine what authority cities have to clear homeless
encampments. I know your administration filed an amicus brief urging the court to take up the case
to clarify these laws. Can you talk about why you think the court needs to step in? And are you
concerned at all that this very conservative court could come down with more draconian ruling,
like saying homelessness is criminalized? Well, right with, you know, more draconian ruling, like saying homelessness is criminalized. Well, right now there's nothing more draconian
than the status quo. I don't know what the compassion is stepping over people in the
streets and sidewalks and allowing people literally, I mean, how many days go by and
you read it or watch another story in the news about someone that was found dead in a homeless
encampment. I do homeless encampment cleanups. This is not, I did it once.
I do it all the time.
I go out all over the state personally.
I'll never forget, I was in San Diego with their mayor and we went to an encampment right off the freeway.
And there was this young guy and self,
he said, I'm a meth addict.
Came here a few months ago.
I was trying to get clean and sober.
And right when I got off the bus,
I was like, I immediately went back out on the streets. And he said, thanks for coming out. I'm
not happy. But he goes, thanks. I said, well, why are you thanking me? And inside the encampment
was his girlfriend and a brand new baby, brand new baby. I mean, we could just turn our blind
eye and talk about the way the world should be and just say is excuse
and accept that and watch him perish and pass away and be another stat but at least we give
this kid a chance now we gave him a chance he said i'm probably going to be back out he was so kind
and so decent and it was so tragic i mean this guy just the deep diction i mean that's meth not
fentanyl i'm in the fentanyl crisis all all another thing. And so, look, when I got here, there wasn't one.
The state of California was not focused on the issue of homelessness.
It was completely consigned to cities and counties.
I was a former mayor.
I get it.
When Schwarzenegger was governor, they didn't focus on homelessness.
They talked about it.
By the way, we had a larger homeless population in 2005 when I was mayor of San Francisco.
That was decades ago.
It was 188,000 in the pick count.
It's about that now. So this has been going on for decades. My point though, is the state
needed to get involved 15.3 billion dollars later. That's our three-year commitment to address this
issue. We now need to see accountability. And the problem we're having is that accountability is
being hindered by the inability to address what's happening in the encampments because we're being sued.
And the courts have provided some very confusing guidance on what you can and can't do as it relates to cleaning up the encampments.
against in terms of my progressive record against pretty much any governor in this country now asking this Republican Supreme Court for help just to clarify that we can actually clean up the
encampments and do it with our values. Do it in a way where we actually, we're not whack-a-mole.
We're not trying to get people, just throw them around the corner. I have encampment resolution
grants, 750 million I put up, that require us to have a solution to the individuals
before we allow them to clean up the encampments. Right now, we may have all of that and the courts
may say, no, you can't do it. Can you explain what that means? I mean,
it's a guaranteed housing, it's customary. Whatever the services, I mean, it's a panoply
of services, but we want flexibility in what the service is. Some people say, no, it just needs to be a permanent supportive housing unit.
Okay.
In a perfect world, sure.
But let's have an honest conversation about that.
Some say, no, no, just, I mean, if I have a shelter bed and, you know, and it has appropriate conditions and supportive services, that should do.
And some judges are saying, Ninth Circuit, we have some judges that say, no, no, no,
you have to have certain staffing ratios.
And you're like, okay, you know, I can't help this person.
I got empty shelter beds.
They're out on the streets and sidewalks.
People are angry.
They're frustrated.
These encampments, you know, we had a lot of issues
with, you know, some of these things,
people dying in these encampments
because of fires and other issues, right near the freeways and cars.
And so just trying to find some balance.
That's it.
And some common sense.
And I think we've lost a little common sense.
And again, I want to hold hands.
I want to have a candlelight vision.
I want to talk about the way the world should be.
I'm into that.
But you know what?
I got to deal with cars that are dealt, the pragmatism of this job. And we need to deal with what's happening on the streets in the state.
We just do. And as Democrats, we have to perform. We can't just talk about issues. We got to
actually deliver results. Prop 1 is about real results and delivering the support and services
in the housing, 11,150 units and 27,000 outpatient units. So that grants pass
allows us clarity. We have unprecedented opportunities for support we've never had
in the past. So it's both and, both and. If you could wave a magic wand and have all the
funding you need and get rid of all the NIMBY bullshit that happens in this state to solve
the problem in one fell swoop, what would that look like? Well, we're doing that. I mean, I did, we did some conservatorship
reform. I did something called Care Court, which is a nation leading effort as it relates to
court ordered care where it's self-directed, it's not coercive. And it's done with a frame
of due process that allows more tools. I'm reforming the Medi-Cal system.
It's called CalAIM, which is, I mean,
nothing's happening in the Medicaid system like we're doing in California
in terms of reforming that system.
I have $4.7 billion legislature supported.
Thank you.
$4.7 billion new additional dollars
focused on children zero to 26
to focus on brain health early before we punish it later.
So it's not just homelessness,
it's also taking care of our kids, our youth.
All those are component parts,
but what's been missing, the magic wand,
the thing that is the answer to your question,
honestly, is Prop 1, and I'm not just here promoting it.
I'm here really sort of, I think it demands attention,
at least, that it is the missing piece.
It's the 50-year missing piece.
It's what we promise.
It's what we pray for.
And we have the opportunity to deliver in just a matter of weeks.
And that's why I'm excited.
And then it's about accountability.
Look, I'm not the mayor of every city and county in California.
Localism is determinative.
And local government has to deliver.
Switching gears a little bit.
So I saw that you vetoed a bill that would have banned tackle football for kids under 12.
Now you were an athlete growing up, right?
Were you a football player?
Is it obvious?
Yeah.
Yes.
Baseball?
Baseball.
I don't look like a football player to you?
Okay.
I don't know.
Yeah.
All right.
I made a little more baseball, basketball, not basketball.
Baseball, basketball. Yeah. I'm don't know. Yeah, all right. I made a little more baseball, basketball, not basketball. Baseball, basketball.
Yeah.
I'm, well, I mean, I'm just curious why you feel this way.
Look, full disclosure, I read about it.
I thought this seems a bit off to me.
Yeah.
Football isn't the only contact sport, right?
There's hockey, there's lacrosse.
My kids are playing soccer and there's not a game
where there's not someone that is not looking at a concussion protocol.
There's a lot of research about high concussion rates among girls' high school soccer teams in particular.
That's hard, yeah.
So, yeah, I'm just wondering, you know, you have kids who play sports.
You play sports yourself.
You're dealing with the legislature.
What is the right balance between keeping kids safe and not denying them opportunities that come from sports?
Well, that's it.
I mean, look, I'm sitting here with you.
Literally, no BS.
You wouldn't have had any interest in me whatsoever
if it wasn't for sports.
Saved my life.
I'm a kid.
I'm a 960 SAT kid.
And that's not to knock someone who got 930.
Okay.
I mean, I don't mean to diminish anyone.
I was on my way proudly to community college
and I got a call from two coaches.
They said, hey, you interested in coming
to a four-year college and playing baseball?
And we'll give you a literally partial scholarship.
It wasn't even the money.
It was literally the ticket to a four-year university.
Changed my life, my trajectory.
Struggled with dyslexia.
Couldn't read, write.
You don't see me reading speeches today as governor.
I'm still working to overcome it.
Sports saved my life.
So I revere it.
And I also revere the unity around it.
I think about the mental health issue.
I think that's a unity agenda.
But there's also something beautiful about entire community coming together and not someone looking, hey, are you a Trump guy or are you a Biden guy?
It's like, man, hey, we're just Eagles fans or in this case, we're Niner fans or Charger, LA. I don't know. I don't want to get in trouble. Now I have to go
through every team. Everyone's going to be upset. You didn't mention the Rams. Jesus.
I didn't mention the Dodgers either. But the point being, sports are important and it's an
important outlet, particularly in a lot of diverse communities, particularly football.
And I've seen that firsthand as a former mayor who was deeply involved in some of the Pop Warner and
the Brown Bombers in San Francisco and others. But same time, you know, I'm close. I put Ronnie
Lott on this youth sports committee. Ronnie's a friend. He's working with my wife, who was a
college athlete. Legendary football player. Legendary football player. And we're tasking
Ronnie and others to, we have to keep this safe. I worry about these kids. I mean, the concussion
protocols are real. And a lot of these kids don't know how to tackle correctly, et cetera. So here's
the answer to your question. Sorry about all that preamble. But in 2019, I signed a bill that
answered that question in detail, which was a youth sport tackle football framework and new regulation went
into effect just two years ago. And it requires certain training and protocols and EMS workers
to be on site in certain events, et cetera. What we're going to do is strengthen that. We're going
to look to see if it was effective. And this is, I appreciate the author of this bringing this issue
back up, but our outright ban? Come on.
I didn't think it was the right thing to do, but we have to protect our kids because it's legitimate.
But to deny them that and to say you have to do flag football, which is amazing and it's growing and it's great,
and I love to see that.
My son plays flag football.
It's really great to have that as an alternative, but we shouldn't mandate what that alternative looks like.
Yeah, and I guess where do you draw the lines between where the parents make these decisions
and a state? A little old fashioned. And meanwhile, what are we dealing with on the other side? This
cultural purge and this banning binge? I mean, we're dealing with a party, guys like you brought
up DeSantis and Trump and everyone else, banning books, 3,362 last calendar year, banning speech
in boardrooms, private speech as it relates to issues related to
race and gender and sexuality, not just in the classroom. They're banning travel. If you're
trying to access reproductive care as a minor in a place like Idaho, these guys are banning
bids that includes Bud Light, not just Disney and Target. I mean, they're banning abortion.
They're banning fundamental freedoms and choice.
They're rolling back hard on rights, voting rights,
not just LGBTQ rights.
They're coming after contraception.
Don't think twice about that.
We already know it in the courts.
Mifo, miso, and other things.
I mean, this is, I mean, I'd like to,
we can a little compare and contrast.
I know they got a little upset
that we were mandating mask wearing
and they all think everything goes back to COVID.
But I do believe in parental choice.
And I find it the hypocrisy on the right just to be glaring and extraordinary.
And I also think that's a point of contrast.
It's important.
People like you, Dr. Fauci, like anyone in a leadership position during COVID had to
make decisions on the fly
about a virus that literally didn't exist. No, we're all, we're experts and we knew every play
every day. I mean, I just wonder what that was like and what it's like now watching these
recriminations. I mean, people are calling Dr. Fauci a traitor. It's complete revisionist history
and they're getting away with it. And we've allowed them to get away with it. I mean, Ron DeSantis, at that debate, I reminded everyone,
he did an emergency declaration before I did.
He closed his beaches.
He closed his bars and restaurants.
All these other Republicans, folks, Robbins did.
I mean, yeah, you had DeSantis himself out there visiting with Trump
with a mask on outside.
And all of a sudden, it's as if these guys all of a sudden were soothsayers
and they saw the future and none of this was true.
They were out there celebrating Fauci.
They were out there promoting vaccines.
By the way, they promote vaccines now.
Everyone knows this, I assume.
The mandates on vaccines in states like Florida, red states, are legendary.
You can't get a childcare unless you have 15 vaccination shots.
You can't even get them to schools without six vaccines mandating them to states like Florida. But all of a sudden
with COVID, now we're not for vaccines. And all of a sudden it's a revisionist anti-public health
and anti-science frame purely because of the ideology and the politicalization of this issue.
Well, and DeSantis today said, every booster you take, you're more likely to get COVID as a result.
It's disgraceful. What he's doing, hurting people, people's lives. Tens of thousands of people died
unnecessarily. Tens of thousands of human beings are dead today because he lied to folks and he
fell to the far right of his own party. The equivalent of 10, 9, 11s, if you compare and
contrast California's per capita death rate, is just a 32% higher without the density of place.
I mean, compare the density in a place like LA to a place like Miami,
it's significantly higher here. And, and, and, and then he caved,
he was right. He started on the right foot.
And then he caved to the far right extreme. And it's really sad. Again,
if people didn't lose their lives, it's one thing, by the way,
they also did worse on education. They had more learning loss in a place like Florida than compared to California.
Absolute fact. In three of the four categories, they had worse learning loss, and their economy
didn't particularly form any better. They contracted at about the same rate, and we grew
about the same rate the year after COVID. So for what? For political expediency. And again,
they've been aided and abetted by a laziness on here where we've all sort of fallen prey a little bit to acting like this thing wasn't a big damn deal.
I was getting body bags from other states because we were running out of body bags at the morgues.
We had mobile morgues I had to put up.
I mean, this was serious.
People have forgotten all about this.
And I know we don't want to come back to it because we're stacked with stress. And it's like the last thing we
want to talk about. It's like, oh God, I can't deal with this. I get it. But I don't think we've
learned objectively our lessons. The lessons we're learning are through the prisms of ideology.
You get these right-wing think tanks say, well, here's what really happened. Or with respect,
some others on the other side that are a little bit loosey-goosey of the facts as well. And I think we need to really come to grips with an objective,
hard-earned look. I've tried to be self-critical, what we could have done better, et cetera,
because I don't think we're, absolutely, I don't think, I know we're not more prepared now
for the next pandemic. I think we're less so because all of a sudden, science is now partisan,
just like democracy has somehow become partisan.
When the hell did that happen?
Yeah.
That's a,
that seems like a problem too.
Yeah.
And before COVID,
right.
There was certainly some communities that were scared about debunked research
that vaccines could cause autism,
but the amount of vaccine hesitancy and disinformation and fear mongering and general
fear among well-meaning people, people I know and love deeply who are scared that vaccines are going
to harm them or their kids. It seems like something has been unleashed during COVID.
And I'm wondering if you have thoughts on how we can fix that and get people the right information.
Well, I don't know. I mean, look, the information came out of Yale.
18.5 million people avoided hospitalizations.
3.2 million people's lives were saved because of the vaccines.
You look back historically on what vaccines have saved in terms of human lives.
Globally, it's off the charts.
It's not even comparable.
By the way, perhaps that's why vaccines are still mandated in all these red states to
get into schools and to get in childcare facilities.
I mean, even these guys recognize the impacts of that. That said, because they've analyzed
the confidence, you're starting to see diseases we haven't seen in years and years start to
increase, at least numeric terms, percentage-wise. It's significant, not yet numerically in terms of
total numbers, but the concerns are raised and they're there. And look, I'm deeply, I got in the middle of the whole anti-vax thing
before COVID. So I understand it. There were some changes to our rules and I get it. I get there's
some good well-meaning to your point. I don't disrespect people that disagree. And I certainly
understand people's rights and concerns, but there was a lot of intentional disinformation,
not just misinformation, that was out there
and promoted and weaponized, and it cost people's lives.
And so I'm a public health guy.
I can lay claim to being the only governor in U.S. history
to provide universal health care,
regardless of pre-existing condition, ability to pay, or immigration status, which has been weaponized in terms of grievance
on the other side. California is doing that. It's a point of pride. Infant mortality, maternal
mortality compared, blue states compared to red states, not even comparable, life expectancy,
blue states, red states, death of despair, blue states, red states. I like our record uh i like uh i like team blue uh in terms of
science and facts and health and evidence i don't want us to lose that yeah i don't want us to either
uh last question is a very dumb one no um i was informed by our younger cooler team here at crooked
media that the 2024 coachella lineup is pretty mid. Oh, man.
Pretty mid?
Do I have to look that up?
Really?
It means it's not great.
Okay.
I figured mid was not so good.
Do you have a dream Coachella lineup?
Is there a concert you really want to see right now
or have seen recently?
You know, I thought it was,
I don't know if this is cool,
but I thought it was cool.
My wife just sent me a selfie with Wycliffe.
And I'm like, wait, that's kind of cool.
I was like, what's my wife doing with Wycliffe?
They're talking about gender equality.
I didn't know Wycliffe was into gender equality.
So he's up there now.
Anyway, she wants to now put him in that California Hall of Fame.
I'm like, really?
Just like that?
Just because you met him?
Is that how it works?
I'm going to get in trouble, by the way.
We're going to have to edit this out.
That's not how it works.
There's a process.
But maybe he deserves.
I don't know.
I love Wycliffe.
I mean, as a singer.
Look, I'm old school, man.
I'm a Bay Area kid.
I'm like a Green Day Metallica kid.
Oh, that's great.
I mean, like that's-
Green Day was performing
in the subway the other day?
How cool was that with Alan, right?
Yeah.
That was next level cool.
Okay, so great.
I mean, those guys are the best.
That would be a great,
I could absolutely see them doing a Coachella headliner.
Thank you.
And Lars, I mean, Lars is a buddy.
Metallica, come on, Metallica.
Like, come on.
And then, you didn't expect Metallica, did you?
You're like, he doesn't seem like a Metallica guy.
He seems like maybe he just learned
about Taylor Swift or something.
Yeah, who we do love.
We love Taylor Swift. We do, of course. You know know i don't mess with taylor swift someone told me the
other day this could be total disinformation that uh metallica is one of the only bands
to stay together because they saw a group therapist fact that's true they did a whole
documentary on it okay no they're like these guys are these guys are the real deal they deal with
real issues and they've stayed together across their differences they talk it out they hug it out and i mean but it's these guys are next level
successful these are you know these are the guys that still fill in stadiums around the globe and
could do that every single damn day there's only a handful of them but they're also remarkable guys
this is human beings individually committed i mean i bring up lars he's just a perfect example
talk about a guy who's deeply in our lane of values, cares about people, growth, and
inclusion across the spectrum on every issue.
Inclusion and recognizes that we need to right wrongs and take some accountability in his
own life in terms of his own time, not just his own contribution financially to these
causes.
Anyway, I love those guys.
And Green Day, come on, man.
Look what they did on New Year's.
Yeah.
It's okay.
They changed.
Well, you know, they just did a little mega shot.
I was like, I like it.
And they all went all crazy.
I mean, they still do it.
They got guts, man.
I love that.
People have guts that express themselves.
I like that, too.
So, okay.
So we got like Friday, Fugees, or maybe just Wyclef.
I don't know.
Yeah, Friday, Fugees.
They might need a band therapist, if we're being honest.
Yeah, I want to get into all this.
I need all the friends I can get.
I'm not going to.
Green Day, Saturday. Headliner, sunday closing it out metallica i would i would sell out right yeah so that's not mid anymore that's not mid at all that's exactly that's more
lollapalooza vibes maybe no yes no i got bottle rock up north you know we got that nappa which
is that's starting to blow up that's getting good good, right? That is always fun. I never went just, I don't know why.
And Outsides Land.
Yeah, Outsides Land is great.
When I was mayor, I got that done in Golden Gate Park.
I was like, first year, I got that done.
Outsides Land is a blast.
The only thing I will say, my only complaint living in San Francisco is it would be August
20-something and you're walking around in a fucking parka.
Oh, really?
Because it was freezing.
Are you doing the whole Mark Twain, the coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in san francisco i'm not doing that shot man that's just like a southern
california dude giving a shot to northern california that's yeah listen you know that's a
lot of shade man or a lot of fog it gets cold yeah it gets cold by the way i love to say you
can only say i say about the desantis's policies they have the form and substance of fog uh because
you know only a san francisco kid can lay claim to that.
And Trump, we don't even want to lay claim to any.
He doesn't even have any policies.
I was trying to call him Jan DeSantis, but it didn't really catch on.
Jan DeSantis?
That's pretty good.
It didn't even get a chuckle.
The other mics are off.
Everyone else left.
DeSanctimonious, I guess, still is the default best.
I don't think that's the default.
I know, but it's default.
You have a better one?
No.
But it doesn't even matter anymore.
It's toast. He's yesterday's news. He's come 4%? You don't. No. But it doesn't even matter anymore. It doesn't even matter.
He's toast.
He's yesterday's news.
He's come 4% or something.
Yeah.
He's 6.
He's 6.
He's surging.
Sorry.
He went up one point yesterday.
Come on.
Be respectful.
Governor Newsom,
thank you so much
for doing the show
and for setting up
the 2025 Coachella lineup.
That's it.
That's what we're
talking about.
Yeah.
There we go.
Right?
Huh?
I want to commission
Metallica and Green Day.
Those are good answers.
Get out of here with this PR anxiety shit.
All right.
Thanks to Governor Newsom for joining us.
Everyone have a great day.
And we're going to be recording Tuesday night after the results.
And you'll be hearing that on that pod will come out on Wednesday.
So we'll talk to you then.
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Our show is produced by Olivia Martinez and David Toledo.
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Thanks to our digital team,
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Kiril Pellaviv, and Molly Lobel.
The history of HIV and AIDS is the history of people who were told to stay out of sight and who refused to do so. Gay men, but also injection drug users, women, and yes, children who contracted the virus.
Join host Kai Wright for Blindspot, The Plague in the Shadows,
a new series that seeks to answer the question of how much pain could have been avoided had we paid attention sooner. You'll meet people who demanded that they and
their illness be seen. Mothers and children, doctors and nurses, nuns and sex workers,
all leading to a woman who literally helped change the definition of AIDS.
From the History Channel and WNYC Studios, Blindspot,
The Plague in the Shadows. Listen wherever you get podcasts.