Pod Save America - Obama Night at the DNC (feat. Julia Louis-Dreyfus)
Episode Date: August 21, 2024Barack and Michelle Obama and Doug Emhoff make the argument for Kamala Harris with a trio of pitch-perfect speeches to the delegates in Chicago. Harris accepts the nomination with a surprise live gree...ting broadcast from her packed rally in Milwaukee. Then, California Senator Laphonza Butler joins the show to talk about the Kamala Harris she's gotten to know over the years, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus talks to Jon and Lovett about getting involved with politics—and all those Veep comparisons.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This week we're going all out for the Democratic National Convention.
Here at Crooked Media, we're giving Friends of the Pod subscribers access to a ton of
behind-the-scenes content and community events, including a DNC subscriber live chat, a new
subscriber exclusive segment featuring me, John, Tommy, and Dan, four, count them, four
back-to-back ad-free episodes of Pod Save America recapping the biggest convention news
of the night, and brand new episodes of Inside 2024 and Polar Coaster.
It's going to be a hell of a week for content and as a bonus we'll have a Democratic Party
nominee by the end. Pretty good deal. Get all of our exclusive DNC content and more when you
subscribe to Friends of the Pod. Head to kirkat.com slash friends to sign up now.
Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Jon Lovett. I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
Tommy Vitor.
On tonight's show, Barack and Michelle Obama rally the troops at the DNC, the one and only
Julia Louis-Dreyfus stops by to talk about why she's involved in the convention and all
those Veep comparisons with Kamala Harris, and our own Senator, Lafonza Butler, a close
friend of Kamala, talks to Lovett and me about what the VP is really like and why she decided
Like Joe Biden to serve just one term. She also called me pretty weird, but I really like her
Yeah, in fairness, that's because you called yourself weird first. But anyway, so good conversation
He's our JD Vance tune in
We do that chair buddy look you started the interview as JD Vance.
You ended as Tim Walz.
Nice.
OK.
All right.
So we're recording this at 11 PM on Tuesday night.
Better than last night.
Which is lovely.
We're doing better.
Half an hour better every night.
Half an hour better every night.
Who knows what happens by Thursday night.
It's just after night two of the convention.
So tonight is traditionally the night
when the big festive roll call happens to officially nominate the presidential and vice presidential candidates.
This year, of course, the official roll call happened virtually to make sure we didn't run afoul of the state ballot deadlines.
But you know what? We're the party of fun now. So Democrats decided to do the ceremonial roll call anyway.
It was actually really cool. It was a really cool part of the night. As usual, the delegates cast their vote state by state,
but this time they played a state-specific song
with at least one surprise in-person appearance
from, obviously, Lil' John, who's from Georgia.
By tradition, the nominee's home state delegation,
California, went last to put her over the top,
and then there was an unexpected move.
Here's a supercut
of how it all went.
We are here tonight to officially nominate Kimberly Harris for president.
As Nevada's first black woman chair, I proudly deliver the Silver State's 48 votes for the
next president.
Texas casts three votes president and 263 votes for freedom.
California, we love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you. We love you. We love you. We love you. We love you. for the next president. Texas cast three votes president,
and 263 votes for freedom.
California, we proudly cast our 482 votes
for the next president, Kamala Harris.
But now, a special surprise.
Live from my home state of Wisconsin,
Vice President Kamala Harris.
The delegates at the Democratic National Convention,
well they just completed their roll call,
and they have nominated Coach Walz and me
to be the next Vice President and President
of the United States of America.
What did you guys think of that Milwaukee move?
I think we should set the stage.
There's nothing just to do with Milwaukee.
They filled the Pfizer Forum,
which is where the Republican convention was last month.
Yep, yep.
And it was a raucous crowd and a perfect set,
and they did it live, which is a risky maneuver.
Two full stadiums.
Yeah, especially for all the issues last night
with going over.
The fact that they orchestrated
the whole thing tonight so that literally the roll call ends and Newsom puts her over
the top in California and then it just cuts to her walking out on stage with a huge crowd.
It was amazing.
It was so good.
The stagecraft, a lot of people had a hand in that.
They probably don't get a lot of credit.
That's amazing.
It was just so people, we were all watching it and we were just such earnest
we were just so earnestly like excited and it like just sort of that's so
fucking cool. Don't look at me and Dan you know we weren't here we're up in a
suite. I was sitting right here. I was talking with your daughter and your wife.
Yeah. Oh that's what happened. Oh I was doing a T-Bitsy spider with Lizzie.
I thought we were in the suite. Which is fair. Which is totally fair. It's a good excuse.
What'd you guys think of the vibes in general before we get to the big speakers?
Vibes are good. Vibes are good, right? Vibes are good. It was a good day. We're drinking now. We're
having a good time. Vibes are good on day two. All right, let's get to the speeches. Headliners
tonight were second gentleman Doug Emhoff and Barack and Michelle Obama. We're just going to
take them in order. Let's listen to Doug. I got Kamala's voicemail and I just started rambling.
Hey, it's Doug.
I'm on my way to an early meeting.
Again, it's Doug.
I remember I was trying to grab the words out of the air and just put them back in my mouth and
For what seemed like far too many minutes. I hung up
by the way
Kamala saved that voicemail and
She makes me listen to it on every anniversary
But that's when she called me back and And we talked for an hour and we laughed.
Well, you know that laugh.
I love that laugh.
So should we talk about why we miss Doug's speech?
The live part, yeah.
So we were about to watch Doug and then our friend Ben Krause,
who's in the speech writing room,
he said he was going to bring us down to the convention floor. To the podium area. To the podium area. I gonna bring us down to the convention floor.
To the podium area.
To the podium area.
Where you literally, I've never been down to the podium area.
You're literally standing on the podium,
but behind the stage that you see.
It's very cool.
Yeah.
Like we watched Doug come off and greet his staff,
and everyone was elated.
Elated.
That's the best word.
And then we walked down and we were gonna go out
to watch the, we were gonna watch the speech,
and then we were walking down the hall
and we saw Barack Obama's assistant Amos,
and he just pulled us in.
We got to say hi to Obama.
How are you?
Give him a little good luck.
He needed that.
He needed the good luck from us.
He was like, all right, get out of here.
It's so annoying because he did not even seem
a little bit nervous.
No. Not a hair. It's his. It's so annoying because he did not even seem a little bit nervous. No.
Not a hair.
It's his...
It's like his superpower.
Fifth convention?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he was fine.
Yeah, it was cool.
Doug's speech was fantastic.
Now that we've seen it.
We watched it when we came back.
We have seen the speech.
He's so charming.
Yeah, he's a charming guy.
I love how much they, like,
it's so authentic how much they love each other.
From, you know, when they were at the State of the Union
and they found each other.
And you saw Kamel looking up at Doug up there.
I've always loved it.
I just, I do, I genuinely, they just love each other.
There is something so relatable,
and I know this from experience,
as someone who knows they punched above their weight
in getting married, like, Doug knows he got lucky and
that Kamala's amazing and he'd like he probably wakes up every day he's like I
can't believe Kamala Harris married me even if she knew it became my friend. It's basically the theme of the speech. Yeah it is it's so relatable to people in the same way that Tim Walls is this
archetype that's relatable people Doug Emhoff is exactly like that everyone
knows Doug Emhoff right they like that. Everyone knows Doug Emhoff, right?
They understand that relationship.
They understand who he is.
And this was one of the most effective
convention speeches I've seen in a very long time.
And to get all political strategic about it,
we've talked a lot here about this debate over masculinity
and young men and men leaving the Democratic Party.
And I do think between Tim Walz and Doug Emhoff,
you are seeing in this campaign models of men
who are just good guys and good models for men to be.
And I'm threatened by the success of women.
Yes, right.
Aren't at all bothered by it.
That's what's been beautiful about Doug from the beginning,
that you can just see that he loves being the plus one. He he loves it he loves being he's on a plus one world tour
yeah I used to be on a plus one world tour I like calling him Doug I also like
calling walls coach also just again a little behind the curtain look here we
were sitting around we were all talking about how you know like we all had a
sense of what Obama was gonna say you could sort of had a sense of what
Michelle Obama might say we're like we don a sense of what Obama was gonna say. You could sort of, had a sense of what Michelle Obama might say.
We were all like, we don't really know what Doug's gonna talk about.
And the only preview was a message about the need to combat anti-Semitism around the world,
which is a very important message, but a very different tone than what we ultimately saw.
I am so glad that what we saw was a speech about Doug explaining why he loves Kamala Harris.
Oh, one other thing that Doug did that was so beautiful really reminded me,
so Bill Clinton, 1992,
he said, this was when they were making fun
of like Murphy Brown and single mothers,
and he said, if you don't feel welcome
in the Republican party, come be part of our family.
It was a beautiful moment.
He's standing up for lots of people
whose families didn't look like the platonic ideal
of 1950s television.
It was a big deal that Bill Clinton did that
and said, like, there's a lot of people that live like that
and like deserve to feel loved.
And there was something so beautiful about Doug
just unapologetically, unabashedly saying,
we're a blended family.
They call her Mamala.
She's an incredible stepmother.
It was complicated.
He said, I got divorced.
And we figured, and I figured out,
and Kamala took, I thought she'd be good for our family.
And she was.
That sort of like direct honesty
without feeling at all self-conscious
I have to pretend to be some other version just to it was a recognition by the way of like it's respect for people
It's respect for the viewer for voters that I really really liked
it's just like being in touch with real life not the
Refracted view of politics that we have where it's like you have to have this perfect marriage and your life has to go a certain way and it's just comfort in your own skin.
It's understanding like this is what everyone knows, right?
They know blended families, they know mixed race couples, they know step kids and step
moms and it's like that's just like normal stuff just presented to people and it's not
welcome or discussed about in the Republican Party in the same way.
Well because the primary strategy of the Republican Party,
particularly under Trump, has been to
authorize their opponents, Democrats, right?
They are weird, they are different.
Barack Obama wasn't born here.
Now we do the weird thing.
Kamala Harris is, you know, the biracial thing.
Is she Indian, is she black, right?
And I think a theme of tonight,
we're gonna talk about the Obamas as well,
but from all three prime time speakers,
Doug, Michelle Obama and Barack Obama,
was like, hey, we're pretty normal Americans
in the year 2024, this is what the country looks like,
this is what we sound like, love our families,
love our country, like it's a really powerful message.
And it's why, it's the way people vote.
They don't Google your list of policies
and compare them and bust out the abacus
and like total up what it means for them.
They're like, I like this person, they seem like me,
they will fight for me, which Barack Obama directly says
in his speech, Michelle Obama got at that too.
It's all about values and who you are and your character
and how that informs your leadership.
That's what people are looking for.
The speakers tonight understood the assignment.
Yes.
They knew what they were supposed to do.
All of those speeches were not about themselves.
Even Doug Emhoff's speech was not about himself.
It was all about Kamala and their family
and what she did for their family.
It's what Obama and the former first lady did.
It is just, they got it and they executed on it in a very effective way.
And it's always good to see a strict scrutiny guest
make it big.
Yeah.
No.
A guest and a guest of a guest.
That's right, yeah.
Come on here, come on to the strict scrutiny show.
Which is also one of the most charming things.
Yeah.
Yeah, because no one knew, we did,
she just showed up at the strict scrutiny show,
the live show in DC
Sat in the front row to cheer on Doug. She's like a guest of Scrutineer. We're now three circles removed from the Kamala Harris interview we seek
We're gonna get it before
She'll be back. I ran into her on an airplane once and she came up and gave me a hug and shook that like she couldn't have
Been nice. She's like a normal person. She's friendly. She's nice. That's who she is extremely normal All right, so after Doug Michelle Obama took the stage
High expectations for Michelle Obama, right because she always gives the most incredible speeches
She always knocks it out of the park and man. She fucking met them tonight
If not exceeded them, let's listen to Michelle
She understands that most of us will never
be afforded the grace of failing forward
never benefit
from the affirmative action of generational well
if we have a good business
or joke in a crisis
we don't get a second, third or fourth chance.
If things don't go our way, we don't have the luxury of whining or cheating others to get
further ahead. No. We don't get to change the rules so we always win. If we see a mountain in
front of us,
we don't expect there to be an escalator waiting to take us to the top.
No.
We put our heads down.
We get to work.
In America, we do something.
Unfortunately, we know what comes next.
We know folks are going to do everything they can to distort her truth.
My husband and I sadly know a little something about this.
For years, Donald Trump did everything in his power to try to make people fear us.
See, his limited, narrow view of the world made him feel threatened by the existence
of two hard-working, highly educated, successful people who happen to be black.
So wow, that was...
I mean, that was one of the best convention speeches I've ever seen.
I mean I think the way she tied Kamala Harris' mother and her own mother and wove their story
together to talk about her values was incredible.
The way she sliced Donald Trump in half and made him so small and went harder at him than almost any other speaker, but did it
in language that was just less harsh and nasty?
It was unbelievable.
There was also a whole section where she, where there's some very real shade thrown
at annoying politicians who demand to be stroked and loved and donors who need to be called that was very funny
And you can felt deeply felt really really interesting. Oh, that's what I was actually thinking we went out
we watched her on the floor, which is awesome and
What I what I was thinking about when I was watching the speeches
she doesn't it like an amazing and very difficult job of
Speaking both to people that barely pay attention to politics and the hyper engaged partisans and impundits
and politicians and activists with a message
that kind of works for both.
Like, which is really incredibly impressive.
So basically like stop checking 538 and do something.
Yeah, which I will not do, but I will do something.
But I will also check 538.
You can do both.
I can do both.
Go to BoatSaveAmerica.com. That's right. but I will do something. But I will also check 538. You can do both. I can do both. Go to vote safe America dot com.
That's right.
That would be doing something.
75,000 volunteers to show up.
We got 40,000 now.
We need 35,000 more in the next 25 days.
Vote safe America dot com slash 2024.
Wow, look at that one.
It's pretty good, pretty good.
I'm saying I want 75,000 on top of the 40,000.
I like that.
It's not inclusive for me.
Dan, what'd you think? When they go low, love it goes higher?
Yeah, that's right.
Continue, continue.
Barack Obama is the best speaker in the Democratic party,
but the second best speaker in his family.
Yeah.
Which he said in his speech as well.
It is just the way,
like every person who is in politics
should watch all of Michelle Obama's convention speeches,
starting in 08, and every single one.
And I watched the 2021,
which is one of the starkest warnings about Donald Trump,
because, if you remember, they were just videos.
They were just two-camera remarks.
And she talks, like a normal person, to normal people.
There is no speechifying,
there is no lofty rhetoric about the founders
or you're not like cosplaying the Kennedys in your head
when you do it.
It's just like, it's, it always sounds like
if you've ever had a conversation with Michelle Obama,
it sounds like this, right?
When she's telling you to do something,
she's asking you to do something,
she's explaining something to you, it sounds like this.
And it is just so effective.
And in her 2020
speech, she said, you all know I hate politics, right? So me doing this tells
you how serious, I'm paraphrasing her, this situation is and that's the vibe, right?
She's not political. And there was a genuine love and affection for Kamala
Harris that was so powerful in there. Yes, like that she understood her life, she understood her experience, a kindred.
And they have become friends.
They're close friends. They both live in D.C.
They hang out. It's just it's very I thought it was just very, very meaningful.
The way it was done.
I've been thinking about the reason that the way she went after Donald Trump
was so effective, like why that was.
And I think it's like, we've heard so many lines
from politicians, politicians we love
over the last however many years now about Donald Trump.
And some of them are like really harsh and really slam him.
And I think that like her indictment of him
was like the most devastating,
even though it wasn't as sharp,
because like she told a story about him and about
like what he represents versus what like Americans actually value in life and she
did it with like a certain subtlety. It wasn't very subtle to like everyone
understood that it was like a full frontal attack but it's always bothered.
I have this thing where everyone who criticizes now, like when they go low, we go high.
I think it's a misunderstanding of what that meant.
I've always thought it was a misunderstanding.
She was not saying when they go low, we go high.
Like they get down and dirty and attack.
And we turn the other cheek.
And we turn the other cheek and do that.
She kind of corrected it tonight.
She was like, they're really small
and we have to go really big.
And that's what she did in her indictment of Donald Trump.
It was much bigger than like cheap applause line attacks.
It was like, he does not stand for
what we value as Americans.
And I thought it was like so much more powerful.
There's something,
look, Doug's speech into Michelle's speech
into Barack Obama's speech were, I think,
pound for pound the three best speeches
in a prime time that I've ever seen.
And I think it's because each of them
started from a place of, why am I here?
And what is the single most effective thing I can do?
What is the speech only I could give
that's the most persuasive speech
I can personally give for Kamala Harris?
What are the strengths I bring to achieve the goal?
Every person on that stage tonight cares and understands how important it is to fucking win.
And what they were focused on is trying to figure out the best and most exquisite case
that they can make based on who they are, their values, their experiences,
their kind of place in, you know, whatever, American politics to make that argument
and they each did that and it was incredibly effective.
And one thing I think, like, well,
it's a feeling I feel when I watch them now
post-presidency and I wonder if you guys feel this way,
which is that they, I worked for Obama from 2004 to 2013,
they endured so much racism and bullshit
and just like vicious attacks, especially Michelle.
And they had to, in some sense, turn the other cheek
on those attacks or at least not directly call them out
as racist when they were.
For example, the birther stuff.
We never said, hey, that's racist, Donald Trump,
stop doing that.
Because we knew Barack Obama would be called
an angry black man.
He'd be accused of playing the race car. Right, right would be the OJ trial over again, right?
Well, and he took a high road
but now he's like I don't have to do that and she doesn't either and they can just be brutally honest and
Respond to him in the way he deserves Donald Trump that is but even now
They also knew that like it's not like they just had to turn the other cheek because they would be accused of playing the race
Card they knew that like again's not like they just had to turn the other cheek because they would be accused of playing the race card. They knew that like, again, to Lovett's point, politically, the best thing to
do to actually like win the election and advance the cause is to not get yourself baited into what
the Republicans want, which is like an argument and debate over identity and over race. And even
the way she did it tonight, when she said like, like, and he wants to make people afraid of just two of us,
of two people who just happened to like work hard
and become successful and rise to a high station in life
who happened to be black, right?
Who happened to be black.
And like just the way that was just like a perfect way.
It's elegant, it's an elegant phrasing.
She's directly calling out the racism in the attack.
Of course, but in a much more elegant way
than I think most Democrats do.
There is just something about the way
a lot of the Democrats last night went after Trump
that was very overly online.
It's like referencing something that went viral that Trump did
or some controversy only known to political junkies.
It's very like MSNBC, Twitter.
You didn't think the Cofiff video was good?
No, didn't work.
Or Potsdamerica referential, right?
And the way the Obamas did it was they talked to people
about Donald Trump where you would understand the critique
if you don't follow politics, because that is our audience.
Right.
That is the only audience that matters.
It is not to send a thrill up the leg of Democrats
who are going to vote no matter what and work hard no matter
what.
Those Democrats were thrilled in there, let me tell you.
And she, again, the reason she's so good
is that the audience in the room was just, it was crazy.
It was electric.
And no one rode the applause better than her.
She shut down so many silly chants and things going on.
She's like kept going.
Yeah.
Alright, last but not least,
noted Chicago native Barack Obama
closed out the night with a speech to the delegates.
Let's listen.
Here's a 78-year-old billionaire
who has not stopped whining about his problems
since he rode down his golden escalator nine
years ago. It has been a constant stream of gripes and grievances that's actually been
getting worse now that he's afraid of losing a comma. There's the childish nicknames, the crazy conspiracy theories, this weird obsession
with crowd sizes.
It is one of the oldest tricks in politics.
From a guy whose act has, let's face it, gotten pretty stale. stay up. We do not need four more years of bluster and bumbling and chaos. We
have seen that movie before and we all know that the sequel is usually worse.
America's ready for a new chapter. America's ready for a better story. We are ready for a President Kamala Harris.
Kamala Harris won't be focused on her problems, she'll be focused on yours.
As president she won't just cater to her own supporters and punish those who refuse to kiss the ring or bend the knee.
She'll work on behalf of every American.
Alright, so as you disclose, I, you know, once a staffer, always a staffer, I volunteered to help a little, look at the speech a couple times.
I mean, don't knock the three changes I made in the speech.
There's one very important We don't look like we don't let's not let people be we don't have one very important change that I just did in
Dan included the dick job
That makes sense just so you all know he just he just that was just in the moment
It's just a moment. He just put his hands on the podium. I don't know
Or maybe maybe maybe he knew all along but that was a dick joke and nobody else did but him I will
not comment on it or what do you guys think of Obama's speech what is this
journalistic ethics you've adopted journalistic I think it's just weird to
be like oh well I was like talking about the speech about his badge has a portal
all of a sudden it's gone to his fucking head over here this guy for a long time
conflicts are well here's my here's what I was feeling when I was watching first of all it was very
moving especially there's a he he talked about Michelle's mother and how much it
reminded him of his grandmother it was very emotional what I was thinking when
I was watching the speeches we've I think one of the most frustrating and
dispiriting parts of the last decade has been for a lot of people
Voting against Trump stopping Trump at all cost. It's obvious. Of course, you must stop this man
Of course
This person shouldn't be in power and for a lot of people it isn't obvious like it feels like it shouldn't be 50-50
And yet it is and what I really appreciate it about this speech is instead of ringing our
Hands and being like endlessly sort of like why is Trump here? Why is Trump here?
This was a speech about why it was obvious, why it should be obvious, right?
What are the values that he doesn't uphold that if you think about it, if
you're reminded of what you care about, it will become obvious.
This was a speech about making it obvious to people for whom it is not, why
obviously somebody like Trump shouldn't be in power.
And it was an incredibly effective argument for that reason.
I agree with that. That's great.
The I think one thing I just see is being in the room,
because I don't think it came through on TV,
is that there was obviously like uproarious applause at times.
But people, especially when he was talking about the country
and polarization and the kind of country we can be and should be,
the audience was wrapped.
They could not take their eyes off.
It was like a very, very powerful place to be
for that conversation.
It was like he had the audience in his hand.
Just the thing I would say about the speeches,
and this has been true of every Obama speech
dating back to 2004, is that most politicians
and particularly Democrats, particularly in the Trump era,
operate from the assumption that the only things
that keep people from voting for us is ignorance.
And Obama has always understood that people who may not agree with us come at that from
a place of experience and knowledge, and that it is their job to persuade them.
It's not just that we yell our message in their face loud enough to get there, it's
that they have a set of experiences in their lives that may make them feel not immediately
welcome in our party.
It is our job to welcome them in.
And this was true of Michelle Obama's speech,
it's true of Barack Obama's,
is you're starting with a place of persuasion, right?
Everyone is someone we have to persuade.
And if they don't agree with us,
they don't agree with us on everything.
But the reason they don't agree with us
is not because they're wrong or they're stupid
or they don't follow the news or they're ignorant
or they've been hoodwinked or whatever else.
It's that something in their lives
has not worked out the way they wanted
or they just in their life experience
don't agree with us on some things,
and we have to go get them and bring them in.
And that is just such a powerful force,
and it's just so different than I think what we hear a lot
in this era from politicians.
Yeah, I mean, honestly, it brought me back to 2004,
and being on the floor of the DNC in Boston.
And some of that was very purposeful and deliberate.
There were allusions to those lines, like conventions have always been good to, you
know, skinny guy with a funny name was the line in 2004.
But it was also a patriotic story about freedom, about being an American, about things we have
in common, shared hopes, shared dreams.
It was just like a, it's a beautiful vision of America.
And of course, like 2004, you got your policy section
for Kamala, and you got your tough hit on Trump,
like there was a tough hit on Bush back then.
But ultimately, like it was a speech for everyone
about bringing people together.
It was patriotic.
And it was a guy who loves the country
and wants U2 too and wants it to be a little bit better
and thinks we can make it better
if we try to come together again
and get past the last eight to 10 years, basically.
He approaches these speeches like an organizer, because he was an organizer.
And to Dan's point, when he talked about this speech, he was saying, one of the first things
he thought about was towards the end, when he said, like, sometimes we think that winning
is all about, like, out yelling the other side or scolding people or, I mean, this is
what your point, right?
And what we really have to do is actually, actually like go out and listen to people and talk to people and
persuade people and you know give people the grace that we would give our loved
ones if we don't agree with our loved ones and similar to Michelle right you
make political points by talking about relationships and the way that we are
with people that we love and and it's about values,
but not in the consultant value talk.
Talk more about the middle class and optimism.
Just name your values as much as possible.
Right, yeah, but real actual values,
the way you go through life.
And the other thing he really wanted to do
and he did in the Trump section was,
and this has actually been a theme of a lot of the speakers,
which is, you know, Trump has been seen
and talked about as a threat to democracy.
We talked about this last night,
an existential threat to democracy,
which we all believe he is,
but, you know, nine years into this fucking Trump era,
he's also like a clown and a fool
and attacking him that way.
And Julia Louis-Dreyfus talked about this with us
during our interview that you're gonna hear.
It's like the way to like go after the supposed strength
of an autocrat or a strong man is to just make them seem
foolish because they hate getting made fun of.
And he sort of mock Trump and Michelle mock Trump.
And like the, I think mocking Trump while still acknowledging and obama acknowledging the speech too that
He can be dangerous like clowns clowns with a lot of power can still be dangerous. We've all seen it
Exactly. Yeah, we all get it right, but um important point
but you gotta but like
And just like and just like name like the exhaustion the exhaustion of having a person
Who is wants to be a leader,
who is in our lives all the time, who only fucking cares about himself, is only complaining
about himself, whining all the time, and contrasting that with Kamala Harris, who cares about people,
who is like wakes up thinking about people, like that is a powerful contrast.
And it was Biden's contrast as well, right?
It's like a through line from the whole campaign. Yeah, there's something about what Obama is doing up there,
which is he is, he's not saying you're not wrong to be pissed
or that there aren't people that you want to scold
that are frustrating you.
He's saying, it's not the most effective thing.
And being effective is all that matters.
This was a night about being effective,
that the speeches themselves were models
of what it means to be effective and what he is saying in the speeches
this is how you be is Donald Trump a threat to us absolutely but what's the
most the most effective case and you can make and one of the ways that we can be
effective you if you're talking to someone who doesn't think Donald Trump's
a threat right you still need to get their vote and part of what he's saying
is hey we want to be a party people want to join right right? We want to be a place that everybody feels welcome.
Does that mean that people aren't wrong and hold views that we find abhorrent?
Of course it does.
But what is effective?
What is practical?
What brings people in?
And that like, that was just so refreshing.
This was a night about winning.
There has been so much talk over the last month about how the parallels between Kamala Harris 24 and Barack Obama, oh, wait, right,
that just the the pack crowds the energy, but I think like,
just we've known them for a long time. They see those parallels
to not in not in the superficial crowd in way, but just in the
kind of campaign she's running in the kind of politician she is,
right, she is running a fearless campaign where of campaign she's running and the kind of politician she is, right? She is running a fearless campaign
where she knows she's the underdog, right?
Like, do we, it seems like a small thing
for most people out in the world,
but pulling off, going live at your convention
is a situation where one person tripping over a wire
can embarrass the shit out of you on national television
in front of 30 million people
wherever we're watching tonight.
But they did it anyway because they you know
Barack Obama always says if your name is Barack Hussein Obama doesn't matter
what the polls say you're an underdog and if your name is Kamala Harris
same thing you're an underdog and she's running like an underdog and she's also
trying to build a movement that's about people not her right it's like Kamala
Harris for the people Kamala for the people is what or a future for the people. And just there.
And you just I just really felt their
passion for her and what she stands for and the kind of president
she would be in those remarks that they were putting it on the line.
Michelle Obama did not have to speak at this convention.
Yeah, she wanted to.
And it's like in that people are genuinely excited about her
and people are getting involved
and reading about politics who normally
don't pay a lot of attention.
I think we're all probably hearing that in our lives.
What's different than oh wait is look,
I didn't agree with John McCain on a lot of issues,
but if he had been president, I was like,
well, he's a good man.
You know, he's got a core decency to him.
He'll do some things that I think are abhorrent,
but I don't think that he's gonna damage the country.
Donald Trump is an existential threat to the nation, to democracy, and also people are
excited about Kamala Harris.
That's a pretty potent combination.
And the other thing that's similar is that Obama was about turning the page on an era
that had been going on for an overly long time.
It was basically like Bush's running against Democrats for a long time.
And Kamala Harris represents an end
to this nine fucking years of Donald Trump.
Yeah.
And the Democratic Party has not gone forward since Obama.
To his great credit, we went backwards.
Hillary Clinton ran.
And then Biden stepped up and ran.
And we've never hit the post-Obama era.
We've never turned the page unless we've
had almost a decade where every single moment was about Donald Trump and Kamala Harrison
I think the reason people are so excited is there is a promise of something different, right?
And that is what her campaign is not about Trump
It's about her and I think that is very compelling and that's sort of what you heard in some of Obama's remarks tonight
I still think
AOC last night
Doug Emhoff
Barack Obama Michelle Obama all very different people,
some in politics, some not, some different ideological persuasions.
Just shout out Doug, you're in that sentence, man.
Great job.
Incredible.
An entertainment lawyer, also married up, that would be an amazing dinner party.
You would not think there's like a common thread that like binds all those people together,
but they all did something similar with their speeches,
which is like invite people in to this movement,
to this party who may not pay close attention to politics,
may not necessarily be with us.
And all of them are trying to grab people
who just may not necessarily be with us
and to bring them in.
There's a moment where Doug that I really liked where he said, Kamala Harris is a joyful warrior, grab people who just may not necessarily be with us and to bring them in.
There's a moment with Doug that I really liked
where he said Kamala Harris is a joyful warrior,
but just because you're joyful doesn't mean you're a warrior.
She's a warrior.
And there's something about that,
that like the thing Trump does
is throws people off their game
and they're just not being thrown off by Trump.
She's not running away from being joyful.
They're celebrating the laugh.
They're like, it really is a campaign
that also just reflects the lessons of the last nine years.
It's figuring out, it's like,
the Democratic Party has adapted to Trump.
And in Kamala, for the first time,
you really see a campaign that's built around his moves,
that kind of sees ahead of his moves.
Well, and Michelle did a good job foreshadowing to,
at one point, she was like,
and things are gonna get tough, and people are gonna get nervous
She's been there gonna see the polls and you're gonna it's gonna happen like everything's feeling great right now
But times are gonna get tough and when they do keep this feeling keep this work
Go ahead she goes so big but then she also goes real small and it's like you are going to get to work
You're gonna make that call you're gonna give money. You're not gonna whine about got getting touched by the political director
I love it. She's so actionable with her like demands
The last thing I would just say is if you are a democratic politician, you're a speechwriter
You're a wannabe communications director the speeches you just laid out AOC Doug Barack Obama Michelle Obama
Watch those speeches and don't emulate the cadence. Yeah, right. It's not the cadence. There's no copying them, especially since they're all so different.
Yeah.
It is just, look at how they gave the speech,
how the speeches weren't about themselves.
Look at how they told a story.
It's just, look at how they were not trying to go viral.
None of them are trying to go viral.
Right?
No.
It just, it was just.
A lot of Barack Obama stuff, like, in the room,
like you said, it wasn't thunderous applause
because he was thinking about the audience.
It's hard to pick out a moment, too,
because it really is an argument made over the course
of a speech.
It's a lot of amens.
Yeah.
Mind us.
You guys hear the guy last night when Biden was speaking who kept being like, Joe in his
bag.
I love that guy.
It was so funny.
It was so good.
That guy was my favorite.
All right.
Enough of that.
Later in the show, you're going to hear our interview with Julia Louis-Dreyfus, but when
we come back, a really fun conversation with Kamala Harris's good friend
and our senator from California, Lafonza Butler.
And we came away, we're huge fans.
Joining us tonight, fresh off her convention speech here in Chicago, is California's junior
senator, our senator, and a longtime close ally of Kamala Harris, Lafonza Butler. Welcome
to the pod, Senator.
Thank you for having me.
So you've known Kamala Harris for 15 years. A lot of the country is just getting to know
her, even though they know that she's vice president. Can you tell us something about Kamala Harris that not a lot of people know but
should know? I think everybody knows everything so I'm just gonna tell you
everything I know about her. I love that. So look I think she is one of the
funniest fun people that I have ever been around. She is warm in ways that you just couldn't really imagine.
She's had to be an executive in office over and over again
and just to see her with my daughter
and to see her hang out and invite my daughter
over to a pool party at the VP's residence right and show her a good time but also to see her grab the face
of a stranger's kid and tell them how important they are and tell them how
much the country is counting on their leadership. You know to me that's the
the best picture of Kamala Harris that I can give to the American people.
It's a person who's fun and fun loving,
but not afraid to make hard choices
while having a good time.
That's great.
You were to side a lot of the 2020 campaign
as a senior advisor.
What was it like being an advisor to her during that period
and what lessons do you think she learned
from that campaign?
Look, I think that she has learned very much
how to go about introducing herself to the country.
I think that was a critical objective of her 2020 campaign.
I think she did a good job in places
where she was able to sort of dig in and spend some time.
And I think the way that she's been in partnership
with President Biden, giving her the opportunity
to not just travel the country, but travel the world
and really understand how to communicate quickly,
effectively, but yet completely
about particular issues, about herself.
And I think that's an incredible skill
that she has sharpened.
And I think we're all witnessing
the execution of this campaign,
her ability to do that in a stronger way.
Yeah, that's been, I think,
so refreshing and exciting for people.
Even people who were excited about Vice President Harris,
if Bill Biden steps aside being a candidate,
or even people that love her are blown away by how she has just taken on this mantle,
this incredible amount of pressure and performed so well and in such an
authentic way. And it reminded me, I think, you know, we interviewed Kamala
Harris back in 2017, 2018, and an incredible like person on stage. Was
there some recognition that I think during that 2020 campaign,
whether it was not talking about being a prosecutor or all this sort of politics around
lanes and all the rest, like is there a lesson there about what not to do about how to
disregard criticism or what do you think? Look I think there's you know in a crowded primary field
Look, I think there's, you know, in a crowded primary field, I think that experience was probably one that, you know, maybe will be unique for that period of time.
And we had, you know, such qualified, extraordinary candidates in that primary.
Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Cory Booker, it was really the best of the best uh... of the of the bench of the democratic party
uh... and i think all of them were trying to figure out you know how how
best do i make the strongest impression
uh... possible and i think truly the lesson for
so many of us they were on that campaign is just
forget about all of that.
It is just be who you are, show up as authentically as possible, but with clear passion about
what it is that you care about and a vision to communicate to the American people and
let the chips fall where they may.
And so I think what we see in this, in the execution of this campaign, but frankly, I
think throughout the vice president's president, vice presidency in service with with President
Biden, like since Dobbs and that Dobbs decision, she has just decided that there's so much
at stake that she's not going to get it perfectly every time, but she's going to get it right
every time because she's going to show up and be who she is
and talk directly to the American people.
And that's, to me, the exciting part about where we are.
So Joe Biden did something pretty rare in politics.
He chose to voluntarily give up the chance to stay in power.
You did the same thing when you chose not to seek reelection.
How did you come to that decision?
You know, it's interesting. I became a United States senator in 48 hours.
Senator Feinstein passed away late Thursday, early Friday morning. The governor, Governor
Gavin Newsom, really had to figure out what his options were, and I think he spent a lot of time doing that on Friday.
I got into conversation with him late Saturday.
My family and I were on a trip in Colorado and were flying back on Sunday when the news
broke and my mom found out the same way that everybody else did, that I was going to be
a United States Senator. And I literally was sworn in on Tuesday morning,
October 3rd.
And so for me to be able to have the time to think about
how do I serve my country and my state in this
unprecedented and unpredicted moment is different from do I want to spend my life doing this.
And in order to really, I think, show up as the kind of senator that Californians deserve,
it's got to be somebody who knows that this is what they want to spend their life doing. And for me, it was, I have a nine-year-old daughter,
she's gonna be 10 in two weeks.
The commitment that I had already made
was that I was gonna be the best mom for her.
And I had already made a commitment.
And after going across California and really assessing,
could I raise the money?
Could I get the endorsements?
Could I change the playing field by taking endorsements away
from folks who are already in the race?
The answer to that was yes.
And I knew that to be true.
And so the question had to just become,
is it something that I wanted to do?
And I didn't.
And so I didn't.
That's interesting. You really thought about it. You got into it.
Oh no, I did the work. I got into it.
I could tell you where the money was going to come from.
I could tell you what endorsements I was going to take. Yeah.
I did the work. I considered it.
I was clear with Governor Newsom. I would not accept the appointment if I couldn't.
If it was his expectation expectation that I wouldn't.
Because people thought that, right?
They thought there was some sort of a deal.
I understand that, but that's
because they hadn't met me yet.
Yeah.
It's not the kind of game I play, it's not how I roll.
If I'm gonna do something, I'm gonna do it my way.
And I think the governor appreciated that.
You've been in politics for a long time, activist, organizer, advisor, having been in the Senate
and been in an elected capacity, what did you learn about politics being in Washington
that you didn't already know from your long career in politics?
You know, it's a great question and I spent a lot of time in my career adjacent to politics. I'd always sort of figured that I was just a step or two removed from those in the seat
having to make the decision, but having the influence to be able to persuade, engage,
communicate effectively with those who are making the decision.
So now being the person that gets persuaded and engaged
and communicated to effectively,
definitely changes the dynamic,
but it has helped me to appreciate
what I think is a fundamental element
that we need to develop our muscle in,
and that is the partnership between the advocacy community and
committed
elected leaders we see those old photos of Reverend Martin Luther King jr. Sitting in the president's office
and in negotiation and conversation with folks around the March on Washington
Those are conversations those photos captured the
kinds of relationships necessary to produce the Civil Rights Act and the
Voting Rights Act and the Housing Rights Act. And so I think that we've got to
figure out how we bring more strategic collaboration between the advocacy
community as well as the elected officials.
And that's the thing that actually made it,
has become more real for me being in the seat.
Is there something, is there something you think advocates,
is something you came to understand that you realized,
oh, this is something advocates are getting wrong
or something you wish they understood
now that you've been in this seat?
I think at the end of the day, it's about power, right?
Like getting to the outcomes that we want to achieve
is about assessing, do I have enough power?
Do we collectively have enough power to get there?
And what I would love for our advocate community
and being a part of it, I put this on myself as well,
is that we spend a lot of time talking
to the elected officials who we know are on our side.
And we don't spend enough time building our power with the folks who need to be persuaded. So does that make us think about our coalition formation differently in order to actually
move the needle and get the next three votes that we need to? Do we change who goes to
the meeting? Do you know adjust our
Messaging a bit and so not just spending so much time with the folks who are with us
But actually doing the hard work to figure out how we find common ground with those who might not naturally be with us
That's a it's a great lesson to learn I think for all of us
Senator Lafonza Butler. Thank you so much for coming on Pod Save America,
and thanks for being our senator.
Thank you for having me.
You gonna run for something else?
I am not.
That's a shame. Are you sure?
I am not running for anything else right now.
Oh, I like that right now.
Just gonna go be a mom for a while.
I am.
Great.
Thank you all so much.
Okay, we're about to go to break, when we come back you're gonna hear our conversation
with Julie Louis-Dreyfus, but before we do that, I want to call your attention to a moment
from Kamala Harris' event in Milwaukee tonight.
No, no, we haven't already won.
77 days of work to do, my friends.
Someone in the crowd said you've already won.
Like it's a fucking participation trope.
Was it Michael J. Fox from the future?
I hope so.
To her point, we haven't already won.
That's our job. We got to do the work.
That's why we're very excited to announce that Vote Save America has set a big goal.
As we mentioned, 75,000 volunteer signups for their 2024 Organizer
Else program by September 17th, National Voter Registration Day. Vote Save America is the
absolute best at providing the highest impact ways you can take action right now to support
down ballot races in must-win districts and build momentum for the Harris Walls ticket.
So we got currently 40,000 volunteers in the program, which means ambitious goal, very necessary, but only achievable
with you.
So, go to vote save America dot com slash twenty twenty four to sign up.
This message has been paid for by vote save America.
You can learn more at vote save America dot com.
And this ad has not been authorized by any candidate or candidates committee.
When we come back, Julia Louis Dreyfus.
Welcome back to Pod Save America, Julia Louis-Dreyfus. Yes, thank you for welcoming me back.
It's good to have you back.
What are you doing here in Chicago at the convention?
I just happened to be here and I thought I'd pop in. It's a great town. I actually went
to college here.
You did?
Yes.
Where'd you go to school?
Northwestern.
Oh, nice.
Yes. I'm here because I am a tried and true Democrat, number one. And I came specifically
for a few events, including I am hosting a panel of all the
eight Democratic female governors. I'm doing that
I guess today this afternoon is how it's
this should I should say it and the link is in my bio you guys are gonna put the
link because you can
live stream it and it should be hopefully
I mean you know to
be honest with you I hope it goes well but it's eight people. What are you guys
gonna be talking about? I don't know. Are you asking them all questions? Yeah.
Okay. And so I've got a list of things you know by the way they have this
complete you may know this already but you know they have this camaraderie
they've got a text chain going they're're all, it's a real. That sounds like a fun text chain. It actually does, right?
And so they're a very close group.
And so I think it's gonna be interesting to hear
what leadership is like from their point of view.
That's great.
Yeah, I think maybe you start out
by really insulting Kathy Hochul
so that the rest know to be afraid of you.
Or come to her defense.
And then we see the sort of the connection of the group in action.
Or divide them, whichever.
Or divide, yeah.
Well, that'll be easy, because it's women.
It's easy to ruffle up women.
This is not your first foray into politics.
You've been really involved in the last several years
in the Trump era.
How did you?
Pre-Trump, too, by the way.
Pre-Trump, too.
How did you make the decision to like be active in
politics which is sometimes tricky for a celebrity of your status? You know what? I had this feeling
that if I didn't I would feel guilty. So I had a feeling of responsibility and I never ever ever
ever purport to be an expert on the issues cuz i an't
but what i do try to do is shine the spotlight on people that i think
should have a spotlight on them
uh... and uh...
and i'm very focused this election too on uh...
multiple down ballot races
so uh... i'm doing a lot of
work to
raise awareness of various state legislature races and so on in various states
Because you know sometimes raising funds or an awareness for those
Smaller as it were campaigns not so small anymore in the sense that state legislatures have so much power and authority and
and I think it's
so much power and authority. And I think it's, you know,
a few hundred dollars can go a very long way
in races like that.
Do you ever find, because there are plenty of people
that aren't willing to do that.
They're just like, I stay out of politics.
I don't want people to know what I think about politics.
I don't want to be involved.
I understand that.
Do you like, do you ever talk to people who feel that way
and try to persuade them that they actually should,
that it's worth it? Do you have any regrets about doing it ever talk to people who feel that way and try to persuade them that they actually should, that it's worth it?
Do you have any regrets about doing it?
Talking to people about that.
We're just like, do you ever, are there any downsides?
Have you felt downsides to becoming active in politics?
Cause there are plenty of famous people who could be shining a light on issues
who decide not to.
Oh gosh, that's a good question.
I, um, no, I don't think speaking for myself, there hasn't been a downside for me. I just, I do feel frustrated sometimes
with certain people that I know who don't sort of,
I don't know, use their celebrity for good.
You know, I've said this before,
but I'm quoting Norman Lear.
He used to say, celebrity is something you can spend.
And you know, you can spend too much of it.
You can in fact and so one has to be careful and thoughtful about
where you choose to spend it and I choose to spend it in this way. Yeah.
So what do you think of the switch? The big switch?
Is it going to be a Biden convention? Now it's a Harris convention?
Well I have to say first of all it was absolutely the right thing to do.
I'm delighted that it happened.
It really, in my view, absolutely cements Biden's legacy
as a hero and in American history.
This is just an extraordinary moment in politics.
I just cannot get over what's happened.
I know.
It's such a short period of time.
I am so excited.
I really am.
It's a strange feeling.
It's a strange feeling.
Yeah.
And isn't it fascinating how they have just tripled down on joy and light?
It is.
And please, Tim Walls.
Tim Walls. Oh, and the fact that he has taken he's he's how can we say this he has burst the bully bubble by not empowering him even though
should Trump be reelected please may it not happen
that would be a terrible thing but he is letting others know that we mustn't be
afraid we must approach this with strength and humor we should laugh at
this guy and it really bothers him when we do and it kind of takes his power away from him
It's like it's just good old-fashioned handling a bully tactics. I was gonna ask you about that cuz so
Your character on Veep, Salina Meyer, bully, found herself in an almost identical situation to Kamala Harris
But she has the personality of Trump
Or more like Trump at least so So like, do you have-
Much more like Trump.
Do you have advice for Kamala Harris
on how to approach Trump?
And you think that the mockery is,
and humor is a good way to approach it?
Well, I mean, she's obviously found her voice
in her authentic voice.
I mean, that is in evidence, I think.
I don't know if you guys agree with that.
Yes, for sure.
I mean, it is completely,
I feel like she's found herself in front of our eyes and as far as presenting herself and very
really and honestly we can tell this is who she is when she speaks and she takes him very seriously but she also takes his behavior not seriously
and I think that's important she does both at the same time.
So I want to ask you about your career just a little bit.
Okay. That's okay? Yeah sure.
It's not that interesting though. Oh I think it is.
Well anyway I was going to talk about our plane ride.
Oh yes.
We were on the same flight coming here.
I heard, I just got Tony Goldman.
He got you.
He got me and we were almost diverted to Milwaukee.
Milwaukee because of Air Force One landings.
Yeah.
Joe, Cline.
Joe, Biden, my God.
We were almost Trump voters by the time we landed.
Then we got drinks.
I was very jealous when I heard this.
I know.
I thought we were going to be renting a car and driving from Milwaukee to Chicago together.
That would have been a dream come true.
It would have been really good.
So you've led multiple hit shows.
Uh-huh.
Not a lot of people can say that.
Okay.
Okay, keep going.
Okay.
So there's a lot of people that they're incredibly funny in one time and place.
Yeah.
They don't really evolve.
They get kind of stuck.
How have you thought about staying curious about evolving as a performer even in different
times?
Just, you know, sign belt and be as big as it can get, completely different styles, completely
different tones.
Yeah.
Well, at the risk of sounding like an...
Can you swear on this show? Oh, yeah.
Like an asshole artist type.
I have never approached my career by thinking of it like that.
I approach it by...
I mean, I really like to work
and I get very excited by material
that provokes me and in a good way. And so that's been the driver. And then I've just
lucked out. But I mean that has been the driver. There are certain pitfalls to show business
that I think I haven't fallen prey to.
Like what?
The celebrity stuff.
There's a kind of success that you can't really focus on because it'll fuck you up.
It really will.
I think it's really about material at the end of the day.
And by the way, some things haven't worked out,
but I don't have regrets about any of that.
And by the way, when I say haven't worked out,
I mean, haven't been huge hits, but that's okay,
because I have had a really good time
playing all sorts of different things.
Well, the reason I was thinking about it is because like,
so JD Vance says, I love Diet Mountain Dew,
and I think that's disgusting.
Yeah. You're gross.
Yeah.
Then Tim Walz says, I love Diet Mountain Dew,
and I think I should try Diet Mountain Dew.
Okay, that's fascinating.
Well, it's because he has like charisma.
Again, of course there's a policy difference,
but like Tim Walz is charming.
He has it.
He's disarmingly charming.
Yes.
And I think a lot of times we try to make politics objective,
but sometimes some people have it
and some people don't have it.
Correct.
You have it.
Thank you.
You do, but like you're beloved.
I'm not running for office.
I'm not running for office.
You've played some of the biggest jerks.
You've played beloved characters,
but the same thing
that carries them together is you have this charm, this charisma.
What is it?
What is it?
John, come on!
No, I want to know.
What is it?
Tim Walz has it, you have it, Kamala has it, some people don't.
Ted Cruz doesn't have it.
What the fuck is it?
I can't, I think maybe they are, sort of to what I said earlier. I think
there's an authenticity in place. I think you're aware of the fact that JD
Vance is not telling the truth about himself and that you're picking up on
that. Same is true of Cruz, same is true of Kevin McCarthy, all of these guys.
There is a, and by the way, we can differ on policy.
There are Republicans that are affable and charming.
They are, there are.
But there is a, people can smell a fake, I think.
Veep is one of the greatest shows ever,
one of the greatest characters ever.
Like we are watching it again, my wife and I,
like for the fifth time, it's like up 350% now,
the number of people who are watching it now
because of the situation we're all in.
It really is timeless.
Like a lot of political shows tend to sort of,
they age differently and I'm just wondering, like what what did Veep because I also think that it's like the most accurate portrayal of
The White House and politics of any political show. What did it teach you about politics?
well
You came and spoke to our our writers
Yeah, because we had a lot of people come in who were in the weeds as it were and
talked to us about that experience.
You know, it was just a reminder, which is both good and bad, that these are really honestly
just people like you and I are sitting here, just people who, you know, wake up, have their
coffee, go to the bathroom, you know, do everyday normal people things
and they just happen to be in positions of government.
And it's really that simple.
And sometimes it fucks you up.
And sometimes it fucks you up.
Sometimes it brings out the worst in you.
And sometimes it brings out the best in you.
So it doesn't, it certainly,
one thing that was great about doing the show
is that it gave us access to sort of inside politics
in a way that was super interesting.
And I'm a kind of a nerd for that. I love it.
But you did get to meet people who were very well-intentioned and well-meaning.
Both sides of the aisle. I really mean that.
And so, yeah, it was an extraordinary opportunity to meet people really trying to
make the world a better place. Like really trying to make, to do the right thing. And
that can be very inspiring.
Yeah. Julie Dreyfus, thank you as always for coming on Paz de America.
That was quick. Hey, it's my pleasure.
So good to see you.
It's so good to see you too.
Good luck with all the governors tomorrow. Oh, what should I ask them for reals? Oh, that's my pleasure. So good to see him. It's so good to see you too. Good luck with all the governors tomorrow Oh god, which I asked him for reals. That's a good question. Yeah, come on guys. Just give me a little something ask them
Give ask them to all give it given have them give a little advice to Kamala
Because they're all gonna be very messy. Right every governor. They're gonna they're gonna get their talking points out, which is great
That's their job. Yeah, but they're not all yes, but they're not running. I don't think anybody's on the
ballot. And so I, I'm hopeful that maybe we can avoid some of that, but I don't know.
Some of them, some of these governors are from states where they've been able to protect
abortion access. And some of them are from governors from states where they haven't been
able to. And in the states where we there are states we need to win where like say Gretchen Whitmer has done an incredible job of making
sure that abortion access is protected. But we need abortion to be salient for
those voters right? And we found it like in states where California or New York
people didn't feel like it was as much of a threat. How do they think about
making sure people understand the threat Trump poses on abortion when they're
working so hard to protect abortion access for their people.
Right. Or they have a red legislature and they're dealing with... Yes, exactly.
Oh, I go into...
What?
There has become... There's a huge gender gap opening up in this election. There's a
gender gap opening up even larger in Gen Z. So these younger voters, like there's young
men are becoming more Republican. But people like Gretchen Whitmer, people like Maura Healey,
they're like governors in states where they have won,
like there hasn't been as big of a gender gap
and they've been like really appealing
to like both men and women.
And I think like talking about sort of the gender split
there is kind of interesting to see how they deal with it.
Cause Gretchen Whitmer is like beloved in Michigan.
So like wins by overwhelming margins.
Rural areas, cities, everywhere.
So it's kind of interesting to know what her secret is.
Well, I think to what we were discussing earlier,
I think they really pick up on her authenticity.
I just read her book when we were on our plane, by the way,
and it's actually a really interesting read,
and it's very digestible.
Can I tell you something that I was embarrassed of
on our plane ride?
You were watching The Real Housewives.
No, I was watching, I looked over
and you were reading a physical book, a physical book,
and I was like, I have to take out my iPad
and watch House of the Dragon.
And I was trying to hide my screen,
and then finally your husband took out an iPad,
and I was like, oh, thank God.
Please don't read a book.
Please don't read a book.
And he didn't.
He watched something.
And I was like, fuck it.
We can watch TV.
I don't have to feel embarrassed about watching this bad reboot.
I can be myself.
Have a cocktail.
Yeah, that's right.
All right, awesome.
Thank you for coming on.
Thank you.
It was really nice to see you guys. That's right. All right, awesome. Thank you for coming on. Thank you. Good luck tomorrow.
It was really nice to see you guys.
That's our show for tonight, but we've got more from the DNC for our Friends of the Pod
subscribers.
Lovett and I answered some of your questions, did some behind the scenes, and played take
appreciators.
If you're a subscriber, these segments should be showing up as a separate episode in your
Pod Save America feed.
If you aren't a subscriber, head to crooked.com slash
friends or sign up through the Apple podcast app. See you all tomorrow.
If you want to get ad free episodes, exclusive content and more, consider
joining our friends at the pod subscription community at crooked.com
slash friends. And if you're already doom scrolling, don't forget to
follow us at pod save America on Instagram, Twitter and YouTube for
access to full episodes, bonus content, and more.
Plus, if you're as opinionated as we are, consider dropping us a review to help boost
this episode, or spice up the group chat by sharing it with friends, family, or randos
you want in on this conversation.
Podsave America is a Crooked Media production.
Our producer is David Toledo.
Our associate producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safari.
Reed Cherlin is our executive editor and Adrian Hill is our executive producer.
The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer with audio support from Kyle Seguin and Charlotte Landis.
Writing support by Hallie Kiefer.
Madeleine Herringer is our head of news and programming.
Matt DeGroote is our head of production.
Andy Taft is our executive assistant.
Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn,
Hayley Jones, Phoebe Bradford, Joseph Dutra,
Ben Hefkoat, Mia Kelman, Molly Lobel,
Kiro Pellavive, and David Toles.
Okay.