Pod Save America - Other Than That Ms. Boebert, How Was The Play?
Episode Date: September 19, 2023The right dials up the heat on Donald Trump as he continues to make potentially incriminating statements. Republicans inch closer to a government shutdown. Mitt Romney takes his Senate exit stage left.... Then, Michigan Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin joins the show to discuss the United Auto Workers' strike and her campaign for Senate. And Lauren Boebert is on an "apology tour" after the groping and vaping episode that got her booted from a performance of "Beetlejuice."For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett, and I never think about the Roman Empire.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
On today's pod, Trump gets hit from the right, Republicans inch closer to a government shutdown,
Congresswoman Alyssa Slotkin joins to talk about the politics of the UAW strike and a race for Senate,
Mitt Romney says goodbye to the Senate and good riddance to the Republican Party,
and local theater enthusiast Lauren Boebert apologizes for the lewd behavior that got her kicked out of Beetlejuice. What a sentence. What a sentence. But first, Jack Smith is now asking Judge Chukin to
impose a gag order on Donald Trump to protect witnesses from his attacks. But that unsurprisingly
hasn't stopped the Republican frontrunner from saying all kinds of crazy shit over the last few
days, including during his first network television interview since his attempted coup. What a milestone. What a milestone. In Trump's Meet
the Press sit down with new host Kristen Welker, he talked about banning abortion,
pardoning insurrectionists and his criminal charges in a way that will certainly make
life more difficult for him and his lawyers. Let's listen. I mean, DeSantis is willing to
sign a five week and six week ban. Would you
support that? You think that I think what he did is a terrible thing and a terrible mistake.
And Republicans should go out and say the following because I think the Republicans speak
very inarticulately about this subject. Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio was sentenced to 22 years in jail. Now that you know what the sentence is, 22 years in jail, will you give him a pardon?
Will you give other Proud Boys a pardon?
I do.
Will you pardon him?
In Minneapolis, I'd certainly look at it.
I'd look at that, and I'd look at all the other people that have suffered, the J6 people.
Were you calling the shots, though, Mr. President, ultimately?
As to whether or not I believed it was rigged?
Oh, sure.
It was my decision.
Are you saying you needed those votes in order to win?
Are you acknowledging you didn't win?
I'm not acknowledging.
No, I say I won the election.
That's what I say.
Why do you think so many legal experts are saying that Trump's comments may have
made his case harder to win?
What kind of trouble might he have gotten himself in there?
I think they want retweets.
I think part of it.
That's a very good point, yeah.
You did talk to Larry Tribe last week, though.
Reposts, reposts.
Oh, they're sorry, they're reposts.
They're rethreads.
Oh, back to your question.
Do you want to answer it?
I can say it.
Two things.
That's my question.
No, I was pointing it in to answer your question.
Sure, sure, whatever.
Listen, the point is,
people like Lawrence Tribe, Neil Katyal, are pointing out that basically one of trump's big defenses is going to
be like my lawyers were giving me advice he's saying i wasn't taking that advice then andrew
weissman friend of the show so then on top of that he says also during the interview basically
something like at 10 p.m i said stop counting the votes and that's that's a no-no it's a big no-no
uh which he has said before but you but reiterating it after you've been charged
is not great.
No, it's an election no-no.
You're right.
Look, I'm famously not a lawyer.
I will say, if you go back,
if you look at these,
it's clear what Trump is trying to say to her,
not in a snide way,
but in a kind of smarty-pants way,
is, well, the thing that I thought,
yeah, I was in charge of thinking that.
It seems to me, if you actually look at it, what he was doing. Yeah, he's just... The other thing that's interesting is, well, the thing that I thought, yeah, I was in charge of thinking that. It seems to be,
if you actually look at it, what he was doing. Yeah, he's just, the other thing that's interesting
is, you know, the judge is looking at whether there should be a gag order. I'd imagine saying
that I hope Mark Meadows is still loyal. Oh, yeah. That can't help. Don't forget about that.
Yeah, that was not good. And also, I think he also called Jack Smith deranged again,
because the gag order is supposed to protect, first and foremost, the witnesses, supposed to prevent the jury pool from being tainted, but it's also
supposed to protect the prosecutors and the judge from attacks, which he's been leveling.
There's something funny about the way Welker asked the questions, not actually a criticism
of the questions, but it's just sort of the world we live in when people interview Trump,
which is a lot of the questions were like that experiment where you put one marshmallow in front
of a kid and say, if you don't eat it, you get two later.
Because they're like, hey, you think Mark Meadows is loyal?
Hey, would you interfere with the Fed?
Hey, would you tell the DOJ what to do?
Come on.
Would you?
There's a little like he's being tempted by the questions.
Dated.
Yeah, which is where she was getting at when she got him to say, I listened to myself.
It was my choice.
She put the word loyal in his mouth too oh for
the mark she's like do you think he was loyal yes and also i do think though he's the whole
context of the remarks right the full set of remarks he's like he basically said that she's
like oh you listen you you called some of these people crazy some of their theories like sydney
powell like why'd you listen to them and he's like well why didn't you listen to your like
campaign lawyers and your white house lawyers he said, every lawyer who told me it wasn't rigged
is a rhino.
Yeah, he called them all rhinos.
Which doesn't really,
that doesn't help your defensive counsel.
Doesn't seem like it does, no.
Your advice of counsel defense.
He also said he'd testify in the classified documents case,
which he always says he's going to testify and then doesn't.
He told Megyn Kelly in his interview with her last week
that he was
allowed to steal the classified documents and that he doesn't think he had to comply with the federal
subpoena. She's like, well, but you get a subpoena for the documents. And then, of course, you have
to go. No, I don't know that's true because I had a right to have those documents, which is also not
a great, not going to help his defense either. Yeah, I felt on the whole, I see the point that he's sort of, I found this all to be
quite incremental.
Like there's a lot of what he is saying is a different phrasing or reiteration of the
kinds of things that were already in some of the indictment documents anyway.
But yeah.
The classified documents discussion was frustrating, but interesting on Megyn Kelly's show because he repeatedly says
that the Presidential Record Act
governs his stealing classified
documents. It absolutely doesn't.
It just doesn't. It's one of those things where he says
it so often and he says it with such conviction
and he just steamrolls over it anyway.
If you stop to think about it for even one second
you realize how stupid and inane it is.
The way the law works isn't
if you don't break one
law you can't break the others you know it's all it's not like right you know it doesn't really
make sense at all no sense and then megan didn't push back on that at all but she was like look i
was a lawyer for a very long time if you get a subpoena you have to turn over the stuff and he's
like i know that i don't know that he like he contradicted himself in the same sentence because
his little legal brain turned on yeah i don't i think that was very damaging because remember the defense on the subpoena is oh no no we gave you everything what
are you talking about we didn't it wasn't it wasn't oh you sent me a subpoena and i said fuck
you which is basically what he just said to me kelly i didn't but he said no because well he's
saying i didn't have to do i'm he what he's saying both about that he's i don't know if he's confusing
it uh or i'm confusing it or there's no way to not confuse it but's saying both about the, he's, I don't know if he's confusing it or I'm confusing it or
there's no way to not confuse it, but he
talks about the documents the
same way he talks about the footage, which is, I
didn't have to give you anything. I did it to be nice. I gave
you everything you asked for and I didn't even have to.
He's sort of taking every position.
He's saying they're my documents. I didn't have to give
them to you, but I gave them all to you and I didn't
try to delete the footage, but we didn't
delete the footage. So everyone just be happy. you're saying he didn't have to comply with a
federal subpoena which you just can't say sure yeah if you're it's not debatable if you're uh
if you've been charged with obstruction of justice for not complying with a federal subpoena
can't say it well okay uh i'll tell you something i'll tell you for someone who can't say something
he certainly said well that's why that's why he got in trouble.
No, no gag order from my president.
That's why I think Jack Smith's probably pretty happy.
So let's talk about the abortion comments. He certainly seemed like there and other places he's pivoting to a general election message on abortion.
Can that work for the guy who also takes credit for eliminating the constitutional right to an abortion, Tommy?
I don't think so. I mean, let's just talk about the polling. So he was criticizing Ron DeSantis
in the clip we heard for signing into law a six-week abortion ban. 73% of all U.S. adults
believe abortion should be allowed up to six weeks of pregnancy. 56% of Republicans say abortion
should be allowed in their state up to six weeks. So the DeSantis position is wildly unpopular in the Republican Party. I don't think, though, that Trump is going to be
able to fool anybody on abortion. He's wisely, I think, not taking the bait in the primary.
But everyone knows his judges are the ones who overturned Roe versus Wade. He brags about it
in front of evangelical audiences. In the past, he said that women should be punished for getting
an abortion. I just don't buy that anyone's gonna be fooled by this yeah he kind of like sort of
lumbers into this issue and he treats it like negotiating over the price of marble you know
it's like six weeks is crazy seven months is crazy we'll get together we'll find a number
where everybody walks away happy which is of course, not the way this issue works.
No. Well, it's in response to the polling that a lot of Republicans will hang on to forever,
even though I don't really agree with this, is that, you know, if you ask people late term,
right, and, you know, we've all said a million times abortions late in pregnancy are extremely
rare. Usually they're because of medical complications, et cetera, et cetera.
But if you just pull the question without people having a base of knowledge, you'll have people say, oh, well, we don't want late term abortion.
So he's heard that from Republican pollsters and he thinks he's going to get some kind of middle position here.
I worry a little bit that it could work unless Democrats constantly remind people about what Tommy just
said, which is that he said that women should be punished for having abortions. And then, of course,
that he's out there bragging about appointing the three justices that overturned Roe v. Wade
and Dobbs. And I think that's why the Biden campaign in one of their first ads basically
has him saying both of those things in an ad they have with the rest of the republicans too but like democrats joe biden with ads with speeches have to keep hammering it because no
one remembers anything in this fucking country yeah that's the like i i do think he and he's
trying to like you know it was the same thing in in 2016 when he sort of danced around and tried to
make himself seem moderate on lgbtq issues which of course he was not. Same thing on like,
I'm not going to be a warmonger, right? We have the collective memory of a goldfish in this country.
That is absolutely true. I just think that the people who have been turning out in record numbers
at the midterms know exactly where he stands on abortion rights are not going to be fooled by this
at all. And I think the challenge, you know, the thing that people are frustrated about in this
interview is him saying Democrats want to abort babies after they're born, which is not a thing that ever happens in the world.
Or acting like late term abortions or something that Democrats want or, you know, just sort of a decision that's made by choice when the reality you hear the specifics and it's people were like, I had twins.
One of the twins died.
The other wasn't viable because their organs were growing outside of their body.
The baby would have died the minute they were born. That's why I had a late-term
abortion. That's the reality of why these exceptions exist that people have to better
understand or be educated on. Yes. We've got to make that case. Of course we do. I just think
it's the easiest ad ever. He bragged about all of this. He's talked about women getting punished.
it's the easiest ad ever like he's bragged about all of this he's talked about women getting punished i also think the people who i think the people who turned out in the midterms are turned
out especially around this issue when it was on the ballot when it was it was fresh it was in those
states also these were like more highly college educated people i think those people are certainly
not going to forget trump's position on this but you have a general electorate people who didn't
vote in the midterm and they are potentially pro-choice and trump's up there on a debate with biden or whatever and says you know
what yeah we return it to the states and now the states get to do what they will and stuff like
that well let's just put i'm not going to do anything let's just put this behind us i'm not
going to do anything as like you can just see the bullshit space yeah this he is benefiting from the
fact that a but that these guys that every other person in the field has taken an extreme and radical and deeply unpopular position on abortion.
And just by dint of that, if you were just paying attention, he is trying to and seeming reasonable on the issue.
Across this whole interview, he is trying to seem reasonable on a number of issues.
And because Ron DeSantis signed a six-week ban, because Mike Pence is calling for a national ban, he gets to he gets to sound like this. I think that the part of it
where he's dodging, right, he's like, oh, you know, we're going to come together and make a
great deal. The reality is that if whatever, if there was a Republican Congress, they will pass
a ban and Trump would sign that. Yes. And that's and that is the Democrats just have to keep saying
over and over. And he's like state ban, federal ban. I don't know.
He won't.
Yes, he's he's he's talking about it like he's he's negotiating over a price.
And look, the upside of this is he's doing this and he's trying to wriggle out of this position because he knows how politically damaging it is.
And because he's acting like a general election candidate because he's not afraid of any of these people.
And he believes, probably correctly,
that this will have no impact on the fact
that he is winning amongst the furthest right,
most religiously conservative Republicans
that will vote in Iowa.
Trump's been getting more criticism than usual
from right-wing pundits and his Republican opponents.
The DeSantis campaign just attacked him in a tweet
for a long list of what they see as gaffes,
including denouncing the six-week abortion ban,
promising to compromise with Democrats on abortion,
struggling to answer Megyn Kelly's questions about,
as she put it, whether a man can become a woman.
And she asked him why he gave an award to Dr. Fauci
right before he left office.
And the DeSantis campaign also criticized him for sounding a bit senile during his Saturday speech in D.C.
Let's listen.
As you know, Crooker Joe Biden and the radical left thugs who have weaponized law enforcement to arrest their leading political opponent, leading by a lot, including Obama.
I'll tell you what, you take a look at Obama and take a look at some of the things that he's done. This is the same thing. The country
is very divided. And we did with Obama. We won an election that everyone said couldn't be won.
We have a man who is totally corrupt and the worst president in the history of our country,
who is cognitively impaired impaired in no condition to lead
and is now in charge of dealing with russia and possible nuclear war just think of it
we would be in world war ii very quickly yes world war ii world war ii put that put that in an ad let's get it out come on
let's get it out there but he's old too enough with the issues put that in sick of the issues
sick of he's crazy he's a crazy old man he's so old he sounded like a guy who'd taken a painkiller
and was feeling the effects that's what it sounded like to me hey when you get some deflation training
for time when you're about to lie allegedly you believe again, that's all you have to say. You believe
when you're going to launch an attack on your opponent for being senile, you shouldn't sound
like that. You shouldn't talk about World War II. World War II did happen. I believe
use him for Barack Obama, then confuse Hillary Clinton for Barack Obama.
I would say this. I look, I know we're in the middle of a, of our, uh middle of yet another freak out about how old Biden is. And every day it gets a little bit older,
and it's a problem. But I just would like to point out that nobody is doing a better job
saying that Biden isn't too old than Donald Trump. Because in that interview with Welker, he says,
so Welker says, is it time for a new generation? He goes, well, it's always time for a new
generation. But you know, some of the greatest world leaders have been in their 80s. I'm not
anyone very near 80. But by the way, and Biden's not too old i don't think biden's too
old put that in the ad too fascinating if he can say it why can't you say it just say it um
speechwriters though having a dude there like doing some live synth giving you vibes
fantastic i want yeah it's an innovation i want you to know that i have come i would do that
during the state of the Union.
I have been predicting music for speeches for a long time.
Sam, if you're listening to this,
send me a text so I can screenshot it.
Who's Sam?
Who's Sam?
Someone I went to college with.
Uncle Sam?
He's just a person.
I know that.
I just figured you should.
Ryan, call me after this.
Oh, that's my friend Ryan.
He's a composer.
What the fuck are you talking about?
What do you use this pod for?
You don't use it to talk to your friends.
Sometimes I use it for...
That's what I'm using it for today.
Okay.
Minor chords, major chords at the end.
Beautiful.
I think an innovation would be
during the State of the Union,
an intermission between
the domestic policy section
and the foreign policy section.
You just play a little music.
Yes. Some snacks. When we come back, I'll take a tour I love that idea. You just play a little music. Get some popcorn. Yes.
Some snacks.
When we come back, I'll take a tour through all seven continents.
You get a real bar?
Do we think any of these attacks have the potential to hurt Trump in the primary?
I just think-
And I will say that for any of them to make any difference, probably it needs to be more
than a tweet from a random staffer if you're Ron DeSantis.
But beyond that,
do you think the message is sorry to go ahead? No, no, no. I mean, I just my take on this is
they haven't so far. And, you know, maybe now you could argue, well, it's mid-September. People are
paying more attention. The evangelicals in Iowa are waking up to the fact that Donald Trump isn't
with them on the six week abortion ban. But I think they all like Trump and they think he will
implement their agenda. And I don't know. Yeah, I think they are also I think these other Republicans are paying for what really is going
to be an advantage. You know, we were talking before the show that like the Lauren Boebert
clip, not on Fox, right? Donald Trump seeming to like if if Joe Biden has a moment like that,
it's all of a right wing media. Those are not the moments they take out. And I would just say like
watching Trump with Welker, he was fucking on it he was sharp he was responsive he
like he just he was like as strong look he's obviously fucking cuckoo and you look at the
you look at the transcripts you can barely make sense but as a as like the sharp version of him
the most sharp we've seen it was there so and i i've been noticing this. He was better. He's been better and sharper with mainstream journalists,
with Caitlin Collins during the CNN town hall,
and now with Kristen Wilker on Meet the Press,
than he's been with his pals in the right-wing media.
He sounded like fucking nuts on the Tucker Carlson interview,
and he sounded really bad with Megyn Kelly.
Because he gets to fight them.
He gets to fight the mainstream media.
And Tucker's over there being like, but again, Epstein.
Killed himself?
No?
I'm trying to pin you down here.
And he's like, what the fuck are you talking about?
And I think he wasn't expecting Megyn Kelly to be as tough as she was with him.
Yeah, she did a pretty good job.
He made a couple oblique references to the debate question that led to her eventual ouster from Fox.
So, you know, I feel like there was a sword hanging over the whole time you know i i do think that i i don't think that like he's not
conservative enough works really well i i didn't notice as i was prepping like it has bubbled up
some of these attacks from the right that desantis has been doing have bubbled up more in the
conservative media like eric erickson was attacking him for the question on on the answer on trans issues
with megan kelly and he got a couple he's got like a bad new york post story about it and
you know bob vanderplatt's out there getting pissed about the abortion stuff the guy the
hated trump for years yeah so it's like you know steve dees he's like a right-wing radio guy from
iowa but like i think that attacking Trump as someone who's lost a step
and doesn't know what the hell he's talking about
is probably more effective.
And I think it could be too late,
but I wonder why DeSantis and others didn't...
You could start with the, like,
he was a great president and he served us well
and now we're moving on.
You could start there and then as the primary goes on,
you could be like, he's a little crazy.
You know, like, you don't have to be... i just think that's more effective than going issue by issue but just because republican voters don't really care about
issues but then you're like you have you know a desantis staffer taking a shot at him through a
statement and then what is desantis is seemingly uh best swing at news of the day is like going
after john fetterman for for not wearing a bow tie what was that so that's that's how you're gonna be you are 40 points behind that's how you're talking about a fucking
dress code in the senate maniac i think you'll beat fetterman in the primary man i think you're
gonna get a few points more than john fetterman in the republican primary in iowa he didn't get
a question about it he was like i he went out of his way he's a little press conference he's like
i want to talk about something that's on my mind oh here comes the donald trump hit on the no no no no no no it's like fucking leno he's like you
hear about this you guys see this you guys hear about this like what the fuck are you doing in
defense of seersucker tuesday and he sounds like such a goddamn we should say the hit is in case
people didn't know this news um chuck schumer changed the dress code in the senate so that
you don't have to wear a suit and tie all the time, which John Fetterman has not been doing.
So that and this is freaked out some people on the right, including Megyn Kelly and Ron DeSantis.
And I can't think of anything that makes Ron DeSantis seem more like the absolute worst version of himself.
That's like, I think you should be wearing a tie when you come to my house.
It fucking sucks.
Also, man, you work in like Tallahassee.
Like you want to wear a tie down there?
I do think DeSantis has tried an age hit. I can't remember which one of them. These are
Megyn Kelly or Krista Welker was kind of like Ron DeSantis says you won't be as effective
at age 80. Trump's response was, well, he won't be effective. He's a bad candidate and just like
blasted right through it. So it's good. So Joe Biden, let's talk about Joe Biden. He's at the
U.N. General Assembly this week, though he's dealing with quite a few challenges on the domestic front right now.
House Republicans are trying to impeach him and shut down the government. His own Justice Department just indicted his son on gun charges.
And Democrats are freaking out over bad polls that show real concern about his age and the economy, which is still being weighed down by inflation, gas prices, and now potentially the United Auto Workers strike.
Let's start with the strike. I'll get into the details more with Representative Slotkin.
But what do you guys think about the politics?
Biden and Democrats are obviously supporting the workers.
The White House is trying to broker a deal.
But Republicans are trying to drive a wedge between auto workers and the UAW leadership, car companies, and Biden by blaming
the transition to electric vehicles for the strike. So if you step all the way back, the UAW,
the big three, the Biden administration are completely aligned, right? Like they want there
to be a big electric car industry by unionized workers in America. Big union shops
making the next generation of cars.
Tesla is not unionized.
The giga plant that makes the batteries
is not unionized.
I got rid of my Tesla
because I'm a good person
and it rattled.
And I got a Volvo
which was made in Belgium.
And it's a fucking Volvo.
And it was made in Belgium.
It rattled.
Menchie's on Twitter about Elon Musk.
It's out.
I can't be sitting in a car that is getting me bad replies and makes a little noise.
You know what else is making a noise?
Those replies.
A little rattle in your head.
But the Inflation Reduction Act incentivized a ton of investment in manufacturing in the United States.
One criticism from the unions is that it didn't do enough to incentivize that that production be done by unionized workers.
The Biden administration-
We know why. We know why it didn't include that. Like everything else that went bad over the last
several years, Joe Manchin took it out.
I think you're talking about Joe Manchin. But then right before, a couple of weeks ago,
the Biden administration has been trying to address this. But GM, Ford, they've been doing these kind of joint ventures to build battery manufacturing facilities.
Those facilities haven't been unionized.
So underneath this is a fight about, yes, for these workers at these plants right now, but also for the future of the industry.
And, you know, it's not just about Ford and GM and Chrysler versus these workers in this negotiation. It's them collectively
trying to make sure in the same way that the U.S. auto industry faced competition from
Japanese cars in the 70s and 80s and faced a crisis in 2008. It's can they get to the other
side of this and work together to make sure that U.S. companies and union workers are the ones that make these cars. I'm going to step even further back. Okay. Hank Ford. Oh, God. Jesus. Hank Ford?
Henry. Oh, Hank. I forgot that he goes by Hank. I just remember that he was an anti-Semite.
Apparently, you didn't care enough. That's why you called him Hank.
I'm worried about the politics, too, because you have the Republicans trying to create this wedge
issue, and their narrative is being reinforced by the UAW leadership and by the car companies who are all kind of complaining about competitiveness and the EV mandates in the future.
And I also think union workers are particularly susceptible to inflation and gas prices going up because if you're making an hourly wage that's negotiated
years ago, that's incredibly challenging. And exit polls showed that four in 10 voters in union
households voted for Trump in 2020. So I think there's probably some cultural issues where Trump
and Republicans are pushing on an open door and will find ways to split union voters from the Democratic Party.
So I hope that it's really good that Biden came out in favor of the strikers. Obama did, too.
Basically, every Democrat, a bunch of Democrats on the picket line. But, you know, UAW's got
150,000 workers like it's this could this could swing swing states. I think Democrats should say
about this like Republican attempt to drive a
wedge between them on electric vehicles these people are full of shit they don't want the
inflation reduction act incentives to suddenly go to they don't want these loans to go to union
shops that are making electric vehicles they just don't want electric vehicles and you know jd vance was saying that he said oh you were just importing parts from tesla parts from china
and that leaves out u.s workers they just don't want electric vehicles right but and you know
congresswoman slotkin brings us up in our interview too like the market is moving towards electric
vehicles like that people want electric vehicles and it's going
to be more and more and cheaper so the question is do we want to have them built in china overseas
or do we want to have them built in the united states and democrats want them built in the united
states biden administration wants them built in the united states the uaw wants them built in the
united states and so does the big three automakers right and so the question is can we make sure that
incentives to build new battery plants and electric vehicles go to places where there are unions where
their unions are allowed because part of the problem is some of these loans are going to like
Georgia and the Carolinas where that they're right to work states and they don't have to be unions
and that's not Joe Biden the Democrats Democrats' fault. That's fucking Republicans' fault
because they don't want to have
union protections in those states.
And I think Democrats
just have to call out
the bullshit that it is.
Republicans have never been
on the side of workers.
They've never been on the side
of unions, especially unions.
They've been trying to break up unions.
So I think it is a real problem
and it's a real challenge
because some of these loans
have gone to shops
that aren't union shops and workers are worried about that. And they're also worried that it takes fewer parts
to make electric vehicles. So it might not be as much, it might not be as much work for
auto workers. That's the real structural change. And also these workers, you know,
they have not benefited the way that the executives have at these companies since
the Obama administration bailed out the
big three automakers. Also, you know, the broader context is that Biden has done some incredibly
important things for unions very recently, like the NLRB under Biden has taken all sorts of really
important pro-union steps. They're just complicated and hard to explain and people may not know about
them. But I do think it's in the, where the union and these companies are aligned is they
together are in a competition with Rivian, with Tesla, with companies all around the
world.
And they want to prove that these union shops can compete and they can make the best cars.
They can make the most beautiful and well-run and interesting and creative and innovative
cars that people are excited to buy.
They want to get to the other side of this negotiation so they can do that,
but they have to do that together. And there's no, there's like, you know, we can,
we can talk about what the politics mean and what Democrats should be saying and all the rest, but,
but underneath that is the substance. And that, that is the question that will determine whether
or not the U.S. succeeds and has unionized auto plants making the next generation of cars,
where they can make a
deal and then actually move forward and make the cars that can beat Tesla, that can beat Riven,
that can beat their international competitors. Yeah. And by the way, to the point about having
more work, like also ensuring that these battery plants and these battery factories are unionized
as well, because maybe there's fewer parts for cars, but like we're also building these batteries
and that should be like all of this clean energy transition has to put workers at the center of the transition.
And it's not a coincidence that Ford does a deal with, I think it's Samsung, and GM does a deal with another South Korean company so that those joint ventures aren't covered by the collective bargaining agreements.
These things are not happening by accident.
All right, let's talk shutdown, which now seems even more likely than it did last week.
A supposed deal between Kevin McCarthy and the House Freedom Caucus to pass just a short-term funding bill has apparently fallen apart.
And a lot of Republican leaders seem to be in favor of a shutdown, including Ron DeSantis, Mike Pence, and Donald Trump.
Conventional wisdom is that a shutdown will be bad politics for Republicans and good politics for Joe Biden. What do you guys think? I think it's probably right. I mean,
every headline is about Republicans attacking Kevin McCarthy. You know, like Biden is sort
of absent from this. The Senate's kind of absent for this, at least for now.
I think it's also helpful that Donald Trump says to Welker, like, if they don't get a good deal,
shut the government down. You know, I don't think people won't know where to lay the blame for this.
I do worry. Yes, maybe that, you know, if you run a poll, it'll say that more people hold
Republicans responsible than they do for Democrats. But in the end, the way press coverage is, the UAW
strike gets laid at Biden's feet, a government shutdown gets laid at Biden's feet, inflation
gets laid at Biden's feet. So it's, you know, a country in which people have insecurity and fears
and concerns about the economy, even as the numbers improve,
where there's all these sort of chaotic markers, I don't think ultimately redounds to Biden's
benefit. Yeah, I think everyone who is going to follow this story will know that it's Republicans
fault, but most of the country won't follow the story. And when they wake up one day and just see
headlines that the government shut down, are they going to be like, oh, did Republicans do it? Did
Democrats do it? Probably Republicans, but I don't know, Joe Biden, fix it. You know, so that so but I think it's a good opportunity
for Biden to show that he is fighting for the vast majority of Americans who don't want to
see cuts in education, health care, disaster relief, basic government services, just because
Donald Trump and a few fucking goons in the House want to impeach Joe Biden over nothing? I think that's, you know, and I think if Biden ends up being the adult who gets the government back open and also is out there fighting on behalf of people who don't want to see these cuts, I think that's a good position for him to be in.
government shutdown since 1990 and like i do wonder if people just you just like i asked you guys before we started hey there was the longest government shutdown ever was in 2019 why did it
happen none of us could remember why first you said do you remember what the the shutdown in
2019 was about i'm like and i said i don't know i think it was short and you go actually it was
the longest in history i was like wow, wow, I do not remember that.
Don't remember.
35 days?
Didn't retain it.
Yeah.
So the question is like these 18 moderate Republicans who represent districts that Joe
Biden won, none of them like the politics of this.
But, you know, by election day, do their voters remember?
I don't know anymore.
I mean, it's just the only hope McCarthy had here was to do what he did in the debt ceiling, get something out of the
house by telling everyone in the house, look, none of you agree on this. None of you are happy.
But unless we send something over to the Senate, we can't do anything here. And we're going to have
to cut a deal with Democrats. And let's just send something over to the Senate or else we're going
to get jammed by the Senate because they're going to pass a bill. That was his only hope.
And he thought that he had something. And now it does seem like now this happened last time,
of course, and then they cobbled something together. But this time, the way that your
Matt Gaetz's and your Chip Roy's and all these people are talking, it sounds like they just
want McCarthy to fail because they want to try to go for a motion to vacate him.
It's a fool me once situation. Yeah, I don't, you know,
that was the same deal with the debt ceiling,
which was this idea that
if McCarthy could just pass something
out of the House
with his majority,
with anything,
somehow that would strengthen his hand.
There's nothing that can pass
the Republican House
with just Republican votes
that can pass the Senate.
So we will ultimately,
and so, you know,
maybe like,
maybe in the world, McCarthy helped destroy. It seems like there's nothing Republican votes that can pass the Senate. So we will ultimately, and so, you know, maybe like it,
maybe in an, maybe in the world McCarthy helped destroy.
There's no, it seems like there's nothing that can pass the Republican house period. Well, sure, but of course not. But like we don't live in the, in part because of what McCarthy and
his politics have done. We don't live in a world where the fact that a house Republican bill was
able to pass gives him leverage and working with the Senate? No. If they want to keep the government open, it's going to
be a bipartisan vote in the Senate. It's going to be a bipartisan vote in the House. And the only
way that's going to happen is if it's with Democratic votes in the House. And the only way
that's going to happen is if there is a negotiation which the House Freedom Caucus would never agree
to. Yeah. I mean, and just as an example, what this short-term funding bill
that is probably never going to see the light of day,
what it did is it had like a pretty hefty cut to spending
way below the levels that Biden and McCarthy agreed on.
8% cut.
8% across the board.
And that's just like a deal that already took place.
We made a deal.
We're living under the deal.
So even if it was just the 8% cut and nothing else it would have passed they throw on their immigration bill
essentially that the house republicans wanted which would rebuild the wall and sort of do all
you know the most stringent immigration thing cut asylum refugees all that kind of stuff but they
they cobble this together without realizing that the eight percent cut across the board would cut enforcement of immigration solid it would just decimate enforcement at the
border genius because they don't there's nowhere for him to go there's just nowhere for him to go
bobert looks up looks up from a playbook what and there was uh no money for ukraine no disaster
relief funding like none of the above the line things.
They know the Senate wants, but it's the Republicans want to send a Republican want to.
Yeah. But, you know, listen, my guy, Congressman Dusty Johnson, has been working this package.
That's a name. That's Dusty Johnson, South Dakota. My favorite.
What about him? Have hope. Oh, you just work on the package.
Working on it. One Republican who is quite done with his party's antics is Willard Mitt Romney,
whose announcement last week that he'll be retiring from the Senate was accompanied by quite an exit interview with McKay Coppins,
who spent hours with Romney for a forthcoming biography.
Should be out next month.
The Atlantic ran an excerpt where Romney torches his Republican colleagues as phonies who privately share his disdain for Donald Trump, but refuse to do anything about it, specifically calling out Mitch McConnell, Mike Pence, Josh Hawley,
and J.D. Vance, who he does not care for. He does not like J.D. Vance. I'm there with you, buddy.
Romney sums up his feelings by telling McKay, quote, a very large portion of my party really
doesn't believe in the Constitution. for mitt uh what else did you
guys find noteworthy about this piece so first of all i think it's just worth just this is a very
sad story about a very sad man who is very lonely in his isolation from the trump supporting parts
of the senate and like and his family and his family well because he's stuck because he's in
because he's here but But he talks about like
McKay Coppin says at one point that his conversations often last for hours in part
because he thought Romney liked the company. But it was really striking, right? Like there's one
part where he says authoritarianism is like a gargoyle lurking over the cathedral. And it was
just we we've seen Mitt Romney giving Josh Hawley, Josh Hawley, the eyes from behind behind him
during his speech after the insurrection.
And we've seen him give these statements.
And it really was just interesting to see what it was actually like to live behind the scenes with these people who are all telling him one after another that they don't believe any of the things they are saying. and how much of a personal crisis it created for Mitt Romney, who was, I think, genuinely
trying to sort out how to work in this environment.
Yeah, I thought it was interesting where he named names, because there were a lot of like
blind anecdotes about senators saying things to him that sort of told you something about
how broken the institution was.
But he destroys J.D. Vance, Josh Hawley, and Mitch McConnell.
And I thought that was interesting in telling, like, for example, McConnell says to Romney,
you're lucky you can say the things that we all think. It's like, buddy, you represent Kentucky.
You are the leader of your party. Why can't you say what you think? Just because you're pathetic.
Yeah, I think, I mean, I think McConnell believes that saying what he
thinks would fracture the party and a divided party is always less successful. Right. And so
he can. And Romney says they keep saying, like, well, it's just more we can't let the Democrats
take over. Right. That's the whole underlying. The whole thing is the worst thing that could
happen is not authoritarianism or Donald Trump or anything like that. It's Democrats running the government.
That is, I think, the most, that was also striking,
which is they don't believe a word of what they're saying about Donald Trump,
but they believe every word they're saying about Democrats.
I actually, I do think that they believe that
because one of the points Mitch McConnell makes to Mitt Romney is like,
they'll do the Green New Deal.
Some other stuff that is just funny.
They'll save us from planetary collapse.
Could you imagine there are 20 senators here who do all the work and there are 80 who are just along for the ride?
Welcome to having a job, buddy.
Richard Burr walks on the treadmill in his suit, pants, and loafers.
Sherrod Brown and Dick Durbin pedaled so slowly on their exercise bikes that Romney couldn't help but peek at their resistance settings.
Durbin was a one, but Brown was at an eight.
I love that.
And one person you didn't mention
that he goes after incredibly hard
is Paul Ryan.
Oh, yeah.
Paul Ryan, who's not in office,
calls to whip votes
against him on impeachment.
What, just for fucking fun?
You know what?
I'm glad you brought that up
because I wanted to yell at everyone.
I wanted to especially talk to Dan about that,
who knew how he feels about Paul Ryan.
That was wild to me
because I looked at the date of when that was because i'm like oh was was ryan speaker at
the time no he's out of office he's gone he's already doing his like oh i don't like trump i'm
standing up but then he's like calling oh you know mitt you can't you gotta you gotta acquit trump
on impeachment you gotta do it he's whipping votes for him and then the other the other thing and
that and paul ryan makes the kind of political argument.
Coward.
Worse than coward.
Worse than coward.
Useless.
Because he had nothing to be afraid of.
Useless coward.
He's not even, he's just being a terrible person.
He's just being terrible.
Like, no one's coming after him.
It's a private phone call.
He couldn't tell the truth on a private phone call.
Paul Ryan sucks.
But, you know, the argument that keeps being made to Ritt, there's a moment where he's
with his staff and he's telling his staff he's going to vote for impeachment.
And some of the staff are like beside themselves because it's like their political careers are going to be affected.
And then a senator, he's a senator, a member of leadership.
And this is one of your one of your anonymized ones says that he was leaning to vote to convict and the others urgent to reconsider.
You can't do that. Romney recalled someone saying, think of your personal safety.
Think of your children. The senator eventually decided that they were right.
That is true.
And the fact that, you know...
And that's a theme through the piece
because when they talk about January 6th
and Romney texts McConnell and is like,
hey, I just talked to Angus King
and he said that there's like real concerns
about security on January 6th and I'm getting threats
and also people are threatening
to like go to your house mitch and blah blah and mcconnell never responds uh yeah he may not be
just may not be a good texter but uh but like romney says it was sitting there it's a green
definitely a fucking green text mcconnell gets 100 green text he's on t9 freezing 30 seconds
at a time it's hard to type when you freeze
fully for 30 seconds like t9ing each other during the ai hearing yeah i can't yeah i can't believe
we have recognized regulated big tech trick chuck schumer's on a flip phone the the republican
minority leader is frozen solid but the uh but but uh he's romney's talking about being driven
uh with security behind him and he's worrying what's going to happen if someone takes a shot at him with a car behind him won't really help.
And we really kind of have like gotten to the point where the former Republican nominee for president is saying that the threat of violence, that the fear that Republicans will do violence against Republican
politicians is so great that it is changing the way people vote in Congress. Romney says he spends
$5,000 a day on security. A day. No one can afford that. So I was saying this to tell me,
but like every time I read another account of January 6th, I become radicalized all over again in my anger about that day.
And like that image of when Josh Hawley is objecting to and trying to overturn the election
after January 6th happens, and then there's Mitt Romney in the background, like giving him the eyes,
you realize how infuriated he must be because when he talks about what they all went through,
how they were all scared for their lives, how they were at the doors, there were weapons,
there was stuff. And then Romney's like, well, it's all done now. We're going to get back in
there and they're going to drop their objections and we're going to, you know, make Joe Biden
president. It's all going to be fine. And then they go up there and they all still fucking object.
He couldn't believe he wrote a speech and he thought, well, I won't need this. Certainly,
I won't need this now. And the other just to reading again, another account of like a first person account of the insurrection.
You know, Trump to Welker made up something about how Nancy Pelosi rejected.
He blames her.
And they, of course, there's been, you know, different accounts about why there wasn't more security.
But like you realize like how terrifying it was in part because nobody thought this was going to happen.
Nobody expected it.
There was a lot of ineptitude.
There's one moment where he's in the elevator and someone says, oh, the senators don't know where to go.
And they're like, we are the senators and we don't know where to go.
Yeah, the security guards were like, I don't know where you go.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's also just like Mitt Romney.
There's a part where he quotes Tennyson.
He says, you know, this madness has come on us for our sins. It's a beautiful sentiment. It's a beautiful quote but then some of them named donald trump just pointing like this in the shower but um but then he does say that he has talked to
uh joe mansion about what a mistake it would be to run on the no labels ticket so you know doing
all the right things mitt romney doing all the right things he also talks about starting a he
said don't don't run for president, let's start
a party, which is... Right, that pushes one of the parties.
I noticed that Joe Biden's
former chief of staff, Ron Klain, tweeted
something complimentary
about Mitt Romney and this
interview, but that said, there is one more
thing you can do, which is get behind Joe Biden
and you haven't done that. And Ron has a good point.
You know, that's, and I get it.
And I get that's hard
for Mitt Romney because Barack Obama ran against Mitt Romney in 2012 and there was an honest debate
over the size and role of government. Mitt Romney believes in a very small government and we do not.
And I think that that debate is real. And so I think for Mitt Romney, evolving to the point
where he's like, all my policy considerations are secondary
to this threat from authoritarianism that is coming within my own party. Like, I think that,
you know, that takes a, that it takes some effort, but very few other Republican politicians,
except for like Liz Cheney and a couple others have made that journey.
Well, you know, I will say this is, I really appreciate this version of Mitt Romney,
but I do think that one of the things he's grappling with when he sees all
these other politicians is the way he himself subsumed his own principles for
the purpose of elective office.
He did the event with Donald Trump.
And if he,
and if he can find a way to evolve from being pro-choice to pro-life,
he can find a way to evolve from being a Republican member of the Senate to a
person who is endorsing Joe Biden to save the country.
He clearly loves and believes is threatened by, by Donald Trump. He can do it.
Yeah. And look, Ron's tweet is right. But also the smart thing to do if you're going to make
that endorsement is to do it like in late October. Yes, I agree. You know, make news.
OK, before we go to break, two quick housekeeping notes. The second Republican presidential debate
is coming up on Wednesday, September 27th, which means it's time for another friends of the pod exclusive group thread join us on discord for
live reactions and commentary during the debate from your favorite crooked hosts and staff
subscribe to friends of the pod to join our group thread at crooked.com slash friends also if you
live in the midwest get out your malort love it or leave it is coming to chicago this week on
september 21st and Madison on September
22nd. With wonderful guests like
Brandon Johnson, Peter Sagal, Alice Waterland,
Jillian Flynn, Ben Wickler, and more, tickets are
going fast. Head to crooked.com slash events
to get yours today. Yeah, well, just one thing, I'll just say
that the Madison and Chicago shows are almost
sold out. Wow. But
Love It or Leave It is going to be across the country. Pod Save America is going to be
across the country. So go to crooked.com
slash events. Yeah, you can't go wrong if you go to cricket.com slash events.
You can't go wrong.
When we come back, I talk more about the UAW strike with Michigan Representative Alyssa Slotkin.
Last week, the United Auto Workers initiated a strike against all three major automakers in the United States. Here to discuss this historic strike, the political implications, and her race for the U.S. Senate, Representative Alyssa Slotkin.
Welcome to the podcast.
Thanks for having me.
So you joined a UAW picket line at a Ford plant in Wayne, Michigan last week.
What was the mood like? Did the workers
you met seem like they are ready to strike for as long as it takes, or did you get the sense that
they're ready and willing to give a bit to get a deal? No, I think the energy was really good. I
mean, morale was good. I was there on the very first day, and people, you know, had been moving towards this. And I think the energy was
positive. Look, people were there signing up for strike benefits. So they are obviously watching
their own pocketbooks. And I don't think anyone in Michigan wants a really long, prolonged strike,
no matter who you are. But the energy was good. And it was interesting. I met a couple of people who had had parents who were UAW workers at that same plant the last time it struck, that specific plant struck in the 80s. And, you know, just kind of talking about, you know, being ready to do what they needed to do to make sure they got a good deal.
to make sure they got a good deal. So the Ford CEO said the union's demands for a 46% pay increase in a four-day workweek would bankrupt the company. The basic automaker argument is labor costs are
already higher than foreign automakers like Toyota and Tesla that don't have unions. And they offered
a 21% pay increase, which the UAW has rejected.
What's the best counter to the argument from Ford and other automakers, in your opinion?
Well, I mean, I think the strongest statement about these negotiations is that the die was
cast months ago, right? It's the context for these negotiations. The context is you have a bunch of people who gave up things in 2008, 2009 because we were in recession in Michigan, in a real recession, where we are now fast forward making record profits at those same companies.
I mean, that's just fact.
And these companies are also getting help in setting up, uh, new things like electric
vehicle battery plants, right?
So against that context, um, you have workers who are saying, Hey, we gave up stuff before.
Now you're doing really, really well.
We want to do better and we want more money in our pockets.
And that to me is like the greatest statement about where we are in these negotiations.
I'm not in the negotiations.
So I don't know the back and forth that's happening on an hour to hour basis.
I know that they're looking for a better deal than what they have.
And I don't think that's a crazy thing to ask for.
Politico ran a story yesterday that said the GOP sees the UAW walkout as a potential lifeline
in Michigan and talks about
how Republicans are trying to win over rank and file union members and non-union working class
voters by blaming the strike on the Democratic Party's climate policies. Donald Trump is
reportedly planning a trip to the same Ford plant that you just visited and said that the union
should prioritize the repeal of Biden policies that accelerate the transition to electric vehicles.
You've gotten this attack yourself from Republicans.
Does it worry you at all?
Like, do you hear these concerns about electric vehicles from autoworkers in your state?
So, you know, I'll be honest, like most of the people that I talk to and I, of course, represented an electric vehicle plant.
The Chevy Bolt was made
in my district before it was redrawn. We have an electric vehicle battery factory coming to my
current district in Delta Township, Lansing. The next generation of vehicles is going to be made,
right? And right now, places like China are ahead of us. So if we're going to make those vehicles
somewhere in the world, I would always
rather make them in Team America than Team China. And so there's a second order question that comes
after that. How do we make sure people in those facilities are making a living wage, only have to
work one job in order to sustain themselves? They should be able to have a good middle-class life.
But if the question is
who should make those vehicles, Team America should make those. So every time they say that,
I mean, I just say, would you rather it be China? Like, what is your alternative here?
Now, there's a very good conversation to have about making sure we push the car companies to
give people a fair shot at life in those facilities. I have a huge
interest in that. We got to get that right. And certainly for the bipartisan group of us that
signed onto the CHIPS Act, that cared about incentivizing American manufacturing,
we have a huge incentive to making sure they get that right. But the first order of business is
make it in America and not in China.
So you don't think that this, and Republicans have been trying to do this for a long time to pit,
you know, labor against climate activists. You don't think that's really going to work?
Well, look, I mean, they're certainly, they're trying, but I don't think you can,
I think they have this fundamental conundrum that
they're going to have to deal with on the Republican side, which is you got a lot of people,
including a lot of senior folks in Michigan, Republicans who have for 20 years voted against
anything related to labor. But now because of Donald Trump, they're suddenly populists.
And now they care about the working man. When you've got a 20-year record of voting against right to work and prevailing wage and all of these things,
it is pretty hard to turn around and be Mr. Union. And that is the needle they're trying to thread.
And all I know is that when I was out on Friday, no one's talking about Trump,
no one's talking about Biden, no one's talking about politics. They're talking about being able
to have more money in their pockets so they can do well and their kids can do better.
It's really not as, to me, as like desperately political as everyone would like it to be
made out to be. So the New York Times interviewed a few dozen striking workers and found that many
who voted for the president said, quote, inflation had so undercut their wages
that they felt pushed out of the middle class, laying the blame with Mr. Biden. How do you
persuade those workers to vote for Democrats like you and Joe Biden next year? So, you know, I think
the there's no doubt about it, right? People because of inflation, they this is the point
they have more they have less money in their pockets and more of a desire to make more money.
That is sort of a fact of life.
And all we can do is try to demonstrate that we care about this core American value of
the middle class.
Like that to me is the sun and the moon of American, frankly, national security is how do you have
a strong middle class and how dangerous it is in a multiracial, multiethnic experiment
to have only rich and only poor.
And I think that if you just put on merit the policies of one party over the other,
it is very clear which one supports a middle class life. And all we can do is demonstrate that.
But we also can't shy away from the fact that inflation is a real thing. And while we hope
it's getting better, it's not better yet for many, many people. And if you try and shy away
from that and say, well, but jobs are growing and all this, that may be true. But to the people I represent, they have less money in their pockets.
That's all. There's a whole lot of reasons for that. But you can't shy away from that.
Yeah. Biden's also, of course, dealing with concerns about his age.
Democratic pundits and strategists are in full freak out mode.
But, you know, we're also seeing it from voters in poll after poll. What would you say to a Biden voter in Michigan who's worried about whether the president's too old to serve a second term?
You know, look, I think I've said repeatedly that it's not just one person.
You look at a lot of the candidates in, you know, looking for the White House, the Senate, the House.
It is definitely, you know, as someone who's kind of like a Gen Xer,
it is definitely feels like we need a new generation across the board and you can feel
that interest. The president is running for a second term. There's nothing more natural than
a president running for a second term. That's typically how we do it in this country. And
all I can say is that, you know, he is the president of the United
States. His policies have helped a place like Michigan. And so, you know, it to me, it's only
natural that he runs and I support that. But do I think we need a new generation across the board?
Right. Mr. Trump is well, not a spring chicken. You know, folks in oh my Lord, right? In the House, oh my Lord.
So that's, I think I can feel that generational push across the board.
Michigan's a place where Democrats have done quite well since Hillary Clinton barely lost
the state in 2016. Though people like you and Gretchen Whitmer and Debbie Stabenow,
who you're running to replace in the Senate, have all won by much
larger margins than national Democrats like Biden or how Hillary narrowly lost. What do you think
Michigan Democrats can teach national Democrats about winning states like yours? Well, I mean,
I think that in Michigan, I mean, I'm someone who likes math. And if you're going to be successful in the state of Michigan, you need to understand
math.
And math means that we are a state where independent and swing voters usually decide our
elections, right?
That's we're a swing state for a reason.
So I think it's important to understand that while you always want to turn out the base
and be in touch with the base, that it is about appealing
to a broad group of people, which if you've been elected in Michigan, that typically,
you know, you've demonstrated that. But I think it's also about, if I can be honest,
getting into areas and going to places where Democrats have not shown up in 40 years,
not writing off rural areas. I represent a rural district, not writing off those
areas where, you know, people may not be able to be out marching in the streets, but they want a
better world and they're willing to vote that way. You know, I always told people that, frankly,
you know, there are a lot of Democrats and progressively minded people in very conservative areas, and they risk a hell of a lot more to be a Democrat than anyone in New York City or L.A.
Right. And some of them don't tell their husbands how they vote.
They don't tell their kids. And I want them to be a part of the family.
And in Michigan, that is part of the family, right?
And I just think that that is a lesson that could be learned in other parts of the country.
We want to be an open, welcoming party of reasonable people. And that usually works.
What's the number one issue you're hearing about in the campaign trail? And
what will be your number one priority if you get to the Senate?
Number one issue I'm hearing about generally is like people either have no hope of getting in the middle class or they've fallen out of the middle class and they want back in.
And so it's literally kitchen table economics.
How do I have a one job, a good job with benefits that helps me save every month? And then how do I bring down the insane costs of health care, prescription drugs, housing, child care and post-secondary education? Somewhere in that zone is 90 percent of making more things in America. There's the issue of like protecting
our kids from the things that are truly harming them, like gun violence and, you know, the diseases
of despair, mental health issues and opioid addiction, and then protecting our rights and
our democracy. But first and foremost is like, how do we as a nation grapple with the fact that after World War II, we did such a good job of building this strong middle class and now people are falling out of it or have no hope of getting in. So that's what I want to work on. Frankly, I'm a national security person. You know that.
Yeah.
But I think this is the national security issue of our era because we don't get it right at home.
What can we do abroad?
Representative Alyssa Slotkin, thank you so much for coming on Pod Save America and good luck out on the trail.
Thanks very much. Thanks for having me.
Okay. Unfortunately, we cannot end the show without talking about Lauren Boebert.
We covered the story last week on our subscription show, Terminally Online, which you can sign up for at crooked.com slash friends.
But there have been quite a few developments since then. To recap, Boebert and her boyfriend attended a performance of Beetlejuice the Musical at the Buell Theater in Denver, Colorado, where we once did a live taping of this very podcast.
Lovely theater.
The couple was asked to leave the show after complaints that they were being rowdy, taking pictures, and vaping, despite being asked not to vape by a pregnant woman in front of them.
Boebert's campaign initially denied the vaping and dismissed the criticism.
Then security camera footage of the incident showed the couple not only vaping,
but groping each other because there's nothing hornier than a musical production of Beetlejuice.
This led to a full apology from Boebert for, quote, falling short of my values.
And the vaping lie she apologized for, which she attributed to either the, quote,
values and the vaping lie she apologized for which she attributed to either the quote excitement of seeing a much anticipated production or the natural anxiety of being in a new environment
she then expanded on these thoughts during an interview with one american news as one does
what's the top story lauren bobert getting kicked out of the View Theater in Denver, Colorado It's what the media does.
It's what the media does.
So what went down?
I was a little too eccentric.
I am very
known for having
an animated personality.
Maybe overtly animated
personality. I was laughing.
I was singing, having a fantastic time.
Yeah, she was fantastic time oh boy
guys what's so bad about a little vaping a little groping at beetlejuice
it's a musical not a concert i'll say it again you don't laugh you can have a great time at a
musical you sit still and quietly because there's human beings on the stage playing characters there
is a uh uh there's somebody i follow on follow on TikTok because he does an incredible impression of
Patti LuPone.
That's why I follow him.
He sings as Patti LuPone.
I didn't know this, but he had actually been cast.
It was his big break in the traveling production of Beetlejuice.
And then he said, I remember that night.
I didn't actually know someone got kicked out, but I remember that somebody was doing
a lot of flash photography.
He was disturbing the performer. She was disturbing the performer she was disturbing the performer flash photography
that's insane it's too far from the stage won't work yeah right it's also useless it's just gonna
get a bright shot of the people ahead of you does he say that the musical is as horny as uh
he says we think it is nothing makes the performers of beetlejuice the musical in and of itself
something that exists as a testament to the fact that we are a nation in decline,
nothing makes them more excited as performers
than to know that people have full-on fucking boners
during their performance of the various songs
that we all know and love
and don't need to say what they are
because we all, of course, love Beetlejuice the musical,
a beautiful adaptation of an important piece of IP.
But yeah, no, that's what he said.
Is anyone else weirded out that the theater has, like,
really good night vision cameras?
Didn't know that when we did our show there, that's for sure.
Yeah, I tell you, I don't think...
No one at the Buell Theater told us there'd be night vision cameras there.
Yeah.
Now, granted...
We didn't do a lot of groping.
Not nearly as much as I would have hoped.
And you know what? No one in the audience did either
because they're at a public fucking event.
They did it with discretion.
But yeah, I definitely...
Not enough just...
Yeah, in between the flash photography
and the vaping, they're groping.
Yeah, just we're going to keep it quiet over here
as our flash photography is singing, yelling, grabbing.
I will say this.
That is a lesson.
First of all, I think when Lauren Boebert says
that she had the anxiety of a new place, what she really means is i didn't know there was tape i
didn't know it was on video yeah but i think as a rule if you are going to go to a musical production
that welcomes children 10 and up you can either do flash photography or over the shirt groping
right yeah i i prefer neither but you can't do both because it draws attention to the over-the-shirt groping.
Yeah, to me, the OTPHJ is not as bad as saying, do you know who I am when confronted?
Oh, I just want to say the acts themselves, like, I don't give a shit.
Oh, I'm just saying, but saying, do you know who I am to someone?
Well, that's the worst.
You're the worst person in the world.
I'll be a prude.
I do not believe you should be publicly getting it on at a theater during a musical where children are present.
I think you should restrain yourselves.
Someone found the public indecency law in Colorado.
She potentially violated it because it does include groping in public as part of the public.
You're not supposed to do that.
At the very least, quite rude.
I just think that the existence of the night vision camera is weird.
Makes me uncomfortable.
Then there was like another discourse where people were like,
why are we mocking this right now?
And these people were surveilled against their will and blah, blah, blah.
And they just leave them alone.
I'm like, oh yeah, you have every right to privacy to grope in a public setting.
No, you don't.
I can't follow those
people there uh i will say this if you ever are in a position and happens all the time like someone
you know a a drunk state legislator will get pulled over someone will get a problem at the
airport if you ever say through you know if you're slurring your words and you're ever shouting
do you know who i am you lost you're
the villain famously it's a villain famously ineffective it does no one it's it's you know
what it is she did a couple more too she she doesn't say she's like i know the mayor i know
i'm calling the mayor which is i don't know how that's gonna help her and then she also said i'm
on the board the board of what the theater is i do and he's under the board of heaven and good
if she had just been like hey i'm sorry you know we acted inappropriately i apologize to the theater and the other people
i disrupted you wonder if they would have released this footage maybe they would have just because
it's kind of funny but she's also just a giant hypocrite she's the first person to attack gay
people for grooming and she's like a total hack who's pretending she's going to protect our kids she sucks and her boyfriend that was
the man in question uh is a democrat whose bar hosts drag shows i mean he seems like he's up for
a good time he's as far as we can tell so far he's just he's just along for the ride as well
but the uh i will say yeah saying um he's like oh we're at beetlejuice yeah he's like, oh, we're at Beetlejuice? He's like, I love the finale. When does the musical start?
Oh, boy.
Yelling, do you know who I am,
is about as effective as yelling relax at somebody.
You know what I mean?
It just gets the opposite.
It gets your haunches up.
She's also, she's not like,
she acts a little like MTG adjacent,
but she's not in a republican plus 40 seat the way
marjorie she almost lost she won by like 500 votes last time adam frisch go to his campaign website
the best part though he's not going to be doing that in that beetlejuice not now no uh there's a
he's he's he's groping out a victory
it's within his reach not going to be that caucus with dusty johnson for long
liz croak he doesn't want a premature ejection there's a there's a bona fide lunatic on twitter
named liz croak and who has pizzagate is real in her bio who said uh if i were a wagering
enthusiast i would bet that the date of bobert's date was paid to set her up. So this is the new conspiracy theory, that the
deep state, the libs, were coming
for Boebert by getting her to
go out with this guy. Her bio also says that she's a
seasoned journalist for 20 plus years
in addition to Pizza Gatorade. And her
pronouns are I slash
told slash you slash so. And there's
no evidence that any liberals came anywhere.
She said
these types of tactics and traps
are used all the time and I would know.
What would you know, man?
What would you know?
What a sting operation.
Step one, build trust.
Step two, mention that in passing
that at the Buell Theater in a couple weeks,
fetal juice is coming.
Fetal juice is coming.
Hey, Lauren, I got a crazy idea.
Install a security camera.
It's going to be dark. Is this a Nathan for you? Beetlejuice is coming. Hey, Lauren, I got a crazy idea. Install a security camera when nature has night vision.
It's going to be dark.
Is this a Nathan for you?
Good question.
By the way, maybe he's a Nathan for you plant.
I just think it's also like, man, let's say everything is going according to the Deep State's plan perfectly.
Lauren's still up for a little hanky-panky at the Buell Theater, you know?
No one, Deep State didn't do that.
I watched the footage.
I hated it.
Again, it's Beetlejuice.
And it is, and again, Beetlejuice the musical.
So hot.
So hot.
How do you not get horny while watching Beetlejuice the Musical?
Should be NC-17.
They must have been so drunk.
She said, I didn't remember vaping.
Okay.
Yeah, that's not all she didn't remember.
Unbelievable.
Anyway, what a story.
What a fun story.
I love it.
Something for all of you to enjoy.
Thank you to Alyssa Slotkin for joining us.
And good luck in your race.
Stay out of the theater. Much like race. Stay out of the theater.
Much like Lincoln.
Stay out of the theater.
All right, everyone.
We'll see you Thursday.
Bye.
That's funny.
The second worst time a politician's had in a theater in living memory.
Other than that, Ms. Boebert, how was the play?
Pots of America is a Crooked Media production.
Our producers are Olivia Martinez and David Toledo.
Our associate producer is Farrah Safari.
Writing support from Hallie Kiefer.
Reid Cherlin is our executive producer.
The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer,
with audio support from Kyle Sedlin and Charlotte Landis.
Madeline Herringer is our head of news and programming.
Matt DeGroat is our head of production.
Andy Taft is our executive assistant.
Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Mia Kelman, David Tolles, Kirill Pelleviv,
and Molly Lobel.
Subscribe to Pod Save America on YouTube to catch full episodes and extra video content.
Find us at youtube.com slash at Pod Save America.
Finally, you can join our Friends of the Pod subscription community
for ad-free episodes, exclusive content, and a great discussion on Discord.
Plus, it's a great way to get involved with Vote Save America.
Sign up at crooked.com slash friends.