Pod Save America - “Parscale finds something new.”

Episode Date: July 16, 2020

Trump replaces his campaign manager as his re-election bid hits a rough patch, Joe Biden rolls out an ambitious new climate plan, and his campaign decides whether to expand the map by competing in sta...tes like Texas and Georgia. Then Dr. Abdul El-Sayed talks to Jon about his America Dissected interview with Dr. Anthony Fauci, and his role on the Biden-Sanders health care task force.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. On today's pod, I talk to Crooked Media's own Dr. Abdul El-Sayed about his interview with Dr. Tony Fauci. Before that, we'll talk about a very rough, very weird week for the Trump campaign, Joe Biden's ambitious climate plan, and his campaign's decision to start running ads in Texas. But first, check out this week's special bonus episode of This Land, where Rebecca Nagel talks about what last week's big Supreme Court decision means for Native rights. Today is an excellent episode. Just out. Check it out.
Starting point is 00:00:53 Also, our Adopt-A-State program sent out the first call to action emails last week, and I'm told that we have a bit of a competition on our hands. Team Florida raised over $40,000 to register voters in that state. But Team North Carolina apparently made 10,000 calls in a single day to educate voters about down ballot races in that state. And for some reason, Dan, whoever put those two anecdotes in the Pod Save America prep
Starting point is 00:01:18 chose to ignore the fact that the host reading them has adopted Arizona. So I have no updates for my state, but I'm sure we're doing an incredible job. I'm wearing the T I'm wearing the t shirt because I was like, fuck this. No, no one gave me an update on Arizona. Do you think it's because there was just so much amazing news, they decided to leave it out? Or do you think maybe you should be more involved in your team? Maybe I should be more involved in my team? Maybe I should be more involved in my team.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Although I saw an email from Juliet, our Team Arizona email this morning, and it seems that we have called 3,000 voters already in rural Arizona because we're trying to register more rural Arizonans as part of that state's efforts in 2020, which I think is great. It would have been great to include that in the prep doc, but you know, I guess we don't have any team Arizona people working on, uh, working on the pod. That's a failure to recruit on your part. Um, it is, I would say I am not a white guy named Nate. So I'm not, I'm not saying I'm good at math, but 10,000 is definitely more than 3000 is what I know. Fuck off everyone else. If you haven't already signed up, it's not too late.
Starting point is 00:02:27 Go to votesaveamerica.com slash adopt. Join the thousands of volunteers looking to flip some swing states. Finally, one last thing. We have refreshed and restocked the Crooked merch store at crooked.com slash store. We got new Friend of the Pod merch. We got new Adopt-A-State merch. I'm told there are even some this is again just right in the prep doc word for word fun and flirty tanks dan fun and flirty tanks
Starting point is 00:02:54 i guess that's just for you so please did michael go to cricket dog things are out of control here uh so please go to cricket.com slash store and get them while they last. All right. Let's get to the news. Donald Trump's campaign strategy of trying to get reelected by ignoring the pandemic that's ravaging America isn't really catching on. A Quinnipiac poll on Wednesday has him down 15 points nationally. Monmouth poll has him down 13 points in Pennsylvania. He's down about nine points nationally, about seven to nine points in the
Starting point is 00:03:31 battleground states he needs right now on average. Last night, he replaced his campaign manager, Brad Parscale. And on Tuesday, he held an official White House press conference in the Rose Garden that was supposed to be about China and Hong Kong, but was instead an hour of incoherent rambling about Joe Biden and the campaign. We pulled a few excerpts. See if you can follow along. Here's a clip. We have great agreements where when Biden and Obama used to bring killers out, they would say, don't bring them back to our country. We don't want them. Well, we have to. We don't want them.
Starting point is 00:04:07 They wouldn't take them. Now with us, they take them. Someday I'll tell you why. Someday I'll tell you why. But they take them and they take them very gladly. They used to bring them out and they wouldn't even let the airplanes land if they brought them back by airplanes. They wouldn't let the buses into their country.
Starting point is 00:04:23 They said, we don't want them. Said, no, but they entered our country illegally and they're murderers, they're killers in some cases. And they said, nope, we don't want them. They turned the bus around, they turned the plane around, then they'd land in the United States and who knows what happened to them. But it wasn't good. And we have one about polls too. But it wasn't good. And we have one about polls, too. I think we have really good poll numbers.
Starting point is 00:04:49 They're not suppression polls. They're real polls. You look at the intercoastal in Florida. You look at the lakes. You see thousands of boats with Trump signs, American signs. You've got the Trump Pence sign all over. You look at what's going on. You look at bikers for miles and miles riding up highways proudly with their signs. Dan, is it possible that Donald Trump's freewheeling rhetorical style may undercut his argument that Joe Biden isn't mentally fit to be president?
Starting point is 00:05:19 I mean, there is so much to break down from those clips. I mean, there are so many good parts. One, you know, you may not know this, John, because I don't know how close you fall politics, but boat freighters are the new soccer moms. It's what a lot of the data journalists are saying is that you have to look at. Look, we're laughing now. It's going to be pretty embarrassing the day after the election when Donald Trump was one reelection. And we should have seen it coming in the number of boat people holding up Trump signs in Florida. Yes, I agree with that. And I agree with that.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And I remain I have a lot of remaining concerns about this election, which we can talk about. But if Donald Trump is reelected and Bill Mitchell retweets my July 2020 tweet about boat paraders. That is the least of my fucking problems. I'll tell you that. But also when he's in there and he's like, they let in killers. Some of them are even murderers. He's like, and we don't know why, but I'll tell you someday. It was so hard to follow.
Starting point is 00:06:22 I mean, that was just, those were two clips. We could have done like 10 clips from that press conference. It was one, I realize it's ridiculous to keep saying, that was one of the most rambling, incoherent things Donald Trump has ever done. Because we say that all the fucking time. We have for the last however many years. But that was really, that was new levels, that Rose Garden press conference. New levels.
Starting point is 00:06:42 And, I mean, should we talk for a second about the fact that it was an official White House press conference in the Rose Garden from the President of the United States where basically he used the entire time to attack his political opponent like it was a campaign rally? That's not normal, right? It's not normal, nor is it legal. Legal, right. Which people just sort of skipped over. Yeah, it's neither cool nor legal it legal legal right which which people just sort of skipped over yeah it's neither cool nor legal i think is from uh back going back to impeachment 100 years ago um it is you cannot campaign from federal property like and when the president does political work then his campaign or his political party is required by law to
Starting point is 00:07:26 reimburse the taxpayers for some of the costs incurred. For example, if President Trump gets on Air Force One and flies to Ohio to do a campaign rally, it is a political event, a portion of the cost of Air Force One, the traveling staff, security costs, etc., must be paid by the campaign. And so when you do it on federal property in the White House, you are violating a large number of laws. And a lot of people are like, well, the president's exempt from the Hatch Act, which is a terrible law that we should change. The president should not be exempt from the Hatch Act, since the president is the person with the greatest incentive to use federal property for political purposes. But even still,
Starting point is 00:08:05 what that means is not that what he did was legal. What it means is that Trump can't go to jail for it, but the campaign still must be billed for what they did. Now, obviously, there's no one in any position of power to make him do that, given that Bill Barr is at the Department of Justice. But it is very illegal, and it's easy to let the craziness override the crimes, but they are both there. So let's talk about the sort of sorry state of his campaign right now, which, I mean, that press conference was Donald Trump sort of flailing for some kind of a message about Joe Biden, about himself, about his presidency. It is clearly not working. We know that not just because of the polls, but because he did fire his campaign manager or demote his campaign manager last
Starting point is 00:08:50 night. Brad Parscale is now, he stays on as the digital person. And Bill Stepien is, who was the deputy campaign manager, is now the campaign manager. What do you think about Trump firing Parscale? Is that going to fix everything? Seems like it will not fix everything because the problem, like that press conference was the microcosm of the problem. He has no argument for himself, no argument against Biden and no real connection to the reality of what the country is facing. Like I would say that's number that's number one. Yeah. And that seems to be the biggest problem. I mean, I think that those it's an interrelated set of problems.
Starting point is 00:09:30 But, you know, you said, you know, we always say Trump was crazy. He said these crazy things. And it has certainly been a large part of our lives over the last four years now since we've been doing podcasts together. four years now since we've been doing podcasts together, one presidential term of podcasts, God help us, is that, you know, Trump does crazy things. We dunk on them. We make fun of them. And we do that. And it's OK to laugh at him because you can either laugh or you can cry. But what's different this time is the context, right? He's doing this at a time in which coronavirus cases are spiking, where 800
Starting point is 00:10:06 people are dying a day. In some cases, millions of people lost their job. And so ultimately, the problem is Trump, not Brad Parscale or Bill Stepien or anyone else. And politics is sometimes quite simple. And Trump is losing because Trump is a shitty president. Millions of people have lost their jobs and 130,000 people are dead. Full stop. It's not about ads. It's not about message. That is the big problem. And he needs a solution to fix that problem, which is much bigger than Brad Parscale.
Starting point is 00:10:32 Well, let's talk about what that solution could possibly be. I mean, you and I talk about this every day. You know, I'm torn over these polls. On one hand, you know, we have maintained for a long time that we are out of the prediction business. On the other hand, I do want to be honest with people listening about the state of the race right now. Like what I think it's important to look at these polls, not as a prediction of what might happen in November, but a signal that what Donald Trump is doing right now, his campaign strategy is not working. What Joe Biden is doing is working, at least right now. What do you think Donald Trump could potentially do to make this race tighter?
Starting point is 00:11:13 Oh, first, my very important caveat about no predictions. And I want to be very clear that I am a glass one-tenth empty kind of guy, right? Like, that's my approach to these things generally. I know you are. And I struggle. glass one-tenth empty kind of guy right like that's my approach to these things generally and uh and i that's why that's why i send the best polls around all the time to you just to sort of poke you a little bit yes i almost put in the outline uh that when you were saying when you're sitting around sort of the revised schedule last night about talking about these polls i almost pointed out that this would be the part where i drizzled on your parade because i can't fully rain on it given what's going on but But I think Donald Trump's political fate is primarily centered around things that are beyond
Starting point is 00:11:50 his control. He needs to get a handle on the coronavirus, which he has some control over, certainly, like wearing a mask and doing his job. The bare minimum of his job would help. The economy is going to drive this some. What Donald Trump needs to do is he needs to do his job. He needs to get lucky because he needs things to look better in the country. And he needs to find a message that goes right at why a significant number of people who either voted for Trump in 2016 or were approved of him just a few months ago now support Joe Biden. And right now he has no plan to do any of those things. Yeah, I think partly because Trump won unexpectedly in 2016, there is this view of Trump that he is, that he has some sort of magic powers, that he's Teflon, right, that he defies
Starting point is 00:12:35 the laws of political gravity. And so everyone's sort of waiting for like, is Trump going to define Joe Biden in some very damaging way? Is Trump going to pull some trick out of his hat? And I think, I don't know what will happen in November, but I think that none of that is what's going to ultimately help him. What's going to help him is doing his job and controlling the pandemic, because that is the main issue on everyone's mind. You look at poll after poll after poll, what is the issue you on everyone's mind. You look at poll after poll after poll. What is the issue you're most concerned about? And right up there is either the the economy and then and the pandemic are like the number one and two issues. And of course,
Starting point is 00:13:14 they're interrelated, which Donald Trump also does not understand. But even as we're looking at some of the polls from yesterday, like the Quinnipiac poll, you know, the number one issue for people was the economy. But Biden is now winning that issue 50 to 45. We have talked about a lot on the pod before that that has not happened yet. The Trump strength in the economy was sort of the one thing he was holding on to. You wrote a memo about this. Number two issue for people is the coronavirus. And they trust Biden over Trump on that by 59 to 35. Trump cannot win with those numbers like that. And so he can win, but in order to win, he has to have people start trusting him more
Starting point is 00:13:52 on handling the coronavirus and he has to sort of win back and strengthen the economy. And to do that, he actually has to get the virus under control and sort of do something to give people a little bit more faith in his capacity to govern. If he does that, I could see the race tightening up. If he doesn't, I don't think I can see that. I think that all of that is true. And if the conditions on the ground do not get better,
Starting point is 00:14:16 whether he has a good message on Biden, a good message for himself is less relevant. He needs to get it close enough that then campaign tactics and messaging can truly matter. Now, just the thing I think we just have to remind ourselves every day and remind our listeners is through the lack of wisdom of our founders, we are basically spotting Trump four to five points. So if you look at a national poll and say Biden's up 10, how is Trump going to get, how's he going to come back 10 points? Trump doesn't have to do that. And there's no way he can do that. If Trump gets the race between four and five points, he has a pretty good shot at pulling off an electoral college victory like in 2016. And so a 10 point lead. So can I just can I just press you on that for one minute? Because like that's I've always thought that was true.
Starting point is 00:15:02 If you look at the polling averages right now, he's about about nine points nationally. But then in some of these in the three swing states, the three easiest swing states for Joe Biden to flip from 2016 and to thus win the presidency would be Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. We've talked about this. And it looks like Biden is also leading, at least according to the polling averages now, in those three states by seven to nine points, seven points in Wisconsin and closer to nine points in Michigan and Pennsylvania. Which surprised me or surprises me because I thought that that's sort of a narrower difference between those swing states and the national number than I thought there would be. between those swing states and the national number than I thought there would be. Yes. And like, I almost texted you this yesterday, but I thought it would be way too on brand for me, which is when we were looking at the Pennsylvania poll, the Monmouth poll of Pennsylvania, which is 53-40 Biden, I think, that it's just, there is no math where Biden is up 10 nationally
Starting point is 00:16:01 and up 13 in Pennsylvania. Like that does not work not work as we understand demographic groups. Now, the thing we have to remember about 2016 was the national polls were correct, the state polls were wrong. And the weighting of demographic groups and turnout models matters much more in state polls. So it is very possible that this seven-point lead in Wisconsin is closer to five, right, if it's weighted appropriately. And if that is the case, that fits within the context of the electoral college advantage we think Trump has. Now, it is also possible that because Biden is so overperforming among white voters and older voters, that he is sort of eluding that trap by doing very well with
Starting point is 00:16:47 voters that are disproportionately represented in those Midwest battleground states, which could explain why the margin in Arizona is much smaller on average in these polls than in these Midwest battleground states, because Biden is in many of these polls underperforming among Latinx voters. And so in that sense, so I don't think we know the full answer. I think we should just operate as if Trump has this popular vote disadvantage, let's say electoral college advantage, because honestly, if it turns out that that does not exist and Biden wins these states by as much as his popular vote margin, like, you know what?
Starting point is 00:17:25 Whatever. Say I was wrong. That's fine. Well, look, I mean, I saw Jen O'Malley Dillon, Biden's campaign manager, say this. And I don't think Jen's just saying this to sort of set expectations in the right way that she's like they have always expected the race to get tighter in the fall. the race to get tighter in the fall. And I think partly it's because where you see Biden over performing among sort of older white voters, among non, you know, white voters in general, non-college white voters, too. These are groups that are traditionally Republican, traditionally Trump voters. And as we get closer to the fall, polarization in the electorate will
Starting point is 00:18:02 sort of naturally bring these people back to the Republican column. And so Biden's lead among these voters right now is maybe not as sure as you would want because they're not dependable Democratic voters. Right. And whenever your lead is based on not dependable Democratic voters, you know, you should still be fairly cautious. So that's a note of caution for me. It's also Biden's at what is probably close to his ceiling. So you look at Pennsylvania, right? So let's say that the Monmouth poll is correct, right? That Biden is at 53. Obama got 54 and a half in 2008 in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania is a more Republican state now than it was because of demographic changes. So I find it hard to imagine that Biden is going to exceed Obama's 54 and a half in that state, which means, so you're
Starting point is 00:18:51 at 53-40, which means you have 7% that is unallocated. Presume 1% of that goes to third party, given that's generally what third parties have gotten. So you can take a bunch of that other vote and allocate it to Trump, which means it's not 53-40, it's 53-48, right? Which is a much closer race, but still a huge win. So there are a couple of narratives to beware coming up. One is Trump's going to go up in the polls. He's probably not going to do it. He may not be doing it at the expense of Biden. He may be doing it just simply by getting some of his voters. Getting some of the undecideds too. Yeah, who are his people. They're 2016 Trump voters who were just disillusioned by the
Starting point is 00:19:33 complete clusterfuck that is the country. And so that's one narrative. And that's gonna be the Trump comeback narrative. We saw that with Obama and Romney in 12 when we were winning by margins larger than we would. McCain on my McCain, you see this every time. We saw it with Clinton, Trump, and we made the same point. It didn't work out so well, but two out of three is not bad. But then the other narrative that we should be prepared for is Bill Steppian is now a campaign manager. And I read with great amusement today in some stories that Bill Steppian's great skill
Starting point is 00:20:02 is candidate management, which is so funny because he's worked for Trump for like four years now. And so bang up job, Bill. He's going to get those tweets under control any day now. Well, I think what is very possible to happen because Trump has had so many turnovers, both in his first campaign and his White House, that what always happens is Trump gets rid of someone, someone new comes in and then Trump like doesn't tweet for three days. And then we get 75 glowing profiles of the new person in charge and how the story, you know, you can see the headlines out. How did Bill Steppi and tame Trump's Twitter account? Like, do you remember the, when everyone wrote stories about how John Kelly, uh, did the
Starting point is 00:20:41 most basic things like making people write things down in meetings, things like that. So that that is coming. There is like the reason you fire your campaign manager is one, because your first campaign manager sucks. The other reason is you need a circuit breaker on your bad narrative and a new campaign manager gives you a chance to have that. Yeah, I will say that I think that's going to be harder to get that reset narrative in the middle of the pandemic. Yeah, I will say that I think that's going to be harder to get that reset narrative in the middle of the pandemic. But again, like stepping back from all of our like, you know, digging into the demographics of polls here, the president of the United States is on the wrong side of almost every issue that the public cares about right now in a big way. You know, like by 71 to 26 percent, people think everyone should be required to wear face masks in public. That is not like a Republican versus Democrat polarized nation debate, as sometimes the media makes it out to be. It is a 71 26 debate. Right. And so like even on his white grievance politics. Right. Which he tried to kick up in a CBS interview before his crazy press conference.
Starting point is 00:21:46 He was he responded to a question about why black Americans are dying at the hands of law enforcement by saying, quote, so are white people, more white people, by the way. In the same interview, Trump also said, I know people like the Confederate flag and they're not thinking about slavery. I just think it's freedom of speech. You know, Quinnipiac poll asks about Confederate symbols. Fifty four to 40 people say they support removing Confederate statues. Fifty one. Forty two support renaming military bases named after Confederate generals.
Starting point is 00:22:12 Fifty six percent see the Confederate flag more as a symbol of racism. So even on the white grievance politics that basically helped him win in 2016 in the Electoral College, the public is sort of against him on even that base issue for him. I think it's not even even with the white grievance politics. I think it's especially the white grievance politics because he was beginning to suffer from coronavirus mismanagement when the protests after the murder of George Floyd happened. And the way Trump responded to that supercharged his political downfall, because it sort of told you everything that you did not like about Trump. And he is operating his entire campaign around a world that does not exist anymore, right? Where Black Lives Matter is accepted among the large swaths of the population,
Starting point is 00:23:03 including the numbers of Republicans. The fact that the Confederate flag is now seen as a sign of prejudice among Republican voters, as well as Democratic voters, or a majority of the country. The Mississippi state legislature? Yes. I think if you were to the right of Mississippi Republicans on race, you've probably done something wrong. I mean, Jesus. Meanwhile, back on Earth, Democratic candidate for President Joe Biden is just running a normal campaign. He's doing events. He's given speeches. He's rolling out policy. And it turns out he's rolling out some really ambitious
Starting point is 00:23:45 policy especially around climate where he released a two trillion dollar plan this week that's focused on creating jobs through investment in clean energy and the construction of sustainable infrastructure plan draws heavily on the unity task force recommendations developed with bernie sanders allies and includes goals like a hundred percent-free electricity by 2035, a million green auto jobs, the creation of a civilian climate core, which Jay Inslee originally proposed, zero emission public transportation in cities with more than 100,000 people, much more.
Starting point is 00:24:16 Here's a clip of Joe Biden delivering a speech about his climate plan. Here we are now with an economy in crisis, but with an incredible opportunity, not just to build back to where we were before, but better, stronger, more resilient, and more prepared for the challenges that lie ahead. And there's no more consequential challenge that we must meet in the next decade than the onrushing climate crisis.
Starting point is 00:24:47 Left unchecked, it is literally an existential threat to the health of our planet and to our very survival. That's enough for dispute, Mr. President. When Donald Trump thinks about climate change, the only word he can muster is hoax. When I think about climate change, the word I think of is jobs. Dan, you've been part of many a climate plan rollout in your time. What do you think of Biden's? I'm fascinated by it on a number of levels. One, I'm glad he did it.
Starting point is 00:25:22 I'm fascinated by it on a number of levels. One, I'm glad he did it. Biden's original climate plan was obviously the most progressive climate plan of any Democratic nominee. And he went much further here, which is, I think, where both you and I want our Democratic Party to be. So I think that's good. I think it's interesting because it tells us a couple of things that I think are pretty encouraging about Biden and his campaign. As we just spent the last few minutes cautiously talking about, Biden is winning. And candidates can look at being in a strong position one of two ways. They can see their lead in the polls as a disincentive for risk or permission to be bold. And this is Biden being bold because despite all of our concerns and the narratives after
Starting point is 00:26:07 Bernie dropped out, Biden has unified the Democratic Party. There is not this huge swath of Bernie or Warren voters who are unwilling to support Biden. To the credit of Biden, Bernie, and Warren and everyone else, the party is unified. So he did not need to do this from a defensive political position. He did something bold. And I think that speaks well of the kind of campaign he's running and the, you know, and hopefully the kind of president he would be. And he made he made a lot of progressives, especially on climate and climate activists happy. The Sunrise Movement's Varshini Prakash, who was a member of the task force, said that Biden's plan addresses many of the criticisms that people within the environmental movement had of his original efforts. Julian Brave Noiscat of Data for Progress, a progressive think tank that we work with sometimes. He said this to Slate about the plan.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Joe Biden endorsed a Green New Deal in our view substantively, which is, you know, that's that's pretty big. That's pretty big. Why do you think Biden made his plan more ambitious and progressive, knowing, like you just said, that he didn't have to politically? The context has changed. didn't have to politically. The context has changed, right? Biden, when he got in this race, it was really a lot of his message and his sort of political reason for being was to a return to pre-2016 normalcy. That is not available to us as a country anymore because of the coronavirus and the ensuing economic crisis. So I think he now sees his role. I mean, he's talked about this, right? And people are going to talk about it. This is more FDR than sort of keeper of the flame, right?
Starting point is 00:27:58 And so it's bold. And we'll talk about this, that it has a real tie-in to what fixing the economy looks like. it's bold. And we'll talk about this, that it has a real tie into what fixing the economy looks like. So I think it, you know, and I think it is to, you know, his credit that he went down this path. And I think to the credit of all of these activists who fought so hard for the green new and everything else who recognized that Biden didn't give them everything he wanted, like there's not a ban on fracking in here. But he went a long way. And they they recognize the benefits of their activism, and push for this. And I promise you, it's not like Biden gets to walk in the White House and just pick out his pen and make this law.
Starting point is 00:28:32 There's going to be a lot of work on this and a lot of pushing. And I think it is a sign of true good faith or opportunity for progressive activists that it has worked on climate and can work on other things going forward. for progressive activists that it has worked on climate and can work on other things going forward. I also think I think the politics around climate have changed significantly since, you know, Barack Obama proposed a cap and trade plan in 2009. I think that is a testament to progressive activists, to young people who have pushed this to the forefront of the agenda. It's also due to the fact that we are seeing the devastating effects of climate change, like in our lives all the time now. So if you look at polls, and Data for Progress has some great polling, so go check that out. But all kinds of polls, there's just a lot more Americans, you know, it's not 50%, it's up to percent. It's two thirds of Americans who want bold action on climate from the federal government.
Starting point is 00:29:29 And so he sort of has a political context that has changed here that I don't think we didn't have the benefit of back in 2009. I also think the other thing is a lot of states have sort of taken action on their own over the last several years. So basically having this mandate that we have to generate 100 percent carbon free electricity by 2035, you've seen other states in the country, even redder states like Montana, put in place these rules since, you know, over the last several years. And so a lot of these states have led. And so, you know, some of Biden's plan is basically scaling up what we've seen in cities and states across the United States already. You're correct.
Starting point is 00:30:09 The political context has changed. I think there are some pitfalls that we should talk about, about that political context. But the primary realization of that change is that the Democrats are now unified on climate. The reason that cap and trade cannot get through the Senate was because there were a whole bunch of Democrats who were from coal producing states or oil producing states who vehemently opposed that sort of climate legislation. And now that unanimity is a product of two things. One, changing opinions, right? You have Ohio senators who like Sherrod Brown, who are from a coal producing state who are supportive of real important climate action. But it's also because geographic
Starting point is 00:30:51 sorting among partisanship, right? In 2009, Obama had two senators in Louisiana. He had two senators in West Virginia, a senator in Alaska. Every place that were huge fossil fuel producing parts of the country, there were Democrats. Those Democrats have all lost their seats and we're now much more centered around other parts of the country. So it's a little bit of two things happening at one time. And Republicans still are still – Republican voters are still very skeptical of climate. And while Democrats have moved a long way, core Republican voters have moved very little in the last decade. And you still have, I think, according to Pew earlier this year, a quarter of Republican voters who think climate change is a long way. Four Republican voters have moved very little in the last decade. And you still have, I think, according to Pew
Starting point is 00:31:25 earlier this year, a quarter of Republican voters who think climate change is a hoax. So one in four Republican voters looks at our melting fucking planet
Starting point is 00:31:35 and thinks it's not happening. Now, these are probably also, I bet they're the Venn diagram of the climate change deniers and the non-mask wearers is like one circle. Yeah, you're not moving those people on anything. So the Trump campaign was pretty excited to go after Biden's plan.
Starting point is 00:31:49 They said, quote, it's more like a socialist manifesto that promises to massively raise taxes, eliminate jobs in the coal, oil or natural gas industries and crush the middle class. He's pushing extreme policies that would smother the economy just when it's showing signs of roaring back. You know, that's that's those are all the signs I see, roaring back economy. Could this attack from the Trump campaign be effective right now? No. I mean, like, I hate to say it that way because in a close race, you only have to move a few voters at a state for it to matter.
Starting point is 00:32:18 So could it matter? Right. Yes. Is it likely to be massively consequential? No. And it doesn't, the fact that Biden moved, Trump would have said all those exact same things at his illegal Rose Garden press conference if Biden had stayed closer to his original plan than the Boulder plan. Which by the way, is such an important realization over these last several years in general that we've been talking about,
Starting point is 00:32:41 about progressive policy, right? That like the Republicans are going to say we are socialists who want to kill jobs and raise taxes no matter what we propose, even if it's the most center left type policy. And so that's not a reason alone to propose an ambitious progressive policy, but it should not be a reason that you avoid doing that. And effective political tax only work if they are believable and fit be a reason that you avoid doing that. And effective political attacks only work if they are believable and fit with a narrative that is already understood by voters. And so some of the speculation about the political dangers of the Green New Deal
Starting point is 00:33:14 originates from how the Trump campaign was able to weaponize Hillary Clinton's comments about coal miners in 2016. But that was not about climate. That fit within a larger narrative about her being an elite with disdain for working class people, which obviously we don't believe that to be the case, but that is how it fit. It wasn't really about climate politics. It was an elite politician looking down their nose at working people, which only worked because it fit with the deplorables
Starting point is 00:33:40 comments in a bunch of 30 years of Republican characters of Hillary Clinton. That is a harder case to make against Biden. Yeah, it just is. So Biden really framed this as sort of an economic plan as well. And I thought Eric Levitz had an interesting piece in New York magazine about this, saying that Biden's policy, quote, doesn't just represent a more substantively ambitious response to the climate crisis. It also establishes massive green investment as the cornerstone of his vision for economic recovery, and that he clearly views this as a governing priority. What did you think of that? I thought that was a very, very smart take from Eric Levitz, who I think is very, very smart.
Starting point is 00:34:18 And it is a good reason for optimism. If you sort of boil down what I think Eric means by it is Joe Biden and the Democrats are going to, in order to respond to this economic crisis, are going to have to put in place a massive jobs program. And the fact that Biden is centering his jobs program around the exact same things that will help deal with our climate crisis and move us to his new, more aggressive admissions goal is a sign that he is going to do sort of two birds with one stone here, right? It's not going to be a bunch of sort of random infrastructure jobs or public work programs that aren't connected to client. And so tying those two things together, like you sort of think about legislation in Congress as
Starting point is 00:34:58 the number of trains leaving the station, because we know that the appetite, the political will for big action in Congress is pretty limited. And the one thing that we believe, assuming the Democrats do the right things on things like the filibuster and everything else, is that one of the first things they will do if the economy looks like what we think it looks like is going to be a huge version of the Recovery Act from 2009, a massive economic relief bill. And if that is tied to real investment in dealing with climate, that means we have a real chance of getting climate done. Because if you do them separately, you spend all this political capital on the economy, and then you try to come back and do cap and trade or other aspects of the
Starting point is 00:35:38 Biden plan later, it's going to be much harder to do that. I mean, the irony here is the reason it was called the Green New Deal, which it was labeled far before we ever had a pandemic and a recession, was to draw an explicit connection to Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal, which was a, you know, very ambitious, the most ambitious in history sort of public works, public spending program to get the economy moving in the midst of a depression in history. And the idea is we're going to do what FDR did with the New Deal in the Great Depression, except we're going to make sure that the investment is in sustainable infrastructure, clean energy jobs and all the rest. And now Joe Biden is facing probably the biggest economic crisis since FDR was president. And if he takes office, we'll be facing that.
Starting point is 00:36:36 And we'll need a very ambitious jobs and economic plan to pull the country out of recession. jobs and economic plan to pull the country out of recession. And I think that like, you know, the Green New Deal immediately, you know, Fox News turned it into fucking, you know, farting cows and hamburgers. But I always I always thought that it was very smart politics to talk about a climate plan as fundamentally a jobs and economic plan, because I think that is a that is a smarter political way to sell it to people that it's not, you know, people care deeply about the climate. They also care about their own livelihoods. They care about jobs. They care about good jobs. And especially they care about that now and will if Joe Biden wins and takes office in the midst of this recession. And so for Joe Biden to say, you know, Joe Biden's gonna have a lot of economic plans, I'm sure, if he steps into office in January. But I think for him to be able to say,
Starting point is 00:37:33 my big, sweeping, ambitious economic plan is to transform this nation, to transform our energy, to move towards a clean energy future and do it in a way that creates millions of good paying jobs, not just for people sort of constructing things, but for engineers, but for scientists. And like, there are so many jobs in so many different sectors that will be created
Starting point is 00:37:56 through a clean energy transformation in this country. And I think it's just a very smart political move. What makes it harder for Republicans to oppose these measures when they are tied to dealing with the, you know, 10 million Americans who are unemployed because of the pandemic related recession? Right. That's exactly right. So one one other notable campaign development this week was the appearance of a Jill Biden for president television ad in the state of Texas. Let's take a listen to the ad. I'm thinking of all of you today across Texas. I know the rise in case numbers is causing fear and apprehension. People are frightened and they're especially worried about their parents, their grandparents, their loved ones who are most at risk. This virus is tough, but Texas is tougher. We can stop the spread, but it's up to all of us to do it. We have to step up and do
Starting point is 00:38:53 both the simple things and the hard things to keep our families and our neighbors safe. Wear a mask, wash your hands, stay home if you can, and socially distance when you go out. hands stay home if you can and socially distance when you go out i want every single american to know if you're sick if you're struggling if you're worried about how you're going to get through the day i will not abandon you we're all in this together we'll fight this together and together we'll emerge from this stronger than we were before we began. I'm Joe Biden, and I approve this message. So this ad went up after a New York Times story about how Democratic officials have been pressuring the Biden campaign to, quote, compete aggressively in more states. This election, officials argue, offers the provocative possibility of a new path to the presidency
Starting point is 00:39:40 through fast-changing states like Georgia and Texas and a chance to install a generation of lawmakers who can cement democratic control of Congress and help redraw legislative maps following this year's census. Does this Texas ad mean that the Biden campaign now agrees with this assessment? Great question. You know, that ad, the original buy that was talked to that started this week was about $65,000, according to our friends at Advertising Analytics. It was mostly it was a cable buy. There are reports this morning that Biden is starting to buy broadcast TV. And if that is the case and these are, you know, and you see real dollars behind that, then that means at least they're going to test the waters. And you can do that, right, which is you.
Starting point is 00:40:19 I imagine they've pulled Texas. They have a baseline poll. They may do it statewide. They may do it within a few key media markets. And you can see, you know, does a sustained advertising campaign over a period of time move numbers? This is a huge decision for the Biden campaign. And why is that?
Starting point is 00:40:38 Well, so you take Texas and Georgia, which are the two states where people say, like, Democrats have a real opportunity. So in 2018 in Georgia, Stacey Abrams spent $20 million on ads and another $3 million on mail. Now, some of that was spent in the primary, but most of it was the general. So this is a, Georgia's a $20 million decision for Biden, if he wants to truly compete there. Texas, probably a $40 million decision, at least, to truly run a campaign there. So Biden's fundraising is- It's got like 10 media markets, at least? Yeah. I mean, these are massive states with many media markets and with expensive media. And so
Starting point is 00:41:17 this is a huge investment of resources. And for all of the success that Biden has had raising money, and they announced, General Malley Dillon, his campaign manager, announced this morning they have $242 million cash on hand. They have a quarter of a billion dollars in the bank. Which basically almost wipes out the Trump campaign's cash on hand advantage with money. Yes. But that's sort of a little deceptive. Right. It's incredibly impressive.
Starting point is 00:41:41 But Trump has already spent, has spent a year and a half building up data, infrastructure, hiring. All that money is already out the door, already accounted for. So a lot of the things that Trump was spending money on in 2019, Biden has to spend money on now. So while they have narrowed the gap tremendously, it'd be naive of us to think that Biden is at parity already with Trump because he's not. Biden has is at parity already with Trump because he's not. He could get there because his fundraising has been quite strong. And I think there's some indication that Trump's is lagging as all other elements of his political life are lagging. But it's a big decision and it's a risky decision. It'd be a hugely risky decision because that's $60 million that's coming out of Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona, Florida, and North Carolina to pick six states that listeners could adopt. Well, so let's talk about the risks associated with this decision. Here's what our good pal David Axelrod tweeted about the New York Times story, which, of course, came before this ad buy.
Starting point is 00:42:42 First rule of presidential campaign planning. Lock down the states you must have by making sure your operations and ads are funded there for duration. Then you expand to more ambitious targets. That's not cautious, it's smart. And before you commit to compete for a state, you better be clear about what the cost of competing
Starting point is 00:42:57 to win that state would be. Texas, Ohio, and Georgia are all large states with expensive and extensive media markets. Half-assed efforts are a waste of resources. What do you think? I mean, I agree with that. I mean, obviously, because we studied at that political wisdom for years. Before he was a hack on tap, he was just our boss.
Starting point is 00:43:18 But, you know, a lot of people responded to that tweet from Axe and said, I know because a lot of them tagged us in the response, so thank you, people, saying, well, that's not what Obama did in 08. Because to be clear, Obama took the Kerry 2004 map and expanded it to it because we competed aggressively in Virginia, North Carolina, Indiana, and Missouri. And we flipped three of those four states. And people, when we started competing in those states, people thought we were insane. Right.
Starting point is 00:43:46 Democrats. Virginia. Everyone sees Virginia as like a safe blue state now. In 2008, there was nothing safe about Virginia as a blue state at all. But what is different, I think, an important note is that although Virginia is not cheap and North Carolina is not cheap, Indiana is cheaper and Missouri somewhat expensive, but we also had a massive, massive fundraising advantage over McCain. Obama was able to raise so much money that we were able to go outside the spending limits that you get from matching funds.
Starting point is 00:44:18 And so we had money to play with. And there's sort of two ways to think about the map, right? There was like, how do you get to 270, which is Axelrod's point, which is right. Like if you have determined with all of your analysis experience and data, that it's going to take X million dollars to win the states you need to get to 270 and you have more than X, you can go spend that elsewhere, which is what we did. Because at some point, the ads are diminishing returns. You can't hire more field organizers. You can't run more ads.
Starting point is 00:44:45 So you have that extra money. Now, you want as many paths to 270 as possible, particularly now, because what we just do not know in our coronavirus electoral world is, let's say you're depending on Wisconsin to get you over the 270 mark. Like that is your difficult state. What happens if that becomes a coronavirus hotspot at the end and you can't vote in person in Milwaukee, right? We will lose that state. What happens if there's a massive screw up with mail balloting in Pennsylvania because they're doing it for the first time in the general and a whole bunch of people don't
Starting point is 00:45:20 get their ballots in the city of Philadelphia or in the suburbs? Like because of the unpredictable nature, or in the suburbs. Because of the unpredictable nature, you want those pass. But can you afford those pass? And that's a really tough question for the Biden campaign to make. Because this is not adding Montana with one media market. This is adding two of the most expensive states in the entire union to your map. Look, I also think there's additional considerations besides the presidential race that may be part of the play here. Like, you know, I heard our friends at Hacks on Tap talking about this this week and and Mark McKinnon, who has obviously spent a lot
Starting point is 00:45:58 of time in Texas politics. You know, his point was this is crazy. If you're if you're Joe Biden, you're winning. If you get to the point where you're winning Texas, you've already won the electoral college just because of demographics. Right. And so if you're winning Texas, that means that you've probably won Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Florida. And, you know, the state that's super expensive to play in that you want to play in because it's going to be closer and you have an easier shot to win is Florida. Right. So I get all that, too. because it's going to be closer and you have an easier shot to win, is Florida, right? So I get all that, too. And demographically, as you're looking at the states you're most likely to win, and what is that tipping point state that's going to put you over 270,
Starting point is 00:46:36 Texas and Georgia are not going to be those tipping point states at all. But as the New York Times alludes to in that story, it is possible that we can flip the Texas legislature. We have a Senate race in Texas. We have two Senate races in Georgia. There is redistricting coming up where in a number of states, flipping legislatures could give us the power to redraw the maps to lock in majorities in Congress for the next generation. Joe Biden as president with a Republican Senate is a world different than Joe Biden as president with a Democratic Senate. And in many ways, like even if Joe Biden wins and we have a Republican Senate, thank God Donald Trump is gone. But life is going to be incredibly difficult. And there's going to be it's going to be incredibly difficult to pass almost any progressive legislation. We're talking about an ambitious climate plan. Like there's almost no climate plan that will pass if Joe Biden is the president and Mitch McConnell is running the Senate still. So I do think like, and look, part of this is on like everyone who is listening to the podcast right now, like donate every last fucking dollar
Starting point is 00:47:41 you can to Joe Biden and to the Senate races and to everywhere else. Because if we if Democrats basically have this massive financial advantage, sort of like the one you were talking about that we had in 2008, it's going to be easier to start for the Biden campaign to start competing in Texas and Georgia and some of these other places. And by the way, when the Biden campaign decides to compete and spend that money, that helps Democrats down ballot, which is why I'm talking about this. That sort of helps all Democrats in the state in their races just by having more attention from the presidential campaign in that state. So I do think like, you know, I I would be I would you know, I'd be worried if I thought the Biden campaign was like we're going to play in Texas. But Michigan's covered. We got it. You know, I don't think they're doing that. If they are doing that, that's bad. But I do think that like, yeah, they should spend every last penny competing in as many places as possible.
Starting point is 00:48:33 Right. Like that's that's that's not brilliant strategic advice, but I do think that's what they should do. So a couple of things on that. One is. I agree with everything you're saying about the importance of the Democratic Party investing all of these states, right? It's the 50-state strategy. You know, we've been talking about it for decades in this party. We rarely implement it. But you either play to win or you don't play at all. Because if you're not going to spend enough money to actually put the state in play,
Starting point is 00:48:57 then you're wasting money, right? And now a show buy here to test, you know, money to test the waters or a show buy for media narrative, you can do that. In 2008, we did a show buy in Arizona to show we were expanding out to Arizona, mainly just to fuck with John McCain. But we didn't, we didn't spend a lot of money. Like, that's fine. Right. But if you're like, if it's going to take $40 million to win, don't spend $5 million playing around there. Right. Like that's $5 million wasted. And it's also, you know, donors, there are limits to what people can give. And so Biden isn't the only place to make investments in these states. You have Senate candidates in Georgia.
Starting point is 00:49:30 You have MJ Hager, who just won the runoff in Texas, going against John Cornyn. Any contribution to her helps put Texas in play. You have Beto O'Rourke's organization, Empowered by the People, which has been trying to flip the legislature, but just today announced it was expanding to to statewide operations as opposed to just focusing on target districts. And so there are lots of places that you can make real investments there that don't only happen through Biden. Now, the thing that I think would be interesting for the Biden folks to do, which is this also is going to seem crazy given where we are, maybe not. But there were real questions about whether Obama should play in Florida in 2008 because
Starting point is 00:50:05 we lost it in 2000. Bush had won it pretty easily in 2004. There was a sense it was moving dramatically away from Democrats. And like Texas and Georgia, huge investment of resources, right? Ton of media markets, very expensive, gigantic state. And what Plouffe did, our campaign manager on that campaign, was he wrote a memo and did a presentation where he detailed for our donors. And I don't mean like the big rich donors. I mean everyone on our email list, what it would take to
Starting point is 00:50:32 win Florida. Here's how much it's going to cost. Here's how many organizers we're going to have to hire. I remember this very clearly because you were too high ranking a writer to ever edit PLUFS memos. So I edited this one and he rejected every single one of my edits every one of them um but like i think it'd be interesting for them to do to lay that out for their supporters like what it takes to win georgia or texas and see if there's a good idea yeah right and like i said i think for everyone who's listening who can give uh especially the wealthier people who are listening who may be big Democratic donors, I don't know who listens. I think that we are in an environment where because of Trump's approval right now, because of the pandemic, because of the recession, because of just the political climate in general,
Starting point is 00:51:19 Democrats have an opportunity to possibly not just beat Donald Trump, but to sort of crush the Republican Party under Trump right now. And I don't know that you get that opportunity every four years or every two years. And so if you were thinking about giving, now is the time to give every last dollar you can possibly give. to give every last dollar you can possibly give. Because I do think like, you know, having Joe Biden winning and then possibly having a Democratic Senate, a Democratic House could set Democrats up and progressive legislation up for success for quite some time. You know, and I just think like the stars are all aligned
Starting point is 00:52:00 on some of this stuff now. And so some of the stuff we're talking about, the tough decisions that people, that the Biden campaign is going to make about money are going to be easier decisions the more that people give. That's just the way it is. And the same goes for volunteering, right?
Starting point is 00:52:13 They need X number of volunteers in the battleground states. And if you can exceed that number, then you can start having people volunteer in Texas and Georgia. And one of the features, I guess it's the only feature of the pandemic is because so much is happening digitally is that you can, you don't have to be in Texas and Georgia. And one of the features, I guess it's the only feature of the pandemic is because so much is happening digitally, is that you don't have to be in Texas or Georgia
Starting point is 00:52:29 to volunteer in those states. You don't have to get on a plane and go to them. If you are volunteering X number of hours a week, some portion of that can end up in Texas and Georgia if the Biden campaign has enough to meet their volunteer quotas for the battleground states, for the current set of battleground states. Absolutely. Okay. When we come back, we'll have my interview with Dr. Abdul El-Sayed
Starting point is 00:52:50 about his interview with Tony Fauci. Hey, I'm Akilah Hughes. And I'm Gideon Resnick. We are the hosts of What A Day, Crooked Media's daily news podcast. Look, we understand keeping up with the flood of news every day is hard. There are updates on coronavirus, Disney reopenings, animal news. What else? So much else.
Starting point is 00:53:16 But we're here to help you cut through all that. We break down the biggest news stories each day and help you understand what's important and what you can do about it, all in 20 minutes or less. Episodes of What A Day come out every morning, Monday through Friday at 4 a.m. Eastern, wherever you listen to podcasts. But you actually don't have to listen that early. Don't get up that early, please. On the pod today, Dr. Abdul El-Sayed is the host of the Crooked Media podcast, America Dissected. His book, Healing Politics, is out now. Abdul, welcome back to the show. Thanks for having me, John.
Starting point is 00:53:54 So you interviewed one of your personal heroes on America Dissected this week, Dr. Tony Fauci. Fascinating interview. Everyone should check it out. I found it especially interesting that Fauci has been doing a lot more interviews recently, even as Trump and the White House are trying to both silence him and publicly attack him. What does it say to you that he's still speaking out now, maybe even more than ever? Well, Tony Fauci, like you said, he's a legend. I remember in med school opening up my infectious disease textbook, and one of the authors was Anthony Fauci. The guy's been around for a long time. He's been in this role for 32 years. To put that in perspective, I was three when he became director of the NIAID. And he is a public servant,
Starting point is 00:54:47 consummate public servant. You don't do this work unless you believe deeply in the work. And so, you know, Dr. Fauci realizes that we are in the middle of a pandemic, that his responsibility is not to the president. He serves the people of the United States. And he recognizes that his best service right now is publicly communicating about the severity of where we are and what we need to do to take it on. his leadership and his knowledge, then he's going to find other opportunities, which, you know, worked in our favor because when I reached out to him, his team reached right back out and said, you know what, this is a podcast focus on coronavirus. Of course, I'll jump on. And we had a great conversation about where we are in this pandemic and where we need to go. The message hasn't changed. The other thing that I'll say is, you know, you and I both share a bit of an understanding of the inner workings of a complex
Starting point is 00:55:46 bureaucracy. And Dr. Fauci has been around for a long time. He understands how this thing works. So, you know, he understands that he's going to be able to leverage these platforms to make news and that the people need to hear from him. Yeah. In fact, he's probably safer the more public he is in some ways that Trump knows that his with his, you know, the number of people who trust Fauci over Trump, which is significant, kind of gives him a little running room to speak out. And he's doing it in a smart way, I think. Did anything in the interview surprise you or what stuck with you the most? What stuck with you the most? There were a couple of moments for me that were both surprising, but also in hindsight, spot on. Number one, we talked about the challenge of the decision to both in the beginning of the pandemic to message that masks were not something that the general public should
Starting point is 00:56:45 be wearing and what went wrong in the communication and why it changed. And, you know, at the end of the day, the hard part about messaging in the middle of a fast moving pandemic for which you have very little science, because of course we didn't know coronavirus existed six months ago, seven months ago, is that you're constantly trying to make decisions in an evolving space of science. And as the science changes, you have to change your positioning. And that's exactly what happened. But he admitted that it was a mistake and that we should have been a lot smarter about protecting the fact that at some point, the science could change. But early on in the pandemic, the need to make sure that
Starting point is 00:57:25 professionals on the front lines who were involved with caring for symptomatic patients needed that PPE more than the general public did. Considering that at that point, we didn't know that asymptomatic spread was a thing. And so we thought, well, you know, if you're not being exposed to symptomatic people every day, then you probably don't need a mask. And of course we were wrong. And we should have been a lot more thoughtful early on in the pandemic, that the science might change on that. The second point that I thought was really quite profound was the fact that, you know, I asked him, you've worked for a lot of administrations. And, you know, it's funny with Anthony Fauci, you don't really know where he sits on the political spectrum, like his political party is science. But I asked him,
Starting point is 00:58:05 you know, you, by nature of having served with, for under six presidents, there has to be some presidents that you disagree with. And have you ever thought about just walking away? And he said, no, the work is too important. And, and, and, you know, the point that you made, I think John, in the last Pod Save America episode, I think was spot on. Like, if you're President Trump, why in God's name are you trying to undermine a guy whose general approval in the public is super high in the middle of a pandemic? Like, it makes no sense. I just don't understand the politics of it. And I think Fauci also understands that it makes no sense. And he's going to end up winning this agreement.
Starting point is 00:58:49 Yeah, I mean, the politics from Trump's view of this is he has been hoping since the beginning that if he like closes his eyes and puts his fingers in his ears, that the pandemic will go away, right? Like the more he talks about it, the more he acknowledges it. He thinks that makes it real for people and that somehow it's not real for people. If he just if Tony Fauci isn't speaking, if Donald Trump isn't giving these press conferences every day, which is fucking absurd. because I've been thinking about this a lot since the beginning of the pandemic. It must be such a challenge in public health because so much of public health is communication. And you and I have been in politics,
Starting point is 00:59:33 and you're thinking about how to message things and how to make sure that you let the public know what the truth is, but you know that if you change your mind or you change the message that you could get penalized for that. And that's just the way sort of politics and communications works. But the health side of public health is based in science and science changes and it grows and it evolves. And I imagine it must be, and you know, you've obviously been in public health for a long time. It must be one of the central challenges of that field to sort of both do the political communication side of this and sort of evolve with the science
Starting point is 01:00:09 and change with the science. Yeah, I'll say a couple of things about that. In most circumstances, public health professionals are trained to just interpret the science and develop a message that is true to the science because we take it for granted that politicians are going to do what's right based on that science. And I think this is one of the first moments where on a grand scale, public health professionals are realizing that it's not enough just to interpret the science, that we also have to be very smart about messaging because we can't leave it to the politicians to do what's right. And then the second point is that, you know, action when it comes to stopping a pandemic
Starting point is 01:00:47 or preventing a public health disaster in general takes two forms. The first is informing public policy, which are the things that government uniquely can do. And then the second is informing people about the things that they can do to protect themselves. And the hard part is that when you're pushing a message, you have to do both at the same time. And sometimes, like when it comes to masks, the government has a real responsibility of protecting the people who are most vulnerable and most critical to being able to care for folks. That's why it was so important that healthcare workers had PPE on the front lines, because if they're getting sick, then our hospital capacity goes to zilch. And of course, our whole goal there was to flatten the curve to make sure that there was enough space and ventilators and
Starting point is 01:01:30 beds in our hospitals to care for people. And if all of a sudden the nurses and the doctors and the staff that you need to do that are gone, it doesn't matter how many ventilators or hospital beds you have because the people who are there caring for them are sick. And so getting PPE out to those folks was critical from a government imperative. And at the same time, we should have been able to tell people, look, a cloth mask is something that you could wear, right? At this point, the science isn't there on telling us whether or not it's effective. And that's the mistake that was made is that we, in trying to protect PPE for the critical folks who are necessary to be able to run our hospitals and take care of people who are getting sick in massive numbers, we allowed the message to veer
Starting point is 01:02:12 into, well, masks aren't useful anyway. And that was the big mistake. And so public health professionals now on the front lines with the responsibility to message both to policymakers and to the public have to realize that you're saying one word that's being interpreted by two very different groups of people. And you have to be really thoughtful about making sure that you're not allowing any group of people to misinterpret it. And as you're messaging a scientific truth reality that is changing over time as we learn more, it's an extremely complex thing to do. I will say, you know, there is nobody better in America at doing it than Anthony Fauci. And,
Starting point is 01:02:50 you know, it is a testament to this moment in this pandemic that it is so hard to do that somebody who is as good at doing it as Dr. Fauci has made mistakes. And, you know, the important thing to remember though, is mistakes or lack of knowledge are not the same thing as lying and distrust. And so folks who will point to, you know, things that public health professionals have said back in January when it was an evolving picture and we didn't have the science that we have now, right, doesn't mean that people are lying to you. It just means that we didn't know enough to be able to tell you what would become the truth after science took its process.
Starting point is 01:03:22 So, you know, you and I could sit here and talk forever about all the ways that Donald Trump has fucked up and continues to fuck up the response to this crisis. I'm in Los Angeles right now. Like we were one of the first major cities to issue a stay at home order. Garcetti, Mayor Garcetti issued a universal mask order on May 14th, even before they started to reopen the bars and restaurants in mid-June. We never really got our case count below like a thousand a day. Why do you think that even some of the more cautious and restrictive cities and states have had a hard time bringing this pandemic under control? Yeah. Unfortunately, the sine qua non of public health is what you do before you're ever in a crisis. And if you look at where we are as a country, we are profoundly unequal, which meant that even as we quote unquote lockdown, that didn't mean lockdown for everybody.
Starting point is 01:04:16 That meant lockdown for people like you and I who can discuss complex topics behind a computer screen. For a lot of folks who are essential, the people who are most at risk of both getting the virus and dying of the virus, they were expected to go back out because of course we invented a new word for expendable, which was essential. And so those folks who were the most likely to get the disease in the first place were still being exposed in that moment. And so what happened is because our economic system is so profoundly unequal, because there was not enough action to keep folks at home, to allow them not to have to choose between saving their lives and their families' lives or saving their livelihoods, is that we allowed the virus to continue to spread as a function of the lack of preparation as a society that we had on net to take this on. And then couple that with the fact that, you know, on a national level, we had done away with the pandemic response unit in the National Security
Starting point is 01:05:12 Council. We had threatened funding for the CDC and state and local health departments. And we allowed what should have been a containable epidemic not to be contained. And so you have in effect the tinder of inequality and the exposure to which poor folks are relegated in that moment. And then you have the spark, which is the failure to contain the epidemic in the first place. And that's what created the circumstance that we're in. And so, you know, once you have a live fire, right, you can have the best fire station and the best fire response in the world, and you're still battling an inferno. The trick is to make sure that you don't let it become an inferno in the first place. And of course, you know, we had packed away Tinder in the form of
Starting point is 01:05:53 inequality, and we had a spark in the form of disinvestment in public health, and here we are now. Yeah, and you know, you can certainly see that here in Los Angeles. You know, they had a couple, the public health department, a couple of charts up yesterday of sort of the positivity rate and the case count among Latinos in Los Angeles versus which includes so many of the people who were still working when the city shut down, has been hit so much harder than especially the white population of the city. So you're right that, yeah, a lot of people just didn't get to stay home. And so the virus wasn't contained. That's right, John.
Starting point is 01:06:37 If you were running the federal response right now, what would you do? What are some of the first big, you know, major steps that you would take to sort of course correct here? Yeah, I'll give you, I'll give you five big actions. The first is that I would mandate masks nationwide in public places. I know that there's going to be a big backlash because of course the president has been sitting there and, and politicizing masking, but we know that it is essential and critical to preventing. Number two, that in, I would establish a very clear federal benchmark, county by county, in terms of case positivity per test, and in terms of speed of spread. And I would use the
Starting point is 01:07:18 power of the federal government to mandate lockdowns in communities where you have runaway spread. Number three, I would be really, really investing in making sure that we have the hospital capacity that we needed in local communities that were heavily affected and making sure that, you know, all of what we had built out in the Northeast when that outbreak was as bad as it was, was moving into the States where the outbreak is now the worst. And then number four, I would really, really be pushing a clear federal investment in livelihoods. We need to renew unemployment benefits that are going to expire at the end of this month because people shouldn't have to be choosing between their lives and their livelihoods. And I think that's critical.
Starting point is 01:08:08 And then, you know, when it comes to number five, I think we've got to be building the ability to contact trace and test at scale. One of the big mistakes that we made is that we locked down, right? And we were able to push transmission down below a certain threshold where testing and tracing was a possible containment approach to this pandemic. But then we never built up the testing and tracing capacity that we needed.
Starting point is 01:08:32 And all of a sudden, right, of course, cases started to rise again because there's no magic bullet here. This is just basic workhorse public health. And so we've got to massively invest in contact tracing and massively invest in testing. And if we can't do that right, we are going to continue to see this sawtooth, jagged, increasing cases, then massive lockdown response. Then the cases come down and then everyone opens up and then everyone's like, yo, COVID is now over, but it's not. And so those things are critical. And the messaging here, we've got to get right. And the messaging has to be, yo, COVID is now over, but it's not. And so those things are critical. And the messaging here,
Starting point is 01:09:05 we've got to get right. And the messaging has to be, listen, there is no magic bullet. COVID will not be over until we get to a point where we can show across the board reductions in transmission. And even then we have to be vigilant in the way that we're going to be able to do this, right? If we all want to have our economy and our freedoms and the ability to walk around and do the things that we all took for granted just six months ago, then it's going to be because we are willing to sacrifice a little bit, right? Wear an uncomfortable mask when you go out, you know, be willing to answer that call from the health department when they tell you that you were exposed and, you know, you're potentially at risk and you're going to need to quarantine for 14 days. And so we can choose between, you know, these minimal kinds
Starting point is 01:09:45 of losses of our autonomy and, you know, the ability to not take for granted that COVID is out there and then have the rest of our society, or we can ignore these things and choose not to abide by them and face this recurring system of shutdowns, which is so devastating to our lives and our livelihoods. What's your best guess on the timeline for the development and deployment of a vaccine that's going to give us most normalcy back? Yeah, I appreciated the way you asked that question because it's not just about having, you know, in theory, a vaccine that works.
Starting point is 01:10:23 It's also about being able to manufacture it at a scale where we can achieve herd immunity because we can vaccinate enough people at scale. My best guess, and this is a best guess, this is kind of like the epidemiologic version of me asking you who's going to win the election, is that I hope that by the end of 2020, we have a theoretical vaccine. Probably, you know, I'll be honest, I wouldn't be surprised if we had more than one. And then by, I would say, mid 2021, I think, you know, we'll have had the level of vaccination where, you know, where we can achieve the kind of herd immunity where COVID is no longer the dominant question about, you know, whether or not we're going to
Starting point is 01:11:10 be able to move forward in the ways that we're used to as a society. But again, this is like asking me who's going to win the election. So I'll take any good news I can get. One last thing I want to talk to you about, you're a member of the Healthcare Unity Task Force put together by Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders. Can you walk me through some of the final recommendations you released last week that were sort of substantively different than Joe Biden's original healthcare plan? Yeah, John. So for context, right, you know, we had three Bernie Sanders appointees, of which I was one, and five Biden appointees. And we came
Starting point is 01:11:47 in with very different perspectives. I believe deeply in Medicare for All. I've got a book coming out about it in February. But we also knew that this was an issue that had been litigated substantially. And we also knew that if we were to walk out into a post-COVID-19, post-George Floyd reality with a pre-COVID-19 plan that we would not be doing Joe Biden any services. And that was consistent and a point of consensus across the board. All eight of us agreed with that. The conversation was contentious at times. There are points at which we disagree, but we also know the clear and present danger, not just to healthcare in America, but to democracy itself if Donald Trump wins.
Starting point is 01:12:25 And so what we were able to do was build a far more robust version of the public option that I think achieves a lot of the goals that Medicare for All advocates came into it with. And of course, it's still not Medicare for All, still not satisfied, but it does achieve a lot of goals. It is truly public, meaning it's operated by CMS rather than being kind of like a Medicare Advantage plan, which is sort of set up in terms of guidelines by public authorities, but operated by a private corporation. Second, it is, in the context of this COVID-19 pandemic, extremely generous. In fact, more generous in terms of reductions in out-of-pocket costs than Medicare itself is. And then really importantly, every public option to every
Starting point is 01:13:10 individual, there is going to be a no deductible option. Deductibles are confusing. They're like the money you have to pay to unlock the money you already paid for to get your insurance. And so everybody would have a no deductible option. And for folks earning less than 200% of poverty, that means people earning roughly $52,000 a year for a family of four, they're automatically enrolled and it is free. There are no premiums. All that comes with it are the out-of-pocket costs. And then beyond that, one of the big wins, I think, and the thing that I'm most proud of is that right now it is public policy in America that Medicare, which is the single biggest buyer of prescription drugs, can't negotiate the price of those drugs with
Starting point is 01:13:49 corporations. And the recommendations do away with that. In fact, rather than just even negotiating on behalf of Medicare buyers, Medicare would be able to negotiate on behalf of every single American, which is a huge deal. We also doubled investment in federally qualified health centers, do away with some of the barriers that are, you know, frankly, just cruel to immigrants getting access to healthcare that they should be, should have access to in this country. Investments in the Indian Health Service. And one point for me, which is a baby of mine and something that I care a lot about, given that I was the health director in the city of Detroit and saw firsthand what health disparities look like every day, is a commitment to an executive order, which commands and offers resources but the Department of Treasury, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of Labor, all of them are tasked with the responsibility of asking, how do our policies and systemic racism insinuate their way into
Starting point is 01:14:53 our policies? And how do these create inequities in our country? And how can we meaningfully root them out? And so I'm very optimistic about this plan. Of course, not satisfied. I believe in Medicare for all. But I also know that, you know, for folks who believe in Medicare for all, like I do, there is no world in which a Donald Trump presidency advances the ball down the field
Starting point is 01:15:13 for Medicare for all. You know, the way I sort of think about it, and I tend to think in crude sports analogies is that, you know, right now we've been in defense for a long time. And I got the choice between going on defense again under another Trump presidency and working to prevent the repeal of the ACA, or we can go out in the field and potentially kick a field goal. And if I wanted to score a touchdown, I'm going to take three points on the field any day. And so, you know, progressives, I think, have a lot to look at in these plans and say, you know what, you know, we got to come together. We've got to be Donald Trump. And then starting on day one of the Biden administration, we can't let up on the things that we know need to change in this country. And that's got to be the way forward for us. No, I mean, look, first of all, I'm so glad that you were one of the people on this task force. I think it sounds like tremendous
Starting point is 01:16:05 progress. You know, I think what was lost in some of the conversation in the primary about the different plans is like not all public options are created equal. And I think Biden's public option in the primary was sort of on the, you know, on the flimsier end of the scale, just compared to sort of a Pete Buttigieg public option or what Beto and Kamala had and stuff like that. And I think what he has agreed to now, thanks to you guys, is, I mean, that is very robust that, you know, people making $50,000 or less in this country, many of whom have been even shut out of Medicaid in states where they haven't expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, to be automatically enrolled in a government-run plan that is premium-free,
Starting point is 01:16:48 that is no deductible, that takes care of you, that alone, just for some of the poorest and working-class folks in this country, would be huge. And again, the idea behind the public option is that hopefully so many people like that option that it eventually crushes the private insurance companies over time. Not as quickly as obviously moving to Medicare for all would be in a single payer, but hopefully people try it, they like it, and we move closer towards a single payer goal. I agree. And I sort of judge healthcare policy by two basic questions. Number one, would it benefit the median family that I was responsible for when I was health director in
Starting point is 01:17:29 the city of Detroit? And if I go to them and I say, what is your circumstance now when it comes to healthcare? Will this meaningfully improve it? And that's absolutely the case. And then second, what will the insurance corporations who profiteered off healthcare for a long time think about this policy? And I assure you, they're not going to like it. And so- They're not going to be happy. Yeah. So part of me is just like, yo, if the bad guys don't like it and the people who are hurt by the system do like it, then we're probably moving in the right direction. And so I do think there's some real movement here. And I got to say, it was a privilege working with
Starting point is 01:18:01 every member of the team, like the earnestness that came through the process, you know, with, in, in, in honesty with the disagreements that we had, but earnest appreciation for what we all were trying to do. I was just really impressed by, and I think one of the frustrations with 2016 is that that earnestness did never came through. Whereas in 2020, I think, you know, folks sitting on opposite sides of the table saw, looked each other's eyes and said, you know what, like we all want the same thing for the country. We have a difference in opinion about how we get there sometimes or how fast we try and get there. But we agree in what direction we want to go. And that's a big deal. So let's come together and think about how we get there. And let's move forward. And I'm really proud of that. Abdul, thank you for joining
Starting point is 01:18:39 us as always. Everyone, please go check out America Dissected. It's a fantastic podcast. Definitely check out the Anthony Fauci interview and go pick up Abdul's book, Healing Politics. It's a fantastic read. Thank you so much for joining us, man. Take care. John, always a privilege and my best to Emily, who I know almost there with the little young Favreau. I'm really excited to see pictures. Almost, almost. A couple of weeks away. Take care, man. All my best. You too.
Starting point is 01:19:10 Thanks to Abdul for joining us today. And everyone have a great weekend. And we'll talk to you next week. Bye, everyone. Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production. The executive producer is Michael Martinez. Our assistant producer is Jordan Waller. It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Starting point is 01:19:31 Kyle Seglin is our sound engineer. Thanks to Tanya Somenator, Katie Long, Roman Papadimitriou, Caroline Reston, and Elisa Gutierrez for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Narmel Konian, Yale Freed, and Milo Kim, who film and upload these episodes as videos every week.

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