Pod Save America - “Party of Q.”
Episode Date: February 4, 2021Democrats choose to go big and fast on Covid relief, Republicans choose applause over punishment for Marjorie Taylor Greene, and control of the House could hinge on the redistricting battles set to be...gin soon. Then journalist Farai Chideya talks to Dan about building a media that’s more representative and better connected to all communities.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, please visit crooked.com/podsaveamerica. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's pod, Democrats go big and fast on COVID relief.
Republicans take it easy on Liz Cheney and Marjorie Taylor Greene.
And the fate of democracy could depend on the redistricting battles that will take place in state houses over the coming months.
Then, Dan talks to journalist Farai Chidea about building a media that's more representative and better connected to all communities.
But first, check out Keep It All
This Month. Ira, Aida, and Lewis will be having discussions with Black creators, Black-owned
business leaders, and many more great guests for Black History Month. Also, check out this week's
Pod Save the World to learn about the military coup in Myanmar that took place this week.
And speaking of Pod Save the World, Ben Rhodes has written another book, which you can pre-order
right now. It's called After
the Fall. It's about Ben's travels around the world after Trump won, where he met with dissidents,
opposition leaders, and young activists who are trying to understand the turn towards
authoritarianism and nationalism in their own countries and all over the world. Ben is one of
the best writers I've ever met, one of the best storytellers I know.
You should go pre-order After the Fall right now.
It comes out in June.
I started reading it a few nights ago.
It does not disappoint, Dan.
It is outstanding.
I'm only laughing because it is a real testament to Ben that I got you to read a book.
So I'm very, very proud.
I only read my former colleagues' books.
Those are the only books I read.
In 2020, it was Samantha Power, Barack Obama,
your book, and now Ben's.
I will say a couple of things about this.
I have also started reading it.
You were exactly right.
Ben is an amazing writer.
It is also a chance to revisit a world where you can travel.
So if you miss traveling, that's a good place.
And that is.
And as a connoisseur of podcast related book pitches, Ben's pitch for why he wrote the book and what you can get from reading it on Pod Save the World is a Hall of Fame book pitch.
And Tommy's pitch was also quite persuasive, which is by Ben's book to make sure that it ends up ahead of Dan Bongino's on the bestseller list.
Does Dan Bongino have a book coming out?
I don't want to just substitute any asshole for Dan Bongino, any asshole on the right.
You can always bet there's some asshole from the right with a book coming out.
By the time Ben's comes out, it'll be like Lauren Boebert's book.
So, yeah, go check that out. All right. Let's start with a quick update on the negotiations over Biden's COVID relief plan. The president and vice president met with the 10 Republican senators who made a counteroffer on Monday. They had a two hour meeting. Everyone said nice things about each other afterwards.
But the White House still released a statement that read, quote, While there were areas of agreement, the president also reiterated his view that Congress must respond boldly and urgently and noted many areas which the Republican senators proposal does not address.
Sure enough, all 50 Senate Democrats voted on Tuesday to use a budget reconciliation bill to pass the COVID relief plan, which would only require 51 votes instead of 60. Not only did Joe Manchin vote in favor of using budget reconciliation,
some people were a little worried he might not. He said this about the size of the plan on MSNBC.
The worst thing we can do is put a price tag on it. We just get what the needs of the people are
and basically how we keep the economy going,
how we keep people basically ready for this economy to come roaring back and they're prepared
to be part of it.
So if it's 1.9 trillion, so be it.
If it's a little smaller than that and we find the targeted need, that's what we're
going to do.
But I want it to be bipartisan.
So if they think that they're going to basically, we're going to throw all the caution to the wind and just shove it down people's throat, that's not going to happen.
So that's a lot of mention being mentioned, but pretty good news on the one point nine trillion that he is willing to embrace one point nine trillion if it gets there.
It does seem like he has at least two specific sticking points.
Overall, of course, he keeps saying he wants it to be bipartisan.
He wants it to be bipartisan.
That seems like it's going to be tricky.
But on the policies, he keeps talking about making the bill more targeted to people who've been most impacted by the pandemic.
We learned yesterday that Democrats are reportedly considering lowering the income threshold for the fourteen hundred dollar checks from seventy five thousand to fifty thousand dollars for individuals who make that a year. And from one hundred and fifty thousand a year down to one hundred thousand a year for married couples.
Parents would also get fourteen hundred dollar checks per child.
Dan, what do you think about this change and why Democrats are reportedly
considering it? I assume they're reportedly considering it because they need Joe Manchin's
vote. Yeah. Do you think he's made it a large bill, a number consistent with what Biden has
talked about. I think this is a foolish and unnecessary thing to do. There is no situation
where there's a perfect process for distributing funds. It has never worked in the history of time.
This is something that has to be done very quickly at a very large scale.
I would much prefer in a historic recession in a pandemic that you err on the side of helping some people who need it less than not helping enough people who need it more.
But this is sort of the reality we're going to
have to come to terms with, which is we need Joe Manchin, we need Kyrsten Sinema, we need Mark
Kelly, we need a handful of more conservative senators to get something done. And hopefully,
he'd be persuaded to do something different. But this is why this is happening. It is not
Joe Biden just deciding so that he can appeal to austerity hawks on Morning Joe or whatever else to
demonstrate, to sort of do austerity virtue signaling. This is, I imagine and assume,
he's trying to figure out what it is going to take to get all 50 Democrats to vote for
something that is very close to $1.9 trillion in line with what he proposed last month.
Yeah, I mean, we talked about this a couple of pods ago, like when Susan Collins was complaining
that people making $300,000 would get a check. Like I understood that $300,000 is a lot of money.
I don't know that someone needs a stimulus check if they're making $300,000. I also wasn't sure
what she was talking about because I don't know what threshold that really is in the in the plan but like these numbers get thrown around in washington
and in the press and like i think people don't think about what real people are going through
like imagine if you're making sixty thousand dollars a year and you've gotten the past stimulus
checks and suddenly someone tells you that you can't get your full stimulus check making $60,000 a year because why?
They needed to like save a little bit of money.
It's not a ton of money to go from $75,000 to $50,000 in the context of a $1.9 trillion piece of legislation.
So it does seem very silly to me and harmful to people who are struggling making in that income bracket.
That said, again, we are just all fucking living in Joe Manchin's world.
Joe Manchin wants something, then you can yell at him, you can try to persuade him.
But at the end of the day, every Democratic senator gets to act like the majority leader.
They do.
They just, because if they're out, there is no bill.
Similarly, Manchin also said he's against raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour,
and that he'll only go as high as $11 per hour.
Background of this is in West Virginia, the minimum wage is like around $7 an hour.
The cost of living in West Virginia is much lower than other places.
So again, minimum wages aren't the same, aren't equal in many states.
$15 an hour in a place like LA or New York is probably still too low to have a living wage and
to keep yourself above poverty. Certainly in West Virginia, though, maybe $11 is a living wage.
So what do we do about that? Is there a way to square the circle so that we don't get no increase in the
minimum wage, but that if Joe Manchin, clearly if Joe Manchin is a hard no on 15, it's not going to
pass because you need all 50. Before we persuade Joe Manchin about how high the minimum wage should
be, we have to persuade the Senate parliamentarian that a minimum wage increase fits under the rules
of budget reconciliation, which is a very, very open question. Senator Schumer has expressed some optimism on that last month, but we don't know.
And once again, we may be in the unfortunate situation of having to compromise with Joe
Manchin to get something done.
The minimum wage has not been raised since 2007, I believe, not federally.
I think this is something we should push aggressively on,
even with Manchin, even with Republicans, because as we've seen in our polling and other polling
around the country, minimum wages, that $15 minimum wage is incredibly popular and with
bipartisan support among the public. And so I think we should push really hard for it and not
immediately accede to his demands. There could be some of these faux populist Republicans who
could potentially be on board with a minimum wage. It's going to depend on are we dealing
with the minimum wage increase as part of a standalone piece of legislation that requires
60 votes because it is not viewed as part of budget reconciliation? Or is it in this
deal where Joe Manchin has vetoed over every single word in the larger coronavirus package?
over every single word in the larger coronavirus package.
And we should say the good news about Manchin here is he's running around talking about how $1.9 trillion is OK.
Like, even if there is a bad policy decision on the threshold for the checks, even if there's
a bad policy decision on minimum wage that we don't agree with, which I wouldn't if it
doesn't pass.
Like the unemployment benefits alone in this package that is going to hold people who are unemployed to anywhere between 70 to 100 percent of their wages through September is really
important.
The vaccination money, super important.
The child care money, the rent money, the you know, there is so much in this plan that is really important.
It's going to make a huge impact on people's lives.
And the fact that it does seem like Manchin is on board with most of it.
And so are all the other Democrats on board with reconciliation and passing it with only 51 votes is overall very good news.
Now, Republicans in Congress are still pretending that they
give a shit about bipartisanship. They're also trying to spin reporters into believing that
Biden really wants to cut a deal with Republicans, but his liberal advisors are standing in the way.
On Wednesday, Republicans got some help on this from an anonymous longtime Joe Biden advisor
who decided to fucking go on background to Politico and say that the White House statement after the meeting was too harsh, that it's all being driven by Ron Klain and other
Obama veterans who learned during negotiations over the Affordable Care Act that waiting around
for Republican votes is pointless. And this advisor also said that getting Republican votes
is worth lowering the price tag of the plan by a few hundred billion dollars. I mean, where do we even begin here, Dan? What's
the argument for lowering the price tag to get Republican votes that you don't need?
There is none. The entire exchange is so frustrating on so many levels.
One, because this very vague anonymous person, we have no idea who this person is. It could very
well be a longtime Biden advisor. It seems clear it's not someone who works in the White House since they seem to. It's not. Certainly not
someone involved with drafting the statement in the White House. It could be someone who is Biden's
legislative director from like 1986 to 1989. It could be a former campaign aide who is not involved
in the White House. It could be someone who was in my 1997 Joe Biden Senate office intern class.
We do not know the answer to that.
And I should say the reason we're bringing it up anyway is because it is the narrative
that's not only coming from this random anonymous Biden advisor from the past.
Republicans are pushing this narrative.
The press, a lot of the D.C. political press has bought into this narrative, especially
at Politico and other places.
So it is out there.
And this And this advisor
sort of gave it more life, which is why we're bringing it up. One other thing is just like,
this is Ron Klain making Joe Biden do things. Obama advisor Ron Klain. Ron Klain worked for
Joe Biden from 1986 off and on until 2020. That's part of it. But idea that two to three hundred billion dollars in less aid to
the economy and the pandemic control effort is worth a handful of votes is insane that is just
like where is that 200 billion dollars that is like talk about talk about fucking dc brain how
long have you been there jesus christ that's what what you, you're like, like, this is like people's lives struggling through a pandemic.
And you're like, well, I don't know, a couple hundred billion for a vote.
That'd be cool.
What are you talking about?
But where does it come from?
Are you going to do less money to get the vaccine out?
Are you going to cut people's unemployment benefits for this optic. It speaks to a strain of political coverage and punditry that is so
deeply stupid, which is thinking that optics are more important than substance.
What is going to matter more two years from now? Just put aside all the substance about
saving people's lives, helping them put their families back together financially.
Let's just talk politics for a second because that's clearly what Politico by name in this case is focused on is in 2022, are people going to think more about whether Joe Biden got some political risk for someone who ran on a unity message to have to pass a very large bill on
a party line vote because that allows the other party to just stand back and say, this is all
your fault. Everything that goes wrong. But there's also, but there's also risk in under
responding to the crisis and having it linger. Which risk would you choose between those two things? This seems pretty clear what the right answer is. Also, again, public opinion is on Joe Biden's side
here. Data for Progress has a poll out yesterday. By 55 to 35 percent, voters want Democrats in
Congress to pass a larger bill as soon as possible, even if it doesn't have support from Republicans in Congress.
That was yesterday.
We now have polls from Yahoo News and YouGov, Data for Progress, Quinnipiac, all confirming
the Crooked Media Change poll from the other week that 70% of Americans support this plan,
Biden's plan.
It's all coming up around 70%.
It's the gold standard.
Our poll is the gold.
Yeah, it's the Ann standard poll is the goal yeah it's
the yeah it's the anselter of polls yeah it's the anselter 2008 to 2000 and january 2nd 2020
70 support and then 40 republican support you know and now you get now you get a bunch of dc
reporters be like democrats are have a new way of defining bipartisanship by the percentage of support they're getting from voters in the country.
Like, yeah, that is the fucking definition.
The voters in the country, the people who decide elections, they like the plan.
I don't give a fuck what a couple of Republicans in the Senate caucus think about it.
That's their problem.
Go ask them why they're not supporting a plan that 70 percent of Americans
support, including almost half their own party. Ask them the question. Don't ask us.
Ask them and ask the anonymous Biden advisor. Those are the two people to ask.
Yeah, well, so Politico Playbook got the anonymous Biden advisor who was
the intern in your class back in the 80s. Punchbowl
actually got Steve Ruschetti to speak to them and who is a Biden advisor in the White House.
And he pushed back pretty hard on this idea that there's some kind of split. He's like,
this is who Biden is. He goes, he he wants to be polite to people. He wants to have respectful
disagreement. But he like he's not naive about what republicans want and he's like
okay with there being disagreement and again everyone keeps confusing i think who joe biden
is and and sort of what his approach is going to be like when he talks about unity when he talks
about bipartisanship even it's not joe biden thinking he's going to completely change the
republican party bring a whole bunch of them on board and then everyone's going to completely change the Republican Party, bring a whole bunch of them on board, and then everyone's going to pass bipartisan bills.
It's, you know, and he said this in the inaugural, he doesn't think that every fight has to be
a political war.
He doesn't think you have to be nasty to each other, which is why as soon as that meeting
ended, like Susan Collins walks out of the meeting, talks to reporters and like, you
know, we didn't agree on everything, but we had a really nice chat.
And like, if all Joe Biden's bipartisan unity bit is, is making sure that people aren't screaming at each other all the time in Washington and aren't like calling each other names and at least are listening to each other, even if they end up disagreement.
That's pretty good. That's pretty good. And that's a lot different than the last four years.
Um, so one thing before we move on from this, you know, everyone's talking about how, uh,
the Biden folks and a lot of specifically people who are working in the Biden administration that used to work in the Obama administration have learned lessons from 2009.
When they talk about that, they mean both lessons, um, from the negotiations around
the recovery act and then the affordable care act right after that, since you and I were
both there, uh, do you want to explain why things went that. Since you and I were both there,
do you want to explain why things went the way they did and what lessons we learned, Dan?
Well, I could explain it to you. I would also recommend you read Barack Obama's take on this in his not particularly well-known book, Promised Land, which has only sold seven gazillion copies.
There is no question that with, as Obama said in his book, with the
benefit of hindsight, we would do a lot of things differently than we did in 2009. I do think,
however, some of the retelling of that history has been overly reductive and doesn't sort of
provide context. And so there is no question that the first stimulus that we passed was too small for
the challenge. Now, you may say, why did we do that? And there were three reasons for that that
I think are relevant. One, the top line number was dictated by members of Congress who had just
passed a stimulus the year before and two bank bailouts that no one wanted to pass but felt were necessary a month earlier
before the whole conversation began. Second, we had a much more conservative Democratic
majority back then, but just from top to bottom. Joe Manchin is closer to the left than the right right in the Democratic caucus of 2009. You had Joe Lieberman, whose vote we needed,
who had endorsed and campaigned for and spoken at the convention of Barack Obama's opponent.
We needed his vote. We needed the vote of Ben Nelson to the right of Joe Manchin in a lot of
ways. We had two senators in North Dakota, two senators in Arkansas, a senator in Alaska,
a senator in Louisiana. We had a lot of very conservative senators in
red districts. That group of people would never in a million years have been for using budget
reconciliation for this purpose. And we also only had – people always pretend like we had 60
senators. We actually had 58 because we would have had 59, but Al Franken was in a recount that lasted through the first half of 2009.
He actually did not get seated until the summer, like June or July.
July.
We had 60 senators from July of 2009 to February of 2010.
That's it.
That was our super majority.
And one of them was Joe Lieberman this whole time.
And then the last thing that I think is really important that I do think people forget a lot,
which is as bad as the crisis was, we didn't even realize how bad it was.
Because the first report of the gross domestic product for the last half of 2008 during the crash
was that the economy had contracted 6.8%.
And stimulus is about filling the hole in the economy. We learned after the stimulus was passed,
when they revised the numbers, the number was actually 8.9. So they're off by a pretty large
percent. And so all those things combined led us to be in a position where we did not get the stimulus – the amount of stimulus and response we needed in the short term.
And then what happened because of that is our party, which not just – we talked about conservative senators.
There's also a gigantic coalition of quote-unquote blue-dog Democrats in the House who were very fiscally conscious, if you will,
and then we were unable to go back to the well to get more stimulus where we saw we were missing.
The most important thing from all of this, and I think Barack Obama would agree with it,
you and I would agree with it, the Biden people clearly agree with it, is you get one shot
to address this crisis. And everything else that you want to do depends on addressing the
crisis right now, which is why they are going big and fast and comprehensive and being aggressive
about it. Because if you fail here, you're going to be trying to dig yourself out of this economic
and political hole for the rest of your term. And so there was a lot of lessons to learn about 2009.
And it is very clear that Joe Biden, who was there and managed the Recovery Act, completely understands that his team, I think, is very wisely approaching this with that experience in mind.
political coverage tends to focus on characters and personalities and lessons learned from individuals and who's tough and who's not and who's smart and who's not. And usually the answer
lies not in personalities, but who has power, not in characters, but what the larger context is.
And the larger context is we now have a more
ideologically consistent caucus in the House and in the Senate than we did back in 2009.
And now we have power in the sense that we have a House majority that is ideologically consistent.
We have a Senate majority that is more ideologically consistent than it was,
though we still have Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema to deal with. And so we're going to be able to just do a lot more and to be a little bit more ambitious
than we were in 2009. Have we also learned lessons from how the Republicans acted in 2009 and ever
since? Yeah, absolutely. But even if we knew in 2009 that Republicans were going to block every
single piece of legislation and be obstructionist, we still would have had to deal with Joe Lieberman and Ben Nelson and all these people.
And if Barack Obama, like what was Barack Obama going to do?
Like go to Ben Nelson's, go to Nebraska and start like whipping up crowds against Ben
Nelson.
They don't give a shit about Barack Obama in Nebraska.
Ben Nelson, like he's not going to be afraid of Barack Obama.
And so I do think that's
something that people have to keep in mind today, just because, again, Joe Biden can yell at Joe
Manchin all he wants. But Joe Manchin is going to have a lot of power over the next couple of years.
And it's just something that we're going to have to deal with, unfortunately.
All right, let's talk about Republicans in Congress because they're having a hell of a time this week.
They had a big decision on Wednesday.
Do you punish the House member who voted to impeach Donald Trump
for provoking the attack on the Capitol?
Or do you punish the House member who thinks Democrats should be executed
and wildfires are caused by Jewish space lasers? House Republicans went with neither. They chose neither.
In a secret ballot, only 61 members voted to oust Liz Cheney from her leadership post on Wednesday
night, while 145 voted to keep her. As for Marjorie Taylor Greene, not only did Kevin McCarthy and
House Republicans decide not to strip her of her committee assignments, half of them reportedly keep her as for marjorie taylor green not only did kevin mccarthy and house republicans decide
not to strip her of her committee assignments half of them reportedly gave her a standing ovation
after she half denied and half apologized for all the comments she definitely said as we're
recording this she's on the floor this morning saying things like i do believe that 9-11 happened
which is you know something good for her.
That's something that she has to say.
That's a real it's a real sister soldier moment for her.
It's very brave saying that 9-11 happened.
And what's happening now is the full house is going to vote on whether she should be stripped of her committee assignments.
Before we get to Green, Dan, what is your take on the
Cheney vote, the Liz Cheney vote? First, a Pulitzer Prize to the reporter who uncovers
which Republican voted present on a secret ballot. Because that person should also be
stripped of their committee memberships, just for pure stupidity. So funny.
No one's going to know my vote. I'm still too afraid.
The number of people who voted against Cheney is pretty substantial and pretty telling about
just how divided the Republican Party is. This is ultimately a decision by the caucus writ large to
kick the ball down the field a little bit and deal with this later.
the Cuban non-Trumpist crazy part of his caucus feel good that he's on their side,
the insurrectionist wing of the Republican Party, of which I would note that Kevin McCarthy is a part of, but also the more establishment, corporate-backed part of the party can feel
comfortable that it hasn't fully devolved into Marjorie Taylor Greene-ism. So they've accomplished
nothing.
They solved their problems and they managed to only slightly exacerbate the problems they
had, if that makes sense.
It does.
To me, the most telling part of the whole thing is the secret ballot.
I believe that if it wasn't secret ballot and they had to be public about their votes,
there would be a lot more of them who were afraid of what would happen to them if they
voted to um defend liz
cheney uh because they are led around by you know their voters and their voters are led around by
uh right-wing lunatics on fox and right-wing radio so that's it but you get a secret vote
maybe some of them feel like they can be a little bit more normal, just a little bit more normal. But when it's public, they are scared shitless.
So entire House is about to vote on a resolution to strip Marjorie Taylor Greene of her two committee positions.
This comes after Kevin McCarthy offered to kick Greene off one committee, but not the other.
An offer that House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer rejected.
So McCarthy decided to accept her fake apology, telling reporters, quote,
This Republican Party is a very big tent.
Everyone's invited in.
If you know everyone from deficit hawks to people who think Nancy Pelosi should be executed.
It's a big tent. It's a big tent, Dan.
And then he pretended to not even know what QAnon is.
Here is a clip.
I think it would be helpful if you could hear exactly what she told all of us.
Denouncing QAnon.
I don't know if I say it right.
I don't even know what it is.
Any from the shootings.
She said she knew nothing about lasers or all the different things that have been brought up about her.
Has no idea what QAnon is, except here's a clip of Kevin McCarthy just a few months ago.
There is no place for QAnon in the Republican Party.
I do not support it.
And the candidate you talked about has denounced it.
A real leading light of the Republican Party, Dan, Kevin McCarthy.
It's just a lot going on upstairs with that guy.
He managed to pronounce it incorrectly twice in two different ways.
I know.
Why do you think McCarthy was willing to do one committee but not two?
I realize that's a small question, but...
He's so painfully stupid.
Just painfully dumb.
When he was the House whip, his job was to count votes.
And it is incredibly rare for a House majority to call a vote and lose it
because you get to decide when it goes and you get to count the votes.
And it happened to him several times.
It is like what the galaxy brain meme is for is something that stupid, which is yes, leader Hoyer, you have some solid points here. And I think she's definitely
too anti-Semitic and off the rails to work on education issues, but labor issues, I think we're
okay with like, what the fuck are you talking about? This is, I mean, this is
ultimately the problem is we're dealing with really stupid people in really important positions at a
very important time for this country. Do you see, onto the Democrats, do you see any risks
to Democrats kicking her off these committees? This, just so people know, this hasn't, this
doesn't happen. You usually don't have a full vote in the House to kick a
member off their committees. Usually if a member does get removed from committees, it happens
within the party. Kevin McCarthy did ultimately kick Steve King off his committees because he's
a white nationalist, belatedly because he's a white nationalist. But usually it happens within
the party. This is, you know, going to the to going to the full floor is unusual. Do you see any risk in this for Democrats? Not political risk. This is absolutely the right thing to do.
There is a, I think Democrats have a political imperative and frankly, a moral obligation to
deal with someone like this and to shine a light on what the Republican Party has become and where
it's headed. There is almost certainly going to be some form of
retribution if Republicans take the House again in two years. Yeah. Oh, I mean, they will immediately
take some comments that some members or all members of the squad made, they will twist them
into something awful, and they will all vote to kick them all off committees, probably other
members as well. It will definitely happen.
I think – and then so we say that and they're like, well, maybe they shouldn't do that because ultimately who cares what committee Marjorie Taylor Greene is on. I just think Democrats cannot pull our punches based on what we think Republicans may do because they will probably do it anyway.
Yeah.
Oh, I totally agree.
Yeah. Oh, I totally agree. disturbing information political environment where calling out the extreme positions of someone strengthens that person's position in a lot of ways. I sort of sometimes refer to it as
mutually assured attention. She has raised well over a million dollars because she said crazy
things and Democrats called her out for them, which is a pretty disturbing sign about where our politics are and where the Republican Party
and its base is. So we should not – Democrats have to do this because it is the right thing to do.
I also think it is the politically wise thing to do to put – to shine a light on this.
But we should not pretend that this is going to do anything to make the Republican Party less extreme, less out of the mainstream, less dangerous. It will probably have the opposite
effect. It's not our job to police their party, but that is ultimately the, her hand is, I think,
strengthened by this, not weakened. I just want to emphasize why it's important to do as well,
because I think some of the focus on Green has
been, oh, she makes these sort of kooky, crazy comments, right? This is someone who said that
Muslims should not serve in Congress. This is someone who said, who promoted a post, liked a
post that Nancy Pelosi should be assassinated. Like the QAnon conspiracy is not just like some
kooky conspiracy. QAnon has been not just like some kooky conspiracy.
It's QAnon has been labeled a domestic terror threat from the FBI because QAnon believes that leading Democrats should be executed.
She is someone who has advocated violence against government officials shortly after we just had a riot, an insurrection on the Capitol where government officials were targeted for assassination.
It is it does not get more serious than that. You know, there's also a question of like, why not expel her? That was
on the table. To expel a member of Congress, I believe you do need a two-thirds majority,
which of course Democrats are not going to get in the House. I also think the problem with
expelling her is she'd probably go run again and the people of Northwest Georgia would vote her
back in. I mean, this is the headline in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution today. The leader
of a private paramilitary group that provided security for Marjorie Taylor Greene said he's
formed alliances with other far-right racist neo-Nazi hate groups to advocate for Georgia's
secession. One of them said, things are different now. The ballot box, we tried as hard as we could. It's not working. This is what's happening right now in different
places in the country and specifically in Marjorie Taylor Greene's district. Right. Like we focus a
lot on the Republican Party and Kevin McCarthy, but the voters, they center there. And if you get
rid of Marjorie Taylor Greene, they're probably going to vote another lunatic back in in that district. So, you know, the problem goes a little deeper than I think we would hope. Democrats are already
trying to make Greene and Republicans like her the face of the Republican Party in advance of
the 2022 midterms. The Democratic congressional campaign chair, Sean Patrick Maloney, previewed
the party's strategy to Politico, saying, quote, If Kevin McCarthy wants to take his party to
crazy town and follow these dangerous asides, he shouldn't expect to do well in the next election.
They can do QAnon or they can do college educated voters. They cannot do both. The DTRIP is already
running $500,000 worth of ads linking House Republicans and battleground districts to the
dangerous cult. Here is the ad. QAnon, a conspiracy theory born online, took to the dangerous cult, here is the ad. letting the QAnon mob win. Kim and Steele should have stood with us, but they were cowards.
They stood with Trump and the lies.
Representatives Kim and Steele,
they stood with Q, not you.
DCCC is responsible for the content of this advertising.
They stood with Q, not you, Dan.
A little ham-handed, I would say,
but what do you think of the strategy overall?
I would also note that that same person has been doing voiceovers for
DCCC negative ads
my entire career.
It is a little, this is not really
DCCC's fault. This is sort of how
you have to get things covered.
I'm 90% sure that DCCC
does not know and no one else knows what
their strategy for 2022 is going to be.
We got a lot of miles to travel before we get there. Yeah, I do think as a political communications
approach in this media environment, putting paid advertising behind stories that are relevant and
making sure that voters see them long in advance, the election is the right way to do it. So
I don't love every word in this ad. I don't love the execution. I support the strategy. I think
it's the right thing to do. What impact it'll have in the long run, who knows. But if you step back,
what this is really about is continuing to lock in the Trump era gains among suburban voters.
And keeping that going, because you can see a world where Democrats
can be very concerned. We don't have evidence of this yet, but it'd be on my worry list,
that with Trump in the background, with people not seeing Trump every day, that people could
revert back to where they were before Trump politically, right? And they only need a small
handful of suburban voters to go back to Romney Clinton voters who voted for Clinton and Biden and for Democrats in 2018 to revert to a Republican to think the Republicans are less crazy than they were with Trump.
And as it turns out, they're actually more crazy post-Trump than they were during Trump.
And making sure voters know that is – will certainly be an essential – whether it's this exact execution of it will be a central political goal for the Democrats over the next two years.
D-Turple C said that something like 60 plus percent of voters knew what QAnon was in the polling that they did, which really surprised me because I would not have guessed that that many people did.
I still wonder if you ask them, OK, explain what QAnon is, if they could do that.
But anyway, they're like five people who can do that total. Right. And Q is not one of them. It's
like. So, you know, putting that aside, I think the overall strategy of trying to
of trying to depict the Republican Party as in the thrall of extremists is a useful strategy.
Should it be the only strategy? Probably not. Part of this is we still don't know, like, for example, in Georgia, in the runoff, Democrats ran an economically populist campaign
against Republicans. And I thought we both thought that was a good idea. They also pointed out that Loeffler and Perdue were part of the big lie that Donald Trump was telling and
helping him try to overturn the election. So there was an argument that they were extremist and that
the Republican Party was extremist and that the Republican Party was just trying to help rich
people at the expense of the working class. Which one of those
arguments was more effective? We actually don't know. We don't know yet which drove voters. And
in truth, different arguments could have driven different voters and different kinds of voters
to the polls. So I do think there needs to be a little bit more research on what exactly is
motivating different groups of voters and what has motivated them in the past. But in general,
we know from like decades
of political science research that if voters believe a candidate or a party is more extreme,
ideologically way out to the side, either on the right or the left, they're going to be less likely
to vote for that candidate or party. Like we do know that. So just painting the Republicans as
extreme is at least useful. It's not everything,
but it's useful. One of the biggest factors that will determine who controls the House after the
2022 elections is a process that will begin in the next few months, redistricting. What is
redistricting? Well, we hold the census every 10 years. As a result, some states lose population,
other states gain population. That
changes each state's number of electoral votes since that depends on population. It also changes
each state's number of house districts since that depends on population. So every 10 years,
all 50 states have to redraw the boundaries of their house districts based on the new census
numbers. If your state government is entirely controlled by Republicans,
Republicans get to essentially pick their own voters by drawing districts that are favorable
to Republican politicians, known as gerrymanders. If your state is controlled by Democrats,
Democrats get to draw the districts. In some states, an independent or bipartisan commission
gets to draw the maps. And this year, which is a redistricting year, Dave Wasserman
of the Cook Political Report, who is such an expert on the process that his Twitter handle
is literally redistrict, says that Republicans may be able to win the six seats they need to
take control of the House just by drawing new maps. Again, they think that Republicans just
by redrawing the maps during redistricting can pick up the six seats they need to take control of the House of Representatives in 2022.
And this year also redistricting is going to start in July because the census data has been delayed due to the pandemic.
All right. Did I leave anything out there? And where should Democrats be worried? Which states and where might Democrats have an advantage?
be worried? Which states and where might Democrats have an advantage? Democrats should be worried generally because in the states that allow partisan redistricting, Republicans control
district lines for 188 seats and Democrats control them for 73 seats. The states that are most
likely, we don't know, but most likely to gain seats include Florida, Texas, and Georgia. Republicans have complete control of the redistricting process in those three states. And so, like, I think Dave Wasserman's actually being, when he says may, he is just like putting in a kernel of doubt.
clear based on the number of seats these states are going to get and how aggressively Republicans have redrawn these districts on a partisan basis the last time around, that while we could win
other seats to make up the gap to hold the House, they would take control just on the states I
mentioned alone. Democrats have an advantage in New York. It's the one state where we now have
complete control and have some ability to do it. Republicans could still lose seats in some states
where they have complete control just because they have almost unanimous control of the congressional delegation. But this
is deeply, deeply considering. We went into this election in 2020 with huge hopes of making real
gains to be in a much better position than we were in 2010. And while we are in a better position than we were after
the 2010 election, we failed to gain control of a single entity that would give us additional
influence over the process in the 2020 election. Thank goodness we did so well in 2018 because we
were able to pick up governorships in some states that would allow us to have a say in the process.
But we enter into the redistricting process in a deeply,
deeply, deeply disadvantageous position. And, you know, you might be wondering, like,
what about a state like California where Democrats have full control? What's going on there? Well,
California outsources redistricting to a commission so that it's not partisan. Same
thing as states like Colorado colorado virginia washington
also california is all in all likelihood going to lose a seat this time so even the states where we
have full control and and some of the more in the bluer states they're either bipartisan or
non-partisan commissions or where they're those are states that are actually going to lose
population and therefore lose a seat so we're just in a we are in a bad spot.
And like it's not I think what's so worrying about this is it's not a bad spot like in a normal year, years ago.
It's a bad spot where Republican control of the House could mean, you know, in 2024 2024 the next coup succeeds because now republicans control
the house they could start impeachment hearings of joe biden uh when they went in 2022 it's the
end of joe biden's legislative agenda in 2022 if the house republicans take over so it is
it is quite worrisome and what do we do about it, Dan? We need a time machine.
Okay.
Okay.
Next.
What else we got?
What else we got?
There's two elements of things we can do.
One is grassroots activism in the states where this process is happening.
All on the line, which is a project associated with the National Democratic Redistricting
Commission, is organizing grassroots campaigns to put pressure on Republicans. Indivisible
is organizing their chapters to put pressure on Republicans to shine a light on what is happening.
We can absolutely have influence, and we should absolutely not wave the white flag. And there
are efforts. The worst gerrymandering happens when it happens out of the spotlight, where you don't put
pressure on people and you can really push hard. And I'm not saying this is going to fix all the
problems. I'm not saying that Texas Republicans are all of a sudden going to become responsive to
the will of the people. But we have agency here and we have to use it.
The other thing we can do is really simple and really important,
which is the For the People Act, which is essentially the updated version of the John
Lewis Voting Rights Act, would ban partisan gerrymandering. It would ban any map that
unduly favors one political party or the other. And if we were to put that in place,
we would have a chance at outlawing the worst gerrymandering in this upcoming election. We would have to do that
very quickly. In order to do that, we have to eliminate the filibuster and pass the bill.
So again, we could save the House, potentially, if Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema would only vote
to get rid of the filibuster so we could pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
vote to get rid of the filibuster so we could pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
This is the next decade of our lives. What happens in this redistricting process is going to determine the next decade of our lives. Because it is not just federal districts. It's also state
districts. There's a whole bunch of things happening here. It would, in addition to dealing
with gerrymandering, the For the People Act would put automatic voter registration in place. It
would stop a lot of these really malicious Republican efforts to roll back voting rights in their tracks.
All we have to do in order to give ourselves the best chance to govern this country in a
progressive way consistent with the will of the majority is for a small handful of senators to
be willing to change their opinion on an archaic, esoteric legislative
loophole and then pass a bill that, according to our poll, has two-thirds support in the country,
including more than 30% of Trump voters. That is all we have to do. We're not asking anyone to do
anything politically hard. We're asking you to break with a Senate tradition that was critical to the implementation
and containment of Jim Crow, a Jim Crow relic as Barack Obama called it, change that, pass this
popular bill to make America more democratic and to stop an effort to rig our politics and steal
the house is right before us. And so ask yourself, what would Mitch McConnell do in a similar situation
if Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski were being a little reticent about something that would give
the Republicans the best chance to control the levers of government for a decade?
What do you think he would do? Yeah, I mean, I think we all, I think every single person
listening knows the answer to that. I mean, it's one of, it might be the most important
piece of legislation that is in front of Congress that Joe Biden could sign in the entire first
term. And maybe for the next, like you said, maybe for the next 10 years, not only because it would
end gerrymandering, dark money in politics, it would protect voting rights, roll back some of
the things Republicans have done to make it harder to vote offer the citizens of dc and puerto rico statehood i mean look the number of things it
would do to make to unrig our democracy are just mind-blowing and necessary um and just so you
know like that like if the republicans pick up six seats that they need from redistricting, our only other chance of picking up seats in the House, we have nine Republicans in the House sitting in districts that Joe Biden won, which is not many.
And then we have seven Democrats sitting in seats that Donald Trump won in 2020. So the playing field is relatively small in 2022 because like we don't have a lot
of other targets and opportunities should the Republicans start by making up six seats just
by drawing the maps. So it's going to be really, really hard in 2022. And it's never been more
important. I know we say every election is the most important election of our lifetime, but because we now have a authoritarian party that hates democracy,
it's true. I think it's also important for people to understand that while our friend Mark Elias
and other attorneys can do everything they can to fight back in the courts over these new partisan
maps, we have to realize that according to the Supreme Court, thank you to
moderate hero, John Roberts, partisan redistricting is constitutional.
The Supreme Court, in an opinion written, I believe by John Roberts, made this point,
which is so painfully stupid that it hurts my brain, that the courts are not the place to litigate
overly partisan districts. The only place to do that is at the ballot box. So according to John
Roberts, the only way to get a fair district is to win an election in an unfair district.
Yeah, I mean, it pretty much sums up what Democrats are facing in the next several elections,
should we not pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
If we do not pass this bill,
it'll be really one of the worst mistakes
any political party has ever made.
This is having unified control of government.
We have not had it for a decade.
This is a chance, it is fleeting.
And we won't have it again.
Not, I mean, not for a very long time, very possibly.
And like, I don't, I mean, I'm going to get very worked up about this and that's probably
not constructive, but this is, we have an opportunity to do something that will change
the trajectory of American politics in a way that will give us at least
the opportunity to address things like healthcare, climate change, everything else.
But it requires this.
And it begins – and people get bored by process and it's, why are you having – like,
talk about the economy, talk about healthcare.
Yes, that's all true.
But process is a predicate for policy.
And if we want to put in place the policies that we want, we have to fix the process.
The opportunity is right before us.
We could do it in a day if we could just get Joe Manchin, Kyrsten Sinema, and I will say
others.
We always say their names because they have outed themselves.
Dianne Feinstein.
Yeah.
But there are a lot of other Democrats who are hiding anonymously behind Sinema and Manchin
and Feinstein.
So we have a lot of work to do to get people there.
But this is a once in a generation opportunity and we're trying to sound the alarm on this because
i don't want people to be surprised by it and i know there's a thought right now like trump is
gone things are good biden's there we can sort of relax we cannot relax this and this is why this
is one of the reasons why like we like 2022 is going to be incredibly important and before we we get there, Joe Biden and the Democrats trying to pass this piece of legislation is going to be incredibly important, just as important in many ways as getting rid of Trump was in 2020.
So everyone pay attention to this. We'll be talking about this again and again in the months to come.
When we come back, we will have Dan's interview with journalist Farai
Chidea. Farai Chidea is a journalist and author. She's the creator and host of Our Body Politic,
a syndicated public radio show and podcast, which is centered on reporting on not just how women of
color experience major political events today, but how they're impacting those very issues. Fry, welcome to Pod Save
America. Thank you so much. Glad to be here. Fry, I wanted to start by talking about the
conversation you've been leading in your industry for a long time now about representation and how
newsrooms are often disconnected from the communities they're covering. How has the Trump years illuminated that problem? And how are people within the
industry responding to the conversation you're having? Yeah, first of all, I think a lot of us
are having it. And part of my specialty is doing voter demographics. And I've done it year in and
year out for many different elections in different places. And I won't perseverate on this, but I have been speaking about the 538 newsroom in 2016,
where there was no interest in really exploring the rise of racial resentment as an indicator of
voter preference, and the rise of white nationalism. And, you know, I had examples
of both, which are interconnected, but not the same. But also, I feel like, in general, and I
was very lucky, I should say, to get to do a series on voter demographics, but it could have been much
more robust if we had given it some space to breathe. That's my personal experience. But pretty much every
black journalist you talk to, many Latino, Asian American, Native American journalists,
and even white journalists who seriously took on the topic of racial resentment and its
weaponization in politics, were often shut out of doing the kind of substantial reporting
that the issue demanded. And so in the end, it's not about journalists of color versus white
journalists. It's like, what is the frame for the way that we covered America? And so just recently
on my Twitter feed, I looked at the past five years of Time magazine covers and found that
there was no coverage of
white nationalism explicitly in any of the covers. And the one cover on Steve Bannon
had the word white 16 times referring to the White House and once referring to white nationalism.
So basically, what I've been doing is calling BS on the framing of politics and the way that
we've covered it, both to diminish,
I think, some of the contributions of women of color, which is what I'm specializing in now,
and also to underplay the rise of white nationalism.
The unwillingness to look at politics through the frames, very specific frame of white nationalism,
very specific frame of white nationalism. That is a product of newsrooms that are not diverse enough, a product of a mentality about politics that's outdated. What do you ascribe that to
that's bigger than just, that includes, but maybe bigger than just representation within the
newsroom? Yeah, absolutely. I think it's a frame, I call this frame establishment whiteness, which is essentially one of the constructs that affects a lot of newsrooms, which is the idea that whiteness in and of itself is unremarkable, and in fact, normative. And because it's normative, it doesn't have to be reported on as a thing in itself. So blackness is often reported on badly or in biased ways, but it's reported on extensively
to the point where I feel like black people are often problematized. It's like the problem with
America's cities and implicitly how it's covered. It's like the problem is black people don't have
their stuff together. Whereas nobody asked the problem with domestic terrorism and then starts
going in on white nationalism. Why has that cover not been in any of the major
magazines? I mean, that's pretty astounding. So if white people were treated the way black people
are by supposedly objective newsrooms, there would first of all, just be coverage of whiteness,
the good, bad and the ugly, but whiteness is not covered as a category, which to me is a huge
blind spot in the coverage. And then it really undermines political reporting because
white nationalists are a group of American voters. They are voters who are motivated by certain
sentiments and beliefs. And during the 2016 election, I interviewed a woman in the Las Vegas
area who was told repeatedly in both business context and personal context that the reason to vote for Trump
was to prevent the dilution of the white race. If that's not the rise of white nationalism in
politics, I don't know what is. And I think we didn't give enough heft to that kind of narrative,
which is also about white people who reject white nationalism and supremacy. You know,
she rejected it.
And whether people were embracing it or rejecting it,
we didn't get enough of those voices.
Over the last four years,
how much have you seen the industry come to terms with this challenge?
Because, you know, my experience
in talking to journalists of color
over the last four years
is the people least surprised by everything that's happening, right?
Absolutely.
Least surprised by what happened at Capitol last month, least surprised by Trump's election, least surprised by how the Republicans have embraced Trump on Capitol Hill over the years.
But the decision makers in many cases, or in most cases, I guess, in a lot of these networks and newsrooms are still white people. And have you seen these newsrooms, these executives
begin to seriously wrestle with this question and address it in some way in their coverage
and in their staffing? Staffing, I think, is a little bit of a too soon to say,
because there's major staff changes coming up. You know, first of all, after every election,
there's a lot of movement in political reporters. It's when people move on to take new jobs, etc. But also there are positions open for the head of news at ABC, there's leadership at Washington Post, CNN, Reuters, Vox, Huffington Post, the list goes on, LA Times. So this is a sea change in the industry
of journalism where all of these leadership positions are open. So now would be good,
a good time for leaders in journalism to open themselves up to who is considered a leader.
But I think you can put anyone in the seat at any company and not empower them to make
new decisions. So you could change the race and gender
of every position to someone else of someone, you know, another race or gender and still get the
same outcomes if you don't have a sense of inquiry about the truth. So to me, really, it's like,
what is your inquiry about the truth? How are you unbiased? I don't like the term objectivity
because it's been used in ways that are patently not objective. And in my case, Nate Silver and I
had these sort of running discussions about race and politics and how we covered them.
But in the end, he called the Trump campaign evil and made a big point of it on the podcast. And I you know, what is often classified as one group of voters?
You know, white evangelical Protestants are, you know, very much a voting bloc at this
point, but there are many differences within them.
So it's about treating people with respect.
And it's about treating people as individuals, not statistics.
Statistics are great, but we have to know the story that gets
us there. I think it's a very important point, what you said about objectivity, because the way
that most people, I think, commonly understand journalism, particularly in this day and age,
is there is partisan journalism. That can be right-wing, left-wing. It can be opinion. Then
there is, quote-unquote, objective journalism. That could be what traditionally you think of
as The New York Times, Washington Post, ABC, and that what you often hear people wanting is more objectivity in journalism. Can
you explain why that is not necessarily a good thing? I'm less worried about the, I mean,
the concept of objectivity doesn't work for me for this reason, which is that it asks that you leave
your culture and your past behind, which frankly that it asks that you leave your culture and
your past behind, which frankly, I don't see journalists doing when they go out in the field.
A lot of the reporting on low-income people, working class people, and people of color,
which are not the same group, but interconnected in various ways, is very anthropological, like,
oh, we're going to this dangerous Black neighborhood to talk to people.
And to the point where I wrote a report for Harvard Shorenstein Center, and one of the
parts of the report was talking to a woman who had been forced to go basically as the Black buddy of
a white reporter to Black neighborhoods. But when she was sent into the pit at NASCAR and dragged into a bathroom, no one was there to protect her.
You know, the I mean, to be a black woman in due field reporting is patently dangerous
and many different types of unpleasant incidents have happened over the course.
But that's part of my job.
And I sign up for those dangers.
What I what I get really irked by is that the construct of objectivity itself becomes
weaponized in newsrooms to prevent the kind of reporting I'm talking about, to prevent the kind
of reporting that really does take you into the field and to dealing with people who are unpleasant,
unpalatable, et cetera. So, you know, if we can reform the whole idea of objectivity and make it
meaningful, great. But right now what we have is a conceit that is actually used to prevent coverage in various
ways.
And so I go for fairness or impartiality as the language I choose.
You know, if we want objectivity not to be bankrupt, we have to act differently.
One of the challenges of the quote unquote
objective model of journalism is sort of the both sides dynamic. And one of the things that a lot of
our listeners have been very concerned about, and I've heard from a lot of journalists about,
is that because now we have sort of come to, at least some people come to terms with the idea
that there is a very virulent, very growing strain of white nationalism in the Republican Party.
And so now we have to treat white nationalism, quote unquote, objectively, as opposed to calling it out with some sort of moral clarity.
How do you think about that?
Yeah, I mean, I think that objective journalism, and I've done 25 years of reporting on white nationalists and supremacists. I want to treat them impartially, which includes saying, in some cases, this group kills people or, you know, you know, you part of being impartial is actually stating what's happening and not not sugarcoating it. So I'm, you know, in one case, a woman from the Aryan
Nation, which was disbanded because they killed people and were sued out of existence in civil
court, said that the reason that she granted the interview was to recruit followers. And that let
me really understand that I also could not make her an antihero. She was a very compelling, like she would make a great movie. She was from a wealthy family, said that the Aryan nation was her true home, talked about throwing the hammer at this summer hammer toss. And like, she was basically like a Leni Reifenstahl, you know, character.
you know, character. But I don't want to portray her as someone who is living the good life.
You know, I'm going to be honest about her life, but I'm not going to valorize her. And so I think what actually happens sometimes, people are afraid of covering this because they don't know how to
contextualize the fact that there are perfectly, you know, employed, well-off people who join these
extremist movements. If we wrap our brain around
that, then we just have to make sense out of the fact that some people choose this. Some people
make, it's not like, you know, it's not by accident. And that's okay. If we can do endless
crime coverage on the evening news, we can cover domestic terrorism through the lens of white nationalism. And it requires a bit of discipline.
There is sort of two opposite, I think, two sort of polar opposite types of journalism that happens.
There is sort of the man on the street. It's the New York Times diner story that we make fun of a
lot here, where you just go to a diner, interview a bunch of people with MAGA hats on and ask them why they still love Trump. And then there is
sort of data journalism, where you're just digging into the crosstabs of polls or whatever else.
How do you find a balance between those two to tell an accurate, contextualized story of what
is happening in America? Yeah, I love using both data and field reporting,
because you can also, I mean, data is flawed, just like interviews are flawed. Sometimes people lie
to you, you do your best to figure out when they're lying and when they're not lying based on
context and evidence. And at the same time, people also lie to pollsters, which we're increasingly
finding out, or simply the
mechanisms don't track certain populations well, you know, people without landlines, etc. So I
really use the two types of journalism to reflect on each other so that I can puzzle out what the
truth is. And I also don't pretend to have a lock on the truth all the time. If I'm not certain about something, I'm not certain. But I also spend time with people where they are. So I go to mosques, I go to evangelical churches, I go to people's places of work, I go to county Republican meetings, because I don't just want to interview someone in a diner. I want to talk to them where they live,
where they pray, where they have family so that I know what the words that they're saying mean
to them. It gives me so much more context. If we were, if we, the political community,
the journalism community were not up to the moment of dissecting what was undergirding the Trump movement in 2016.
Do you think we are better prepared for this next time around to cover the next Trump or
another politician who is part of that same movement? I think we're going to get plenty
of practice, whether we like it or not. I mean, the reality is Trump is gone, but Trumpism isn't,
as we've seen from the way that Marjorie Taylor Greene was able to sway members of her own party.
And there's a tick tock of arrests coming out of the siege of the Capitol.
So we don't have the luxury of not dealing with this.
Now, will we deal with it?
Well, it depends.
I mean, first of all, as someone who's done primary source
reporting, it's dangerous, and it's time consuming. The data reporting on white extremists, you know,
which is in and of itself a huge thing of people scraping various, you know, video, Facebook posts,
etc. It's a very skilled endeavor. And so I think that you have to, in order to really understand the story,
have some basic understanding of technology and social platforms, where to find information and,
you know, how to safely interview people if you choose to do the primary work. But I also want to
be clear that, you know, I think that the press missed the story of white nationalism. But I think that the press missed the story of white nationalism, but I think that the more important story and the story always in politics is power. Who holds it and why? So white nationalism is just a tool to hold power. It's a tool to hold political power even when you don't win it democratically.
And politics is all about power.
So there's many ways to gain power.
You can gain it through a Democratic vote.
You can gain it through weaponizing ideology or race. And so it's just part of what we should be doing as political reporters is to understand
the many different mechanisms people use to hold power, ethical and unethical.
Frye, thank you so much for joining us.
Before I let you go, how can our listeners follow your work and support what you're doing?
Oh, thank you so much. I do a podcast called Our Body Politic. You can find it at
ourbodypolitic.show. And we dive into basically how women of color hold power and the ways in
which it's sometimes different than men or white
Americans or both. And I think that to hear the stories of how women of color gain, hold,
and use power is also something that we need to plug into. Fry, thank you so much. It's such an
important conversation, and I look forward to talking to you again. Likewise. Thanks so much.
talking to you again. Likewise. Thanks so much.
Thanks to Fry for joining us today. Everyone have a great weekend and we'll talk to you Waller. It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Kyle Seglin is our sound engineer.
Thanks to Tanya Sominator, Katie Long, Roman Papadimitriou, Caroline Rustin, and Justine
Howe for production support.
And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Narmal Konian, Yale Freed, and Milo Kim, who film
and upload these episodes as videos every week.