Pod Save America - "Repeal and go f*ck yourself." Our first episode!
Episode Date: January 9, 2017Jon Favreau, Jon Lovett and Tommy Vietor launch Pod Save America with a discussion of Russia hacking, cabinet confirmations, saving Obamacare and Obama's final speech. Then they're joined by Tamika Ma...llory and Linda Sarsour to discuss the Women's March on Washington.
Transcript
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Welcome to the first episode of Pod Save America.
What a name, guys.
I'm just imagining everyone just hearing our Nintendo music having played.
This is going to be glorious.
I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
Hello, everyone.
We're back.
Or for some of you, this is the first episode of Pod Save America you'll hear.
This is a venture of our new media company, Crooked Media. Some of you might know us from our old podcast, Keeping It
1600. Some of you may know me from just being somebody everybody knows. We're very excited.
We're very excited. So let's start with why we did this whole thing, why we moved over from
The Ringer to our own little venture. Yeah, let's talk about it. Some of you might have heard us crumble into little balls on election night and the next morning.
And I think like most of the country, we have since that day been trying to figure out what do we do about it?
Because I think if Hillary Clinton had won, we would have continued our lives in California and watched from afar and cheered her on.
And she just came so close.
and watched from afar and cheered her on.
And she just came so close.
I think all of us feel,
Favreau, Levin, and I,
who are starting this new company, Crooked Media,
please visit our website, getcrookedmedia.com,
felt like we wanted to get more engaged and get back in the fight.
And part of the problem in this election
is that there wasn't a good place
to talk about politics like a human being.
And there wasn't a good place to try to understand
not just what was happening, but what you can do about it.
And we want to figure that out for ourselves and help you guys figure it out.
And it's going to be a long, difficult process, but we're excited about it.
Yeah. And you can expect, for those of you who were keeping it 1600 fans, the three of us will be doing this podcast on Monday.
Dan Pfeiffer will be joining me on Thursday.
We're going to have the same sort of
fun, freewheeling conversation about politics that we always have.
They're both looking at me, guys.
But we do want to focus a little bit more on, as Tommy said, what you can do on some advocacy,
on how to get involved in politics. We want you to be part of this, which also means
send us your ideas, send us your complaints, send us your jokes.
We really do.
We are very responsive on Twitter, maybe to a fault.
Yes.
No, Lovett only checked his mentions this morning.
He did not prepare for this podcast.
I had a lot.
Listen, I'm starting a media company.
I got a lot of menchies.
All right.
A lot going on.
The one thing we want to say is we will no longer be on Keeping It 1600.
We will no longer be with The Ringer. But Bill and his
team were so incredible to us
for giving us this opportunity, for
supporting us along the way, and for inspiring us
to step out and try
to do our own thing the way he did. So thank you to
those guys. They're incredible.
Tate Frazier, Joe Fuentes, the whole
team at The Ringer. You guys were the best.
Thank you. And we'll be seeing you soon.
Also, if you like this podcast podcast please uh rate us on itunes that's how we make a living here
john and his initial notes kept saying forced give us a four-star review don't give us a five star i
didn't know i thought that was the highest five stars we're gonna get infomercial can we just get
to the podcast let's get to the podcast podcast here we go i think we'll pick up right where we
left off last time we did this which is is the Russia hack. Still happening. So according to a declassified
intelligence report that was released on Friday, the CIA, the FBI, and the NSA have concluded that
Vladimir Putin himself ordered an influence campaign to undermine Clinton and had a clear
preference to enhance Donald Trump's campaign prospects. The influence campaign included the hack of the DNC, the hack of Clinton chairman John Podesta's personal email account,
fake news, Russian Twitter trolls, the whole nine yards. So Obama and Trump got the classified
briefing on this on Friday. Trump released a statement afterwards that actually acknowledged,
it got close to acknowledging this for the first time. It said, acknowledge that Russia is
constantly trying to hack our cyber infrastructure, but said there was absolutely no effect on the election.
Now, I don't want to necessarily get into the whole debate here about the effect on the election.
That's a boring podcast.
Though, I did notice that Jesse Bernie on Twitter tweeted, the Russian hack led to a guy driving hundreds of miles to shoot up a pizzeria.
So, yeah, I'm pretty sure it might have affected some votes.
Fair point.
Also noted, the ThinkProgress folks noted that Trump mentioned WikiLeaks 164 times in the last month of the election.
So, clearly he thought it was useful.
But let's look forward on this.
It seems like there's two things that we need to do in the future on cyber attacks.
One is to do better at stopping cyber attacks before
they happen, right? And that's a lot of things that we don't know. We're not experts in this.
DNC needs a couple of bike locks on those computers.
But assuming that even with better defense, cyber attacks will happen, I think we need to talk about
how do you lessen the effects of cyber attacks? Right? Yeah, I mean, I think even that's an important cultural question. But
even before you get to that, it's like, this, this wasn't just a cybersecurity issue. This was a
broader influence campaign, right propaganda effort that was directed against the media and
every US citizen by Vladimir Putin. Part of it was done by releasing John Podesta's emails to
WikiLeaks. Part of it was done with these trolls. Part of it was done by releasing John Podesta's emails to WikiLeaks. Part of it
was done with these trolls. Part of it was done with the Russian propaganda network RT. And I
think, you know, there's some people on the left that are sort of reflexively dismissing these
findings as bullshit. They're pointing to us being wrong about Iraq WMD and saying they want to see
more detail. I just, I want, I think we can't be nihilistic about this and distrust
the intelligence community forever. Because, you know, a few months ago, if you if you'd
read these findings aloud, you would have been called the craziest conspiracy theorist
alive. And now you have it as the consensus view of the intelligence community that Vladimir Putin
ordered this entire undertaking. And I think we need to recognize that they did this in Eastern Europe before.
They're going to do it again.
And, you know, we need to focus on ways to prevent it.
And sort of what John was starting to talk about as a culture, like, how can we stop being a part of these weaponized hacks you're seeing against individuals?
Because it started with Sony in North Korea.
And the media and everyone on
twitter followed right along and and allowed themselves to be a part of it and it's dangerous
but also what makes our political conversation so vulnerable to it but also as individuals
what is it about the polarization of our politics uh that means that that not only will a presidential candidate wave around a WikiLeaks report on stage,
but that his supporters will just grab onto it.
And by the way, if the situation were reversed, Democrats would have done the exact same thing.
So we are vulnerable to this, not just because of hacking,
but because our culture is just wholly unprepared for a steady drip, drip, drip of hacked information in a partisan context.
And I don't think anybody knows what to do to fix that part.
Well, and what's so hard to, it's hard to determine what kind of outcome it had or what
effect it had because sort of the range of information you're talking about is so wide,
right?
Like some people would say, well, if someone hacks into an email, someone's email and exposes
some big, awful thing, right?
Then shouldn't the public know
about it anyway, right?
So that's one issue.
You set that aside.
But then there's the fake news stuff, right?
Then there's the more, like, framing things in people's emails as more insidious than
they actually are, right?
And so, like, the question is, how do we, when something is hacked, when someone's email
is hacked or whatever, how does the media
I guess, put some more context
around the information that's being
released so that it doesn't seem as sinister?
And I think it should start with the
motives of these groups. I mean, I'm
going to be honest with you guys,
John, John, everyone listening,
I'm kind of scared to mention WikiLeaks
because I don't want them to fucking go after me.
You see these WikiLeaks task force people tweeting that they're going to start listing the financial and family information of every verified Twitter user.
I mean, what is the broader good of doing that, of going after individuals and their families just because they got a little blue check from at Jack?
I mean, this is a dangerous path we're going down of character
assassination. Yeah. I mean, I think the important thing here is whether you supported Trump,
whether you supported Hillary, these people have an agenda to destabilize democracy and
destabilize Western democracies. That's Putin's agenda, right? He's going to try to do this in
Europe. He could try to do this to us again. And it's nice to talk about it in the future,
as opposed to rehashing the election, because obviously it's become this partisan thing,
but it shouldn't be partisan. Right. I mean, it's so crazy. The notion that the intelligence
community is somehow lying about these findings, right, that John Brennan, the CIA director,
is going to cook up an inaccurate, dishonest report that is really damning to Donald Trump,
up an inaccurate, dishonest report that is really damning to Donald Trump, and then two weeks later, hand over the keys to the CIA to Donald Trump's hand-picked CIA director,
right?
That doesn't make any sense.
They're going to see all the evidence John and the CIA team who's there currently is
seeing.
So, like, I think we have to have some confidence in these results as a nation.
I guess the question then is what do we do
and i think one thing is reporters are gonna report on news and hacked information and they
should and there was plenty of news and you know you step back in the sony hack and other hacks
and the dnc hack and hit in the emails that came out uh legally uh from hillary but i i think one
thing that's gonna have to we're gonna have to figure out how to
be more mature about is the day to day business just isn't newsworthy. And if every once in a
while, we are going to see the sum total of a person's personal correspondence, we just have
to be mature about it and give people a threshold for saying the crazy thing. Yeah, I mean, listen,
there's some things that are newsworthy, and there's some things that are newsworthy and some things that are just a shitty comment you made to your friend in an email. And like that shouldn't be a political story.
And stories can no longer be a rare look behind the scenes because they're not rare and they're not news.
Nothing is rare anymore.
Nothing is rare.
a result of a foreign adversary trying to weaken us, right?
There's a reason that Putin's doing this,
and it's not because... There's a reason he wanted one side to win
and one side not to win, right?
And, like, you know, he's going to keep doing this,
and the idea here is destabilize Western democracies,
and he's targeting environments
that there's a lot of political polarization
and media polarization.
Those are ripe targets for those.
Right. The report notes that the Russian pundits thought Hillary was going to win, too.
Apparently, they also suck the way we did.
Well, they are.
They are friends of the pod.
Yeah, friends of the pod.
So they were trying to weaken her as president.
So, yes, I mean, you're right.
This is an attack on the institution of the presidency.
Oof.
Okay, so I think we solved that.
Could you imagine if that thing had worked?
Oh, boy.
Okay, so this week we have cabinet hearings.
We have confirmation hearings for Donald Trump's cabinet members.
Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell are basically trying to jam most of the cabinet
confirmation hearings in this week and in the next couple weeks.
They're stacking a lot all together.
This is actually before most of them have completed their ethics reports
and FBI backgrounds checks.
Last week, the Office of Government Ethics complained that the current schedule
is too much too soon for them.
That's the first time that the Office of Government Ethics
has ever actually complained about that before,
because usually most of these ethics reports are...
Strong silent type, type usually those guys are yeah right yeah the oge isn't really you know
making a lot of noise um uh but they've been complaining about this because they're trying
to jam them all through the reason it's taking them so long is that all of trump's cabinet picks
or at least a good majority of them are millionaires and billionaires with all kinds of
financial possible conflicts of interest and every lot there's a lot to sort through it's almost as if he's it's also a very
cumbersome process i mean yeah in fairness to in fairness to them having not completed these
forms it's a very onerous process that said you don't the reason trump and his team are jamming
all of these hearings in one week is because he knows that there are going to be some nasty stories spinning out and some very difficult questions, and they want them all to get squished
together to just minimize the impact while on the day he does a news conference. It's almost as if
he's putting together an unaccountable oligarchy. And if you were to put together such an unaccountable
oligarchy, how do you get them through? Over the course of a couple months? No, no, no. You get
them through all at once. Yeah, very busy Wednesday.
I like that they're going to have these Senate
hearings and the Senator's first question is going to be like,
how do you spell your name?
Can you please submit some form of identification
so we can verify who you are? We're not really sure.
We haven't seen any documents. People are just
going to be handing their licenses to the...
What did you do before you came here?
Good to meet you, Rex.
I tried to look you up on Wikipedia.
I couldn't find you.
Do you have a resume on LinkedIn that we can check out?
Democrats say that the unprecedented personal wealth of Trump's nominees warrants delays.
Mitch McConnell's response is grow up, Democrats.
I don't care about their.
The fact that they're wealthy is not a reason to delay. The fact that they are going to hold hearings all at once before these people have submitted the documentation that allows senators to ask informed questions is absurd. And obviously wrong, and Mitch McConnell knows that.
that because he, you know, we can talk about it, but Mitch McConnell wrote a letter in 2009 to Harry Reid saying we must wait until all their documents are submitted before we hold hearings.
McConnell yesterday on the Sunday shows said,
no votes, there will be no up or down final votes until all the forms are in.
But it is a little weird doing the confirmation hearings without the forms.
Yeah, you need to, like, you know, I worked on a number of these confirmation teams and they are grueling.
You have to fill out forms for the ethics committee.
You have to pass an FBI background check.
You have to turn over all your personal financial disclosures.
And you also answer a ton of policy questions.
And you have one on one meetings with you try to get to every senator.
And usually you have a Sherpa who's sort of like a, you know, former senator or someone well known on the Hill kind of brings you around.
But it's an important process because I guarantee you, like people who have worked in government
all their lives are not ready for how hard this is. These random, like Rex Tillerson, who three
months ago was worried about where Exxon was going to drill next. Like that guy is not ready at all.
And he's got to be able to answer not just for things in his life and his background,
his financial dealings, but also Donald Trump's policies.
And they're not prepared.
And what's that process like preparing a nominee for questions in front of the Senate?
I know you were part of some of those for some of the national security folks that we
The murder boards.
Yeah, I mean, like basically you try to be a mock, you do a and you, you get a bunch of, you get the nominee in the room. I did them for,
um, a few people, but the, my favorite was John Brennan because I was sort of like
tapped to be the asshole, which is of my nature and just ask him the most obnoxious,
difficult questions you could possibly think. And I got him really pissed off and I think it
was helpful, but like you, you try to, you try to get them so that they are not going to get a question that's harder than anything they heard in prep.
Now, Democrats, Chuck Schumer has said that they're basically targeting eight nominees of Trump's specifically.
Some of them they're not really going to put up much of a fight on and going to let them through. The eight they're targeting are Rex Tillerson for state, Jeff Sessions for
attorney general,
Mnuchin for treasury,
Scott Pruitt for EPA,
Betsy DeVos for education,
Tom Price for health and human
services, and Puzder for
labor.
First of all, I think that's great. Why eight?
It's a lot. It's probably
too many. Seems like it's a lot.
It's a lot to bear.
Maybe drill down.
Drill down.
Come on.
Make some choices.
Are we really in a position to...
Let's not let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
Yeah.
Right?
Well, it's a good question because, I mean, we don't...
It should be said, the Democrats do not have the votes to stop any of these confirmations.
Which is our fault as Democrats.
Right, because you could
in the past, you could maybe filibuster
a nomination. It wasn't very likely
with 60 votes, but
we blew up the filibuster for
not cabinet nominations
but lesser nominations.
Which means that it's next to go.
Which means it's, yeah. This filibuster.
The filibuster we could employ to stop cabinet appointments is, right, there's two left.
There's cabinet appointments and there's Supreme Court justices.
Basically, we need two Republican votes on each of these nominees to sink them, which is actually not impossible.
If you got two Republicans on one of these nominees, you'd sink the nomination.
Dude, we had a few nominees that were scuttled back in the day, right?
Yeah, we had a hard time at Commerce.
We threw up through four different people there.
Someone went down.
I think Tom Daschle had some tax issues that prevented him from serving in government.
Can you imagine that?
Tom Daschle has a few tax issues, and that was enough to sink his nomination?
Tim Geithner made a couple mistakes on TurboTax, and it was like a whole thing.
That literally happened.
It's ridiculous.
These people are just sending in their forms blank.
When our nominees were going up, the Senate Finance Committee had a former IRS staffer who
would go to the homes of nominees. And like, if you'd written off a room in your house for a
write-off, they would measure the square footage to make sure you got it right. It was that level
of insanity. I mean, it was probably way too far, But I mean, that that's how far away we've gotten
from traditional vetting of any kind of nominee. And it's interesting, because at the time,
you know, we've all been through all seen all kinds of vetting processes, you know, for even
for little things like when the when the president goes to give a speech, you heavily vet the people
that are going to be on stage, on stage, you everything is vetted within an inch of its life. And Trump has just abandoned all of that, you know, he's
standing on stage with like ex mob guys, there's just no, and and and it turns out, all you had to
do was be completely shameless, right? And then none of these standards had were at all politically
enforceable by pressure or press or anything. In terms of where Republicans have voiced some concern, you've heard McCain and Graham talk about Secretary of State nominee Rick Tillerson's ties to Russia.
And there are some of their concerns about those, you know, what that might mean in terms of our policy towards Russia.
You've seen he's opposed sanctions, notably in the past.
He's opposed sanctions on Russia. You've seen... He's opposed sanctions, notably, in the past. Yeah, he's opposed sanctions on Russia. And then Jeff Sessions, who is the nominee for attorney general,
was rejected in 1986 for a federal judgeship when Reagan put him up. And that was only the second
time in history that it happened. And, you know, this is a guy that we need to keep an eye on,
because in terms of, along with the allegations of racism, I mean, his support for mandatory minimums and these just draconian drug sentencing laws is truly turning back the clock.
Not unrelated to the accusations of racism.
Yeah, right.
I also think there's a category of nominees in here that Schumer has targeted that fall under the category, you know, Trump promised to improve the lives of working class Americans,
but he's not going to because look at the people he has.
And so I think targeting Mnuchin,
who was, you know, part of a lot of foreclosures, unfairly.
Yeah, people in the West.
One West.
Maybe we should have prosecuted a few of those people.
Right, DeVos.
In hindsight.
Yeah.
Now they're going to be secretaries of treasury.
Yeah.
Betsy DeVos, who, you you know is a very strong voucher advocate which takes a lot a lot of money away from public schools price obviously on health care because he wants to get
rid of obamacare which we're about to talk about and puster because he wants uh you know robots to
replace workers in fast food restaurants so these i think there's there's a messaging this is
interesting i mean what what do you guys think strategic for democrats i mean how much of these I think there's a messaging. I'm betting that Elizabeth Warren and all those other senators will be asking, you know, what do you think about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau?
Do you want to get rid of that?
Do you want to get rid of the rules on Wall Street that President Obama put in place?
Right. Like, so I think they're going to try to go towards Trump's policies and get some answers out of these nominees about what Trump might actually do, because Trump has said so little about what he might do on a lot of these issues.
so little about what he might do on a lot of these issues.
Right. I mean, we're going to need to do like bank shots because the goal here is two years from now to tie these congressional Republicans to Donald Trump and have Donald Trump be so
unpopular that we can take back at least the House.
That's a good point.
And I think no one really knows the best way to do that just yet. I think it's a little
too early to see what really sticks. But one thing we do know is that the more unpopular Trump becomes and the more unpopular his administration, the harder it will be for these Republicans to defend him, the harder it will be for them to keep their seats.
You're right.
Love what you said earlier, which is it is not enough to say, oh, this cabinet is stacked with millionaires and billionaires.
It is what will these cabinet secretaries do?
What agenda will they carry out and how will that affect the lives of average Americans? Yes, we need to, it's, it's not about like, their wealth is not offensive.
The fact that he's putting together a team of people from business is fine. The question is,
what does that experience lead them to want to do? And right now, what they want to do is,
you know, well, tear the middle class to pieces, repeal the Affordable Care Act,
which is our next topic. I do think this is an area
where people can get engaged.
And if you guys got to go getcrookedmedia.com,
we've linked to a couple of websites
where it helps you figure out
the best way to contact members of Congress
to voice your displeasure
with the timing of rushing these hearings
with the nominees themselves
and things they've done and said in Trump's policy.
So check it out.
This is a great way to make your voice heard. And one last thing on this. We're playing defense and that's good.
We can play defense is a lot easier in Congress. So these are a lot of these are guides and
resources about a new way of thinking about the way to fight back. And it's about being defensive
and being advocates for what we've already achieved. And I think the biggest fight that's
coming up in the next few weeks is the fight
to save the Affordable Care Act. Congressional Republicans may vote to repeal the Affordable
Care Act by the end of this week. They can do this with 51 votes because they're going to do
this through a process called budget reconciliation, where you can repeal most of the law that way.
But they can only lose support, like we said, for the nominations from two Republican senators in order to make this happen.
To replace the Affordable Care Act, however, they will need 60 votes, meaning they will need some Democrats.
And just the reason this is the case is in part because that's actually also how we pass the Affordable Care Act.
Right, because you can pass some things through budget reconciliation where you don't need the 60 votes.
It's a lot of Senate teeth.
I think it's interesting.
Yeah, well, there'll be a bonus pod with Just Love It explaining the Budget Reconciliation Act. So the current plan is, in the minds of a lot of Republicans, is repeal and then do nothing. And then ideally delay...
Repeal and go fuck yourself repeal and go fuck yourself is what we're calling it
and then just delay basically the implementation
of repeal until a time
when I guess none of these people are in the senate anymore
yeah well they think
it's going to be like where no one has to deal with the political consequences
it's going to be like how they figure out what to do with nuclear waste
10,000 years out
they're like we'll put up a sign with a big X on it
big stalactite
so it looks fearful for the surviving humans.
And Cory Booker had a great quote about what this is like.
Love it's looking.
It's actually love it's quote first.
Love it.
Give it to us.
Oh, now you're...
Don't make me...
Oh, sure.
I'll do it.
What?
They are pushing our healthcare system off a cliff and trying to build a plane on the way down.
That's what they're doing.
That's it.
Glad we had to wind up to that.
And it's been, they have had basically the better part of a decade to come up with a replacement, and they don't have one.
I mean, in fairness, they have a bunch of different plans running around.
None of them would result in anyone having more coverage or lower premiums or lower deductibles, or at least certainly sick people.
So there's a lot of opposition.
So Republicans are starting to feel, this is where we really need to get involved,
because Republican congressmen, congresswomen, senators are starting to feel the pressure on this
because there's a lot of opposition to the idea of repealing the Affordable Care Act
and have nothing in its place, because you have 20 million people with health insurance right now.
You have 52 million people who have health insurance who have pre-existing conditions
that could lose their insurance if we repeal that part of it.
All kinds of stuff out there that could go horribly wrong.
And just one other thing.
If they were to repeal it through the budget process, it would really mean getting rid
of all the subsidies and all the ways you help people through Obamacare, but you would
leave in all the rules that require things of insured companies and...
No, I looked this up this morning, because remember the Supreme Court ruled that the
mandate was a tax, and so because it's a tax, you can get rid of that too.
What?
But just the mandate, but they can't get rid of the rules and regulations.
No, they're right.
There's some stuff that they can't get rid of.
But the mandate is now a tax?
Remember, that's what the Supreme Court said.
That's how I would survive. John Roberts. Anyway, they're right. There's some stuff that they can't get rid of. But the mandate is now a tax? Remember, that's what the Supreme Court said. That's how I would survive. John Roberts.
Anyway, anyway. We're going to cut this part, so just start again.
So most voters don't want this. 75% of Americans, this is a recent Kaiser poll from last week,
75% of Americans want Congress to either leave Obamacare alone or wait to repeal it until there's
a replacement law. Also sharing this feeling, the American Medical Association, the Association for Nurses, business groups,
conservative outlets like the Washington Examiner, the American Enterprise Institute,
have come out against repeal without replace.
And now some Republicans, senators, are skittish about this.
Rand Paul of Kentucky, Bob Corker in Tennessee, Tom Cotton in Arkansas,
Susan Collins in Maine are all signaling a possible break
from the party.
Collins and Lisa Murkowski from Alaska have voiced objections because Paul Ryan, in this
package of repealing the bill, also wants to defund Planned Parenthood.
So, Trump has said he wants to replace the Affordable Care Act with a terrific plan where
no one loses their coverage and everything is affordable.
Oh, wonderful.
That sounds great, guys.
That sounds really good.
Paul Ryan gave a quote that sort of gave up the game here the other day.
Jonathan Cohn of the Huffington Post caught this.
He said, quote, we want to make sure there is an orderly transition so that the rug is
not pulled out from under the families who are currently struggling under Obamacare while
we bring relief.
Don't pull the rug out from the people who are currently struggling under Obamacare while we bring relief. Don't pull the rug out from the people who are struggling.
Like, if they're struggling, they should want the rug yanked right out from them.
I don't understand. What's the rug? Is the rug the subsidy?
Is the rug how we're helping them?
What's under the rug? Is it a hardwood?
So, I mean, I think Barack Obama himself has said that there are,
the law is not perfect and that he would support fixes that would make it better.
I mean, I wonder in our effort to be as fair minded as possible, like what do you think should be tweaked or fixed in this law to make it better than it is now?
Here's what is true is in McConnell raised this on the on the shows yesterday.
You know, the law does not cover anyone.
There are it's covered, you know, 90% of the American public is covered now.
That is, it's the lowest uninsured rate in history.
But still, people aren't covered.
Part of this is because of some governors refusing Medicaid expansion in their states,
and some of it is just because people still haven't bought insurance.
It's still not affordable enough for them.
Premiums are still too high, okay?
The growth of premiums has slowed, where it wouldn't have been as much
without Obamacare, but premiums have still risen. A lot of plans have deductibles that are too high.
So these are real problems. Now, to fix these problems, President Obama said this the other day
during his Vox event. He said he would, you could raise taxes on the very wealthy to increase
subsidies. You could add a public option in a lot of these states where some of these insurance companies are leaving, so then everyone has an option to buy insurance. And if their subsidies are higher, that means you would have more people covered, you have they've had, and the Congressional Budget
Office will score this, so it's not just us saying this, they would actually lead to more
Americans without health insurance.
They would lead to higher premiums, higher deductibles.
So the problem is the Republican plans will not fix the very real problems that do exist
under the Affordable Care Act.
Here's the thing.
Part of the problem the Affordable Care Act was trying to solve is this inherent disconnect
between the cost of health care and the people who pay for health care.
Right. Like we all walk around like that, that we're not the ones who are going to end up paying for health care.
But as a country, we're there's either there's individuals, there's businesses, there's government and there's hospitals and others who will carry the cost.
We will pay for our healthcare. If your plan is about making sure that you can cut taxes on the wealthy to have a less generous version of Obamacare, human beings will end up paying for that. It's not that
complicated. You know, these subsidies could be more generous. The reason they're not is because
this was the most we could get out of the Congress that we had when President Obama took office.
We would have a public option, but for the fact that some
Democrats were obstinate at the time. Joe Lieberman. Joe Lieberman, not a friend of the pod.
One of the few people who aren't, frankly. But anyway, one of the lessons I think we should
take away from this as Democrats is, man, we paid a huge price in this election and for a lot of the criticisms being leveled against Obamacare by Donald Trump and none of the problems that certain Democrats thought they were addressing when they made the bill less generous, when they took out the public option, when they made it more complicated.
None of those problems that they claimed to solve helped us at all.
And if this were a simpler, more generous proposal, I think Hillary Clinton might be president right now.
The New York Times did a really interesting piece where they had reporters shadow doctors
and patients and executives in the Indiana University health system. And it was an
interesting piece because, you know, in addition to the subsidies and all the things you've heard
about what the Affordable Care Act did, it's also radically changed the way care is delivered. And
that's in some ways the most important part of the law, because you had doctors talking
about how, you know, they had the option to use a $300 cement versus an $84 cement in
a surgery.
And they never once before in their lives thought about which to use.
And now they're focusing on the lower cost option.
I want the more expensive cement.
It's an emphasis on this community health.
But the saddest and most frustrating part of this story is there's an anecdote about a 28 year old guy who had cancer
and he only survived because Governor Pence expanded Medicaid and it helped him. And he
thought ACA, he and his mom hated ACA and they didn't support it. And they thought it actually
forced him to be dropped from his mom's health care at 26 rather than allow him to stay on.
And it's one of these things where it's like, this isn't sad politically because I want this guy to support ACA. It's sad that he's been
fed so much disinformation about a law that literally saved his life that he has this view
of it. And it's part of what we want to do in the show, right? It's like, have a better, more honest
conversation about what's going on out there because this is life and death stuff. You're not
going to fix the health care system easily.
We all found that out.
We were part of passing a law that was admittedly imperfect.
In a sane world, with a sane political system,
what you would do is Donald Trump and the Republicans, Democrats
would work together and fix Obamacare and just improve it,
and they wouldn't scrap it.
And that's what most people want us to do.
And look, you look at the fact that Obamacare has always been like a 50-50 proposition in terms of people who support it versus not support it.
Like right now, probably slightly less than half of people want it to remain.
Slightly less than half of people want it repealed or scaled back.
But if you look at the percentage of people who are unhappy with it, there's a percentage of those people who just wish it were better, more generous, more liberal.
And I think that is a mistake that we are paying for every day.
So, what to do?
Call, bombard your senator's office with calls about this, particularly the ones that I mentioned who expressed reservations about this, because if they're already wobbly, more calls will make a difference.
In addition, I would add Senator Heller from Nevada and Senator Flake from Arizona, who are both up in 2018, they're Republicans, in states where they'll have pretty competitive races. Again, a few Republicans flake on this, and they can't pass it.
the country on January 15th on Bernie Sanders' site, ourrevolution.org. They're already organizing that. And there's a bunch of rallies spreading up all over the place around on this on January
15th to stop this. So participate if you would. Before we get to where I ask, I want to ask you
guys a little bit about Obama's final speech tomorrow. Sure. Last speech of the administration.
I noticed that you guys were both Obama speechwriters at some point in your careers. I'm wondering, what do you think? I mean, I wonder what the hell it's like writing
the last one of these, right? I saw him on San Stephanopoulos that he gave his little speech at
a dinner for senior staff and got choked up and couldn't make it through. I'm like, do you think
he's going to make it through this thing? And what do you think he should say? I think he'll be a
little choked up. It's going to be in Chicago. It's his last speech.'s where it all began back home i know they're still writing it i know cody's
pretty tired he slept in a couple days they're trying to get the paragraph at the end where he
says he's not leaving office and you'll have to drag him drag him from the resolute desk
kicking and screaming like i think the the media debate around this speech is going to be and we
you know i've already seen it in some pieces like is he going to go too hard at Donald Trump or not?
Is he going to be partisan?
I don't think he will be, but what he has believed since he's taken office, since he started his political career, in many ways is antithetical to everything we're seeing in the political system right now.
Not just because of what Donald Trump represents, but because of sort of, you know, sort of what the political system has become.
So I do think that he'll focus most on democracy, right?
And what it means to...
To be a citizen.
What it means to be a citizen
and what it means to protect democracy.
And that is both a national and an international question
in the world we're in right now.
I don't think he, I mean,
I think he's going to talk about some of his accomplishments,
but I don't think it's going to be like
a long recitation of accomplishments. There's no political upside to that anymore. No,, I think he's going to talk about some of his accomplishments, but I don't think it's going to be like a long recitation of political upsides of that anymore.
No. And I think there's a tradition in farewell addresses, starting with George Washington,
that there's warnings of them to people, right? And there's warnings to the American public. And
I think his warning here will be probably based around, you know, how to save and protect a
democracy going forward. That sounds great. Dark. Finish it up, Cody.
It's going to be... I think the president
is digging in right now
as we speak, probably.
I think he's probably...
He's got that yellow legal pad out.
Sounds like you have
a little insider knowledge, John.
You've been talking to Cody.
It's going to be quite a thing
to watch him finish
that last speech as president
because it is going to be
quite some time
before another president
gives a speech
worthy of a president.
So that's depressing. That's true. Okay, for some less depressing news, we are going to be quite some time before another president gives a speech worthy of a president. So that's depressing.
That's true.
Okay, for some less depressing news, we are going to come right back with our guests,
the organizers of the Women's March on Washington, Tamika Mallory and Linda Sarsour.
You're listening to Pod Save America with Jon Favreau, Dan Pfeiffer, Jon Lovett, and Tommy Vitor.
Welcome, Pod Save America, to Tamika Mallory and Linda Sarsour.
You guys are organizing the Women's March on Washington.
Thank you for being our first guest here on Pod Save America.
Thank you for having us.
Absolutely.
So tell us, what is the purpose of the march, and why did you guys decide to organize it? I think that the purpose of this March is to really allow an opportunity for many of the communities
that have felt marginalized and in some ways abused by the rhetoric and the
action of people in this past election cycle and even before that even prior to
this election cycle you know certain before that, even prior to this election cycle,
certain communities have been feeling oppressed.
And I think we are providing an opportunity to give people space to voice their concerns,
to build power with one another, where they are able to find allies
and like-minded individuals who are willing to work with them in their local
communities. So we're building space for people to push back against misogyny and sexism and racism
and all the isms that exist that oppress folks in this country on a daily basis. And I think that's
one big part of it. And then obviously giving folks the platform
to continue to work after January 21st. The message is quite clear on what we're doing out
there. It's a mass mobilization of hundreds of thousands of people on the first day of this new
administration, letting them know that we're here, we're watching them, we're outraged, we're going
to stay outraged. And we want to send them a strong message that we're here them we're outraged we're going to stay outraged and we want to send them a strong
message that we're here to protect the most vulnerable amongst us that means undocumented
people muslim communities women and women's bodies people with disabilities and those i'm in our
communities who uh count on uh support from the government to thrive in this country so it's going
to be quite clear when we get there. Hey, it's Lovett.
So I'm sitting here with a couple of bros.
I'm also a guy with a strong feminine instinct.
Will they be allowed in?
You've got to be okay with this.
The march is open to everybody, men, women, gender nonconforming folks,
children, seniors, elders, anybody can come to this march.
Everybody's welcome.
But what you've got to be okay with is that it's a women-led march.
So if you're ready to follow women towards justice and freedom for all people, then you're welcome, brother.
Honestly, I prefer following women.
That's why I work for Hillary.
And I think what's important in this moment is that, you know, women have always been at the forefront of movement.
They have not necessarily received the credit, but they've been there.
They've built movement.
And we also carry the weight of the community on our backs.
So men should want to, and gender nonconforming folks,
should want to be there to uplift women's voices
because we have been the ones crying out in this nation for a very, very long time
since the beginning.
We've been holding this nation together.
And we're just basically stepping into what is our rightful place in leadership.
So this is Tommy, a question for you guys.
So Democrats, we're obviously out of power and we are not going to have a lot of tools
to push back on Trump over the next four years. I'm wondering what you see the role of
protests is going to be during that period of time. Will it be a critical piece of changing
public opinion? Is it something that we should use at major moments? I mean, how do you plan
the next big movement like this? I mean, look, like you said, you know, we basically don't have any power in any level of government right now on the federal level.
The Senate, the Congress, the White House does not belong to progressives.
That's just the fact of the matter.
And what we want protests to do is to keep people awake.
We need people in perpetual outrage over the next four years.
But we also want people to focus on local elections.
I mean, people have to understand that the power doesn't just lie in Washington, D.C. It lies in
your Capitol building, in your local city hall. And one of the things that really scares the hell
out of me that people don't know, because our country has kept us away from the type of knowledge
and education that we need, is we're two governors away from calling a conference of states which allows the governors
to amend the Constitution of the United States of America.
This is how bad it is and could be for a whole bunch of communities
and a lot of the rights that we are afforded.
Some of us are fighting for some of those rights,
but at least to know that the Constitution can be changed
and we're only two Republican governors away from that is really scary.
So we've got to keep people awake.
We've got to keep the message strong.
We've got to keep people – we can't afford the silent majority anymore.
You know this.
We can't be ahistorical.
We know that in this country really horrible things have happened in history.
Slavery, segregation, Jim Crow, internment of Japanese, excluding the Chinese from coming
to this country through legislation.
So all these proposals people are hearing, they're not far-fetched because we've done
something in that iteration before.
So protest is just an opportunity to also allow people to take their outrage and translate
it into a public sphere where they can put their voices out there, because we don't want
to fight injustice with injustice, and protesting is a way to do that. So I'm hoping people stay perpetually outraged
because that's what I'm doing for the next four years. Protest is just one part of a greater thing
and when you talk about the fact that we're in a time where Democrats have lost everything,
but the will of the people will always prevail if it is strong, if it is powerful,
if our voices are louder than any person who seeks to roll back or oppress us. And so the
will of the people is now what it will take in order to right side what, you know, some of what
has been, what is being, what we see happening in this moment. And I'm very excited about, you know, some of what has been, what we see happening in this moment.
And I'm very excited about, you know, I've been saying to people, if there's one good thing that could come out of a president like Donald Trump being elected to office,
it would be the idea that folks will have to work together and fight harder than they are used to.
It's going to force people out of their comfort zone
and into a
space where we now have to take matters back into our own hands. We have to take a page out of the
Republicans' playbook, where in 2018, we know that there are going to be plenty of seats up for the
midterm elections. We've got to go take them and then block every kind of no-good policy that comes forward.
We've got to be prepared to block it.
So we've got real work to do, and that's why this march is so important,
because we're bringing people to the table who actually have the power to do something
that they may not have done before and be a part of a movement that they may not have been involved with.
What does success look like from this march? And what are some of the follow-up steps
that you guys are planning and hoping that other people do once you guys are finished?
I mean, immediately, right on January 22nd, which is the day after the march,
there's going to be a training in Washington, D.C. of 500 women who are interested in running
for office. There are teach-ins that are going to be happening around different issues led by a lot of our partner organizations. And the idea is
that we hope that we inspire you. We hope that we help you. If you're not already outraged,
we're going to send you in a state of outrage that you translate that into supporting movement work
in your local cities, in your local neighborhoods, finding organizations to support, like a local
Planned Parenthood chapter, like a local organization that works on police accountability or maybe
works with immigrant women or with refugees.
We have those partners that are already on our website, and we're hoping to give people
concrete things to do.
We have access to a lot of these people that are coming to the march.
They've registered with us on some level, on some form, on some website. So we are going to stay in contact with these people, put out calls to action,
and start connecting them and giving access to some of our partners,
especially those who are in most need right now, like the Planned Parenthood,
who are going to be potentially defunded, to have access to these people so they can act immediately.
Could you both talk about what led you to be involved in activism in the first place?
You're both young leaders, role models to a lot of people,
and there's a lot of young people out there right now who might be interested in these issues,
but they say, you know, I don't know if I can do it, I don't know how I can help.
Would you just mind each telling your story of how you each got involved?
So my parents were two of the National Action Network's first members, Reverend Al Sharpton's
first members, over 25 years ago when the group started.
They took me to rallies and protests and had me very actively engaged in the movement from
a youth standpoint at a very young age. And I think that when it became sort of my thing, not so much following my parents,
but really owning the movement for myself, was when my son's father was murdered.
My son was just two years old, and his father was shot and killed.
He was left in a ditch dead for two weeks before his body was discovered.
And I think in that moment, when we talk about this issue of intersectionality, it's like, you know, it was gun violence that killed him.
But was it really gun violence or was it poverty that we really need to be talking about?
Because he ended up in a situation that he shouldn't have been in because he was just trying to feed himself and his family.
situation that he shouldn't have been in because he was just trying to feed himself and his family and i realized in that moment that i had to find ways to stop this from being the reality of so
many black women that we are dealing with raising our children our black sons and daughters without
their fathers either due to mass incarceration or gun violence.
And it is all tying back to the issue of oppression, of people in this country, you know, not being
able to live and thrive as they should.
We're not living in an equal and just society.
And I decided that I wanted to work on those issues. And rather than sort of, you know, just be upset and feeling frustrated and hurt about losing my son's father,
my job was to figure out ways to ensure that other people did not end up in that club, you know, with the same reality.
So this is Linda.
I mean, I'm Muslim, and I'm a Muslim American born and raised in New York City in Brooklyn. And I remember immediately after 9-11,
as someone who grew up in a lower middle class family,
was really sheltered from the world.
My parents really sheltered me from a lot of injustice that was happening around me.
And I got to watch grown men in my community,
fathers, brothers, sons,
picked up in sweeps after 9-11 in the very community that I live in,
in South Brooklyn, and watched mothers cry over their sons. I watched wives crying for their husbands and
children crying for their fathers. And people were being detained sometimes weeks, months at a time.
And they were put into some black hole somewhere. We couldn't even find some of them.
And that really was my wake-up call to understand that I live in a country that doesn't treat us
all the same. I live in a country that has seen my entire faith community as suspect
instead of actual citizens of this country.
So I was basically radicalized at that moment
as someone who wanted to be part of movement work
and to protect my community first and foremost.
And what I've learned over the past 16 years doing this work
is that the government continues to target the communities that I come from
under the guise of national security,
so stripping us of our rights under this false premise of national security, which led me to other
communities, undocumented communities, black communities who have been systematically oppressed
under law enforcement agencies in this country.
So I'm in this because I have no choice but to be in this versus other people who may
say, well, that's really interesting.
I might be passionate about this issue. But a lot of us who are involved in this Women's March on
Washington, we are directly impacted by the system. So we can't sit at home and think about
what we care about. We know what we care about because we're watching our very family members,
our communities oppressed almost on a daily basis. Well, thank you guys for sharing that with us.
One last question. I think, you know, it's like we're talking about politics, but it's easy to forget that this is also kind of an experience we're all having together. So I just want to close by asking you guys, how did the election of Trump hit you when it happened? How are you feeling then? And how are you feeling right now?
You know, it was no different than how I felt when Sandra Bland was found hanging in a cell.
It was no different than Trayvon Martin being killed and then having George Zimmerman walk free.
It's sort of like waking up in a nightmare every day that this country continues to commit crime against humanity. And, you know, for me, it's like
another day to go to work. Unfortunately, we have a president coming into office who's very
powerful and very dangerous. And I know that we just got to put on like the entire armor.
And for me, it would be of God because I am a very spiritual person. You know, we have to put on like the entire armor and for me it would be of god because i am a very spiritual
person you know we have to put the entire armor on and we're going to have to drop these issues
that some folks might have people don't want to work together people don't want to support one
another we have to get past that in this moment to be able to stand up for all of our freedoms.
What does justice look like for each one of us?
That's how I feel.
So when the elections results were kind of unfolding, I was actually doing media commentating.
I was doing media commentating.
It was going to be pretty obvious that Donald Trump was going to be the next president.
I got a text message while I was about to do BBC World News on camera.
And the text message was from my 17-year-old son,
who literally is the most spoiled child that you could imagine.
You know, he's my only son.
And he was writing me continuous text messages saying,
why, why is this happening? This can't be happening.
Do we still have a chance?
And this is a 17-year-old kid who doesn't care about anything but himself and sports and his friends. And immediately after my BBC interview,
I went home to my family and I walked in and my three children literally both looked back at the
door as I walked in and burst out crying. And my daughter, who's 12 years old, was like,
what are they going to do to us? So I was devastated. I'm not going to
lie to you. I was in a moment of despair for maybe a couple of hours. And then I woke up the next
morning and I just got into this perpetual outrage. But people have to understand that
there are people who are in actual fear, that Donald Trump and his administration sends
true fear into the hearts of a lot of people because we know what injustice looks like in
this country. And we don't know what injustice looks like under an American fascist.
And that's how I've been.
I'm afraid, but I'm outraged at the same time.
Well, Tamika and Linda, thank you so much for joining us and telling us about the march.
And we will post some links to anyone who wants to get involved and wants to sign up.
And again, keep us posted, too, on what you're doing.
And we're going to try to keep sharing what you guys are up to.
Yes.
Thanks for being our first guests.
Good luck.
All right, guys.
That is our very, very first show.
Thank you so much for listening.
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