Pod Save America - Supreme Malarkey
Episode Date: June 29, 2023Donald Trump can’t stop incriminating himself after he’s caught on tape talking about classified war plans. The Supreme Court rules against affirmative action. Joe Biden delivers a major speech on... Bidenomics and White House Communications Director Ben LaBolt stops by to talk about the strategy behind it. Then, the on-again, off-again bromance between Trump and Kevin McCarthy has hit the skids once more.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast. Get the best seats in the house! Join Friends of the Pod for DC + New Orleans presale access: crooked.com/friendsGeneral onsale begins 6/30: crooked.com/eventsÂ
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, Donald Trump can't stop incriminating himself
after he's caught on tape talking about classified war plans.
The Supreme Court rules against affirmative action.
Joe Biden delivers a major speech on Bidenomics.
And White House Communications Director Ben LeBolt stops by to talk about the strategy behind it.
Then, the on-again, off-again brom and kevin mccarthy has hit the skids once
more uh but first pre-sale tickets for pod save america live shows in dc and new orleans are
available now and you know what dan they're going fast are they yeah they are that's what it says
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like our Terminally Online pod.
Dan and I had a very fun time recording with Priyanka and Elijah yesterday.
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All right, let's get to the news.
Moments after we recorded Tuesday's pod,
there was, as always, some breaking news cnn obtained
the audio recording of the 2021 meeting in bedminster new jersey where uh donald trump
tells a few random ghost writers to look at highly classified war plans that he admits
he couldn't declassify uh let's listen he's a bad, sick people. That was your coup, you know, against you.
Well, it started right at the beginning.
Like when Milley's talking about, oh, you were going to try to do a coup.
No, they were trying to do that before you even were sworn in.
That's right.
Trying to overthrow your election.
Well, with Milley, let me see that.
I'll show you an example.
He said that I wanted to attack Iran.
Isn't it amazing?
I have a big pile of papers.
This thing just came out.
Look.
This was him.
They presented me this.
This is off the record, but they presented me this.
This was him.
This was the Defense Department and him.
We looked at something.
This was him.
This wasn't done by me. This was him. We looked at something. This was him. This wasn't done by me.
This was him.
All sorts of stuff.
It's pages long.
Wait a minute.
Let's see here.
Wait a minute.
I just found, isn't that amazing?
This totally wins my case, you know.
Except it is like highly confidential, secret.
This is secret information. Look at this, you attack...
Hillary would print that out all the time.
She'd send it to Anthony Weiner, the pervert.
Please print.
By the way, isn't that incredible? I was just saying, because we were talking about it. And he said, he wanted to attack Iran.
He's in the papers.
You did.
This was done by the military, given to me.
I think we can probably, right?
We'll have to see.
Yeah, we'll have to try to figure out.
See, as president, I couldn't de-classify.
Now I can't you know but
this is yeah now we have a problem isn't that interesting yeah it's so cool i mean it's so
i'm look we here and i have and you probably almost didn't believe me but now you believe
me it's incredible right no hey bring some uh bring some cokes in please bring some Cokes in, please. Bring some Cokes in, please.
It's so awesome listening to it.
Every time.
Every time it's great.
It surpassed all expectations.
Just, you know, I was reading about him like, well, we finally hear the audio.
What's that going to do?
You know what?
It's worth it.
To quote Donald Trump, do you think that totally wins his case?
This is one of those examples where sometimes the movie is better than the book.
There are so many good parts of this. My favorite may be when one of the women speaking feels the need to clarify that the coup she is referring to is not the coup he did. It was the fake coup
against him. She's like, this is a coup. The coup against you. It's so good. It's honestly
perfect. He goes out of his way to admit to all the crimes.
Out of his way so many times. He says so many, like if there was, he erases any doubt just in
the, look at this. I just found this. This was him. This was the defense department. Hillary
would print out stuff like this
all the time it's classified it's secret it's off the record i could have declassified it before but
now i didn't look at my secret war plans that you're not supposed to see i mean it's just
now dan you might be thinking uh-huh i'd like to see Trump wriggle his way out of this one.
Well, unfortunately for us, he used his persuasive powers and command of details to put on a masterclass in crisis communication when he was asked about this.
You're not concerned then with your own voice on those recordings?
My voice was fine. What did I say wrong in those recordings? I didn't even see the recording. All I know is I did nothing wrong. We had a lot of papers, a lot of papers stacked
up. In fact, you could hear the rustle of the paper, and nobody said I did anything wrong,
other than the fake news, which of course is Fox, too. Are there any other recordings that
we should be concerned of? I don't know of any recordings that you should be concerned with because I don't do things wrong.
I do things right.
I'm a legitimate person.
He is.
He is a legitimate person.
There is no one more legitimate than him.
He then took another swing at this during an interview aboard his plane with ABC and Semaphore.
He said, quote, I would say it was bravado.
If you want to know the truth, it was bravado.
I was talking and just holding up papers and talking about them, but I had no documents.
What do you think?
Will any of these compelling explanations work on a jury?
While it is almost certainly a bold-faced lie, Donald Trump's claim that this was bravado might be the most authentically honest thing he's ever said. Because there is truly nothing more Donald Trump, and frankly, believable than the idea that Donald Trump would lie to make some people, particularly women, think he was more important than he was.
Like, that is a believable thing.
Yes.
There's a gigantic caveat here that we're about to get to.
I'm just saying as a point, he is a man who is driven by a bottomless well of insecurity.
And that is what someone like that would do.
It has done, I mean, he is a man who has a fake time man of the year cover in his office
to make people think he was time man of the year. Like this is something he could possibly do,
but we can get to the butt if you will. Yeah. I was going to say this would absolutely
be his, the best defense he has trotted out yet. Were it not for what you hear in the tape what you hear on the tape right which is
he's like yeah i had some papers are rustling around he did not he did not say on that tape
i have a paper here that shows whatever right he said look at this look at this. Look at this paper. So and then later he said, oh, he also said in the semaphore interview, it was nice.
They said, oh, you said it was plans. You said it was you said it was plans.
And he said, did I say plans? That's it's not war plans. It was building plans.
So we are now to believe that during that meeting, Donald Trump had some papers that he told us were rustling. You could hear the papers.
And that what he did was he showed the two ghostwriters building plans, but pretended that it was classified war plans.
And they were like, yeah, yeah, no, we believe you now.
And he also told them, by the way, this is secret.
This is classified.
I could have declassified it.
But really, it's just a bunch of building plans and some other papers.
And I think you're leaving out the punchline to this, which is building plans and some other papers and i think you're you're leaving
out the punchline to this which is building plans for a golf course you know what i fooled all these
people they i told them it was an it's you know i'm it's bravado and i like to lie a lot so i told
them it was war plans but honestly it was just golf course plans and they're these fucking idiots also do we think that
that jack smith has built his entire case just on the audio recording that he hasn't
interviewed the two ghost writers because when maggie haberman and and jonathan swan or whoever
she wrote the story with the new york times reached out to those two writers uh they didn't
they didn't respond, which probably is because
they're fucking witnesses. There's also another part of this that is really interesting, which is
he must just have them sitting on his desk. It's not like he went and got them in a box.
He was doing an interview. There's no reason why he brought this plan to in a box the car it came up like he was doing an interview there's no reason
why he brought this plan to the media he took it out of the box in whatever locked door bathroom
where he was keeping it he it came up in conversation and he found it in a pile on his
desk hence the rustling of paper well well probably he had taken it out because Susan Glasser of The New Yorker had had recently written the piece about Milley saying that he was worried that Trump was going to start a war in Iran.
And so when he got that piece, I'm sure he said, ah, I have a secret classified document that I stole from the White House and kept in defiance of a federal subpoena.
And it's over here in my box that I bring everywhere with me
because I know that there are classified documents
that I'm not supposed to have in those boxes.
So yeah, he probably had it at the ready.
There is one interesting little footnote here,
which is CNN reported that the Iran war plans
are not listed in the documents in the indictment
that Donald Trump was accused of keeping from the government.
But, and so that's been seen a lot.
Aha, this proves Trump's right.
That is not the case because Jack Smith did not charge Trump for any of the documents
he gave over after months and months of trying to get them.
So it's very possible that he turned this particular document over, but that does not
excuse him for showing a classified document to someone who doesn't have security clearance before he handed it over. So just the fact that it's not in the
indictment does not mean that that document was not in Trump's possession. Well, he also, I mean,
they didn't charge Trump with dissemination of classified information and it might not be.
So the New York Times also says that the government, Jack Smith, views this piece of evidence as among their strongest pieces of evidence in their case.
Maybe because it pretty clearly shows intent and it shows knowledge that Trump knew that he didn't have the power to declassify, knew that he held on to secret information that he wasn't supposed to have. And so even if you use that evidence to tell a jury what his state of mind was
on all of the other shit that he had that he was charged with,
it seems like a pretty strong piece of evidence.
We also got some new details about the Bedminster crime scene
from both that Times piece and a Washington Post piece that ran this week.
Jack Smith's team initially wanted to search Bedminster,
but didn't think they had enough evidence to get a warrant.
They did, however, successfully subpoena surveillance footage from Bedminster.
So again, Trump's bravado.
We're going to see if that holds up once we see the surveillance footage.
They have reportedly asked witnesses a lot of questions about the war plan incident. And of course, they view it as one of their strongest
pieces of evidence. So it does sound, you know, doesn't sound too good for Trump.
No, doesn't seem that way.
Also not good is Jack Smith just apparently interviewed Rudy Giuliani about trying to
overturn the election and is reportedly close to charging decisions in that investigation. You seen any good legal news for Donald Trump lately?
No, I have not. I've looked. It is not. It is not there.
Jack Smith has also asked Judge Cannon to move the trial to December. And Trump has until the
6th, July 6th, to respond, which, you know, some legal analysts are saying is sort of a shrewd move because by Jack Smith offering to move it ahead, it makes it harder for Trump to delay even further than that.
The judge in the hush money case seems inclined to reject Trump's request to move that trial to federal court from state court.
So he's not doing well there.
And we also learned that the person
he showed the classified war map to,
that's different than the war plans.
That's the map of the war
that wasn't going very well.
And he showed it to a PAC representative.
That was Susie Wiles,
who's currently his top campaign aide.
So that makes things a little tricky as well.
Yeah, it technically means,
according to the rules put down by Judge Cannon,
that Donald Trump and his campaign, essentially as a campaign manager, cannot talk about the case because she is now a witness in the case.
Yeah, that's tough. That's tough. which is a chance for a witness or a subject to voluntarily tell prosecutors what they'd say if subpoenaed,
knowing that what they say can't be used against them unless they lie.
So prosecutors could have asked Rudy to come in or Rudy's lawyers could have offered to have him come in because they're afraid he might get charged.
And they either want to avoid charges or they want to cooperate to reduce the sentence.
So, you know, we could have Rudy flipping as well.
I can't wait till that happens around 2 p.m. on a Thursday, one week in our future.
Could be happening right now.
That's right.
While we're making good use of our fake legal degrees, let's talk about the Supreme Court's final week of big rulings before their term ends.
We will start with the bad news.
Court's final week of big rulings before their term ends. We will start with the bad news.
This morning in a 6-3 ruling, the court struck down affirmative action programs at Harvard and the University of North Carolina as unconstitutional. Chief Justice Roberts, writing for the majority,
did say that colleges can consider how race has affected an applicant's life, but that students,
quote, must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual, not on the basis of race. Justices Jackson and Sotomayor each wrote dissents, with Jackson arguing that, quote,
deeming race irrelevant in law does not make it so in life. And Sotomayor saying, quote,
the devastating impact of this decision cannot be overstated. There is plenty of evidence to
support her claim. In the nine states that have
already banned the use of race-conscious admissions at their public universities,
the share of Black and Latino students has dropped. President Biden spoke out on the
decision this morning. Here he is. We cannot let this decision be the last word.
I want to emphasize, we cannot let this decision be the last word. While the court can
render a decision, it cannot change what America stands for. America is an idea, an idea unique in
the world, an idea of hope and opportunity, of possibilities, of giving everyone a fair shot,
of leaving no one behind. We've never fully lived up to it, but we've never walked away from it either.
We will not walk away from it now. So today I want to offer some guidance to our nation's colleges
as they review their admission systems after today's decision. Guidance that is consistent
with today's decision. They should not abandon, let me say this again, they should not abandon
their commitment to ensure student bodies of diverse backgrounds and experience that reflect all of America.
What I propose for consideration is a new standard where college is taken into account the adversity a student has overcome when selecting among qualified applicants.
So not surprising from this court, but still infuriating. Where does this go from here? You know, the president also said he's directing the Department of Education to assess what factors are contributing to more diversity at colleges and what factors are holding back diversity at colleges. legacy admissions, which of course the court did not say anything about. Alumni who went there,
their kids, donors who gave money to the college, their kids, right? The court didn't say anything
about preferences there. So Biden did direct the Department of Education to assess those factors.
But where do you think this goes from here? And what's your overall thought on this?
I mean, you're exactly right. It is infuriating, if not unexpected. I thought Justice Ketanji
Brown Jackson's dissent summarized exactly how absurd this ruling is. It is a ruling
of a court being willfully ignorant about America's past and present. And to your point,
this is going to have a very real impact
in the states that have banned it.
It has gone down and precipitously.
In the Michigan band,
using race and college admissions in 2006,
the percentage of black students
at the University of Michigan
has been cut nearly in half since 2006.
That is a huge deal.
It's going to have a huge impact.
And by the way, it was cut in half
from 9% to 4%.
So it wasn't that great to have a huge impact. And by the way, it was cut in half from 9% to 4%. So
it wasn't that great to begin with. Yeah. And we were already underperforming massively,
even with the previous regime in place. What this is going to mean and how colleges are going to do
this, because there is still many colleges will continue to seek out a diverse student body as
they have been doing.
How that happens is going to be very different.
What is this going to mean for standardized testing?
Will that go away?
How is this going to affect the admissions process in general in terms of interviews and essays and all of that?
There is no question that this is a huge step backwards on the path to try to make America
more equitable.
It's going to have a real
impact on real people's lives. The president of Harvard was out with this statement in response,
and he noted that the part of the opinion that said that they could still take into account
essays in which applicants discuss how race had affected their lives and said that they would be
figuring out how to preserve their values that place importance on diversity of backgrounds, perspectives and lived experiences.
ruling about, oh, you know, colleges can still consider in essays sort of individuals' experiences with race was likely the result of questions that Katonji Brown-Jackson, Justice Katonji
Brown-Jackson asked during oral arguments when she was like, so kids can talk about
how they're the, you know, fifth generation to attend UNC, but they're not supposed to talk about racial discrimination in their life. And it be a five-term legacy because previous generations of the family were not allowed
to attend that school because of segregation.
And that really flummoxed all the people making the argument.
Like it was one of those, made it very clear that she had narrowed in on the exact flaw
in the argument.
And that has given, you know, based on Melissa's interpretation here,
room for something that may be not positive compared to previous status quo, but a way that allows some students who still get access to higher education.
Yeah. And looking around just on Twitter since the ruling, a lot of statements from a lot of colleges saying like,
this is not going to deter us in our mission to make the student body. Yeah, these are all words,
of course, we got to see what happens. But, you know, hopefully we can imagine scenarios where
colleges develop admissions standards that exactly will not as robust in making sure that student bodies are more diverse than it was
before this ruling, at least still continues that mission. I noted with some irony that I got an
email from Holy Cross, where I went to college, and where Clarence Thomas graduated from college,
and the new president of Holy Cross, first black president of Holy Cross, said that he was very much opposed to the decision and that the college would not be deterred from their mission to make sure that the student body is diverse.
So we'll see what we'll see what can happen there. But not a great ruling, not a great ruling at all.
But we did get some good news from the court earlier in the week when Roberts also wrote a six to three opinion rejecting what's known as the independent state legislature theory,
which essentially argues that state courts don't have the authority to review voting or election laws passed by state legislatures.
Dan, there have been differing views from various legal experts on just how good this news is. What do you think? Did John Roberts save democracy once again? This ruling is way better than it could have been.
Had they adopted this radical interpretation of the independent state legislature theory,
what it would mean is twofold. One, theoretically, a state Supreme Court, like in
Wisconsin, could not rule on an alternate slate of electors passed by the state legislature. The
state legislature decided to reject the results of the popular vote. That can happen. The state
Supreme Court cannot weigh in on voting suppression laws like voter ID or poll taxes or any of the other things that had
previously been subject to constitutional and judicial review. But also, in a Supreme Court
case of a few years ago, the Supreme Court said that the Supreme Court had no role in rendering
judgment on partisan gerrymandering. Racial gerrymandering could still be judged by the court, as they just
had in a relatively positive decision pretty recently. But if you stack the deck all wrong,
party lines, not racial lines, that was up to the state to figure out.
And the whole point of this case was that a Republican supermajority in North Carolina redrew the districts in a completely
absurd and ridiculous way. The state Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional,
violating a whole host of equal protection rules. And then they sued saying they could not do that.
Now, ironically, we have since lost the majority of the Supreme Court in North Carolina. And now
that Supreme Court is undoing all the good that was done. And had they passed the
independent state legislature, that would have stopped that. But this is protecting a role of
state Supreme Court that's going to matter in 2024 and beyond. The dangerous part here is what
essentially John Roberts did, and Rick Hassan, a law professor at University of Berkeley,
pointed this out, is that what they've essentially done is codified some of the footnotes from the Bush v. Gore decision, which will give the Supreme Court
more aggressive judicial review in federal election cases that occur at the state level.
And so there is a potential for, and just a potential, and this is better than the alternative,
but a potential for them to be more involved in overruling state Supreme Courts like they did in
the Bush v. Gore case that stopped the recount in the middle of Al Gore trying to determine who
actually won Florida. That was a very good summary, Dan, of what happened here. So I,
as I always do, listen the uh brilliant strict scrutiny episode
on this ruling i believe they are also recording one on the affirmative action ruling uh that will
be out very soon as well so you should listen to both of those having listened to that having like
read rick hassan's piece and a bunch of other pieces like i you're right there is there's
clearly the potential for the Supreme Court
to get involved down the road.
I think that potential was always there.
The majority said here that...
So basically, it was so ridiculous
to put forward a theory that state legislatures
could do whatever they wanted
without any kind of judicial review whatsoever.
To say that that is like antithetical to the U.S. Constitution,
to like 200 and something years, it's just, it's wild.
It's wild.
So basically the majority said that, yes, of course state courts have a role
in reviewing what the state legislature does
and interpreting the state constitution, of course, but they do not have free reign
to rewrite election laws from scratch. And so basically there may be instances where the state
courts are so wrong in interpreting state legislatures and state constitutions that federal courts,
including the Supreme Court, have to step in. And like, I tried to put out of my head what like, whether the Supreme Court is in its current form a very right wing Supreme Court or a liberal court,
whether state courts in question are liberal or conservative like i don't think you would want
a state court to be all-powerful just as you wouldn't want a state legislature to be all-powerful
you would want some option for federal review of a state court's decision like just from a pure
partisan perspective if if there was a state legislature that was like a mega legislature
and then there was a mega state court basically like there is in North Carolina now, and they trampled all over the rights of voters.
And also the state court decided, yeah, you can have new electors there.
You can just basically send your own electors.
Wouldn't we want a federal court to step in at that point?
Probably.
I don't know, John.
Were you a 24-year-old standing in Palm Beach County when the Supreme Court ruled in Bush v. Gore? I was. Right. But what I'm saying here is that all of this goes
back to like, we got to just got to have the right people on the right courts. Yeah. I mean,
that's 100% right. You can't say like, well, I want the state courts to have all the power
because right now we have a right wing Supreme Court. But if we change that Supreme Court and
then we have suddenly a MAGA Supreme Court, then I'd want the U S Supreme court to have all the power.
The issue here, as I understand it is, and I agree with you,
like there are three options here. There is terrible.
There is this and there are slightly better than this.
And we ended up in the middle,
which is basically all we can fucking hope for these days with the Supreme
court. So I'm not saying this is not the, I'm not saying this is the end of the
world.
I'm not saying there's some secret plan to take down the election or anything
like that. No one thought in 2000 that the Supreme Court was going to weigh in on that election
because there had been no previous precedent for the Supreme Court to get involved in a matter,
a state election matter like that. They basically created a new legal doctrine for
the sole purpose of stopping the recount and giving the election to Bush. Now, would Bush
have won anyway? Who the hell knows? But they went out of their way to do it. And then they
went out of their way to basically say that was a one-off, right? It was only in some footnotes
that they adopted. One of those footnotes is where the independent state legislature theory
comes from. And then in this case, the far right, the people who brought the case,
took the most radical interpretation of that original independent state legislature theory.
What this does is it's going to make it easy. You're not going to have to invent a new legal
doctrine to weigh in here. Now, does that mean they wouldn't have done it anyway? Maybe they probably would have because they did it in 2000.
They could do it again.
So I just, this is not to say, to panic, to say there is like a secret time bomb here
or anything like that.
But there is a reality that a repeat of Bush v. Gore is at least slightly more likely because
of the way this decision was decided with a 6-3 majority, including appointees from Democratic presidents.
And also, no surprise, again, because Kavanaugh and Barrett were involved in bringing the
case to the court in 2000.
Yes.
On the bad side.
So no shocker there.
But as Clarence Thomas criticized the majority and his dissenting opinion on this, he was like, you didn't – there is no standard now of when the federal courts or the Supreme Court should weigh in.
And you guys didn't set a standard in this majority opinion.
So it's sort of up to a case-by-case basis here.
Which it was before.
Which I think is – yeah.
That's why I feel like it seems more status quo than not.
What does this mean for 2024?
So this was mostly about the elections clause not the electors clause there are two different clauses in the constitution but the language in the two cases is basically identical and so
it does seem like if a state legislature after the fact decided to just send in a new slate of electors like trump wanted them
to do in 2020 the supreme it seems like from this ruling the supreme court say like of course the
state supreme court could say that is blatantly unconstitutional based on the state constitution
which in a lot of these states says you can't change the law after the election happens and suddenly decide to send fake electors.
So that's good news. Yeah. Take the wins where you can get them. That's good news.
All right. Let's talk again about President Biden. He spoke this morning on the Supreme Court ruling.
He also delivered a major economic speech in Chicago yesterday where he compared Republican trickle-down economics with what the
White House is calling Bidenomics. Let's listen. And guess what? Bidenomics is working. When I
took office, the pandemic was raging and our economy was reeling. Supply chains are broken,
millions of people unemployed, hundreds of thousands of small businesses on the verge of
closing after so many had already closed. Literally hundreds of thousands on the verge of closing. Today, the U.S. has the highest
economic growth rate leading the world economies since the pandemic. The highest in the world.
Now Republicans are at it again, pushing tax cuts for large corporations and the wealthy
and adding trillions of dollars to the deficit. Trillions.
Folks, let me say it as clearly as I can. The trickle-down approach failed the middle class.
It failed America. Bidenomics is about the future. Bidenomics is just another way of saying
restore the American dream because it worked before. What'd you think of the speech? It was good. I liked it. It is his best to date distillation
of not just his economic accomplishments,
but what they say about what he would do in a second term.
Yeah.
I think that they framed the accomplishments
in the context of here's our theory,
here's our approach to the economy.
It's working, not it has worked,
it is working. And it is a lot more effective than the other side, than Republicans. And that to me
is a much more useful and effective message than just look at all the good stuff we did.
Maybe the economy is better than you think it is. I think we haven't focused on this yet, but it was really smart, I think, how he hit the tax cuts really hard, that like trickle-down
economics is Republicans wanting tax cuts for the rich versus Biden's policies, which are focused
on better jobs and lower costs. The winner of the election will decide what happens to the Trump tax
cuts, which expire at the end of the year.
And basically, Biden hit the Republicans in the speech for wanting to pay $2 trillion to keep in
place tax cuts that mostly benefit the rich, when we could be spending that money on, you know,
lower health care costs, lower education costs, investment in infrastructure, right? And so that is a great fight to have.
It's a fight with real consequences because you can tell people whoever wins after the election,
this is a choice. Do you want more tax cuts for rich people or do you want investments in the
middle class? So I think that I like that they framed it like this. Would you say that there's
a fiscal cliff coming? Wow, that's a callback.
Well, I mean, it does speak to an ability to repeat the strategy of 2012 because the Bush
tax cuts, in part because they were extended by a bipartisan deal cut with Obama and McConnell in
2010, but the Bush tax cuts expired after the 2012 election. And a big fight in that election was,
what are you going to do with those tax cuts? Romney wanted to extend all the ones for the rich people. Obama wanted to keep
the ones for the middle class and the ones for rich folks. And that was a very advantageous
issue environment for Obama. And Biden is going to get to repeat that play against whoever the
Republican nominee is. And by the way, if you give voters a choice between tax cuts for the rich or the child tax credit,
tax cuts for the rich or lower prescription drug costs, tax cuts for the rich or privatizing
Social Security and Medicare, which is what Republicans want to do.
The numbers are wild, right?
Like they will choose the investments over the tax cuts for the rich every single time by a margin of like I just saw a Navigator poll this morning.
I think it was like 75 percent were against the tax cuts for the rich, including like 70 something percent of Republicans.
It is a very good issue for Democrats.
It is one of those issues that divides the Republican base, because in all the polling we've seen on various Biden initiatives,
particularly when he was trying to raise a bunch of taxes on the rich as part of the
original Build Back Better plan, working class Republicans, Republicans who make under a certain
income threshold, support those initiatives at a level commensurate with Democrats. That's how
that is. And also, I will just note that comparing child tax credit and tax cuts for corporations or investments in X with tax cuts for rich people actually undersells populist sentiment in this country.
If you ask people, do you want to give tax cuts to the rich or you personally have a root canal?
Most Americans would pick root canal like that.
That is that is where populism is.
Yeah.
Well, he also emphasized in the speech what the administration has done to eliminate junk fees, hotel fees, overdraft fees for banks, which are also, you know, some people could argue that they're small.
They're a very big deal to a lot of people in this country who have to pay those fees.
And so I think that'll be a part of the message going forward. So the White House seems to be more confident in making the case that the economy is doing better and that Joe Biden's policies are the reason why.
Polling still suggests that people don't quite buy that, though, as you'll hear from Ben LeBolt
when we talk to him. He cites a poll that most people say their personal financial situation
has improved or is improving. What do you think about the argument they're trying to make here
about the economy doing better, which is, I should say, empirically
correct according to all of the data. Inflation is down. Consumer confidence is up. The job market
is still churning out jobs. There are good jobs. Unemployment is at its lowest. I mean,
all this stuff is right. But as we talked about a million times during the midterms,
at that point, people weren't feeling the improvement.
Are they feeling it now?
They are at least more optimistic about the future.
Inflation is down for 11 months in a row.
It is particularly down in gas and groceries, the things that hit people the hardest.
Biden folks were in an impossible situation throughout 2022.
Inflation was such a dominant and very real and painful issue for so many people that
they could not talk about all the other stuff because people were so mad about inflation,
and gas prices in particular. We're now in a much more nuanced environment. And on top of
the polling that Ben cites, earlier this week, the consumer confidence measure came out, and it's its
highest level in 17 months. And the consumer confidence measure is probably the best measure of how people really feel about the economy because it indicates what they want
to do going forward. It correlates with buying homes, buying cars, going on vacation. And so
if consumer confidence is up, that speaks to a change in the economy. Now, the challenge for
President Biden is not just how people feel about the economy, but how they feel about what
he is going to do on the economy, because he still is operating at a fairly historic deficit
with Republicans in terms of who you trust on the economy, and particularly with Donald Trump.
And so this speech, this ensuing public relations campaign, and frankly, the entire presidential
campaign is going to be an effort to change that dynamic, to undermine what Republicans are for and build trust in the president as an economic steward.
An economic steward really means who are you going to fight for and what are you going to fight for?
Right. Because, you know, if you just frame it as how has Biden managed the economy,
you're going to get people who are cranky because they don't think the economy
is humming along yet. Or you're basically going to ask people to judge based on their own financial
situation and how they view the economy. If you make it, do you want this set of policies,
this approach? Do you want someone like, and probably more effectively, do you want someone
like Joe Biden who is fighting hard for the middle class? Or do you want Republicans who, if they win,
will shower rich people with more tax cuts, right? And if that is the choice,
they are going to win that argument. Now, the question is, how do you think Biden's argument,
economic argument, fits into the larger campaign message? Like, should this be the central focus?
Should he spend more time on issues like Trump or democracy or abortion like he did in the midterms?
Like, we've had this conversation before.
It's incredibly difficult to get an economic message to break through in a time of Donald Trump
and threats to democracy and abortion bans and everything else that are serious threats that we're dealing with,
how would you run a campaign where you really want to get that economic message to break through?
The economic message is going to be central.
When Celinda Lake was on this podcast, at one point in a recent interview,
she pointed out that no one in modern political history has won the White House
without being the person who won the economy in exit polling. And Biden barely snuck that by. He was drawing for most of the campaign. And then
the way Trump mishandled the pandemic and the ensuing recession, Biden ticked ahead by a little
bit at the end. So he's going to have to do that. And it's worth remembering that as high as turnout
was in 2022, it is going to be significantly higher in 2024. There's about
50 million people who voted in – more than 50 million people who are going to vote in 2024 who
did not vote in November. Those people will tend to be people who are less politically engaged.
Therefore, they're going to be people who are going to be less motivated by some of the democracy,
Trump, the sort of more process arguments about extremism that were
effective in 2022. So how do you do this? I think you make a mistake by doing this from an issue
perspective. It's not a recipe. We're not making cookies, right? We don't need two cups of flour,
two cups of democracy, two teaspoons of court reform or whatever. You need a narrative about
the differences between
President Biden and the Republicans, most notably Donald Trump, who will serve as the
avatar for all Republicans, whether he's the nominee or not, what they're going to fight for,
what they stand for. And then each individual issue, whether it's abortion or democracy or
the economy, is something that undergirds that larger narrative. So you start with narrative,
and then issues are the supporting parts of that. The economy is going to have to be a huge part of
that. I suspect it will be a dominant part of paid advertising, because to your point,
you can't get the press to cover the economy in ways that are, especially with the diminution of
local news, to get people to really understand how the economy is doing. So you're going to have
to pay to do that. But it's going to have to be a bigger part of the 2024 strategy than 2022, because you're gonna have more economically sensitive voters in this
voter pool than we had last time. Yes. And the only chance to get it to break through,
or and I imagine this will be the bulk of the paid ads as well, is you got to pick a fight over it.
Because if you're just out there touting accomplishments, which again, I'm not saying
they are, they didn't do that in the speech on Wednesday. But if you're just doing if Democrats are out there just touting
the accomplishments, that's not going to break through. That's not going to be new. If you are
out there fighting with Republicans because they want to screw up this economy by giving a bunch
of tax cuts to rich people and fight for their rich friends and fight for themselves versus Joe
Biden, who's out there wanting to fight for middle class workers because, you know, he's he's Scranton Joe, then that's going to be
something that has at least has a chance to break through more. And so I do think that like
constantly picking fights with Republicans, drawing the contrast, talking about their agenda,
talking about what Trump would do, because Trump you can see that Trump in the primary
sees this coming in the general, which is why he's
trying to hit DeSantis on cutting Social Security and Medicare, even though Trump's budgets did the
same thing, you know, sales tax, stuff like that, like Trump gets this. And what Biden and the
Democrats need to do is be like, no, no, no. Trump also gave us these tax cuts that have increased
the deficit and just made rich people richer. And he would do more of that if he comes to office.
So we will talk more about all of this with Ben LeBolt, the White House communications director, right after this.
joining us now he's been joe biden's white house communications director for just about four months he's also a longtime friend and colleague of ours from the obama days and the only person in the
world who's lived with me tommy and love it and worked for dan. Ben, the bolt. Welcome to the pod.
That,
that,
uh,
that sounded very incestuous.
Uh,
I am sitting in Pfeiffer's old office.
I've not done much with the decoration,
but I have put one picture up so far.
Uh,
and I will say out of all the roommates,
just this sea of clothes and trash all over the floor and love.
It's bedroom is a site.
I'll never fully get out of my mind, but I've been, I've been working on it.
I was going to ask that question on the video,
but just the left is the plaque that they have to commemorate the fact that it
was my office. So
Ben first question, is this the best day of your life?
You know, John, every day is the best day of my life. No, this was an exciting
day for us. It was a day we've been building up to for a long time because it was the day that
we came forward to really tout the president's economic accomplishments with the speech in
Chicago. And I'm excited to talk to you about it. A lot of stuff in that speech,
great speech, his economic approach, his accomplishments, work he's got left to do,
contrast with Republicans approach, your communications director, what's your
dream headline out of the speech, or at least one part that you really want people to take away?
that you really want people to take away? That President Biden took on the failed concept of trickle-down economics, and he's rebuilt the economy around the middle class, who are really
the backbone of the economy in the first place. And if you think about his career,
we've been talking about trickle-down economics for 40 years, and a lot of economists had felt that this was an effective policy for the country. We've been talking about it since the 80s, that if you rewarded the wealthiest in corporations with tax breaks, that somehow that would trickle down to middle-class families and the economy across the country would be strong. But growing up in Scranton, Pennsylvania and Claymont, Delaware, President Biden never saw
those policies impact his family. It never trickled down to the kitchen table. And so
he really believes in reverse engineering that concept and centering economic policies around
the middle class from the beginning. That means basically three things. Number one,
we should invest in the United States.
We shouldn't reward corporations that are shipping jobs overseas. We should take a look at
what industries can be built here in the United States from clean energy to superconductors,
or I'm sorry, semiconductors, chips, industries that were being built overseas in China over the
past decades. Even though we
invented that technology here in the United States, a lot of people said reviving manufacturing in
the US wasn't possible. 800,000 manufacturing jobs have been created under this administration.
And that's just the beginning. So that's one piece. The second piece is empowering workers.
We have a tight labor market. 13 million jobs were created under this administration.
And unemployment has been lower than 4% for 16 months.
That's the longest in decades.
And that means workers are empowered.
Their wages are up.
Workers are unionizing.
Even young workers are unionizing in new sectors.
And employers have to compete for their talent. And that means that workers are doing well, and they're very empowered. And we've got the most wage growth of anybody else. We've seen the lowest Black and Hispanic unemployment in history under this
administration. So it's having a real impact, and it's a result of all of the big pieces of
legislation that the president was able to get through Congress over the past couple of years.
The political challenge for the president is that people like the things he has done
when they hear about him, but not enough people have heard about him.
What's your theory or strategy to keep people paying attention in the days and weeks after
this speech?
Well, Dan, you wrote a bit about this today.
As you know, it's harder and harder to break through in today's communications environment.
The media is fractured.
A lot of people go off in their filter bubbles.
We know that in the 2020 election, you know, for the average persuadable American,
the number one show wasn't the news, it was The Bachelor. And so I have to wake up every day and
figure out how we communicate with people across the country that aren't necessarily watching the network news in the morning, that certainly don't get their newspapers
in print anymore. And so frequency becomes really the challenge of the job. How do we
reach people on a repeated basis with the president's economic accomplishments in a way
that they'll remember, because the average
person has to hear something seven times before they'll remember it at all. And so, you know,
what this Bidenomics frame allows us to do is to start to talk about things that people are feeling
in the economy. You know, consumer confidence is up. Inflation has come down over 50% over the
past year. We've had the strongest recovery in the
United States of any developed nation. But these bills are just starting to be implemented. And so
shovels are going into the ground to rebuild roads and bridges, 35,000 projects across the country.
You know, the price of insulin is now capped at 35 bucks across the country. But we got to make
sure that people
are connecting those things to all of the legislation that the president passed through
Congress in the past couple of years. And so that will require the president, the vice president,
the first lady, the second gentleman going out on the road to talk about this, coordinating with
members of Congress, coordinating with members of the cabinet. And we're trying to be on the road
in districts, on conventional media platforms, and to be communicating digitally. It's sort of
an all-in communication strategy to make sure that people are seeing that these economic gains,
this progress that they're seeing coming out of the pandemic is related to the policies of this
administration.
You know, as you remember from the days we worked together, we always had a tortured relationship with the term Obamacare.
Sometimes we embraced it.
Sometimes we thought that it would turn people who did not love President Obama,
but did like more affordable health care away from the program.
But with this speech, you guys are clearly embracing the term Bidenomics.
Why are you doing that? Are there any downside risks to making the economy so personally tied
to the president? Well, we think we have a really strong story to tell. And it's countering a
narrative that's been out there for some, you know, there's been this prediction of a recession
from some economists and economic commentators. For months now, when all the data
is coming in, you know, 330,000 jobs created last month, for example, as I said, the strongest
recovery of any developed nation, stable and steady economic growth. We believe that there's
a really strong story to tell. And this manufacturing boom that we're seeing in the United States that we're not seeing in any of our competitors in the West, we know it's a result of passing the Inflation Reduction Act that had the record funding for clean energy in it, for example, and the Chips and Science Act, which are building these semiconductor plants across the country. And so our view is that, you know, ultimately, Americans' perceptions of the present will be
linked to the performance of the economy. And we believe there's a very strong record here
that we need to start communicating forcefully about every day. And so I don't think Bidenomics
will just be today and just be the speech. But that's really going to be a key part of our frame moving forward.
Hey, Ben, thanks for joining our filter bubble. I just want to say that.
A lot of diverse viewpoints here.
One of the president's favorite lines is don't compare me to the almighty,
compare me to the alternative. Sure enough, House Republicans started the day with two tweets about Hunter Biden and one celebrating the end of Roe v. Wade.
Do you find it easier to convince people that they are better off with Biden's approach versus
the Republicans approach than it is to convince people that they should feel better about the
economy than they might? Well, look, we're going to do both.
Number one, we think people are feeling better about the economy.
We're not going to tell people something that they don't believe.
And when you ask somebody, for example, today,
how do you feel about your personal economic situation?
76% of Americans are saying that they feel good about it.
And consumer confidence is up.
The job market is
booming. Unemployment is at a low. And so those things are factually true. And they're the reason
we can go out and talk about them. At the same time, what are Republicans offering people today?
I think that economically, we know what they're offering. They're offering tax cuts to the wealthiest in corporations, which have seemed to be this recycled Republican idea over and over
again that didn't bring manufacturing back to the US, didn't create record low unemployment.
We know that it doesn't work and it created record deficits that we're all paying for as well.
Secondly, they've gotten into such an extreme position across the board on
so many issues. Another one that I would point out, you talked about Roe, they're really out
of step with the public on that. They're certainly out of step with millennials and Gen Z, but this
notion of freedom and individual liberties, that used to be something that Republicans liked
to go out and talk about. But MAGA Republicans today, if you're a woman who wants to make her
own healthcare decisions, if you're a parent that believes that you should decide what books your
kids have access to instead of, you know, an ideological politician, if you're somebody who cares about gay rights in this country or LGBTQ
rights broadly, Republicans are really conducting an assault on freedom and an assault on individual
liberties right now. And they're way out of step with the public on that. And I think it really
puts them in a vulnerable position. So the president has been a champion to go out and defend these things. He believes we should
codify Roe. He came out after Dobbs and did what he believed was everything he could do in his
executive authority to defend reproductive rights. He made sure that we're defending marriage equality and pass legislation to do so. And so, you know,
Republicans are just drifting further and further down the MAGA ideological spectrum here and really
putting themselves in political peril. We're still waiting on some of the big Supreme Court
decisions to come down, but it looks like the Senate's moving forward on ethics reform legislation after a series of stories about Clarence Thomas and Sam Alito failing to
disclose private jet rides with rich right-wing donors. So the President's Commission on Supreme
Court Reform has recommended a code of conduct for justices. The Senate looks like they're
going to do something similar. Does he support that kind of reform?
We'll have to take a look at the text of the legislation to understand what's coming through.
But I can point out that he signed the Courthouse Ethics and Transparency Act, which requires federal judges to disclose their stock purchases and sales and post their financial disclosures online.
And obviously, you've seen a lot of news that's come out of that recently.
You know, in terms of the courts more broadly, you know, placing the president's mark on his
on the federal courts has been a big part of this presidency. He's confirmed 136 federal judges to
appointments to the federal bench so far. Two-thirds of them have been
women. It's been the most diverse slate of judges in history. You know, the president used to be
chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. And so every Supreme Court justice that was appointed
by a Democratic president, you know, President Biden has played a
key role in making sure that they were confirmed. There just couldn't be a bigger priority for this
administration than making sure that the courts, you know, are upholding opportunity and equal
justice under the law. And the president's really dedicated his career to that. And so he keeps a very close eye on the courts.
I was yelling on the pod earlier this week
about how a few months ago,
Biden got all kinds of shit from the left
about supposedly abandoning the rail workers
on the issue of paid sick days.
And then we learned this week from the rail workers
that the administration was quietly working
behind the scenes the entire time
to help them successfully negotiate for those paid sick days.
There was a similar dynamic around Biden not going out more forcefully during the debt ceiling
negotiations. How do you guys decide which fights you're more likely to win by just
quietly playing the long game, even if it means eating shit in the short term?
I think that that's part of the president's DNA, and he doesn't get spun up by the daily news cycle
and focuses on the long game and focuses on getting to the outcome. So, you know, something
like when he was negotiating with the Speaker and Republicans in Congress over
the bipartisan budget agreement, where we thought at the end of the day, we got a very good deal
that protected all the president's signature programs and things like the largest investment
in history in the clean energy economy. You know, he is, he's very hands on in those negotiations
and in the communications to the point where, you know, some of the statements likes to win every argument.
And that isn't always the smartest negotiating strategy.
And I think that that's just one, you know, hallmark of his long career in public service is that he knows how to drive towards an outcome.
Speaking of winning an argument, I just saw that one way the White House press internet stuff that just has no basis in reality. And they never corrected the story and
took it down. And so, you know, as you know, we had a big pride celebration at the White House,
and we were glad that everybody was welcome to participate.
How did the reporters at Fox take that?
I'll let them comment on that.
So you've worked for Biden for about four months now. Can you give us
like one story about what it's like to work for Joe Biden, just to give
people a window into how he runs his White House?
Absolutely.
Look, as you both know, I've worked for a number of elected officials over the years.
They all have their own style and their own ways of dealing with the team.
And we're all familiar with one. I think the way things work
around here is it's important to prep for prep. President Biden is extremely detail-oriented.
He likes to attack policy issues and negotiations from every angle and to play out every scenario in every possible
way along the chessboard that they could play out. And so you better walk into the Oval knowing
the answer to every possible question to make sure that, you know, he works it through. I think of it
like the law school class I never had, because after I took the LSAT, I just went and worked on campaigns instead. But, you know, Socratic method, anybody
in the room should be prepared to speak and answer any question, you know, devil's advocate around
every issue to understand both, you know, the policy and politics of how something might play
out and people across the country might
respond to it. And that's true on domestic policy. It's true on foreign policy. You know,
I'm in a position where I feel like I'm learning every day, getting my PhD here in the job. And so,
you know, he's just a very, very hands on president when it comes to both managing the White House, the government apparatus and policy writ large.
We we asked Saki about this, but what what's different about your second tour in the White House?
it's a little bit different in that I think we all wish we could always be in our 20s doing these jobs to just have the limitless energy and ability to deal with anything
and to sit here at all hours and throw yourself with all the energy you've ever had
and everything that comes your way.
This is more a marathon than a sprint. I guess
that was a sprint that was also a marathon. And so endurance becomes more important.
You also come into the job just knowing more about the fact that you're always going to leave
something on the table every day. You're never going to get it all done. The executive branch is a massive organization with
hundreds of thousands of people. And so for as many moments as you want to sit here and drive
news and plan things perfectly, it's so easy for something to pop up in the news or across
the government that takes your full attention for a week, two weeks, three weeks, a month,
two weeks, three weeks, a month, where you really have to divert the team and focus on that. So I came in with that perspective this time around. And I'm also inviting myself to more of the events
that they host at the White House. I know what to ask. Smart. That's smart. Last question. People
don't know this, but in the Obama days, you started a tradition in the press office where you'd respond to overly whiny complaints from journalists with a picture of a crying mime.
Honestly, started meme culture there. It didn't exist before that.
When is the last time you've sent a crying mime to someone?
sent a crying mime to someone well you know technology's been updated john and we didn't have emojis back then and so now there's actually the eye roll emoji and several other emojis that
i'm able to deploy in similar circumstances excellent uh lavole thanks for coming on pod
save america appreciate it come back again soon good to talk to you guys. Will do.
Okay, before we go, a heartbreaking story. One of Washington's saddest and fakest bromances is on the rocks. Kevin McCarthy, the legislative and political genius who's fighting off a MAGA rebellion in the House,
was asked in an interview whether Donald Trump is the best candidate to run against Joe Biden.
Here's what he said.
But do you think he could win an election?
Could he win an election?
Can he win that election?
Yeah, he can.
You think he can?
The question is, is he the strongest to win the election i don't know that answer also first of all just talk about a
swerve he just had to shut his mouth there it wasn't like the interviewer when i first heard
about this i thought maybe the interviewer had like grilled him and was like no no is donald
trump the strongest candidate no he just said could he win an election then kevin
volunteers is he the strongest i don't know not the deftest of people i will say kevin mccarthy
before we get into the lovers quarrel was mccarthy right in what he said feels like a trick question
like if i say mccarthy was right elijah's gonna cut it and tweet it out
so i don't really know how to respond in this entrapment that we call a podcast.
I could not think of a more banal correct answer.
Yes, of course, Donald Trump can win an election against Joe Biden.
No, I don't know if he's the strongest candidate against Joe Biden.
Of course, we don't know that.
There is evidence that he is definitely not.
There is evidence that he's not. There's some evidence that he might be because Ron DeSantis
fucking sucks. It's like, we just, we just don't know. And the reason I want to make the point
about what a banal observation that was is because of what happens next. So after this Politico
reports that obviously Trump lost his shit his people were
texting what the fuck to each other and calling mccarthy a moron like there's some fucking pod
save america hosts kevin then called trump to apologize gave an interview to breitbart where
he said quote trump is stronger today than he was in 2016, and then put up a fundraising pitch that said,
Trump is the strongest opponent to Biden.
But that pissed Trump off even more
because apparently you're not allowed to fundraise,
do a fundraising pitch using Trump's name
without Trump's explicit sign-off.
So then they made McCarthy take down the fundraising pitch
that he did to try to correct
his fuck up. I guess they're also pissed in MAGA world that McCarthy hasn't endorsed Trump yet,
which raises the question, why hasn't he? I mean, he's endorsed Trump in all but name only,
but the extent, the reason he hasn't done it is he has 19 Republicans who are trying to run for
reelection in districts that Joe Biden won.
And it makes it a little bit harder for Kevin McCarthy to campaign for them, raise money for them, appear with them if the Speaker of the House and the leader of the caucus is someone
who is shilling for Trump. Yeah. Also, it's just like he is the top elected official in the
Republican Party in the country, and there is a competitive primary for the Republican nomination,
obviously you would expect this in any other world, not the one that we're in, any other one,
you'd expect the Speaker of the House to be neutral. We would not have expected Nancy Pelosi
to jump in and endorse one of the Democratic candidates during the 2020 race at the beginning.
Of course he should be fucking neutral.
It just, it's like, what do you think about McCarthy's statement to Breitbart that Trump is stronger today than he was in 2016?
Sure.
I actually think that might be true.
Yeah, that's probably true.
I mean, it really depends on what political value you put on multiple criminal convictions and their impact on electability.
I mean, if you just look at the polls, I went back in 2015 at this exact time, the primary was
Bush, as in Jeb, 19, Trump, 12, Huckabee, 8. So he's doing a lot better in the primary than he was then.
And then he is closer to Biden in polling in general election matchup than he was to Hillary.
At this time, in end of June 2015, trial heats were 59% Hillary, 34% Trump.
Yikes.
Well, and as we know, the polls of 2016 were infallible.
I just this to me is an example is just this whole story is an example of like what an
unbelievable grip Donald Trump still has on the Republican Party that Kevin McCarthy goes out
there and says something fairly obvious, which is who knows if
Trump's the strongest candidate. Let's wait and see. Of course, he can win the election. And
Donald Trump and his people flip out so badly that Kevin has to apologize, basically flip his entire
stance from saying that he doesn't know if Donald Trump could win to basically endorsing him by
saying he's the strongest candidate against Joe Biden in a fundraising pitch that he then had to
take down. That's what happens when you cross Trump and the Republican Party. Well, Donald
Trump also has an amazing intuition for very weak people who will degrade themselves. And Kevin
McCarthy is a very weak person who will, of course, degrade himself in tremendous ways to beg forgiveness.
He loves to make people beg.
And he knew Kevin McCarthy would beg.
So he did it.
Speaking of people who will debase themselves.
I can't wait to see where this is going. Ron DeSantis' answer to a question at a New Hampshire town hall about whether he thinks Donald Trump disrupted the peaceful transfer of power on January 6th.
Did you hear that answer?
I think your use of the term answer is doing a lot of work in that sense.
Ron DeSantis answers by saying,
well, I wasn't near Washington that day.
And then he said,
I certainly didn't enjoy watching what happened.
Oh, oh, you didn't enjoy watching
the violent insurrection against the Capitol?
That's what you're saying?
So Caitlin Collins of CNN
is interviewing Chris Christie last night, I believe.
Asked him to respond to Ron DeSantis' answer.
And here's what Chris Christie had to say.
He wasn't anywhere near Washington.
Did he have a TV?
Was he alive that day?
Did he see what was going on?
I mean, that's one of the most ridiculous answers I've heard in this race so far.
You don't have an opinion about January 6th, except to say I didn't particularly enjoy
what happened.
People were killed.
That's exactly a strong statement.
People were killed, Caitlin, as you know, that day on Capitol Hill defending the Capitol.
We had members of Congress who were running for their lives.
We had people trying to hunt down
the vice president of the United States, chanting, hang Mike Pence. And Donald Trump the entire time
sat outside the Oval Office in that little dining room of his, eating a well-done cheeseburger
and watching TV and doing nothing to stop what was going on until it got to the point where even he could no longer
stand it. And he finally at four something in the afternoon put out a video asking people to
leave the Capitol. And Ron DeSantis doesn't have any opinion on that. If he asked you that question,
how would you answer it? I would say it was one of the most disgraceful days in American history
and that the president was principally responsible for it.
Not that hard.
No, great job, Chris Christie.
He's still around.
I'm sure Trump put out a few angry truths about this.
Nothing happened.
Is he going to win the Republican nomination?
No.
Are Republican voters going to like that?
Probably not.
Glad he's out there saying it, though.
Yeah, it's great.
It's a pretty sharp prosecution of Donald Trump.
It is a wild world that Chris Christie, who is an actually talented communicator in a
party full of absolute marble mouth losers, can't get any traction in this primary.
I was watching this and I thought to myself, you know what?
Chris Christie is basically just a really good cable pundit who fucking hates Donald Trump who's running for president.
That's what he is.
Yeah.
And Donald Trump won in 2016 because he was a really good Fox News pundit running for president.
Well, and the thing he does there that's good, that's beyond sort of, you know, politics, ideology, whatever, is he just like is not afraid to sort of say what everyone's thinking about Ron DeSantis's answer?
Right. Like this is Ron DeSantis's fucking problem is that he does speak in sort of talking points like he is like just reading whatever is written for him.
Typical politician. All the stuff that Donald Trump's running against him for or running Donald Trump's message about him, which is that he's like a typical establishment politician.
Forget about his positions on issues that's like a typical establishment politician. Forget about his positions on issues
that make him a typical establishment politician.
He sounds like one.
He's stiff.
His speeches suck, right?
And I think Donald Trump understands
that sometimes you just say what's on your mind, clearly.
But Chris Christie is now doing that too, right?
We've had plenty of politicians in the Democratic Party
who've been successful doing that.
Barack Obama used to do that quite often
where he'd sort of just like laugh about
the absurdity of politics
or the absurdity of his opponents, right?
That's what Chris Christie is doing right now.
I mean, Chris Christie is full of shit.
I think he legitimately hates Donald Trump,
but I also think if at the end of this election,
Donald Trump invited him back into the cabinet,
he would go back because he's made this flip like 12 times now. But he is a very, I'm not going to place a
lot of bet on the rigid, straightforward moral compass of Chris Christie, but he does communicate
with authenticity. Like he does sound like he speaks like a human with strength. And that was
why he was the first choice of many Republicans to be their nominee in 2012.
And he missed his moment to at least would have given Obama a tougher shot than Romney did.
But it's great.
I will take him on there.
I reverse my position where I've been attacking you in private and in public for being willing to give to Chris Christie to get him on the debate stage.
I'm okay with that.
I think it's good for the world.
I want to see it, but that's where I stand.
I just want to be clear here.
I think Chris Christie would be a horrible president
with terrible positions on a whole bunch of issues.
If there was a Supreme Court opening,
he'd probably put a justice in there
that would fucking ruin the rest of democracy.
It would be horrible.
I don't think he has become a moderate.
I think he is genuine in his hatred for Donald Trump, who almost killed him.
And I think he was probably he's genuine in his disgust of what happened on January 6th.
I think you can hold all of those things in your head at the same time.
That's fair.
That's fair.
I give you that.
I give you and Chris Christie that.
Yeah.
I mean, it's not it's not like he's a fucking hero for it.
Again, it is personal and that Donald Trump almost killed him.
You would expect someone who was almost killed by Donald Trump to spend a lot of time trying to exact revenge on him.
Yeah.
Right?
That's fair.
Someone almost, I wouldn't be too happy if someone almost killed me.
I probably wouldn't support them.
I might not, I might not
accept an invitation
to go back into their classroom.
Just a thought.
Mike Pence?
I don't know if he's there.
Again,
someone who's almost killed
by Donald Trump.
Okay,
that's all we have for today.
Thanks to Ben LeBolt
for joining Pod Save America.
Everyone have a great weekend
and a great fourth. Oh, right. So, instead of Pod Save America. Everyone have a great weekend and a great fourth.
Oh, right. So,
instead of Pod Save America, on Tuesday
you will hear an episode of Terminally
Online, our subscriber show
that you can get. If you go to
kirkit.com slash friends, you can get all the Terminally Onlines
you want, but we're going to put
one episode in the PSA feed
for Tuesday
because we'll be off for the fourth. And then Dan and I
will be back on Thursday. I would just say, as someone who was on that episode of Trimmely Online,
you cannot miss the wormhole that Jon Favreau crawled into on the internet this week. It is
wild. It's dark. It's dark. All right. Bye, everyone. Bye, everyone.
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