Pod Save America - “The Age Old Question.”
Episode Date: February 16, 2023Prosecutors inch closer to a possible indictment of Donald Trump. Nikki Haley officially becomes the first candidate to challenge him for the Republican nomination. Democrats quietly and not-so-quietl...y worry about Joe Biden’s age. Michigan State Senator Mallory McMorrow joins to talk about gun safety legislation after the shooting at Michigan State. And the guys take a meandering journey through Elon Musk’s week at Twitter. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer. On today's show, prosecutors inch closer to potential indictments of Donald Trump.
Nikki Haley officially becomes the first candidate to challenge him for the Republican nomination.
Democrats quietly and not so quietly worry about Joe Biden's age.
Michigan State Senator Mallory McMorrow joins to talk about passing gun safety legislation
after this week's shooting at Michigan State University.
And Crooked's own Hallie Kiefer takes us on a meandering journey through Elon Musk's addled mind.
We're covering a lot today. But first, some big news. We are excited to share that the first book
from our very own Crooked Media Reads is available for pre-order today. The novel is called Mobility
by Lydia Kiesling,
who also wrote the incredible book, The Golden State.
We've been fans of Lydia's work for a long time.
I think friends of the pod are going to love this book.
Mobility is gripping and hilarious.
It's one of those novels you'll nag all your friends to read.
It's part coming-of-age story
and part indictment of capitalism in the oil industry.
It moves between Houston, Athens and Azerbaijan and attracts themes of class, power, politics and desire all through the life of a very compelling character, Bunny Glenn.
The book has already earned outstanding early praise.
Pulitzer Prize winner Geraldine Brooks called it, quote, a masterpiece of misdirection and a cautionary tale for our times.
Pre-order Mobility at Crooked. slash mobility or wherever books are sold so you can be the first to read it when
it's released on August 1st. Can I nag you about this for a second? Please do. So I read The Golden
State when it came out a couple years ago. I loved it. Of course, you read everything. Yeah.
That's the point I'm trying to unsubtly make here.
And loved it.
It's a great book.
I was super excited to find out that Crooked was publishing her follow-up.
So how do I, why do I have to wait till it comes out?
Can I get an early copy here, people?
Can someone get Dan an early copy of the book and also maybe some more Dan merch that we have now discontinued?
Poor Dan, he's just sitting up there in the Bay Area
looking for early books and merch with his name on it.
We can't seem to deliver either.
So yes, anyway, and again,
you should also go to crooked.com slash mobility.
If you're not me and you're going to have to pre-order the book,
then that's how you would do it.
But we are all very excited
and can't wait to announce
more Crooked Media Reads books in the future.
And one more thing before we start,
because it's President's Day weekend,
we will not have a pod this coming Tuesday.
So the next pod you'll hear
will be Dan and I once again next Thursday.
But if you're hungry for some content on Tuesday,
you can go to the Pod Save America YouTube channel
and watch Tommy and Brian Tyler
Cohen do another draft this time of Fox News Outrages. All right, let's get to the news.
A grand jury in Georgia has found by unanimous vote that no widespread fraud took place in the
2020 election. Breaking news. And believes that perjury may have been committed by one or more
witnesses who testified about Trump's attempt to overturn the election. But that's all we know for
now. Judge Robert McBurney only released parts of the final report after District Attorney Fannie
Willis asked to keep most of the findings sealed to protect the ongoing criminal investigation and
the rights of the potential defendants in the case.
She has also said, however, that charging decisions are imminent.
Meanwhile, special counsel Jack Smith is moving quickly in the federal investigation into Trump's attempted coup and hoarding of classified documents in the last few days.
He subpoenaed Mike Pence of Hang Mike Pence fame, Mark Meadows, and Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran.
of hang Mike Pence fame, Mark Meadows, and Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran. That last one is interesting because Smith is trying to get around Corcoran's claim of attorney-client privilege by invoking
what's known as the crime fraud exception, which means that Smith believes that Corcoran's legal
services were used to further a crime. Dan, we didn't get him today. Today wasn't the day.
crime. Dan, we didn't get him today. Today wasn't the day. We thought that maybe we heard that the grand jury, that some portion of the grand jury final report would be released this morning.
We thought maybe the day would end with Trump getting frog marched down to a courthouse in
Atlanta. No, we didn't actually think that. But anyway, we didn't get much. We got the intro,
the conclusion, and then this portion of the report where they said that they do believe some of the witnesses lied under oath.
Anything more we can read into these developments, or do we just have to wait for Jack Smith and Fannie Willis to hold their respective press conferences?
It feels like we will continue waiting, and what we should do in the interim is just tweet at Merrick Garland, which seems to be what everyone else is doing this morning.
Oh, is that what they're doing?
Yeah, people are very upset about this.
Yeah, no, I'm sure he's reading all your tweets.
Also, it's nothing to do with this specific thing, but that's neither here nor there.
Yeah, no, keep bugging him.
It's like that, remember that jelly bean container we did to raise money for a fair fight?
Yeah, yeah.
Merrick Garland has one of those in his office for the indictment, so it just fills with tweets. When it gets to a certain line, he goes to jail. Yeah, it's yeah. is that no widespread fraud happened, which is a precipitating finding that they will need
in some of the potential charges that may come. So this does not mean that no one's getting
charged. It very well may mean that someone is getting charged at some point in the not-too-distant
future. And it is interesting to speculate who may have committed perjury. Some of the witnesses
included Lindsey Graham, Rudy Giuliani. I guess CNN's Manu Raju caught up with Lindsey Graham this morning after the report was released and asked him if he's still pretty confident of his testimony that he didn't perjure himself.
And he said yes.
For a brief second there, I thought you were saying that CNN's Manu Raju had testified.
I was like, why did you get caught up?
What a surprise. The other thing that's interesting on the Evan Corcoran part of the Jack Smith investigation is that if a judge were to find, were agreed with Jack Smith on this, Trump will within one calendar year have had two attorneys in two different crimes had their attorney client privilege lifted because a judge believed the preponderance of evidence showed that they had been, that they had committed a crime, which is just a wild thing for the frontrunner, for the Republican nomination.
And I realize it's tough to keep all the investigations straight.
In the Evan Corcoran case, that seems to have to do with the classified documents.
Yes.
Because it seems like it's possible that when Evan Corcoran released a statement saying, oh, yeah, all the classified documents are back.
Don't worry.
We don't have any more.
He may have lied about that.
He may have.
Well, we don't know if Evan Corcoran committed the crime or Trump used Evan Corcoran to commit the crime.
We don't know that yet. But Jack Smith thinks someone committed a crime.
We also know in back to the Georgia case that Rudy and the fake, the potential slate of fake electors all received target letters,
meaning that they were informed
that they have been targets of the investigation. That doesn't necessarily mean they'll be charged
or indicted, but it does mean that the prosecutors in the case believe that they may have committed
crimes. There's also, we should say, no known communication between the DA and Trump and his
lawyers in the Georgia case. And Trump didn't testify there. So who
knows? How do you think potential Trump indictments might affect the Republican primary that has now
begun in earnest? I think that probably a large group of Republican voters will look at this and
say, we cannot stand it anymore. Our party is too good for this. They will toss Trump overboard.
We're done. That's it. That's what we were looking for. We are the law and order party.
We cannot have criminals in charge. We're out. What did Lindsey Graham say right after January
6th? I'm out. Count me out. Now he's he's he's been pulled back in as many people often are
into large crime syndicates. I think that we should expect that the MAGA media, which is the most powerful force in Republican primaries, will rally to Trump's defense that Trump is being persecuted by his political opponents, a Democratic elected official in Georgia, the special counsel appointed by the attorney general appointed by Trump's most likely Democratic campaign opponent. And there will be a rallying to whether that rallying will translate into
actual votes. I impossible to say, but I think that there will be a route that his opponent,
his opponents will rally to Trump side in this environment, much in a very different, completely
unrelated context. But when the Republicans went after Hunter Biden, as part of the first Trump
impeachment, all of Biden's Democratic
opponents came right in defense of Joe Biden, rightfully so. Now, these are obviously two very
different cases, but I do think that there will be a rallying effect around Trump from some of
his opponents. They're not going to criticize him for it. I guess it'd be a better way of saying it.
Yeah, I was going to say, it seems like there's three options for each of these opponents.
It seems like there's three options for each of these opponents.
They can use the indictments to criticize Trump.
They can just defend Trump or they can try to take a middle ground.
Do you think any of them try to take a middle ground on this?
And what does that sound like, a middle ground on this? It's too early to take the middle ground in this race, I think.
in this race, I think. But what a middle ground would be is to put all of these legal troubles in the context of the sort of baggage that Trump would bring to the general election and make him
a more easy to defeat opponent by Joe Biden. Yeah, I think you could see one of them saying,
look, I'm not going to criticize the former president. All I can say is that I'm not under
any investigations right now.
And I don't have that kind of baggage. And I don't and I haven't lost, you know, like you could you
could see one of them doing that. Like Larry Hogan, like, like, put aside Larry Hogan and
Chris Sununu, if Chris Sununu were to run these sort of people running the anti-Trump lane who
have as much chance of being the Republican nominee as you and I. But of the people who are semi-quasi-viable contenders
for the Republican nomination,
I don't think that any of them will take that middle ground.
You think Ron DeSantis just answers
and goes right after the Justice Department?
Yeah, 100%.
Okay.
I think that's probably right.
Or I think either maybe... So there's two ways that can play out.
One is to aggressively go after them as a point of offense for your campaign.
And the other one is just how you're going to handle it in questions, right?
Where you're going to focus on your own stuff.
But whenever you're on TV, you're going to be asked about it.
And then you'll respond to it by attacking the Justice Department, the politicization of the Justice Department, all of that.
Well, here's a follow-up question. Who will write the first take about how Jack Smith or Fannie Willis just handed Trump the nomination by indicting him? And why won't
it be David Brooks? Because it'll be Josh Kroschauer. Shit, you got it. It's going to be
Josh Kroschauer or Hugh Hewitt. I could see Hugh Hewitt doing it too. Yeah. And so I sort of went,
there are any group of people in the MAGA media media could do it but i was just looking for someone who
is at least uh theoretically and technically in the more traditional media that's very clearly i
think i see that i can see that axios headline coming right now um all right well now that we're
into the republican primary let's do a quick update on the Mess America pageant.
One might think that the prospect of multiple indictments against Trump would provide fodder for the twice impeached presidents would be primary rivals.
But alas, here's the New York Times headline after Nikki Haley's campaign kickoff this week.
They're trying to topple Trump, but they barely utter his name.
Haley chose not to hit Trump directly in her speech, opting instead for a series of implicit criticisms designed to persuade Republican primary voters that it's time to turn the page.
Let's listen.
America is not past our prime.
It's just that our politicians are past theirs. We'll have term limits for Congress and mandatory mental competency tests
for politicians over 75 years old. And I have a particular message for my fellow Republicans.
We've lost the popular vote in seven of the last eight presidential elections. Our cause is right, but we have failed to win the confidence
of a majority of Americans.
Well, that ends today.
We're ready.
Ready to move past the stale ideas and faded names of the past.
And we are more than ready for a new generation
to lead us into the future.
If you're tired of losing, put your trust in a new generation.
And if you want to win, not just as a party, but as a country, stand with me.
Wild that you came out swinging against Dianne Feinstein.
It's so bad. It's so bad.
What did you think of Haley's announcement video and her speech? it's so bad. It's so bad. What,
uh,
what'd you think of Haley's announcement video and,
uh,
and her speech?
Just verbal consultant drivel.
Just terrible.
It's a,
it's a bunch of sound bites that aren't connected together that don't ladder
up into any compelling argument for why her and why not the others, it makes no sense. It's terrible. It is absolutely terrible. It just goes to show the paucity of political talent that she has and exists in the Republican consulting class. It's terrible. It's a terrible speech.
I mean, my next question was, what do you think about her chances? But I guess I got the answer to that, huh? Well, actually, I have a slightly different take on that.
But I think there is one element about Nikki Haley's candidacy that I think just goes to show
how just sort of misbegotten the whole endeavor is. Before you, you and I worked for Barack Obama when he was beginning the process of running for president, I've been involved with other people who were thinking of running for president, many of whom didn't run, none of whom won other than Barack Obama.
And the first thing you do in that conversation is you ask what is known as the Roger Mudd question.
That refers to a question that Roger Mudd
and NBC journalist asked Ted Kennedy in 1979, why are you running for president? And Ted Kennedy
just fumbled the question away that hampered the rest of that presidential run for him.
She has no reason why she's running. There is no rationale that is unique to her. You can see it in
the – her argument is generational, but her number one opponent is not Donald Trump.
It's Ron DeSantis. And Ron DeSantis is of the same generation than her. In fact,
he's 13 years younger than her. And so what are you doing? Your argument is you're electable.
You won a solidly red state. Ron DeSantis just won by a huge margin a one-time battleground state in this country.
It's just there's no why unique rationale for her.
And so I think she is – everyone who gets into the race has a low likelihood of success.
Like that's always true in every race.
And there is a world, and I think maybe this is what she is thinking, although her team clearly do not think it out very well, is, is it possible if DeSantis and Trump hammer the living shit out of each other that some third candidate could come up the middle?
That happens periodically to individual states.
That's how John Edwards almost won the Iowa caucus in 2004.
caucus in 2004. But there's no historical precedent of that person winning the nomination.
And you're going to need something more than just to be the person who is not getting... You're going to need something more than just being the person who's not being attacked
at the exact right moment. I just think she's not MAGA enough for a party that is
controlled by MAGA at this point.
And that doesn't necessarily mean that Donald Trump wins,
but like Ron DeSantis is at least MAGA enough for most of the party and can probably,
you basically, you need a nominee
who can attract both the MAGA portion of the party
and sort of the college educated Republicans
who are, you know, mega curious,
or maybe they're for Trump or maybe they're never Trump, or maybe they're sort of kind of for Trump,
right? Like that, you need someone who can straddle both of those factions in the party.
And Donald Trump has obviously done that in the past. I could imagine Ron DeSantis achieving that.
I just can't imagine Nikki Haley doing that. Like think she had a great announcement for a 2012 campaign for president.
That's what it felt like to me.
It felt like the version of the Republican Party that was when Mitt Romney ran for the presidency.
And what she's trying to, you're right, it's generational.
Barack Obama's campaign was also generational, but he had a few more elements to the message
than just generational change.
She's trying to say like,
look, this is a party of old white men.
I am a woman.
I have an Indian descent.
I confronted racial division in South Carolina,
although she never mentioned
what she's known for as governor,
which is taking down the Confederate flag outside the state capitol. I thought that was fairly notable and cowardly that she didn't
mention that. Basically, the the 2012 autopsy report where it says that the Republican Party
will only win if it becomes a more inclusive party and starts like looking younger into the future.
You can imagine Nikki Haley trying to run to be the leader of that party.
But that party's been gone for 10 years. I think if Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis are
beating each other up in the primary and there's a potential for a third candidate, again,
I don't think it's Nikki Haley. I don't think that she's going to be acceptable enough to the
base of the party. There's two parts of this that I think are notable. One is, it's not just that she's not MAGA enough, and she's not. And she is betwixt
and between because she's not anti-MAGA because she worked for Donald Trump and covered up for
him for years, but she's also running against him. So you don't have a lane. You're not MAGA,
you're not anti-MAGA, you're not really MAGA adjacent. What are you?
And the other thing is, it's also not that she's not MAGA enough.
She's not interesting enough.
Like, what are you saying that is different?
She is rerunning Marco Rubio's 2016 campaign.
And that was an epic disaster.
Yeah.
I mean, and you mentioned she has this extra challenge because she didn't just support Donald Trump.
She worked for Donald Trump.
So they're going to be the same challenge that Tommy and I talked about this on Tuesday that Mike
Pompeo and Mike Pence will have. This predicament was fully on display during her post-speech
interviews. Let's listen. What specific policy areas would you would you say part with Donald
Trump? What I am saying is I don't kick sideways, I'm kicking forward. Joe Biden
is the president. He's the one I'm running against. And what I'm saying is you don't have
to be 80 years old to be president. How would Donald Trump do on the competency test at 76
years old? I think he did great the last time he did it. I have no reason to think he wouldn't do
well this time. President Trump is my friend.
I was honored to work with him in the administration.
I thought he was the right president at the right time.
And that remains to be the truth.
We had a great conversation.
I told him that I was doing this because I thought it was time for a new generation.
I thought we needed to leave the status quo and we needed to move forward.
Seems like she really nailed it, huh?
Are they not allowed to do prep before interviews? Like, can they just go like,
just dry run a couple of likely questions that might come and prepare an answer maybe?
Yes. I mean, clearly she was not very prepared. What would a good answer have been? This goes to
what you were just saying, which is the fundamental flaw in her candidacy, is the only argument for her candidacy
is, I'm not as old as this guy. It's not even, I'm not as old as him, and also he has a lot of
baggage. She's not even willing to say he's got a lot of baggage. Yeah, you could pick one, you
just, you don't need to win the election on this question. You just need to have an answer that doesn't make you sound like a loser.
So just pick one issue where you disagree with him.
It could be something completely minor.
Yeah.
And cite that, right?
Like Donald Trump was – I was honored to serve Donald Trump.
It was a privilege.
He was a great president.
He did these things.
I agree with him on a lot of stuff.
That's why I worked for him.
But there are a couple of things where we disagree.
Here is one of them. It could be the tax policy. Yeah, it could be the
Abraham Accord. It could be tax policy. It could be Chinese balloon policy. I don't know. Pick one
fucking thing and say it. Even if you wanted to do it, it could be anything. It could be
absolutely anything. Just have an answer. It's just not that hard.
But also, she does this stunt about the mental competency test, which is such a stunt and obviously an attempt at a sop to the MAGA base who all think that Joe Biden is senile, right?
And it's supposed to be an implicit criticism of Trump's age.
But then they ask her about it. The Fox and Friends ask her about it. And she's like, yeah, I think he took it before and he did great. So now you're saying that you're a new
generation of leadership, but that you think that Donald Trump is competent enough to be president
and run for president again? Then why are you running against him?
It is just, it is like, there is three-dimensional chess, there's chess, there's checkers,
and there's whatever the fuck this is. like they obviously made a decision to pick an age for the mental competency test that included
donald trump obviously but then had no answer to the follow-up question about it because if you
didn't want to include trump you just want to pick the age of 80 which is what joe biden is
right it's like oh so bad like i am well this is what but also it's a great example of this is why political stunts that like
are dreamed up by a bunch of consultants in a room don't ever work or mostly don't work because
they are obviously bullshit it's like a transparent attempt it's like it's always too cute by half
and when you and it's fine in a speech but when you have a follow-up question
even from fucking fox and friends what was that Brian Kilmeade that asked you the question?
Yes.
Fucking Tim Russert over here just nails it.
Oh, man.
I'm offended.
I hate everything she stands for.
I hate everything she's done other than the one thing she did that was great that she won't mention.
But as a political professional, I am offended by this campaign.
I feel the same way. I really do. What do you think about the general reluctance to criticize
Trump from not just Haley, but people like DeSantis? This is something else we talked
about on Tuesday. Tommy and I went back and forth on this.
I do not. If I was running a Republican primary campaign, which I hope I never am, then-
But who knows?
Liz Cheney, you call it? I'm kidding. I'd never do that.
Flip it, Elijah. Flip it.
I would not advise my candidate to criticize Trump. That's not what the voters want.
I would advise my candidate to differentiate myself from Trump in a coherent way. She doesn't
have to. There's no argument right now to come out guns blazing against Trump.
You just have to have some sort of answer as to why you, why not Trump.
On a debate stage, you and Tommy had this conversation around DeSantis and whether he
sounded like Jeb Bush, whether he should sound like Jeb Bush or whatever else.
And I think he, DeSantis does not and should not take the bait from Trump now.
On a debate stage, there will be a test. Yeah, are you tough enough to do it? And Marco Rubio failed that test miserably in 2016,
to actually to many people to Christie to Trump to everyone else. Marco Rubio, he thought he had
a chance and suddenly he just like finds himself going back and forth with Trump over dick jokes.
That's what happens. You start off the great Republican hope
and then you end up doing dick jokes.
You lose
a dick joke competition with Trump.
So I don't think she should be out there
criticizing him. Just be a little
more deft about why you, why not
him and be a little more specific.
It does not attack his activism.
You should praise the shit out of him. It should be like a positive sandwich for Trump. Did a great
job as president. Every Republican should be grateful for everything he accomplished and what
he did for our party. He saved us from Hillary Clinton and all these other things that you want
to say that make your base feel happy. And then say where you would be different, why you need
him. And then implicit in that, and even somewhat, I think, relatively explicit is the electability
argument.
You don't have to call him a loser, but you have to say we can't afford to lose.
Yeah.
And she did, in fairness, she got into the electability argument a little bit when she
said, we lost the popular vote in the last seven of eight presidential elections.
But then I think on another interview on the Today Show, she was asked about, you know,
did Joe Biden really win the election?
And she went with the old, Joe Biden is president is president we know there's a lot of weird things
that happened in 2020 in the election because of covid that was which is like okay what are you
doing what are you doing all right as fun as it is to talk about the mess of a republican primary
we should also mention that it's looking like there probably won't be a democratic primary
uh president biden and everyone around him has made it abundantly clear that he intends to run for reelection and is in the process
of putting together a campaign. Just about all of his potential Democratic primary opponents
have ruled out running against him, including two progressives who ran last time, Bernie Sanders and
Elizabeth Warren. In fact, progressives like Warren, Pramila Jayapal, head of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, and Ro Khanna are proudly endorsing him when they've been asked.
And yet, and yet, Politico's Jonathan Martin has a piece out today, Thursday, that reflects
the concern you hear from almost any Democrat you talk to inside and outside of politics.
People think Joe Biden is too old to run again, but party leaders are afraid
to say so publicly. Let's start there. Why do you think Democratic officials are afraid to voice
their concerns? I don't think afraid is the right word. And let me explain why. One, I think they
all like Joe Biden. They have a lot of affection for him. They're very proud of the work they did together over the last two years.
They think he's a good person.
What's not to like he,
and to his credit,
Joe Biden has done his small P politics incredibly well.
Like there was an anecdote in the Jonathan Martin story about Angie Craig,
the Democratic representative from Minnesota,
who's one of the few people who has publicly called for called on Joe Biden
not to run.
And she was recently attacked in the elevator of her building.
And the first person who calls her, Joe Biden, right? Like he's done that. And so they like him.
Two, they know he's running. They've been told he's running. And so to what end would that
criticism serve now? Would it convince Joe Biden not to run? No. Would it possibly be used as fodder
against Joe Biden were he to run? Yes. And so it's like to what like what would be the constructive nature of it? And then there is the third question, which we will get to, which there just, you know, worrying aloud, either via
anonymous quote or putting your name on it about Joe Biden's age.
It would be constructive, you could argue, for someone to just go ahead and challenge
him for the nomination.
Why do you think no one has stepped up to challenge Biden?
Three reasons.
One, primary challenges always come from the ideological flank.
Left for the Democrats, right for the Republicans. Joe Biden, while he has not done everything the
progressives want, has done a hell of a lot more than anyone thought was possible. And so there
is not room to Joe Biden's left for a viable primary challenge. And that's the assessment of
Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pramila Chopra, all the people you said, is how would you run to the left of Joe Biden? And he hasn't accomplished
everything, but a lot of times it's not for lack of trying. It's because of the narrow majorities
he has. Second reason why no one has challenged him is that primary challengers always lose.
Challenges to incumbent presidents have always failed. In addition to failing,
challenges to incumbent presidents have always failed. In addition to failing,
they have invariably made that incumbent president weaker in the general election. Of the four incumbent presidents in modern political history who have lost re-election,
three of the four did so after facing a very vigorous primary challenge. Gerald Ford and
Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter and Ted Kennedy, George H.W. Bush,
and Pat Buchanan. And so there's an assessment that if I run, I will lose. I will make it more
likely that Donald Trump or Ron DeSantis becomes president, and therefore my future in democratic
politics is over. So it was like, why would a J.B. Pritzker or Gavin Newsom or Gretchen Whitmer or
any other people who would almost certainly run in a world where Joe Biden was not running to undertake what is likely a political suicide mission.
Joe Biden as president has done everything within his power to pass progressive legislation or take executive action that progressives have wanted him to take. I think there are probably a few
things you could say, I wish he took executive action on this or that. But in terms of what is
legally viable, and we don't even know at this point if the student debt relief
action is legally viable, he has done just about everything he can. And then we all know,
we've all gone through what's happened in Congress. He's passed the most sweeping climate
legislation in history. The rest of the Inflation Reduction Act, what it does for healthcare prices,
what it does for prescription drug prices, the COVID relief bill, the transportation bill.
He's done just about everything that Joe joe mansion and kirsten cinema would
allow him to do and he cannot get around those two so we have talked about this so i do think
that's why bernie sanders has said i won't challenge him that's why pramila jayapal said
i was skeptical at first but i'm a fan you know and i hope he runs again right so you're not going
to get the challenge from the left so then the challenge you could imagine that would be a historical, considering what you just said, would be someone who is younger than him and shares basically Joe Biden's politics or at least politics that reflect the record that Joe Biden has amassed somewhere in the mainstream of the Democratic Party, maybe a little more left than people had expected from Biden. And then you have a series of governors, right? The problem there is basically
exactly what we just criticized Nikki Haley for, which is the only real thing you can say
about your candidacy is that you are a new generation and Joe Biden is too old.
And that's it. That's like your whole, there's not a lot of ideological differences.
There's not a lot of policy differences. There's not a lot of policy differences.
You could probably find some small policy differences here and there. But mainly,
you're talking about age. Even electability is hard because Joe Biden just won the last election.
And Democrats did pretty well in the midterms, even though Joe Biden was pretty unpopular. The one time voters had an opportunity to render their judgment on Joe Biden's presidency,
one time voters had an opportunity to render their judgment on Joe Biden's presidency.
They helped him expand the Senate majority and have the most narrow House loss in recent memories.
So he was not rejected by the voters.
It's just like, I'm not even sure what the electability argument you would make is.
So it's like, these people are all smart.
They all want to be president.
They would all jump at the opportunity to be president.
They've looked at it, and there's not a good, viable argument that would give them even a modicum of chance
of success against the president. And the consequences for taking it on and failing
would be disastrous to them personally. We can have an argument about whether
the party is strengthened, the country is strengthened by a primary challenge.
And that very well may be. We have a small sample size problem when it comes to presidential
elections. There just aren't that many incumbents who run for re-election. And therefore, you can't draw some statistically significant sample from what I said about how things have played out in the past. But from the personal decision making of those politicians, it's very easy to see how you get to not running in this context.
Well, let's talk about why the worry persists, because unlike a lot of things we talk about on the show, it is not a worry that is limited to a bunch of Washington insiders not want Joe Biden to run again. And I have seen this myself in all the focus groups I did for the wilderness. No one wanted Joe Biden to run again. And they were all Joe Biden voters. And they all had pretty nice things to say about him and pretty nice things to say about his record. A lot of them were frustrated with the direction of the country, frustrated with inflation,
but they were all concerned about his age.
Sarah Longwell has been on this podcast and our bad on the clip there.
But Sarah was saying that she has done many, many focus groups and heard the exact same
thing.
And she thinks that like, yeah, and she and she said at the beginning, the part that we
cut out that she is very grateful for Joe, and she said at the beginning, the part that we cut out,
that she is very grateful for Joe Biden and thinks Joe Biden saved America and thinks that Joe Biden could, you know, beat Trump again, but that anyone besides Trump that
he'd have a problem with and that she thinks that he would lose.
Now, I don't necessarily agree with that, but there is a lot of data, not just in polls,
but from like talking to people where
people are concerned about his age. So are Joe Biden and all of the folks in the White House and
all the Democratic strategists who just are all getting behind a second run, are they just out
of touch with the electorate on this? No, I think it's worth just for a second unpacking the age issue to what it actually means.
And I think there's four elements of it. The first is, is Joe Biden too old to do the job
now or in four years? And there is no evidence to say that he is. In fact, he has done a great
job as president. In the people who are in the meetings with him, no one makes that case,
because you would hear it. People heard it about Reagan in his second term.
But right now, as we stand here, Joe Biden can do the job and he's doing a hell of a job at it.
That is just a fact.
The second is, is he too old to campaign vigorously enough to win the election?
Running for president is hard.
Being president is hard.
Running for re-election while being president is really fucking hard.
Because you don't just go to rallies. You get off the rally, your national security team has told
you that yet another balloon has arrived over the Hudson and you got to shoot it down. It's
like a lot of shit going on. And can he do that? His State of the Union was clearly designed to
show people that he can. How he delivered it. And I think as we said last episode,
and I think he did it rather effectively during that.
Very, very effectively. That's the question. That's an unanswerable question right now.
And then the third question is, will his age be a political factor? Not can he do the job,
but can someone make the generational argument against him? Will you be able to say he's too
old for the presidency? And as we sit here today, the most likely Republican nominee is four years
younger than him. And so in that sense, it's not. And then the fourth reason is, and this really shows up in the polls, is
there is certainly a disconnect right now between Joe Biden and younger Democrats.
They are the group least enthusiastic about him running. They're the group who told pollsters
that they're least enthusiastic about the idea of him winning again. They were his toughest
constituency in the 2020 primary.
And can he get those people to turn out? Now, 2022 suggests some positive evidence that he could,
but that is ultimately the age question. And it's going to be on Joe Biden to answer some of those questions throughout the process of it. But it's hard to make that the basis for a primary challenge. It's just like, as you said, it doesn't. And we actually saw
a purely generational argument play itself out in the Massachusetts Senate primary
between Joe Kennedy and Ed Markey. And once you got past, I'm younger than Ed Markey,
Joe Kennedy, who we love and really, and have got to know over the years, didn't have anything else there. And that's how you can
see one of these, like a Gavin Newsom or a J.B. Pritzker or a Whitmer who agree with Joe Biden on
almost everything. Like what happens after that? You're old. No, I'm not old. I'm not too old. I
have experience. Okay, that's the end of that. Where do we go from here? It gets very challenging.
Yeah. And also, when you ask people, do you think he should run again? That is a different question than when you ask people, okay, he's running and it's Joe Biden versus Donald Trump or it's Joe Biden versus Ron DeSantis. And then they have to pick. Yeah. And all of those polls, it's much, much closer.
And I, again, back to the focus groups, I noticed the same thing.
Do you want Joe Biden to run again?
No.
Do you want Donald Trump to run again?
No.
What happens if it's Joe Biden and Donald Trump again?
And then just about everyone picked Joe Biden, at least in my series of focus groups.
I also think just on this, one more thing is that you look at Joe Biden's approval ratings, you look at some of the numbers we're looking about, about lack of enthusiasm from
running and all of that.
And that all seems like kind of scary.
Like, and obviously we worry about everything here, but I do think we probably have not updated our priors to account for an era of historic
negative polarization where extremism is the central issue of American politics.
Because all the traditional fundamentals said that we should have gotten our ass kicked in 2022,
and we didn't. And I think some of the same dynamics, it won't be exactly the same
because it's all going to be about Joe Biden. It can't be all about Hershel Walker or anything
else in 2024. But there are, I think politics has changed in a way that maybe might obviate some of
the traditional concerns you would have around some of these numbers. Well, on that note, the
flip side of not a lot of voters and Democratic voters being enthusiastic about another Joe Biden candidacy is there's not a lot of people who are really angry about Joe Biden.
Right. Like he does not he is not as polarizing of a figure as a lot of other politicians in either party over the last decade or so.
Like that's just a fact of who he is. And so that could help him to look.
I don't want anyone to walk away from this thinking that we are like sanguine about Joe
Biden's candidacy here. Like, yeah, I worry about the performance in a presidential election again
in 2024. Of course, I worry about this. But when you think about all the other alternatives that
we've just laid out, it's pretty clear, like, this is what's happening.
Like, this is happening.
No one is stepping up to challenge him.
Progressives are endorsing him.
He has done a great job as president, I believe.
He has passed a lot of what I hoped he'd pass.
Probably he probably beat my expectations on his legislative agenda.
For sure.
And so, you know, and so that know and so that's that's what it is
that's what it is and whether it's donald trump or ron desantis this goes back to the negative
partisanship point like whoever the republicans nominate is going to be a serious threat to
this democracy to this country and a lot of people are going to be a lot worse off if one of them wins the
presidency, especially if it's Donald Trump again. So that's where we are. Anything else you'd like
to add? It seems like a trap. I'm sure we'll talk about this again at some point.
You're right to point out that we are not overly sanguine about this, or frankly, anything. I'm sure we'll talk about this again at some point. You're right to point out that we are not overly sanguine about this, or frankly, anything.
I'm not sanguine about anything.
And if you were to say, if Joe Biden were to come out tomorrow and say,
I am not running, and we're like, Pete Buttigieg is the nominee, or Elizabeth Warren,
or Kamala Harris, I'd be worried about all of them.
If someone changed the Constitution and Barack Obama was going to run again,
I would be worried because invariably, this election, no matter who is our candidate, who is their candidate, is going to come down
to something like 100,000 votes over five states. That's it. That's how it's going to be. It's going
to be decided on the margins. And so we're going to have to worry about everything. And it may be
age, it may be in this situation that Joe Biden is old. It could be that Pete Buttigieg is young.
It could be any list of things. And so just this is the one that Biden is old. It could be that Pete Buttigieg is young. It could be any list of things.
And so just this is the one that Biden is navigating.
Other candidates have other things to navigate.
And no one has made a compelling argument that someone else is obviously more electable.
Put aside everything he's accomplished and the right to go finish the job, as he said. But there's this candidate who would definitely win in the wings that we're like ignoring out of so we can get Easter egg roll tickets. Like that's not what this is, right?
Are we going to get Easter egg roll tickets?
Gee, I didn't know that. I'm going to go back and edit this segment just to make sure.
Yeah. Okay. When we come back, I will talk to State Senator Mallory McMorrow about the legislation that she and her colleagues are about to introduce in Michigan to promote gun safety.
And we're back. This week, there was yet another horrific school shooting, this time at Michigan State University, where three students were killed and five more were
injured. Joining us to talk about what Democrats in Michigan intend to do about this now that
they've won back control of the state legislature, Senate Majority Whip Mallory McMorrow. Senator,
welcome back to the pod. Thank you.
So yesterday, a big group of Michigan State students came to the Capitol to demand action on gun safety.
They sat outside the steps in rows because that's how they've been trained to sit during lockdown drills.
You were there with them. What did those students tell you?
It was really, really moving.
I mean, first, it was one student organizer who asked all of the legislators to come in front and sit in front and just look at all of them, which was really powerful. And then she asked anybody, any student
who was there who wanted to share a story one by one to come up to the microphone. There had to
have been at least a hundred kids who stayed out there and it was really cold yesterday and really
windy one by one telling their stories. And one of the things that really
struck me was how many of these kids who just survived a school shooting have lived through
another gun violence event before, whether it was another school shooting. A lot of these kids have
just survived the Oxford High School shooting 14 months months ago there's a kid who survived the sandy hook shooting um and then everyday gun violence people who survived suicide
attempts or have loved ones or nearby neighborhood gun violence and this is it just washed over you
to realize how much of an epidemic this is you also spoke at that event and shared that your
good friend's older brother was killed in the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007.
I was struck by what you said at the end of your remarks that you felt powerless after that tragedy.
What do you say to young people who may feel the same way today?
I, you know, it's a hard thing because it was, as I said in my speech, the older brother of one of my closest friends. So there's always this kind of feeling of guilt that it was a step removed from me. But this was somebody I grew up with who I saw at sleepovers, who, you know, when we were still in high school and he was in college, we tried to get him to get us beer.
was in college. We tried to get him to get us beer. This was somebody I knew. And I remember when it happened, just watching it play over again and again and again on CNN and the news
coverage and seeing reenactments and animations of where the shooter was and how he got into the
classrooms. And then seeing my friend's dad,
you know, just screaming in a photo that was on the front page of the Washington Post and just
feeling paralyzed. And when I was running for office for the first time a few years ago,
in the wake of the Parkland shooting, there were high school kids in my district who reached out
to me, even as a candidate, not even somebody in
office yet, and asked to get coffee with me at 8 a.m. on a Sunday at a Starbucks, which is not
what I was doing when I was in high school or when it happened to me. And they grilled me and
they demanded to know what I was going to do on this issue when I got into office. That pushed me to push harder. And
it has happened slowly, but the reality is now we have a Democratic majority in Michigan
that got to a majority partially on gun violence, on all of us committing to do something.
So my message to all of these kids or anybody is that you're not
powerless. It is night and day difference from Virginia Tech to now. And in Michigan,
we are going to act. Can you talk about what legislation you and your colleagues are preparing
to introduce on gun safety? Absolutely. The bills are being finalized and drafted and being
introduced right now, actually. We're on recess to go back into session to introduce them. So there
will be a package of bills on three key issues. One to create red flag laws, emergency risk
protection order here in Michigan, as well as requiring safe storage of firearms when they are not in use, and universal background
checks. These are pieces of legislation that we have introduced multiple times, time after time
after time. But we now using the best research and data from states that have enacted these
policies already. Our policy teams were already working on these before this horrific event happened. But just credit to staff, who I don't think ever get enough credit, stayed up, you know, long nights all of this week to expedite the end of this process to make sure that we could introduce them today.
sure that we could introduce them today. So for folks who don't know, it takes two-thirds support in both chambers of the Michigan legislature to enact a law immediately. If you have a simple
majority, there's essentially a waiting period of about 14 months. Do you think you guys can get any
Republican support on these measures that'll be necessary to get to that two-thirds number?
I do hope we can. There have been some moments in my time in the legislature where there has been bipartisanship.
In the wake of the killing of George Floyd a couple of years back, there was a police reform bill that even under a Republican-controlled legislature passed out of the Senate unanimously in the wake of that crisis.
It ended up dying in the state house, but I think that showed me that when it hits home and when it is a devastating moment, there's an opportunity, there's a window that opens up for us to actually come together and put our differences aside.
Michigan State is four miles away from our state capital.
This has not only impacted the families and the kids directly. This is quite literally everybody's staff, everybody's family, everybody's kids. I mean, everybody
in the Capitol is affected by this. There were some speeches today from both sides of the aisle
about what this meant to them. And this feels like it can and should be one of those moments.
Do you envision any issues getting enough Democratic support for a simple
majority? No. That's great. That's great. You know, as I said at the outset, this is the first
time in 40 years that the Democrats hold a trifecta in Michigan. What other pieces of
legislation are you all looking to get passed in these next two years? Oh, there's, I think this
is a whole episode in and of itself. But I will say, you know,
beyond this is an issue that, again, I know some of the opposition is going to say that we are
rushing to introduce these bills in the wake of a crisis. But I really want to reiterate,
we've been working on these for years and years and years. This was a priority coming in.
But we also signaled as a new Democratic majority that we're tackling a lot.
On day one of this new legislature in both the state House and the state Senate, we introduced six bills that include repealing our 1931 abortion ban, expanding our state Civil Rights
Act to explicitly include the LGBTQ community, expanding the EITC tax credit to support working families, repealing the pension tax, which is something that
Republican Governor Snyder taxed seniors' pensions in order to give big businesses a $1.8 billion
tax break back in 2011, and also repealing right to work and restoring prevailing wage.
So we came out the gates with a big message that
we're going to tackle kind of democratic social issues and economic issues. And Michigan right
now is making the case that we are the anti-Florida. The governor said in the state of the
state that bigotry is bad for business. So we are addressing inflation issues, making things better
for people's pocketbooks, but also signaling to everybody,
you are welcome here in Michigan, no matter who you are, and we're going to protect you.
And gun violence and gun reform is a big piece of that as well.
So you got national attention for your response to a Republican state senator who accused you of
grooming and sexualizing children because you stood up for LGBTQ kids. The Republicans running
for president in 2024 seem to be competing to see who can do the most to marginalize kids based on
their gender identity, sexual orientation, or what they learn in school. I think like Pence
is going to spend a million dollars in Iowa on some parents' rights,
bullshitty thing. Donald Trump has a new policy where he's going to try to ban gender-affirming care for all minors. Obviously, Ron DeSantis has been doing
this for quite a while. What's your advice to Democrats on how to handle these issues and this
dynamic that we're going to see play out in the Republican primary over the next year?
Look, I think you just said it. I mean, these issues that they're running on, they're bullshit.
look, I think you just said it. I mean, these issues that they're running on, they're bullshit.
They are an attempt to distract and make people believe that all of their very real issues related to inflation or the economy or jobs or education or whatever it is, are somehow somebody
else's fault. And that somebody else, they seem to be coalescing around the LGBTQ community and
trans kids. It is absolute horseshit. And Democrats should call it out,
call it what it is, and make that connection. You know, I think that's something that we did
here in Michigan and did it well, is point out that, you know, banning two kids every year from
playing soccer with their friends is not going to do anything to lower your health care costs or fix
the roads or bring teachers back into the profession. And I think if if Democrats stand up and show that, then
Republicans have nothing to run on. Last question before I let you go. Speaking of 2024 could be a
crowded primary to replace retiring Michigan Senator Debbie Stabenow. You haven't yet said
if you're considering running for that seat, anything you can tell us?
No.
I had to try.
I know. I respect the attempt.
Senator Mallory McMurrow, thank you so much for joining Pod Save America.
And good luck introducing the legislation in a few minutes.
We'll let you go do that. Take care.
Thanks.
All right.
Before we go, Crooked's own Hallie Kiefer is here.
I guess we're doing something with Elon Musk's tweets.
We are.
Okay.
You know, we wanted to do a little twist on the forum and just to establish, you guys, you're over OK Stop.
Yeah. We're over it.
Way over it.
And, you know, unfortunately, the audience loves it.
They're constantly asking for it.
And you guys said, never again.
Don't even bother.
OK?
And it is sort of like, even though we've given up on it,
it's like the old story of Pagliacci, the clown.
You know, it's like, Doctor, I'm depressed.
It's like, oh, I have something for you.
Go listen to Pod Save America.
They've got a great segment called OK Stop.
Doctor, I am OK Stop.
This is OK Stop. It's just a okay, stop. This is okay, stop.
It's just a verbal version.
I'm just going to tell you the story.
And then you guys will say, okay, stop.
And I was reading this and it is about Elon Musk.
And going through this, it really, it felt like I was telling a horror story.
And so I'm going to call this, again, we can change the title later.
I'm going to call it Tales of Online Terror.
Okay.
I like this.
Because I'm going to tell you a spine-tingling story,
and then you tell me when you want to stop and scream.
Okay?
Okay.
Okay, before we go, did you guys watch the Super Bowl?
Are you Super Bowl boys?
Okay.
I mean, I don't know if I...
Yes to the first question, no to the second question,
am I a Super Bowl boy?
It's entirely subjective.
But you had strong feelings about it.
No, I didn't really have strong feelings about it.
I don't like the Eagles that much, but that's about it.
Did you tweet at all?
Were you putting anything on the internet?
I did some tweeting.
Well, I personally watched only the halftime show with Rihanna,
and then I watched the Puppy Bowl, which is the perfect amount of the Super Bowl.
However, the story begins when cosmic flop Elon Musk
discovered that his Super Bowl tweet got less engagement than President Joe Biden's.
And I'm going to just describe the tweets to you because they are just the most nothing tweets.
Like these are not tweets that people needed to know.
Biden, it's a video of Dr. Jill Biden in an Eagles jersey.
And then Biden just says, as your president, I'm not picking favorites.
But as Jill Biden's husband, fly, Eagles, fly.
Cute.
Yeah.
Totally benign.
Appropriate.
Elon Musk.
This is the tweet that inspired this whole saga, which, by the way, he deleted in shame.
Apparently, it's not up anymore.
It just said, go Eagles, exclamation point, with six American flags, which felt like it could have been a Biden tweet.
I was like, it could have been either.
That's the most anodyne possible. Exactly. Okay. For those of you keeping score at home, go outside. Don't do that. But for us who cannot do that, apparently Elon's pro
Philadelphia Eagles tweet got 9.6 million impressions. So we're just talking impressions
compared to Biden's 29 million impressions. According to a report from
Platformer, Elon was so enraged he immediately boarded his private jet, which by the way is
destroying the planet, flew to San Francisco and demanded his staff fix the issue or they'd be
fired. A fact that makes me want to destroy the planet. Gentlemen, are your spines tingling yet?
How does that strike you? Did he fly directly from the Super Bowl where he was in a box with Rupert Murdoch?
Is that where he flew from?
Allegedly, yes.
Yeah, I saw the picture of that.
Wow.
Doesn't that feel like it should just be an email?
Am I wrong?
Doesn't it feel like you should not have had that concern in any way?
Because you're, what the fuck?
What's the point of over-leveraging yourself
to buy a $44 billion failing company
if you get poor engagement in your tweets?
I mean, I think Dan's got the point.
But he put in, but here's the thing.
He didn't put any effort into that tweet.
It's not even like-
That's the point of owning the company.
The rest of us have to think hard about what can go viral.
He shouldn't have to think hard.
Could you imagine if you owned a restaurant and had to wait for a table? That's ridiculous.
He is like the epitome of the tech founder personality where you do something and you
just are used to everyone around you being like, oh, sir, that's amazing. Oh, you're changing the
world. Incredible, incredible job changing the world. I know this is about Elon Musk,
but can I just go on one slight tangent?
Absolutely. I feel like the White House lawyers are being overly careful with Joe Biden that he,
a guy who's grown up rooting for the Eagles, can't just root for the Eagles.
Do you think it's the White House lawyers or do you think it was like his political team? Well, it's not that I thought that he doesn't need Kansas City. Yeah, it's not the Eagles against the Atlanta Falcons, right?
Or the Arizona Cardinals.
This is a layup.
Just be for the Eagles.
People will like that.
He cares about Red America, even if Red America doesn't care about him.
That's Joe Biden's message.
Okay, there you go.
All right, back to Elon Musk.
Sorry.
In the grave of night on Monday morning, Twitter engineers received an urgent at here Slack message that said, we are debugging an issue with engagement across the platform.
Any people who make dashboards and write software, please can you help solve this problem?
This is high urgency.
If you're willing to help out, please thumbs up this post. Gentlemen, 80 engineers
had to gather after this Slack message went out. They gathered at the Twitter office to begin
working through the night. When was this message sent? 2.36 a.m. These people who are human beings
with families, hopes and dreams, sleep schedules, maybe even children had to go do this.
Is your skin crawling?
If you are still at Twitter right now, my question is, do you have hopes and dreams?
Do you have sleep schedules?
You can't anymore, right?
I also want to know which engineers declined to give the thumbs up emoji.
The ones that have one foot out the door.
The ones who are like, my fourth interview is tomorrow and I'm pretty sure.
So do we think that 80 engineers showed up at Twitter headquarters, whatever's left of it, at like three in the morning to try to start fixing this engagement issue?
I mean, I do believe that because I think, unfortunately, that's where they're at.
Now, if you guys were to Slack me, I'd be asleep.
I wouldn't even get it.
That's what's hard is like they got the message, which means that they know that this is happening all the time.
That's the terrifying part.
Yeah, they have sounds enabled on their Slack messages.
Yes.
In the general channel.
Ugh.
Oh, according to reports, Elon Musk then ordered his engineers in the middle of the goddamn night to build a system that boosted his tweets to all Twitter users or else they'd be fucking fired.
And then they adjusted the algorithm that would, quote, green light all of his tweets to bypass Twitter filters and boost them by a factor of 1,000. Basically, his tweets were receiving special treatment
that no other user could ever or has ever received.
And without any of us knowing about it,
are your bones chilled, gentlemen?
Are you chilled?
I am to the core.
I am.
Because this to me, this is,
at this point it's insidious
that we don't know what's happening.
Isn't that terrifying?
So Twitter has become just like affirmative action for Elon Musk,
Musk's tweets.
That's the whole thing.
To go back to Dan's point about owning a restaurant,
it's like if Elon Musk bought a restaurant
and then he started making the chicken parm
and then was mad that everyone was like,
this is not as good as anyone else's.
As Joe Biden's chicken parm.
And so he hired 80 chicken parm engineers to come in and not even make his chicken parm better, force people to eat it.
That's terrifying.
Yeah, except he was making the chicken parm with like hamburg and ravioli.
Wait, there's no chicken in it.
There's no chicken.
Is there chicken in it?
No, it just says go Eagles.
I'm reading it.
So as a result, Elon's tweets then sort of insidiously started
taking over people's timelines this week not mine i haven't blocked when people started asking why
his tweets were flooding their timelines he tweeted please stay tuned while we make adjustments to the
uh algorithm that makes me want to scream in horror gentlemen what are your thoughts about
this like morally ethically oh i mean i don't have any moral or ethical thoughts about elon musk because i think he left that behind long ago i um i have not noticed more of his tweets
i still i i had like a fascination probably a bit of an bordering on a bit of an obsession with
elon musk's and his terrible tweets when he first took over the platform i left that behind a couple
months ago yeah i haven't muted him or blocked him,
but I don't pay attention
to his shit as much anymore
and my life's been better.
And I think that is the problem.
Yes, Dan,
you wanted to take issue
with what I just said.
I was just going to ask
if the producers could go back
through your timeline
and see when the last time
you tweeted Elon Musk was.
I think it was like Saturday.
Well, it was this.
This was the first time in a while
because I heard about this story
that you're reading here
and it was bone chilling.
Well, and then we could sort of talk about that because that's also on my list that Elijah gave me.
Basically sort of, you know, this isn't his only bad recent take.
You know, we have the whole Paul Pelosi hammer story that he just sort of carried water for.
A classic, yeah.
You remember when Paul Pelosi, an elderly man,
was attacked by a saber with a hammer
and everyone on the right laughed about it?
So he put out a tweet saying,
some of the smartest people I know
actively believe the press, dot, dot, dot, amazing,
even though he was posting from something
that was just pretending to be a news outlet.
And so obviously you had a reaction to it
and also you have a podcast about being less online.
What are your
like sort of like i guess like what do you want people what should people take from this or is
it just sort of like uh the raw icy terror at the whole thing it's just sort of like i can't even
you know talk about it it's just such a um i mean look elon musk doesn't want people to believe
anything negative about Elon Musk.
It is all like it's so hard.
It is just we are reliving the whole Donald Trump.
Yes.
Era again, except he's like a poor imitation of Donald Trump not running for office that just controls Trump's old favorite platform.
And that's all he is really.
You know, and it is like he's running for just our attention
and even that he can't do it no he can't even that's the sad part he paid 44 billion dollars
to get our attention and now he has and he captured it for a brief moment and now he's
mostly lost it and now he doesn't know what to do because he's just 44 billion in the hole so i have
three takes on this one is hell yeah. Yeah. It's deeply sad,
right here is a person who was kind of funny.
Yeah.
It's,
it's funny,
sad,
right?
Which is here's the richest human being in the world at one point,
at least who has built multiple successful companies is upset that his
tweet got less RTs than Joe Biden's.
And like,
that's just like,
that just speaks to everything about how like this gaping well of insecurity and emptiness
inside this human being.
Yeah.
Which we can laugh at because he's the richest human being
in the world or was at some point.
Second point, ultimately, who cares
if we all have to look at more of Elon Musk's tweets?
It's not like Twitter was this curated list of wonderfulness
and now we've got to look at Elon Musk's shit.
But the serious part is if he is playing with the algorithm, it's Elon Musk's dumb tweets now,
it's pro-Ron DeSantis content later. It is something else that fits with his. It could
be something that promotes Dogecoin or some other financial, like there is an inherent corruption,
which then speaks to the more important point, which is, if Elon Musk can make 80 engineers
change the algorithm to promote his tweets,
then we need some sort of regulation to prevent them from changing it to promote all kinds of other corrupt and dangerous stuff.
And that is the serious point to this absurd story about an absurdly small human being.
Or, you know, failing to get that regulation, which probably we will.
Everyone should just sort of uh stop treating twitter as uh
the media's assignment editor and so we that's why that's what mastodon is for that's what matt
fewer tweets more to write it over there yeah the end of this story is go sign up on mastodon
um and there's one i think it speaks to your your point dan which is the final uh apparently a story
also uh reported by a platformer that Musk
fired one of his last two principal engineers after they told him his tweets were declining,
partly because people just cared less. Like, it's like you bought it, the months have gone on,
people are just sort of not really back. It's not like business as usual, but like,
you know, people have all their stuff going on. And isn't that the most horrifying thing of all?
And apparently, Musk had said, like, why are my tweets not reaching everybody and he told them this is ridiculous i
have more than 100 million followers and i'm only getting tens of thousands of impressions
and when this person tried to explain to him how waning attention works he told the engineer you're
fired you're fired is this scary or is it just humiliating or is it
worse, a combination of the two?
I think it's the best day of that engineer's life.
They're finally free.
They're free? They're finally free.
Also, if that engineer would like to
come on offline, please
come on offline.
We'd love to talk to you about your experience at Twitter.
And we just want to show you at the end a very grim little video
of Elon talking to his, I mean, honest to God, three of the remaining employees
who I've really, I do feel for those people, like whatever situation they're in, it's like,
it's not good. You have to give it three in the morning. Do you sound like insane every night?
And just if you're listening, there's sort of in a sterile, blazingly white office space,
like there's no color. It's on, the lights are so are so bright. Probably, again, ruin their sleep.
And here we go.
If you wouldn't mind playing it, Phoebe.
You create your own memes, though, don't you?
I create some memes.
Your meme game is strong.
Thank you.
Your meme game is strong.
Yeah, I create some memes.
I create some memes. Again, the richest man in the world 51
has damn near a dozen children just this is what we're doing with our time guy sucks that's all
that's all i'll say about that the whole thing is an argument for more touching of grass
um and and progressive taxation hell yeah on that note gentlemen thank you for letting me tell you
this terrifying spine tingling tale thank you for sc me tell you this terrifying spine-tingling tale.
Thank you for scaring the shit out of us.
It's something about it.
Thank you.
I don't know.
It's better to laugh because if I think about it, I'm like, well, that's not good that someone could turn out that way.
It's not good at all.
Have that much money.
No, no, no, no.
Maybe billionaires shouldn't exist.
On that note.
On that note, thank you, Hallie Kiefer.
Of course. Thank you for having me.
For telling us that bone-chilling story.
Thank you to Senator Mallory McMorrow for joining us.
Everyone have a wonderful weekend, and we will see you next week.
Bye, everyone.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production.
The executive producer is Michael Martinez.
Our senior producer is Andy Gardner Bernstein.
Our producers are Haley Mews and Olivia Martinez. It senior producer is Andy Gardner Bernstein. Our producers are Haley Muse and Olivia Martinez.
It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis sound engineered the show.
Thanks to Hallie Kiefer, Ari Schwartz, Sandy Gerard, Andy Taft, and Justine Howe for production support.
And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Phoebe Bradford, Milo Kim, and Amelia Montu.
Our episodes are uploaded as videos at youtube.com slash podsaveamerica. you you you you you you you you you you you you