Pod Save America - The Biden Bump (with AOC!)
Episode Date: July 6, 2023Joe Biden launches a new plan to forgive student debt after the Supreme Court strikes down his first attempt. Ron DeSantis attacks Donald Trump for being too supportive of LGBTQ rights. Congresswoman ...Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez joins to talk about reforming the right wing Supreme Court and lots more. Then, in a special edition of Two Takes and a Fake, Jon and Dan sniff out the made up reaction from the right over the revelation that lines were crossed and possibly bumped when someone left their nose candy in the White House. 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.Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, Joe Biden launches a new plan to forgive student debt
after the Supreme Court strikes down his first attempt.
Ron DeSantis attacks Donald Trump for being too supportive of LGBTQ rights.
And Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez joins to talk about reforming the right-wing Supreme Court and lots more.
Then, in a special edition of Two Takes and a Fake,
lots more. Then,
in a special edition of Two Takes and a Fake, we sniff
out the made-up reaction from the right
over the revelation that lines were
crossed and possibly bumped
when someone left their nose candy
in the White House. Did you write that yourself?
I got a lot more where those come from, Dan. Yeah, of course
I write it myself. Good, good. That's impressive.
Good. But first,
over the long weekend, you may have seen
an episode of our subscription show,
Terminally Online, pop up in your Pod Save America feed.
Check it out.
If you haven't listened yet, you'll hear me, Dan, Elijah, and What A Day's Priyanka Arabindi
talk about everything from Ron DeSantis and Roseanne to Barbenheimer.
It's a hard one to say.
I don't think that's all we talked about.
What else did we talk about?
We talked, what was, oh, we talked about Elijah
going to the North Carolina Republican.
No, I think we talked about you
not so subtly floating your campaign
for governor of California.
Is that what happened?
So not subtle that you demanded,
I'm told demanded the marketing department
label that episode to title it. Governor Jon Favreau. not subtle that you demanded, I'm told demanded, the marketing department label
that episode to title it?
Governor Jon Favreau. You know what?
There's a little behind the scenes for everyone. There's a
whole bit. That's a whole bit they're all doing.
They've all ganged up on me. No one told me what the title
was going to be. It just popped up
in my feed. It was a question about
when we were all going to run for office and what
office it was going to be. We started
with Dan in Delaware,
which now he has to wait in line because he's just waiting,
waiting around for Chris Coons to retire.
But anyway,
and then I attacked Sacramento.
I actually wanted,
I wanted to talk to you about that because I spent my 4th of July weekend in
a cabin at a Lake with families who live in Sacramento,
including our friends who own a great wine bar called good news wine in
Sacramento.
None of them thought you were being helpful.
They did appreciate me defending Sacramento,
but they're trying to build a small business with a delicious wine bar.
And you're just attacking the entire city.
Well,
you know what?
Go to Sacramento for that wine bar.
I'll go for that one. Okay, perfect. I'll tell you what, it's not gonna be on the house wine bar. I'll go for that wine bar.
Okay, perfect.
How's that sound?
I'll tell you what,
it's not going to be on the house for you.
I'll tell you that right now.
Because for some reason,
I did not have a tour of Sacramento
from someone who lives there,
so I don't know the city.
That's what I need.
I need, you know,
especially if I'm going to ultimately live there someday
when I am governor.
Yes, your future home, gov.
Anyway, if you want to listen to the nonsense we do on Terminally Online every week,
which you should, and get regular access to a truly great subscription community on Discord,
which is just like a public Slack channel.
We're trying all kinds of social media apps these days.
You know what it is?
It is Twitter pre-E-line for Friends of the Pod. That's what it is? It is Twitter pre-Elon for Friends of the Pod.
That's what it is.
That's what it is.
Put me in the marketing department.
I know.
I know.
Join Friends of the Pod at crooked.com slash friends.
All right.
Let's get to the news.
The Supreme Court's right-wing majority celebrated America's birthday with a trio of six to three rulings that banned affirmative action in higher education,
of six to three rulings that banned affirmative action in higher education, allowed a business to deny wedding services to LGBTQ couples, and struck down President Biden's plan to
forgive $10,000 worth of student debt for people earning less than $125,000 a year and
$20,000 worth of debt for low-income families, relief that nearly 26 million borrowers have
already applied for. Chief Justice Roberts
invoked the so-called major questions doctrine, which was just made up by this court. And it
basically says that the president can't take executive actions regarding major political
and economic questions that aren't explicitly spelled out by Congress in the legislation they've passed.
The Biden administration was clearly prepared for this outcome, which is why the president made this announcement shortly after the ruling.
I believe the court's decision to strike down my student debt relief program as a mistake was wrong.
I'm not going to stop fighting to deliver borrowers what they need.
to deliver borrowers what they need. I'm announcing today a new path consistent with today's ruling to provide student debt relief to as many borrowers as possible as quickly as possible.
We will ground this new approach in a different law than my original plan,
the so-called Higher Education Act. That will allow Secretary Cardona, who's with me today,
to compromise, waive, or
release loans under certain circumstances.
This new path is legally sound.
It's going to take longer, but in my view it's the best path that remains to providing
for as many borrowers as possible.
Second, we know what many borrowers will need to make their hard choices, which their budgets
are being strained now when they start to repay their
monthly loan payments this fall. That's why we're creating a temporary 12-month, what we're calling
on-ramp repayment program. Monthly payments will be due, bills will not go out, and interest will
be accruing. And during this period, if you can pay your monthly bills, you should. But if you cannot, if you miss payments, this on-ramp temporarily remove the threat of default or having your credit harm, which can hurt borrowers for years to come.
So it seems to me that the challenge with this new plan is that it's going to run up against the same Supreme Court.
But what do you think?
What's your strict scrutiny legal degree tell you?
Well, like any aspiring lawyer, I've been in the stacks today. I've been on LexisNexis,
just reading briefs.
LexisNexis. Oh, there's a callback.
Do you think that still exists?
I don't know.
I don't know. Either way, I have been asking-
I'm wondering what percentage of our audience knows what LexisNexis is.
I assume all the lawyers who are over 40. I have no idea. In other words, I listened to all the back episodes of strict scrutiny that came out
at the end of last week before the holiday weekend. Based on what little I know, and I
really want to emphasize little, is it does seem like there are many people who believe that the
Higher Education Act would be a slightly stronger ground on which to offer loan forgiveness.
There is a provision in the Higher Education Act that has been used for loan forgiveness
before.
It's the foundation for the public service loan forgiveness program, which allows people
who do public service to get some of their debt forgiven.
It was also used when the Biden administration settled a class action lawsuit involving people who had been misled by for-profit universities. So there
was precedent there. But as you point out, the major questions doctrine is this incredibly vague
and intentionally vague weapon to be used to strike down the executive actions of Democratic
presidents. So it's very likely you would end up right back where you are because they can do the exact same thing all over again.
Yeah, I mean, as you heard Biden say there, the Higher Education Act gives the Secretary of Education the authority to, quote, compromise, waive or release any right title claim, lien or demand.
Roberts in the student loan decision that they just handed down said that waive or modify could not be interpreted as giving the secretary the power to cancel debt at a massive scale.
So I'm not sure exactly what the difference is.
White House aides, though, as you mentioned, have pointed out that that, you know, Biden's taken other executive actions around student loans that have not been challenged in court, like increasing Pell grants and reducing
monthly payments. So, you know, even though this one was challenged successfully in court,
they point out that other student loan action, executive actions from the president have not
been challenged in court. So that's, I think that's what they're hoping for here. It will
take a long time. It'll take maybe a year because the Department of Education has to undertake a rulemaking process around this that involves policy negotiations and a public comment period.
Though some economists have argued that the administration should skip the rulemaking
process and see what the court does. I think we all know what the court will do.
Some folks on the left directed their very understandable frustration with the decision
towards President Biden and Democrats in Congress. Can you think of anything they
could have done differently to achieve a better outcome here? I cannot,
but I don't know if I'm missing anything. I don't think you are. Had Congress passed a law
forgiving student loan debt, the court cannot have used a major questions doctrine to strike it down.
There's one giant flaw in that argument, which is in the two years in which Democrats had control
of the White House House and the Senate, the filibuster was in place, which would allow 10
Republicans to easily block any attempt to forgive student debt. There was not a majority of Democrats
to eliminate the filibuster. And there was not a majority of Democrats supporting broad-based
student loan debt forgiveness. There was nothing in the past that I can see. There was no different
way in which the Biden administration could have written the rule. There is no strategy that I can
see whether they could have passed a law that would have been immune from this specific court
challenge. This is the reality we have of the Congress we had with this court.
And I don't think I understand why people are angry.
That anger should be directed at Republicans at the court and channeled into trying to regain the House and expand our Senate majority so that we can eliminate the filibuster and ensure that we have 50 Senate Democrats who are willing to publicly, who are willing to support
forgiving student debt. Yeah, I realize we sound like a broken record and have been for the past
several years about the filibuster. And it's not exactly like a new and exciting explanation for
things. And it is frustrating. But again, that's where we're at, right? Like unless we have 50
senators, plus Kamala Harris is the tiebreaker, who are willing to get rid of the filibuster, we can't do anything.
And Joe Biden yelling about whatever and other Democrats yelling about whatever are not going to change Joe Manchin's mind on this or Kyrsten Sinema's mind on this.
And that's been pretty clear since, you know, Joe Biden became president, since long before Joe Biden became president.
Like they are immune to pressure on this issue. So that's what we have to do is focus on, like you said, electing a Senate majority that is willing to get rid of the filibuster for
a host of reasons. There's also been a lot of pressure on Biden and Democrats to support
more aggressive judicial reforms, particularly around expanding the court.
Here's what the president had to say about that during an interview on Friday with MSNBC's Nicole
Wallace. Do you worry that without court reform, this conservative majority is too young and too
conservative that they might do too much harm? Well, I think they may do too much harm. But
I think if we start the process of trying to expand the court, we're going to politicize
it maybe forever in a way that is not healthy. So Biden also put together a bipartisan commission
on court reform a few years ago that issued fairly moderate recommendations
around transparency and ethics. They did not suggest expanding the court, but they did suggest
some ethics reform code of conduct. But we heard from White House communications director Ben
LeBolt on last week's episode that Biden has not yet endorsed any specific ethics reforms either.
What do you think is going on there? Let's take these in reverse order. Let's start with ethics reform.
Great.
When we were listening to Ben give that answer, I had two thoughts. The first is,
Joe Biden is naturally more reticent on sort of aggressive political reforms than you and I are,
probably a lot of people who listen to this podcast are. It took him a long time on the
filibuster. He's
in the Senate for decades. He was the chair of the Judiciary Committee. He has real concerns that I
don't want to necessarily agree with, but about delegitimizing the court. And so that may be one
reason why he's hesitant. And I think there's only one thing that's why he's hesitant or opposed on
bigger issues like expansion and term limits. On ethics reform, I have a suspicion that the
White House did not want to come out with a position on ethics reform while the court,
this right-wing court, was making decisions on these huge cases that matter a lot to them.
The one about discrimination against the LGBTQ community, the one about student loans,
and the one about the independent state legislature theory. You'll remember this, that when the Supreme Court was
making a decision on Obamacare in Obama's first term, it was seen that Judge Anthony Kennedy was
the deciding vote. And Obama, because he likes being funny, was on the stump in interviews
making a joke about how he would mow Anthony Kennedy's lawn and offer to do his laundry.
And one day, the White House counsel came down
and told us that they had heard from people
who know Kennedy,
that Kennedy probably doesn't like that joke.
So you should stop making it
while access to affordable healthcare
for millions of people is at stake.
And we immediately shut up.
So I can definitely see the White House counsel saying-
And to apologize,
and to apologize,
Obama did send him a giant fruit basket,
which he actually did not like.
Now that doesn't matter. Fruit, you mean inedible arrangement? And to apologize, Obama did send him a giant fruit basket, which he did not like.
Fruit, you mean inedible arrangement?
Yes, that's correct.
And so I can definitely see whatever policy process is in place to make a decision about this ethics reform, that would definitely take place after the Supreme Court term was over.
So we'll see what happens.
But I think that may be what's happening there.
Also, maybe they wanted to save it for the heat of the campaign.
little bit and help shape it as well so that they can be on the same page as the Senate Democrats in whatever they propose. Or, you know, there's an off chance that it could be bipartisan as well
because you have people like, you know, Susan Collins and Murkowski that might be interested
in the ethics reform side of it as well. So on that, I think it is definitely a wait and see.
On the adding justices to the court, you're right. Like, I don't, it's Biden, right?
And it took him a long time in the filibuster.
The flip side of that is he did change his mind on the filibuster.
And I think this White House has shown that they do care about public opinion, that their minds can be changed.
That President Biden's mind can be changed on issues like the filibuster.
The guy is a creature of the Senate for decades and an institutionalist. And so,
of course, he was going to support the filibuster for a long time. And the fact that, you know,
at this age as president, he changed his mind is, I think, a good sign. And it tells you to keep up
the pressure on him for that. But I will also say if Biden came out tomorrow in favor of adding justices to the Supreme Court, do you think it would change the political dynamic in any way?
Not in the short term.
We're not going to automatically get justices on the court.
It doesn't say it.
And then all of a sudden we get two new justices.
That's not how that happens.
And it's –
We should tell people – well, the way it happens is there's a law that has to be passed by Congress, which, again, could be blocked by a filibuster.
So, again, we do not have the votes.
Even if every Senate Democrat was on board with adding justices to the court, which they are not, we would not be able to pass legislation adding justices to the court while the filibuster is in place.
And we don't have the House.
And we don't have the House.
Forgot about that.
Forgot about the fact that we don't have the House. And we don't have the House. Forgot about that. Forgot about the fact that we don't have the House. Yeah. Now, I still think, I understand politically,
and we'll talk about the polling in a second, why Joe Biden, I think he sincerely does not
believe in the idea. I do not think this is, he like secretly is a big court expansionist and
just keeping back because the pollsters have told not to do it. I don't think that's the case.
But just because it's not going to happen now is not an argument for not supporting
aggressive policies that are going to take time. If you want to build support for it,
you've got to come out for it. And so nothing is going to change in the short term.
Yeah, nothing is going to happen in the short term. I wish Biden was for expansion because
I don't think expansion is going to happen in his first term, certainly,
maybe not even a second term. But if we actually want to solve this problem, and I believe
pass real court reform, it's going to require prominent Democrats to support it. But
that's not where Joe Biden is now. And as you say, if he were to change his mind tomorrow,
it's not going to expand the court. We still don't have the power to do it. And it's not going to
forgive anyone's student debt. Like simply saying it, it does not change where we are in the short
term. In the long term, it could have an impact.
Yeah.
I saw a quote from Brian Fallon, who works with Demand Justice, which is they support court reform and expanding the court.
And he acknowledged in an interview that Joe Biden is probably the last domino to fall
among Democrats on this issue.
Now, if he came out tomorrow and supported court reform, you might get a few Senate Democrats who were already supportive of court reform privately to come out publicly and, you know, start building momentum.
So, yeah, I think that could help. But it's also possible that you build support by, you know, starting to ask Senate Democrats how they feel about it, starting to ask people who are running for the Senate, like, you know, Ruben Gallego is trying to, you know, run against Kyrsten Sinema and whoever the Republican is in Arizona.
And, you know, so people like you start you start building support that way. And I do think that's
that's good to do. But I don't think that Joe Biden coming out for court reform tomorrow or
had he come out for court reform a year ago, two years ago, would have led to a different outcome. Correct. Well, what do we know about how voters feel about court reform?
When we generally talk about court reform, we are talking about three things,
a code of conduct and a process for accountability for the Supreme Court,
term limits of some, shape or form, and expansion. The first two are quite popular. There's a poll that was
conducted by N Citizens United, which is a pro-court reform group that found that two-thirds
of voters, including a significant majority of independents, support a code of conduct for the
Supreme Court. That seems pretty obvious, particularly given everything that's been
happening with Alito and Thomas and everyone else. Term limits, while constitutionally and legally complicated,
is also quite popular. We've seen polls that show north of 60% of voters supporting that,
which makes complete sense. And probably in fact be the most important – if you could get it to
be constitutionally acceptable, which is tough because the Supreme Court is the one who would
make that choice, would be a complete game changer both in terms of the balance of the court. I think it would mean
that each and every one of these appointments would not be this cataclysmic apocalyptic battle
where you have to find the youngest, healthiest person possible that can serve the longest.
I think it would just be better across the board for the court. Expansion is much less popular. How you word the question matters a lot,
but in general, it is far below 50% right now in support for it. When you package them all together,
I've seen it do better, but expansion is by far the least popular part. Only 60% of Democrats
support it in a bunch of polls. Now, to the Biden point, if Biden were to come out for it, that number would
go up, not to 100% of Democrats, but would go up, but it would not get it to majority support
this country. Republicans obviously don't like it. Independents are particularly skeptical of it
thus far, but also no one is making the case for it either.
I think that the polls I've seen,
expansion has become more popular over the last several years, particularly since Dobbs.
You're right, though, it's still under 50. Data for Progress had a poll in April of 2023. That's
the latest poll that I've seen on this. 47% support expansion, 42% oppose. This would be
expanding the court to 13 justices, which is legislation that some Democrats have introduced.
And you're right.
It's underwater with independents, 42-46.
And then Republicans, it's 28-62.
No surprise there.
So it's getting more popular, but you're right.
It's not majority support yet.
It's plurality in some polls and some polls.
It's different.
You're right that the ethics reform is by far the most popular.
I also would argue that it will be the least effective of the options.
It solves a different problem.
It solves a different problem.
I think it's a connected problem.
I think that if you had a very stringent code of conduct and really significant ethics reforms, you would still have a bunch of ideological zealots on the court who, even if they weren't flying on private planes with Harlan Crowe and, you know, getting their mom's house paid for like Clarence Thomas, would still make horrible decisions just because they like to make horrible decisions based on their right wing ideology. But I think it's still important. We should still do it.
I do think term limits is probably the the one that is both popular and would be effective that Democrats should feel more confident running on, including Joe Biden, because I think that you're right.
confident running on, including Joe Biden. Because I think that you're right. Like you actually start limiting the amount of time the justices sit on the bench, then that's going to have a real effect.
And it is quite popular. And then I think, and then in the meantime, you try to get court reform
and expansion more popular by actually advocating for it. So that's what I would do. All right,
let's talk about the knuckleheads
trying to replace Joe Biden.
Most of the Republican candidates
spent the weekend on the trail
at 4th of July parades and barbecues.
Donald Trump held a rally in South Carolina
where he was introduced by Lindsey Graham,
who was loudly and repeatedly booed
throughout the event.
That's fun.
Mike Pence marched in an Iowa parade
where the crowd started chanting,
Trump, Trump, Trump, which I guess is an improvement over hang Mike Pence.
Just, you know, you take the wins where you can get them.
And Ron DeSantis's campaign released a video to mark the end of Pride Month that begins by attacking Donald Trump for pledging to protect LGBTQ Americans during his 2016 convention speech.
during his 2016 convention speech,
then shows a series of headlines that say DeSantis signed the most, quote,
extreme anti-trans law ever
and is, quote, evil,
all while flashing pictures of shirtless dudes
and Patrick Bateman,
the serial killer from American Psycho.
The video managed to be both homophobic
and homoerotic,
was widely condemned by Democrats and Republicans, including some DeSantis-curious pundits.
But the best response was from Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
What's your reaction to that video?
You know, I'm going to choose my words carefully, partly because I'm appearing as secretary, so I can't talk about campaigns.
And I'm going to leave aside the strangeness of trying to prove your manhood by putting up a video that splices images of you in between oiled up shirtless bodybuilders and just get to the bigger issue that is on my mind whenever I see this stuff in the policy space,
which is, again, who are you trying to help? Who are you trying to make better off? And what
public policy problems do you get up in the morning thinking about how to solve?
So first question, obviously, there is a constituency for homophobia in the Republican
Party. But do you really think there's
a bunch of Republican voters who will vote for Ron DeSantis because they've somehow been persuaded
that he's a bigger homophobe than Donald Trump? No. And I have come to the conclusion now that
Ron DeSantis' campaign team was in a coma from the period of 2015 to 2017 when Donald Trump was
running for election for the first time,
because they are running the exact same ass-backward, doomed-to-fail stupid strategy
that these other candidates ran in 2016. Remember all the ads with footage of Donald Trump saying
he was pro-choice or at a wedding with the Clintons or playing golf with Clinton?
Republican voters understand that Donald Trump is full of shit. They don't care. They're not
in it for the sincerity. They're in it for the strength. And it's not going to work. It has
never worked in the past. It's not going to work now. You're not going to convince people that
Donald Trump is insufficiently MAGA. You might be able to convince people that he is ineffective
at the MAGA agenda, but it's not like everyone's running around thinking Donald Trump is a true, as an honest, sincere human being.
And if you're only were to show this footage to show that he is not as bigoted and homophobic as
his speeches would suggest, they're all going to suddenly going to leave him. It's just,
there is no evidence for that to work. And it's particularly stupid, like much of what
Ron DeSantis' campaign does. I mean, point taken about the way he campaigned in 2015 and 2016.
But even beyond that, voters just lived through, Republican voters just lived through four years of his presidency.
And judging by his approval ratings among those same Republican voters and even evangelical voters, they don't think he governed in a way that was too supportive of LGBTQ rights.
Or if they do, they don't care.
Right?
Like, they just got four years of it.
And they're, like, all in.
So now, instead of hitting him for, like, what he did or didn't do during his presidency, you're going to go back before the presidency to when he was, like, running Miss Universe pageants and complaining that he let, you know, transgender Americans compete in the Universe pageants and and and complaining that he let you know uh transgender
Americans compete in the beauty pageants or that he said that Caitlyn he didn't care where Caitlyn
Jenner uh went the bathroom which was those two bits were also in the DeSantis video I mean it is
so nuts and so stupid and it wasn't I had to check by the way because I think in the outline you said
it was from the Never Back Down pack no no, no, no, no. The video was made by someone else.
They posted it.
By some other group.
They posted it.
They also posted it.
But DeSantis' campaign posted it.
Yeah.
Not the PAC.
The campaign also posted it.
And then Ron DeSantis was asked in an interview about the video and he defended it. He said, I think identifying Donald Trump as really being a pioneer in injecting gender ideology into the mainstream where he was having men compete against women.
I think that's totally fair game.
It's so stupid.
It's so stupid.
So I guess that brings us to the second question.
Why is Ron DeSantis' campaign so fucking weird?
Because the fish rots from the head, John.
No campaign in history has needed to go touch grass more than Ron DeSantis' campaign.
They are the most online campaign I think I have ever seen.
Like, you have to have a fucking degree in 4chan to understand what was going on in that video.
The music, the images, like, you know, you've seen people have like dissected it who know this stuff.
But it is wild that they would put that up.
I mean, it all comes back to the fact that Ron DeSantis announced his campaign in a Twitter spaces conversation moderated by Elon Musk and the
former HR director at PayPal.
I also think, by the way, that the way that Trump is handling these issues is with like
a bit of a wink and a nod to how ridiculous and concocted these culture war issues are.
So like, we didn't talk about this, but there was a couple of weeks ago,
he had an event where he did his like, I'll keep men out of women's sports.
I'll cut federal funding for any school pushing transgender insanity was his quotes.
The crowd went wild.
And then after the crowd goes wild trump stops and he says it's
amazing how strong people feel about that i talk about cutting taxes and you all go like this and
then he did like a you know and he goes i talk about transgender everyone goes crazy five years
ago you didn't even know what the hell it was which is just a completely true statement from
donald trump and a very sharp bit of political analysis.
Yeah.
And an honest bit of political analysis.
He winks and he nods at the people who want to see the wink and the nod.
And the other people know that even though he's winking and nodding, he's still going to do what they want.
Yes, that's right.
It's not.
Same thing on abortion.
Trump is a vibe for these people.
Yeah.
So DeSantis is attacking Trump for supposedly being too far left on issues
like gay rights and abortion. Trump is attacking DeSantis for being too far right on issues like
wanting to privatize and cut Medicare and Social Security. How much does it worry you that this
may make Trump seem more moderate and thus electable to a general electorate if he's the nominee.
I don't want to overstate the case because in times of high polarization like the one we live in,
very little change people's opinion. And that's particularly true of Trump,
whose approval rating, other than a couple of moments, stayed basically the same for eight
years. It's in a narrow band, whether he is getting indicted, getting impeached, committing
crimes, talking about Nazis, about the same.
So there's not a lot that's moving people.
But the presidential electorate is much larger than the general election.
You're going to have a lot of people in there who are paying zero attention in this primary.
They're just kind of like surfing the news.
They're seeing the headlines.
And there is a chance that some of them watching this coverage will get the impression,
particularly how Ron DeSantis is running his campaign that Donald Trump is more economically populist than the rest of his party and
slightly more moderate on some cultural issues than the furthest extremes of his party.
And that could be decisive on the margins. And as we know, this presidential election is likely
to be decided on the margins. The way I've been trying to explain how close this is going to be is that if
it's anything like 16 and 20,
the election will be decided by fewer people than attended the most recent
Taylor Swift concert, right? That's like,
so it does take a lot of people to get that impression to do it.
Cause it's not like you're people who are like lifelong Democrats are going to
all of a sudden change their mind or Republicans are going to,
it's they're going to people who voted for Trump in 16, Biden in 20, and might possibly
be available to Trump again in 24.
And those are sort of people who could get that impression, right?
People who voted, maybe people who voted Trump in 20, but then voted for a Democrat for Congress
in 2022 because they thought these other Republicans were such MAGA lunatic extremists that they
might see Trump as slightly different if he's out there protecting Social Security and Medicare
and getting hammered by a bunch of his opponents for being not insufficiently extreme on abortion
and LGBTQ rights.
And like you said, the challenge is a lot of voters go on vibes, especially when it
comes to Trump, especially low information voters who are not paying close attention
to politics.
when it comes to Trump, especially low information voters who are not paying close attention to politics. We have Trump's record for the last, you know, when he was president for four years,
he put out budgets that would have decimated Social Security and Medicare. He put the justices
on the court that have given us all of these rulings that are horrible on abortion and gay
rights. So, you know, I do think that it's probably smart of Democrats to start reminding
people of that to kind of counter what DeSantis is doing here. But you could see DeSantis running,
if DeSantis' campaign actually picks up, if DeSantis is still around in the fall, in the
winter. Open question. Open question, right. And it becomes like Ron DeSantis' culture warrior who also has a little Paul Ryan in him too,
which is electorally the worst possible
fucking position to be in.
But if it's him versus Donald Trump,
then yeah, you could see it have an effect
on people's perceptions of Trump in general.
And it would be the wrong perception,
but it's something that Democrats should think
about now. There was a sense in 2020 among some people that because Donald Trump, he doesn't go
to church, he's a thrice-divorced New York City playboy, that he is not really even a natural
culture warrior like a bunch of these other Republicans, and that helped him.
And now people were – many people were quite surprised we turned out to govern like that, but that you could get some element of that dynamic could happen again in 2024.
Thank you, Ron DeSantis, for running a terrible campaign.
It's fucking awful.
Yeah.
Awful.
One more thing we should mention about the Republican primary.
The RNC has demanded that every candidate sign a loyalty pledge where they have to promise to support the eventual nominee or else they don't get to participate in the debates.
Most of the candidates, including Trump, have not signed it yet.
So what happens if they don't. Well, as you know, that Ronna McDaniel, a woman of such steadfast principles
that she gave up using her given name in order to become the RNC chair will probably fight this to
the end. No, I assume they're just going to quietly somehow abandon it and do whatever Trump wants to
do. Trump will either sign it and say he's going to lie and then everyone's going to have to do
the same thing or he's not going to sign it and they're not going to hold the debates without
Trump. So there you go. I think whatever it takes to get Trump on that stage, the RNC will do.
And I don't know that the loyalty pledge or even getting rid of the loyalty pledge will get Trump.
It changes. Yeah. Yeah. There's, there's two things. Those first couple of debates,
no matter what the question will be on the first debate that he may be, may feel compelled to do
for whatever reason, what, when's it going to to matter there i really wonder if he skips the first two if he ever shows up i know
that like you know chris christie made a somewhat compelling case on his during a scene in town hall
about this that like donald trump's ego won't let him skip all the debates but i don't know like if
it turns out if it turns out that all these jokers are still like 30 points behind him, why the fuck would you participate in those debates and just like risk getting your ass kicked?
Chris Christie's – we thought the same thing around the presidential base in 2020.
It's Donald Trump needs the attention.
And ultimately, that's what I think will matter.
But, you know, we'll see.
Yeah.
I think the general is a little different. Yeah, for sure. For sure. For sure. But, um,
but I could, you know, we'll see. Okay. When we come back, I talked to representative Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez.
joining us today to talk about the supreme court and much more representative alexandria ocasio cortez congresswoman welcome back to the pod thanks for having me so i want to get into a
broader discussion about the court but first on student loans i would love nothing more than for
the president's new debt relief plan to succeed my concern is that it'll end up at the same Supreme Court.
You've urged the president to also consider shortening the time frame on when it goes into effect and suspending interest on loans, especially over the next year.
Have you heard from anyone in the administration on those suggestions?
You know, I think we've been,
our staff and our team has been in contact
with the White House.
I think we are continuing our advocacy.
I anticipate that there's going to be
more discussions of movement
when Congress reconvenes
and is back in session next week.
So I think right now,
there's kind of like a little bit of a long period
as the
administration first starts to pick up what it's already committed to doing. And then I think we
can, you know, follow up with conversations about how to potentially make improvements on it.
It seems like a no brainer idea to me. I know that the timeframe, like there's all kinds of
rules around figuring out a process with the Department of Education and there's the public comment period and all that.
On the suspending interest, it seems like a no brainer.
Like, what would the argument against that be?
You know, I really don't see a huge argument against it. You know, I think it's just the political backlash about, you know, there has
been this handshake agreement with the debt limit deal about, you know, ending the suspension,
ending the payment suspension in September. I don't know if people would basically say,
oh, you know, this is kind of breaking your end of the bargain. I don't really think so. I think suspending interest is totally fair game. And remember,
we are proceeding with an alternative plan here, which means there are millions of people out there
that would potentially be paying interest on loans that are on loan balances that are going
to get forgiven if all goes according to plan. And so I really do believe that suspending interest is,
you know, the move to make right now, especially as people start to, you know, get acclimated. A
lot of people don't even know who their student loan servicers are anymore, because there were
a lot of consolidations during the pandemic. On what to do about the court, I see a two-track
approach here. There can be hearings and investigations
into ethics and potentially legal violations and hopefully some kind of ethics legislation.
And then there are broad structural reforms like court expansion and term limits that can help
rebalance the extreme right turn the court has taken. In terms of the ethics investigations,
who makes the decision on whether Senate Democrats issue subpoenas,
which has only been tried under justice once in the past? Is that Durbin? Is it Schumer?
Is it like a majority on the judiciary? What's the process there?
I mean, I would say that it's a combination of both Leader Schumer, of course, Democratic Party
and any chamber's party leadership would be part of that conversation.
But of course, it would go to the chair of the judiciary, the Senate Judiciary Committee would have enormous sway over that decision. But a lot of that conversation does tend to be a
caucus-wide decision. We dealt with a lot of subpoenas during impeachment, sitting on House
oversight. We took issuing of subpoenas very, very seriously.
And they were often a combination of consultation within our rural caucus, conversations as
a committee. But, you know, much of that at the time was a lot of that decision weighed
very heavily on then chairman of oversight, Elijah Cummings, as well as discussions with
House leadership. And so I would expect that there would kind of be a mirror dynamic Senate
side. So that would mean that Durbin would have an enormous amount of input on that,
as well as other, you know, major figures as well. Sheldon Whitehouse has been doing
an enormous amount of work
regarding this issue. And of course, a Senate, you know, majority leader, Chuck Schumer.
So Durbin said today that they're going to move forward on ethics legislation.
More broadly, like what would your ideal outcome be from a series of ethics investigations and
hearings? You know, I think ethics legislation is necessary
and it's important,
but my concern is that this isn't quite covering the harm
that has already been done to the court.
I do not believe that we should leave it
to ProPublica alone, God bless them,
to bring all of this information to light.
What we are seeing is really an unprecedented and frankly catastrophic amount of revelations
of financial entanglement coming out of the Supreme Court court and it does leave open a question of in addition to
what we already know have there been even other kind of developments out there that we don't know
about that have potentially swayed or had significant impact on decisions that may have
already occurred and is there aing of a wrong on that?
I think that ultimately is what this is about,
is that as much as these justices, of course,
conveniently want to say, oh, this
has nothing to do with this, they
have far surpassed even what members of Congress
are allowed to do.
And Congress regulates itself. And people
have seen what members of Congress have gotten away with, frankly. And what the Supreme Court
has done, what certain members of the court have done, has even put that to shame. And so
I really do believe that what we need is not just ethics reform, which is very necessary,
but we do need a thorough accounting and investigation of what the court has frankly
been withholding. We cannot allow this lack of disclosure, just like a convenient, you know,
people like Clarence Thomas or Samuel Alito, just conveniently leaving off lavish gifts and
vacations from billionaires that have interests before the court and just say, oh, you know,
that's a mulligan, you know, that I think is profoundly disturbing. And these are the kinds of conflicts of interest that even the most basic, low-level, entry-level judges would know that this is a no-no.
Even basic government employees are not allowed to receive this kind of favoring.
And that needs to be taken seriously, and I do think that there needs to be an account on what has fully occurred.
On court reform, you've supported expanding the Supreme Court. Biden's not there yet.
If he came out for expansion tomorrow, we still have a Senate majority that can't eliminate the
filibuster or that won't in the case of Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema. What do you see
as the best strategy for achieving some kind of structural court reform?
Well, I mean, I do think that it does come in with oversight and investigation.
If we do not have court expansion, if we do not have a Senate that is capable of eliminating
the filibuster, I think there's a couple of things that we need to do.
We need to engage in a check on the Supreme Court's power, which, I think there's a couple of things that we need to do. We need to engage
in a check on the Supreme Court's power, which means I think that we need to bring
judicial review into question, which basically is saying what the Supreme Court is allowed
to touch, what they aren't, the extent of their power, the extent of what they're able and capable of overturning or not,
all of that falls under a category known as judicial review. And when the court begins to
expand and abuse its power far beyond what it has, that is them expanding their judicial review.
As we saw even with Elena Kagan's dissent.
She is saying this court, you know, the call is coming from inside the House in her dissent.
She's saying this court is getting out of control.
They are assuming the power of a legislature.
This is we are going far beyond our jurisdiction.
And and we are seeing members of the court themselves really
allude to this and so i believe that in our system of checks and balances it is up to the it is up to
congress it is also up to the president to begin to push back on the scope of the supreme court's
judicial review um they are calling into question laws that and rights that have been established for 50 plus years in this country in their overturning of jobs, in their overturning of basic protections and equality protections for LGBTQ Americans.
even in their Supreme Court decision around student loans,
them just basically saying, the president doesn't have the authority
to do something this big, but we won't say how big.
And they're really calling in an enormous amount
of power into themselves that frankly they don't have
and that the Constitution
does not give them.
And so, you know, I do believe that really honing in on the court's judicial review and
the scope of that is important.
And again, I do believe that, listen, I mean, some folks may disagree with me, but I believe
that the Supreme Court is fully politicized.
I think this was a group of political actors and they respond to political pressure.
And maybe that's not the eye in the sky way
we'd like to think of our court.
Maybe that's not what the court is supposed to be,
but that's the court that we're working with today.
And I think that proper oversight,
I do believe that investigations and subpoenas
and potentially law-breaking
behavior, we have a Supreme Court justice that refused to recuse himself from a case in which
his wife was directly implicated. That was Clarence Thomas and his wife's involvement on January 6th.
And not only that, but he was the only judge, if not one of the only two, to vote against
if not one of the only two, to vote against allowing full disclosure of materials with respect to that. And so, you know, I do believe that investigations, subpoenas, if Chief Justice Roberts will not comply with Senate investigations,
as he has not, he has refused to come before Congress around this issue.
And the Supreme
Court does not have that luxury. They are not above investigation. They are human,
and they are just as susceptible to corruption as any other government entity. And we have a
responsibility to conduct the strongest oversight for them, because at least with the legislature, the presidency,
we have elections and the people can always hold us accountable by not voting for us again.
And that is one of many layers. But the Supreme Court, these are lifetime appointments,
at least they are for now. And that means that the responsibility for oversight
on them is that much greater.
When you talk about judicial review, is there legislation that you envision Congress potentially passing around judicial review that actually scopes what kind of cases or decisions the Supreme Court can make?
And is there historical precedent for that?
Court can make? And is there historical precedent for that? You know, I do think that there is judicial review and the history of judicial review has kind of been this, I guess we can say it's
been like an amalgam of different factors that can shape what judicial review does. Some of it,
again, has to do with political pressure. When we go back nearly 100 years,
when FDR started threatening expansion of the court back then, it was the executive branch
drawing a line in the sand and saying, you all are going too far. And in the past, there have
been moments, even, for example, with Abraham Lincoln in the case of Dred Scott and the Supreme Court ruled the way that it did.
And Abraham and Lincoln disregarded the outcome of Dred Scott when he signed the Emancipation Proclamation.
And they said there are certain things that are inalienable.
And citizenship for Black Americans and the formerly enslaved was one of those inalienable rights.
And, you know, I know it is a third rail in politics to discuss this, but frankly, this is where we are as a country.
far as a country. And it is sad and it is scary, but the idea
of having a panel of unelected individuals who
have demonstrated financial entanglement
and whose reasoning is increasingly
straying from precedent, there has to be a line.
And we have to ask ourselves and prepare ourselves.
We are seeing the Supreme Court, they stripped rights, basic inalienable rights, inalienable rights from women and non-binary people last year with the overturning of Dobbs.
They are now stripping certain inalienable rights from LGBTQ Americans.
And we have to ask ourselves, if they can do this, what can't they do?
What is the line in terms of that pushback?
And so I think when it comes to legislation, there's a potential, there's a possibility there that, too, could be challenged in court.
But it can also be done through other ways as well.
And, you know, I know that that makes folks uncomfortable, but there is a history and a precedent for this in American history.
In general, how do you think President Biden has handled his job over the last four years?
You know, I think he's done quite well, given the limitations that we have.
I do think that there are ebbs and flows, as there are in any presidency. You know,
there are areas that I think were quite strong
when he came right out of the gate
with the American Rescue Plan.
And of course,
the Inflation Reduction Act
was a massive step
in terms of our climate agenda.
But, you know, there are also areas
that I think could have gone better.
The president, and I think
the Democratic Party in general continues
to struggle with immigration uh we don't want to own this issue um we talk a big game when we're
in the minority and we're trying to win an election but i don't feel like we are there
uh when it comes to what we actually pass the dream act was is now over 20 years old, and it's still not passed. And a lot of, you know,
there's plenty of other issues as well, even with what is happening with asylees, you know,
the ability to grant people basic work authorization so that they can work while
they are going through their legal processing, there is enormous amount of political
resistance to that. And we want to make sure that we are expanding that fight and working
for the coalition that elects this party. So, you know, I do think, of course, there's
so much more that we could do, so much more that we could do so much more that we should do and we have
major structural issues in this country and it start I think it starts with the
United States Senate and I think that until we have senators that are willing
to stand up and stare the filibuster in the eye and stare a lot of structural
issues about the Senate in the eye and stare a lot of structural issues
about the Senate in the eye,
the United States Senate will be what holds back
this country from an enormous amount of progress.
And I think that we need to have a real conversation
about that, not just in the structure,
but also in the culture.
The culture of the United States Senate is,
there is so much deference to this kind of like polite society, but oftentimes
that runs up against some people's basic rights, and we need to have that conversation.
So, President's only primary opponents are Marianne Williamson and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Haven't been any rumors about
anyone else even thinking about jumping in. Will you be supporting Joe Biden for re-election?
I believe given that field, yes.
Will you make a Cornel West campaign?
You know, I think Dr. West has an incredible history in this country. What he fights for, what he gives voice to is incredibly important.
And the ability for us to talk about issues that, frankly, mainstream Democrats are often too afraid
to touch. When we talk about American oligopoly, when we talk about foreign policy, when we talk
about, you know, the United States Oftentimes, our foreign policy's complicit nature
in human rights abuses abroad, whether that's in Palestine, in Africa, or in other areas of
the global South, these are very important things for us to talk about. We talk about universal
health care in the United States, and we talk about Medicare for all, there are very real powers and forces that prevent
the Democratic Party from really advancing in these issues.
And I think that it's very healthy for us to have those kinds of conversations and to
kind of zoom out into an overall critique of our political system that doesn't, you know,
that isn't obliged in this logic of American exceptionalism. So I think, you know, I appreciate
when there are people who raise those voices and have a history of that.
there are people who raise those voices and have a history of that.
How much do third party candidacies, whether it's Dr. West or No Labels or anyone like that,
how much does that concern you for the general election? Well, you know, I think not all third party candidacies are created equal.
candidacies are created equal.
There are some third party candidacies that really exist to send a message
and to really kind of discuss some of these issues
in real time.
And I think that there is value
to us having these conversations.
But when you look at, for example,
what No Labels is doing with,
that is something to be concerned about, because of the sheer amount of money and bad faith actors
that are involved. And again, it's not just to say No Labels, but we have to be very concerned,
because the risk of fascism in this country is here, it is real, and we cannot risk it,
especially in critical electoral college states that are decided by tens of thousands of votes.
We need to be very, very careful, I believe, about that. This is, you know, the United States
has a winner-take-all system whether we like
that or not we have to live with that reality and the risk of just a fascist
erosion that is really quite there it's real And I think every single one of us, no matter where you are
on the political spectrum, whether you consider yourself moderate or whether you consider yourself
as far left as can be, we have to contend with a very real material risk of people being harmed.
As you pointed out, it's not just about reelecting Joe Biden. It's about sort of expanding the Senate majority or at least having a Senate majority willing to eliminate the filibuster. And also, of course, it's so important that Joe Biden and his administration
go full steam ahead, for example, on student loan relief. I think some of his critics on this are
saying, you know, they're just dragging this out, this whole 12-month process until after an
election. This is just cynical. They have no intention of seeing this through.
I think it's very important for the administration
to prove those critics wrong.
And that's why I think it's really important
to accelerate that timeline.
Cutting interest is a material benefit
that people can experience now while we figure out
and work out the higher education path to student loan forgiveness.
And so I think it's, I think material changes are the best case that we can make where we can say,
look at what we've done. We've brought insulin down. We've capped the price of insulin to $35. We have invested and created 9 million dignified, high-paying jobs to work on climate with the
Inflation Reduction Act alone.
During COVID, we did have that child tax credit that we were able to implement.
And if we get those seats back,
then we can see if we can extend it or make it permanent
and bring it back again.
Really talking in the language
of what everyday people actually felt,
you know, that child tax credit, people felt that.
Insulin caps, people feel that.
Not having to pay rent in a student loan payment, people really feel that not having to pay rent in a student loan payment people really feel
that and that I think is our best case I do think that yeah and and I think that
that is the case of the president can make but I also think that there are
some Senate Democrats that should reflect on some of their positions on things
and see, you know, are they willing to be more vocal on these issues?
Are they willing to fight more on these issues so that we can actually get some of this stuff
done?
Because what I don't want to happen is for people to say, oh, you know, the Biden administration
or certain, you know, or the Senate or the
House or whatever, promise all of these things just to get elected and then they don't deliver
on them.
And so I think it's important to remind folks of the material changes that we've made, but
also really discuss the felt reality of what people are seeing, hearing, breathing and
paying for.
Makes sense. Makes sense.
Makes sense.
Okay.
I'm jumping in.
I'm jumping in.
Jump in.
We got a lightning round from Lovett.
Hi.
Hi.
Hi.
Good to see you.
How you doing?
Good.
Good.
All right.
All right.
It's time to focus on the questions that matter the least.
Are you ready?
Yes.
All right.
Barbie Oppenheimer.
Barbie, but I wouldn't mind doing a double head or whatever.
I think that's right because Barbie is going to be really fun,
but Oppenheimer is going to make us question what it means to be a person
and the incredible chaos and evil we each have within our hands.
And that's worth something too, isn't it?
Absolutely.
Two doors open.
One is a billionaire's sub to the Titanic.
The other is a billionaire's rocket to Mars.
You must go in one.
Which one are you getting in?
Uh, damn, maybe Mars.
Yeah, I think that's right.
I think that's right.
You know?
Fool me once, you know?
Yeah.
Um, are you playing any video games right now at all?
I'm playing Zelda.
You're playing Zelda.
But I left my Switch in D.C., so I've been a little Zelda-less for a week or so.
Are you aware of how addictive Diablo 4 is, and is there anything that you can do legislatively?
I've heard a lot about this, so I have intentionally avoided going near that because I have a job.
But but that's what to stop you from doing.
Yeah. I have to stay focused.
OK. OK. All right. Someone out there went on a White House tour or visit.
They know it is their cocaine. They're scared. They're embarrassed.
It's just you and that person.
What do you tell them? Listen, if it's just me and that person, I tell them, you can tell me
if you want, but don't worry about it. But, you know, listen, there's no shame.
We need to destigmatize drug use.
It's a public health issue.
You know, like end the war on drugs.
Okay.
Okay.
Wouldn't it be cool if the Biden administration actually had coke energy?
Isn't like that deep down what we want?
Like let's cancel the debt and be legends.
Let's mint the coin and be legends.
Yeah.
A hundred percent.
A hundred percent.
Perfect. Perfect.
Perfect.
Be legends.
2020.
Congresswoman,
thank you so much for coming back
on Pod Save America.
We really appreciate it
and we'll talk to you soon.
Good to see you.
Thank you.
Good to see you. Okay, we're back.
Before we go, we want to play a quick game about the discovery of cocaine in the White House called
Whose Line Is It Anyway?
I was excited about that.
That's great.
No, we're actually going to play two takes and a fake with the skipped up reactions from Republicans to the news that a dime sized bag of cocaine was found near the ground floor entrance to the West Wing in a place where visitors are asked to leave their cell phones before taking a tour.
The cubbies can also be used by staff who can't bring their phones into a SCIF or sensitive compartmented information facility where classified materials are handled.
Dan, I remember those cubbies.
I don't remember visitors being required to leave their cell phones there before taking
a tour.
Am I forgetting or do you think that's a new policy?
That seems to be a new policy.
Okay.
I don't know if I was just giving all the tours wrong and letting people walk around
with phones.
No, you used to have to.
If you were going into a meeting in certain rooms, White House staff would just leave theirs in the office.
But even in the Roosevelt Room, which is a meeting room for use for a lot of things, non-White House staff were leaving their phones.
By the time I left, the end of the of the Obama presidency, a lot more sort of sort of anti surveillance measures about where you could take your phones were like more strictly enforced.
But it seems now like anyone bringing their phone in has to leave it there.
Which makes sense because they all probably have fucking tick tock on their phones and the Chinese government is just spying.
Yeah, exactly.
And there are a lot of people come through there all the time for not just tours, meetings, right?
It'll be like the delegation members of Congress or a bunch of union people from Michigan or teachers, the people coming through the West Wing all the time, not just for tours, but for meetings.
And so that suggests that we may never know who brought their cocaine to the White House.
Well, I mean, I think those teachers, teachers are always bringing cocaine into the White House.
Yes. Whoever that person is, they have poor judgment.
Well, here's the thing.
How did they forget it on the way out is the question.
That's a very good point.
Yeah, because theoretically it was next to their cell phone.
Right.
Maybe they just took a bunch of shit out of their pocket and cocaine was part of the stuff in their pocket
and they just stuffed it in the cubby.
I don't know.
Or they panicked.
You know, they're like going.
Oh, they panicked.
Yeah, they're like, I don't want to take it back.
It's like they took all their stuff.
Because you have to empty your pockets to go through security.
So they emptied their pockets.
Oh.
Well, maybe they didn't.
They probably didn't take the cocaine out of the pockets.
Or out of the purse.
Yeah.
Because the Secret Service would have seen it go through the metal detector.
Or not the metal detector, the whatever.
You put your stuff in a.
X-ray machine.
What is it?
An X-ray machine. X-ray machine, yeah.
Thank you.
They would have seen it then.
So maybe they just kept it in their pocket
thinking that it wouldn't set the scanner off
because it was metal, right?
Just imagine the feeling you would have
is you're all ready for your White House meeting.
You're all dressed up.
You're excited.
And you realize as you're about to go through the gates
that you have cocaine in your pocket
and you don't know what you're going to do about it.
No, what you're going to do about it then
is if you realize that is do the cocaine.
Was it on the toilet?
I don't know.
Is that not right?
Yeah.
But so people know what it's like.
So it was on the ground floor entrance.
So that's usually for staff,
except at night when you give tours,
that's where you start the tour often. And the tours are given by staffers like us at night to people that you know. And so you're right, like a ton of people go through that entrance. And they said, you know, they're going to look at surveillance footage, but I don't know that surveillance footage is going to show like who left what and what cubby because no one has taken out the cocaine and like waving it
in front of the camera and then putting it in the cubby right so that's going to be it's going to be
hard to look for the surveillance footage and also they're doing like dna testing and fingerprint
stuff but like people's fingerprints are like all over those cubbies because all the people are
putting their phones in there so i don't know how that's going to work either i think that's there
it's on the bag of cocaine it's's the fingerprint they're looking for. Right.
Yeah, but then that person has to have fingerprints somewhere else, right?
Like, I mean, unless it's, you know, if they have a clean record.
There is one person in America right now who is hiding under their bed. Not sleeping.
Not sleeping because of the cocaine, but also because they're very nervous that they're going to get caught.
Anyway, I heard that we have
a clip that we're supposed to throw, too, that's some
kind of a surprise here. I'm
scared to find out what this is.
John Fife Dog, it's Joe Biden.
Look, I've got a little problem, and I could really
use your help. Last week, I
invited my friend Mitch over to the White House to
watch the new season of Marvelous Miss
Maisel. That Rachel Brosnahan
razzes our berries.
You guys know Mitch,
that prankster loves Gallagher and prop comedy,
so he brings this little beatnik baggie with him
for a cheap yuck because he's cocaine, Mitch.
Ha ha ha.
And now I got the cops on my ass.
It's a bunch of applesauce, man, so here's the deal.
Dan, you need to take the fall.
You look like you know your way around the booger sugar,
so these Fox News folks will believe it.
Mitch says he'll send some earmarks to Delaware
if you do him a solid.
Made in the shade, man.
We got a deal, Danny boy.
That is the closest we'll ever get
to having Joe Biden on this podcast.
I mean, if people had not been making the cocaine Mitch joke,
it hadn't even occurred to me until now.
I know, I know, I know.
Oh, you know, Olivia had thought about it.
She was, she, she put it in the prep, but I did, of course,
I'm glad I didn't say it because I didn't want to ruin that.
I just want to say for the record,
just legally and politically that that is Tommy misusing artificial
intelligence,
which he has now done more than anyone else in politics, I think.
Yeah, it's like the DeSantis people did that ad with the Fauci hug and Tommy.
The two corporates.
Tommy's the big culprit.
Yeah, Tommy deepfake Vitor.
I will say, it really nails Joe Biden's voice.
The ha-ha was pretty funny.
That was the only thing that was a little off, is Joe Biden saying ha-ha.
I'm so uncomfortable right now.
I knew that Booger Sugar was getting in there
as soon as I heard the beginning.
Yeah.
It just knew it.
Okay, now we have a game.
I think Elijah's going to join us for this.
Elijah, are you there?
I am.
Here he is.
I also don't know how I'm supposed to follow up that clip.
It's so funny.
It's a bunch of applesauce.
Not so sleepy Joe, you know?
Yep. Welcome back to bunch of applesauce. Not so sleepy Joe, you know? Yep.
Welcome back to
Two Takes and a Fake. It's our take on
the classic game, Two Truths and a Lie.
This is going to be a cocaine in the White House edition.
Only one round.
Just a little bump.
Here are three Republican
reactions to the cocaine story.
Two of them are real. One of them is
fake. John and Dan, are you ready? So ready. Born ready. Here's take number one. I think a lot of us have believed
that the Biden administration's been blowing it on a lot of fronts, but I guess this is a little
bit more literal than even I had thought. That is number one. Okay. Number two two has deranged jack smith the crazy trump hating special prosecutor
been seen in the area of the cocaine he looks like a crackhead to me that is reaction number two
and here's reaction number three well well well it looks like joe biden's crime wave has finally
come to his doorstep and the white House is now less secure than the southern border.
So guys, which is the fake?
Honestly, great job with all three of those.
I will identify the fake and I will identify the people who uttered the first two.
The first one is from Ron DeSantis.
The second one is a truth from Donald Trump.
And the third one is either fake or you decided to do all three that are real.
That one, the last one is a conglomeration of takes submitted by the subscribers.
Thank you.
Go sign up at crooked.com slash friends.
But the other two, I was correct.
Oh, yes.
The other two, you're correct.
I have the full quotes here if you want them.
Oh, please, please, please.
Yeah, we got to read the whole Trump truth because it's special.
Okay.
I have the Ron DeSantis one also, but I mean, per usual, Trump just blows him out of the water.
Here it is.
And I'm going to shout when Trump uses all caps.
Thank you.
Does anybody really believe that the cocaine found in the West Wing of the White House, very close to the Oval Office, is for the use of anyone other than Hunter and Joe Biden.
But watch, the fake news media
will soon start saying
that the amount found was, quote,
very small and it wasn't really cocaine,
but rather common ground-up aspirin
and the story will vanish.
Has deranged Jack Smith,
the crazy Trump-hating special prosecutor,
been seen in the area of the cocaine?
He looks like a crackhead to me.
It certainly feels like Donald Trump has used or at least been aware of the
it's just ground-up aspirin excuse.
We were all thinking it.
Really reached for that, huh?
Just strange detour to go.
There are a lot of ways to go with cocaine being found in Joe Biden's White House.
Accusing Jack Smith of being a crackhead was a swerve, I would say.
Yeah, rent free.
It was a swerve.
It was a swerve.
Though an unsurprising one.
You know, kudos to him.
Well, there it is.
Two takes and a fake.
We did it, blow.
We did it, Blow. We did it, Blow.
We did it, Blow.
I'm so glad that because Tommy did that thing,
you and I will never see those newly installed cell phone copies
because we will never be invited back to the house.
No, that's it. We're not getting invited back.
Again, it was all Tommy.
Thank you.
Thank you to AOC for joining us today.
Sorry that you joined on the episode where we made about 40 cocaine jokes.
Everyone have a fantastic weekend and we'll talk to you next week.
Bye, everyone.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production.
The executive producer is Michael Martinez.
Our producers are Andy Gardner Bernstein and Olivia Martinez.
It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick. Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer with audio support
from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis. Thanks to Hallie Kiefer, Madeline Herringer, Ari Schwartz,
Andy Taft, and Justine Howe for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn,
Phoebe Bradford, Mia Kelman, Ben Hefko, and David Tolles. Subscribe to Pod Save America on YouTube to catch full episodes,
exclusive content, and other community events.
Find us at youtube.com slash at Pod Save America.