Pod Save America - The Biden-Trump Polls are All Over the Place
Episode Date: February 2, 2024Nikki Haley's campaign claims she has a path to the Republican nomination without winning Republican voters. The Biden-Trump polls are all over the place. Joe Manchin, RFK Jr. and others continue to f...lirt with third party presidential bids that could tip the election to Trump. Plus, Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown stops by to talk about his high stakes Senate race, the fight for reproductive rights, and the one year anniversary of the East Palestine train derailment. 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
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, the Biden-Trump polls are all over the place.
Joe Manchin, RFK Jr., and other third-party candidates are still flirting with bids that could tip the election to Trump.
And later, Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown stops by to talk about the country's most-watched Senate race,
the fight for reproductive rights, and how the city of East Palestine is recovering a year after the train disaster.
But first, a new Washington Post poll out of South Carolina
gives Donald Trump a 58-32 lead over Nikki Haley,
three weeks out from the primary.
But that's not stopping her, Dan.
The latest fundraising numbers show her campaign entered 2024
with $14.6 million cash on hand.
Her super PAC has another $3.5 million.
Her team argues that she has a path to the
nomination through all the upcoming states that allow Democrats or undeclared voters to participate
in the primary. She's running a new series of ads about Trump and Biden titled Grumpy Old Men.
And she's been on quite a media tour, everything from CBS This Morning to Fox and Friends to this
Breakfast Club interview with Charlamagne Tha God, where she had this to say about Donald Trump.
Two more questions. How has Trump changed politics for the good and the bad?
He's made it chaotic. He's made it self-absorbed.
He's made people dislike and judge each other.
He's left that a president should have moral clarity and know the difference
between right or wrong. And he's just toxic. I mean, he, you know, I think a lot of the things
he broke needed to be broken, but he doesn't know how to fix things again. And it's not okay to just
break. You've got to fix it and make it better. Toxic. Toxic.
What do you think, Dan? Should we run
a side hustle where we get Democrats to vote for Haley
in these primaries just to keep things interesting
or what? I said this to you last
week. I'm going to say it again. I am not getting on board with
any plan that tries to convince people to vote for Nikki Haley
over Joe Biden, which is what you're suggesting.
But, but,
that's how it would work. That's a
vote from Joe Biden that you're giving to Nikki Haley.
Oh, yeah.
Watch out.
Watch out.
Dean Phillips is going to overtake him in South Carolina.
I mean, just like, look, I just like people who vote for Joe Biden.
That's just me.
But that is a great answer from Nikki Haley.
It is a great answer.
It is an answer that she should have been giving for the last year.
All these Republicans should have been giving.
It's the kind of answer that you can build a campaign narrative on. Now, that poll shows some real problems for Nikki Haley, right? There are so many ways to look at this, but I'll give you one. There are four subgroups in that poll that Nikki Haley is beating Donald Trump with. One, college graduates. That's pretty good. Two, people who identify as moderate or liberal.
Three- The libs. She's got the libs.
She's got the libs. People who think Joe Biden won the election fairly,
and people who think abortion should be legal in almost every instance. That's her base,
which is not a... There are not a lot of those folks in the Republican primary. And now,
she has three weeks to change that dynamic. Expectations are on her side. If she can actually come in a close second by improving significantly her performance
among Republican voters, then she has an argument to her donors to keep funding her through
Super Tuesday, which is 10 days after that.
It is just beyond wild that people who think Joe Biden won the 2020 election are just a
tiny fraction of the
Republican electorate. It's just un-fucking-real. And the Democratic thing is hard too, because
in 2012, when the last time there was a Republican primary all on its own, which is,
even though there was, I was half kidding, there was technically a Democratic primary this time,
only 2% of voters were Democrats. So you have to keep, we're probably behind the curve if we're
trying to get a lot of Democrats to tip this thing for Nikki Haley. What do you think about that
media tour she's on? She also, by the way, just did, she just did an interview with Jake Tapper
right before we recorded where she said that we will lose if we nominate Donald Trump and also
hit him on how much money he's spent on legal fees. It's good she's doing it. I wrote a little
thing in this little newsletter we like to call the message box about lessons Democrats can learn
for running against MAGA candidates from all the failures of the Republicans trying to beat Trump.
And one of them is you have to compete with him for attention. Throughout the entire primary,
DeSantis, Haley, Scott, all of them just ceded the stage to Trump and let him dominate. And she's out
there. She's working hard.
She's doing all these interviews.
She's trying to say more provocative things.
She's trying to get attention and try to get in people's mind space.
And that's what you have to do.
So it's the right thing.
The hard part for her is she's not really welcome on the MAGA media that is speaking
to a lot of the base voters.
But Fox and Friends is good.
CBS is good, particularly in South Carolina where the voters are older.
And they probably see some of that stuff.
And so this is all all this stuff is things she should have been doing a year ago, but it's good she's doing it now.
I talked about this with Tommy and love it on Tuesday's pod. But what do you think she's up to here?
Do you think she believes she can win? Do you think she's just like, I want to be the runner up with some delegates just in
case? What do you think is happening here? I think every presidential campaign involves a
tremendous amount of self-delusion, right? You don't get in the race unless you think you can
win and you know the odds just that almost every single person who's going to run is going to fail.
But I don't know that's as strategic as I'm going to accumulate enough delegates to be able to take on Trump because
theoretically, she knows what the rules are. And if she does not perform well on Super Tuesday,
she's going to get basically no delegates after that because almost all of the races
after Super Tuesday transitioned to winner take all or winner take most. And so if Trump wins by
one, he gets all the delegates. He wins by 50, he gets all the delegates. And so there's less value in
coming in second in terms of delegates. But I think it's, let's give this thing a shot.
The memo they laid out with these 13 states that allow independents and Democrats, that's like a
far-fetched plan, but it is a plan. And so if you can improve your performance with Republicans,
I think the odds of that are quite long. But if she does, and she can combine that in those 13
states with a significant independent turnout doing very well there, then maybe she can
cobble together some wins. And then you fight on to see what happens next, right? So it's like
presidential primaries are a little bit like the NCAA tournament, which is just win in advance,
win in advance. And she's, or at least, or in this case, come in a less distant second and
maybe advance, which is kind of what the goal is here. I think she probably, I mean, to your point
about competing for attention with Donald Trump, I also think there's probably part of her that
likes that she's getting some attention. Of course, she's a politician.
It's very hard for any Republican who's not named donald trump to ever get any attention and now
she's getting national attention she's getting invited on all these shows and whatever happens
in 2024 then maybe she's thinking i mean i don't think she has a i don't think she has a future in
the republican party in 2028 but maybe if don't if for some reason Donald Trump loses badly enough in 2024,
even if he loses at all, even if he ends up going to jail, gets convicted, whatever might happen,
she could try to fight out again in 2028. I still don't think she'd have much of a chance with the
base of the party the way it is right now, because it's still a MAGA base, even if there's no Donald
Trump. But that could be what she's thinking as well. Yeah, there is. I mean, if she goes through this and makes the argument that Republicans will lose
if they nominate Donald Trump and then Donald Trump loses, it is possible. I don't think it's
likely, but it's possible there is sort of a reckoning like the Democrats had after they
lost in 1988, the Republicans almost had after they lost in 2012, and the party starts thinking
a little bit differently about the kind of candidates they need to nominate. And she would potentially be
well-positioned if there was some growing backbone in the non-MAGA part of the party.
So play it out to the strength. She has the money to be in it. I think she is enjoying the attention,
enjoying running against Trump. So it really is play this till Super Tuesday and see what happens after that.
And it's probably over at that point, but maybe not.
One more question for you.
Okay.
Do you think there's a chance
that if she keeps going down this path,
keeps hitting Trump harder and harder,
that when she eventually gets out of the race,
she will, she's not going to endorse Joe Biden, obviously, but do you think there's a chance she might just say, I'm not endorsing
and I'm just, I'm just walking away. I don't think there's much of a chance, but it's, it's,
there's part of me that think it's, it's, it's greater than zero now.
I think if she believes her future is in Republican politics, she has to endorse Donald Trump.
Yeah.
You can be lukewarm in how you campaign for him.
You don't have to back him on – you don't have to spout 2020 election lies.
You don't have to support his future convictions or any of those things.
But to sit on the sidelines, I think, would forfeit her ability to run for president in the future.
If that's something she wants to do. Don't do it, Nikki. Don't do it. Just step away.
I do think it, I mean, Sarah Longwell has been making this point as well, but I do think if she
inevitably does endorse Donald Trump or say that she's going to vote for him after she said all
these horrible things about him, it is somewhat damaging to Biden in the general, because I think it does create a permission
structure for a lot of these anti-Trump voters who have been with Haley to be like, oh, well,
we voted for her. We wanted her. We don't like Trump, but she's voting for Trump. Maybe I need
to just come home and vote for Trump as well. Yeah. I think that's definitely true is that
she would do. I mean, it's hard.
What does she really believe?
Does she believe, you know, I think she believes she's better than Donald Trump and Joe Biden,
but I think she also believes Donald Trump is better than Joe Biden. And so I think she does.
And I think, yeah, which is wild.
But yeah, so Trump is reportedly, reportedly, we could all guess,
extremely annoyed that Haley hasn't dropped out yet.
The Guardian reports that in one conversation,
Trump used an epithet pejorative to women while describing her perceived disloyalty.
So he called, just a couple,
just a couple options there.
It doesn't, it really doesn't sound like him,
but he's pissed that he has to spend time
and money in South Carolina
instead of focusing on Joe Biden.
Money he may not have
since his latest fundraising report shows his super PAC spent $30 million in legal fees
to over 47 law firms and attorneys in just six months, which is at least 50% more than they spent
on ads. You don't usually see campaigns spending more on lawyers than ads, but then again, you
usually don't see campaigns where the candidate's facing 91 felony charges. You think this is a problem for Trump,
or is he going to have enough money? I think he will probably have enough money to run a race,
but he's not going to have as much money as he wanted because he's going to keep giving it to
lawyers because his legal problems are not going to end anytime soon. At some point this spring,
hopefully, the January 6th case starts, he's still going to have to be dealing with both the Florida case in terms of legal fees. You're paying lawyers on retainer. You have lawyers filing motions, filing briefs, gathering evidence. Also in the Fulton County case and the Florida case where he's being tried for stealing classified secrets. So all those costs are going to continue to accrue throughout the election. And those are ads he won't be able to run, organizers he won't be
able to hire, whatever else he would spend money on. But it comes out, money's not zero sum, but
it's not entirely fungible either. $30 million. He's a real job creator he's really doing his part to support the economy
it is wild it is wild i i also wonder if there's an argument uh that uh democrats should be making
that hey donald trump's out there again only cares about himself when you're donating to
donald trump uh most likely you're donating, especially if you're donating to one of these PACs that's spending money on the legal fees.
You're just donating to help this guy defend himself against 91 felony charges.
That's where your hard-earned money is going.
Donald Trump worth $3 billion, you know, allegedly.
And he's asking you for money so that you can help pay for his legal fees.
And I realize that the base is probably just like, yeah, well, he's our Jesus,
so we'll do anything for him. But it's fucking wild.
I think there is an argument to make that this is yet another piece of evidence that Donald Trump
is in this for himself, not for you. I think it's harder to persuade the people writing these checks or putting their credit card
information into these sketchy texts they're getting to buy that argument for two reasons.
One, the big donors are buying access and they don't care if their access check goes to Donald
Trump's lawyer or to more mediocre, probably ineffective TV ads. They just want Donald
Trump to know that they wrote them a check. The small dollar donors, like there was this CBS YouGov poll last
year where they asked people about the indictments and a huge portion of voters who identify
themselves as part of the MAGA movement, which I think has probably overlaps pretty nicely with
people who are sending $10 to Donald Trump, view the indictments of Donald Trump as an attack on
people like them. So this is like a righteous fight for them and they're probably more than
happy to fund it to help Donald Trump fight back against the deep state, the elites,
big government, whatever else. But for the broader electorate, I've more and more come
to the conclusion that our best message is essentially our most true message, which is that
Donald Trump is in this for himself to punish his enemies, to reward his rich friends,
and to avoid legal accountability.
That's why he's doing this. And this is another example of it.
Yeah. He doesn't really care about running for president. He cares about running from prison.
That's Donald Trump.
Put that on a t-shirt.
All right.
The general election polar coaster has begun.
I will use that as a chance to plug Crooked's new podcast of the same name,
hosted by none other than Dan Pfeiffer.
To hear all the good stuff, go sign up at crooked.com slash friends to be a friend of the pod subscriber and you'll get to hear Dan's Polar Coaster podcast.
When's the next episode, Dan?
Next Thursday.
Next Thursday.
A week from yesterday.
A week from yesterday.
Today, we're recording this yesterday when you're listening to this.
Thursday.
Listen to Polar Coaster.
But since I'm an addict, we will talk a little bit about the polls today.
to Polar Coaster. But since I'm an addict, we will talk a little bit about the polls today.
On Wednesday morning, we got a series of horrendous Bloomberg Morning Consult polls that show Trump leading in every swing state by anywhere from three to eight points. But then on
Wednesday afternoon, Quinnipiac saved the day with a poll showing Biden opening up a 50 to 44 lead
over Trump, which represents a five point swing towards Biden from their December poll.
But then, Dan, just before we started recording today, CNN dropped a real stinker. Trump 49,
Biden 45. But if you look at the polling average over the last week, you can definitely see
evidence that Biden is doing a bit better against Trump. The trends are starting to go a little bit
in Biden's direction. But I don't know. Do you see any signal in all this noise or do I just need to go outside
and touch some grass? Both, I think, is the right answer here. Yeah, that is the right answer.
I think at the most macro level, four months ago at the end of last year, sort of from the
basically beginning of the fall to the end of the year, every poll that came out was bad for Biden. He was losing in almost all of them. All the
numbers were bad. Trump seemed to be gaining strength. In the last month, we're starting to
get a handful of polls that are good for Biden. Now, which polls are right, which polls are wrong?
I can talk a little about why there's a gap between these polls. But the fact that we're
seeing more good polls for Biden and the polling average is narrowing a bit, it's just a sign that I think at bare minimum,
Biden has stabilized from where he was last fall. And maybe the combination of improved
views of the economy, which we're seeing in some of these polls, the percentage of people who have
a good opinion in the economy is inching up, I think is the right way to put it. The consumer confidence numbers have gone way up in the University of Michigan
survey. And so it's possible that as prices come down, Donald Trump gets in the news more,
Biden's – sort of the election is clarifying people's minds, and that's helping Biden a
little bit. More work to do, obviously, and it's still very early. I tried to figure out why these
polls are so different from each other, and there are many reasons, but I'll give you the shortest version here. In the Quinnipiac poll where Biden is winning by a decent margin, he is up 12 with independents. In the CNN poll where he is down by four, he's losing by independents by four. In the Bloomberg swing state poll, he's losing independents by eight.
Bloomberg swing state poll, he's losing independence by eight. So you have between Quinnipiac and the Bloomberg morning consult swing state poll, you have a 20 point swing
among independence. And that sort of explains the gap between those polls. Now, we have no idea
which one of those is right. There's a little apples to oranges depending on voter screen and
how you do it. But it's just, I think all of this boils down to something we knew to be true last
fall, we knew to be true now, and we assume will be true next fall, which is that this is going to be an incredibly close, very winnable election that
will come down to 50,000 votes across six states, right? That's kind of what we're looking at. And
what the polls say now doesn't really change that dynamic. They really are all over the place, though, in a way that I can't remember seeing
in 2020. The other interesting thing about the Quinnipiac poll is he's winning Democrats like
96 to 2 in that poll. And I haven't seen that kind of margin with Democrats in other polls.
So that would be good news in addition to what you mentioned about independence.
And one reason to find hope in that Quinnipiac poll is it does show his approval rating is 4155, which isn't good. But the fact that he has a 4155 approval rating in the same poll that
he's winning 50 to 44 over Trump is the kind of outcome you would hope for with his approval
as low as it is and as low as it has been
for the last two years now. Yeah. I firmly believe that Joe Biden could win re-election with a 41%
approval rating. I'm not sure he can win it with a 38% approval rating, but the low 40s, given
how people feel about this election, rise in polarization and negative partisanship,
and negative partisanship.
The 41, 42 is like 46, 47 was four or five years,
you know, a couple election cycles ago and like 50 was in the early 2000s.
It's just the universe of people you can get to say
they approve of a candidate has come down.
And so 41, I think would be like,
if you're there, you're in the ballgame.
I'll also say that we really need more swing state polls.
We've had a dearth of swing state polls this season so far. And obviously those Bloomberg Morning Console polls are terrible. But like there were a few Pennsylvania polls out recently where Biden's in the lead in Pennsylvania. He's had a few good Wisconsin polls. And we haven't had a lot of Arizona polls at all. Could use a lot more Michigan polls too.
So I think we probably got to wait and see to get some high quality swing state polling to see
exactly where we are right now, at least. My one tip for people who listen to
Polar Coaster know this, but the number that I would look for in polls where they give you the crosstabs is share of Biden's 2020 vote for Trump's share of his 2020
vote. In every poll dating back to that New York Times, Sienna poll that kicked off this whole
panic attack, Trump has had about a six-point advantage on that. And that's a better number
for me than Democrats because it encompasses the independents who came to Biden in 2020 and those Trump-Biden voters that we have to win back over. And so if I didn't see
that in the Quinnipiac poll where Biden was winning, but that's a little bit where I always
look for is, is Biden making gains there? Because that's what he has to do to win is to, and if he
just gets up to the same number as Trump from his other 2020 vote, then Biden will almost certainly
win because he wanted
2020. Right. One thing you notice in all these polls is that the race gets a lot closer and
often better for Trump when they ask people about potential third party candidates. Big question
there, of course, is which candidates will end up on the ballot in which states. CNN just ran a long
piece about no labels. TLDR is that the organization seems to be a bit of a mess.
Maryland's former Republican governor, Larry Hogan, reportedly left not because he's planning
to run for president, which was the original speculation, but because he was pissed at no
labels for not sharing info about their 2024 plans. Our good pal Joe Manchin is also annoyed
with no labels for some of the same reasons, says it's sort of a mess.
They don't know what they're doing.
But he's still flirting with a run for president because he reportedly views himself as having, quote, national icon potential.
Sure, sure.
And then there's RFK Jr., who, because he's having trouble getting on the ballot in states other than Utah, that's the only state where he's on the ballot right now, he now says he's considering running as the nominee of the Libertarian Party, which is on the ballot in every swing state.
cash on hand, but his super PAC has nearly $15 million cash on hand thanks to a $15 million donation from banking heir Tim Mellon, who has also donated $10 million to, wait for it,
Donald Trump. So I feel like these third party candidacies are the source of constant anxiety,
mostly because they could tip the race to Trump, but also because we still have no idea in what states they'll be on the ballot. What's your take on the latest round of news, where the candidates
are, what the ballot access situation is, and when we're going to know what's happening here?
Well, it's all very confusing because we keep getting national polls testing all five candidates
against each other, but they're not
going to all be on all 50 ballots. And so that is very confusing. It's also confusing to test when
we're testing swing state polls when we don't know which states they're going to be on the ballot.
I think the short version here is that Jill Stein, we know that the Green Party nominee,
likely to be Jill Stein, is going to be on the ballot in the very same states that she helped tip the election to Donald Trump in 2016. RFK Jr., we don't know where
he's going to be on the ballot yet. $15 million in a super PAC and $5 million in his own account
is enough to get on the ballot in a couple of places. It's not enough to run a 50-state ballot
effort, but if he wants to get on the ballot in, I don't know, to pick six random states that sound
a lot like Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, then yeah, then maybe he could possibly
do that. On a macro level, what is problematic here is pretty simple, which is Donald Trump
has never gotten 47% of the national popular vote in either of his two presidential elections.
And you can win a five-way race at 47%. You cannot win a two-way
race at 47% because it has to add up to 100. And that doesn't work that way. And even if you look
at this in Pennsylvania in 2020, Donald Trump did one point better than he did in Pennsylvania in
2016. But he won in 16 and lost in 20 because in 16, about 3% of the vote went to Gary Johnson,
Libertarian, and Jill Stein, the Green Party candidate. And so these candidates just lower
the threshold for a candidate who has never proven to get above 47%. Joe Biden has proven
he can get above 50% in some of these states and nationally. And so that obviously just
strategically hurts Joe Biden. It's like pure math. Yeah. I mean, the no labels thing,
I could see a scenario where it's just, it's such a mess and they can't because they need a
Republican and a Democrat. So they need a unity ticket. They have been telling people that they
want the Republican at the top of the ticket, which has pissed off a lot of potential Democratic options
for that candidacy. And Manchin's basically like, he told CNN, the reporting in CNN was he thinks
that they're sort of a mess, but that he'd use them as a ballot access organization because
they're getting on the ballot in a whole bunch of places. And then he'd just bring in his own staff.
I don't know. I don't. Do you think Manchin does it?
I would be surprised.
But what do I know?
I mean.
Look, who am I to question a self-proclaimed national icon?
That is someone who spent way too much time on the Sunday shows.
Thinking that he's a national icon.
Although he's traveling around the country now.
So now he's hearing from people.
He's going to events.
People are like, please, please run Joe Manchin.
We're centrist just like you.
So he's probably hearing all the wrong things.
But I don't know.
It seems like No Label's plan was originally to have an in-person convention.
Then they were going to do a virtual convention.
Now they're not sure if they're going to do a virtual convention, but they keep saying that by mid-March, that's when they will decide at some convention or decide what the potential unity ticket would be.
But we still haven't heard any reports that there are actual Republican and Democratic candidates seriously looking at this or seriously being considered by no labels.
So it's still sort of a big question mark with the no labels thing.
I mean, their ballot access operation is well funded and well executed they're on the ballot in a bunch of
places now a lot of those places are states that we're not overly worried about in the general
election like hawaii um for example the ones the ones i think to worry about are they're on our
they're on the ballot in arizona nevada which would be enough to fuck up the election uh maine
which you know splits its electoral votes so they could always win the
second congressional district, which is more conservative than Maine. They could screw things
up there. So those are the states to worry about. I worry about Oregon too, because they're on the
ballot in Oregon. And Nader almost fucked up Oregon for Gore. Gore was campaigning in Portland
right before the election in 2000, which is not a thing a Democrat wants to be doing. And it has a
history of independent candidates. We had this independent candidate who ran for governor, who didn't win,
but took a big chunk of vote. And so just across the board, not great. You're exactly right.
Where the no labels thing falls apart is can they get people to actually join this effort who seem
credible? And it's just worth noting that this no labels thing is sketchy as
hell. They want to run a presidential candidate, but they refuse to declare themselves as a
political party because for legal purposes, if they were to do that, they'd be required to
disclose their donors. And they want to be able to fund this whole thing, all this ballot access,
all this research, all this messaging without ever having to say which billionaires wrote these checks to
them. And that is just the height of corrupt sketchiness. Well, and also they know that it's
a messaging and political problem because a successful third party candidacy is going to be
like raging against the establishment or I'm independent of all the moneyed interests in Washington. And no labels is the opposite of that.
So anyone they put up is going to be very establishment,
well-funded by a lot of billionaires and a lot of corporate interests likely.
So that's going to be a problem for them.
Cornel West is tested in a lot of these polls,
but he is currently on the ballot nowhere
because remember he was flirting with the Green Party nomination and then decided to just do an independent
candidacy. So, so far there is no Cornell, Cornell West isn't on the ballot anywhere.
And the thing to worry about with RFK Jr. and the libertarian party flirtation is they are on the
ballot in every single swing state. Libertarian parties on the ballot in most states in the
country, but definitely all the swing states, Their deal is they have a convention in May where the delegates to the
convention pick the candidate. And there's already been, bet you didn't know this, a primary season
going on. There was an Iowa primary for the Libertarian party. So they have a bunch of
candidates running already. So I don't know how RFK Jr. does this. But I do think if somehow he convinces all the delegates at the Libertarian Convention to make him the nominee of the Libertarian Party, that would be worrisome just because he has the name recognition.
He has a super PAC that's now funded by some Trump donors.
And yeah, that would worry me.
You want to hear an RFK stat that would really worry you?
Well, this is more than just RFK.
So this is a third-party stat that should scare the crap out of us.
And this is courtesy of John Della Volpe, the pollster who's been on this podcast before.
In the Quinnipiac poll among 18 to 29-year-olds in a head-to-head between Biden and Trump,
Biden's winning by 24.
When you test the five-way with Biden, Trump, Kennedy, West, and Stein, Biden's lead drops
to plus two.
Wait, I'm sorry.
Among 18 to 29-year-olds.
Was that the one that we were just talking about?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Because the lead is smaller in a five-way.
And the ballot access question is the big question with RFK Jr., for sure.
I will say that there's a lot happening underneath with RFK Jr.
He is making the rounds.
He's doing a lot of – obviously, he's built a support network among these rich tech folks, like the all-in podcast type world.
My wife pointed this out to me the other day, which is he's constantly doing interviews with wellness podcasts and influencers all the time, talking about things that are not anti-vax, although that does come up. But our food system and how people are being poisoned by chemicals and all this other stuff.
There is something to watch, and there's going to have to be an effort if he does get ballot access to really define him for voters. Because in a world in which a lot of people are unhappy with the
choices at the top of the ballot, he becomes a vehicle for that anti-establishment vote.
Yeah, it's something to watch. And hopefully we will know what's going on probably in the
next couple of months, because at some point we get into deadlines. Okay, a Few quick notes before we go to break. On last week's episode of Pod Save
the People, DeRay interviewed Deputy Commerce Secretary Don Graves about President Biden's
economic record and how to push back on the Biden haters in your life. Check out this great
conversation and more episodes of Pod Save the People wherever you get your podcasts. And on a
special bonus episode of Strict Scrutiny that is out today, the host talked to E. Jean Carroll and her lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, about their big victory holding Donald Trump accountable in court.
Here's a clip.
Can you give our listeners a sense of just how outside of the band of normal defendant behavior, the behavior of Donald Trump during this trial was? In any trial, someone behaving the way Donald Trump
behaved, making nasty comments to his lawyers, shaking his head. When we were picking the jury,
one of the questions was, who believes that the 2020 election was stolen? He raised his hand.
Oh my God.
We're picking the jury. Literally acting like a seven-year-old boy who has behavior problems in elementary school. That's how he was acting.
Again, the full interview is out now. Search for Strict Scrutiny wherever you get your podcasts.
When we come back, Dan talks to Senator Sherrod Brown.
joining me now is the senior senator from the great state of ohio sherrod brown senator welcome you're going to say great senator from the you were going to say great i think that was implied
by senior didn't say that that okay go ahead i was i guess great senator from the great and
senior senator from the great state of ohio sherrod brown senator brown welcome back to
pot save america dan good to be back.
So we're recording this interview a few days before the one year anniversary of the train
derailment in East Palestine, Ohio. I know you have spent a lot of time with the people of that
community working on what happened there, working on the response. Can you tell us what things are
like on the ground a year later? Yeah, I've been to East Palestine eight times,
meeting with all kinds of people affected, Palestine eight times, meeting with all kinds
of people affected, meeting with farmers, meeting with small business people, meeting with people
at a health center, meeting with people just generally walking the streets. And people, my
job for this last year is two things. One is to help people get their lives back to normal,
and that's helping them on testing the water, helping them on making sure their food is safe, helping them get the kind
of help from Norfolk Southern which they promised and have entirely delivered on,
and to make sure this doesn't happen again. We have seen in the last year, in
about the last year, we've seen in just my state alone derailments in Sandusky
and Springfield and Ravenna and, well, East Palestine, obviously,
a couple others around the state. We've also seen the railroads in their arrogance not keep up,
not maintain their bridges and tracks that they own all over the state. So you'll see in Cleveland
or you'll see in Butler County, pieces of bridge fall down on the road where cars pass underneath because
the railroads aren't investing the way they should. And they've been a powerful interest
group for 100 years. I mean, they've been railroads and Wall Street and coal and oil
companies, some of the most powerful interest groups in the country forever. And that's why
we haven't been able to get this bill passed. Yeah. So I want to ask you about that. Tell us
a little bit about the bill you worked on with Senator Vance
and what exactly is holding it up
and what the prospects are for possible passage in the near term.
Yeah, I think we're going to get it passed.
I've been in enough fights here to restore pensions for people
who lost because of Wall Street greed,
lost their pensions, 100,000 union workers.
It took us five or six years.
Child tax credit took us even or six years. Child tax
credit took us even longer than that, and it changed people's lives, and we're doing it again.
So I'm not giving up on this. I'm hopeful it passes in the next two or three weeks.
I'm hopeful it'll pass in the House. We're doing everything we can. The problem in the House is the
railroad lobby is really close to the Speaker of the House. So we know that, and we've got to
overcome that. Primarily the bill, these trains go through towns, and literally millions of Ohioans in a state of 12 million,
Dan, as you know, live fairly near a railroad track. My wife and I live maybe 300 yards from
a railroad track in Cleveland. So these trains pass by all the time. Nobody really knows what
cargo they're carrying. They don't have to register. They don't have to notify the state or the community when they pass through carrying
liquid natural gas or some kind of chemicals that they carried in East Palestine. So if there's a
derailment, everybody has to flee. Everybody has to move at least temporarily until they find out
what's in the train. So there's that problem there. The railroads haven't implemented the safety devices that they could in terms of detection of heat in
the wheel bearings. And the railroads are most bizarre of all. The railroads are insisting that
they should only have to have one engineer on these trains. These trains are two, two and a
half miles, sometimes three miles long. They carry. Sometimes they pull 200 or more cars.
And I asked the CEO of CSX when he came to see me.
I said, do you fly up here?
And he said, yeah.
And I said, did you look in the cockpit?
Was there one pilot or two?
I mean, nobody, you wouldn't get on a plane with one pilot.
And railroads should be no different in terms of public safety.
So we're fighting on that.
We're going to win. The public overwhelmingly is with us on this. But frankly, I mean,
every Democrat's going to vote for it. We got to get 10 Republicans and we keep pushing for that.
The White House announced that President Biden is going to make this long awaited visit to East
Palestine next month. What do you hope to accomplish with his presence there?
long-awaited visit to East Palestine next month. What do you hope to accomplish with his presence there? Well, I hope that he calls for and pushes and gets the administration to do regular sort of
baseline safety checks to begin with in terms of healthcare. We know that, I mean, I met dozens of
people who had pretty bad-looking rashes on their arms and their necks and faces
in some cases from this ingesting this toxic whatever it was stuff that people didn't really
know. I want to see what happens longer term for people there. I want the president to make sure we
do regular water testing and soil testing, farmland and in town. I want the president mostly to listen and to listen to
what people have to say. I mean, what I was able to do in my eight trips there is bring information
back to pass this bill to help them in a variety of ways to get EPA and FDA to respond. One thing
we recently found out was that a number of people who have gotten reimbursement or at least
some payment in dollars from Norfolk Southern that they might be hit with a tax bill. So the
bill that passed last night, overwhelming bipartisan vote in the House, included a
provision that the dollars they got from Norfolk Southern to East Palestine won't be taxed. It's
not a big issue nationally like the child tax credit or the R&D tax break, but it's a really big issue in Eastern Ohio.
You brought up the child tax credit, the bill that passed last night. I know you worked for
a long time on the child tax credit. It passed the House. Now there's reports that Senate
Republicans may be the problem here. What are the prospects for getting this bill through the Senate quickly? Well, it passed in the House with 370 votes, I think. Every House member in Ohio except one
voted for it, so it's got really good bipartisan support. Corporate America wants it because it
will mean jobs for small businesses and research and development and keeping those jobs in the
United States, keeping the intellectual property, if you will, in the United States from that R&D. And the families of 575,000 children,
150,000 black children in Ohio will benefit from this. It's a big deal. The Wall Street
Journal's opposed it, of course, but it's got very broad support. And I think that senators
will listen of both parties,
will listen the way House members of both parties listened.
That's good. That's great. It would be a huge accomplishment to get something done in this
election year with this Republican House. So that's a big deal.
Yeah. Six months ago, nobody thought we'd get a tax bill. And what happened was a number of us
encouraging Democratic colleagues when business comes in and says they want the R&D
tax credit that we said every time, you know, I'm for it because I think it does help business
growth. I think it helps entrepreneurs. I think it helps keep these jobs in the U.S.
But the answer from all of us over time, and Ron Wyden really led on this, was if you want that
tax break, you've got to support
the child tax credit. Otherwise, nothing's going to happen. And over time, we build up enough
interest in a tax bill and enough interest across party lines from the child tax credit.
It's really impressive stuff. Maybe in less optimistic Capitol Hill news, a lot of your
colleagues were working on a border security bipartisan deal that was hopefully going to allow Congress to pass aid for Ukraine and Israel.
That seems to have hit the skids in the Senate.
What do you see happening there?
And if a border security deal is not passed, do you see any path for aid for Ukraine to get through this year?
I don't give up easily, as I said in the last question. I've watched
Senator Lankford and Senator Murphy, Republican from Oklahoma, Democrat from Connecticut,
sort of assiduously go through this and make this border agreement work. I think they essentially
have a deal. I can't imagine that the Senate, the House is so dysfunctional
that they would turn their back on it after demanding we won't do anything else until you
do the border. I would say, I mean, presidents of both parties have failed on the border.
We haven't done what we need to do. Part of it is sending enough resources there at the
points of entry to keep the fentanyl out. And most of the people bringing fentanyl out are American citizens going back and forth across the border.
We need to enforce those rules and laws.
We have better detection equipment than we've ever had to find this stuff.
It's small quantities of a poison that can kill thousands of people, as you know, Dan.
But we do that right.
thousands of people, as you know, Dan, but we do that right. And I mean, I just can't imagine they're going to continue to block that when they've been calling out for that. And the pressure
from internationally, the pressure from people that care about our national security and Ukraine,
I mean, what people don't think about, I'm not sure that we all, many people in this country
pay enough attention to history, but
if we allow Russia to overrun Ukraine, it means they're right up against the border of a NATO
country. And you know, in your years in the Obama administration, we all know, they're paying
attention to this, that if NATO's ever attacked, every country has got to send troops. And that's
a really scary thought of a land war. We have right now the
biggest land war in Europe since World War II. And that is just lunacy. So I think cooler heads
prevail. Ultimately, we're doing it in the Senate. A number of Senate Republicans are really strong
on this. McConnell wants to do this on the border. And all of us know this is a major
national security issue all the way around.
You're running for reelection in Ohio, a state that has been difficult for Democrats in recent
cycles, although you won relatively handily in 2018. Your campaign launched your first ad
this morning. Talk to me a little bit how you plan to run for reelection in Ohio in a year with Donald Trump or a Republican at the top of the ballot.
I run for office the way I always have, and it's really about what we do and what we have accomplished.
I wear in my lapel a depiction of a canary in a birdcage given to me in a Workers Memorial Day rally some 25 years ago.
The mine workers took the canary down to the mines.
Memorial Day rally some 25 years ago. The mine workers took the canary down to the mines. If the canary was on his own, he had no union strong enough or no government that cared enough to
protect him. And so it reminds me, always reminds me of whose side I'm on. I've worn this pen,
as I said, for 25 years. When you come to the Senate, they give you a really nice looking,
cool, expensive looking piece of jewelry. And I wore that for about a week and I took it off and put
the canary pin back on because it really does keep me focused on workers, whether you punch a clock
or swipe a badge, whether you work for tips, whether you're working in an office as a data
entry person, it doesn't matter what you do, you're contributing to society, you ought to be
paid. And if you love this country, you fight for the people who make it work. And it's only who's side you're on. And I don't look
at politics as sort of this left or right on the spectrum. I look at it as who's side you're on.
And it means taking on the drug companies and bringing the price of drugs down. It means taking
on Wall Street and making them accountable on trade agreements and on what they did on pensions.
It means taking on interest groups. It means taking on interest
groups. That means taking on the railroads and the abuse and the damage they did to a community
in my state. We can't let them do it again. It's pretty simple, frankly.
Obviously, the economy is always a top issue, but people's frustration with the economy was
incredibly high over recent years, particularly in the 2022 election with inflation going up.
There have been some signs in consumer confidence
and maybe in some polling that shows that the outlook is brightening a little bit.
What are you hearing from Ohioans about how they feel about the economy right now?
Well, there's always concern about the price of things. And the price is higher than it was
three years ago. I hear people say inflation has become lower, and it is, but people are concerned with prices.
And it's clear to me that when you go to the grocery store, if you go to Dave's Supermarket,
a union supermarket in Cleveland, you're paying higher prices in large part because you're paying
for stock buybacks and you're paying for executive bonuses and compensation. I mean, that's what drove prices more than anything was corporate greed.
Things as we came out of the pandemic, input costs were a little bit up,
but big corporations, especially transportation companies
and meatpacking companies and drug companies and oil companies
used that to raise their prices.
And it really was predatory practices by large
corporations that contributed so much to this. So that's why you go after the drug companies to
bring drug prices down. You go after the insurance companies and the oil companies,
and we'll see a better country as a result. Do you get the sense that people are feeling a
little bit better about the economy as prices have come down some, even if they're still higher than
they were? Yeah, I think people are feeling better, but I also see,
I mean, I walked a picket line in Toledo back during the strike, the Stellantis, the old
Chrysler plant is called Stellantis now. And as I'm walking the picket line, I'm meeting people
that are just started working. I mean, some were new workers, some had been there 20 years, but the CEOs were making
literally 800 times what an entry-level worker at Chrysler was making. So prices are still too high,
but prices are still too high in large part because of corporate greed. And there are not
enough around here that take that on. And people always know I'll take them on, whether it's a bad trade agreement that costs jobs in my hometown of Mansfield or Springfield or Akron, or whether it's drug companies overcharging people or whether it's banks and their junk fees that cost people a whole lot of money.
Do you have some legislative or policy proposals that you're pushing to tackle to make it harder for these corporations to be so
greedy? Well, first of all, on the one end of it, that's what the child tax credit's about,
to make it easier for large swaths of people in my state, particularly people with kids,
but beyond that, to be able to deal with those prices. It means a better federal tax policy. It means what we've done on drug
prices that we've limited the cost of insulin to $35 per month. We've limited the out-of-pocket
cost for seniors to $2,000 for the year. We've also gone after stock buybacks with the stock
buyback tax, which probably will be enough,
high enough that people will simply not, that some of the companies won't do these stock buybacks.
One of the other things we've done is taking on landlords increasingly in our cities,
and not just cities. We've seen kind of Wall Street predators come up and buy lots of homes,
lots of homes, raise rentals, and essentially not keep these properties up. But those companies all get to deduct their mortgage the way you do in your personal home, Dan. So we will take that,
the way we will do this predatory lending act is to stop them from doing that and making it
much less likely they're coming into our cities to do that.
You have, there's a Republican primary, folks running against, running for the opportunity to hopefully be beaten by you.
The one thing that they all have in common is very extreme positions on abortion.
Several of them support bans with no exceptions, either for rape or incest.
Talk to me a little bit about the role you think abortion is going to play in this campaign, especially given the response in the Ohio constitutional
amendment last year. Yeah, the entire Republican Party now in Ohio is pretty much for a national
abortion ban. They passed a terrible six-week abortion ban. They called the heartbeat bill
overwhelmingly in the legislature. Then Ohioans fought back.
We got 700,000 people signed petition to go to the ballot
for a constitutional amendment for abortion rights.
We then saw that then the Secretary of State and the legislature
tried to change the rules, one, making it harder to vote,
second, to change the threshold instead
of 50% plus one, to carry a ballot issue, making it 60%. We defeated that in a special election in
August decisively. Then in November, Ohio passed a constitutional amendment, as you mentioned,
passed it by 13 points. Now, when Roe was overturned, my three opponents and a number
of others celebrated the overturning of Roe and then began to pass more and more restrictive legislation.
Last November, we blew a hole in that by passing the constitutional amendment for abortion rights.
All three of my Republican opponents, one of them will come out of the March primary in a couple of months as the nominee, but all three of them are for a national abortion ban. So it's not going to be perhaps the most salient issue we talked about, but it's going
to be the contrast will be clear. And all three of them are kind of running from it. They don't
sort of know what to do. They're talking about compromise. Whatever they're talking about is
women don't trust them. And it's clear that this contrast is clear. They're for a national
abortion ban. My entire career, my entire life, been supportive of women's rights. In the end,
they don't want, you know, in the end, it shouldn't be politicians in Columbus that make
these decisions. It should be women and their doctors. It's really clear. It's really easy
to explain. They can dance all they want. This contrast is clear, and there's no way
Americans want a national. Ohioans, maybe a more conservative state than some, but Ohioans don't
want a national abortion ban. Not to toss you the softball of all times, but we don't keep the Senate
without winning your seat. And fair to say that if we do not do that and do well in these 2024
elections, that national abortion ban that your opponents support has a very real chance of becoming the law of this land if Republicans have control of government, right?
I'm just trying to make the – for our listeners who are not in Ohio, I want them to understand why your reelection is so important.
Yeah, well, thank you for that.
That's not the softest law.
I could give you some others, but that's not bad. I mean, it really is clear that when this passed, again, by 13 points, not two or three, when it passed by 13 points,
the immediate reaction of legislative leaders, these guys, almost all guys who think that they
know best, the immediate reaction was, we got to find a way around this. We got to find a way to
make this not count. We've got to find something in the Constitution.
Already for the November election, the Secretary of State changed the ballot language. They're supposed to write a summary of the ballot language. His actually was longer than the ballot
language submitted. So it wasn't a summary at all. So they've tried to do anything to play to their
extremist far right base. And it hasn't worked. And they're going
to keep trying. And I don't have a lot. I mean, I am pretty certain if they win this race and they
beat Tester and they win a couple other races that they are going to continue to try for a
national abortion ban. I mean, it's clear that's their goal. They want to ban it in Ohio. Every
state they get an opportunity, they ban it. Really no exceptions. Maybe sometimes they'll say exception, but frankly,
they want no exceptions. They want a six-week ban. They want that everywhere.
And that's one of the reasons I'm going to win is that women in my state don't trust them. Women in
my state, men in my state too, think that this is a decision between a woman and her doctor,
not a bunch of politicians in
Columbus. Senator Sherrod Brown, thank you so much for joining us. Good luck out there,
and I'm sure we'll talk to you again before November. Dan, thanks. Good to be with you.
Thanks to Sherrod Brown for joining us today. Everyone have a great weekend,
and we'll talk to you next week. Bye, everyone.
If you want to get ad-free episodes, exclusive content
and more, consider joining our Friends of the Pod
subscription community at crooked.com
slash friends. And if you're already
doom-scrolling, don't forget to follow us at Podsave
America on Instagram, Twitter and YouTube
for access to full episodes, bonus
content and more. Plus,
if you're as opinionated as we are, consider
dropping us a review.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production. Our show is produced by Olivia Martinez and David Toledo. Our associate producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safari. Kira Wakeem is our senior producer.
Reid Cherlin is our executive producer. The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer with audio support from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis.
Writing support by Hallie Kiefer.
Madeline Herringer is our head of news and programming.
Matt DeGroat is our head of production.
Andy Taft is our executive assistant.
Thanks to our digital team,
Elijah Cohn,
Haley Jones,
Mia Kelman,
David Tolles,
Kiril Pallaviv,
and Molly Lobel.