Pod Save America - “The Democratic National Couch-vention.”
Episode Date: August 17, 2020The Postal Service warns states that mail-in ballots might not be counted in time, Democrats plan an emergency hearing with the Postmaster General, and the first all-virtual Democratic National Conven...tion begins with speakers ranging from John Kasich to AOC. Then voting rights attorney Marc Elias talks to Jon Favreau about his legal fight against Donald Trump’s efforts to sabotage the election.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, please visit crooked.com/psa.For a transcript of this episode, please email hey@crooked.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Levitt.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
On today's pod, I talk to voting rights attorney Mark Elias,
the man who's leading the legal fight against Donald Trump's effort to sabotage the election.
Before that, we'll talk about the latest in the Republican war on the post office,
how Democrats are fighting back,
and what the party hopes to achieve at this week's national convention.
But first, Levitt, happy birthday.
Oh, thank you. Thank you.
Happy birthday to you. you happy birthday very exciting
can we insert some music here what's terrific yeah let's do that wonderful uh um
how was the show this week great love it or leave it so shears and mayda joined ben rhodes
alissa master monaco wow we had a great time we had a great time a little belarus on the show i heard
yeah we talked a little belarus yeah yeah we got our own you know trump's trump's watching
lukashenko and just sort of like taking taking notes and be like oh oh good idea oh it's not
bad that's a good one it's out the window and then for my birthday, you know, the Democratic Party got me a cameo from AOC.
Awesome.
I like that.
That's good.
Also, Lovett and I are trying to be YouTube stars like Dan.
We have a new series called Speechwriters React.
And we have a few episodes up where we break down past convention speeches from obama hillary and biden talk about what works and what doesn't check it out at youtube.com slash i can't
believe dan moved into that hype house in bel air that was a so i didn't see that one coming
here's the thing here's the thing that sucks for dan is it seems like a good idea but if the if the
if the sponsorship deals don't come in you're owing a ton of rent on a big mansion.
That's right.
That's right.
Well, you know, he's good on TikTok, so he'll probably be fine.
Congrats to Dan.
And finally, the Democratic National Convention starts today.
And we're streaming the whole thing live each night this week on Crooked.com slash convention starting at 6 p.m. Pacific, 9 p.m. Eastern.
We'll be doing group threads to cover the big speeches with some of the hosts and staff here at Crooked. And on Thursday, we have a special live Pod Save America
pre-show where we'll have some fun, take some questions, and also host the world premiere
of the documentary short Dress Rehearsal. It's about the progressive organizers who pulled off
a stunning upset in this year's Wisconsin special election, even as Republicans did everything they could
to stop people from voting, just like now.
It's a deceptive title.
It is not about a ragtag group of high school kids putting on Brigadoon.
But it should have been.
But it should have been.
It should have been.
But it should have been.
You can find all the details at crooked.com slash convention.
We will see you tonight and every night this week.
All right, let's get to the news.
Last week, the president of the United States said that he opposes funding the U.S. Postal Service
because the money would go towards making sure people can vote by mail during a pandemic
where crowding inside a polling place could literally kill you.
In response to this and to increasing reports of mail delays and disruptions,
House Democrats announced on Sunday
that they'll be returning early
from their summer recess
to deal with this looming crisis,
which includes votes on legislation
and an emergency hearing
at which Postmaster General Louis DeJoy
will be called to testify.
And as of just now, he has agreed.
Tommy, we found out over the weekend that the Postal
Service sent letters to all but four states warning them that their current mail-in voting
deadlines may not allow enough time for the delivery and return of people's ballots. And so
those votes may not be counted. Can you walk us through some of the reasons the post office
may not be able to deliver these ballots? I would love nothing more, John. Thank you again to Donald Trump for making us
talk about the post office constantly.
It's all we want to do here.
I think the thing to know for people to know the background
is that the post office is in bad financial shape
and we can get into why in a minute,
but they need a big infusion of cash from Congress
and Republicans so far have refused to do so.
Trump also recently put a big donor named Louis DeJoy
in charge of the Postal Service.
That guy's mission seems to be to just gut the place, a bunch of management changes. So
specifically, DeJoy has limited overtime for postal workers. He's told them they can't take
extra trips to make sure that everything gets delivered on time. So things are just stacking
up in these offices. And in a very subtle move, they removed 671 mail sorting machines from
various facilities. He also reassigned some top executives in Washington. So that's the reason
for this more recent slowdown and the reason you're seeing all these warnings that ballots
might not arrive on time to be counted. And like just stepping back, this is a little silly if you
think about it, because if the post office can absorb the surge of mail around Christmas, they should be able to do like
one ballot from each of us.
But enough of that.
So these Republicans, they want to use this financial play at the post office is in as
an excuse to privatize the whole system.
They say, look, the post office, it's in one hundred and sixty billion dollars of debt.
It's a broken system.
It can't work.
What they don't tell you is it's their fault.
In 2006, Congress passed a law that requires the post office to pre-fund the cost of its staff's
health care benefits 75 years into the future. So that accounts for $120 billion of their $160
billion debt. On top of that, Congress sets their prices and metals in their operations. So it's
just a mess. So this all dovetails with the fact that Trump hates vote by mail. And he said on the record that if we don't give the post office this funding, you can't have universal vote by mail.
So Trump has married these two things, his hatred for the Postal Service, which is based on this inaccurate belief that somehow Amazon is fleecing them.
His hatred of democracy and vote by mail, Republican efforts to privatize the system.
He's jammed them all together into this megatron of voter suppression. And here we are. It's a toxic brew. Love it. The Wall Street
Journal editorial board wrote today that Democrats are culpable for spinning post office conspiracies
without evidence and that state election officials should just change their deadlines.
So you're seeing a lot of this now that like these are unfounded conspiracies that Trump is trying to sabotage the post office. Why is this? Why is this bullshit
here? So on that line of reasoning, it actually reminds me a little bit about of the pandemic.
Experts pointed out early on in the pandemic that if you do the right thing, if you sound the alarm
correctly and you achieve the goal you want, right, whether it's stopping
a pandemic or preserving democracy, in hindsight, what you did looks like overkill. Your warnings
look like they went too far. So it's like, okay, I'm glad that you're sanguine about it,
right-wing pundits. I know that you don't care what happens either way. But for those of us on
the outside watching this, it's a terrifying prospect that we'll discover on November 4th that we didn't do enough on November 2nd. Now onto the actual
facts of the matter. It is actually right now hard to separate three distinct problems. One,
it is Trump's effort through DeJoy to purposefully attempt to subvert and delegitimize the election.
Two, as Tommy points out, implementing
a long-term ideological plan to burden the post office, cost cut, and kind of undermine the basic
premise of a public good through this service, and promoting privatization, right? That's also
a long-term project. And then three, there is just generational failures to invest in institutions,
There is just generational failures to invest in institutions, systems, infrastructure across our society.
You know, one piece of news that came out over the past couple days is that some of
the mail sorting machine shutdowns may have at least been planned before DeJoy took over.
Now, does that tell you it should happen?
Of course not.
All that tells you is some of these problems,
some of these attempts to dismantle the post office
precede Trump and will follow Trump.
That doesn't mean we shouldn't fight to stop
and we have to attack each of these different problems.
The long-term agenda,
the short-term attempt at basically a coup,
and then the kind of generational failure
to invest in our public goods.
Yeah, like there's this debate,
is it Trump trying to delegitimize the election? Well, yes, because that's what he's saying,
right? Or is it the long running project of conservatives to completely delegitimize our
institutions by starving them of funding so that they can't deliver services? Also true.
Either way, the effects are the same right now, which is there is a risk that ballots
won't be counted in an election where ballots need to be sent through the mail to keep people
safe.
That is the effect.
So the intention, whether it's typical Republican bullshit or Donald Trump authoritarian bullshit,
the attention is almost beside the point at this point because the results are the same.
And I just make two other points about this.
One, you know, when the Pentagon spends a trillion dollars
on an airplane that can't fly in the rain,
no one says, ah, the Pentagon's operating at a loss.
And then two, the focus on the post office
and their desire to make sure that it's on the hook
for its pension and retirement liabilities,
the kind of scrutiny it is under.
None of that comes when it's time to bail out financial firms, when it comes to the
loan program, when it comes to a dozen other ways that we bail out corporations all the
time.
The onus is only on the post office because they hate the post office because it's a public
service and it is done by unions.
And that has been the agenda for a long time.
I will say the other very sinister effect of all this is it is, and I think this could be
Trump's intention here, is that it is freaking people out about whether their votes are going
to be counted. And so it is instilling a fear in a lot of voters that they maybe shouldn't even
use mail-in voting at all. And, you know, you're seeing this on Twitter too, like people are
sending around pictures of post office boxes locked up, freaking out about that. And,
like, it turns out that is a completely normal practice that they do to stop people from
stealing mail. And there's actually a mail slot in the back of those that you can put in mail,
right? Like, so, but it's understandable that people are getting freaked out because
Donald Trump is saying mail-in voting is fraud. And then there are actual disruptions of service that are happening because of what DeJoy has been doing at the post office.
And what this is doing is it is, you know, it is hurting people's faith that the mail will
actually work. And it's not just ballots that may get delayed here. The New York Times reports that
in rural Michigan, diabetes medicine that used to arrive in three days now takes almost two weeks.
NBC reports that military veterans are waiting weeks for life-saving medications from the VA. Americans generally love the post office. Tommy, do you think this could end up
backfiring on Trump and the Republicans? Yeah, I mean, look, I think it could. I think it's
going to take a lot of work because, you know, let's be honest, it's hard to drive
post office concerns to the front page of the newspaper. But I think the press needs to view
this as an attack on voting rights and democracy itself and report on it accordingly. And it drives
me insane that, you know, preventing black Americans from voting has been a core strategy
of the Republican Party for years in that, you know, the discourse around these questions are
still softened with these euphemisms and like bullshit spin about voter integrity. And we just
need to call it for what it is. I do think that Democrats need to do a lot more work
to sound the alarm about what's happening locally, right? So find a bunch of veterans and seniors in
your community who are waiting for medications, lift up their stories, find service members who
serve in your district who are overseas and are worried about their votes being counted.
This is actually another instance where the total lack of local news is really bad, right? Like normally the local paper would be highlighting
exactly this kind of stuff. People would be reading it. You'd be hearing about a veteran
not getting medication. Instead, we're waiting on these stories to get found and filter up
in national media outlets. And we're not hearing enough about what these slowdowns
view for these specific communities. So Democrats need to do all this work. We got to educate constituents about what's
happening, why, and that this is an urgent need. Because like the post office is a bedrock
government function, right? I think it was like the first real core thing that the government
did in some ways. Like there was a while that I think a quarter of federal workers were postal
workers. So it's a big deal to just kill it slowly and to try to do it in the six months before the first ever election in a pandemic.
That seems obviously purposeful to me.
A Pew poll from April showed that the post office has a 91 percent approval rating, 91 percent.
And you're right on me that Democrats should be doing more of this liberal firebrand.
Joe Manchin was doing what you were talking about over the weekend, going to a post office, making videos about how people's mails are getting delays.
So this is something like and, you know, there are reports that some Republicans, of course, they don't want to be named.
Our elected Republicans are also concerned about this, too, especially Republicans who represent rural areas.
Who is getting hurt by these post office delays when they don't get their medications?
Seniors, veterans, rural Americans, all constituents of the Republican Party right now.
And I did, you know, Politico's playbook over the weekend had a roundup of how this is breaking through in the local news, the local news that still exists, as you point out, because there's not enough of it anymore.
But it is like it is so important to sound the alarm because I think one of the most important things
we can get out of this is just awareness and education
so that, and we'll talk about this,
so that people can vote as early as possible to avoid this.
House Democrats are finally making moves.
They're coming back from recess early on Saturday
to vote on a piece of legislation
that would prohibit the Postal Service
from implementing any changes to operations or service that had already been in place at the beginning of 2020. And then there's the hearing
with DeJoy on August 24th. Lovett, what can this vote and DeJoy's testimony actually accomplish?
And like, how likely is it that Trump and Republicans will agree to fund the post office?
Yeah, I mean, I think, look, I think it's, I think it's good that they're getting on their
Canastoga wagons and having the horses slowly take them back to the nation's capital.
I think that that's terrific.
Obviously, it's a harrowing journey.
So I'm glad that they're making it.
It's good.
Yeah, look, every once in a while, Trump says something brazen, as he always does, and he's surprised to find out he shouldn't have. He's like, but I say the racist, demagogic, authoritarian part out loud all the time. Why
does this one bother you? And he doesn't really understand it. But he's like had to walk back a
little bit of his anti-male rhetoric because they want that to happen, but they don't want to take
credit for it. I believe like Meadows and the administration has signaled they'd be open to
a bill just about the post office. It seems like Republicans would be too. I mean,
like the thing about the mail is you don't have to pay attention to politics. It comes to your
house or it doesn't come to your house, right? It affects everybody. It affects people that don't
pay attention. And when an issue like this touches people that don't pay attention, it has some more
political power. But yeah, I'm like, I feel that, you feel that Democrats need to get DeJoy to testify,
pass a bill with a bunch of money that has a bunch of restrictions. So Trump can't hold up
the money. DeJoy can't not spend the money. They need to pass a bill that tries to see around the
corners to make sure that the money that Congress appropriates to the post office is spent to make sure that services continue through
November and into next year and any delays, any cost cutting measures, any efforts to relocate
mail sorting to central locations because it's more cost effective but takes longer.
Any of those things that DeJoy has been trying to implement should be should be paused in the law.
I feel pretty happy that he's going to testify. But Tommy,
it made me think, I have a little bit of an impeachment feeling, impeachment hearing feeling,
where it's like, at the end of the day, we can get him to testify. And I hope that it raises
public awareness. But I think we're in the same spot we were, where Democrats have the House,
we don't have the Senate, we don't have the presidency. All we can do here is really public
pressure and public awareness. Public pressure, public awareness. Like I would want
to get him on the record about why these mail delays are happening and then tell a story about
who is getting harmed. You can also talk about how this guy's an unqualified donor who has major,
major financial conflicts of interest because he has a huge financial stake in a competitor
to the post office. So that's going to piss people off. But then I think I would be specifically focused on Republicans who are up for reelection in rural places. So tell a story
about someone in Montana, because that is a top target. And we might be able to get Steve Daines
to fold. Tell a story about a constituent or a veteran in Maine, because Susan Collins is up and
she's floated the idea that she'd be willing to pass some sort of bill. Right. So I'm glad they're doing this. I also like that they're trying to counter program
the Republican convention to the extent that one can do that. So, look, I respect the hustle.
Good for them for doing this. Brian Boitler will be at least a little bit happy. Some good oversight.
It is good oversight. I do think and, you know, I'm going to talk with Elias about this in the interview, but I think ultimately the plan for us has to be figure out how to get around all of this shit and request ballots early, vote early, drop off ballots as opposed to setting them through the mail, massive public education campaign on the part of Democrats and anyone who cares about the mail and democracy and voting.
And what I think we have to avoid is to let Donald Trump win by making us think it's just
not worth it to vote or making people think it's not worth it to vote because it's going to be
rigged anyway, because that is the ultimate plan, right? Everyone's confused. He's thrown all this
bullshit at the wall and people say, I don't know if I should put my ballot in the mail. I don't
know if I should vote at all. It's probably not worth it. It's all rigged, you know?
And so I do think we have to get people to make a plan to vote despite whatever they may throw at us.
Yeah, I mean, it's worth remembering that Donald Trump delegitimizing the election so
that he can remain in office and Donald Trump delegitimizing the election so he can leave
while preserving his ego sound the same on Twitter.
All right, let's talk about the week ahead.
Today is the beginning of the very first all-virtual Democratic National Convention.
The event comes on the heels of Joe Biden's selection of Kamala Harris as his running mate, along with a number of polls that show the ticket beating Trump by an average of eight points and that most voters approve of Biden putting Harris on the ticket.
It's almost been a week since the big VP decision.
Haven't had you guys's reaction yet to the pick and how it's played so far.
Tommy, what do you think?
So, look, the rollout was excellent.
Kamala Harris's speech was excellent, right?
And when you unpack it, like the resume,
when you lay it all out is so impressive.
Her personal story as the daughter of immigrants,
I think resonated with tons of people,
especially first generation Americans.
And she delivered the hell out of it.
She's just an incredibly talented speaker.
And the other thing she does that I noticed
is that Obama was very good at responding to Republican attacks with a joke, with a smile,
with humor. It just takes the edge off the response. Harris is extremely good at this.
She has lines in that speech where she was just gutting Donald Trump, but she delivers it with
a smile. It lands well. It's very impressive. It's something, frankly, I'd like to see Biden
do a little bit more, use a little bit more humor when he's dealing with this stuff.
Look, you know, the knock on Harris's presidential campaign was, you know, that it didn't seem like it always had a clear message or direction.
And I think they would obviously admit that like dropping out before Iowa was not the goal.
That was not what success looks like. But navigating that huge, unruly Democratic primary
is very different than prosecuting the case against Trump. And she is an expert at prosecuting
a case. And we saw it already. So I was energized by it. I heard from a lot of people who said,
I'm surprised at how excited I am by this pick. It's wild that Biden raised $48 million in two
days after the speech. There's already some polling, 54% of Americans like the pick,
64% of Democrats are strongly approving of the pick.
And then, you know, like stepping back
because I'm being very tactical here,
like this is a historic pick for women,
African-Americans, Indian-Americans, Jamaicans.
It's also, you know, we're a party
where a lot of our leadership is pretty old
and Harris at 55 represents generational change.
And it's exciting.
And so I guess the last thing is there's probably listeners who wish someone else had got it
or they say, you know, I have a problem with Harris's record or policy positions.
And that is OK.
We are not here to tell you to get over it or like hold your nose.
I just think you need to remember that politicians are humans.
They change.
They evolve.
So, you know, make Harris and make Biden account for their records, but know that they are
not bound by them.
You can advocate and push them to change.
So it's gonna be really interesting to see what the campaign does, how they deploy her,
right?
Like they're going to do this joint interview on ABC.
She gives a major speech at the DNC.
Then there's the VP debate.
Those are the big moments, but it'll be interesting
to see how they use her in between because there's no stumping. Love it. However, now that we've,
it's been almost a week since the rollout, how do you think it's, how do you think it's gone?
And what's your reaction been? Look, I agree with everything that Tommy just said. I think
what was striking to me is I had come to know that Kamala Harris in key moments shines, right?
She, in that debate with Joe Biden, right, she sort of crushes.
And in hearings where she really needs to have a moment and step up,
she can make those moments really count and really go far.
And it was striking to me just how much that energy,
that capability was needed in this campaign.
We have four people running for president and
vice president. She is not just the best messenger in that group. She is the best messenger by a
mile. And just seeing Biden and Harris together, sitting at those two desks side by side,
getting briefings, seeing her go up and give a speech, it creates such a contrast with Trump and Pence. And she's just
so effective in those set pieces, in those made for TV moments. And I think that that, especially
given that there aren't crowds, I mean, she gave an announcement speech with no crowd and she did
it really, really well. And so the fact that she is so adept at that, so effective in those moments, I think is why
she is going to be really valuable in the big moments, but also in between.
So, Lovett, Trump quickly went from calling her nasty to embracing his birther roots and
saying that he heard she doesn't meet the requirements to run.
He just heard that, which I thought was interesting because then his campaign walked it back over the weekend in favor of the argument that Kamala is just too
liberal, like Jason Miller and some of the other ones. They said case closed for us on this.
And why do you think they don't see the birtherism as a winner this time around?
Well, look, let's see. I mean, they always play footsie with this stuff, right? They throw it out
there, then they get it out there into the ether, and then they walk it back. They've played that game
a few times. I don't know that they're walking it back means that they're not getting the mileage
out of it that they want. It's obviously absurd. It's ridiculous, obviously. I mean, she's born
as absurd. It's a lie. It's a racist. But see, the Obama birtherism was a conspiracy theory that everybody was in cahoots to pretend he was eligible.
The Kamala Harris conspiracy is actually just a kind of crackpot reading that nobody takes.
There's no actual missing information.
Everybody has the same set of facts.
It's the same set of facts that apply to six or so other American president, including Donald Trump's favorite, because somebody told him once in a
meeting that they were the same, Andrew Jackson. But I do think it speaks to the fact that like,
look, you know, John, congratulations, Donald Trump retweeted something that mentioned you.
I'm sure your mentions were just flowing. It was just a highlight of my whole fucking life.
Fun people. that was it yeah but i mean
look they you know she's she's an antifa general and also uh uh a uh corporate cop and they're
gonna just throw both of them at us for a long time well you can see it we talked about this
a couple episodes ago i think on the on the new ad strategy right which is to still call
joe biden liberal but they've sort of sanded
the edges off the exaggerations that he's like Antifa general. And now it's just like,
he raises taxes a lot and he's super liberal. And sort of the more traditional Republican
consultants around Trump right now, to the extent that there are some, really do want to just be,
they think they need to run this campaign and just say that Kamala Harris and Joe Biden is too liberal. And so when I said last week on the pod that Kamala Harris has,
in fact, embraced progressive policies in the Senate, she's for the Green New Deal.
She had, you know, she signed on to Bernie's Medicare for All bill. Somehow, like, they all
sent around my comments all week. It's like some big gotcha on Kamala Harris. It's like,
I'm sure she would admit that she is for those policies still. She's proudly for them. They're popular.
It's so annoying when Republicans like play act these these revelations and the media repeats
them. It's like, oh, no, we said facts out loud as if that sort of changes. You could Google this.
But like stepping back to the birtherism thing for a minute, like, first of all, I didn't know
I needed another reason to not read Newsweek because they wrote this big piece, this birtherism thing for a minute. Like, first of all, I didn't know I needed another reason to not read Newsweek because they wrote this big piece, this birther piece, but right on the heels
of their Jared Kushner puff piece about the pandemic response. So, you know, I look forward
to never seeing it in print again, I guess. I don't know. But like, I'm not convinced the
Republicans have abandoned birtherism, similar to what Lovett said, because, you know, the thing to
know about birtherism is that it is not and has never been about eligibility or the Constitution. It was a way to launder racist
attacks about Obama through the media, right? It allowed them to say Obama was other. He was
foreign. Fox News claimed he was educated in a madrasa, and that spilled out in so many different
ways, right? Marco Rubio, his spokesman said Obama was
intentionally trying to destroy America. And Rubio himself said Obama deliberately weakened America.
So it was just part of this otherness strategy. So I'm waiting for a version of this to come back
because Trump always gets back to these fissures around race and now around gender. I do hope that
the press has come a long way on this subject because in 2011 through 16, they were a disaster. Trump was repeatedly welcomed on mainstream news shows to spread this lie. He was on The Today Show, The View, ABC News, CNN. It was like a core part of his message that like they would cursorily fact check, but it really just spreaded this birther bullshit everywhere until Trump finally walked it back in the summer of 2016. And we were all supposed to act grateful for it. So,
you know, look, hopefully it'll be ineffective. Hopefully the press will shut it down.
I expect it to come back. Yeah, that is true and unfortunate. All right. Let's talk about what to
expect from the convention itself. There will be no big speeches and stages and crowds in Milwaukee.
Instead, The Washington Post reports that it will involve, quote, a behind-the-scenes crew of about 400 with operations centers in New York, Milwaukee, Los Angeles, and Wilmington, Delaware, with, quote, plans to broadcast to the nation hundreds of live video feeds from living rooms, national monuments, and stages around the country.
Homebound delegates will be dialed into quick feeds of the live speeches so their real-time actions can be broadcast to the country as if they were in the same room as the speakers.
Wow.
Here's the only thing.
Before we get to the analysis, they need to make a graphic of Joe Biden holding an electric
wire in his mouth like a dog that says, we'll be right back, technical difficulties, just
in case.
They just need something to throw just in case they just need
something to throw up in case one of these things they said i'm scared for them too so they
they said in that story love it that like um we have they're like you know not everything in fact
most things in the convention most pieces of the convention haven't been pre-recorded
and we haven't tested all this so like a lot of this is live and a lot of this,
we're just going to like see how it goes.
Exciting.
Any tech person, any tech person,
anyone involved in this logistics, the advanced people,
anyone involved in planning this, we're thinking of you.
We know how big this job is.
Oh my God, we're hoping for you.
We will not, do your best. Do your best,
junior people involved in putting this on. We're on your side. On your side.
So stepping back from that, I mean, the three of us have now been through four conventions,
right? Four, eight, 12, 16. We've each been to a couple in person. What do parties typically hope to get out of a convention week?
And what are some of the ways this year might be different?
Love it.
Well, yeah, I mean, you know, a big room filled with people celebrating the anointing of a nominee.
Look, it's been now a long time since a nomination was truly in doubt, right?
It's been a long time since we had a real floor fight.
I mean, you know, we had that moment in 2008 where Hillary Clinton called off the stop your counting, stop your counting.
It's Barack Obama's and everybody was very excited.
And, you know, you know, Linda Rothschild finally gave up her foolhardy effort.
That's a great deep cut.
Deep cut.
Rumors.
So it's really become kind of an opportunity to sort of craft a story about the race and building up to the nomination of the vice president and the nomination of the of the president on the ticket. And, you know, I would say it has been a place where you've seen like real rising stars kind
of emerge as the leaders of the party, like Barack Obama in 2008. It's also been places where people
really shit the bed. So it's a mix. But, you know, I do think the one big moment that has been deprived
of Joe Biden is this is an opportunity to be on the same stage as a president to have a big crowd
in a big arena talking about big things before the entire country. And the kind of scale has
been taken away. And I think that that matters more
for a challenger than it does for the incumbent, because Donald Trump has all the trappings of the
White House. But other than that, I think it's about figuring out how to tell that story in a
way that's compelling without the trappings of a big convention floor. Tommy, everyone's always
looking for a bounce, a bounce out of the convention. What makes it what makes this
year maybe a little trickier for the bounce? I mean, like these are such anachronistic events that maybe we won't have
conventions in the future. But I mean, look, you do two things, right? You want to fill in
everything you can about the biography of your of your nominee and your vice president in the
gauziest, most inspiring way possible. So there will be a beautifully produced video about Joe
Biden's life, his loss,
his time in the Senate, his time as VP, about Dr. Biden, their family. There'll be similar videos
about Kamala Harris. And then core parts of that story and that bio and those values will be
repeated in every major speech. So by the end of it, you can't help but understand who Joe Biden
is, right? Obama's 2004 convention speech, we remember it as this coming out party about him.
We remember red states and blue states. But in the middle of that speech, we remember it as this coming up party about him. We remember
red states and blue states. But in the middle of that speech, there was a tight, really compelling
argument for John Kerry and John Edwards and what they would do for the country. In 2012,
the DNC played this like seven minute like mini biopic about Obama's first term that was about
the financial crisis, the bin Laden operation. It was narrated by Biden, Michelle Obama, and Bill Clinton to contextualize and tell that story. Associated with that story is just going
to be an astained sassault on Donald Trump and his record, which is why tonight's agenda is three
crises, pandemic, economic downturn, and racial justice. And you'll hear that message from
politicians, but then also these stories from real people who have been impacted by the policies. Like, I think those could even be more impressive than the political the politician speeches. So this is weird. It's all digital. It's all remote. I suspect we'll see all kinds of calls to action for like digital organizing events or fundraising.
um but stephanie cutter was quoted saying this year's convention is 16 hours shorter than a typical convention so in some ways maybe that will make all the like cable booking and spin
and conversations around the convention even more important i don't know we'll see
you're welcome america yeah no kidding 16 hours shorter so no mean, campaigns spend hundreds of millions of dollars on advertising.
These conventions are free infomercials.
They, you know, from 9 to 11 at night, usually they're longer than that.
The cable networks will probably take them. The networks, the broadcast networks will only take them from 10 to 11 each night.
So you get one hour.
So the only people that, so the question about these
conventions is like, who are they for? Right. They are not for us. Like if you are voting for Joe
Biden, if you are voting for Donald Trump already, this convention is not really for you. We're going
to watch it. We're hopefully going to be entertained by it. We're going to be talking about it a lot.
To the extent, Tommy, that you just mentioned, they can be an organizing tool. They are, you know, they are for people who are already made up their minds because hopefully, you know, even if you're voting for Joe Biden, if there's a call to organize or get friends to register to vote at these conventions, you go do that.
So I fully believe they should be an organizing tool. hoping for is that in the 10 o'clock hour, when people tune in on broadcast television who are not
like political news junkies, like the people who watch cable news, there's basically two types of
voters. There's swing voters who haven't decided who they're voting for yet, Trump or Biden.
And then there's people who haven't decided if they're going to vote at all, who tend to be
younger, who tend to be people of color, who tend to be more cynical about the process. And I think from the Democrats' perspective, we both need to reach voters who are swing voters
who are going between Biden and Trump. And we especially need to reach voters who may not vote
at all because they are tired of the system and very cynical. And so those, I think, are the two
audiences to have in mind as we see all this, because a lot of it is not for partisans.
For me, like that's how I'm going to watch each of these conventions. I think it's gonna be
different. I think for the Democratic convention is something, John, we talked about in our
YouTube video that Joe Biden has to both, you know, reassure people who are who are looking
for normalcy and reach people for whom normal was a crisis for a very long time.
And I think the big challenge for that, this convention is how you kind of tell that story.
And then on the Republican side, you know, Pence gave a speech, I think like over the
weekend or the last couple of days.
And he, apropos of nothing, he's like, hey, and by the way, Kamala Harris and Joe Biden,
they're going to take away your red meat.
They're coming to your house and they're going to take your burgers out of your house. That was crazy.
And it's, and it is crazy. You know, the, you know, when Sean Hannity asked Trump,
like, what's your second term agenda? And he just like, didn't have an answer. You know,
it used to be that on the Republican side, the kind of the right wing populism was the icing
on a kind of like corporate country club Republican cake,
right? Like Paul Ryan's agenda, never going to be popular. So they do all this other,
all this other stuff, you know, from Reagan to Bush to Trump, they're all doing it to kind of
like stir up their base and stir up the grievances to get out the vote so they can kind of push
through the program, the cake. And with Trump right now and Pence, like it's just the icing.
It's just the fear mongering. It's just the grievance. There's no actual program. And so
I think that like what I'm going to be watching is are they going to have a program? Are they
going to have a positive case for a second term? So tonight's primetime lineup is Monday,
former Republican Governor John Kasich, Senator Bernie Sanders and former First Lady Michelle
Obama.
What a crew. What a crew.
I will say that in the 10 to 11 hour, I think it's only Bernie and Michelle, but Kasich somewhere in the primetime.
Tommy, what do you think was the strategy behind that lineup?
And do you think the big tent is too big there?
I mean, look, am I a big Kasich fan?
No. He's sort of well known.
You've said that for years. He's like kind of well known for being an asshole. And his politics are obviously way more conservative than
mine. But look, he did a pretty good job in 2016 of rebranding himself as this sort of softer
alternative to Trump. And I think a lot of people came away from that cycle liking him. And I think
the goal this year is not to say Kasich is a Democrat. It's to say this is
a year unlike any other. Joe Biden's candidacy is a place you can go if you're a Democratic socialist,
a moderate or a Republican who just can't stomach Trump for a variety of reasons.
And like if we can reach and turn out all of those people, that is a very effective message.
That's a lot of the country. And so, you know, are Kasich and other former
GOP electeds the best way to sell it? Maybe. Like, they'll get attention because they have name ID,
they have profiles. And any time someone from the other party speaks at a convention and makes news,
we all recall in 2004 when a Georgia Democrat named Zell Miller made a fool out of himself
at the convention, in part because he challenged Chris Matthews to a duel, which was
weird. But before that, you know, he gave this speech just destroying John Kerry and it was
treated as big news. And so people, I think, you know, Stephanie Cutter and the folks running this
convention are hoping to get the same treatment. I think longer term, you know, the videos you see
coming from Republican voters against Trump are more effective. Like average people voted for
Trump, maybe largely voted Republican
in their lives, explaining why this time they just can't. And I think those messengers are
really powerful. And I think you'll see those types of people in tape pieces and speeches from
just sort of average citizens. And that might be more effective. But, you know, the big names are
getting the attention right now. Love it. There's been some consternation that AOC only
has a minute to speak on Tuesday night, whereas Kasich, I guess, is going to get five tonight.
Most of the speeches are very short. I think some of the keynotes are like 10 to 15
or the final primetime ones. What do you think about this whole whole debate?
Yeah, I think AOC should have had more time. I think it's less important to make the comparison
and more to attack this question as to whether someone like John Kasich should speak at the convention.
I think one point that the activists on the left have made for a long time is Democrats have been
too focused on symbols and not enough on actual substance, too much on performance and not
enough about the undergirding policies. In this case, John Kasich speaking at the Democratic Convention is a symbol.
A symbol of what?
Well, I think it's, for the most part,
a symbol about how uniquely dangerous Trump is.
If it was also a symbol that Joe Biden
is moderating his policy views,
shifting toward the center to get at the kind of people
that agree with John Kasich,
I would have a bigger problem with that.
But I think what we are seeing
is that sort of two things can be true. One is that progressives and the left have successfully pulled the
Democratic Party, and as a result, their consensus pick, Joe Biden, to the left. His policies have
shifted to the left. He has embraced the Green New Deal. He has embraced a host of democratic
reforms, economic policies that bring him to the left of Hillary Clinton in 2016, and certainly to the left of Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012. At the same time, they're trying to
build a case that Trump is a unique danger. And again, what I said before, I think applies, right?
He is trying to tell a story about going back to normal while also telling a story about how normal
was horrible for a lot of people. I think you can do that and have John Kasich and Bernie Sanders speak
on the same night. So I don't have a problem with it. Yeah. I mean, look, if it were up to me,
I love hearing AOC speak. I take AOC every night of the convention, right? She's a fantastic speaker.
I think she's a rising star in the party. Like, yeah, again, this is not for me, right?
And I also, by the way, think that AOC could do more in a minute than
most of the speakers this week will be able to do in 20 minutes. That's who she is.
As for John Kasich, John Kasich, as many people have pointed out, is anti-choice. And he has a
whole bunch of other pretty conservative Republicans' positions, but especially anti-choice.
We're not being asked to vote for John Kasich or for John Kasich to
implement any of his policies. In fact, the opposite is true. John Kasich is saying,
I am anti-choice, but I am going to, in this election, vote for a ticket that is pro-choice,
that is probably going to install Supreme Court judges that protect the rights to choose
and pass laws that protect the right to choose for the next four years and possibly justices
for a generation. And I'm going to do that even though I don't agree with it because Donald Trump is so
fucking dangerous. So all you other Republicans who might feel strongly about certain positions
like choice and stuff like that, I'm telling you, put that aside because our democracy is in danger
because Donald Trump is president right now. So let's vote for Joe Biden. And will that be
effective? Who the fuck knows?
Is it worth a try?
Yeah, probably.
It probably is.
Because again, we need two types of voters.
We need people who voted for Trump and are now going to vote for Joe Biden, who voted Republican in the past, are now going to vote Democrat.
And we need people who feel that the system isn't working for them and they might not even vote.
And those are the people that Bernie Sanders and AOC can sometimes reach. And if we didn't have Bernie Sanders and AOC,
then shame on us because we wouldn't reach those people. And if we don't have the John Kasichs of
the world trying to reach the other swing voters, then shame on us there too. You got to do both.
I just think on the AOC thing, like when people first started talking about her when she won the
primary, I thought this must be a little bit overhyped just because it was so effusive,
the praise. And then I saw her speak at this Bernie rally in Iowa and I got it right.
And it was because she told a story about needing to get a blood test and she couldn't afford it.
And then she had to go to a free clinic and wait hours and hours to get the test that way.
This happened when she was running for Congress.
Right. If you watch the Netflix documentary about her campaign to bring down the house,
you see her scooping ice when she's working at a bar. Like, I've had that job. You've had that job. Billions of people have had that job. So you see her and you think, okay, she gets
my value. She gets working people. They need to make sure that they are programming enough speakers
that are talking about the working class, that are talking, forging that connection. Totally agree with that. With voters, right?
And so what's specific to AOC, like on top of that really, truly authentic connection,
she's just an unbelievably talented speaker, right?
Ted Yoho learned that the hard way.
So it doesn't make a lot of sense to give her one minute.
I don't think we need to talk about it like Twitter has in terms of the zero-sum choice
between AOC and Kasich, because I could make an argument for both
of them. And I could make an argument for a lot of kind of milquetoast, boring Democrats not speaking.
And then you give those minutes back to AOC. But these tend to be political decisions that go
through lots of annoying screens that probably don't lead to the best product always. But check
all the right boxes. To that point, Tommy, like the speakers I'm looking forward to are,
they announced that the keynote address is instead of one person, it's going to be 17 people. It's
going to be Stacey Abrams and 16 sort of up and coming Democrats, very young, progressive,
diverse Democratic electeds. Some people who just ran for office the first time a couple years ago and I do think
you're absolutely right that showcasing Democrats who can say I was just like you like last year I
was I was a a working class person I had never thought about politics before I was disenchanted
with politics myself and I decided to run for the first time because I was disenchanted with
politics and do something about it.
That's AOC's story.
That's like Jamal Bowman's story, right?
Like showcasing these politicians, I think, is actually very useful, more useful than a lot of sort of the older politicians that have been around for a long time.
Can I ask you guys, how do you make a 17-person keynote?
How does that work?
Yeah, I do not know how this is going to work, I do not know how this is going to work.
I do not know how it's going to work.
You put up four soprano, four alto, four baritone,
five bass maybe.
I don't know, bass, bass, bass.
My other question for you guys is,
what does an applause line look like
at an all remote, all Zoom convention
where there's no one?
Do you have your family applauded for you?
Do you hopefully skip them? There's going to be some cl some clunkers look we all know a lot of the speech writers who are
working on these speeches and um many of them are friends many of them are fucking fantastic
the best there is so i have faith that they will not be writing out like i don't think you write
out applause lines i think you write speeches without applause lines.
I mean, reading that Washington Post story was kind of confusing because they said that there would be real-time reaction from some people who are getting the speeches beamed live into their homes. So maybe you'll be able to hear some applause.
But if I was the writer or the speaker working on the speech, I would not be counting on any applause.
But if I was the writer or the speaker working on the speech, I would not be counting on any applause. So I would be writing a speech that is very conversational, almost like you're doing a direct to camera kind of thing and not that you're trying to go for the typical applause, which won't give it the power of a typical convention speech at all.
But I think is better than landing some fucking clunker that someone thought was a good applause line.
And and then no one does anything.
Yeah, I also I I've been thinking about this too. I think not all applause lines are created equal. And
there are kind of jokey speech applause lines that are either snarky or cutesy that will not work,
will just crumble, just terrible. But I still think that there is power in the fury of this
moment. And if there is one advantage to the fact that there are no audiences right now, is
it lends like a real seriousness to this moment.
It really highlights how sad and broken a time it is.
And that creates an opportunity, I think, for like in a speech, they would get applause.
They're not applause lines.
an opportunity, I think, for like, in a speech, they would get applause. They're not applause lines. They are people speaking from places of emotional, personal fury. And I think if they
can bring that home, if they can do that, be really personal in their sort of righteous anger
and sadness, like they would get applause. If there were applause, there isn't, but it'll still
work. That's maybe too specific, but. No, but like, I think about Ann Richards, right? Talking
about how poor
George Bush, he was born with a silver foot in his mouth. Imagine delivering that to Zoom in
your living room. It's one of the most famous DNC quotes of all time. How does it work? I don't know.
Sarah Palin, hockey mom, lipstick, dead silence. Or even Obama's 2004 convention speech. Like the first time he practiced it,
it was bad because he didn't figure out
how to ride the applause
and sort of like keep it going in the right moments.
And then it was exceptional
because you could feel the momentum swelling underneath it,
even if he couldn't even hear himself delivering it, right?
Like what does that speech become this year?
Well, but I was just going to say, Tommy,
that speech to me is an example of
what Lovett was talking about, which is the difference between sort of the classic applause
line that you write that can be cheap and funny versus an applause line that you get because you
built to it. And what was so brave about his writing of the beginning of that speech is you
didn't get applause. You didn't land in a place that you got applause until he
got through the whole bio, his whole bio at the beginning of that speech. And then it finally
lands on this big applause line, which now seems normal at the time. But at the time, that wasn't
normal at all. You immediately start a convention speech, like big applause, like I'm John Kerry
reporting for duty, right? You get applause line, applause line, applause line. Barack Obama just told this story about his life, and then he lands there.
So it's a harder thing to do.
And it's just like the last point.
That to me, it speaks to like, okay, we're talking about the process.
There's no audience.
Two hours.
It's going to be K6.
It's going to be AOC.
Like, anybody involved in this, everybody involved in this does also need to step back
and just sort of appreciate the scale of the
moment. Just like take a moment and remember how serious this crisis is, how broken our society is
right now, how much pain there is out there. And if that motivates what people say, I think the
logistics, all of that melt away. Yeah, that's a good point.
Well, we will be on group thread making fun of the chill plus lines i mean look i may have written
some not not how everybody still throwing out how everyone envisioned covering this uh this this
convention a year ago but you know i guess there's snacks in my house it's easy to get to the
bathroom i saw our vote save america team sent out that email this morning to get everyone ready
for the convention and they wrote in the, when we started planning the convention, one of
the notes taken was party bus Milwaukee, question mark. That was our initial plan.
Listen, a couple hours from now, I should be getting my classic late night in room Caesar
salad. That's like all I, you know, you land, you order the Caesar.
It doesn't matter where you are taken.
I didn't get to go to the convention in 2008 because someone who I won't name, name rhymes
with Rand Pfeiffer wouldn't let me go because they wanted some rapid response team at the
office.
But in 2004, I got to go and I was a last minute addition.
Like Gibbs was like, hey, you want to go? And I figured it all out. I ended up sitting next to
this guy who was so friendly, so engaging, was asking me about myself the entire time,
why I was going there. And at the very end, after blabbing at this dude for two hours from Chicago
to Boston, I was like, I'm sorry, why are you going to the convention? He's like, oh, my dad
is speaking. It was Hunter Biden. He was just like, couldn't have been nicer.
Just listened to me bullshit the whole time.
This overexcited 23-year-old, whatever.
Super nice guy.
That's funny.
I was at 2004 also, Tommy.
But I was on a documentary crew carrying a boom mic behind Amy Goodman.
And so I, who does Democracy Now!
But I was not working for Democracy Now! I was doing
a documentary about Democracy Now! But it ended up with me chasing Madeleine Albright with a boom
mic trying to get her on the record for war crimes. I don't know if I got her.
I almost couldn't get in to see, I think it was Edwards or Carrie's speech because they start like closing off all the doors.
So I'm with a friend of mine.
We're like sprinting around, like trying to find an entrance that's still open.
And I see a bunch of people going through this one, you know, area to get to the loge, to get down to the floor, whatever the hell it was.
And I finally run up to it and they're like, are you with them?
And I'm like, yes, I'm with them.
And I need him and her.
And we get up and we realize somehow we just talked our way into being
with the road crew for the Black Eyed Peas.
And then we just escaped from there and went to the floor and watched.
Very fun.
Well, tonight we'll all be on our couches.
Do you remember?
I'm not done.
Do you remember trading badges to get further and further in?
Yes.
Yes.
You get the yellow badge to the blue badge the purple badge i
finally got the right badge so that i could see obama in 04 there you go all right guys well
the moment the moment pandemic the moment um well i'm looking forward to it it should be uh it should
be interesting to see uh how they're going to pull this one off uh when we come back i will be talking to democratic election attorney
mark elias
i am now joined by attorney mark elias the leader of the group Democracy Docket.
Mark, thanks for joining.
Thanks for having me.
Between Trump and the post office and Republican officials all over the country,
there's a lot of election shenanigans going on, to put it mildly,
sometimes too many to keep track of.
What are you most worried about, which is how I know what we should be most worried about. So I'm most worried that we are going to have a situation in the fall where people are not going
to be able to vote easily. So I'm worried about poll consolidation and poll closing that will
lead to long lines and confusion. And that's not something people are talking a lot about,
but I think we're going to hear more about that. Remember in the primaries, we saw long lines everywhere as we saw COVID
preventing polls from being open. And then I'm worried about the postal service and the problems
that we're seeing in the delays in absentee ballot applications going out, in absentee ballots
typically going out, and absentee ballots coming back.
So let's start with the poll closings first then. What is sort of your strategy,
legal strategy in regards to handling that? Yeah. So, you know, a lot of attention has been focused on the litigation that I and the Democracy Docket are sponsoring around vote by mail. And we
have litigation in 17 states trying to make sure that there's adequate vote by mail. But at the
same time that's been going on, we're also litigating around in-person voting opportunities
as well. We're suing Georgia over long lines to prevent that from happening again. We're suing North Carolina to ensure that there is more adequate in-person voting.
So we've been attentive to this, but I expect that the Republican shenanigans, as you say,
will creep up, as we've seen them even when the sun is shining and skies are blue and everyone's
healthy in past years. Yeah. So your legal strategy is focused on what you've called the four pillars to safeguard vote
by mail. What are those four pillars? So the four pillars are, number one,
that the state should pay postage so that voters don't have to. It turns out that requiring voters
to pay postage has a really negative impact on return rates, particularly among young voters and voters of color.
Number two is ensuring that all ballots that are postmarked by Election Day count, even if they're received a few days afterwards.
You know, one of the ways to combat a slow post office is to simply abide by the same rule that most people experience in their daily lives,
which is if something is due on Election Day, as long as it's postmarked by election day, it counts. And even if it comes in a day or two later,
it still gets counted. And a number of the states require ballots to be received by election day,
and that really disenfranchises lots of voters. And it allows for the kinds of
politicization of the postal service that we see the Trump administration involved in.
The third is to make sure that signature matching laws. These are the laws that of politicization of the postal service that we see the Trump administration involved in.
The third is to make sure that signature matching laws. These are the laws that when absentee ballots come in, they compare the signature on the envelope with the signature on
file, making sure that those signature matching laws are applied in a uniform and fair manner,
so that we don't have a circumstance in which black and brown voters and young voters face higher rates of rejections than older voters
and white voters. And also that anyone whose ballot is rejected has an opportunity to be
notified and contested and say, hey, that was my signature, or to cure it and prove that it was
their signature. And then the last one is to allow third party groups, community organizations to
collect and deliver voted sealed ballots. We know that in many parts ofparty groups, community organizations, to collect and deliver voted
sealed ballots. We know that in many parts of the country, for example, on Native American
reservations, there is not regular mail service. So the ability of groups to collect voted sealed
ballots and drive them to the local post office or drive them to the county election office is critically important.
So are you currently in legal battles to sort of make sure that all four of those pillars are
upheld? Can you like sue to make sure that states pay for postage for, or do these have to be sort
of legislative strategies as well? No, we believe that there is a constitutional right to each of those four, which is why we identified them. And it's why we are right now suing in, you know, we've sued in
17 states for four pillars cases. There's actually a section on the Democracy Docket website, if you
want to see it, that's entitled Four Pillars Litigation, and they can see what the four
pillars are. They can also look at their own state and see in their state how many of the pillars their state meets.
But we are litigating
in all of the battleground states right now
to ensure that all four pillars are met.
Can you talk about some of the recent wins
you've had lately?
Yeah, so we've had a number of important wins.
So just on Thursday of last week,
Pennsylvania agreed,
litigated against us on the election day cutoff, moving from a received by to a postmarked by deadline.
On Thursday, I was thrilled to see that the state reversed course and has now agreed with us on the postmarked by. This follows Pennsylvania a few weeks earlier agreeing to do prepaid postage,
so that's victory for voters in Pennsylvania. In Minnesota, we were able to sue successfully to
allow third-party ballot collection to strike down their state's witness requirement for November,
which is another barrier that voters face for absentee voting. They also,
as part of that lawsuit, we achieved a postmarked by rather than a received by deadline. So that
was a win for voters in Minnesota. We won a case in Montana on ballot collection,
because it's very, very important in a rural state like Montana. You know, South Carolina,
we sued and they've agreed to prepaid postage. So. You know, South Carolina, we sued and
they've agreed to prepaid postage. So, you know, it's mix and match throughout the battleground
states, but we've been doing okay. Do you have any lawsuits that are directly related to
some of the steps the post office has taken to disrupt service, slow down service?
So we don't have any lawsuits against
the Postal Service or the Trump administration around the Postal Service. And, you know,
there will undoubtedly be others who bring those kinds of lawsuits. I stick to the voting rights
arena. And what I'd say is that for my part, and it doesn't mean it's the only part, but for my part,
you know, we are bringing cases that are going to help ameliorate that.
For example, if you had a rule that said that a ballot postmarked by election day is going
to count, then the fact that the postal service is delivering mail slower really doesn't affect
whether that vote counts, right?
It may delay the results, but it's not going to disenfranchise the voter.
It may delay the results, but it's not going to disenfranchise the voter.
If you prioritize requiring states to do prepaid postage, you actually get people to vote their ballots earlier because they don't sit on their ballots while they go figure out where to get postage.
And obviously, allowing third-party ballot collection is a way that voters can get their ballots in without having to go through the mail necessarily. What can people do to make sure that they can cast
their ballots safely without having to rely on the U.S. Postal Service? Yeah, so I recently posted
an article on Democracy Docket that listed four things that people can do if they want to vote
without the Postal Service. And let me first say that there is some good information about this going around, and there is some bad information
about this going around. The bad information is the information that suggests there is a one-size-fits-all
solution. Different states are going to have different laws that are going to allow some of
these or others of these. So, for example, as you know, John, from your background and our work together,
early in-person voting, right? So like, you know, everyone who is in a state that has early in-person,
no lines, you know, lots of days, take advantage of it.
And that's like 41 states at this point, right? Early in-person voting?
Yeah. So like early in-person voting is like a super convenient way to vote that doesn't require
the postal service.
The second is many states have drop boxes, you know, where the counties put out these
steel boxes that allow people to put their ballot in.
And those don't go through the postal service.
They get directly picked up by the state. As I mentioned, in some states,
there are community organizations that will come pick up your ballot and hand deliver it,
that will do ballot collection. And that's a solution around this. And in some states,
you can go directly to the county or the polling site and hand in your absentee ballot.
Again, not every state has all four of those.
Some states have one.
Some states have three.
It's important to check your state.
If you look at the article we posted, it actually has links for each of those for you to confirm for your state what's allowed.
each of those for you to confirm for your state what's allowed. What's the competitive swing state that you're most worried about in terms of not having enough of those options for voters?
So it depends on how you define it. I would point you to two. North Carolina
is probably the state that I am most concerned about because it has fairly restrictive vote-by-mail rules.
And as you know, there is a very, very high reliance on early in-person voting,
particularly among African Americans. So if you ask, where do I worry about the rules?
I worry about North Carolina because we need to make sure that people are not being disenfranchised
in the vote-by-mail process and that there is adequate in-person voting, which is part of why we are suing for
more in-person early voting. And we are also suing on the four pillars. If you look at the
traditional, or not traditional, but if you look at the Pennsylvania, Wisconsin,
the, the traditional or not traditional, but if you look at the Pennsylvania, Wisconsin,
Michigan frame, you know, I'd say that Michigan is probably where I'm focused. Most of my attention,
Pennsylvania has made some strides on, on, on things as, as a result of our lawsuit.
Wisconsin's being heavily litigated. But the other thing about Pennsylvania is that the Trump campaign is suing Pennsylvania to ban drop boxes, which is like, actually, if you think about it for a second, it's kind of incredible.
Like, who would be against drop boxes?
Well, I tell you, the Trump campaign.
Well, I was going to ask you next.
I mean, Trump this morning, as you saw, I'm sure, tweeted about ballot boxes, about drop boxes.
How do we ensure that there are more ballot drop boxes? Is this a state by state legal fight?
Yeah. So it's, you know, again, on the things that you didn't have on your Trump crazy bingo card at the beginning of the year, you know, attacking the Postal Service would have been one, but
certainly going hard negative on drop boxes would not have been something that you would have singled out as something the president of the United States would engage in.
Unbelievable.
Mark, you've won so many of these lawsuits already.
I think people, not enough people know how hard you guys work and how and how successful you are.
What can people do to support your legal work and everything else you're doing to fight voter suppression in the upcoming election?
Yeah, so a few things. First of all, if you go to our website, democracydocket.com,
you can sign up and be kept informed on what we're doing. There are links to donate to
501c4, the Democracy Docket Action Fund, that supports some of our litigation.
5151C4, the Democracy Docket Action Fund that supports some of our litigation.
And hopefully you can get some really good information as well by being there.
But beyond that, particularly on the Postal Service, as you know, John, the Postal Service is quite popular throughout this country.
It's popular in red states and blue states, popular in red districts and blue districts.
In fact, it may be more popular in the redder areas and the bluer areas.
in red districts and blue districts. In fact, it may be more popular in the redder areas and the bluer areas. So this is one of those places where really calling your member of Congress,
calling your senator may make a real difference. You know, sometimes we're jaded about that
because you figure, okay, well, you're not going to move a Republican to oppose the Trump
administration. Boy, the Postal Service is more popular than Donald Trump.
The Postal Service is a lifeline for veterans getting medicine.
And so I'd urge people to call their member of Congress and make sure that they stand up for the Postal Service.
Mark Elias with Democracy Docket.
Thank you for joining us and keep up the good fight out there.
Thanks a lot, John.
Thanks to Mark for joining us
today, and
we'll see you tonight on Group Thread.
We'll see you
Thursday for another pod, Friday
for another pod, Thursday night for our
pre-show. We'll be seeing you a lot this week, guys.
True. Bye.
Pod Save America is a Cricket True. Bye. Bye. Katie Long, Roman Papadimitriou, Caroline Reston, and Elisa Gutierrez for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Nar Melkonian, Yael Freed, and Milo Kim,
who film and upload these episodes as videos every week.