Pod Save America - The "Let Trump Be Trump" Strategy
Episode Date: August 14, 2024Jon and guest host David Axelrod discuss Donald Trump's struggles to define Kamala Harris, his rambling interview with Elon Musk, and why the Trump campaign keeps letting their candidate run his mouth... so much. Then, they look at Trump and Harris's competing economic messages, how Tim Walz is faring out on the trail, and what the Harris team needs to accomplish at next week's Democratic National Convention. 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 and hosting with me today, my friend, mentor,
the man I miss working with every day,
the brilliant David Axelrod is here.
Oh brother, good to see you.
I guess the stars are on vacation
and left you to man the ship here, huh?
Those boys are off doing something.
They're doing something.
I got all three PSAs this week.
So on today's show, we're gonna talk about Kamala Harris's plans to define her PSAs this week. So on today's show, we're going to talk about
Kamala Harris's plans to define her economic agenda
this week, Tim Walz stepping out on his own
with a big union speech.
We're also less than a week away from the
Democratic National Convention.
So we'll talk about the opportunity there for the
Harris team and what we're hoping to hear.
But first, uh, Donald Trump just keeps reaching
voters where they are with his hallmark message
discipline,
which is why I guess he appeared on a glitchy Twitter Spaces feed with red-pilled billionaire
Elon Musk that took about 40 minutes to get started because of all the tech issues.
Once they finally got going, it was two hours of this.
Our country is becoming a very dangerous place and she is a radical left, San Francisco liberal,
and now she's trying to protect.
Now she's looking like she's,
she wants to be more Trump than Trump, if that's possible.
I don't think it's possible.
If she's gonna be our president, very quickly,
you're not gonna have a country anymore.
And she'll go back to all of the things
that she believes in.
But she's getting a free ride.
I saw a picture of her on Time magazine today.
She looks like the most beautiful actress ever to live.
It was a drawing.
And actually, she looked very much like our great first lady, Melania.
She didn't look like Camilla, that's right, but of course she's a beautiful woman,
so we'll leave it at that, right?
Now, Biden's close to vegetable stage, in my opinion.
I looked at him today on the beach,
and I said, why would anybody allow him?
The guy could barely walk.
Well, you, you're the greatest cutter.
I mean, I look at what you do.
You walk in there, you just say, you want to quit?
They go on strike.
I won't mention the name of the company,
but they go on strike and you say,
that's okay, you're all gone.
Axe, did you catch any of what the Trump campaign billed
as the interview of the century?
Yeah, well, it felt like it took a century, I'll say that.
In fact, the 40 minute delay was sort of a metaphor
for where their campaign has been
since Kamala Harris became the candidate because they can't get started. And it's just him out there
really grieving the fact that this race that he thought he had won is now competitive and he
doesn't quite know how to handle her, how to deal with her as a candidate, and you can see him just throwing stuff against
the wall, which is how, by the way, he approaches his speeches. One of the notable things at the
Republican convention was they all said, well, this near-death experience of the assassination
attempt has changed him. He's a changed man and he's ripped up his speech.
And he really wants to talk about unity in this speech.
Well, he talked about unity for about seven minutes.
Wasn't going over well with the crowd at the convention.
So he threw it out and just went back to his rip snorting,
you know, divisive, you know, stand up shtick.
That's what he says. And he's been there ever since. He has. He has. divisive, stand-up shtick.
That's what he does. And he's been there ever since.
He's been there ever since.
He has, he has.
And really, I mean, we could talk a little bit
about the sort of strategic or lack of strategic wisdom
of that, but yeah, the interview was a disaster.
And then my favorite part was Elon Musk trying to break in,
thinking how am I gonna dragoon this guy away from the mic
for a second here?
Yeah, it's two small egos.
So it does seem like the, you know, some of the news
out of that interview was he handed Democrats
a bit of a win by praising Elon for firing workers
who want to unionize.
Yeah, UAW filed a complaint with the labor department
after that for intimidation.
Yep, and then the Teamsters, who the president spoke
at the Republican National Convention,
put out a statement calling it economic terrorism.
You think that's the message
the Trump campaign was going for?
No, you know, honestly,
it does raise a serious question, or should should in the minds of union workers around the
country. The fact that Trump so admires union busting tactics should really tell them something.
And I think it'd be harder for any labor leader with a straight face to go and talk to the members and say, you know,
this is our guy after something like that.
So, you know, I'm sure Musk was very excited to be, to be lionized in that way.
That probably he felt, well, this really helps me.
But no, listen, Donald Trump is out of control right now.
I think he is rattled.
He feels like he could lose this race.
And remember losing this race for him
carries a much greater risk
than it would for the normal candidate
because he still has these legal issues to face,
including one conviction with sentencing still awaiting.
So, you know, I think that he is completely
out of sync and out of sorts,
and that's redounded frankly to Kamala Harris' benefit.
Well, let's talk about the Trump strategy,
because I noticed this morning
just before we started recording
that Trump is scheduling another press conference
for Thursday outside of, at Bedminster, at his country club in New Jersey.
So it sort of feels like they're going with a,
a let Trump be Trump strategy,
or like a more Trump is better strategy.
Do you think that's smart?
No.
And I wonder how much that is their strategy
and how much that it's his strategy, you know,
because Trump believes that he is the best ball carrier.
And his idea is, give me, just call my number on every play
and we'll get to the end zone.
And he keeps going backwards
and he keeps getting tackled behind the line of scrimmage.
And yet he wants to get up and call the same play again.
No, it doesn't make any sense.
You know, look, if you were over there, if you were
saying, well, what would be a sensible strategy? What you'd try and do is make her the incumbent.
You try and link her to, you know, Biden's economic policies and, you know, all the things that,
you know, certainly the border, which they're trying to do. But what's happened and what they've
allowed to happen is she has become
the turn the page candidate in this race.
She is the vice president of the United States and yet she is the turn the page candidate
in this race.
She has changed.
He is the embattled incumbent and that is a huge, huge strategic problem for them.
I suspect because they've been a very competent campaign,
leaving him aside, that Chris LaSavita and Susie Wiles
and some of the sort of rational professionals around him
recognize this, but I wonder how much control
they have over Trump right now.
Doesn't sound like much.
I mean, like I think that they're,
if you look at their ads, you know,
they're sort of settling on a message
that she's the San Francisco liberal
trying to tie her to the Biden administration
on inflation and the border.
But you can't just run a campaign based on television ads.
You need a candidate to deliver the message too.
I think people miss this, that, you know,
especially at this phase in a campaign
where these candidates are covered wall to wall,
that the candidate has to be in concert with the paid media message because people are going to
default to what they see that's unscripted. So when he's out there and he's talking,
that is the thing that's going to be the signal to people as to what the campaign is about.
And so even if you thought that the spots that they're running, I have a couple of some thoughts on that,
that the spots that they're running are exactly the right spots.
If he's doing something completely different, it's going to erode the efficacy of those spots. I think that they're, you know, they love on their side
the whole kind of Willie Horton, scary left-wing radical
message and it may be energizing to the base,
but she just doesn't look or seem like that person.
And the more people see of her,
the less she looks like that and,
or the less credible that
is.
I suspect this convention that's coming up, and we'll talk about that in a bit, is going
to be more evidence that she's very much in the mainstream and very focused on the day-to-day
experiences of people.
And so I think they're overshooting the runway, you know,
and it may make what they're doing less effective.
It seems like it's not just Trump struggling
to come up with a message or an explanation
for Kamala Harris' appeal.
Kellyanne Conway, who was Trump's campaign manager in 16,
she was on Fox last night venting about Kamala Harris. Let's listen.
Kamala Harris is just one big old blind date and everybody's making her whatever they need
her to be. She's so good looking. She's so smart. She's so wealthy. She's so funny. She's close to
her mom. She goes on really cool vacation. She'll never break your heart. Everybody's making her
what they need her to be. I'm Kamala Harris, and I approve of that message.
Exactly.
Exactly.
It reminded me a little bit of how the McCain campaign
sort of approached Obama in the summer and early fall of 2008.
Did you think of that too?
Yes.
Although they presented an alternative.
Yes, they said he's like the Paris Hilton,
it's a name from the past,
the Paris Hilton of politics,
meaning a star but nobody knows why.
That was their, and he's drawing this big crowds, but why?
But the bigger, the thing that made that message
actually somewhat concerning to me at that
time was the flip side, which is John McCain's all about country first. You know, they had a
positive message for him that made him look big and substantive and, you know, larger than life
against this cartoon character that they were creating or trying to sell about Obama.
And that got shattered when he named Sarah Palin as the VP candidate, which wasn't exactly,
I had great admiration for John McCain, but I think even he would say that probably wasn't
the country first move. So, you know, but yes, I think, listen, she's not wrong, John. I mean, she's,
she there, there is such a sense of relief in this country that there's an actual choice other than
the one they feared there would be. And she is coming across really well and people are imputing
to her a lot of qualities that they, they hope that she has. And it's up to her to deepen that feeling through the telling of her story and the telling
of other people's stories who she's connected with.
So she's not wrong about that and I'm sure it's frustrating.
But the question is Barack Obama ultimately didn't disappoint.
Barack Obama was largely the person that they hoped he would be.
I think the standard for her is a little lower.
The race is shorter.
The opponent is more flawed.
I think she just needs to be an acceptable alternative to Donald Trump.
A majority of people in this country do not want to vote
for Donald Trump. They just want an acceptable alternative.
Yes. And the, and the story of the Democratic party since 2016 is that at all levels, when we
have nominated and put forward candidates, Senate, House, governor, president, who are
mainstream Democrats, broadly acceptable to most of the electorate,
Democrats tend to win, especially running against
MAGA candidates or people like Trump.
And I think that's why, this one reason why.
And nobody's like Trump more than Trump.
Right.
And obviously it's why Joe Biden won in 2020,
and it seems like in 2024, he was no longer broadly
acceptable to the electorate
because of age concerns.
And she is, you know, I saw this,
Nate Cohn said this in the New York Times,
she's basically like a generic Democrat now.
That's not an insult. That's an asset, you know?
Yeah, I will say, and you know, I've gotten scolded by
your friends on social media about saying this.
Not my friends.
I get scolded too.
We're both in the crosshairs.
I mean, this is a very close race, okay?
I'm not sure what would happen
if the election were called today.
She's clearly got momentum, she's closed the gap.
What was a clear Trump advantage is now a coin flip race and she's closed the gap
in a lot of these battleground states.
I don't think to the degree the New York Times poll suggested, but still she's in
the hunt and she could win some or all of those states.
So, this is a real race, but they you know, they say in baseball, look the ball
into the glove.
In other words, when the ball comes your way, don't assume you're going to catch it.
Look the ball into the glove.
There's a lot of work to be done between now and November for Kamala Harris to win this
race, but she's in a position to win this race, which is an amazing turnaround in just
one month's time.
Yeah, my view of the race is that she is much closer now
to Biden 2020 numbers than obviously Biden 2024 numbers,
but Biden won 2020 by 40,000 votes
across a couple of states.
And I think the difference other than, you know,
the increased enthusiasm and sort of the base
coming home for her in with Biden is that she's opened up sort of more paths to 270
than he had because it seems like the blue wall states are still easiest, but now we
got, you know, Georgia's back in play and Arizona, Nevada, maybe even North Carolina.
So she has more of a chance, but it still seems like she
hasn't even quite hit Biden 2020 numbers with a lot of
demographic groups yet.
Yeah.
I mean, there's work to be done.
The convention will help do some of that work.
The debate obviously is going to be very important.
But think about this, you know, because she, because
this happened so late,
they had their convention already, she has her convention.
That convention will take us to the end of the month,
basically, because you've got Labor Day in there.
And then 10 days after that, you've got the debate.
And I like her chances of doing better
than the last debate that we saw.
But I think, you know, Trump can call, you know, Trump for in playing to, you know,
race and bias and all that stuff, you know, calls her low IQ and all that stuff.
I hope he goes into the debate with that attitude because what he's going to
find is someone who's very, very good at forensics and at debate. So, you know, she could extend her
momentum into late September, and then lots of folks are voting around this country or starting to vote around this country. So she's in a very advantageous position.
And I mean, it turned out to be a gift
that Biden waited as long as he did to,
I know the Trump people think it was a big conspiracy.
To me, you know.
If only.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Exactly, they're imputing too much to the Democratic Party.
One quick thing before we go to break,
we are so grateful that you all listened to the show.
We're asking you to take it a step further
and take a few seconds to share an episode
with five of your friends to remind them
what's at stake in November.
Like one of those old email chains your kooky aunt
used to send promising seven years of bad luck if you didn't share.
Except instead of seven years of bad luck,
it's four more years of Donald Trump and the rest of our natural lives under his Supreme Court appointees.
Head on over to Apple or your preferred podcast platform now to make sure you're following our show and click share.
We really appreciate it.
Well, let's talk about what Kamala Harris is doing to define herself this week.
Even though she currently has maybe the slightest lead in the polls, Trump still has a lead in most polls on the question of who voters trust to handle the economy, and voters still rank affordability and cost of living issues as their top issues.
So Harris is going to be delivering her first big policy speech on Friday in North Carolina.
She's going to reportedly focus on lowering the cost of groceries, housing, and healthcare,
according to Axios, which says this will be part of an effort by Harris to put some distance
between herself and her current boss, Joe Biden.
Trump's going to give an economic speech of his own later tonight in North Carolina.
His campaign also took a whack at Harris in response to today's inflation numbers, which
were actually pretty good, dipping below 3% for the first time since 2021.
But Trump said that, quote, under Kamala Harris, everything costs 20% more than it did under
Donald Trump. Working families are having to pay 20% more than it did under Donald Trump.
Working families are having to pay 30% more for baby food
and the price of gasoline is up 50%.
Certainly doesn't sound like Trump's voice.
The statement also branded this.
No, but you know what?
That is.
Kamalanomics.
Is that right?
Kamalanomics, which it really rolls off the tongue.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I'd love to hear him say that.
But look, those words are the, you know,
if you were running their campaign, those would be the right words, right? Try and impute everything
that people hate about the economy to her and shift their dissatisfaction from Biden to her.
You know, I think, you know, when you hear some, there'll be obviously new elements to her economic program.
Some of it will be familiar.
The difference is in a strange way, Biden was so eager to get credit for his economic
accomplishments that when he talked about the economy, he talked a lot about himself
and what he had done.
And what she's done very well in the first weeks of this campaign and what I suspect she'll do well in this speech is to talk about people and the lives that
people are living and their struggles and aspirations and how we can help, how
she can help, how government can help, and make it prospective and make it
value oriented and less about her than about them. And I think that's really important.
It seems like she's also going to try to be a little bit more economically populist,
specifically towards corporations and price gouging. And she of course has a record to
back that up when she was attorney general of California.
She took on the banks.
You know, Biden Joe, but on that, Favs,
Biden did try and do that.
He just wasn't very,
he didn't seem particularly wedded to the words.
You know, he didn't, it didn't,
it seemed sort of synthetic.
Whereas it's, you know,
she seems a little bit more connected to the words.
And maybe it is her tenure as attorney general,
where she fought a lot for consumers
and against banks and for-profit colleges
and pharmaceutical companies and so on.
I wonder how much of that is.
Biden always had sort of the Scranton Joe persona
at times. And I always thought that was his most effective.
It was, yeah.
Economic message. And, you know, I was always wondering how much is the white,
is just being in the White House, right? And you have all this economic policy and you have all
these people trying to like get their policies in and sort of tout accomplishments because you're,
you feel like you're in a foxhole and everything and you're beleaguered all the time by the press. And so you want to like make, you know, make
sure you get credit for stuff.
Yes.
I know the syndrome.
I think we, we were subject to it from at times.
For sure.
For sure.
And it feels like she is in a way unburdened
by all that, or at least has learned the lessons
of that and is like, well, look, I got less than
a hundred days left.
I might as well run a campaign, you know, and I
don't think it's contradictory.
She can say, you know, we, we did some, some
great things in the White House, but prices are too high and people
are still struggling. And that's going to be my main focus. And Biden tried to do that, but it
always was sort of an afterthought, you know, after a litany of, you know, accomplishments and
insistence that, which is statistically true that the US has outperformed
all the other countries and so on.
Even that, you know, you know, you would advise a candidate,
give the credit to the American people and their hard work,
you know, but be that as it may.
Yeah, I think that, I think she's gonna push forward
and what she's gonna try and do is do say here's what I am going to do
I think she'll do the same by the way on immigration. She's doing the same on immigration
She's pushing the conversation into the future giving people a sense of what she would do and she's definitely
Carving out her own identity as a candidate
how
Detailed do you think she should get on
economic proposals?
I saw the New York Times story about this and it
basically said she's going to be light on details.
And, you know, of course the downside of that is
in the press.
Complains that you're not detailed enough in your
agenda and maybe it opens you up to attacks from
Republicans though.
Donald Trump is not so detailed on his agenda
either.
Um, but the upside is that, you know, you're talking in values and, and also,
like you want to give yourself a little room and not, you're not sort of debate
yourself and, and, and open up a debate within the party over like details
of a healthcare plan.
Yes.
We all want to do that in 2020.
I say this behind your back and I will say it on your podcast.
Cool.
You are one of the great presidential speech writers
of all time.
And it was such a pleasure to work with you
and read your prose, which often was poetry to me.
But you remember, because you wrote a lot of these speeches,
when Barack Obama was in a deep hole in the fall of 2011,
after the debt ceiling debacle of the summer of 2011, and we were looking forward to a race that we thought would be with Mitt Romney,
at a time when people were very jaundiced about the economy, angry at Wall Street, angry at the people who had precipitated the financial crisis.
And you wrote a series of speeches, including one that he gave at Ossowonomy, Kansas,
where Teddy Roosevelt gave his new nationalism speech. And yes, there were specifics in those speeches,
but there was a fundamental sense of values
of identification with people, working people and so on
that were so much more important
because at the end of the day, even on election day,
Mitt Romney won the polling
on who is best suited to manage the economy. Barack Obama won
the day on who's going to fight for me. And that was what was conveyed in those speeches. So I
wouldn't worry about the spectators on the sideline who are, you know, and it also gives
her a chance to unpack some of the things that will be in that speech and offer a little more detail down the line and focus on you know a specific
economic challenge. So I'm fine with it. Now Trump is leading her on the question
of who do you trust to handle the economy, manage the economy by certainly
more than Romney did Obama on Election day. Do you think that she needs to narrow that gap a little
or do you think she just needs to sort of reframe
the choice about who's on your side?
I think you've got to stick to the fight that you can win
and that ultimately I think will be more determinative
in terms of the people's votes who you need to get.
And that is, you know, is she connected to my life?
Does she understand my struggle and will she try and do things to help me,
to help me in my life and people like me and my kids and so on.
I think that, you know, one of the, one of the things that's coursing through
this race is whatever Donald Trump says, and
yes, people say, I did better when he was there.
He still has a patina of economic mastery that flowed from 14 years of a bullshit reality
show.
But there is this lingering feeling that he augments every day that really what he cares
about is himself.
Yeah.
Okay.
And if you want to get into a fight about the economy, understand that the centerpiece of his economic plan is another huge tax cut for the same
people he gave a huge tax cut to the last time. And the question is that reflects his economic
priorities. Elon Musk is his economic priority. So I, so I think there's a great contrast
to be set up here and you shouldn't get focused
on the things that you may not win,
just focus on the things you need to win the race.
Yeah, no, I agree.
Tim Walz made his solo debut with a speech
to a convention of public sector union members.
Here's a little bit of what he said.
You heard the story.
You knew Vice President Harriot,
grew up in a middle-class family,
picked up shifts at that McDonald's as a student.
I keep asking this to make a contrast here.
Can you simply picture Donald Trump working at a McDonald's
trying to make a McFlurry or something?
It's, oh, he knows, he knows, he knows,
he couldn't run that damn McFlurry machine if it does
him anything.
So he sits there and tells his friends, you're rich as hell and we're going to cut your taxes.
I believe him when he says that.
But he also turns around and tells workers their wages are too high.
I keep bringing this up.
Who do you know who's asking to cut taxes on billionaires
while stiffing working people? I don't know anybody.
How do you think Walz did there? What do you think about him as a messenger?
Well, he's obviously a very, very talented communicator, you know, and that's why he is
where he is. He basically talked his way into this position
by doing every network but the home and garden network
in the weeks leading up to the vice presidential decision.
And what you see is a guy who he speaks in a colloquial way
that is very accessible to people.
And so he is a, you know, I mean, there'll be debate
about the vice presidential pick
if Kamala Harris loses the race and she loses it
by the margin of losing the state of Pennsylvania.
Then there'll be a revisiting of this.
But Walsh is a, he's, he is one of these sort of,
he sneaks up on you, right?
He's like, he is a great communicator
who comes in the package of every man.
And so I think he's good.
I will say when he was talking though,
that Trump may not have worked in a McDonald's,
but he certainly patronizes McDonald's.
Probably more than Kamala Harris does,
from what I can see.
He's much more on the other side of the counter.
Exactly, as usual, he's the consumer.
I thought that the McDonald's hit,
the way that Walls did the comparison was funny and great.
I also liked the latter half of that clip
where he really got into the,
what you were saying is Trump wanting to give a tax cuts
to his friends.
Cause then I think it sort of connects the character
of each with the policy,
which is probably the connection you want to make there.
This is why the debate is so important
because she can really prosecute this case on that stage.
I mean, the fact is that, you know, Trump,
you know, policy is pretty meaningless to Trump, and he doesn't go very deep on it. But this is the
centerpiece of his first term, this tax cut, and he's promised to make it permanent, $4.5 trillion
over the next decade. And I think there are a lot of folks in America who probably have a different set of priorities.
And it's just hanging there for her.
Do you think that his position on tariffs, the sort of the across the board tariff on
everything imported, that would obviously be quite a price hike for consumers.
Do you think that's like fertile territory?
You think it's too confusing for people?
Yeah, you know, I think this is a really good question.
I did a podcast that'll go up Thursday with Ezra Klein
and Ezra went into a long, who's brilliant obviously,
went into a long disquisition about tariffs
and the impact of tariffs and so on, you know, what 10% tariffs
on China would mean and on all products and this.
And like, I don't think people understand tariffs and I'm not sure that I'm always loathe
to be involved in trying to educate the public in the last 90 days of a campaign about something.
I think it's fair to say that when you add up
all of Donald Trump's economic policies,
it's gonna raise costs on people by X number of dollars.
You don't have to get into the sort of mechanics
of how that happens, but you should make that assertion
because it's true.
And you know, look, he wants to take over the Fed
and hold interest rates down artificially.
That may sound positive to people, but the result of it is going to also be more inflation.
I mean, he has an economic program that would explode inflation, and I would assert that.
I would not get into the ins and outs because it's easy for them to say, look, I know you
want to give a pass to China. I don't. All right. Democratic National Convention is next week in your hometown
of Chicago. Can't wait to be there. there. Full lineups have not been released,
but it looks like we'll hear from Joe Biden
and Hillary Clinton on Monday night,
Barack Obama on Tuesday night,
Bill Clinton and Tim Walz on Wednesday,
and Kamala Harris, of course, on Thursday.
We will be doing a reaction show every night.
Pod Save America will be there.
Axe, you've been involved in a lot of these.
Big picture, what does the Harris campaign
and Democrats more broadly need to accomplish here?
Well, I don't know if I said this earlier, but look, if it were a Biden convention, this would be 80% just assault on Trump, carpet bombing on Trump, because the mission there would be to make Trump so unacceptable
that whatever misgivings they had about Biden that they would vote for Biden. And there would
be some stuff about his accomplishments and so on. This is an entirely different task. The task
here is to tell the Kamala Harris story in a way that builds on what she's been doing
and makes people feel more comfortable and give them a deeper sense of what it is that she
is fighting for and who she's fighting for. It's a much more, I think, a much more energizing
kind of prospect for the folks who are planning the convention. If
you come out of the convention with a deeper richer sense of Kamala Harris as
someone who identifies with people, fights for people, and has an idea about
the very tangible things that need to be addressed to improve people's lives or
help people improve their own lives.
I think that would be a big win.
And I think it is very, it's much less complex
than it would have been.
Clearly there's gonna be contrast drawn with Trump
and there should be, but I kind of think people
have made a judgment about Donald Trump.
I don't think you have to do that much work on Trump, you know?
Yeah.
I feel like the only work you have to do on Trump is they've made up their minds
on his character, who he is, what he's done in the past.
I wonder about his second, his potential second term agenda and how much work you
need to do sort of just laying out the choice for people on,
you know, if he gets another term, he'll do X, Y, and Z. But I go back and forth.
Well, it's interesting that Bill Clinton is speaking Wednesday night because you remember
the role he played at our convention in 2012 where he did a lot of that. I'm sure he'll do a lot of
that again. And I think particularly on economics, the discussion we were just
having, doing some good work on that. You know, yes, and on rights and abortion
rights in particular and reproductive rights, there's work to be done
there. You know, I'm not like a huge believer in just uttering the words
project 2025 again and again.
I don't think the average person knows what it is.
I don't think you should waste a whole lot.
But I take some of the things from it that are particularly egregious and extreme, and
I would certainly raise their salience and create that contrast. But in the main, I think that this is Kamala Harris's
great chance to introduce herself to the country.
And you know, when you're the sitting vice president,
yes, you're a national figure,
but you're really not known.
Yeah.
And you know, a great example is George H.W. Bush in 1988
was, you know, the cover of Newsweek at the beginning of the campaign was
is Bush a wimp? Because he was like the understudy to Ronald Reagan and that convention really,
really broadened people's sense of who George H.W. Bush was, the war hero, the guy who's really attached to, you know, his family and to American
values.
And, it was a hugely important event for him.
So vice presidents are known, but they're not
known.
This is a chance for her to be better known.
Let's talk about her speech specifically.
You and I have worked on a lot of these
convention speeches.
Uh, I remember in 2008, there's just like a
lot of business to get done in all of these
speeches, right?
Like I was a particularly hair raising, uh,
it was, well, it's their state of the union
esque in that you want to talk about yourself.
You want to talk about your opponent.
You want to lay out your agenda, but you don't want to lay out too much of the agenda. You want to talk about your opponent. You want to lay out your agenda, but you don't
want to lay out too much of the agenda.
You want to talk a little bit about your
opponent's agenda and what the choice is.
You want to wrap it up in unlike a state of the
union, you want to make it a little tighter and
wrap it up in sort of inspirational rhetoric.
And you don't have to deal with a bunch of
bureaucrats trying to get their pet project
into the speech.
Right.
But I also remember, we know that our,, those first couple drafts of the 2008 speech
were very long because there was so much business to get done.
What would you focus on, like, specifically, if you were her?
Well, first of all, you know, again,
I think more than even Obama needed to,
because remember, he had a two-year campaign
She is literally one month into this race or she'll be one month into this race
so she you know, she needs to tie her own story to the
Values that she's fighting for I think that's one big thing
But I actually think that they're touching on some of this. She also needs to ask people,
what kind of country do we want?
You know, that's what elections are about.
And what kind of country do we want?
And contrast her vision with the vision of a Trump redo,
a Trump 2.0, and really cast herself
as a hopeful forward-looking alternative.
And I think if she does those things, it'll be a successful speech.
Yeah, you have to resist the temptation to make it a State of the Union speech.
This should be as much poetry as prose.
It has to have enough content to support the poetry
and give people a sense of where you're going.
But I think people want to,
what we've seen in the last three weeks is,
people want to be inspired.
They want to feel like there's a better day ahead,
that we're not,
this is now a battle between hope and cynicism.
And she just needs to make a great case for a hope here.
Uh, and I think that she will, I think she will.
I also think, you know, they are going to try to define her as other, right?
She's whether it's radical, whether it's flip-flop or she's she, you know, it's
whether it's Trump talking about her, you know, biracial identity or it's radical, whether it's flip flops, she's, she, you know, it's whether it's Trump talking about her, you know, biracial identity
or it's more policy oriented, the, the, the
message is the same, which is she's not like us.
And I think she has an opportunity here to really
sort of reclaim patriotism and talk about her love
of country and how this country sort of made her
story possible and she wants to make that story
possible. And she's doing that by the way, on the road. Yeah. So, yeah, she should be doing that. about her love of country and how this country sort of made her story possible and she wants to make
that story possible for everyone.
And she's doing that by the way on the road.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She should be doing that.
You know, she has a disadvantage because,
and it's not that so much because her parents are,
you know, Jamaican immigrant and Indian immigrant,
so much as she is a cosmopolitan person. I mean, she's a coastal cosmopolitan person.
You know, Biden had an advantage. Scranton was a huge advantage. And in his convention,
that was the touchstone. That was the thing that certified him. And so she has to approach it a
little differently. And I mean, part of the challenge of the Democratic Party
is that it's become too much of a coastal cosmopolitan party.
So really reconnecting with or connecting with
fundamental kind of the dignity of just hardworking folks
across this country who care deeply about their family
and their communities.
And just, you know, they want their leaders to be on their side and to help them do the
things that they want to do in their lives.
And I think, again, just looking at the speeches she's making, I think she's really touching
on those themes.
And just expanding on those,
I think, will be really important.
So you're right.
You want people to feel when she comes out of this,
I get her and she gets me.
Yes. Yeah, for sure.
Finally, for anyone who's listening,
who's headed to Chicago and might have some free time,
any recommendations on restaurants?
Uh, in addition to Manny's, of course.
Well, you just took away my number one choice.
I'm not going to, I'm gonna duck the question
as only a experienced political consultant can
because I have some favorite restaurants,
but I don't want to insult,
this is a great restaurant town.
I guess my bottom line is,
this is one of the great restaurant towns in the world.
It really is.
And you can't go wrong.
And there'll be a million sort of guides to restaurants.
But there's a lot of great ethnic,
there's still ethnic neighborhoods, ethnic foods.
This is a really diverse city.
And if you get a chance to move around a little,
I'd experiment with those.
But if Haute Cuisine is your thing,
there's plenty of it here,
and I'm not gonna bias you.
You will find them.
But I think you should send in to Pod Save America
your favorites when this is over,
and there should be a Pod Save America guide to Chicago.
You can't go wrong, and you also can't go light.
Yeah, that's true.
You're not going to Chicago to sort of cut calories.
Well, in fairness, this is, you know,
they call it the windy city.
It's actually not about the wind,
but it does get windy here.
And so we'd like to bulk up here
in case a big gust of wind comes along.
You don't want to get blown away.
So we eat well here, and you will eat well here when you come. I can't want to get blown away. So we eat well here and you will eat well here when you
come. I can't wait to see everybody. I love this town and it's never more beautiful than in August.
So visit the lakefront, go walk through the parks on the lakefront, just enjoy the city and in no way to denigrate Milwaukee, which is I think in its
own way a really charming town, but Chicago is the best city there is. And I think you'll find-
Look, I'm excited to go check out some of our old haunts from when we lived there during the
Obama campaign. And Chicago in the summer, I always say there's no better city. There's no-
Yes, yes.
Axe, thanks for doing this today. Thanks for being here. Oh yes, man. It's always say there's no better city. There's no better city. Yes, yes.
Axe, thanks for doing this today.
Thanks for being here.
Oh yes, man.
It's always a pleasure to chat with you.
This is great.
And Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday morning.
We will talk to you then.
David Axelrod, thanks again.
Good to be with you, brother.
If you want to get ad-free episodes, exclusive content, and more, consider joining our Friends
of the Pod subscription community
at Cricut.com slash friends.
And if you're already doom scrolling,
don't forget to follow us at Pod Save 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 to help boost this episode
or spice up the group chat by sharing it with friends,
family, or randos you want in on this conversation.
Pod Save America is a Cricut Media production. Our producer is David Toledo. Our associate
producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safare. Reed Cherlin is our executive editor and Adrian Hill
is our executive producer. The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick. Jordan Cantor is our
sound engineer with audio support from Kyle Seguin and Charlotte Landis. Writing support by Holly
Kiefer.
Madeline Herringer is our Head of News and Programming.
Matt DeGroote is our Head of Production.
Andy Taft is our Executive Assistant.
Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Phoebe Bradford, Joseph Dutra,
Ben Hefkote, Mia Kelman, Molly Lobel, Kirill Pellaveve, and David Tolles.