Pod Save America - The Path to Defeat Donald Trump (Ep. 1)
Episode Date: May 26, 2024Welcome back to The Wilderness. Jon talks about what it will take to rebuild 2020’s anti-Trump coalition with political analyst Ron Brownstein, political scientist Lynn Vavreck, Democratic strategis...t Addisu Demissie, Democratic strategist Jen Palmieri, and Democratic strategist Simon Rosenberg. They’ll talk about the risks of a second Trump term and how you can help prevent it. It may be a challenging road ahead, but by taking the time to persuade the persuadables in your life it’s possible to finally break Trump’s stranglehold on our politics.Take action with Vote Save America: Visit votesaveamerica.com/2024  Pre-order Democracy or Else: How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps at crooked.com/books or wherever books are sold. Out June 25th.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, it's Jon here. I am excited to share the first episode of Season 4 of The Wilderness.
This season, I'm joined by some of the smartest strategists, pollsters, and organizers in politics
today to explore what resonates with voters who are disenchanted, disengaged, and otherwise
uncommitted. And we're going to find out how we can convince them that democracy is on the line
in 2024. Because I don't know if you've looked around lately, but it really is.
Tune into new episodes every other Sunday right here on the Pod Save America feed throughout the
summer to get the goods you need to convince every last person in your life to show up this
election year. Yes, even your Zoomer cousin who gets their news from TikTok and your Boomer uncle
who gets their news from Facebook. So enjoy episode one.
Donald Trump is the next president of the United States.
This time he is coming bent on revenge. He knows how government works. He knows how he was thwarted the last time. I, Donald John
Trump, do solemnly swear. No more people keeping him in check. And I will faithfully execute the
office of president. Deploy the U.S. military domestically under the Insurrection Act. And will
to the best of my ability. Ending birthright citizenship, purging the federal government
of tens of thousands of civil servants.
Preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution.
Terminate the Constitution.
Jail political opponents.
Execute generals who are insufficiently loyal.
Create mass internment camps to send immigrants there.
So help me God.
This might be the last presidential election in our lifetimes.
He is just president until his death.
Okay, I realize that may have been a tough listen.
But I can promise you it'll be even tougher to live through if Donald Trump wins this election.
And I don't think most voters are sufficiently alarmed about the likelihood of that outcome.
So here we are with another season of The Wilderness,
not to panic you, but to empower you,
to give you insights from voters and advice from experts
that can help you persuade as many people as possible
to be part of the anti-MAGA majority
that defeated Trump four years ago.
Yes, this is primarily the job of Joe Biden, his campaign, and the thousands of Democratic
candidates, strategists, and organizers who do politics for a living. But they need our help.
They can't win this alone. Trust me, I've been there. A campaign is much more likely to succeed
when its voters become its volunteers. And that's truer today than it's ever been. Because even if
many news outlets actually believed it was their job to help defend democracy,
they simply don't have the power to reach or persuade as many Americans as they once did.
There's too little trust, too many choices, too many different realities,
and too many people who've decided to tune out altogether.
That leaves us, the people who are paying attention,
and who are absolutely certain that Donald Trump must not return to power.
If you love Joe Biden, that's great.
If you don't, if you aren't happy with everything he's done, or even if you're pissed at him but you know that he's the better option, that's okay too.
In fact, you may be even more persuasive to voters who feel like you do, but haven't yet landed in the same place.
It's sometimes hard to remember that voting isn't primarily about rewarding or punishing Joe Biden or Donald Trump. It's about much, much more than those two men.
It's about us. It's a choice between two very different futures for America. And no matter who
you are or where you live, I promise you, it'll be nearly impossible to escape the consequences
of what Trump has planned for a second term. You know, Trump is in two respects talking about using federal force
to impose kind of the red state vision on blue America.
That's Ron Brownstein,
a political analyst at The Atlantic and CNN,
who's done some of the most extensive reporting
on what a second Trump term would look like.
So one track in all of this
is basically using control of the federal government
to force blue states to live under the rights rollbacks that have proliferated in red states,
whether it's, you know, ban on gender-affirming care for minors,
national voter ID and national bans on voting by mail,
a national don't-say-g gay bill, national concealed carry legislation.
And of course, kind of the pinnacle here
would be some kind of national abortion ban.
Do you believe in punishment for abortion?
Yes or no, as a principal?
The answer is that there has to be some form of punishment.
For the woman?
Yeah, there has to be some form.
Donald Trump's new comments on abortion, saying that some states might choose to monitor women's pregnancies to possibly prosecute women who violate abortion bans.
Do you support any restrictions on a person's right to contraception?
Well, we're looking at that, and I'm going to have a policy on that very shortly.
policy on that very shortly. The other track is probably even more explosive because Trump,
in a whole series of ways, is talking about using federal force in blue cities to advance his agenda. He's talked about sending federal forces into blue cities to round up the homeless.
He's talked about sending the National Guard into blue cities just to fight crime. And in cities where there's been a complete breakdown of public safety,
I will send in federal assets, including the National Guard, until law and order is restored.
And then maybe the most expansive of all of these ideas is him talking about massive federal forces executing a deportation drive unprecedented in American history.
You go to the red state governors and you say, give us your National Guard.
We will deputize them as immigration enforcement officers.
They know their states, they know their communities, they know their cities. That's Stephen Miller,
who may become Trump's White House chief of staff
on The Charlie Kirk Show last November.
And if you're going to go into an unfriendly state like Maryland,
well, then it would just be Virginia doing the arrests in Maryland, right?
Very close, very nearby.
I think that all of this can get really out of control myself.
What does happen if a red state governor really agrees to send
their National Guard into a neighboring blue state? I mean, is that really going to end well?
You know, I do think that if they do even a portion of this, we are going to face situations
that we just have not confronted in this country since, you know, really the Civil War.
Some of you might think this sounds a little
far-fetched. I get it. I'm always worried about freaking people out too much, especially if it
ultimately turns out to be unnecessary. And I suppose there's a chance that Trump could spend
his next presidency raging on truth social and figuring out all the ways he can abuse the office
to make himself rich. It's possible. But if Trump decides to go ahead with even a fraction of the things he says he'll do,
ask yourself,
who will stop a vengeful two-term president who will never have to face voters again?
The courts he stacked with right-wing judges?
The government he plans to purge of nonpartisan public servants
and replace with MAGA loyalists?
A military that reports to Joint Chiefs Chairman
Mike Flynn? Not great. Could we write out one term? Maybe, but I don't think we can write out
two terms. You can't overcome the erosion of norms. You can't overcome the sort of civil
protections that kept in place in the federal government the first time around. Like, it just
won't be there the second time around. That's Jen Palmieri, who was Hillary Clinton's 2016 communications director
before doing the same job in the Obama White House.
It just seems like that that whole bureaucracy could just barrel out of control
and courts will try to rein him in, but he will continue to act
in the vacuum of decisions that are final and enforceable.
Jen's point about not being able to count on the courts
was echoed by someone with very different politics
who I talked to on Pod Save America a few months ago, Liz Cheney.
What scares you most about a second Trump term?
The extent to which we know that as president,
he will refuse to enforce the rulings of our courts.
We're only a nation of laws if the president enforces the rulings of the courts.
And to have someone like Donald Trump, who we know won't do that, presents an existential threat.
I know. Real nightmare fuel from someone who isn't exactly a liberal alarmist.
exactly a liberal alarmist.
And that's to say nothing of all the very legal power that any president has to make war,
control immigration, deploy law enforcement,
order surveillance, and respond to crises,
real or manufactured.
A second Trump term would almost certainly be worse
than the first Trump term.
And that one ended with an attempted coup
after he lost the election
because he mismanaged a pandemic
that killed a million Americans.
But hey, maybe it'll be fine.
And even though this time around,
no one's really asking if it's possible for Trump to win,
a lot of us want to believe it's likely that he won't.
I want to believe that.
I want to believe that Joe Biden actually has a stable five-point lead
over Donald Trump in all of the battleground states he needs to get to 270.
And maybe the polling will finally show that lead in the fall.
Or maybe we'll just have to wait until the election results.
But let's just set all the polling aside for a moment. Because even if we didn't see another
poll from now until election day, the safest bet you could make about the outcome of the
Biden-Trump rematch is how close it's likely to be. We'll tell you why after the break. to give them an actual book they can follow to get ready for this election year. Love it. Tommy and I wrote one.
Our first book.
It's called Democracy or Else, How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps,
coming June 25th.
And it's the perfect first step to getting your friends and family
off the sidelines and engaged.
We know that election years can be overwhelming,
but that's why we gathered all of our political insights from Pod Save America
and our smartest friends in politics
to write this funny, useful guide to help you and your friends through 2024.
Plus, when you pre-order, you're not just getting a book, you're already making a difference because Crooked is donating all of its profits to Vote Save America and 2024 campaigns.
Head to crooked.com slash books now to pre-order your copy.
Welcome back to the wilderness. Let's get right back into it.
So we know this election is going to be very close, and here's why. In 2020, Joe Biden won more votes than any presidential candidate in history in an election where 155 million people
cast their ballots, the highest turnout in the 21st century.
But thanks to the Electoral College, Donald Trump still came within just 43,000 votes of winning.
43,000 votes!
And that razor-thin margin wasn't unique to the 2020 election.
If you look county by county across the country,
and you look at the Democratic Party share of the two-party vote in
2016, and then you say, how did the Democratic Party do in that county in 2020? On average,
across all the counties, the absolute shift in the Democratic vote share was about a point and a half.
That's Lynn Vavrick, a UCLA political scientist who's done years of research on the American electorate. Enough to know that these tiny margins we're seeing weren't always the case.
In the 70s and the 80s, some of those elections, votes were really changing. But now these
elections are replays of one another. According to Lynn, it's not just that usual suspect,
polarization, that's keeping voters from shifting their votes. It's more just that usual suspect, polarization, that's keeping voters from shifting their votes.
It's more than that. Something she calls calcification.
Calcification, we think about it as polarization plus.
Calcification has four drivers.
And the first two are probably very familiar to people.
That is an increasing distance between the two political parties. So they want to build
very different worlds, possibly more different than in our lifetimes. The second driver of
calcification, an increasing homogeneity or a sameness within each political party. So Democrats
are more like one another. Republicans are more like one another now than, again, in the recent and not so recent past.
Third is a shift in what we're fighting over.
So for most of my lifetime, we've been fighting over New Deal issues, the role and size of government, the tax rate.
And in 2016, that really shifted,
and we started talking about identity-inflected issues.
Immigration, abortion's always been important,
but more important now than maybe in the recent past.
Things like a Muslim ban or a religious test to enter the country,
same-sex marriage.
These issues are different from New Deal issues.
They're harder to compromise on.
And then the last driver of calcification is we just happen to be at a moment
where we're in rough balance in the electorate
between people who call themselves Democrats and people who call themselves Republicans.
Each side either wins
or almost wins every election, presidential elections. And so that really means when you lose,
there's no incentive to go back to the drawing board and think about, boy, people aren't really
buying what we're selling, so we better change what we're selling. All of that kind of mashes up together and it makes politics feel stuck.
It's like calcification in the bones.
It's rigid.
Lynn's theory makes a lot of sense when you think about the results of every national election in the Trump era.
The margins have been very tight, usually tighter than the polls suggested they'd be.
So far, 2024 doesn't seem like it'll
be any different. And the Democratic strategist whose job it is to reelect Joe Biden basically
agree. This is going to be a close race. Like, I don't know which states it's going to be. I don't
know how many votes it's going to be, but like, you can write it down in ink. Like, I think this
thing is going to be decided by a few thousand votes in a couple swing states. Adesu Demesi is
a senior advisor to Future Forward USA, the primary
super PAC supporting President Biden's reelection campaign. Before that, he ran successful campaigns
for Democrats like New Jersey Senator Cory Booker and California Governor Gavin Newsom.
He's confident that Biden can pull this out, but he's not pretending it'll be easy.
I am not somebody who is tries to convince people the sky is green when the sky is blue.
Things are tough out there for people. Joe Biden is 82 years old. It is what it is.
Adisu thinks that in addition to the evenly divided electorate Lynn talked about,
there are a few other factors that are likely to make this race so uncomfortably close.
I think what 2020 proved and why it was so close is that Donald Trump is a strong political figure.
He has a strong base that is going to show up.
He motivates the hell out of them.
And because of the way that the Republican electorate is just distributed,
like by population in battleground states,
it gives Donald Trump an advantage in the electoral college.
So we should absolutely plan for the MAGA base turning out in the states that will decide the election.
But Adisu points out that there's also another factor that's making this race even tougher for Joe Biden.
When you are the sitting president, you have a bully pulpit and you also have at least the perceived responsibility for the state of the country.
And, you know, and some actual responsibility, sure.
So Joe Biden is the is the incumbent president. Donald Trump was the incumbent president last time.
And that is a significantly different dynamic.
Adisu's pointing out something that I think has been underappreciated.
The political advantage that was once associated with being an incumbent president
has almost disappeared. In fact, the last time an incumbent president won his second term
with a bigger
margin than the first was 20 years ago, when George W. Bush beat John Kerry. One reason incumbent
presidents don't have the advantage they once did is because most voters have become disillusioned
with politics and unhappy with the state of the country, no matter who's in charge. As Jen Palmieri
points out, Trump is uniquely suited to benefit from the fact that he's now
a challenger who's also
a former incumbent.
You can talk about, like, oh, I delivered a lot.
I did get a lot of stuff done when I was president.
And you're able to say, like,
and if I was president again,
everything would be magically fixed.
You don't have to own what's happening now.
And I do think that
he has the benefits of incumbency, but also the
benefits, the sort of freedom and dreamscape that comes with being a challenger. Basically,
Trump gets to pretend he has the experience to come back and fix everything people have been
angry about during the four years that Joe Biden has been president. Now, you might be wondering,
why have people been so unhappy over the last four years? Here's what Lynn Vavrick told me.
I looked the other day at this time series, the General Social Survey has been asking since 1972.
The question goes something like this, taken all together, how would you say things are these days?
And this is not about the economy. This comes in
a battery of questions where they're asking people about their personal lives. So this is really
meant to be a question about how happy are you? And man, this thing is like steady. Since 1970,
like there's not a lot that makes huge changes. But the difference between 2019 and 2021 is the biggest difference that there's ever been.
And people are less happy after, I'm going to say COVID, significantly less happy with how things are these days than they were at any point since 1972.
You know, I just think that that COVID year and a half was really, really hard.
And, you know, people might not be able to articulate that they're still in this COVID malaise.
So let's complain about these guys are uninspiring and the election is uninteresting and I'm so sick of it.
And I think a lot of that is this moment in time.
I've thought for a while now
that the post-COVID malaise Lynn talks about
might explain a lot about the country's grumpy mood.
Then you layer on all the other issues
that voters say they're very worried or upset about.
High prices, high interest rates,
immigration, abortion, Gaza, democracy itself.
It would be a hard political environment
for any incumbent president,
no matter how much they'd accomplish or what kind of political talents they had.
In fact, incumbents all over the world are quite unpopular right now. And that's true
across the political spectrum. And yet, despite how dreary and challenging this political
environment is, despite how much more difficult the path to victory appears than it did in 2020, that path absolutely exists. In fact,
Joe Biden and the Democratic Party go into this race with some fairly significant advantages of
their own. The most powerful force in our politics today isn't disappointment in Joe Biden or
discontent of the economy. It's fear and opposition
to MAGA. And if you are already fearful and scared of MAGA in those previous elections,
the MAGA that's on the ballot in 2024 is far more dangerous, far more extreme than it was
in earlier iterations. That's Simon Rosenberg, a longtime Democratic strategist who got his start
in Bill Clinton's war room back in 1992.
Today, he writes a very popular substack called the Hopium Chronicles, a name that makes sense after you talk to Simon for a few minutes.
The guy is more bullish on Democrats' chances than anyone I've talked to, and that includes the actual Biden campaign.
I think Trump could collapse this election.
I'm just going to be bold and put this out there, that I think there's a 25% chance that this election's a blowout and that Trump collapses, because there's nothing really holding
him up. He has no rationale to be president. It's my view that our aspiration in 2024 should be to
win this election by eight to 10 points and to make it a clear repudiation of MAGA, because I
think the only way that MAGA starts to leave our bloodstream is if Republicans view it as a political loser.
What did I tell you? Straight hopium.
Simon's view doesn't line up with what everyone else I spoke to is seeing,
another extremely close election in a highly polarized country.
But after correctly predicting the Democratic Party's overperformance in the 2022 midterms,
it's worth taking his theory of the case seriously.
I don't think this is 2020.
I think there are at least two major things that have happened to Trump, and frankly more,
since 2020 that make him a very different candidate.
One is the insurrection and the other is Dobbs.
And what happened in 2018 and 2020 was amazing, right? We unseated a president,
we won the House and the Senate. But what's happened since Dobbs may be even more remarkable
politically, because rather than losing power, which is usually what happens for a party in power,
we've actually gained ground in 2022, 2023. And even in early 2024, we've had very impressive
performances. Simon is absolutely right that Democrats have had a string of victories and over-performances
in the last few midterm and special elections.
The challenge is that the pool of voters in a presidential election is much, much bigger
and more diverse.
Just to cite the most recent example, there were about 40 million voters in 2020 who just
didn't show up at all in 2018.
And that was the highest midterm turnout
in history. We obviously can't know for sure what all the voters who didn't show up in 2022
will do in 2024. But just about all the polling we have suggests that they tend to be less favorable
toward Joe Biden and the Democratic candidates than the people who voted in the specials and
midterms. Those midterm voters are, on average, older, whiter, more college-educated,
and more tuned in to politics.
Simon doesn't really buy this argument.
And again, we can't know for sure
until people actually vote in 2024.
But he also sees a silver lining to the dynamic
where Democrats in the Trump era
have gained more of the highly engaged voters
who show up in every election.
And I think that what's being underappreciated is that the picking up of these higher educated,
higher propensity voters is also creating the most powerful democratic machine that we've ever had.
Those people are also funding our campaigns at unprecedented levels.
Those unprecedentedly large campaigns have, through the money they have and through the volunteers they have, unprecedented tools to reach lower propensity voters and people
that we need to reach, both with persuasion and with turnout. And so what we have is we have this
extra muscle. You may have already guessed this, but that extra volunteer muscle is you. You
probably vote in every election.
You've hopefully volunteered, maybe even through an incredible organization like Vote Save America,
which you should immediately go check out if for some weird reason you haven't heard of it yet.
The point is, you have a huge role to play in this election, and I promise that's not bullshit.
You see, the flip side of living through an extremely high stakes election that's likely to be terrifyingly close is this. Calcification and close elections,
it doesn't mean that, you know, we're stuck and nothing matters. It means everything could be
pivotal. Everything could be pivotal. So people often, oh, is this election going to turn on
dots? Is it going to turn on the economy? Is it going to turn on their ages? And my answer is always, well, it's not going to be about any one of those things. But yes, probably all of them will be pivotal.
Everything matters. Every issue, every ad, every voter, and every person who gets involved. So what does that mean for you?
We'll get into it after the break.
Welcome back to the wilderness.
Years ago, it wasn't all that hard for campaigns and White Houses to communicate with most voters.
Jen Palmieri remembers that time well.
Imagine this, in the Clinton White House, we'd be like, campaigns in White Houses to communicate with most voters. Jen Palmieri remembers that time well.
Imagine this in the Clinton White House, we'd be like, okay, let's just make sure we get the president's message event of the day done by 2.15 so it can be on the network news.
Gotta be done by two so it can make the network news at 6.30 that night and the Post and the
Times and the AP will write about it and we'll do some radio
feeds to the local news and we're done. And we did a fantastic job. And like it was super easy
to communicate. And it is, you know, that is just the hardest thing, right? It is why all the
disinformation can flourish and why no one knows anything Biden has done is because there's not a good channel
that reaches everyone. I'm sure this doesn't come as a surprise to you. It's been decades
since most of the country got its news from a few different newspapers and television networks.
Now we consume whatever our own personalized algorithms fire into our brains all day long,
which is obviously super healthy for everyone. It's also very challenging for candidates and campaigns to actually communicate with the voters they need. And that, dear listeners,
is where you come in. Most voters aren't consuming a lot of political news. Most aren't consuming the
same political news. And an increasingly high percentage of voters don't trust a lot of the
news they're getting, some for good reason.
But you know who voters do trust? The people they know. Adisu Demesi explains.
Because of the fracturing of the media environment, I think the importance of peer-to-peer contact is maybe even more important. Meaning like people you know, not just like people from
your neighborhood or people from your community or people who look like you, but like literally people, you know, we all get those spam texts from politicians that I write stop to every
every day. But like if my friend texts me about something, I might read it.
What Adisu just described is something called relational organizing.
Relational organizing is essentially instead of using a voter list, which is what, you know,
traditionally we did and send maybe people from your neighborhood,
maybe people not from your neighborhood
to knock doors or make phone calls to voters,
you're actually using, you know,
your contacts list in Apple or Android
to like contact voters,
your own people that you already know.
Your audience for real politics
should be pretty freaking narrow.
Like the people on your block,
the people in your neighborhood.
Aytown Hirsch teaches political science
at Tufts University
and specializes in U.S. elections
and civic participation.
He's clearly a big fan
of relational organizing.
He also believes in another strategy
that campaigns and organizers
are now using to persuade voters,
a practice called deep canvassing.
You basically focus on building empathy
in a 15, 20 minute, 30 minute kind of conversation with this person, understanding what their view is,
trying to express what your view is and where you come from on the issue, you know, and it's all
like a very kind of vulnerable conversation where the person on the other side gets to see you as a
real person and what's
motivating you deeply about the issue. And by the way, you also get that from them. And so sometimes
the conversation just end like, oh, we understand each other better. That's helpful. And sometimes
the person on the other end is like, you know what, I never have really given this issue much
thought. But now that you've told me how you see it and why it's important to you and you seem like a nice person, like, I'm with you.
It's a really inefficient way to think about politics, like one 20-minute conversation at a time.
But it works and works in a much more durable way than, you know, a postcard or a letter or something like that.
It's more durable and, according to the research, more effective.
It's also the perfect antidote to a problem called political hobbyism that Hirsch wrote an entire book about.
Hobbyism is when you follow politics, talk about politics, maybe post and argue about politics online,
but aren't engaged all that much in the real work of politics,
which involves building
power by actually persuading other people to see things your way. Yeah, so when I was looking at
this, I asked people about how they spend their time. You know, a third of the country or something
like that is spending an hour or two hours a day on political consumption. But this is the group
that is not checked out. Okay, so let's just look at the people who care. They say they care.
They know a lot of facts.
They're learning stuff.
What percent of them are doing any kind of volunteer political activity?
And it's like 5%.
So of the group of people who are cognitively engaged in politics,
it's only a very small fraction that engage in any kind of volunteerism.
Now, obviously, I realize this doesn't describe the habits of anyone listening to this podcast.
One of many episodes that our progressive media company has released just this week,
along with countless pieces of content we hope you'll engage with.
I'm sure you're much more like me, an occasional news consumer who spends most of my time
deep canvassing and organizing my neighborhood.
But really, I don't think any of us should feel bad about listening, scrolling, and posting to our heart's content.
I do think we should feel bad if that's all we do to stop Trump from winning.
If Joe Biden loses in November, we can all fight about why,
and we can all blame him for mistakes he made in the White House and on the campaign trail,
but we will all have to live with the consequences, as well as the knowledge that each of us could have done more to
avoid them. So in this season of The Wilderness, we're going to focus on the messaging that
actually persuades, in conversations I hope you have with friends, family, colleagues, neighbors,
and perfect strangers who aren't yet certain that they'll vote for Joe Biden. Not diehard fans of Trump or RFK Jr. or other third party candidates.
Not Biden stans or Democrats who already vote blue no matter who.
I'm talking about the group of people who still aren't sure what they're going to do in November.
Typically, an undecided voter is a little less interested in politics.
That doesn't mean that they don't have policy
preferences, that they don't know what kind of world they want to live in. They're just less
interested in it. I asked political scientist Lynn Vavrick what percentage of the electorate
is usually made up of undecided voters. And she said that while it varies, it's not going to be
more than 25 percent, you know, but it's not going to be five. And so all of these undecided voters,
they could have lots of cross positions
between the Democrats and the Republicans.
Very, very few people are 100% liberal
or 100% conservative.
There's a big, big, big chunk of the electorate
in the middle.
And so those people have to decide
which of these things that I have positions on are the
most important to me. It doesn't mean these voters are centrist. It doesn't mean that they're only
choosing between Democrats and Republicans. Some may stay home. Some may vote third party.
Some may vote for all Democratic candidates and one Republican candidate or vice versa.
And because 2024 is a rematch of a race that Biden won by only 43,000 votes,
a lot of these voters will be people who supported the president in 2020.
Every single one of these voters matter, whether they're excited about Joe Biden in this election
or not. There's a lot of people who are coming to grips with the choice that they have
and looking around for options that may not even be there, right? Including third party options that like might not even be on their ballot.
And that includes some base Democratic voters.
That includes some base Republican voters who are just, you know, disaffected with Trump.
It's young people who are, you know, a base of the Democratic Party.
But like when the election is going to be decided by 50,000 votes, like they matter.
Black folks, if they defect a little bit, they matter. Latino folks, if they defect a little bit, they matter.
Latino folks, if they defect a little bit, they matter. If swing voters defect a little bit,
they matter. So we kind of have this thing where we got to plug a lot of holes in that sense,
since we won last time. Adisu's job, which is also the Biden campaign's job and our job,
is to figure out who these voters are and what might persuade them to make up their minds.
And that, my friends, is the real reason that polls and focus groups are actually useful.
Maybe the only reason.
It's not that I don't, I love polls.
Like, I read polls for a living.
But when I read a poll, I don't read it to take stock of what the state of the horse race is seven months before an election.
I read it to see what do voters care about?
How are they thinking? You know, what is actually moving their opinions of people? And that's how private polling
and practitioners look at it. That's also how I hope all of you look at it throughout this season.
As always on The Wilderness, we're going to let you hear what's on the minds of undecided voters
from all walks of life. But unlike past seasons, we're not conducting our own focus groups.
Instead, we're turning to the people who do them for a living. In each episode, I'll have a
conversation with political strategists and campaign pollsters about research and focus
groups they've conducted with different groups of voters who are up for grabs. I'll also talk
to on-the-ground organizers about what they're hearing from these same kinds of voters.
The purpose of diving into this focus group content
is not to help you predict the outcome of the election.
They're not meant to help you figure out who's ahead right now.
They're not meant to confirm your own political beliefs
or settle any debates about the direction of the Democratic Party or the country.
That's what the election is for.
The purpose of hearing from these strategists, pollsters, organizers, and voters
is so that you can have access to some of the same information and insights that the campaigns do.
One of my great frustrations with democratic politics
is the huge gap between what campaigns know about voters and what volunteers know about voters.
Strategists and pollsters talk to literally thousands of voters every day.
Every week, they write really smart memos
and give presentations about what undecided voters are thinking
and what's most likely to persuade them.
And very little of that knowledge makes its way to the volunteers
whose conversations with voters will ultimately decide the race.
So we're going to try to bridge that gap.
You know, it's funny to get a report on a focus group
where you're like, well, we sat with Hispanic men who voted for Biden age 25 to 28, and they didn't know a single thing
Biden did, has accomplished, and they're unenthusiastic, and they think he's old,
and you're like, oh, shit, it's terrible. And then you actually watch a focus group,
and you're like, give me three minutes of those guys. I can convince them to vote for Biden.
actually watch a focus group and you're like, give me three minutes of those guys. I can convince them to vote for Biden. That's what I'm talking about. I want you to feel like Jen Palmieri feels
after hearing from a focus group, like you're ready to go convince those voters to back Biden.
It's so much easier to get people to come back to Biden, people who voted for him before to come
back to him when there is a record of accomplishment. We're not asking them to come back to something that didn't work.
It's a much easier endeavor than it is to convince people who didn't vote for him last
time to vote for him this time, which is what Trump needs to do.
I have seen enough research to know that, you know, Black folks, young Black folks included,
they might be upset with the state of the country.
They might be disappointed that things haven't changed as much under Joe Biden
as they wanted when they voted for him in 2020.
But it's not like they love Donald Trump.
You know, they, in fact, they might dislike him more.
And they're just kind of coming to grips with the fact that these are the choices
and they may not have to vote for somebody they're not necessarily enthusiastic about.
And I think we can move a lot of those folks who might right now be
waffling there over the course of the campaign.
There is more for Biden to squeeze out in white collar white America, I think,
than in 2020. Those voters are frustrated by inflation like everyone else. And a lot of them
think Biden is too old to run again like everyone else. But they are the most receptive to the
argument that Trump is a threat to democracy. And they are also the most pro-choice, but also the most likely to
prioritize that issue. This is going to be a tough one. It's going to be a close one. But that was
always going to be the case because America in the Trump era is a place with an evenly divided,
because America in the Trump era is a place with an evenly divided, calcified electorate.
The good news is that there's absolutely a path to win and finally break Trump's stranglehold on our politics.
The votes are there, and each of us has the ability to go get them.
Because this is not about you and me and Joe Biden at the end of the day.
It's about the people of the United States deciding that this country's not going down on their watch. Those grassroots warriors, the people who are writing their
postcards and giving 10 bucks and fighting with everything they got and leaving it all on the
playing field for America and our democracy and our liberties and our freedoms. And at the end
of the day, when you ask me why I'm so optimistic, it's because of all of them. And I think it's why
we have this extra superpower, this extra gear, this extra muscle that is going to carry us through and
help make sure that we win. A hopeful note to end on from Simon.
Now it's on us to make it a reality. So let's get into it.
The Wilderness is a production of Crooked Media.
It's written and hosted by me, Jon Favreau.
Our senior producer and editor is Andrea B. Scott.
Austin Fisher is our producer.
And Farah Safari is our associate producer.
Sound design by Vassilis Fotopoulos.
Music by Marty Fowler.
Charlotte Landis and Jordan Cantor sound engineered the show.
Thanks to Katie Long, Reed Cherlin, Matt DeGrotte, and Madeline Herringer for production support.
And to our video team, Rachel Gajewski, Joseph Dutra, Chris Russell, Molly Lobel, and David Tolles,
who filmed and edited the show.
If the wilderness has inspired you to get involved,
head on over to votesaveamerica.com to sign up and find a volunteer shift near you.