Pod Save America - The Wilderness Chapter 5: Working-Class Latinos in Las Vegas
Episode Date: October 17, 2022Are demographics destiny? We talk to working-class Latino voters in Las Vegas about what issues matter most to them and whether they’ll vote for Democrats this fall. Political scientist Ruy Teixeira..., former Bernie Sanders presidential campaign manager Faiz Shakir, and Carlos Odio of EquisLabs join to discuss. New episodes of The Wilderness drop every Monday. Subscribe to The Wilderness wherever you get your podcasts.Apple: apple.co/thewildernessSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6JfsJlD5sBhVpEQEALNw4UStitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/the-wildernessIf you want to learn more about how you can take action in the fight for our democracy, head over to Vote Save America and Culinary Union 226: https://votesaveamerica.com/midterm-madness/https://www.culinaryunion226.org/
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Melanie Arizmendi started canvassing when she was 18, before the 2018 Nevada primaries.
She went with her mom, a proud member of Culinary 226, the biggest union in Las Vegas,
one that deployed 500 canvassers to knock on more than half a million doors for Joe Biden.
She likes to teach me. She's like, no, Melanie, you got to do it this way.
She's very loud. I don't know if you've seen, like, a Mexican mom trying to push a point.
Melanie's family hasn't had it easy.
No matter how hard they've worked, it's never been enough to keep up with the cost of housing,
starting with the crash that led to the Great Recession of 2008.
Now it's official. We are in a recession.
A report out today says nearly 213,000 homeowners got foreclosure notices just in July. Nevada is
ground zero for the housing crisis. I was born in California in Los Angeles. We moved to Vegas when
I was three because my parents thought it was too expensive in California. We went to Vegas.
We lived here till 2008. We moved to San Diego because we lost a house in 2008.
It's very tough moving all the time.
I think I went to like 10 different schools.
It was pretty lonely, but it's okay.
I got used to it.
If you are able to stay in the same house from the time you were like a kid, it's very fortunate.
Housing is way too expensive almost everywhere right now,
but Las Vegas is one of the worst markets in the country.
Melanie's also a full-time nursing student,
and when the pandemic hit, she couldn't afford her own place.
So she and her boyfriend moved back home to live with their parents,
just like millions of other young people did during COVID,
which is one reason she's out knocking on doors in another midterm election.
Hello, my name is Melanie Arizmendi.
I'm with the Culinary Union. I just want to...
The culinary workers have proposed a ballot initiative for the 2022 midterms that would
institute rent control in the predominantly Latino working class neighborhood of North Las Vegas.
The union asked us, what do you think is the most concerning right now? Most of us said housing. For the whole entire paycheck to go to housing, how is that attainable?
You need a down payment. You need to be able to live, to eat.
Rent control would be life-changing for people like Melanie and her family,
which is why she spent her summer collecting signatures in 100-degree heat.
Because housing is an issue that too many politicians aren't doing anything about or even talking about. I have such a story about
this. Remember Congresswoman Katie Porter from our last episode? When I met with my first political
consultant and he said, well, you know, what do you see as the issues that you want to run on? Like, who's Katie Porter going to be? And I said, housing. And the political consultant, who's
no longer my consultant, by the way, said, well, that's not really like a thing. And I said, no,
no, no. Listen to me. This is the crisis that people are facing. And this is the crisis that
we're coming into as a country.
But generally, this is thought about as a private problem, right? Not a public one. There's sort of
this category, public housing, and we know what that conjures up and what that typically means.
And the rest of it is sort of thought about as like not really the government's problem.
That's completely untrue. Melanie and the Culinary Union are fighting to make sure housing is the government's problem.
And that's why they're also focused on November.
Now we're going to go tell people to go vote because that's the most important thing.
It is indeed.
Nevada is one of the most important battlefields of the 2022 midterms.
When organizers like Melanie are knocking on doors about rent control, they're also trying to convince voters to re-elect
Democratic Governor Steve Sisolak, who's facing off against the big-lie-believing sheriff of
Clark County, Joe Lombardo. But the biggest race in Nevada is also one of the closest in the
country. The campaign between Adam Laxalt, a Trump-endorsed son of a political dynasty,
who my Pod Save America co-host Dan
Pfeiffer calls the Conor Roy of Nevada, and Democratic Senator Catherine Cortez Masto,
the first Latina senator in U.S. history, and one of the few candidates who's made affordable
housing central to her campaign. I have been working with so many in my state to figure out
what is it that we need to do to address affordable housing.
figure out what is it that we need to do to address affordable housing.
Like Pennsylvania, control of the U.S. Senate may come down to Nevada.
Unlike Pennsylvania, Nevada is the only Biden state where the president didn't improve on Hillary Clinton's 2016 performance, even though the electorate became more diverse.
So what happened?
For years, political experts have predicted that a diversifying America would favor the Democratic Party,
particularly as a growing number of Latino immigrants and their children have become voting citizens,
making up a larger share of the electorate with each passing year.
That prediction seemed like an especially good one in 2016,
when the Republican Party nominated someone who announced his candidacy like this. When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending
their best. They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists. Sure enough,
Trump lost Latino voters in 2016 by 40 points. In 2018, when he made the final months of the
midterms about invading caravans full of
immigrants, Republicans lost Latino voters by a similar margin. But in 2020, something unexpected
happened. Donald Trump still lost the Latino vote, but he did a lot better than he did in 2016.
And Republicans didn't just do better with any kind of Latino voter. They made their biggest
gains with working-class Latinos who don't have a four-year college degree, which is about 85% of all Latinos.
In a state like Nevada, where Latinos make up nearly 20% of the electorate, one of the highest
shares of any state in the country, the Democrats simply can't win if they keep losing working-class
Latino voters. The same is true in other states with big Latino populations
like Arizona, Texas, Colorado, and Florida.
But it's also true in very competitive states
with smaller Latino populations,
like Georgia, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania.
So what can we do?
How can Latino organizers like Melanie and her mother
win over enough of their neighbors and coworkers
to make sure that housing's more affordable,
Nevada stays blue,
and we re-elect the country's first Latina senator?
A few miles from the Vegas Strip,
where a lot of the culinary members work,
I sat down with seven working-class Latino voters.
Everyone in this group identified themselves as an independent,
but some were certainly more conservative than others,
and it was the only group where two voters had supported Donald Trump in 2020.
Two others voted for Biden, one voted third party, and the last two didn't say who they voted for.
As usual, I gathered together a team of experts to help unpack this conversation.
Hey, Carlos Odio. I am co-founder of Equis Research and Equis Labs.
Yeah, I'm Rui Teixeira. I'm currently a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
Faz Shakir. I was Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign manager and still retain essentially a title of chief advisor to Bernie.
And I have started a media organization called More Perfect Union that is focused on telling the stories of working people by and for working people.
We'll hear from Carlos, Rui, Faz, and seven Nevada voters after the break.
Wow.
Three million followers.
I don't know.
I stay away from Twitter.
I figured it'd be bad for my mental health.
You were correct.
Carlos is out there somewhere, right?
Oh yeah, Carlos Odio is here.
I went to Vegas because, well, it's Vegas.
But I also wanted to sit down with some of the working class Latino voters
who've been drifting away from the Democratic Party in recent elections.
There's been a big heated debate among political pundits and strategists
about why this is happening.
So I wanted to make sure I brought together some experts who could represent the different sides of this debate
and actually bring some data and experience to the conversation. Carlos is a brilliant strategist
and former Obama campaign colleague who runs one of the best Latino polling firms in the country.
Roy was one of the leading proponents of the demographics or destiny theory, who's since
changed his mind and now has views on the subject that are a bit more controversial within the party.
And Faz didn't just run Bernie Sanders'
winning Nevada caucus campaign.
He was a top advisor to Nevada's
most successful political leader, Harry Reid,
and now runs a group that's focused on organizing workers.
I sat down with the three of them a few weeks
after I came back from Vegas to share what I'd heard,
and I asked them to help us break it all down.
I wanted to start by getting some opening thoughts from each of you on the long running debate you've all been part of about the Democratic Party's relationship with Latino voters.
Where does it stand? What are some common misconceptions? What are campaigns and
candidates getting wrong? Carlos, you've been closest to the data. You've probably seen
countless focus groups like the one that we're about to hear from. What, you've been closest to the data and you've probably seen countless focus
groups like the one that we're about to hear from. What do you think? I think what we know is that
there's a lot of swing in the Latino vote. And I think for a period of time, we took for granted
that they were part of the Democratic coalition. And I would say, you know, you have different
waves, but really after the immigration debates of 2006, 2007, you had this period where there was a vision of the Republican Party formed within those immigration debates that created a group norm among many Latinos that was, we can't vote for them.
They're anti-Latino.
They're racist.
They're anti-immigrant.
It's the whole package. inflated Democratic coalition, right, and gave a sense of a two-third majority that almost seemed
permanent and that as younger Latinos age into the electorate at a very fast rate would only
persist, if not grow. What we saw after 2016 during the Trump tenure is some erosion of that
group norm, right, where it stopped being so socially unacceptable to vote for Republicans,
in particular for Trump.
And there was a shift, right? And where we are right now is a great deal of uncertainty,
right? It could fall either way. There's a lot that can happen between now and the end of the
election because a lot of Latino voters are still in that undecided column.
Roy, I know you've written quite a bit about this. Your thoughts?
I think the Democrats have become increasingly identified with a set of
positions and sociocultural issues. They really don't sit that well with a lot of Hispanic working
people who tend to be conservative to moderate in their social views. And then you combine that with
people's views. Initially, at least the Trump economy worked quite well until the COVID epidemic
hit. After that, you had a lot of Hispanics being
worried about, well, are the Democrats really serious about reopening the economy? Many of
these people work in law enforcement. Many of these people work in resource extraction industries,
oil and gas. There's a sense in which Democrats are seen as being hostile to those industries.
And to some extent with the Democrats, it comes down to what have you done for me lately?
That's a question that they can't answer satisfactorily. As you know, Nevada politics very well ran a campaign there that won over quite
a few of the voters we're about to hear from. What do you think? You're talking about communities
that have a recent immigrant past or a not too distant immigrant past. They at least can remember
the immigration story by which they came here. And so when you think about why they came to America and what they're trying to do in America
is a reflection on a story of America that they can remember, that this is a story of opportunity.
And for some who come and try to make their own life here, they see, whoa, a lot harder,
a lot more challenging, a lot more corrupt. And so what type of politics
that I think appeal to them are values oriented around the original ambition of America is that,
hey, this is a land of opportunity, a land of freedom, and it's values oriented.
I think you will all find echoes of everything that the three of you just said and some of the
clips that we're going to be hearing. I want to start by finding out what issues were most
important to these voters. Let's take a listen. What are some of the clips that we're going to be hearing. I wanted to start by finding out what issues were most important to these voters.
Let's take a listen.
What are some of the biggest issues that you think are affecting Las Vegas and Nevada overall?
Housing.
Housing.
Housing.
I've lived in and out of Vegas for 32 years.
Every sign used to have 99 and move-in special, everything.
You can't find that no more.
And then they want the credit to match.
Like, we were one of those people
where the owner sold right from under us.
And I had a, there was no weeklies for us to go to.
We were hotel hopping.
And that's 70 to 100 and something dollars
for us to go to a decent hotel.
And I had to do that for three months
before we got our house.
Rent has gone up a few hundred dollars within the last couple years.
That's a pretty big amount for a family to have to incur.
I don't understand why there's no rent control in the state.
I really don't.
I was a renter for so long, and if I had a rent right now,
it'd be hard because, you know, wages aren't going up,
but yet housing is.
I can't think of somebody like graduating college,
let's say 20 or 30 year old,
how they can buy a house now, $60,000 a year income.
Right.
Because the prices have gone up so much.
Well, gas prices and groceries going up.
It's just furious because the way they use this pandemic
to just take advantage of the situation.
The inflation makes millionaire more millionaire.
Climate change, people think it's hypothetical or it's not real,
but being in Vegas, we don't see any rain.
We see extreme weather.
I think about that because my kids, what's going to happen in 30 years,
40 years, what are they going to inherit when I'm gone?
Is anyone else concerned about climate change?
The decline in water and just the fact that we share water
from like four different states.
I mean, and I know it's probably upset, but the abortion and the gun thing, I have a big issue
with that. How dare you tell me what to do with my body, but I can't tell you if you own a gun.
And then the fact that your gun might kill my kid that goes to school,
that's a big issue for me. Because you can tell me I got to have a kid, but I can't tell you,
you can own a gun.
So I asked this question in every focus group and in every focus group. I would say that the cost of living issue that I heard about the most that politicians talk about the least is housing.
And it was here. Obviously, there have been housing issues in Nevada for a long time. I heard
it in Orange County from all the young voters. That was their top issue. I heard it a little bit in Pittsburgh as well. And yet we don't hear that
as much in the national political debate. Faz, why do you think that is? Well, first of all,
some of the policy measures that would be required have been deemed to be so offensive to
wealthy and the rich landlords. So if you think about the words that were mentioned, rent control,
I mean, it's become
almost toxic in many political conversations.
The idea of government coming in and imposing a market condition on the economy is just
so foreign.
So I think it's become an issue that particularly among wealthier folks have decided it's
politically toxic, shouldn't talk about it.
But I think what sometimes Democrats forget and is important here is the working class
emotions around the issue.
Because when you talk about housing, you're also talking about people who feel a sense of shame.
It's a big part of narrative that goes through.
It's like, if I can't provide for my family, I feel a sense of shame for myself.
I feel a sense of shame about my children.
I feel worried.
I feel anxious all the time.
That condition is really important to also access when you're thinking about policy.
So not only just say, hey, this is your policy, here's an emotion. Where people are on the edge,
they're struggling, and we got to connect with it. Carlos, did these answers that you just heard
track with the data that you've been looking at? You could take a transcript of this focus group
and copy and paste it in any state and with any demographic, and people would buy that it's that,
copy and paste it in any state and with any demographic, and people would buy that it's that, that it's legit. We're a divided country, but I would say that the voters are united among
a set of concerns at this point. It is the perverse thing about something like rising prices
and inflation is that everybody feels it, everybody sees it in some way or another,
some people more than others, but it's consistent at their dinner table. It demonstrates that there is this
disconnect between the D.C. discourse and what people are talking about. And the question is,
how does our politics become more responsive to those needs? People feel a lot of anxiety.
They don't know what's going to happen next. Then you have crisis upon crisis upon crisis.
And the challenge for Democrats in this moment is that fairly or not fairly,
upon crisis. And the challenge for Democrats in this moment is that fairly or not fairly,
they're blaming the people in charge and they perceive Joe Biden to be the person in charge.
Roy, one thing I noticed in this group is that while economic issues came up quite a bit, you also heard people become animated about issues like abortion, guns, climate,
and these aren't liberal Democrats. What do you think about that?
climate, and these aren't liberal Democrats. What do you think about that?
Well, I mean, I think if you look at the survey data, it's pretty clear that Hispanic voters overall are supportive of a moderate position on abortion rights, moderate position on gun control,
and generally are in favor of doing something about climate change. The problem is relative
salience, in my view. I think, generally speaking, the issues
that are driving them tend to be different. They're mostly concerned about housing, the cost of living,
jobs, health care, their kids, their community. Other issues are important, and to the extent the
Democrats are viewed as being on their side on those kinds of issues, that's fine. But if the
Democrats aren't viewed as being effective on core issues about housing, about the cost of issues, that's fine. But if the Democrats aren't viewed as being effective on core issues
about housing, about the cost of living, about the way the economy is working, what's happening
with real wages. I mean, one way I always think about it, or a phrase I like to use,
Hispanic voters are normie voters, right? They just want a better life. They want to move up.
They're patriotic. They're here for opportunity, as Faz has been emphasizing,
and sort of that's what they want to take advantage of.
Although one thing I've been wondering as I listen to more voters in these groups is, you know, we tend to separate the issues.
And there's economic issues and then there's sort of cultural issues that are discussed a lot in the media and by elites.
And people tend to care more about economic issues.
elites and people tend to care more about economic issues. But what I'm hearing from people on some of these issues now, especially post-Dobbs with abortion, is people become
animated by issues that really, I mean, it sounds simple, but affect their own lives and people who
know them. And the way that people have talked about climate is not the way that a lot of
politicians talk about climate, but like, hey, we're seeing a drought in our state, right?
The way people talk about abortion is,
I'm now concerned that someone I know
couldn't get an abortion and had to drive to another state,
or I knew someone who was involved in a mass shooting.
I don't know if Carlos or Faz,
you guys have any thoughts on that too?
With any urgent issue and the issues that, you know,
any voter might indicate are high
salience of them, they want to know that you are going to fight on them. And there's this question
of how emotionally resonant and credible you are in that fight. And I think, you know, on the right,
what we're dealing with as people, particularly in this Trump Republican Party, is that they
embrace friction. They're often fighting, they're always yelling, they're always angry about
something. And that's what Trump has brought them to.
And if I asked you today, like, hey, what does Joe Biden and what do Democrats really get
emotionally fired up about? Just ponder and reflect on it. Honestly, I say that with all
due respect to him and to the whole party, honestly. What do you think people would think
you get fired up about? And just
answer that question for yourself for a moment and see where you're at. I think there's a narrative
sometimes that Latinos are moving toward Republicans because there's values alignment
there of some sort, right? And they reject where Democrats are on some of these cultural issues,
and they're more aligned with Republicans. Where I think it's actually closer to what
Faz was just saying in terms of priorities, that they perceive that Democrats are not talking about their priorities. Less I would think about rejection on the particular things Democrats are talking about and more just saying the things I care about the most, the things that I'm intense about, you don't seem to be talking about. Meanwhile, these Republicans, well, they don't seem to give a shit about me, but they are ruthless in prioritizing the economy. And so if I'm going to vote on that issue, that's the way I'm going. What I think Democrats miss in these moments is
what keeps a majority of Latinos with Democrats above and beyond their demographics is a sense
that Democrats care more. The question is, can Democrats deliver? But it was wild to me while
I'm talking in the context of the economy that after Uvalde, you had some arguing that Democrats should just say nothing about guns because on guns, Democrats don't have a natural advantage.
They're not trusted more.
Well, listen, the advantage is the Democrats care more.
You got to lean into the caring.
In a moment like that, like Uvalde, when you had these kids being gunned down, if you can't show care, then you're undermining the one brand strength you have that is still
carrying you forward. So when I asked about most important issues, one person in the group
raised immigration, which I know is an issue that some pundits just assume is Latino voters' top
priority. But he did set off a discussion about the issue. Let's take a listen.
Are there big issues that are debated even either in Nevada or nationally that are affecting you personally that you think about?
Well, the immigration issue.
Immigration?
Yeah.
Every person of those that are going to come here, they're going to qualify for welfare, food stamps, housing, and who's going to pay for that?
Okay.
It seems like chaos.
Chaos.
The Texas border, when you see those big lines under that bridge, it seems like chaos.
Maybe in the past there was times where immigration policy was kind of heartless, where they were
purposely doing things that they knew were going to kill people to deter them from trying
to come over.
That's pretty heartless, but I think now it's way too just careless.
They need to get a policy
and stick with it no matter which party's in charge. I mean you've got kids that are
down there that they're the ones who have to suffer you know they're just
trying to get a better life. How many people think it should be easier to
immigrate to the United States and how many people do you think it should be
harder to immigrate to the United States? It should be a law, it should be controlled.
It's not easy, It's not easy.
I mean, you got people here with 30 years.
They're not criminals.
They pay taxes every year.
They don't do drugs.
And then these people,
they haven't paid a tax in their life here.
They just come over, except Mexico,
because if you're Mexican, you don't qualify.
But if you're from any other country,
you just come here, put your foot here, oh, you qualify for everything.
How sad it is that all those people died in a truck to come to a country,
and we sit up here in this country and talk shit about our own country,
how shitty we are, and these people died in a truck to get here
so they can have a little bit of what we have.
That's sad to me as an American, that all those people lost that,
and we let it happen.
My buddy's married to his wife for 20 years.
She's not a U.S. citizen. And they've been trying to do it for six years now. Immigration lawyers
aren't cheap, you know, and the paperwork to get it, they make it harder in that way, too.
There should be some kind of way to at least help and assist so it can be a smoother process. And
that's not happening. So it certainly seemed to me that, at least in this group, views about
immigration are a bit more nuanced and complicated than the political debate we've heard over the last few years.
Carlos, what do you think?
John, there is so much there.
There's the border and there is this idea of a pathway to citizenship.
And we try to conflate all of these things as being one thing.
But the border is really a different issue in voters' minds, especially in Latino voters' minds, where it's more, as you heard and they talked about in the group, a concern about
public safety, a concern about order, concern about resources.
At the same time, and I would say this is a category that's the plurality of Latino
voters in our polling, both believe in increased border security and a pathway to citizenship.
You heard it.
They're separating between do something about the border, but also take care of the people
who are already here.
And so it is a both and. Now, what Democrats have done of late is none of the
above. And so among Latino voters, the president's worst numbers across all of our states on issue
areas is immigration, because the border crowd, the pathway to citizenship crowd, and the both
crowd all disapprove. Inaction has led to disapproval. And so this thing that helped
differentiate between the parties among Latino voters is no longer has that power. The key swing
voters don't see a meaningful difference between the parties on this issue, at least in believing
that Democrats would actually do anything about it. But I think we have a problem in the Democratic
Party where not only obviously not much progress is being made on a path to citizenship, but there's a real resistance to trying to do anything that smacks of border security.
Hispanic voters because that's not their preference structure. They want to see order at the border.
They think there should be a fair and humane system for people to come to this country and then work their way up. This is a nation of immigrants, and we need to have a functioning,
rule-based immigration system that gives people a fair chance to come here.
What I hear now is like a desperation in those voices. You see people yearning and hungry for somebody to own the political struggle that is required to try to solve the problem and to grapple with the difficulties of governing it and to tell each side like, hey, you can't all get what you want.
Especially when you get into South Texas and you talk to some of those communities, they live with it as a crisis and they live with it as a sense of public safety.
You know, I remember who've gone down there for Jessica Cisneros and we're
working on the campaign. Bernie and I were meeting with so many people and they were
expressing just generally concerned about the crops and the animals and, you know, break-ins.
And it was very much a sense of, I don't feel safe. And if they don't feel like you're even addressing their safety, right, then you're not accessing their emotion, their feeling about the issue.
After the break, the voters tell us how they really feel about politics, parties, and politicians. Welcome back.
After talking with the Las Vegas group about the issues that mattered most to them,
we got into politics.
I started by asking these voters how they felt about politics
and the state of the country.
I feel bad.
Okay, just off. That's not a concern. I feel bad. Bad?
Okay.
Just off.
That's not a concern.
Depending on the subject, furious.
Disgusting.
Horrible.
Horrible?
I mean, I guess I'm just confused.
There's a lot of open sides to everything.
I look back when Reagan and Tip O'Neill, polar opposites, but yet they always came to a way to come together
and make policy work.
We don't do that anymore.
It's not America anymore.
It's two separate parties that are basically saying,
we're not gonna make you look good,
even if it suffers the American people.
Why do you think both parties are so divided?
I think it's a power trip.
I really think that they want to control,
like Nancy Pelosi, she should have been gone a power trip. I really think that they want to control like Nancy Pelosi
She should have been gone a while back and then you've got
McConnell why are they still there? There should be term limits
I mean, you know
It's like how many times can you play an album on a stereo turntable till it starts?
It's not as good as it once sounded and still starts fading off the quality and that's what it's like with those guys
Bringing some new blood
Politicians they promise you a lot of things but then when they get in there i don't see the results a lot
of times you know yeah so um because it gets way too confusing way too quick and there's a lot of
perspectives of how i'm supposed to like live my life and different like policies that are going
out that it just feels way too stressful i'm not about to go and put that into my mind
and then have, like, these, like, household chores
and tasks and work that I have to focus on, so.
Okay.
Faz, do you think that the surprising flurry of activity
in Washington of late might have some kind of effect
on these voters' views about politics or the
state of the country.
Well, yes, it's nice to pass bills and it's nice to show government working.
But then, you know, you go out there and you start talking to regular working class people
and you say, hey, we passed a historic thing to reduce prescription drug prices in America.
So if you're somebody in the suburbs, you've got a nice six-figure income, not really worried
about prescription drug costs in your life, And you hear that, you're happy.
Hey, my team, the Democrats, we did something good for the world.
Now, what if you're a person living on the edge who really needs prescription drug costs to go down?
It's eating away at your life.
You stress about it.
And you go and tell that person, we reduce prescription drug costs in America.
And they look at every penny on that prescription drug cost that they have, and they don't see anything happen.
Nothing has happened and nothing will happen, right, for another few years.
The gap between a Democrat and a working person will just grow.
They will hear you saying, I did something for your life.
Meanwhile, they're looking at their prescription drug costs, saying the same or going higher.
It is fine to be honest and direct about saying,
we passed these important measures,
and in 2025, this will happen.
2026 will happen.
It was historic.
It was hard.
We fought big pharma.
But there's like, how's you got to conclude that sentence?
And if you put us back in office,
here's what I want to do next.
And I'm going to continue to take those guys on.
And I'm going to advocate for these next two, three reforms that will have even more impact in reducing your prescription drug costs.
And the reason I have credibility about that is because I did it.
I just did it in the last two years when you put us into office, but my work is not yet done.
You got to put me back so I can keep taking on these bastards and keep delivering for you.
taken on these bastards and keep delivering for you. Carlos, I was struck by that last comment from a young woman named Daisy about how politics feels confusing and stressful and she's just too
busy working to pay attention. It seems like she's exactly the kind of person Democrats need to reach,
but how do we reach her if she's not paying attention to politics or it's too confusing?
That's a great question. It's typical in focus groups to hear people say, well, you know, I don't know what to
believe.
They have a hard time seeing through the news fog until they turn off the news.
And I think in that case, there's a small number of things that are really going to
break through.
Going into the geographies where our voters live, a lot of the organizing ends up getting
clustered in very urban areas.
We aren't going into the spots where voters actually live. And then similarly,
we're not going where they communicate online. So YouTube is a major source of news and information
for Latino voters. Latinos actually spend twice as much time as non-Latinos on YouTube.
But on some circles, YouTube is seen as like beneath us, right, from an organizing standpoint.
And it's not like the cool place to organize and it takes a very big investment.
And so when people want to know about an issue, what is going on with gas prices?
If they're going on YouTube, the information that is helping them make sense of the world is largely coming from the right wing or is just not there.
I asked about people's views of both political parties and which party was better for working people.
Here's what they said.
I used to vote Democrat all the time.
But in the second term, Obama, I just went to the Republicans.
What made you change?
Because for the workers, for me, it's my opinion, the Republicans is better.
But if you want welfare and food stamps and government,
hell, if you qualify for that, you're good with Obama.
And you held insurance, you went out with Obama.
It's too expensive.
So to me, the Republicans,
they're better for the people that work, if you work.
That's a great question that I was about to ask.
Which party do you think is a better party for working people?
Sergio, you think Republican.
Robert, what do you think?
It depends on your income bracket, unless you're in a corporate position.
So I'd say Democrats.
Democrats.
I would say Republicans now, but I'd say it used to be Democrats.
Okay.
Vince?
Democrat.
Democrats?
Democrats. Eric? Democrat. Democrats? Democrats. Eric?
Republican.
I mean, I don't really know the difference,
to be honest.
Roy, why do you think
people like Sergio and Cesar have
changed their views on which party
is better for working people?
So, I think a lot of the way people vote
between political parties depends on
sort of a long-term weighted assessment of who's been better for you and your family and the kind of people you know.
And when that starts to decay under the press of circumstance, the picture becomes cloudy and you can sort of move away from your traditional loyalties.
loyalties. As I've mentioned before, Democrats seem to be getting sort of more preoccupied with issues in the sociocultural realm, and they seem to be less interested or less focused on
the problems of working people. So I think frequently that just leads to a sense of
frustration, where even if they like the Democrats a bit better than the Republicans, it's not that
they have a great deal of faith in them. And then there are some people who are just going to conclude the opposite. The Republicans are better.
And there are some people who throw up their hands and say, you know, I don't know. I mean,
things don't seem to change that much no matter who's in charge.
Faz, what do you think? I feel like these are some of the very same voters who Bernie was
trying to reach. You know, obviously the Democrats, less of a labor party now than
probably it's kind of historic and storied past, and that's
part of the problem. In the first six months of this administration, coming in the midst of the
pandemic, we had progressive economics, John. You remember it really well. We had a stimulus,
we had unemployment insurance, expansion, child tax credits, pandemic, food relief for people.
It was a whole bunch of things to lift folks. And then inflation hit. And inflation
hit pretty hard in August. And I think we lost the narrative around what did you cause inflation,
right? I mean, that was the more natural question that everyone's got. How did inflation come about?
And was it your fault that you did all these nice things for working class people?
You know, Donald Trump, if you go back and look at his rhetoric, just not policy, just look at his rhetoric. That guy talked about
corporations, named them by name, blasted them on Twitter, blasted them in public speeches more than
probably any modern president in history. And so if you're a worker at any of those companies and
you take all those companies by name, what do you hear? That president is taking on my boss.
Holy moly, that guy's taking on my boss.
Carlos, obviously there's a lot of data that shows Republican gains among Latino voters are concentrated among specifically working class and also folks without a college degree.
Do you think this is economic in nature? And do you think a message like FAS just delivered would help sort of bring these voters back into the fold?
I mean, at most, you're talking about 25 percent of Latino voters being college educated.
So when we say that the trends happen mostly among non-college, like, I think it obscures sometimes more than elucidates because we're talking about an overwhelming majority here of the vote.
I think the challenge is we ask ourselves, well, what's moving people toward Trump? And I think the better question is to start with the first half of it, which is what
constrained them in the past? Because Joe Biden still won a majority of non-college Latinos.
So there's still something that's holding this all together. What has held back other more
conservative looking Latinos, people who by demographics, you'd say, these look like they
might be Republicans. And that's where I think there's a challenge in thinking that the argument should be entirely economic, right? Obviously,
I think Latinos care about the same things everybody else cares about. But this idea that
we should go colorblind, that Democrats should erase racial and ethnic identity from the question,
even though that has been central to what kept Latinos in those large numbers voting for
Democrats. I think part of the narrative about the working class is part of a global trend that we're talking about, right? The right-wing parties
have kind of taken over the working class, and what is left is kind of liberal elites,
plus, and this is the part that kind of gets left out, minority parties and the children of
immigrants. So there's still something about being a minority and feeling othered within a country
that is still very potent. And so we can't just reduce this to materialist concerns in this moment.
We finally get to the midterms, and I asked about one of the most competitive Senate races in the country
between Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto and Republican Adam Laxalt.
Here's what these voters are thinking.
Laxalt's got too much baggage.
What kind of baggage?
Well, when he was in office here, there was some investigations,
but I think for him, he's just more inclined to take more PAC money.
I think he's going to go ahead and take money from the corporate more she will,
and I think he'd be more influenced by them.
And also, the big lie.
I know people think that, but facts are facts.
But you've got all these people endorsing this big lie.
It turns me off big time.
Cesar, have you made up your mind on Laxalt Masto?
I don't think I know enough yet, but probably Laxalt.
Masto doesn't seem sincere and genuine to me.
She seems like a new Democrat team player.
And she just, whatever the party line is, that's what she's going to do,
and I don't respect that as a politician.
I haven't picked one out yet.
You haven't picked one out yet?
What would make you decide?
What are you looking for in a candidate,
or are there issues that would help you decide?
I guess keep their word and do what they're going to do
instead of the big lie.
Carlos, after hearing them say that the media covered January 6th too much,
I was also surprised to hear a couple of them say the embrace of the big lie was disqualifying.
What do you make of that and sort of this race?
Is there advice you'd give to the Masto campaign?
Would you highlight Laxalt's extremism? What would you do?
Yeah, Cortez Masto is an interesting case, right? Because even though she herself is Latina,
she wasn't particularly well known in the Latino community previous to this cycle.
And so she's kind of had to reintroduce herself. And she does have some attributes
that seem to appeal to Hispanic voters that kind of set her apart from a generic Democrat. Even
things she's done around, for example, human trafficking that kind of take her out of the realm of just DC talking points
and your typical MSNBC issue agenda and differentiate her and show her as a person of
action. And then Laxalt, in some ways, Democrats drew the best person they could in Laxalt. I mean,
what you hear in focus groups that we've done in the state is just guys seen as something of a zero, right?
Somewhat boring.
And the attributes about him that are more exciting
are the fact that he's very much a Trump guy.
And so in some ways,
this is one of the hardest races Democrats have right now.
But so far, things have fallen slightly better configuration,
at least as it concerns the Latino electorate.
Faz, in addition to having run a campaign fall in slightly better configuration, at least as it concerns the Latino electorate.
Faz, in addition to having run a campaign that won a Nevada caucus,
you're also a Harry Reid staffer, so you know the state well.
Two thoughts that come to the top of my mind is that Nevada is a strong labor state. Culinary is strong there. It's baffling to me that more Democrats aren't talking about the Starbucks and
Amazon organizers and others. It's like one of the most generationally important things that's happened. I don't think any Democrat ever really talks about
it, but you could imagine for a strong labor orientation in Nevada, it would be very persuasive.
Number two is like housing. And going back to the first comment that you raised,
how do you get attention? How do you break through in a narrative? Sometimes it's just
start talking about things that other people aren't talking about. But if you look actually
in Nevada, there are housing ordinance and ballot measures
that are trying to be pushed through in various parts of that state.
So all you got to do is try to keep your base engaged, get your message out, get Democrats
understanding your credibility, your desires, your fight, your empathy, your goals.
And I think she should do all right, but she's got some work to do.
So I usually end by asking the group
to talk about their dream candidate,
someone they'd be excited to vote for.
This crew gave one of the more interesting
sets of responses I've heard.
Let's listen.
If you could assemble your dream candidate,
what qualities would that candidate have
that you'd be excited to vote for that person
for president of the United States?
When Trump first ran, I liked him because he would always tell he had no influence.
He liked being in the middle.
Nobody had any say what he would do, any decision making.
So I'd want an independent candidate that's not going to have influence from outside parties or sources,
but it's not going to ever happen.
But I want someone who's going to be able to make a decision on what he thinks is best for the country,
not best for his party or her party.
Okay. Eric, what about you?
Yeah, I'd take Trump as a younger guy if he was. Let's say his kids would go around
or something. I'd vote for him.
Younger Trump.
Yeah.
Anis, what about you?
Integrity.
Integrity.
And personal integrity, not just integrity for their party, but to really have, because
if you have personal integrity, you'll do what's best instead of going with your party.
Daisy, what about you?
I like what you said about how Trump was, like, talking about not being influenced.
I like that, just going off for, like, surprise, not really going, I don't know,
like, according to, like, everyone else's opinions or just, like, pressured.
A strong character like Trump.
Strong character.
I mean, I don't like half of his things,
but the other ones.
Some of the stuff.
Here's the truly weird part.
Just so everyone listening knows
how complicated voters can be,
the first man you heard, Robert,
said he liked Trump because he seemed like
he was in the middle and he wasn't being influenced
by anyone.
Robert later said that he couldn't vote for trump again and that he's leaning toward ron desantis in 2024 but then he said that he loves quote loves aoc
and thinks she'd be a great speaker and he said that because she has stood up to nancy pelosi
and her party and he respects that kind of integrity. Can anyone make sense of a voter
who's leaning towards Ron DeSantis, but loves AOC and hopes she'll be speaker? Anyone want to take
that? I feel like we should start with the diagnosis of Trump. I think what sometimes is
missed about the original intent of Trump is that the sales pitch is not that I was a disruptor who was going to revolutionarily bring down this government.
The aspirational pitch of Trump for many of these voters that worked
is I'm a businessman.
I did well in life.
I don't need this job.
I game the system for myself.
I know how the system is corrupt.
I know how it works.
And now I'm going to game it for you.
People are looking for,
at the end of the day, trust in an elected official to do the things that they don't have
the time, patience, or inclination to give a damn about. Like, hey, I elected you. You go figure
this shit out. Give me somebody who wants to come in here, tell me that they're going to take on
some powerful people, be a disruptor, but do it for me. They're basically giving you the pulse
of populism, of their lived condition of real lives.
And if you tap that, that's good populism that you can marshal for good politics. Otherwise,
people are going to move towards the authoritarian autocrats who want to disrupt this stuff because
the whole government ain't worth shit. That's the argument.
Rory, what do you think about that?
People are thirsty for someone who basically hates and will bash and is different from the elites who they believe are running the country and running it into the ground and don't really care about them.
Why would someone simultaneously like DeSantis and AOC?
Well, AOC is out there bashing people, too.
They like the fact that she seems sort of unleashed.
She just tells it like it is.
She's not afraid of saying stuff that's really unpopular. So does it hang together coherently
as an ideology? No, not at all. But let's never forget, people like us whose ideologies hang
together are really weird. Most people have a lot of views that are contradictory all over the place.
But we have to realize that if they don't hear someone
who's making that kind of pitch, who convinces them
they're not just another one of the elites,
they can go in a bad direction.
Carlos, we'll end with you.
You know, you said earlier Democrats sort of need to show
that they care across not just economic issues,
but a whole host of issues.
Can showing that you care, can that exist alongside
some of the
populism that both Faz and Roy are talking about where you are bashing some powerful people?
Yeah, absolutely. Because, you know, it's care and it's deliver. And what Republicans have for
them is the ruthlessness. And so in general, I think someone has equated in the past as trying
to stand on a plank or a seesaw, which is you need to have a strong stance on both sides. You need to take strong positions, but on both sides in a way that kind of balances
you out. And I think people are looking for people who subvert their expectations, who aren't just
saying what they would expect to come out of the mouth of an average Democrat or an average
Republican. And so what Democrats, the challenge for them right now is showing that they have the
care, but show they got a little of that ruthlessness in them, too.
Message, I care, but I'm ruthless.
Muscularity matters.
I care ruthlessly.
All right. We figured it out here. We figured it out.
Faz, Rui, Carlos, thank you so much.
Thank you.
It was fun. Thanks for having us.
See you guys.
Latino political strategists will often make the point that the Latino community is not a monolith.
In fact, all 50 states have seen growth in their Latino populations in the last decade,
and these communities stem from over 20 countries.
It's precisely because this growing demographic is so diverse that it's foolish and even insulting
to make assumptions about Latinos' partisan loyalties or policy priorities.
make assumptions about Latinos' partisan loyalties or policy priorities.
Rui argues that Latino voters, especially working-class Latinos like the people I spoke to in Vegas, are quote-unquote normie voters, which he defines as voters who aren't very
partisan and care mostly about their jobs, the cost of living, the quality of their schools,
and the safety of their communities.
And certainly, that's a lot of what we heard from these voters.
And it's the same thing we heard from other struggling voters
who don't follow politics that closely.
None of these voters have much faith in the political system
because they don't feel like the system has made life better for people like them.
People who aren't rich.
But Carlos makes a persuasive argument that it would also be a mistake
for the Democratic Party to just ignore the racial and ethnic identities of Latino voters, especially when so many right-wing xenophobes are using those identities to marginalize and exclude Latino Americans from the country they love and call home.
It is true that views about immigration among Latino voters may be more complicated than some pundits and activists assume,
especially around border issues, and especially among Latinos who live in border communities.
We certainly heard concerns about public safety and fairness from these voters.
But we also heard empathy and compassion for immigrants who have risked everything to come here in search of a better life.
These voters may not have much faith in American politics right now,
but they still believe in the American dream.
Not just because it holds the promise of opportunity,
but because it does so regardless of what you look like or where you come from or what language you speak.
And what they really want are leaders who are actually willing to fight for that promise,
who are relentlessly focused on the issues we heard about in Vegas.
If Democratic candidates don't show that kind of fight,
there's a real danger that these voters could either give Republicans a chance
or give up on politics altogether,
a trend we've seen in the last few elections.
People like Melanie are doing their best to make sure that doesn't happen.
In August, the North Las Vegas City Council
actually struck down the rent control initiative.
So despite all their hard work
and the overwhelming support from the community,
it won't be on the ballot this fall.
That's very frustrating,
because we put a lot of work towards that.
It's like a slap in the face.
But Melanie and the other organizers
aren't giving up that easily.
The Culinary Union says
that they're going to keep talking to voters
and that they plan to run what they're calling the largest field program in Nevada history. We're going to strike
harder. You know, we're going to take this to Clark County. We're not going to just give up here. We're
going to make it bigger. So the Culinary Union is now going door to door collecting signatures
for a countywide version of their rent control proposal. But, as Melanie learned, none of that matters
if they can't elect leaders who will support these types of policies.
So they'll also be working to elect candidates up and down the ballot
who will finally do something about the cost of housing,
from Catherine Cortez Masto and Steve Sisolak
to their local city council members.
It's not just about making history.
It is about ensuring we have a seat at the table to get something done.
Right?
Because I'll tell you what, don't you think it is about time that we had diversity in the United States Senate?
Every day matters.
There's so little time.
We have to make sure we talk to everyone that we can.
As far as I see on the doors, a lot of people, they've given up.
They don't think it's going to help to go vote.
We have to tell them why it's so important to go vote.
Why we're out here in the heat.
You know, we're not out here for no reason.
They're out there because of what voting can do.
Because of what it can change.
It's the reason that so many people have fought so long and so hard for access to the ballot.
It's why they're still fighting.
When we say things like our democracy is under attack,
when we say things like we are living in a climate crisis,
people of color, particularly Black people in America,
are hit first and worst by all of those things.
So we also know that we can't afford not to vote.
I think the question on the table is,
you've told them to vote, they've been voting,
and what have we gotten for our vote?
That's what you hear from folks. Next week, for our final episode, we talk to Black voters in
Atlanta, Georgia, where organizers are battling cynicism and suppression in a place that's become
central in the struggle to save our democracy. See you then. The Wilderness is an original podcast from Crooked Media.
Season 3 is produced by Dustlight Productions.
I'm your host, Jon Favreau.
From Crooked Media, our executive producers are Sarah Geismar, Katie Long, and me.
Special thanks to Allison Falsetta and Andy Taft for production support.
And to Mike Kulishek from Benenson Strategy Group
who helped us with our focus groups.
From Duslight, our executive producer is Misha Youssef.
Arwen Nix is our executive editor.
Stephanie Cohn is the senior producer.
Tamika Adams is the producer
and Francesca Diaz is the assistant producer.
This episode was sound designed by Stephanie Cohn.
Valentino Rivera is our senior engineer.
Martin Fowler is the composer.
Thanks to our development and operations coordinator
at Dusklight, Rachel Garcia,
and to Chrissy Marin for archival legal review.
If you want to learn more about how you can take action
in the fight for our democracy,
head over to votesaveamerica.com slash midterms.