Pod Save America - Trump Is Too Afraid to Debate Harris Again
Episode Date: September 13, 2024Two days after getting trounced in the debate, Trump turns to a familiar playbook: claim a win, trash the moderators, and—above all—refuse to debate again. The only hitch? All those Trump advisors... and endorsers talking to the press about how poorly he did. Jon and Dan discuss Trump's attempt at spin, Harris's post-debate agenda, and the MAGA freakout over Taylor Swift's endorsement.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, Donald Trump says no more debates,
as even Republicans are saying
that he lost on Tuesday night.
Meanwhile, the Harris campaign is doing everything they can
to keep the momentum going with new ads,
big rallies, and more interviews.
And later, as if they didn't already have enough
to whine about, MagaWorld melts down
over Taylor Swift's endorsement of Kamala Harris.
But first, more than 67 million people
watched Tuesday night's debate,
about 15 million more than watched
the Biden Trump debate in June.
And the more data we get,
the more clear it is that Kamala Harris
won the debate decisively.
In addition to the first post debate poll from CNN that showed Harris
winning 63 to 37 percent, a YouGov poll found her winning 54 percent to 31 percent,
and both Reuters and Morning Consult now show Harris with a five-point lead over
Trump, which is her gaining a few points since before the debate. So we won't get
a full picture of post debate polling until probably the end of next week or the week after. But until then, we
also have some great feedback from swing state voters who haven't made up
their minds yet. Our pal Sarah Longwell at the Bulwark offered a glowing report
from her nine-person panel where the most common word to describe Kamala's
performance was... presidential.
That kind of take seems to be shared by a lot of the undecided voters
who spoke to reporters at CNN, MSNBC, and elsewhere after the debate.
Let's listen.
So that's Trump, the bully.
And I think Kamala Harris came out showing some decorum,
some presidential nature about her.
So I think the door's a little bit open.
But it also sounds like this debate cemented for you
that you will never vote for former president Trump,
at least again. Is that right?
Yeah, I mean, I think that people want to separate policy
from character, and I just don't see how you can do that.
Robert, I know we started off the evening
where you said you're not sure who you may support.
Did this debate change your mind in any way?
Kind of did make me sway a little bit toward Kamala Harris.
What did you think?
As to who I would vote for in this election, I strongly felt Kamala was more optimistic,
more respectful.
I thought she had plans that she
tried to describe in the minutes worth of time that she had. All right, so we're still working on the pronunciation
with some folks, but that is a super cut
I could listen to over and over again.
Just great stuff. What a fun guy you are.
For my friends in the focus groups.
You know, I just, I love focus group.
I love an undecided voter.
With all the caveats, first impressions, still early, lots of voters who haven't
watched or maybe even seen a clip of the debate.
Um, what are your thoughts on how this debate is landing with people?
It's landing great.
She clearly won.
She moved the ball forward on a whole's landing great. She clearly won.
She moved the ball forward on a whole host of measures.
She looked strong.
She looked presidential.
She got a chance to introduce herself to the country.
Huge viewership, which is a huge win, right?
I think there was some initial numbers
that made it seem like only a slight increase of her Biden.
The fact that it's this big, I think is very good for her.
And because of Trump's behavior,
it became sort of a cultural moment.
So you're seeing a lot, there are a lot of the clips.
It may not be the clips that we'll get into some other polling later, but they
may not be the clips that are exactly perfect for Kamala Harris in terms of
like the exact focus group message, but it shows her looking good and him
looking bad and that is great.
But the biggest takeaway here is there's a lot more work to do, right?
In the CNN poll, 82% of people said
that their vote was not changed,
which no one should be surprised by that.
Basically 80 to 85% of voters have been pretty locked
in their position for a long time.
In that poll, 14% said the debate made them reconsider
who they were supporting.
I imagine most of those are Trump supporters,
but, and then 4% said they'd actually changed their mind.
And I think it's important that we think about this debate
differently than any other presidential debate
we've ever had, because usually the debate
is the closing pitch.
It's where you try to close the deal,
because the candidates have been campaigning
for well over a year, they've been running ads,
they are well known to the voters in that moment.
Kamala Harris, for most people,
just like popped up
two months ago, they still didn't know her.
So this is not her closing pitch.
This is her in front of a giant audience
making the initial sale to try to get people
to be open to her.
And the fact that 14% of people have moved
and most of those probably have at least
are now openly considering her, that's a win,
but there's a lot more work to do.
Yeah, I think we have to look at people's decision
about who to vote for, not as like an on and off switch,
where they see the debate
and suddenly they change their minds overnight.
Like this is sort of a journey for a lot of voters,
undecided voters.
And I think it's clear that for most undecided voters,
at least what we're seeing in the data, what we're hearing in the focus groups, And I think it's clear that for most undecided voters,
at least what we're seeing in the data,
what we're hearing in the focus groups,
they came away with a more favorable impression
of Kamala Harris and they learned more about Kamala Harris
that they liked.
If they haven't changed their mind yet,
it sounds like it's because they haven't heard enough
from her yet.
They wanna know more, they wanted more details,
they wanna see more of her.
They probably wanna see her doing interviews, they probably want to see her, you know, doing interviews,
talking to people in other settings.
Right.
And so, you know, we've talked for over a year now about sort of originally
Biden and now Kamala Harris wanting to force a choice, right.
To say, here's Donald Trump, here's me, and let's make people decide,
uh, who maybe haven't been paying attention.
And I do think, you know, unlike either of the conventions, Democratic or Republican,
the debate was the first time voters got to see the two candidates who were running against
each other for president, one of whom will be president on stage together next to each
other for 90 minutes.
And they came away thinking that Kamala Harris did much better.
Our friends at the center left blueprint polling also asked voters which lines and
messages made them more likely to vote for
Kamala Harris and against Donald Trump.
I thought this was probably more useful
than any top line number about who might
have changed their minds.
Anything stand out to you from that poll or
others we've seen so far, like other data
points that actually would help with the
campaign's message and all of us as volunteers
as we're going out trying to convince people.
So two things, one,
the essentially the best testing message
in the entire poll from that debate
was Kamala Harris's line that she's not Joe Biden.
She's certainly not Donald Trump,
but she offers a new generation of leadership.
And that fits with what I think has been
probably both of our theory of this race,
which is her ability to represent
something different, to turn the page on the Trump era
is really the key to victory here.
Because in that Times poll, voters wanted change
and most voters thought that she represented
more of the same.
And so if she can change that and reframe this race
and the fact where she is turning the page on Trump,
that and sort of what we've been going through
for the last many years here, that's a huge positive for her.
The other thing, and I think this is really interesting
and it's interesting for people in the conversations
they're gonna have with the voters in their lives
and also for how we think about the campaign strategy
going forward is all the best messages
were the positive ones.
The ones that were about Kamala Harris and her values.
And it really wasn't about Trump.
And I think when you look at that CNN poll
to try to merge these two polls together,
people's opinions of Donald Trump did not change.
They did not think worse of him after that debate.
Like his unfavorability rating did not really go up.
It didn't really move.
And so when people are trying to make their decision
on that journey that you're talking about,
they already know what they need to know about Trump.
And so they're going gonna cross the line,
cross the Rubicon to vote for Kamala Harris
based on what they learned about her
over these next 50 some days.
And I think that's just really important
as we think about how we're gonna,
what we are posting on social,
what we're sharing with our friends and families,
group chats, et cetera,
is that what they really want
is they wanna know about Kamala Harris,
who she is, her plans, et cetera,
more than they need one more clip
of Trump acting like a nutcase.
Well, and we heard one of the women we heard from
in that clip said, you know,
people think that you can separate character from policy
and I don't know how you can do that.
The voters who still haven't made up their minds yet
about who to vote for
or whether they're going to vote at all,
most of them don't like Donald Trump
and they don't think he has a great character.
They have already decided that.
They are still considering him
because they haven't separated character from policy yet.
And they're still thinking,
yeah, maybe she has a better character
and she's more honest and a fresh face, stuff like that.
But I'm still, I don't know if her policies are better,
if she's gonna be a better president than him,
even though he's kind of an asshole.
That's the voter that we're talking about here. And that can frustrate all of you as it does us.
But that's, it's something to keep in mind. And to your point, first of all, I am not Joe Biden,
and I'm certainly not Donald Trump. What I do is offer a new generation of leadership for the
country. We hadn't even seen the blueprint polling yet, but when she said that line in the debate,
there were cheers from our office.
Cause we just knew, we knew that from all the data that we had seen that that would work well.
And it sure enough, it did the other best testing
lines, the true measure of a leader is who actually
understands that strength is not beating people
down, it's lifting people up.
Right.
Which again, I'm sure a lot of us, political
hardened, cynical, political
junkies would think that that's maybe too gauzy and positive and you know,
that's voters like that.
We don't want this kind of approach that's just constantly trying to divide us,
especially by race.
We don't want a leader who is constantly trying to have Americans point
their fingers at each other.
That was another top testing line.
And then on issues, no surprise here, right
around those lines that I just mentioned,
restoring Roe v Wade, strengthening the
Affordable Care Act and bringing down drug
costs, Kamala saying Trump has no plan for you.
And then the only negative message about
Trump that tested in that top range was her
talking about the Trump sales tax, the 20% tax on everyday goods.
That's $4,000 more a year for families.
This is how she described the tariffs, which
was great because she didn't even have to
describe what a tariff is or define it.
She didn't use the word, which I appreciate.
No, she just called it a Trump sales tax.
And it turns out it was maybe the strongest
negative message against Trump.
The only other thing I'll point out is I saw the New York Times has been talking to undecided
voters, not the random story that they ran about how, that some of you may have seen
about how for some undecided voters, she didn't close the deal.
But there's like a panel of undecided voters that they've been following around.
It's actually the right sample scientifically and not just like random people that they
talk to in a diner.
And Patrick Healy of the New York Times said he was talking to some of these
younger undecided voters after the debate.
And he has a comment from a 24 year old undecided voter that he said, reflected
the sentiments of a lot of people in the group after the debate about Trump.
And he said, he doesn't necessarily scare me.
I think he's incompetent. after the debate about Trump. And he said, I loved that comment because that I personally don't agree with. I feel like they're gonna use him and get policies enacted that I personally don't agree with.
I loved that comment because I think it gets at a truth
of how people see Trump.
And we've talked a lot about how some voters don't see him
as that extreme on abortion,
even though they know that it was his Supreme Court justices
that overturned Roe and they don't trust him,
stuff like that. But people are starting to understand that project 2025, you know, fucking Laura Loomer
on the plane for those who don't know, she said she's a proud Islamophobe.
She's already tweeting horribly racist things about Kamala Harris.
All you have to know about her is she's in a fight with Marjorie Taylor green right now,
where Marjorie Taylor green says she's too extreme and racist for the MAGA movement. She's the one person Marjorie Taylor Greene right now, where Marjorie Taylor Greene says she's too extreme
and racist for the MAGA movement.
She's the one person Marjorie Taylor Greene would fight with
where you'd think about rooting for Marjorie Taylor Greene.
That's who she is. That's right, yeah.
That's how bad, that's all you have to know
about Laura Loomer.
And she's been on the plane with Trump,
she was his debate guest, she's his buddy now.
She's a 9-11 truther,
and she went to the 9-11 memorial with him.
Sorry, yes, I forgot, that was a big one.
Because if I didn't say that, Tommy was gonna bust
through into the studio like a Kool-Aid man.
He's so mad about it.
I know, but that 24-year-old from California
who is undecided, I think that is the more effective
argument about Trump for people who think
maybe he's a little different or maybe he's not that bad
or he's like bullshit, but like, you know,
he's actually not that extreme or conservative. It's's that he has as Kamala Harris said in the
debate he is easily duped he is easily manipulated and he's gonna have a bunch
of extreme extreme far-right people around him more so than he ever has
before that if he gets back to the White House are gonna do whatever the fuck
they want because Donald Trump doesn't really care
because he's easily manipulated.
And I think that is a very effective argument
for undecided swing voters.
["Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy"]
One person who begs to differ on the outcome of the debate, Donald Trump, whose kink is
saying that he won things he actually lost.
Not all of his usual pals are buying the spin this time, though.
Here's Brit Hume and Neil Cavuto of Fox News, MAGA, MAHA surrogate RFK Jr., and Republican
pollster Frank Luntz.
Make no mistake about it, Trump had a bad night.
He decisively lost.
Vice President Harris clearly won the debate.
I've spoken to people on his team and members of his family.
They feel like the same way that I do.
I think that, you know, there were some lost opportunities.
Donald Trump lost.
This is not the worst debate performance I've seen in my career, but it's very close to it
It was a pretty negative
performance pretty pessimistic
Cynical and I think that this will cost him
Yes, I'm
Trying to decide if I want to go on record and the answer is yes
I think that that he loses because of this debate performance.
Wow.
Wow.
That was fun to listen to also.
That's what I would listen to over and over again.
More than the undecided voters.
I mean, I like them too, but this is more enjoyable.
Here in Frank Luntz, just bring himself to say
on Piers Morgan, oh, he lost.
I think the debate lost it for him.
We almost, by the way,
Reed didn't want to put this clip in because he didn't want to jinx it,
which was a good thought on Reed's behalf.
And I thought about that too, but so we're not saying,
again, we're not saying,
there's so much more work to do, he could easily win.
And, you know, Frank Luntz,
maybe you don't take his prediction seriously.
You know, we're just having fun.
We take our superstitions politically very seriously here.
And I went through an entire calculus on this when Reed brought it up. prediction seriously, you know, we're just having fun. We take our superstitions politically very seriously here.
And I went through an entire calculus on this
when Reid brought it up.
And us saying it would be possibly a karma violation.
Frank Lunt saying it does not have anything to do
with karma for us, so it's okay.
Yeah, we're not telling you to believe anything
Frank Lunt says.
RFK Jr. great surrogate by the way.
How helpful is he?
I'm shocked he's not better at this.
Just truly shocked.
I mean, have you known him before the brain worm?
He was great then, but now I don't know.
This is his big week.
You know, the guy who's been,
he's had a lot of roadkill animal stuff.
Was the whale thing this week?
There was the, no, I'm saying it's a big week for him
because of the Springfield, Ohio stuff.
Oh, I see, yes, yes.
You know, but he's been, I guess he's been,
you'd think he'd want to sit back but he's been, I guess he's been,
you'd think he'd want to sit back
because he's had some pet issues himself.
Yeah, maybe that's why.
So all of this is of course driving Trump nuts.
He posted on Truth Social that Neil Cavuto
is one of the worst on television.
He said he'd rather go with the losers at MSDNC.
Ooh.
And then, yeah, that's tough.
And then in much bigger news,
Trump made it clear on Thursday
that he is too afraid to face Kamala Harris again.
Because we've done two debates
and because they were successful,
there will be no third debate.
That's it?
No third debate.
I guess that's that, huh?
Are you surprised he already threw in the towel
the day after or two days after?
I don't know what day it is.
I don't know that he,
we have just been talking about this debate
nonstop for 72 hours now.
I'm not sure he threw in the towel.
You think he might reconsider if the polls go badly.
He backed out of the debate we just had
like three different times.
So I think it's possible.
Oftentimes with Trump, this sort of thing
is beginning of a negotiating ploy.
Maybe this is how he pushes for Fox.
Who knows?
I don't know that there's a lot real,
there's a real plan here,
but I can definitely see him being goaded into,
possibly being goaded into doing another one.
He's not someone super well acquainted
with his own best interests.
So maybe he will do it on the debate.
Well, it's interesting that you said it could
be the opening of a negotiating ploy.
If you're the Harris campaign, do you fight
for another debate at this point?
100%.
Yes.
You.
Cause I mean, I know we said that it was in her
interest to do it, which is why they said,
we'll see you at the next debate.
Now that he said no, I'm wondering how hard
they push it, but I still think you want
another big audience.
She needs another debate.
She absolutely does.
If you, one of the things that CNN pulled out,
to keep going back to it is,
Trump exits that debate with a 12 point advantage
on the economy.
And that's the big, this is through no fault of hers.
It's just that the way that debate went
is the first two questions from the economy,
Trump answered one of those questions about immigration
and we were off to the races onto mythically missing cats.
And that is the biggest thing she needs to do.
That was her biggest audience to do it.
She did not get an opportunity.
She came back through a middle-class background
at seven points, but the debate did not allow
for a huge, big conversation on the economy.
And that's what she has to fix.
And so having another opportunity
in front of another incredibly large audience to do that
is I think incredibly important if she can get it.
She can win without it obviously,
but there is so much more work to do here
and a debate would be very helpful
to be back on that stage for that reason.
Yeah, and again, for all the hundreds of millions of dollars
that she has raised and the ads she'll run
and the campaigning she and the rest of the ticket
and spouses and everyone else is doing all over the swing states,
you're still not gonna get an audience as big
as a debate audience to deliver your message,
which is why that's really valuable.
And even a debate audience,
like even that audience of 67 million people
is less than half of the 2020 electorate.
Yeah.
And we know that the vote- 160 million?
Right. 160 million.
Yeah, I think, yeah, 158 maybe?
But we know, what we do know is that the voters
who are most persuadable, most undecided, most swingy
are the ones least likely to watch the debate.
Least likely to watch, to consume
at least traditional media coverage of the debate.
And so then you may ask the question,
why do we second debate?
It's because you need another moment
where obviously these people will hear about this
through osmosis or maybe closer to the end, they will in if it's in October as it would likely be. So what do you make of the
outbreak of honesty among some of these Republican media types? I would just say that Donald Trump's
debate performance was so bad that the people who deny climate change couldn't deny this.
that the people who deny climate change couldn't deny this. It's just.
Suddenly they found like shame crept back into their mind.
They couldn't bring themselves to do it.
I mean, obviously the most obsequious mega types
are chilling for Trump here, but it's impossible to defend.
It's absolutely possible.
He knew he was losing from the look on his face
from about 35 minutes into that debate.
You couldn't really say otherwise.
And so they will say he did poorly, but then we won't talk
about this pivot and blame other factors
for why he did so poorly.
But, you know, there was no, you couldn't,
if you were a person who at least pretends half the time
to be somewhat to the journalistic center
of Sean Hannity,
like Brit Hume does, then you kind of had to say this.
Yeah, I mean, I think those people probably realized
that most people who watched the debate
had working eyes and ears,
and they could see it with their, see themselves,
and you can't really bullshit people on that.
So the Trump campaign has been telling reporters
on background that Trump supposedly
had detailed plans and talking points for the debate that would have helped him avoid taking
the bait from Kamala Harris and pivot back to his core message. Do you think any of these people
have ever met Donald Trump prior to the debate? It's so funny because if you read, there's a great
bulwark story from Mark Caputo about this.
And in it, they talk about how he had
these very detailed strategic plans.
And the one they cite is how he was going to pivot
off the cat story that he himself brings up.
So it's like they had decided that this very serious policy,
happy warrior Trump could not be convinced
to not bring up the fake cat story,
but they prepared him for how to
get to the cat story and then pivot to the larger Biden administration, uh, immigration record,
whatever else. I mean, they did debate prep with Matt Gates and Tulsi Gabbard.
Yeah. And he, and he just couldn't execute. He just couldn't execute the play. What a surprise.
Let Trump be Trump. I mean, obviously put aside the idea that you ever had detailed plans or a concept of a plan
for how to do this debate or whatever you want to say. He obviously had been, they've been clear
in the report. He had a strategic objective. They announced it in a conference call with this
collection of morons who did debate prep that what they were going to do is they were going to tie
her to the Biden administration record on inflation and immigration. And he could not do that.
He could not execute because he's an addled old man
who's obsessed with himself.
Like he just could not execute it.
And by the way, her pointing that out
is not just fan service for all of us
who've already known that.
It is showing people and I think it has shown people
and I just have words like this man,
imagine him in the Oval Office.
Like he can't follow a plan, he has no discipline,
he can't control himself, and that can be funny
or politically fruitful if you're Kamala Harris
in the context of a debate,
but when you're leading the free world,
it might be problematic, might be a riskier choice
to send him back to the White House.
Which, reason why that's important is
in that New York Times Yenna poll,
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump were tied
in terms of who is a riskier choice.
Yep.
So not all of Trump's sycophants have given up
on making excuses for his bad debate.
Most of them are blaming ABC News and the moderators.
Ben Shapiro said the network, quote,
put a stake through the heart of presidential debates.
And Charlie Kirk likened it to a show trial
where ABC News was the executioner.
Magga Cooke's are also calling moderator Lindsay Davis
and Kamala Harris sorority sisters
because they were part of the same
historically black sorority, even though they graduated from different colleges several years apart.
And the sorority has 360,000 members.
Uh, so that's, yeah, they're, they're, they're buddies.
Trump himself is calling, uh, is calling the moderators, all kinds of names, saying
that ABC news should lose its broadcast license.
Sean Davis over at The Federalist,
the guy who runs The Federalist,
he said that they should be arrested, the moderators.
Should be arrested and charged with campaign interference.
Is that a law?
I'm not even sure that's a law.
It's not a law.
It's not a law, Dan.
Trump also had more to say about his performance
at a rally in Tucson on Thursday.
As everyone saw two nights ago,
we had a monumental victory over comrade Kamala Harris
in the presidential campaign.
Two lowlife anchors, they're lowlives.
I'm not gonna watch him because he's not legit,
what he did, I'm not gonna watch him.
And his hair's not as good as it used to be, you know?
And she was nasty.
She looked at me with hatred in her eyes.
People said that I was angry at the debate.
Angry. I was angry.
And yes, I am angry because he allowed 21 million illegal aliens invading our communities.
Many of them are criminals.
Many are criminals.
I'm angry.
Wow.
So that was a little bit about David Mears' hair,
little bit about Lindsay Davis' hate in her eyes.
He's angry.
We don't have this part of the clip,
but at one point he talked about the situation
in Springfield and said, all of these Haitian immigrants are coming into
Springfield.
Who knows where they're from?
Who could, who could venture a guess?
I'm sure all of the, um, complaining about the moderators and ABC, sure that's
landing with Trump supporters.
Do you think that kind of whining is going to land with anyone else? complaining about the moderators and ABC, sure that's landing with Trump supporters.
Do you think that kind of whining
is gonna land with anyone else?
I don't think most people are hearing it, right?
It's fan service, right?
It's just to make your mega base feel better
about the disaster they watched.
And there's just a truism in politics
that the side complaining about the moderators
is the side that lost the debate.
That is always true.
It was true when Democrats were complaining about the CNN moderators after the Biden the debate. That is always true, it was true when Democrats were complaining about the CNN moderators
after the Biden Trump debate, that is always the case.
To the extent anyone hears it,
it just sounds like more fucking whining
about something involving himself.
And this is, you can see the seeds of the campaign
in trying to manage Trump here, which is I'm angry,
but I'm angry at what he was trying to execute there.
Quite poorly, I would say, was allow him to blather on about the debate, and then he's gonna is I'm angry, but I'm angry. What he was trying to execute there quite poorly, I would say was allow him to blather
on about the debate.
And then he's going to say he's angry, but
he's angry on behalf of you for all the, for
immigration or whatever else, but he can't do it.
And he, the part where he's talking about
himself, he has passion and vigor.
And the part where he's talking about everyone
else, he's reading a script.
And that is like how that is Donald Trump.
Which is what Kamala Harris said.
She said, go to one of his rallies
and the one thing you won't hear is anything about you
because he has no plans for you
because he doesn't care about anyone but himself.
Which by the way, also he announced in a video today
that in a couple of days he's coming out
with his own crypto.
I mean, like that does not get enough attention.
50 something days before the election crypto. I mean, like that does not get enough attention.
50 something days before the election crypto.
He's doing it at Twitter spaces on September 16th.
I hope.
That's right at Twitter spaces.
Yeah.
That's a Monday, I think.
I don't know.
I don't know, but.
Is this what he's gonna do?
He's just, it's a money making fucking scheme.
That's it.
The idea that he is doing this 50 years before the election
and it's not one of the biggest stories is just sort of why,
like there's a lot of big stories stories, it's just sort of why.
There's a lot of big stories,
so I don't wanna play that game,
but it is a truly insane thing to do.
It's crazier than selling the Bibles with Lee Greenwood.
It's crazier than that.
Well, before we move on to Kamala Harris,
we should note that the other message
MAGA World is driving post-debate
has to do with the issue that most voters are focused on,
which is whether or not immigrants
in Springfield, Ohio are eating people's pets. An update, they're still not, but thanks to Trump
and JD Vance repeating this deranged conspiracy to millions of people, the Springfield News Sun
reports that multiple city, county, and school buildings were closed on Thursday due to a bomb
threat while Haitian immigrants are saying that they're scared for their families' lives. city, county, and school buildings were closed on Thursday due to a bomb threat,
while Haitian immigrants are saying that they're scared for their family's lives.
Um, meanwhile, a Trump advisor told the Bulwark, quote, if anyone thinks we're
scared to talk about Haitians eating pets, they're wrong.
Yeah, no shit.
You don't seem scared to do that.
Here, I'm reminded of Kamala Harris's convention speech line that Trump is an
unserious man, whose second term as president would come with extremely
serious consequences. What do you think? Is this a storyline to be mocked, feared?
Both. Both. Like Trump should be mocked for this because it's absurd, it's
embarrassing, it's unpresidential, it just shows like what Kamala Harris would say,
an unserious person. But this is yet another on a long line of incidents
over the last nine years of American politics
where Donald Trump and the far right media
and the Republican party as a whole
have said things, spread conspiracy theories,
and those conspiracy theories have led
to real world consequences, including violence.
Like, do we remember when in 2016,
a gunman showed up at Comet Pizza in Washington DC
because of all the pizza gate conspiracies.
That person showed up there to try to rescue children
from a pizza place because of what was spreading
around the internet, being pushed by Trump allies.
We've seen these mass shootings that have been
where the shooters have talked
about great replacement theory,
something that is being pushed by Tucker Carlson,
a bunch of other people in the fire.
Like there is a history here and it is, it is deeply dangerous.
And so yes, we should make fun of Trump, but we should understand as Kamala Harris
would say that there are very serious consequences for his unserious behavior.
And you know, I think the, the bulwark was also interviewing some folks in
Springfield and what they're finding is a lot of the residents in Springfield are now saying they've heard about the rumors
from Trump and JD Vance or something that they saw
on the internet, not something that they've seen
in their community.
Of course.
And in fact, like, so yes, the background here
for Springfield is a lot of Haitian immigrants came
over the last couple of years.
They are first of all, legal immigrants.
They got asylum from Haiti,
which is horribly violent right now.
And so they escaped.
They came to the United States all legally.
And there were all these job opportunities in Springfield.
So they came now because there's so many new people
in Springfield, it has put like some strain
on social services and there've been some issues.
But when you talk to people in Springfield
and when they ask people, so many of them were saying,
well, these Haitian immigrants are some of the best workers
we have in our factories,
and it's actually not that big of a deal
and it's getting blown up by the national press.
And so you see how this happens
where maybe there's some tension with newcomers
in a town in Ohio,
and then the right-wing crazies get involved and the larger the platform
when it gets by the time it gets to JD Vance and then it gets to Donald Trump on a debate
stage in front of 67 million people, suddenly conspiracies are floating around that are
really going to put people in danger who live in the town.
Both the Haitian immigrants and the residents of Springfield because now there's just crazies
all over the place.
It's insane. It's, it is so insane. It is so insane. both the Haitian immigrants and the residents of Springfield because now there's just crazies all over the place.
It's insane.
It is so insane.
It is so insane.
But it also should be mocked.
And right now on TikTok, by the way,
people are remixing the Donald Trump saying
they're eating cats and dogs.
And it's just, it's fire.
Some of those remixes are fire.
Did you just say it's fire?
It's fire, yeah.
And it's hard to say this because again, horrible.
Are you speaking in emoji now? Like what is happening? Yeah. I don't it's fire. It's fire, yeah. And it's hard to say this because again- Are you speaking in emoji now?
Like what is happening?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't even know you.
You go on TikTok for six minutes and you start saying-
Six minutes.
Fire.
My brain has been pickled.
God, that's fast.
Great.
I mean, come on.
But it's insane.
And I can't tell now if they're gonna stop it
because they're just gonna get bored with it
or like they're gonna keep riding this one now.
They're just gonna keep talking about Springfield, Ohio.
I would imagine the latter.
I can't imagine that they find that this,
you think the latter, they're just gonna keep doing this.
I mean, for a while until they find a new absurd thing.
Like we had an entire episode explainer
on gas stove confiscation a couple of years ago.
They take these things for a long, pretty far away.
Let me ask you something before we move on to this.
Like it seemed like the two best issues for Trump
are the economy, inflation and immigration.
It seems very much like he does not want to talk about
his best issue, which according to the polls
is inflation and the economy
and only wants to talk about immigration.
Do you think that that could ultimately
be a mistake for him?
Yeah, for sure, for sure.
Like it seems like he just can't,
he has no interest in driving an economic contrast
or an economic message.
The same reason that Donald Trump
doesn't like to talk about the economy
is the same reason why the press
rarely writes about the economy.
It doesn't drive engagement, right?
When you go to a rally and he starts talking
about the cost of living, people don't go nuts.
You spew some conspiracy theory
about immigrants eating cats, crowd goes crazy.
And so, and he is just very Pavlovian
when it comes to applause.
And so he, this is like that New York,
that North Carolina rally from a few weeks ago
where he got there,
we started reading the economic parts of the speech,
no one applauded, so he just went down all the rabbit holes.
So yeah, I think it's hard for him to do.
Now the campaign is advertising on the economy, right?
They have a new ad up which has quotes of Kamala Harris
saying Bidenomics is working, like they are hammering that. All right, let's talk about Kamala Harris.
Her team has their foot in the gas after their big win Tuesday night.
Apparently, they brought in $47 million from 600,000 donors within the first 24 hours after
the debate.
On Thursday, they released two new ads that incorporate debate footage.
You can always tell which campaign thinks they won the debate because they put out ads that have
the debate footage in them. Trump did not do that, Kamala Harris did. One ad does the future versus
past optimism versus pessimism contrast and includes the great Harris line where she said she
offers the new generation of leadership. The other ad is a cut down of the debate exchange over abortion.
Politico also has a story saying the Harris campaign is going to be stepping up the pace
of their events and interviews, including interviews with less traditional outlets,
something Trump has been doing a lot of. And the campaign launched their post debate battleground
tour on Thursday, starting with two Kamala Harris events in North Carolina. Here she
is in Charlotte talking about the debate. Two nights ago, Donald Trump and I had our first debate.
And I believe we owe it to the voters to have another debate.
Because this election and what is at stake could not be more important. Now she sounded like she was having a good time at that event.
How long do you think she keeps needling him about the debate and anything else she can
do to just keep this in the news a couple more days?
I think needle him out the debate for a few more days, keep aggressively pushing publicly for another debate,
call them out for being afraid to debate again.
That's where, that's the next turn of the wheel,
I think is there.
Yeah, calling him a chicken.
Plough was on Twitter calling him a chicken.
He's excited.
It's good to have Plough back in the mix.
What'd you think of the two new ads?
They're good.
I mean, they like so much of this campaign.
They are very data-driven and the things they put out
are the things that the polls say work.
The abortion ad is very powerful
and it's the sort of the exact conversation.
I think it's the, when we're talking about like,
what ads should you send to the people
and the voters in your life who are curious
and particularly the ones who are deciding
between voting and not voting,
not necessarily voting between Harris and Trump.
And I think the abortion ad is a very powerful one.
Like that is a great one to send around to people.
Well, and I think you brought this up on our last pod
that Plouffe tweeted during the debate
that how undecided voters reacted
to both of their answers on abortion
was like the biggest split he's ever seen.
It was a 40 point swing.
Dial testing, 40 point swing, yeah.
So that's probably why they went with that one.
On the Politico story about Harris doing more interviews
with non-traditional outlets.
Do you have any advice for the campaign on that aside
from go on Pod Save America?
I've been pitching them directly to some polar coaster.
Just want to dig in the data.
You and Elijah got them behind the paywall.
It's a good way to reach undecided political poll junkies.
Yeah.
I mean, I think this is to be very interesting
what happens next year.
I think they've had a very good set of reasons
for why they have been pretty reticent
in the sort of media appearances she's been doing, right?
They had, they, you know, as we said before,
she woke up in the morning, the vice president by brunch,
she was the democratic nominee.
She had to pick a vice president,
get ready for a convention, prepare for a debate,
hire a staff, do all these things.
And so, but now here we are,
we're in the final stretch of 50 days.
And I think her media strategy has to be,
what I sometimes call it,
it's like everything everywhere all at once.
She's gotta do everything.
She's been doing, to her credit,
she has been doing local radio almost every morning.
When she was in debate camp, getting ready for the debate, keep doing that.
She's going to have to sit down and do local TV interviews. But I think the bulk of where the
energy has to be is in non-traditional stuff because the voters that you need to reach are
just impossible to reach through all the traditional
tools of a campaign, including advertising
on linear television.
It is just so hard to reach particularly young people
because they have cut the cord,
they are on TikTok where there's no paid advertising,
they are on Netflix where there's no political advertising,
they are on other platforms where there's no political
opportunities, they're just, other than major events, like really football games.
It is very hard to reach them with ads.
And so you're going to have to just be everywhere.
And so, you know, have come here, it's going hot ones.
Do Call Her Daddy, have Tim Walls, do every sports podcast
you possibly can around football season.
Have them do local sports radio before high school games
as a former high school coach.
Just be everywhere, do lots of things,
take big swings, take big risks.
You have to do it.
Like.
And by the way, we should say like this,
that strategy probably will not satisfy
a lot of reporters from traditional outlets
who will say she's avoiding tough questions
instead of she's avoiding the press
because they'll think, you know, the argument is they're more softball questions and non-traditional
outlets, but it's less about the type of question for the Hi-Rez campaign than it is about the
audience. Because like you said, it's just a lot of voters that they need to reach are just not
tuning into traditional media outlets and not getting their news from them.
There was, I have it like it would be great.
She should take questions from the press.
She should, you know, before when she gets off the plane
or gets on the plane after an event, take questions,
do that, just be out there.
But there was this bargain that existed
since the invention of media
where candidates would take questions from the press.
And oftentimes those questions were tough
but they're really often process oriented.
They weren't the questions that the campaign,
they weren't the campaign's message
but you took those questions, you suffered through that
because you needed the reach of the media
to reach the public.
You still need some of that for sure
but just that relationship between journalism
and reaching voters has been severed somewhat.
And so you have like, do some of that stuff.
The CNN interview got 6.6 million viewers, which is good,
but that's cause it was sort of an event.
The next one's not gonna get that.
You know, maybe the one way to sort of,
I think you can sort of square the circle on this
is to do like a network town hall,
where because that's her super versus one,
you are taking questions from reporter and voters.
It's traditional media,
but it's also usually covered by the rest of the press
as an event.
And so it's not, you know,
cause you just do a scene interview,
generally it's just gonna be on CNN
and no one else is gonna really care,
but lean into the non-traditional stuff,
take risks and be incredibly aggressive
cause she's really good.
And she's really, really good when she is just being
a human talking about her life.
And there's this great one,
this is great clip that's been going around on TikTok.
Maybe it's fire, I don't know.
Where?
Sorry, you've never heard that before.
Never heard it from me.
I've heard it, just not from you.
My Gen X co-host.
That's right.
You may be a millennial, but you have the soul
of a silent generation member.
Look, I haven't gone as far as Tommy talking about
Riz this and that.
So we're not there yet.
But there's this great, I wish I remember what it was called,
but it's a show where they play a little music
and you have to guess the artist
and then talk about your relationship with it,
which talks about Stevie Wonder and Miles Davis.
And it is awesome.
And like there's, we've talked before
about the Mindy Kaling cooking video from 2019,
like that sort of stuff, more and more of that.
And by the way,
there's a lot of these non-traditional outlets
where you can talk substantively about your plans and
policies for voters who want to know more about what you're going to do.
Like it doesn't have to all be sort of like human interest, cultural lighter
stuff, right?
Like it can be a mix of that and like letting people know what you're going to
do as president, which is what a lot of like some of the low info, less engaged,
more cynical voters are going to want to know. So before we go, the other big news from Tuesday night, less engaged, more cynical voters are gonna wanna know.
So before we go, the other big news from Tuesday night,
of course, was Taylor Swift's endorsement of Kamala Harris.
CNN has reported that in the 24 hour period
after Swift posted, more than 405,000 people
had clicked the link she shared to vote.gov.
Most days traffic is about 30,000 people.
She also encouraged people to
register at the VMAs on Wednesday night when she spoke and won a VMA. And even though Magelworld
has plenty to be angry about between Trump's debate performance and the spate of petnapping
and cat eating in Springfield, they've still saved some outrage for the world's biggest pop star.
Let's listen.
We admire Taylor Swift's music, but I don't think most Americans, whether they like her music or fans of hers or not,
are going to be influenced by a billionaire celebrity who I think is fundamentally disconnected from the interests
and the problems of most Americans.
I was not a Taylor Swift fan, and she'll probably pay a price for it at the in the marketplace But the other thing about all this is what makes you think that the way you think
Should influence other people you sing for a living just deal with that
I'm allowed to criticize Taylor Swift and I don't give a shit who gets upset. This is disgusting
F you Taylor Swift Megan Kelly
Someday Megan Kelly is going through something.
She is, yeah.
She's ever since she's up, she's gotten,
even the last couple of months,
it's just gotten steadily weirder and more extreme.
She's so angry that she thinks it's disgusting
because Taylor in her post said she's particularly happy
that Kamala chose Tim Walls.
And she said that, you know, Tim Walls in Minnesota
has stood up for LGBT people and you
know he remembered the best he sort of was the head of the Gay Straight Alliance at the high
school right all the stories but she takes it as like I don't know she went down this whole
conspiracy with Tim Walls and it's like it's who knows. What do you think about all this?
What do you think about all this? Like what, what, I, I continue to think that
going hard negative on the most popular recording artist
in the world is not a good strategy.
No, it is not a good strategy.
It makes you look fucking ridiculous.
Which first point to JD Vance is,
I know he went to Yale Law, but he is adult.
If only we could-
I know, saying who's gonna listen
to a billionaire disconnect groups.
The Harris campaign should put that in an ad
and then put a picture of Donald Trump
after he says the line.
There, there's the ad for it.
A billionaire celebrity made JD Vance
abandon everything he stood for.
But the reason like, uh,
Judge Jeanine Pirro and Megyn Kelly are doing this is because they're not trying to win an election. They are trying to get engagement and talking about Taylor Swift,
being angry about Taylor Swift,
loving Taylor Swift will get people on the internet to pay attention to you.
And that's what that was.
There's that real anger.
Like she is a naturally angry human being.
I believe that. But Megyn Kelly did that little performance
so that we would talk about her.
She'd go viral, more people would pay attention to her.
Remember that she was once on a network television show
and now she does whatever she does.
It's just the whole people, they're ridiculous.
They're a ridiculous group of people.
It's a crazy thing to be bad about.
Also Donald Trump saying she's,
I think she's going to pay a price in the marketplace.
We'll see pal.
We'll see.
And then like Elon Musk's weird creepy tweet about it.
Oh, I didn't even see this.
Oh my God.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Pull it up right here.
Let's do this live.
I'm going to pull it up.
I'm going to pull it up.
We can cut out some of the space here.
Here we go.
Okay.
So Elon Musk tweeted fine, Taylor, you win.
I will give you a child and guard your cats with my life.
I mean, there's just so the weird thing, the weird thing is really, it's, you know
what, if you like, even if you were for some reason, haven't followed Elon Musk's
trip down the rabbit hole over the last several years,
like you see him talking about like,
I will give you a child, Taylor Swift.
What the fuck is wrong with this person?
Weird, you're right.
Weird, weird, weird.
Megan Kelly saying, fuck you, Taylor.
What is going on with these people?
Like how dare someone,
how dare a celebrity get involved in politics?
Well, I don't know why would that be so offensive?
I could imagine why these reporters are so offended by it.
Unbelievable.
Anyway, what a great week.
You know what? Great week.
There's gonna be tough weeks ahead.
It's a close race.
Who knows what's gonna happen right now.
We're having a good time.
That debate was great.
Watching Donald Trump melt down is great.
Watching the Megyn Kelly melt down
about Taylor Swift is great.
It's all great.
I mean, it's fantastic.
All right, you know what would be even better
if you went to vote save America.com and signed up
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Visit votesaveamerica.com slash 2024 to get started now.
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Podsave America is a Crooked Media production.
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Our associate producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safari.
Reed Cherlin is our executive editor, and Adrian Hill is David Toledo. Our associate producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safari. Reed Cherlin is our executive editor and Adrian Hill is our executive producer.
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