Pod Save America - Trump Wins, DeSantis Whines, Haley Withstands
Episode Date: January 16, 2024Donald Trump wins a landslide victory in the Iowa caucuses and moves closer to capturing the Republican nomination. Ron DeSantis barely wins the race for a distant second place but vows to keep losing..., while Lovett's new crush Nikki Haley looks to upset Trump in New Hampshire. Meanwhile, Vivek Ramaswamy calls it quits and President Biden announces strong fourth quarter fundraising numbers as a re-match with Trump looms. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
The gang's all here. We're back.
There's no I in caucus.
Good to see you guys.
That's actually true. It's just an S.
Well, let's get right to the news.
Donald Trump is the winner of the Iowa caucuses, dominating the field with 51%.
Ron DeSantis comes in second with 21%.
Nikki Haley third with 19%.
Vivek Ramaswamy with eight percent
and no one else cracked one percent trump narrowly lost the caucuses to ted cruz in 2016
eight years later the networks called it for him within 30 minutes he won by the biggest margin of
any republican in history out of iowa's 99 counties i think he won 98 nicki haley uh won one county by a vote she's
up by one in johnson county hasn't been called yet right yeah we're recording monday night here so
all right so big win for trump and uh let's hear a clip from his uh his victory speech well i want
to thank everybody this has been some period of time and most importantly we want to thank the great people of iowa thank you we love
you all what a turnout what a crowd and i really think this is time now for everybody our country
to come together we want to come together uh whether it's republican or democrat or liberal
or conservative it would be so nice if we could come together and straighten out the world,
and straighten out the problems,
and straighten out all of the death and destruction
that we're witnessing
that's practically never been like this.
It's just so important,
and I want to make that a very big part of our message.
We're going to come together.
We're going to come together.
Classic Trump, gracious, subdued.
Unity candidate.
Unity candidate, trying to heal the divides in this country.
It's about a fight for the soul of the nation.
He praised Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis.
He didn't say a bad word about them.
He said how much of a fun time they'd all had together.
Tonight was the night he became president.
Clip that.
Wait, don't.
Even if I'm right.
We'll get back to the speech. let's talk about the results first uh so donald trump 51 blows away the rest of the field how did he do it how did he do it dan i think there's one
number in the entrance polls that kind of shows Trump's dominance is that he won voters who supported
national abortion ban, but he also won voters who oppose a national abortion ban. It's a very wide
coalition. He's the dominant figure. He was always going to win. Of most, 64%, I think it was,
caucus goers made their decision several months ago. Almost all those people picked Trump.
When you look at it that way, this was never a contest. He had this thing wrapped up from the
very beginning, and all of it was just kind of playing around to see who would come in second,
which we will get to eventually. Yeah, the big question of the night. I mean,
you look through the entrance polls, which for some of the, once you get into the demographics,
you maybe take with a grain of salt, but clear majority of Republican voters, 60 percent,
around 60 percent, think Trump won in 2020, think he's fit to be president, even if he's convicted
of a crime. And to me, that's how Donald Trump won. Like most Republican voters love the Trump
presidency. They think he won reelection. They don't think he did anything wrong.
And they want him back in the White House. and they think that he can beat Joe Biden.
I mean, that just sort of explains it.
And literally no one competing in the state ran against him.
Well, that I'm sorry.
They ran against each other.
That's the only Chris Christie who parked in New Hampshire for most of the time or a studio.
John Lovett actually made a case against the guy.
I can't believe that didn't help.
Yeah, I do think even before you get to the campaign, though, you do see the kind of problem polls, uh, people who think that,
uh, Donald Trump is still the president. Donald Trump does incredibly well. Nikki Haley does far
worse, but Ron DeSantis kind of does in the middle. He kind of does like, like, I think it's
like 40% of his voters believed that Donald Trump, uh, won the election, something like that. Yeah.
And you just see that, like, there wasn't a group of people big enough that are anti-Trump and the
people that like Trump.
Well, there's a great restaurant is Trump. You know, they don't need to try a new place.
Yeah. I mean, they saw him as an incumbent president who's running for a second term and won the last time, at least in their minds, and should be back in the White House.
I thought another telling question from the entrance polls, they asked people, are you part of the MAGA movement?
44% of Republican caucus goers said yes.
51% said no.
Trump got 77% of the people who said yes.
No surprise there.
But he still got 25% of the no's.
He got 7% of people who told the pollsters
that Trump was unfit for president if he was convicted.
Yeah. Yeah. He's mopping up with them too tough uh what'd you guys uh what'd you guys make of the speech
speech and the message tell me what you think sort of like a benzodiazepine ad um it's a very
sedated donald trump a lot of acknowledgments at the top it's got to be hard for his opponents to
know you're going to lose to the guy who uh handed his speech over to a state senator and then a guy who was wearing a jacket
that looked like a wall. That was all part of your nine minutes where the entire country is watching
you, your big moment after an election win. Yeah. I mean, it is the lowest bar of expectations to
trip over, but Donald Trump's simply seeming quasi-normal
on public television is a victory
for him. Was he speaking to his
wife's deceased parents
from his grave? Was he looking
at them? The deceased mother.
Melania's mother passed away. He was speaking to
her. He seemed to suggest
the late husband.
Her husband. She said she was
very lonely. But it won't be for long, so I think he was suggesting the husband's husband or her she said she was very lonely but it won't be for long so i
think he was suggesting the husband's getting back on the market it's not clear oh i think he means
he's quite old is he older getting remarried we don't know he's either i didn't this is either
dating or dying but he was looking up in the air like he was talking to god that's what i was
but he also thinks that's where the czech republic is or wherever she's from
well in the globe you're right but i'm glad that you took us off course here because this is where like the tone in the
speech at the beginning was a more subdued like disciplined tone from donald trump and at first
i think we were all sitting there watching it we were a little nervous listening to it
but once he started getting to the melania's father and the lonely, and then he did like 20 minutes of acknowledgements before he actually got to his stump speech, which was just his stump speech.
And so the message on TV, I guess the message was, I'm a little more normal than you think.
Yeah.
I want people to come together, which may be a job well done.
But then it was just, he sort of rambled on about acknowledgements.
It was very subdued, kind of low energy.
It worked because CNN cut him off before he got to his unpopular policy agenda.
That is true.
That is true.
Yeah.
Yes.
I think like it is, it was strange to see him do that.
I mean, it really was.
He was like very, he spoke about his kids in a way he doesn't normally speak about his
kids.
He was very, it was very much like what it felt like was a politician addressing a liability.
It felt very purposeful.
Oh, yeah.
It felt like the advisors were like, hey, you might be able to win this thing if people
just show a little bit less of an asshole.
Right.
Right.
And by the way, like, I think it's worth comparing the way Donald Trump does those moments to
the way another politician does those moments, even like Nikki Haley.
Nikki Haley, who I think had like the strongest speech of the night.
Nevertheless, she does acknowledgements the way every politician does. It's like the most sort of like road and
like formulaic and kind of inauthentic way of doing it. He's just he's just better at it.
And that was a bit a bit alarming. But I do think, though, you know, they got him out there. They got
him to praise Ron DeSantis and Nikkiki haley he seems so he was so generous
towards them and then nikki haley which we'll get to goes out and fucking torches him he is
fucking rip shit right now he is thinking about how he's gonna he's gonna tear into her the next
he's so angry that he got convinced to be nice to nikki haley well it's it is not a new phenomenon
that once in a while donald trump is on message and can show a little bit
of discipline and then like a week later usually a day later usually an hour later or the next tweet
then like just loses it and goes back to being i feel like we've had this conversation on primary
nights or caucus nights before actually i think this he's kind of good at this i think we've done
all of this before remember the beginning if we don't if this. I think we've done all of this before. Remember the beginning?
If we stopped having conversations we've had before,
we should shut this whole place down.
Remember the beginning of COVID too?
Remember the first couple COVID press conferences before he got into the bleach stuff?
I would put money on the fact
that we're waking up to 12 all caps tweets
about bird brain.
I'm sorry, sorry.
Truths.
Truths.
For sure.
So just before he won Iowa, he got a bunch of endorsements.
Big, big endorsement from my boy Doug Burgum, who's out of the race.
Marco Rubio, Mike Lee.
He's now got 22 Senate endorsements, which he started mentioning this tonight.
It sounds like the Republican establishment, like most of the party, has just decided this is it.
We're not even gonna like
they're not even gonna wait for new hampshire they're not gonna wait for south carolina
they got two other alternatives they got nicky haley they got ron de sanchez they just they
don't care they're all in so embarrassing marco rubio feeling like he has to do it
before the iowa caucus is done for some reason so i guess so he's why do you guys think why do
you think that they that they needed to do this or they felt like they needed to do this before Iowa just to get credit so they could get a job from Donald Trump or something?
They probably made a political calculation and asked the campaign when they should endorse and the campaign to do it this day so that when we win Iowa by 30 points, it looks like it's all sewn up in the establishments there and we're inevitable.
Yeah, I think they're under pressure from Trump to do it now. And either you do it when Trump tells you to do it or he attacks you until you do it later.
Just to paint a little more detail on the difference in the message today versus yesterday.
Here's a quote from yesterday's event.
These caucuses are your personal chance to score the ultimate victory over all the liars, cheaters, thugs, perverts, frauds, crooks, freaks, creeps and other quite nice people.
Trump told a crowd in Indianola, Iowa on Sunday.
Yeah, we got to get that guy.
We got to get that guy back out there.
Get him on primetime.
It is a funny thing.
It's like Trump is at his most dangerous
when he sounds his least dangerous,
and he's at his least dangerous
when he sounds his most dangerous.
He still seems pretty dangerous all the time.
Yeah, I agree.
But yeah.
Well, that's Donald Trump.
I mean, I don't know how the night
could have gone better for him right and within the context of the republican primary right like
is there any no and it's because he also got we're going to talk about this but like desantis and
haley ended up so close together that neither of them dropped out and so they're both going on
and so that continues to be a muddle he doesn't have like a one-on-one challenger. And he got over 50%,
which was like the imaginary threshold
that people made up as like him.
Vivek dropped out.
Vivek dropped out.
The little support Vivek has will go to Trump.
And as weak,
and it's a testament to just how weak
and pathetic DeSantis is,
that the fact that he did better than Haley
is ultimately good for Trump,
that everyone's sort of like,
oh, that makes it so that like Haley
isn't so clearly the only alternative, right. That, that he gets to stay
in. I will say though, like it is a trick that Trump has pulled here, which is if Joe Biden had
faced two challengers, both approaching 20 points, he would be seen as incredibly weak
as an incumbent president that Donald Trump gets the benefits of incumbency in so many respects,
except in the expectations for how he should be performing in these is quite a move. I mean,
because he's a former president, he's running like a challenger, he's getting treated politically
like a challenger. And it belies the kind of weaknesses that he has, right?
That like the fact that this former president who has huge support inside the Republican
Party still faces two people that are able to pull as much as they were able to pull
does speak to not it doesn't speak to a strong candidate speaks to a weak candidate.
I 100% agree with that.
I think the throughout over the last course of this year as we've talked about this primary
and it's like can someone be trump can desantis be trump can haley be trump and all of those ideas
that trump was that we were not inevitably going to get here were based on this fundamental
analytical error where we treated trump like a normal presidential candidate not the incumbent
president for this electorate, for these voters,
he is their president. Almost every single person who caucused tonight, they didn't ask this
question in the exit polls, but we should assume it based on Iowa, voted for Trump in 2020. And yet
half of them did not vote for him tonight. I don't know what their internal vote goals were,
but they dramatically underperformed those because he got 51% of 100,000 Iowans.
Yeah, right now, so far, the vote is 107,000 votes so far.
Yeah.
And we're almost in.
Which would underperform the 2012 Iowa caucus, let alone the record turnout from the last time Trump was on the ballot.
Now, there is minus 40 wind chill.
The outcome was not in doubt.
That certainly has some impact on that.
But it's a 47% drop in turnout from the last time around.
And that says something.
It says something.
What it means in the general, I don't know.
But it's not what you would want coming out of here is a ringing,
is that he would dramatically overperform,
that he would demonstrate his ability to bring new caucus goers out, to bring enthusiasm. That did not show up tonight. And it's a piece of data to
put away that suggests that he is a more flawed general election candidate than a lot of the
narrative has had to date. Well, so just for perspective, there's 2.2 million registered
voters in Iowa, 752,000 registered Republican voters. And again, so far, 107,000 turned out tonight,
with 95% of the vote in. So it's probably 110,000 maybe when all is said and done.
So yeah, it's hard to extrapolate to a general election based on 107,000 votes out of 2.2
million registered voters in the state, and then even 750,000 Republican voters.
And we should say, the campaigns, when you were reading about strategies and projections
a couple of weeks ago,
they were predicting up to 200,000 participants.
So this horrific, you know, the 12 inches of snow,
20 inches of snow, like negative 40 wind chill,
it has to have been a big factor.
That's if I were the Biden campaign,
I'd be spinning hard that it was a weak turnout.
One quick housekeeping note.
What happens when one of China's most prominent human rights activists escapes house arrest in China, lands in America as a hero of freedom and democracy, then somehow reemerges a few years later as an avid Trump supporter?
This is the story of Chen Guangchang.
In Cricket's newest podcast, Dissident at the Doorstep, hosts Alison Klayman, Colin Jones, and Yangyang Cheng tell the story of how a person can become a symbol for American values and what happens to them next.
Listen to new episodes of Dissident at the Doorstep each Saturday beginning January 13th in the Pod Save the World feed, wherever you get your podcasts.
I just listened to the first two episodes.
It's really good.
We were at the White House when this all happened and went down.
And it was an insane story of like this guy escaping his village and getting to the embassy and Obama negotiating him out and all the diplomacy.
And then he gets to the U.S. and is suddenly at an insurrection.
Incredible story.
Highly recommend.
Well, then let's talk about someone else who's spinning pretty hard uh ron desantis
uh so ron desantis uh comes in second just edged out nicki haley for second place and uh here he is
i guess celebrating that they threw everything but the kitchen sink at us. They spent almost $50 million attacking us. No one's faced that much all the
way just through Iowa. The media was against us. They were writing our obituary months ago.
They even called the election before people even got a chance to vote.
people even got a chance to vote. But they were just so excited about the fact that they were predicting that we wouldn't be able to get our ticket punched here out of Iowa. But I can tell
you, because of your support, in spite of all of that that they threw at us, everyone against us,
All of that that they threw at us, everyone against us, we've got our ticket punched out of Iowa.
He lost by 30 points.
Yeah, Greyhound busts.
Donald Trump beat him by 30 points.
He bet everything on Iowa.
How much money did he spend?
Jeb Bush levels of money. In terms of advertising spend in Iowa, it was $123 million total, $37 million pro-Haley, $35 million pro-DeSantis, $18.3 million pro-Trump.
The rest was others.
DeSantis did 154 events and visited all 99 counties.
All 99 counties.
And everyone said, no, thank you.
But he got that ticket punched.
Like, what happens next to Ron DeSantis?
So he, in New Hampshire, he's polling at about 5%.
If that.
If that.
So the campaign says
they're going to go right to South Carolina
tomorrow or next week,
which makes me think that
now he's not going to get a lot of attention
as it becomes a Trump-Haley race in New Hampshire.
And Ron DeSantis is just going to be
hanging out in South Carolina
and come in, what,
third or fourth in New Hampshire? Maybe like some people are still going to... I wonder if enough people is just going to be hanging out in South Carolina and come in, what, third or fourth in New Hampshire?
Maybe like some people are still going to...
I wonder if enough people are still going to be voting for Chris Christie
even though he's out of the race.
And Chris Christie could still beat Ron DeSantis in New Hampshire.
I mean, I just don't understand where his path is now.
We'll talk about Haley in a minute, but you watch her speech.
She had a message and she has a strategy.
She's going to New Hampshire with a purpose and with some potential. Ron DeSantis gave a four minute speech that was mostly whining.
And then it was some very lame lines from his stump speech. It's this attempt at a stirring
close where he talks about the sacred fire of liberty is burning at the following locations.
And I heard him do it at a walk in the event in Waukee for 30, 75-year-olds, and it landed just
as flat tonight as it did then. I mean, I don't know what he does next. I think he's going to
have a bunch of advisors around him telling him, if you want to preserve your political future,
drop out, endorse Trump, get on the Trump train. Maybe you can figure out some path forward so you
don't piss him off. But you're not going to win New Hampshire. The Nevada caucuses don't exist. No one knows who you are in South Carolina. What are you
going to do?
I will say it was the perfect speech for Ron DeSantis, because if you want to know what
Ron DeSantis' campaign was like, if you want to years from now look back on it, it was
that speech. No message. He never mentioned the guy who just beat him in Iowa by 30 points.
Nothing about Donald Trump. Nothing even about nikki haley nothing about anything except for whining about the media
whining about everyone thought we were out they counted us out and they were right well it's it's
it's this idea of like they're attacking me they're throwing everything they can at me the
media is trying to stop me they capital t they're, they're trying to stop me. Why, Ron? Why? Why you? All these forces are arrayed against you.
What is this powerful story? What are you saying that scares them so thoroughly? Never guessed it.
I will say, and Ron DeSantis is a defense here. The fact that he-
Clip that. Just clip it.
The fact that he spoke for four minutes is the most self-aware thing he's ever done.
It's taken a year and a half, but he's recognized that more Ron DeSantis is not good.
Well, yeah.
I mean, they should figure that out with the 99 counties.
Also, if he really understood that, he would not be going to South Carolina tomorrow.
He'd be going back to fucking Florida.
Well, he thinks he's going to improve his position in New Hampshire by not going there.
He should just do like five more town halls in Iowa.
See how it goes.
No, but he's wrong.
This guy, Hal Lambert, who is on DeSantis' National Finance Committee, gave the following quote to Politico.
I'll be frank.
I would say third place is not good.
So he got a barely second.
So it's a little better.
But like still, they have no path forward.
It's also like second place.
It's like 19 to 21 percent.
Kaylee got 19. He got 20. It's barely second place. They like two 19 to 21 percent kaylee got 19 he got 20 runs barely second place they wanted a close second they didn't get that it's i he's what he
will probably do is he will go hang out in south carolina he will come in third in new hampshire
if he comes in fourth it'd be really impressive because there are only three candidates in the
race did asa drop i mean sure who cares was that the guy's name?
Binkley?
Binkley?
I think he's only on in Iowa though right?
I think Binkley finished ahead of Asa Hutchinson whoever Binkley is
the first time I've said that name on this pod
he's gonna lose
he could lose to some zombie
he could lose to Christy
like to zombie Christy
that'd be amazing
I mean
look he is
he's not worried
dignity has not been something
he's been very protective of
right?
DeSantis?
DeSantis but I do think the only thing he gets by not going to New Hampshire is a little, you know, he gets a he gets a beat of people not asking him to like he gets lot, maybe he just gets out then. If it's a close in New Hampshire, you know, who knows, Haley surprises or Trump destroys or whatever it is, is there an outcome in New Hampshire that changes what Ron DeSantis can say is his path?
There's no outcome in New Hampshire that can change the inevitable reality that Donald Trump's going to be the Republican nominee.
Well, right. But is there a way in which, let's say, Haley outperforms, that leaves more room for him, or Trump outperforms, that leaves less?
It is over.
When those reporters, when the media wrote the obituary
of his campaign months ago, they were correct.
Yeah, I would dust that off.
That's right.
I would dust that off.
I would keep that in your dress folder.
What was the quote from the DeSantis officials
of the New York Times and the Post?
Basically, we've got him on hospice care.
We're trying to keep him comfortable until the inevitable.
Yeah, it's taken a while.
He'll keep going until the bank account runs dry.
It is like the Monty Python thing
of like, it's just a flesh wound.
Like, the reporters have been like,
you're dead, you're done, you're fucking toast.
He's like, no, no, no, I'm fighting.
Just a stump in Iowa.
You can actually,
if you look at Ron DeSantis' meager performance here,
you could actually see a path
for a better version of Ron DeSantis, meager performance here, you could actually see a path or a better version
of Ron DeSantis, who was a less awkward, terrible candidate running a smarter campaign. I don't
see you would have beaten Trump, but he could have been much more successful because when you look
at DeSantis' path to coming in second, what he did was he got a decent amount of the non-Trump vote
and some of the Trump vote. So when they
asked people if they were members of the MAGA movement or not, DeSantis got 30% of the non-MAGA
supporters, but 11% of the MAGA supporters. Haley got 3% of the MAGA supporters. So if you see a
better version of someone who had made an argument against Trump from a position of strength,
could have put that together to come close. I don't want to take anything away from Ron
DeSantis being one of the worst candidates I've ever seen.
But even if you were a good candidate or a candidate who could figure out how to get more of that MAGA vote, which you clearly need.
I just think that they're they're they're trapped, all these candidates.
And to attack once you start attacking Trump, you're by definition not MAGA anymore because that's what Trump, you know.
So it's like it's really really, we keep saying like,
oh, they got to go after Trump more.
But then when they go after Trump,
we're like, well, if we like it,
then clearly it's not going to work.
I think that there's,
like, this is all fantasy politics
and we'll get to fantasy politics
for Nikki Kelly in a minute here.
But it is, I just think that they're-
Love it's only fantasy player left in this team.
Went through Tim Scott, Chris Christie.
My last one.
I think a better candidate
could have gotten to
lose to Trump
by a more normal
amount
yeah
that does not mean
it's going to change
who's going to win the nominee
but there was a better path
for someone like Ron DeSantis
that Nikki Haley
could never have had that path
someone could have
got 25, 26, 27
before DeSantis
launched his campaign
before he spent any money
before anyone
knocked the door for him
he was at around 30% in Iowa.
Yeah.
He went down to 20%.
I was just saying a better candidate.
Exactly.
Could have held on to more of that.
But I think it's even, I actually think it's even more, like, I think the dynamic, like, they're going to say that DeSantis people, all they're going to, they're going to go to like kind of the fundamental structural dynamics.
Right.
And those are true.
Right.
There weren't enough people who were anti-Trump and all the pro-Trump people with Trump.
Like, it's as simple as that.
are true, right? There weren't enough people who were anti-Trump and all the pro-Trump people were Trump. Like it's as simple as that, except like great politicians have the ability to change that
dynamic, right? Like that's, that's what it means. Like they, to like Obama is somebody who changed
the underlying dynamics in a primary. Donald Trump is somebody who could change the dynamics in a
primary through like kind of an understanding, a deeper understanding of the electorate and
charisma, political talent,
which Ron DeSantis doesn't have. And so we don't know what it would be like if we had been watching
a primary unfold in which a candidate with those kinds of political strengths was able to kind of
shape the story in such a way that like you don't end up with people like Marco Rubio feeling they
have but no choice to endorse today. And like you don't you don't see the inevitability kind of
coming behind Trump. I mean, the polls were even better. There were, there were polls that showed Ron DeSantis sort of
ahead at one point, right? Like there was a moment where a better politician might have
been able to take that momentum and change something that, that, that didn't change.
I think that is all true in a normal electorate. I think the Republican party's electorate right
now, at least a vast majority of the electorate is not normal and that they
really, really like Donald Trump. And the only path to a non-Trump candidate was Trump's going
to lose to Joe Biden. And over the last several months, and this is when Donald Trump has become
dominant in the primary, even more so than he was before, Joe Biden has looked very weak in the
general election. And, you know, we can say that the polls are wrong, the polls are going to change, whatever.
But at least in the period of the Republican primary, it looked very easy to beat Joe Biden.
And so, therefore, if you like Donald Trump and you think he won the last election and you want him back in the White House and the only thing that was stopping you before is you're worried he might lose.
Well, if he's if he's beaten Joe Biden, then why would you vote for anyone else?
I think that's all true. I just think that when you see how Ron is, he has got to second.
You can see what the if you squint hard enough, you can see the inklings of a coalition of someone who could have given a stronger challenge.
Yeah, I agree with that.
All right.
Speaking of a stronger challenge to Trump, let's talk about Nikki Haley.
So she came in third just by a hair. And she gave the last speech of the night after Trump and Ramaswamy and DeSantis all spoke.
Let's listen.
Ramaswamy and DeSantis all spoke. Let's listen. I can safely say tonight,
Iowa made this Republican primary a two person race.
Trump and Biden are both about 80 years old.
Trump and Biden both put our country trillions of dollars deeper in debt and our kids will never forgive them for it.
Trump and Biden both lack a vision for our country's future because both are consumed by the past, by investigations, by vendettas, by grievances.
America deserves better.
All right.
Nikki Haley, what do we think?
Love it?
She going to do it?
Yeah, she's going to fucking.
Yeah, no, that's how you know.
When I think a speech is good,
that's how you know it's going to really work for some fucking MAGA goon in South Carolina.
It's a pretty good general election message. Yeah. It was a good speech. I mean, it was a message. It's a pretty good general election message.
Yeah.
It was a good speech.
I mean, it was a message.
It was a message.
Which is, the bar is so low because DeSantis doesn't have a message.
It's generational.
It's spending.
She always hits Trump on spending.
The debt is the only thing that surely hits him on.
It's this vision of the future and not getting consumed by investigations and vendettas and
grievances.
I mean, I think that hits on the things people like least about Trump and also
sweeps up Biden in the broad side. The other point she makes is, uh, if the 70, the country
does not want a Biden Trump rematch, a Biden, Biden Trump rematch is a toss up, which was sort
of got a little kind of like, Ooh, oohs a little bit in the room,
but I win on a line side.
Yeah.
Right? And that's what the polls show. And the popular vote argument.
Should we keep losing the popular vote
in past elections?
We want to win bigger.
Yeah.
It's all a great message, but to what end?
Yeah, I mean, so the,
here's the demographics that Haley won in Iowa.
Moderates, independent women,
college graduate women,
people with advanced degrees, and people who believe Biden won in 2020.
So Jews.
What percentage of the Republican Party do you think those demographics comprise in 2024?
Like 30%?
That's generous.
Not even close.
Not even close.
And now, in New Hampshire, probably a lot more than in iowa right like which is why you know maybe outside shot at winning new hampshire and you
have independence and you have democrats yes right i mean the new hampshire thing is she could win
new hampshire like that seems that is in the realm of possibility but as we think it's likely but
definitely possible it is is possible. And New
Hampshire is unlike every other state that's going to vote. It's probably one of the most
college educated states in terms of a Republican electorate in the, in the primary Gallup declared
it to be the least religious state in the country. In 2016, the evangelical vote was 24%
in New Hampshire. In 2016, It was 55% in Iowa tonight.
Nikki Haley won 13% of those voters.
When you get to South Carolina, her home state in 2016,
the evangelical vote was over 70%.
Yeah.
The last poll out of South Carolina was an Emerson poll,
January 2nd and 3rd.
It was Trump 54, Haley 25.
It's just, you can't conjure a path that lines up with the with the
profile of voters that Nikki Haley is attracted to date that gets you another win. Like Donald
Trump will probably win all 50 primaries if he does if he wins in New Hampshire, as Al Gore did
in 2000. And again, Nikki Haley started this primary with a message that was and sort of voters that she was trying to go for more similar to what DeSantis was doing.
And then as she did, again, what we've all advised any of these Republican candidates to do, which was actually criticize Donald Trump.
She started getting all the never Trump love.
And, you know, Larry Hogan, governor of Maryland, endorsed her over the weekend.
And he was like, it's time for the party to come together around Nikki Haley.
It's like, dude, what party are you talking about?
The party that you're talking about doesn't exist anymore.
It's a Cafe Milano.
A cocktail party.
And the more that like the never Trump old guard Republican establishment starts coalescing around Nikki Haley, the angrier the MAGA base and Donald Trump are going to get and the more
they're going to attack her. And so like, I don't, there's just no, I don't know what the
middle ground is. Well, they're all, they're all sleeping in the bed they made, which is
not, which is spending the last few years indulging the election lie, which renders
like useless her, one of her, if not her most compelling arguments was, which is that she's
much more electable. We,able. I believe that's true.
I think she's a much more dangerous general election candidate.
Oh, yeah.
The polls have been showed forever.
It's indisputable.
But as you pointed out, this campaign has taken place while Biden is weak.
And they've convinced their entire party that Donald Trump won the election.
And so, you know, the other part of the problem too, is that like, maybe it was a strategy change that maybe she had to figure out
that there was no way to kind of compete for the voters the way DeSantis was, or maybe it was more
like she was, you know, I don't know, slowly coming to be able to be as critical of Trump as
she is, but giving a speech like this now, like what, what is that for? What does that get you?
Like, I don't know. I'm sure. Yeah. Just yeah just but just that's it just gets you new hampshire yeah they have an add up
i don't know where's haley's campaigner i assume it's one of her co-founded superbacks has an add
up with almost this exact message in new hampshire it's been up for for probably a week or so now
yeah i mean that's it that's that's the only play so you you do it right um but just again it just
we don't know what it would be like if there had been a concerted message against Donald Trump for a year because there just wasn't there wasn't.
I mean, Nikki Haley slowly tiptoeing up to this. Ron DeSantis occasionally mentioning Trump and in passing refusing to do it when he loses.
We just they they there was never a concerted case against trump at any point in this primary
vivek ramaswamy uh he was gaining in the polls a rapid rise and then he sat down for an interview
with tommy and now tonight it's the end of the road for him it was very similar to the
sarah pill and kitty kirk interview 2008 yes to. Yeah, that's very good, Dan. That's right.
Seedfully edited.
America's sweetheart, Tommy Vitor.
Tommy, what do you think happened?
Any final thoughts on Vivek's candidacy?
I mean, I was trying to Google
while we were talking
how much he personally spent on the campaign.
I feel like I heard him say
it was like $15 million,
but I could be wrong.
Listen, viewed one way,
coming out of nowhere as a 38-year-old
to run this campaign
and getting 7% of the
vote in, in Iowa and making this huge name for yourself in conservative circles is a huge win
for his personal brand and future in politics, et cetera, et cetera. It's also a huge win for him
if his actual goal was to do a ton of marketing for anti-woke investment products that he happens
to sell or to start a new media business and be the
next Ben Shapiro or whatever. So, I mean, I think, you know, there's a bit of a Pete Buttigieg
feeling to his campaign. They're in no way similar. They're not remotely similar.
And I'm the one they don't like?
But they both came out of nowhere to you know launch the surgeon campaigns and they
had a moment and now people who know who they are and they could you know he could have a future in
the republican party we'll see donald trump's transportation secretary i thought commerce
okay well yeah we'll see uh commerce makes sense but which is not going to happen. Why? Because we're going to win.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
So that's good.
Can these results tell us anything about the general election? We already made the point that it's tough to extrapolate, at least about Iowa, because it's such a small number of people that actually turned out.
But, Dan, what do you think?
Because I did hear a lot of Biden surrogates tonight talk about how, well, it shows that Trump is pretty weak.
The fact that he only got 50 percent when he's the incumbent.
And what do you make of that? Well, I agree that this is an underwhelming victory for Trump in the context of a general showing general election strength.
It doesn't necessarily mean that he is any weaker than we already thought he was, but he did not.
He did not outperform our expectations.
than we already thought he was,
but he did not outperform our expectations.
His vaunted campaign, newly organized,
newly strategic campaign did not deliver some set of new caucus goers
or a big turnout despite the weather
or anything like that.
So in that sense, I think it is not a positive sign
for him in the general election.
For the primary, obviously this is everything
he could possibly hope for in his victory. But once again, as we point out, it's 107,000 Iowans,
63% of them over the age of 50. It does not give us a real picture of the electorate,
but I don't think Trump demonstrated unexpected or surprising strength. If anything, it's weaker than I expected he would do. So I do think it was interesting that 32% of Republican caucus goers
in the entrance poll said that if Donald Trump is convicted of a crime, he's unfit to be president.
Because does that matter much in a Republican primary? No, because it's 32%. But if those
caucus goers in a general election decided not to vote for him, if Donald Trump just loses a small percentage of the Republican vote in a very close race, that's a real problem for him.
The way they asked that question, is he unfit?
You know, you could see Republican voters say, yeah, he's unfit, but also Joe Biden's even worse.
And so I'm going to go with him anyway. I thought that Ann Seltzer in her poll, which ended up being fairly accurate
again, asked Haley supporters, who would you vote for in a general election? And 43% of Haley's
supporters said they'd vote for Biden over Trump. If that's right, and we start seeing that pattern,
then I think that's a problem for Donald Trump. When we go back and look at that poll, it's probably going to suggest that Haley,
they had Haley having too many,
they overrepresented independence as supporters of Haley
because I think half of her supporters
were independents in that poll,
which independence made up a fraction
of the caucus participants.
That seems highly impossible.
But more, I think even more important than that number
is 24% of Republican caucus covers
said that they would not vote for Trump if
he were the nominee. And now this is not random Republicans. It's not rhinos. It's not passive
political participants. These are people who three days before the caucus told a pollster that they
were going to brave subzero temperatures to vote, would not vote for Trump. And obviously the
parties always unite after primaries, even
not particularly divisive ones like this one. But if that number, if half that number, or really
a quarter of that number were to not vote for Trump, and that happened in states across this
country, including the battleground states, Joe Biden would win and he'd win by a larger margin
than he did in 2020. Trump got 92% of the Republican vote last time. Yeah. Yeah, that was that 32% is what jumped out at me.
But also that what some chunk of them, some chunk of those voters still caucus for Trump,
even though if he's convicted, they believe he's unfit.
And I think it just speaks to we spent a lot of there's a lot of tension and time rightly
focused on the ways in which Joe Biden is a weaker general election candidate in 2024
than he was in 2020.
He is older. He has all the kind of negatives of incumbency.
But there are all these ways in which Donald Trump is going to be a weaker candidate.
There was a poll that came out in the last couple of days that showed just how many disengaged and independent voters don't yet actually believe Donald Trump is going to be the nominee.
There is a huge percentage of people who have told posters that Donald Trump is convicted of be the nominee. There is a huge percentage of
people who have told posters that Donald Trump is convicted of the crime. They will not vote for him.
How does that hold? Is that real? What happens when a former president is on trial for multiple
felonies in multiple cases at the same time? These are all untested. These are all unprecedented. And I
think the question is just how much weaker will Donald Trump be by the time we were to get to
November? And just, I don't think we know. Yeah. Biden campaign today also released their fourth
quarter fundraising totals, 97 million, 117 million cash on hand. How much does this matter
as a measure of enthusiasm at this point?
I think it's a very positive sign that at the darkest moments in the polls, in the middle of
an internal, a very public, very emotionally tortured Democratic Party debate about Joe
Biden's candidacy, he raised a record amount of money. That speaks to, obviously, some measure
of enthusiasm. And we'll be interested to see what, I don't know if it was released or not, the small dollar versus big dollar donations in there. But one thing it definitely speaks to is a well-run campaign because that takes serious, serious work and strategy and planning and fundraising. And they pulled that off quite well. And whatever it signals about enthusiasm, it certainly signals that they're going to have the money they need to run this race, which is quite important. All right. Well,
we got New Hampshire a week from Tuesday and maybe a debate Thursday. There's supposed to
be a debate Thursday between, again, I guess just Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis, but we don't know
if they're both going to do it. Why would Haley debate someone who she no longer views as being in
the race? Good point. Why would
you bother to show up? Before this, I think
Ron DeSantis hadn't said he was definitely
going to show up. I just assume Ron DeSantis,
I thought there was a real chance Ron DeSantis would be out of the race
by then, but like everyone else, I underestimated
him.
Dan's over there throwing the kitchen
sink at the guy. Me and my friends
in the media. Everything but the kitchen sink.
We should say his staff was right that AP calling the race before the caucus
voters had voted.
That's thanks.
Thanks is ridiculous.
I don't like that.
It was ridiculous.
The upside of that is what you,
you beat some of the other outlets.
The downside is suddenly you're the story in the most unhelpful way
possible.
Cause if you're sitting there in the,
at the caucus site,
you show up,
they close the doors and then you see an alert on your phone that says, oh, Donald Trump won.
Maybe you're not going to leave, but do you change your vote at that point?
Because you think it doesn't matter.
It's just not a great thing to do.
Even if it doesn't change, it's so insulting.
It's so insulting to people who are showing up to vote.
It sucks.
Look, if there are two things American people trust right now, it's the media and our electoral system.
So I don't see what the problem is.
Republican caucus goers love the AP and people trust right now. It's the media and our electoral system. So I don't see what the problem is. Republican caucus goers
love the AP.
Trust the process.
What a way to restore trust
in the media
than to call the race
before the votes have been cast.
Yeah, we haven't been
down that road before.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
All right, that's all we got.
Again, we're doing
three PSAs a week now,
three positive reviews a week.
So I think we'll have one
on Wednesday. Wednesday ands Amigos a week. So I think we'll have one on Wednesday.
Wednesday and Friday.
Wednesday and Friday.
We're going to feed you content like you're foie gras geese.
Bye, everyone.
We'll talk to you soon.
Bye.
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