Pod Save America - Trump's 2nd Term: Military in the Streets, Mike Johnson in the Sheets
Episode Date: February 23, 2024Trump and his allies make it clear that a second term would be much more extreme than the first, from Christian nationalists running the White House to military raids and internment camps. The Alabama... Supreme Court's ruling that stopped IVF in the state could be a sign of things to come. Nikki Haley says she plans to stay in the race no matter what happens in Saturday’s South Carolina primary and Joe Biden provides student debt relief to another 150,000 Americans. Finally, Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler joins to talk about the new legislative maps that have finally ended one of the worst gerrymanders in the country. 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
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, Nikki Haley burns the boats and says she plans to stay in the race no matter what happens in Saturday's South Carolina primary.
Joe Biden provides student debt relief to another 150,000 Americans.
And later, Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wickler talks to Dan about the new legislative maps that have finally ended one of the worst gerrymanders in the country.
that have finally ended one of the worst gerrymanders in the country.
But first, the MAGA establishment continues to make it very clear that a second Trump term would be much more extreme than the first.
The man who's heading to trial for paying hush money to a porn star he had an affair with
spoke at the National Religious Broadcasters Convention on Thursday,
just a few days after Politico reported that a Trump-aligned think
tank is planning to, quote, infuse Christian nationalist ideas in his administration should
the former president return to power. What are those ideas? Not a lot of details just yet,
but based on what we've heard from Russell Vogt, the former senior Trump official and potential
White House chief of staff who's spearheading the project, and former Trump official William Wolf, a Christian nationalist who works with Vote,
they want to ban the following, abortion, abortion pills, surrogacy, no-fault divorce,
and sex education in schools.
They also want to repeal policies that support gay people, trans people, and single mothers.
And if people take to the streets to speak out against
any of this, they want Trump to use the military against protesters. Here's a clip of Trump
supporter Jack Posobiec speaking at CPAC, where Trump is also scheduled to speak this weekend.
I just wanted to say, welcome to the end of democracy. We're here to overthrow it completely.
We didn't get all the way there on january 6th but we will
we will endeavor to forget to get rid of it and replace it with with this right here we'll replace
it with this right here amen that's right because all glory all glory is not to government all glory
to god he was uh he was pointing to a crucifix uh So all in all, great stuff from the limited government freedom
lovers. The Center for the Renewal of America, which is the think tank that put out the document
that says Christian nationalism is a top priority in a second Trump term. They, of course, told
Politico that their reporting is false. The Trump campaign, Vote, Wolf, all refused to respond.
Wolf even deleted tweets about his policy ideas. But what do you
think, Dan? What are the chances that this agenda becomes reality if Trump becomes president again?
I feel like Wolf deleting his tweets is sort of the smoking gun here.
You think so?
Look, I think we should take this threat deadly seriously. The right wing learned the lesson
of the first Trump term, right? They view him
as in particularly the evangelical Christian nationalist part of the Republican party
views Trump as this obviously imperfect vessel for their policy agenda. And last time-
But a useful one.
A useful one, a very useful one.
Useful but imperfect, yeah.
But they got much less done than they possibly could have during Trump's first term because he
just hired a bunch of yahoos, right? He was just hiring people out of Fox News green rooms left and right. There was no plan. And that's what all of this is connected to the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025, which is to ensure that the people at all levels of the Trump administration are people who are going to be smart enough to implement this right-wing agenda, that no stone
will go unturned. They recognize the missed opportunity of the first term, and they're
not going to let that happen again. And as we know, Donald Trump, not a details guy.
He's not interviewing the person who is the number three in command at the Health and Human Services
Agency. He's not interviewing the people who are on the Domestic Policy Council of the White House
or working on issues related to reproductive health or freedom. This is essentially what Trump did with the Federal Society in his judicial
nominations. He's going to do with his White House and agency staff, with the Heritage Foundation,
which means that Russell Vogt and Mr. Deleted Tweets over here are going to get a chance to put
their agenda in place. And we know how the regulatory process works. You can do a lot
of really damaging stuff under the radar. And by the time people figure out, it's way too late.
Also, if you have a Republican Senate and Mike Johnson as Speaker of the House,
the guy who, you know, he and his son monitor each other's porn intake on their phones,
you can do even more than you can just as president. And look, maybe you think that the thrice-divorced
guy who cheats on his wife with porn stars isn't all that into Christian nationalism. Fair. But he
knows he needs Christian nationalist support. He delivered for them with three Supreme Court
justices and Dobbs like no other Republican president has. They will say that themselves.
And all these
people are going to get positions with real power, like you said, if he becomes president again.
He's not a details guy, but also all it takes to get Trump to do something that you want
is to kiss his ass, which they know. They can go into the Oval. They can tell him he's wonderful.
Oh, sign this bill. It's going to do this. He's going to do it. He's going to do it. So there were three bullets on the document that Politico
obtained. Christian nationalism. That was one of the bullets. Insurrection Act and refusing to
spend money authorized by Congress. This is a new thing that all these groups, the Heritage Project,
the Christian Nationalists, they all want. So this is how the president, this is how President
Trump in a second term gets around Congress. The Congress passes something,
and then he just ignores what they pass. So, I mean, I think this is like a recipe for a
situation that could actually deteriorate quite quickly. You have a lunatic president surrounded
by right-wing Christian nationalists who ignores Congress, ignores the courts, and sends the military out
to deal with anyone who opposes him. I mean, it's not, this is, it sounds like dystopian,
far-fetched shit, but I really don't think it is when you start reading what these people are
saying and you know that these are the people who are going to be in the White House and running the
government in a second term. And I think what's really, you're exactly right about the dystopian vision
of what this could become, right? Checks and balances, out the door, right? Everything that
is supposed to curtail the power of a rogue executive is gone under this plan. Absolutely.
What I think we also have to do is be able to make it a little more peaceful and easier for people to understand, which is how are these things going to affect your life?
And I think this is where even if Democrats hold the Senate or we take the House back and Trump does not have the majorities he needs to pass a national abortion ban, every part of that federal government that can do anything possible to make it harder to
access an abortion in this country will do that. That is what's going to happen.
He's going to try to, he can take an executive action to ban abortion pills,
Mifepristone, where 50% of women get their abortions through abortion pills. They've
already got that plan, and he doesn't need Congress for that.
There's a whole raft of draft executive orders, presidential memorandum written by
Christian nationalists, think tanks, and Donald Trump will sign them, and he will not read a
single one of them, right? I mean, this is very, very real, and I think it's very important that
Democrats talk about this because Donald Trump does have, as you point out, this thrice-divorced
because Donald Trump does have, as you point out,
this thrice-divorced New Yorker that he...
New Yorker?
Well, I mean, Donald Trump does not code to people who see him as a far-right,
evangelical Christian nationalist.
He just doesn't.
That's not how people see him.
And so they think of him as...
You see this in focus groups when you bring up abortion.
Focus group participants among swing voters will tell you that they believe Trump is not only
personally pro-choice, they are sure he has paid for abortions. And so he is able to get away with
things that other Republicans can't on these issues that have driven Democratic turnout
in elections where Trump was not on the ballot. And so every
opportunity we have to make the case about how his administration, regardless of what he personally
believes or doesn't believe, that doesn't matter. What matters is what he does and what he has done.
What he did do was be the person who made it so that Roe v. Wade was overturned. What is going
to happen are all these things that are in this agenda. And we just have to bring that down to
people because otherwise, if you don't explain it specifically, it's going to happen or all these things that are in this agenda. And we just have to bring that down to people because otherwise, if you don't explain it specifically,
it's going to sound like partisan noise to people. No, I completely agree. And it's the agenda.
If you, if all of the things that I mentioned, extremely unpopular with the majority of
Americans, there's one group that's been drifting away from democrats who who will probably also hate this which is young men uh it does seem unlikely to me that the guys who love
uh barstool sports and joe rogan are going to be into banning birth control and porn and all the
other uh crazy shit that the uh christian nationalists want to do these guys aren't
letting their dads monitor their porn like mike johnson and his kid uh that's a double
porn monitoring reference in this podcast
good job can't get enough of coven and eyes um and you know some people like well republicans
are saying you know they're they're for birth control and contraception well republicans in
congress just last year blocked a bill that would have enshrined the right to birth control
into federal law why why are they doing
that like all this is just like what happened before dobbs too right which or right after dobbs
right which is a lot of some people say oh don't worry it's gonna states are gonna do their own
thing it's not gonna be as bad and then you know it how many years later we're about to talk about
the ivf case in alabama we are seeing the downstream effects of what happens when right-wing nationalists, right-wing Christian nationalists, burrow into government, are given power, and decide to force their agenda on the rest of the country.
And if you don't think that's what's going to happen when Donald Trump becomes president, right, could some of it not happen?
Yeah, yeah.
He's lazy.
Who knows?
But a bunch of it really could happen, this agenda. And I do think it's like incredibly important for Democrats to talk about it a lot from now until November. We just got another
preview of what a Christian nationalist agenda might look like. A week ago, the Alabama Supreme
Court ruled that embryos created in an IVF lab count as children under the state's wrongful death of a minor act.
This is a big win for abortion opponents who argue that life begins at conception.
Already, three Alabama hospitals, including the University of Alabama at Birmingham, have hit pause on all IVF care as a result of the ruling.
IVF care as a result of the ruling. So for people in Alabama who are considering IVF as their best or only shot at having a child or have frozen embryos awaiting genetic testing or are going
through already the very expensive, uncomfortable, sometimes painful IVF process right now,
this is just, it's devastating news. Dan Playbook also called this a quote,
nightmare scenario for the GOP. So one in six Americans have had fertility issues. Pew says
that more than 40% of Americans have personally used fertility treatments of some kind. And more
than 86% of Americans support IVF, including around 80% of people who consider themselves pro-life
or evangelicals, according to polling shared by none other than Kellyanne Conway.
How do you think this issue plays out beyond what's happening in Alabama?
Look, I think if you get a poll from Kellyanne Conway that says 86% of people support IVF,
that seems pretty bad for Republicans. I think that we should treat this
much like the Christian National... The two stories we're talking about here are absolutely
interconnected. The people who are trying to staff Donald Trump's administration to put in place his
Christian National Agenda want to take what Alabama did and make it national. They want to
at least make it so that this is a national policy. Maybe it becomes a policy that states can do.
make it so that this is a national policy. Maybe it becomes a policy that states can do. Either way, access to IVF is under tremendous threat if Donald Trump is elected president. And it doesn't
matter what Donald Trump says about this. He might say he doesn't agree with it. He probably doesn't
know what it is. But we should take this very seriously. And people will say, well, this is one
kind of narrowly written decision, and it's Alabama, and there's a history of that sort of stuff in Alabama.
That's how Roe v. Wade got overturned. It was the work of right-wing state-level activists
working a process to get cases to end up before the Supreme Court. Now, this court case is not
yet headed to the Supreme Court, but it very well could be.
And if Donald Trump is president of the United States,
what side do you think the Department of Justice is arguing on?
Do you think it's on the side for access to health care choices for women?
Or do you think it's on the side of what the Christian nationalists
who staff his government want?
And so I think we should take it very seriously.
We should talk about it.
And this is one of those things that just anecdotally in your life,
you know is breaking through.
People who, in my life, who
follow politics but don't obsess about it like we do, who don't generally bring up politics to me,
have brought this up. You see it on social media, people who don't generally post about
politics posting about this because so many people have used IVF, contemplated using it,
did research on it to see if they were going to have to use it, know people who used it.
And the things that really break through in this era of politics are the things it, did research on it to see if they were going to have to use it, no people who used it.
The things that really break through in this era of politics are the things that have a direct impact on people's lives. They're not theoretical policy positions taken by the government or tax
policy. It's, I can do one thing today, and if these people get elected, I can't do it tomorrow.
That's why Dobbs was such a consequential moment in politics. And I think the IVF is, it comes from
Dobbs, but is very, is of the same vein. And it is a very, I think this is one of those,
one of those moments that it could be very impactful.
Yeah. I mean, Republican politicians right now, as we are recording this,
are tripping over themselves to say that they support IVF and they, you know, they don't agree with this. And some Republican told Politico, like,
I don't know why we're talking about this. No Senate candidates, Republican Senate candidates
have supported this, have said that they're against IVF, all this kind of stuff. But it is,
like you said, it is an example of the conservative legal system doing whatever the hell it wants and Republican
politicians enabling conservative judges to do whatever the hell they want. This is what happens
when you legislate religious beliefs that haven't been validated by science or medicine.
You are free to believe, as Nikki Haley said she did in response to this news, that an embryo
as Nikki Haley said she did in response to this news, that an embryo is morally equivalent to a newborn baby.
But if you turn that religious belief into a law, if you decide that you need to make an embryo legally equivalent to a newborn baby,
you get a decision like Alabama's, which is currently preventing people from having children through IVF,
which Nikki Haley said she supports just today.
This is the logical conclusion of what the Supreme Court set out in Dobbs.
And all of these Republican politicians, right,
they think they have their religious belief that life begins at conception and that embryos are humans and that fetuses are all human and all
this kind of stuff. And it's like, and they want to give them the same legal rights. And once you
jump to giving them the same legal rights, you get things like the Alabama Supreme Court making
a decision on IVF that is now ending the practice in the state of Alabama. You get women who are
fighting for their lives
because they have a pregnancy that could kill them
and not being able to get an abortion
because some fucking judge has to figure out
whether the doctor can save the life of the mother or not.
I mean, you can have your religious beliefs.
It is totally fine.
But the idea that we now have to enshrine
your religious beliefs into law
has led to all kinds of pain and
suffering in this country and will continue to if we go down this path. And the Biden campaign
just put out a clip of Trump announcing his nomination of a judge in 2020 who was deemed
not qualified by the American Bar Association. She now has a lifetime appointment on the federal bench.
He considered her for the Supreme Court,
and she is anti-IVF and anti-surrogacy.
And do you think Trump knew that when he was saying it?
Probably not, because he doesn't get,
like you say, he's an eye-to-details guy.
He doesn't give a shit.
But the Federalist Society wanted the judge,
and so Trump said, sure, here's your judge.
And then we get decisions like this.
And then you get Republican politicians like, what?
Someone asked fucking dipshit Tommy Tuberville about this.
And he was like, oh, no, you know, I support the Alabama Supreme Court.
Oh, no, no, I want IVF.
I like babies are good.
Oh, let me look at the bill.
And the reporter's like, there is no bill.
What are you talking about?
There's no bill.
This is just a decision for the Supreme Court.
Like, they don't know what the fuck they're talking about, which is why they shouldn't
be involved in decisions, healthcare decisions that families are making with their doctors.
It's crazy. It's a bunch of weird politicians who want to be involved in what you read,
what you can say, who you love, who you can marry, how you have sex, when you have kids,
your healthcare decisions. That's what they want. They want to be in your life. And I think that
that is something that was a very effective political argument for Democrats for a long
time, but it's sort of gotten lost in the Trump era as we talk, rightfully so, about the fall
of democracy and authoritarianism and all those other things. You still got a bunch of politicians,
men, who weirdly
want to get deeply involved in people's personal issues and but it's the i see i think it it
connects oh absolutely absolutely with the authority role and that's why that's why the
weird christian nationalists are talking about the fucking insurrection act because it's not enough
for republican states and Republican legislatures
and governors to pass these laws. They want to send the military into blue states and blue cities.
And if you don't agree with their fucking right wing agenda, they are going to force it,
literally force it on you with military, with the United States military. And if that sounds dystopian, it is not. It is exactly
what Trump and the people who are going to serve in his second term want to do. Okay, in case Trump's
Christian nationalist government waiting hasn't freaked you out enough, the Love Thy Neighbor
crew also has some pretty terrifying immigration plans. The Washington Post reports that Trump and
Stephen Miller, yeah, he's going to be back, want to launch, quote, the largest domestic deportation operation in American history.
This would go far beyond migrants who recently crossed the border and would target an estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in this country.
These are immigrants who've lived here for decades, who came here as kids, who work and pay taxes.
here for decades, who came here as kids, who work and pay taxes. The plan involves, again,
sending the military and law enforcement into cities, rounding up immigrants, putting them in new internment camps, and then deporting them to countries where many of them have never even
lived because they've been in this country for so long. Here's Trump talking about it during his town hall with Laura Ingraham.
How do you plan to deport the millions of people? I mean, it's probably 12,
13 million people under Biden alone that have come here. And how will it work?
It's going to work that we get the bad ones out first. They're coming in from prisons. They're
coming in from jails and mental institutions. How will you find them?
We're going to find them through local police.
Look, the local police, they're so phenomenal.
I love them.
They love me.
I think I have 97% support.
They know everything.
So Trump and Stephen Miller wanted to carry out this massive deportation operation in the first term.
They couldn't get it done for various reasons.
They got some pushback from local law enforcement, particularly in blue states and cities, got some pushback from the
bureaucracy, the federal government bureaucracy. This is why they're always railing against the
deep state. They got some pushback from the courts, but they think they have learned some
lessons this time and will be able to pull it off in a second term. What do you think?
I think they certainly learned some lessons, just like the right-wing folks learned some lessons about how to use Trump to implement their agenda.
Trump also learned some lessons from his first term. In the first term, he had two kinds of
people. He had loyal knuckleheads who couldn't get shit done, and he had disloyal, quasi-serious,
quasi-effective people. And the lesson of what his failed effort to overturn
the election is he needs true diehard loyalists who will effectively carry out his agenda.
He can't have people like Bill Barr. I can't believe I'm just citing Bill Barr in this case,
but Bill Barr stopping him from doing things or as one of his many defense secretaries.
But he also has people smarter and better than like Jeff Clark to actually get the stuff done.
And so, and this is,
you see this in the Trump campaign this time around.
He has hired real people to run a real race.
And I think there will be people
who can actually get this shit done in his White House.
And so we should take all these things seriously
and all the reporting
about what a second Trump presidency would look like. We got to take that seriously because that stuff can and will happen. This is what he wants
to do. And I think he has a much better chance of getting it done this time than last time.
The Post has done some great reporting on this in this piece. The Times also did reporting on this
a couple of months back. And it is maybe the immigration plans the trump immigration plans
are maybe the most detailed of all the plans we've heard stephen miller gave like a long
interview to charlie kirk about this where he sounded like a fucking lunatic um what a sentence
very was very open about what they want to do in the post story there's a quote about trump and
miller's plans in their first term that they didn't completely carry out.
Quote, their ideas were psychotic.
You're talking about officers in tactical gear going into communities, being videotaped in the streets, putting kids in car seats, carrying baby formula.
Then what do you do with those families?
Are you going to go into neighborhoods in Philly, New York, Baltimore and start tugging people out of communities?
That's what they want.
It puts law enforcement and the communities at risk.
That quote is from the chief of staff at ICE, Jason Hauser. Not exactly a bunch of libs at ICE,
the people who carry out the deportations. Here's what David Leopold, former president
of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, told Ron Brownstein about this in The Atlantic.
What this means is that the communities that are heavily Hispanic or black, those marginalized communities are going to be living in absolute fear of a knock on the door, whether or not they themselves are undocumented.
What he's describing is a terrifying police state, the pretext of which is immigrations.
Literally, as people are leaving for work or their kids are going to school, they're going to see mass deportation centers with children and mothers who are just in the community working and thriving.
I've been thinking about this for a while because it is a very, I think when people think about deportations, they think about undocumented immigrants crossing the border.
There's this border crisis that's getting all the attention right now. So they think people who are
just, you know, just coming over from the border and they get they get stopped and they figure out
what to do with them. Do they get asylum? Do they not? What Trump and Miller are talking about is
undocumented immigrants that have the 11 million, most of whom have been here for a long, long time.
By the way, a lot of these undocumented immigrants are living in families and in homes with people who are citizens.
So you're also going to see images of parents being torn away from their children who have citizenship.
But also, by the way, Trump and Miller want to revoke birthright citizenship, which is in the 14th Amendment,
revoke birthright citizenship, which is in the 14th Amendment, so that children who were born in this country to undocumented immigrants don't have their citizenship anymore. But so there's
going to be families torn apart. There's going to be people who are at work on jobs taken out of
their workplaces, dragged through the streets in internment camps. And what happens if, you know,
Trump sends National Guard in or the military
local law enforcement doesn't want to cooperate. The governor's National Guard in a blue state
doesn't want to cooperate with the red state National Guard that Stephen Miller was talking
about Trump sending red state National Guard into blue states that didn't want them so he said oh if there's if
there's immigrants undocumented immigrants that we want to round up in maryland but the maryland
governor but west moore doesn't want to use the maryland national guard to help round up those
immigrants we'll have glenn yunkin send the virginia national guard into maryland like what
what the fuck are they talking about this is is insane. Can you imagine, like,
the clashes between various national...
This is like...
I'm telling you, it's...
Have you seen the trailer
for the Civil War movie?
I have.
I have.
Just saying they picked a good year to release.
They picked a very good
or very bad year to release it,
depending on how you think about it.
Again, it's like I always want...
I always go back and forth.
It's a tension. You don't want to freak people out too much
and sound like a like a crazy person but it's like you just you read what these people are saying
you think about the power that they're going to have and you think about that the guardrails that
have already come off and you know it's it might not definitely happen but it's a pretty big risk
it's a real challenge because you know sarah Longwell had this tweet the other day that was something like, I continue to believe we're underreacting to the urgency of this moment.
And I think that or the threat of this moment or whatever it is.
I think that's very true.
We absolutely are.
We are sleepwalking right into something very, very dangerous.
You already see, you know, like Jamie Dimon and Bill Ackman and these people just sort of already walking themselves towards we're going to be okay with Trump because we're going to get our tax cuts.
And you see it happening.
But at the same time, the voters we need to persuade don't really believe us when we talk about it in this way, in part because they just lived through the Trump presidency.
And they didn't send the Virginia National Guard to go fight the Maryland National Guard over taking out some nine-year-old immigrant children, right? It's just...
Right.
So it is a real challenge, but you are correctly identifying the natural conclusion to what the
Trump people are telling us they're going to do, and we should take them seriously when they say it. even before January 6th, when Trump wanted to send the military out into Lafayette Park to use
them against the protesters after George Floyd was murdered, right? Like we got pretty close
a couple times at the end of Trump's first term to some of this stuff, which I think will help
people to understand that it is very possible that he continues to act like that in his second term.
Absolutely. That's what January 6th is, why it's so essential, this election.
All right. Believe it or not, Trump still has a primary opponent who says she isn't going anywhere.
Nikki Haley is within spitting distance of Trump ahead of Saturday's South Carolina primary.
Just a just a margin of error.
30 points behind, Dan, according to 538 polling average.
But if she's going down, she's going down in flames.
Haley gave a speech on Tuesday vowing to stay in the race even if she loses tomorrow. Let's listen. Some of you, perhaps a few of you in the media, came here today to see if I'm dropping out of the race.
Well, I'm not.
Of course, many of the same politicians who now publicly embrace Trump privately dread him.
They know what a disaster he's been and will continue to be for our party they're just
too afraid to say it out loud well i'm not afraid to say the hard truths out loud i feel no need to
kiss the ring i have no fear of trump's retribution okay all right uh So no real suspense about Saturday's results.
I mean, slow down, buddy. Slow down.
Just anything's possible.
Anything's possible. Anything's possible.
I mean, I know you're going to be just glued to the Kornacki cam watching those precinct level results come in.
Yeah. I'm not a model for all you people.
You people out there should consume political coverage, preferably in podcast format, but yes.
Is there a Trump margin of victory that would surprise you?
I think anything over 40 or under 20.
Okay. So if he wins by over...
Over 40 or by less than 20. Yeah, that's about right.
It doesn't change the outcome of this. There are a bunch of polls that came out today like
Trump's up by like 50 in Vermont, 50 in Maine. We know where this is going. But just be interested
to see if Haley can somehow improve her performance from New Hampshire in a much tougher state,
even if at this point she governed for six years.
Yeah. I'm sort of wondering if she... This this is this is embarrassing to say but i think if she
i cannot wait if she gets over 40 i would be surprised at how well she did that's what i'll
say yeah yeah yeah sure that way i mean because she's she's sort of pulling in the low 30s
and then if he if he but conversely if he, and this is sort of what you were just saying, like if he gets over 70%, which he could, then that's, yeah, that's telling.
That's the math of 20 and 40.
Yep.
That's right.
That's right.
So really the only suspenseful question here is what's Nikki Haley's endgame?
After that speech, I think it's getting harder to see her endorse Trump, but who knows?
I think it's getting harder to see her endorse Trump, but who knows?
She also just said in an interview with NPR that she has even more concerns about Biden as president than Trump.
So I don't know what's going on.
I know we talked about this before, but, you know, just like to do a gut check every other pod on Nikki Haley's endgame.
She sounds less than like someone who's going to endorse Trump.
I tweeted something about this,
which I haven't been tweeting that much recently.
So I did it.
I even put it there.
I'm preemptively prepared to be disappointed, but she doesn't sound like someone
who's going to endorse Trump
based on one of these clips we displayed.
And everyone's like, you naive fucker.
Thoughtful, thoughtful ones.
People who definitely did very well
in reading comprehension in school.
You see me jump into a tweet thread and you thought, ah, John's having a good time. I'm
going to go in too. I was like, the way John has been spending his weekends recently on Twitter,
I should try to do that too. But then I remembered being myself when I was doing
political commentary for CNN at the Republican convention in 2016 and watching Ted Cruz stand on stage and telling people to
vote their conscience while being booed mercilessly and then endorsing Trump like
two weeks later. And that famous photo of him sadly making phone calls on Trump's behalf.
And I listened to our friends at the Bulwark and their podcast, and they are negative on Nikki. I think Tim Miller has it at less than 1% chance that she doesn't endorse Trump.
Yeah, Tim and JVL both have it like under 1%. Sarah.
It's like 35%.
It's all 35%.
I'm really the Sarah of this pod. Sarah's at like 35%. 95%. Yeah. But it's always good to check in with Republicans because Democrats are the ones who have Aaron Sorkin-like fantasies about Republicans saving them.
And then you go listen to the bulwark of other never-Trump Republicans and some things they can disabuse you of those pretty quickly.
And so I have no idea what she's doing.
I think she likes running for president.
I think she's probably pretty personally offended at the way Trump has talked about her and her family.
She probably can't imagine that she is losing by this much to this guy.
I imagine she has some money commitments through super Tuesday from her super PAC
donors,
which is why she said that,
but she's definitely not voting for Joe Biden.
She's not going to be on stage with Chris Christie,
Liz Cheney,
John Lovett,
Romney.
Yes.
He,
John Lovett,
moderating a panel at the DNC with Liz Cheney,
Chris Christie,
John Kasich coming back from where he is.
Now that his pal Tim Scott's going to be VP.
The best I could hope for from her is to just...
She's definitely not endorsing Joe Biden.
She just said she thinks he's more of a threat than Trump, so whatever.
But she could, at the very least, she could just say, i'm out and i'm just going away i'm not saying anything and trump is bad biden's bad and that's it and i i think that
would be i would take that i would take that i mean it's better than nothing what would they
get you just like i think i mean this is back to our friends at the Bulwark, but I do think that her saying all these things about Trump and then endorsing him does give some of these Republican voters a permission structure to go ahead and vote for Trump, even if they don't like him.
that. And remember back previous election cycles when I had my imaginary super PAC and I had a lot of ideas that I was hoping billionaires would fund? Yeah.
Well, I'm back because I got one, which is we should be doing calls into battleground states
to ID people who want to vote for Nikki Haley. Now, we're going to have some real voters like
when Michigan votes on Tuesday, but even some of these states who may be voting out for Super
Tuesday, anyone who says they're voting for may be voting after Super Tuesday, anyone who
says they're voting for Nikki Haley should be put, at least for a time being in our persuasion
universe, that people we can go get, either to convince them to vote for Joe Biden or to
convince them that voting for Donald Trump is a bridge too far for them.
And if Nikki Haley were to endorse, I think that makes that not impossible, because I think a lot
of her voters would be quite disappointed in that outcome. But I think it makes it a little bit harder and it gives Trump a weapon to go bring some of those people back.
If you're listening. Yeah, no, I think that's a great idea. All right. Before we get to your interview with Ben Wickler, let's talk quickly about our our elderly president who just just keeps doing whatever he can to help the American people. transform more lives president biden announced a new round of student debt relief this week that will benefit 150 000 people uh enrolled in the save repayment plan biden has now canceled the debt of 3.9 million borrowers since he took office so republicans reacted to this news
by accusing biden of violating the law in order to buy votes.
Why should I be paying for these these student loans?
And the Supreme Court said no. And now he's a he's a fascist because he's he's rejecting the Supreme Court's ruling and just doing it anyway.
Ridiculous. And then some lefties are saying, you know, helping four million borrowers isn't enough.
Like, sure, of course, it's not enough, but this is what he can do because there is the
law.
Can this guy catch a break or what?
I don't know.
You got to feel for Biden sometimes.
I really do.
All the time.
You have to feel for him all the time.
He made a bold decision to try to cancel student debt.
Then the Supreme Court overturned his decision.
And he said and promised on that day he would do everything he could within his power to
try to help as many people as possible.
And he has been pulling every lever of the federal government to help as many people
as possible.
And it's just the reminder that Joe Biden is what we want in politicians, right?
He is trying to do everything he can.
He can't fix everything.
There is no magic wand.
He can't make the Supreme Court go away.
He doesn't have a majority in Congress that could pass a legislative solution to this.
What he has is the tools and resources he's using to help as many people as possible.
Is it all the help everyone needs?
Absolutely not.
Is it better than nothing?
No one's saying it is.
Yeah, Joe Biden's not, right?
Just imagine, how many dollars of student debt do you think President Donald Trump will cancel starting in January of 2025?
Trump, who tried to eliminate the very program that made possible the relief that Joe Biden just announced.
Yes.
Yes. And so and for all the fucking blue check marks in my mentions, these morons who are just getting all this wrong and all the right wing idiots who are saying that this is like defying a Supreme Court order.
Two sets of borrowers got relief from this latest announcement. One, signed a law saying that public servants get their loans canceled after 10 years of service.
But the law was administered poorly and people weren't getting the benefits.
So Biden goes back and fixes the law.
And that's why all these people got relief.
So entirely within the law.
And number two is people who are on income-based repayment plans.
So according to that law, after 20 years of
payments, if you still have a balance, the government's supposed to cancel the balance
if you've been paying all along. But that actually wasn't happening. So Biden went back,
fixed that too, and are now sending people checks who overpaid or who still have the
outstanding balance, canceling the balance. So again, both of the sets of people who got relief
entirely within the letter of the law of people who got relief entirely within
the letter of the law has nothing to do with what the supreme court said idiots
i'm spending too much time on twitter i know i know i got a podcast i got a podcast for you to
listen to what podcast it's called offline
it's also by a previous by a previously smart fellow.
You know what?
I'm getting back on.
I'm done.
I'm going back on Twitter all the time.
I'm getting in fights.
I'm going to regress all the way back to 2012, 2013,
whenever I left the White House.
I'm going all the way back.
I was just thinking about this today.
I was already preemptively preparing for my having to eat crow
during the New Year's resolution episode at the end of this year. I've decided my New Year's
resolution was to reestablish my attention span by spending less time online. And in some ways,
I am doing that. I'm trying to put my phone away for periods of time. But we got an election coming.
I got to follow the news. I got to be in there. Just got to do it. I got to do it.
gotta follow the news i gotta be in there just gotta do it i gotta do it also i forgot too because i have a i have a toddler who i'm you know i'm chasing charlie around all the time when i'm
doing that it's very hard to be on my phone which is a good thing but now we have teddy we got the
newborn and when you're holding the newborn and you're just trying to rock him to sleep there's
nothing else to do but look at your phone and can i give you a tip that I picked up with our kids? What's that?
Play games.
Oh, play games.
Because I was-
Teddy can't play any games.
No, you're playing games on your phone.
If you're holding the child, I mean, theoretically, you could pick up a hardcover book and read
it with one hand.
But if you're going to hold this device in your hand and you don't want to be on Twitter
when you're doing it, play games.
That's my advice to parents and newborn who have a phone addiction problem who also don't want to be red-pilled by Elon Musk.
Play games better than arguing over an Ezra Klein essay.
Yes.
Play games, argue over Ezra Klein essay.
So it goes, Ezra Klein essay is worse than play games is slightly better than reading a book is better than that. And then just sitting quietly with your own thoughts is the impossible ideal to aspire to.
Okay, before we go to break,
reminder that everyone should check out Vote Save America's anxiety relief program.
You set up a recurring monthly donation
at the level that feels right for you.
VSA will send 100% of it to the grassroots organizations
in down-ballant races that need it most.
Each month, you'll also get a report
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It's great.
Head to votesaveamerica.com to sign up now.
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not authorized by any candidate or candidates committee.
Speaking of anxiety relief, if you're like me and polling makes you crazy, you have to check out Dan's new show, Polar Coaster.
I think you talked to Harry Enten on the latest episode about Joe Biden being old.
Is that true?
We talked about what the polling tells us about Joe Biden being old? Is that true? We talked about what the polling tells us about Joe Biden
being old. We talked about the Ezra Klein column and what the polling tells us about Biden's
electability and the electability of other Democrats. And just in general, look, we're
addicted to the polls. We're going to follow them. We're going to be happy when they're up.
We're going to be sad when they're down. But if you want to understand what you should worry about,
what you shouldn't worry about why you
shouldn't panic about any of it i highly encourage you to listen to polar coaster subscribe to
friends of the pod so you can it is you'll get access to a whole bunch of stuff including this
podcast and support this company as it's building out the progressive response to the right-wing
noise machine we try to you try to feel that leave episode being a little bit smarter about polling,
understanding in context,
and maybe even sometimes feeling
a little bit better about things.
Yeah, maybe.
And if you're listening to this right now
and you're like, oh, why are you talking about Biden's age?
If you can't handle hearing about Biden's age,
then between now and November,
you should probably close your ears and your eyes
and not pay attention to politics.
Because there are constructive ways to talk about it.
It is an issue.
It's going to be an issue.
Just fucking deal with it, everyone.
We're going to get through it, okay?
And in this episode, you know what?
If you were thinking about listening to Blockbuster,
ignore everything John just said.
I thought that was not,
I thought him taking his response to his Twitter thread... Oh, no.
Oh, no. An idea I disagree with.
Oh, I'm going to melt. I'm going to melt.
It's horrible. It's horrible.
Harry Enten's very smart.
We help explain what the polling really tells us
about Biden's age and
not just Biden's age, but Biden's age
in comparison to Trump being nearly as
old and full of crimes. So, come listen.
Full of crimes.
What did he say? He said something to Laura Ingraham during old and full of crimes. So come listen. Full of crimes. What did he say?
He said something to Laura Ingraham
during the town hall about DC
and he's like,
we're gonna have powerful crime in DC again.
Powerful crime.
Guy's fucking nuts.
He's nuts.
Don't make him president.
All right.
So check out Polar Coaster.
Fantastic podcast, Dan.
You have to be a member of Friends of the Pod to listen.
So just sign up at cricket.com slash friends.
You get Polo Coaster.
You get all kinds of other great content from all of us.
When we come back, Dan talks to Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wickler.
On Monday, Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers signed into law new electoral maps that helped undo years of Republican gerrymandering. It's a huge win for Democrats in a state where the legislature
has been under Republican control for more than a decade. Ben Wickler, who needs no introduction
on this podcast, but is the chair of the Wisconsin Democratic Party. And he's here to tell us more about it. Ben, welcome back to Pod Save America. Dan, it is great to be back. And I cannot tell you
how different it already feels to live in an actual democracy. So I'm here bursting with
enthusiasm and gratitude for everything that the Vote Save America volunteers have done in election
after election after election to make this moment possible.
I was actually, when I saw this news, I was thinking about the first ever show that we
did in Madison, which was on either our first or second tour we ever did back in 2018.
And the topic of that show was gerrymandering and efforts to undo what the Republicans had
done there.
And so the fact that it's five years later, but you guys got
this victory is just absolutely unbelievable. So tell us, I know you worked on it for years,
tell us how you got here. So it starts in 2011, when the Tea Party wave had swept Scott Walker
and the Republican legislative majorities into office. And Republicans immediately used the
redistricting cycle to construct behind closed doors
at a lobbying firm here in Madison
where a lot of Republicans like to hang out
with kind of computational redistricting experts,
the maps of their dreams, which they passed into law
and locked in Republican hyper-majorities
for the foreseeable future.
2012, Democrats won in a landslide,
Republican, the gerrymander held, And even though they lost most of the votes, they still had
many, many more than half of the seats. We elected Governor Evers in 2018 by 1.1 percentage points,
more than one point as a Wisconsin landslide. So we were all thrilled. This is a huge effort.
But at the same time as he won statewide and Democrats swept every single
statewide office for the first time since 1982. And in that same year, Democrats won 54% of the
votes for state assembly. Republicans got 63% of the seats. We win more than half, they get almost
two thirds of the seats. It was as plain as day for anyone watching what was going on. And in 2020, the battle was to stop
Republican supermajorities, which we did not by much. We flipped two assembly seats in an
incredibly intensive battle. But that year was the year preceding the next census. So maybe there was
going to be a chance. And in 2021, the governor created a People's Maps Commission to take testimony from people all over the state and try their hand at drawing maps that would
actually be fair. Republicans completely ignored them, drew hyper-gerrymandered maps, passed them
through the state legislature. The governor vetoed them. Because of the Save the Veto campaign and
work by the Assembly and Senate Democrats, the governor's veto survived and it went to the
state Supreme Court. So we get to 2022, I guess the fall of 2021, and the right-wing majority in
the state Supreme Court announces how they will solve the impasse between the state legislature
and the governor. You have the Republicans in the state legislature pushing for gerrymandered maps.
You have a Democratic governor saying he won't sign anything but fair maps. The state Supreme
Court decides or announces out of whole cloth, there's no legal basis for
this, that they will choose the maps that make the least changes to the Republican hyper gerrymander
from 2011. Of course. Why wouldn't you? Yes. Right. Just like the framers intended.
So that was the basis that they would choose the maps. The governor's team and the state legislature get to work.
The governor proposes a set of maps that makes very small changes, but still doubles the
number of competitive districts.
And he proposes maps for Congress and for the state legislature.
And the Republicans don't really complete the assignment.
They propose their hyper-gerrymandered maps to the state legislature again.
The state legislature says, well, we did say we'd choose the maps of the
lease changes. So they go with the governor's maps in that moment. And then Republicans throw
a Hail Mary pass to the U.S. Supreme Court, which in an unsigned shadow docket opinion,
meaning no argumentation from either side, no nothing, the U.S. Supreme Court strikes down
the state legislative maps, sends it back to the state Supreme Court. State Supreme Court says, oh, well, I guess we can't use those and chooses the
Republicans' maps. So suddenly the maps that the governor vetoed that were obviously rejected by
our political process that build in a Republican supermajority in the state Senate and almost a
Republican supermajority in the state assembly, they're chosen by our Supreme Court, which is
supposed to be the neutral arbiter of the law, in the final moments before candidates have to start running in their districts.
And Republicans come in for the kill. The Republican plan at this point was to get
supermajorities in both legislative chambers at the same time as they were trying to defeat
Governor Evers in 2022, which would allow them to dismantle our democracy. They were openly throwing around their
plans to dismantle the Wisconsin Elections Commission, which is a bipartisan body that's
at the top of our election administration system. They were coming up with, there was a bill that
one legislator proposed that would allow them to cancel the results of an election if the margin
of victory was less than the number of absentee ballots in the election. I mean, just unbelievable stuff. That was the situation in 2022. And in that moment,
we were chillingly reminded when we looked through the records that the last time a Democrat had won
a governor's race when there was a Democratic president, because Wisconsin is a swing state
that has the typical thing of the party in power wins the midterms. The last time a Democrat had won a governor's race
with a Democratic president was 1962,
when JFK won with a 70% approval rating,
won by a single percentage point.
So the chance in 2022 that we'd win the governor's race,
the odds were against us and we went for it.
I mean, people in every corner of Wisconsin
working their hearts out.
We reelected Governor Evers by 3.4 percentage points.
He ran an extraordinary campaign.
It was just absolutely made the case.
And for me, it's a template for what's possible
in the presidential race.
And in the state legislature,
Republicans got their super majority in the state Senate
and they came in,
they thought they were gonna get the super majority
in the state assembly,
but a flood of volunteers, a ton of work, everyone doing everything they could,
we held off Republican supermajorities in the state assembly by 2,499 votes. It was 0.01%
of all the votes cast in the state. And that meant Republicans could not simply unilaterally
impose whatever maps they might want. And at that point, we had six months
until a Supreme Court race to determine the majority on the state Supreme Court.
So once again, we got everyone together. We held together the kind of core team from the
governor's race, people who were now had survived election cycle after election cycle,
thousands upon thousands of volunteers, including people listening to this podcast,
who had volunteered in the Supreme Court race in the spring of 2020, in the presidential race in the fall of 2022, in the superintendent of public
instruction race in the spring of 2021, local elections in 22, the fall elections in 22.
We went back to it. And in the spring of 2023, we won a jaw-dropping double-digit landslide in the
state Supreme Court race. Janet Protasewicz became the majority-making justice on our state Supreme Court, sending
Dan Kelly, who was a consultant on the fake elector scheme, into the dustbin of political
history.
And boom, we were in a new day.
And as soon as she took the oath of office in August, an organization, Law Forward, which
did amazing work arguing that these maps were unconstitutional, they brought a case that said that the Republican Supreme Court chosen map didn't meet the constitutional standard.
And the Supreme Court reviewed it. But as soon as that case was brought, Republicans started
plotting to impeach our newly elected justice, which we all realized they had the votes to do.
They just needed a simple majority in the state assembly.
If they use their full two-thirds majority
in the state Senate,
they could actually throw her out of office.
But if they did that,
the governor would appoint a replacement.
So it looked like they might be plotting to impeach her
and then sit on their hands
because an impeached justice of the Supreme Court
is suspended until the Senate
and the state Senate holds a trial.
So this was this incredibly devious plot to abuse our constitution in order to stop an actual review
of their totally illegitimate power. And the Democratic Party of Wisconsin, our allies,
we launched a campaign called Defend Justice, where we organized in Republican legislative
districts, voters to tell their legislators, absolutely do not do this. Do not
become the first legislators anywhere in the country to impeach a judge before they ruled
on something to stop them from making that ruling. And it worked. The GOP backed down.
They realized that they were facing a whirlwind that they could not control. And they backed off.
The Supreme Court did look at the maps. They did determine they were unconstitutional. They struck
them down in December. And they told the state legislature and the governor, if you can
agree on new maps that meet our constitutional standards, great. And if you can't, we're going
to ask people to submit maps to us and we'll choose the maps. So a bunch of folks submitted
maps, all the parties to the lawsuit. They had the gold-plated nonpartisan redistricting experts
review them. Surprise, surprise, the maps submitted by Republicans were partisan gerrymanders.
The others were fair.
And the consultants said they were virtually indistinguishable from each other.
And at that point, as we ticked down the clock, the Republicans and the legislature said,
well, I guess we'll pass the maps that the governor actually proposed.
First, they tried to change them to protect their incumbents.
The governor vetoed that.
Then they actually passed the governor's maps, you know, facing a Supreme
Court decision that they couldn't control, and they were afraid of facing accountability in the
court system. So they passed the maps, and on Monday, the governor signed them. And Wisconsin's
new fair maps are law. And what happened last time, where the U.S. Supreme Court overruled the
state Supreme Court, that cannot happen now because this was passed through the traditional process of how a bill
becomes a law. These are Wisconsin statute now. The old maps are null and void moot history.
And candidates are coming out of the woodwork at this very moment. I spoke to one just a little
while ago who's gearing up to announce a run. It is so, so exciting that democracy is finally here because
people fought and fought and fought in election after election, after election, after election,
even after everything went wrong over and over again, that resilience, that persistence,
that dedication to the idea of democracy prevailed. And here we are.
That is the lesson of this whole story is change takes time, but it can happen if we
engage in a political process over and over again, we fight hard, we move the ball forward,
and then you have a day like Monday. So there's been some suspicion from folks outside of Wisconsin
who are under the belief, correct, I think, that the Republicans in the Wisconsin legislature are not great. And so why
did they help explain to me why they agreed to these maps and why the governor did not send it,
as some have said, to the Supreme Court on the thought that you could get a more favorable map
that way? So this was, you know, this moment right before the finalization of the maps,
where there were, I think, good faith disagreements and good faith suspicions of bad faith on the Republican side, there are kind of two dimensions of
disagreement. One is, what is the channel of greatest legal risk? So if the governor signs
the maps, then in theory, someone could try to sue in a federal circuit court. And these are rock solid legally. They're impregnable from a legal perspective.
But if judges go rogue, they do whatever they want. It's Calvin ball. And so a lot of folks
were worried that the Republicans had some kind of trick up their sleeve, some judges in their
pocket who were going to find some ludicrous basis to strike them down. And by the time that
could be corrected on appeal, the election cycle would be passed. The other risk, of course, is that the US Supreme Court
would do what it did last time. And the governor had to weigh those two risks against each other
and determine that in his judgment, the legal risk was much lower if the bills are enacted
and signed into law. So that's one piece. The other is there were four different
maps that the nonpartisan experts reviewed that the Supreme Court was considering. Of those,
they're all pretty much fair. The governors make it a little bit harder in the first year to win
an assembly Democratic majority than some of the other maps. And then it takes two years to have a
chance to win the Senate majority. In one of the other maps, it's it takes two years to have a chance to win the Senate majority.
In one of the other maps, it's a little, I think, harder in the assembly, but there's like different levels in the Senate and the assembly for either side. And there's one map that had
different numbered Senate districts where it would have been possible for Democrats to win
a majority in the Senate in 2024, as well as the assembly. So, you know, from one perspective,
in 2024 as well as the assembly. So, you know, from one perspective, maybe the Republicans were doing the thing that could slow down the march of democracy and accountability a little bit.
You know, I think the difference between the maps is much less than the difference between any maps
and any of these maps and no maps. And so if there's a legal risk, the number one priority is to prevent the possibility that Republicans will pull a fast one and block any new maps at all for an election cycle.
As you indicated, Wisconsin is the quintessential 50-50 state, right?
Every election, as you said, comes down to like a point if you're lucky, as you said, Governor Evers won by a landslide at 1.8 points or whatever it was. But prior to these new maps, the Republicans had two thirds of the seats in the legislature
and were, you know, in elections where Democrats were winning at the state level, they were losing,
uh, they were probably getting issues at two thirds of the seats. What, what is that breakdown
now post maps? Is it more like the 50-50 of the state?
Now it is very close to 50-50.
Now, if either side wins by three points, by every single analysis, if you win by three points, you win a majority in the legislature.
And in the 2012 and 2018 election cycle, Democrats won by more than that and still lost almost
two-thirds of the
seats in the state assembly. That is unthinkable now. So Democrats have to do a little bit better
than 50% to be able to win an assembly majority in 2024. And so that's what we're going to shoot
for. I mean, it should be the case that both sides try to win most of the votes and get most
of the seats if they do. And you can see in district after district after district, there's now a realistic shot for Democrats to win seats and for those seats to add
up to a majority of the seats in the state assembly. And there's four, at least, state
Senate seats where we have a really good shot this election cycle. If we do that, then 2026,
we have a shot at a Senate majority and potentially a Democratic trifecta. And of course,
the Republicans also have a shot. And that's how it's supposed to work. That's all we've been fighting for is an equal level playing field.
And that's what we finally got. I mean, this is all such great news. Let's talk a little bit about
some of the other races coming up this fall. Tammy Baldwin is up for reelection. She got an opponent
a couple of weeks ago. Talk to me about this person. How much do we have to worry about this?
So at one level, if you just watched Eric Hovde announce his campaign for US Senate,
where in his launch tweet and launch ad, he didn't mention the state that he's running in,
which raises some questions because the guy lives in California in a gigantic mansion
overlooking the Pacific Ocean. He was rated one of Orange County, California's most influential people three years in a row. But nonetheless, he is running in Wisconsin. And this is who Mitch McConnell
thought was their best shot. It didn't inspire a great deal of confidence in the Republican
battle plan. At the same time, this is Wisconsin. And Eric Hovde runs a bank in California that
makes a huge amount of
money. He is a centimillionaire, at least. We'll see what his financial disclosure forms say,
but he's been saying that he will spend tens of millions of dollars of his own money on this race.
And that means we have to take this very seriously. That's what Ron Johnson did,
who actually lived in the state at the time. In 2010, he announced late, he announced in the
election year, he bought a ton
of ads portraying himself as Mr. Reasonable Businessman. And he was able to define himself
because of the fortune that was spent by him and on his behalf. And he sailed into a U.S. Senate
seat that we haven't been able to win back. So we need to treat this as though it's a 50-50 race.
And I'm so glad it's Tammy Baldwin, who's our champion of the Senate,
who's up against him because she genuinely connects with voters in every part of Wisconsin,
across every line of difference, across geography, across ideology. There are dyed-in-the-wool
Republicans who know that they have their jobs because Tammy Baldwin fought for them,
that they have health insurance because Tammy Baldwin fought for them. So we're going to make sure that everyone knows
about what she's done and what she will do.
She's the lead sponsor of the bill
that will restore the protections of Roe versus Wade
to this entire country
if Democrats get a trifecta in 2024.
Eric Hovde, last time he ran for office,
he said he was 100% pro-life
and thought life begins at conception
and all abortions should be banned.
So there's a night and day difference between these two candidates.
And go to TammyBaldwin.com, chip in, get involved, volunteer for her.
Go to WisDems.org, help us at the state party.
We're going to be helping Tammy, President Biden.
We're going to flip two house seats as our game plan.
And we'll be working hand in glove with Greta Neubauer in the state assembly and Diane
Hesselbein in our state senate.
These are names that you will come to know of champions who are fighting to make Wisconsin
actually work for everybody.
This is an all-hands-on-deck election where we're going to try to build reverse coattails
where the local candidates help turn out voters to help us win up and down the ballot
and vice versa.
It's all one big fight for freedom and democracy in the Badger State.
I think that is a great place to end there. I will just endorse what Ben said. I have been a
monthly donor to the Wisconsin Democratic Party for going on years now. There is no better way
to spend your money than to give it to the Wisconsin Democratic Party because you can
have the full faith that Ben is going to invest in organizing strategies that work.
We had these proven record of
success here. And we know, as exhausting as this is for Ben and everyone in Wisconsin,
that this election will once again come down to Wisconsin. We will be waiting for you guys to
count those votes. Hopefully it happens a little less dramatically than it did in 2020. But to find
out, that's when we will find out that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have been reelected. It'll be
because of the work in Wisconsin, the work that everyone has done. So support Ben,
support the Wisconsin Democrats. Ben, congratulations on this victory. And I know
we're going to talk to you a bunch before this election is over.
Dan, thank you so, so much. And for everyone who has made phone calls, who's chipped in,
who's become a monthly donor, who's helping us with our local elections this April 2nd
in Wisconsin right now, everyone who's doing this work, this victory is
yours. You took a state that was functionally a democracy desert and turned it into a democracy.
And now in that democracy, we can win and pass policies that make a difference in people's
lives. So thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thanks to Ben Wickler for joining.
Everyone have a fantastic weekend,
and we'll have a brand new show for you on Tuesday morning.
Bye, everyone.
Bye, everyone.
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