Pod Save America - Trump's Abortion Gambit Implodes
Episode Date: April 10, 2024Dan is joined by Jennifer Palmieri, co-host of MSNBC's How to Win 2024 podcast and a former communications director for Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, to discuss the ramifications of Arizona's Supr...eme Court upholding a 160-year old abortion ban. Then they break down President Biden's interview with Univision reporter Enrique Acevedo and his campaign’s efforts to reach out to Latino voters. And with just over seven months until the election, they look at the state of both campaigns, how much each candidate is raising and whether or not all that money really matters. 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 Dan Pfeiffer.
And I'm Jennifer Palmieri.
A big thanks to Jennifer for joining us on the podcast today. She's the co-host of MSNBC's
How to Win 2024 podcast, a former communications director for Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama,
my old friend and a White House colleague. Jen, great to have you doing this with us.
I mean, I love, as you know, I love to talk politics with Pfeiffer, so I'm super excited.
I'm glad we can just do it in front of the, for the entire world to see now.
Absolutely.
What could possibly go wrong?
All right.
On today's show, President Biden sits down for a big interview on Univision as part of
an effort to target Latino voters.
And with just over seven months until the election, we'll take a look at the state of
the polls and the way both campaigns are spending and raising money.
But first, in a decision released Tuesday, Arizona's highest court upheld an 1864 law that abands
almost all abortions and could send doctors who administer abortions to jail for up to
five years.
Activists are working to get a constitutional amendment guaranteeing the right to abortion
on the state's ballot in November.
But until then, the ban will be in effect.
Now, since Trump just said abortion should be left to the states, he's obviously totally
cool with this new ruling, right?
Well, not so much because on Wednesday, he said he thought Arizona went too far and
expected voters to overturn the law. Other Arizona Republicans, including Carrie Light,
came out against the law. Jennifer, they are clearly scared shitless. Should they be?
Yeah, totally. Absolutely. Of course. I mean, and it is just, and it is, I was texting with
one of our former colleagues who's currently at the White House to be like, you know, this is so I don't understand why people are getting tripped up that, oh, Trump's trying to moderate his position on abortion.
It's like deferring to the states is the most extreme position to have on abortion.
Second to overturning Roe, like he already did it, right? He already did the big
thing and he owns all of this. And that should be, you know, it's like, it's such nonsense that
now he's trying to backtrack and say like, oh, Arizona should overturn this and Florida will
overturn this. By the way, he votes in Florida. Is he going to vote to overturn the six week
abortion ban? I mean, he basically said today that he's not for a six week abortion ban.
Right. Kind of said that.
Sort of.
Right. Sort of.
The right wing will go will go after him.
But, you know, that Biden ad that they put out the other day with Josh and Amanda's horrific family story, family from Texas.
She had a miscarriage, needed an abortion to protect
herself, couldn't get one. And now she may not be able to have children again. You know,
we have a lot of friends that have been through this, right? I mean, I don't, your parent,
is there anything more wrenching than that ad? Yeah. I mean, it's, it's gutting. It is something
that you, it's, it is hard to watch, but also impossible to turn off.
And that's just we've seen, you know, we saw a similarly wrenching ad in Kentucky during the governor's race about a woman who was a rape victim.
It just it is you're going to see this over and over again everywhere.
And it's just it's like the thing, you know, it's, I like, I think it's like the,
it's just the issue, particularly, I mean, you know, not just for women. I mean, for,
just for, for parents overall, like when, when you see that ad of these parents who went through this terrible miscarriage, she may never be able to have kids. Um, you know, you're like six weeks,
14 weeks. You're like, Oh my God, it's just all bullshit. Like, how about you just trust women
to make these decisions for them and their families? Right. How about that? Yeah. It just,
so it, you know, it cuts, I think, you know, those kinds of ads just, they cut through the clutter of
him Mau Mau-ing, you know, Trump trying to dance on the head of a pin about, about this when he
owns this. And I just think that's the best. He did this. That's it. He did this. He owns this.
All of this trauma is happening because of him. And that's what the Biden campaign should, you
know, should, that is their messaging. That's what they should stick with. Right. Like, and I just
think it's going to be a huge, huge deal. Yeah. I was a little more worried prior to this Arizona ruling that Trump was going to be able to navigate this a little
better than I think maybe you were. I mean, the thing is the thing, right? Roe v. Wade is overturned.
One day, millions of Americans had a constitutional right. The next day, because of Donald Trump,
they didn't. There's no spin. There's no position. There's no video. There's no ad that changes that fact. And the fact that every woman in America lives in fear of that ban happening in their state,
right?
We are just one bad election cycle in a Pennsylvania or any state in which you live where this
could happen to you, right?
That is on Donald Trump.
Now, the polling has shown prior to this that Donald Trump is held less responsible for the overturning of Roe v. Wade than he should be, right?
Because he's the person singularly responsible.
He calls it one of his proudest accomplishments.
That's about all the time.
Yeah.
I talked about this with Sarah Longwell, who's done focus groups on this a couple weeks ago.
In their focus groups, when you ask voters if they think Donald Trump is personally pro-choice, they often laugh. Some of them will even just volunteer the idea
that he has personally paid for abortions. And so he's got this sort of like billionaire,
fake billionaire, New York, CAD, cheats on his wife sort of thing that makes him, he's not a
doctrinaire Republican extremist on social issues like Blake Masters,
Kerry Lake,
Herschel Walker,
and some of these other ones.
Right.
But now in Arizona,
the state that he has been doing the best in,
in the polling averages of the six swing states,
it's been his strongest state to date.
And now this is the top,
this is going to be the top issue,
right?
The top issue.
Yeah.
Politics is like Florida.
Yeah. Like Florida too. Every couple of weeks, this keeps, this keeps happening and it's not going to be the top issue, right? The top issue, yeah. And like Florida. Yeah.
Like Florida, too.
Every couple of weeks, this keeps happening, and it's not going to stop.
It's not going to stop with the crazy Arizona law, right?
Yeah.
And this is, I think, this is just, there's such a sweet, politics has seemed largely
unfair and unjust since 2016, but there is a sweet justice that he puts out this video
and he thinks he's so smart on
Monday and they're like spinning it. And he's got some dumb reporters to sort of like Donald Trump
trying to triangulate on abortion. And look how great it is that Mike Pence is attacking him.
That'll show. And then 28 hours later in one of the six battleground states,
he says, leave it to the states. The states take him up on it and they pass this incredibly extreme law using a, this
is a law from before Arizona was a state.
State.
And that is on Donald Trump.
And now he owns that, right?
He owns not just every law that's in place.
He theoretically owns every crazy proposal from a Republican legislator, right?
Because it's up to the states.
That could happen if it happens.
Up to the states.
Right.
Yeah. Up to the states. This is what happens when you leave it up to the states.
So I, you know, and I also just, I mean, I'm always more optimistic than you are. This is why we're moving. I mean, congratulations. I know it's a low bar, but it, you know, it's like,
and there, there are a lot of people fretting on monday or
whenever that day that he did that and i was just like i don't know like he's responsible for
returning roe v wade and he said leave it to the states and that's a debacle like it's just
it's the most extreme position to have and you know, really, that is really scary. And growing and this won't be the, like, it say, what do you want to be in voters' minds when they make their decision? And in Arizona,
the choice really now comes down to abortion, which every election and every poll shows is
bad for Republicans, or the border, which every poll at least shows has been a challenge for
Democrats. Now there's a very good chance that because of this Arizona law that for those voters in Arizona, abortion is going to be top of mind. It's going to drive turnout.
It's going to drive voter registration. It is a reason for Biden voters or progressives who
have concerns about Biden for whatever reason, right? Gaza, they wanted a younger candidate, whatever that is. This is a reason to get them to vote Joe Biden, not vote or not stay home and not vote for RFK Jr. or Jill Stein or whoever else. I think this is a massive moment for the campaign in a state that some thought I was not, even I am not this pessimistic, but some thought could fall off the map or be the hardest state for Biden to win.
And now I think it is firmly in place.
So that's really good.
And I just think when you look at the saliency between just like immigration is their big thing and abortion is, you know, I just think it's way more.
I understand it's a problem for Democrats, but I just think it's way more salient than abortion is just way more salient.
Yeah.
I mean, and particularly for the voters that Biden has suffered with, abortion is, the progressive voters, the younger voters, and even the voters who are more moderate and voter and Latino voters, they align with Joe Biden on abortion.
Right?
I mean, that's ultimately what you want.
You want people focused on an issue to which they agree with you and disagree with your opponent.
And that got a little bit easier.
One other thing Trump said.
And I'll have a Senate race.
Senate race.
The Senate race.
I mean, Carrie Lake is on tape repeatedly saying that she supported this law.
This was a good law.
It would be great when it was in place.
And now she's trying to walk it back.
This is, I mean, this is a challenge for Trump.
I think it's really, like she said, we got seven months to go here.
A lot's going to change.
People can memory hole lots of things.
But this is really bad news for Kerry Lake, right?
We're going to see the Senate majority pack, the Gallego campaign, any other super pack.
We're going to see tens and
tens of millions of dollars of footage of Kerry Lake endorsing this 1864 law. And there's plenty
of it going around the internet today. It's really powerful. The other thing Trump said on Wednesday
that is notable is many people pointed out in his Monday video that he never said he wouldn't sign
a federal abortion ban if it were to come to his desk. He did say that today. He said to reporters in Georgia.
Oh, I even watched the clip and even I didn't focus on that part of it. Yeah.
What do you make of that? You're going to take it to the bank?
He said he would not sign a bill.
He said he would not sign a national abortion ban.
That is not going to stand. Absolutely not. It's just like, it's just, yeah,
that is absolutely not going to stand. Absolutely not. It's just like, it's just, yeah, that is absolutely not going to stand.
He can't, he can't, he can't, he can't survive continuing to say that he wants Florida to
overturn what they, their six weeks ban and that he won't sign a national abortion ban.
He can't do both of those things.
And you can tell, like in his stupid video on Monday, you could tell that he's so uneasy
about this because he's like, legal scholars on both sides say that Roe v. Wade
that that Roe v. Wade should have been overturned and I was like what no no like so he's just he's
obviously living in his own head even more than normal to convince himself that he can manage
this issue and there's no there's no way that can stand do you think he will have to backtrack on
that yes right don't you I know I don't I think he, I think the right will give him the space to the, like, they don't believe them. They, I mean, this was ultimately
the thing. And you see this in focus groups sometimes with evangelical voters is they don't
think Trump agrees with them on the issues. They just think he'll do it. He'll do what they want.
That'll fight for them when he gets an office. So I think they're going to give him space here.
And all the right-wing groups attacking him for not
doing it is probably on the margins good for him, right? It makes him seem a little bit more moderate.
Sure, sure, sure, sure. It is.
But it's on us as Democrats to say, of course he would sign it. This is the same guy who said
in 2016, as you will remember very well, that he would not cut Social Security, Medicare,
or Medicaid. And then he got an office.
The first thing he did was try to completely eviscerate Medicaid and repealing the Affordable
Care Act and put cuts to Social Security and Medicare in his budget every single year.
He is a known liar.
And every, I mean, there's not a lot that is constructive, although it can be cathartic
to just scream about headlines.
But the amount of headlines I've seen, Trump says he won't sign an abortion ban.
Great. Who cares if he said that? That's not the, the reality of it is he's also not going to face the voters again after this. So his driving force to try to, you know,
I think clumsily avoid the fate of other Republicans on abortion is because he's scared
of the politics. He won't face the politics in office. And of course, he's going to sign it if Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate leader, white guy named John
or whatever, send him the bill. Of course, that's going to happen. Well, and this is what he always
does. Like there is a record of this, that he will always back the MAGA wing because they're
the ones that have his back. So like, I think that this has to go in the bucket of like MAGA
extremist agenda, right? Not abortion most prominently,
but not just abortion. And he always backs those people up.
So Vice President Harris is headed to Arizona on Friday. She's obviously been leading the White
House effort on talking about opposing these abortion bans and pushing for more access.
What else do you think Democrats and the president should do to drive the issue? I think that in the individual states that the people, I mean, one of the
reasons why I feel good about things just in general is the ground game that the Democrats
have had in Arizona, Nevada, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia. And I think, you know, Gretchen Whitmer and
Tammy Baldwin in Wisconsin and, you know, all the house members in Pennsylvania, Bob Casey,
they need to pick it up and drive it. And it's going to help all of them in their races as
well. You know, and they just
got to keep it. I mean, and I, and with paid, right. Um, I'm not sure what else. Yeah. Harris
is great on it. It's interesting that you said you noted about Biden being, uh, aligned with Latino,
um, voices on this. A lot of people are, uh, don't love that the word abortion doesn't come
out of the president's mouth. Like, I understand that. You
know, I'm with Nancy Pelosi, like just when baby, like whatever you got to write, I, you know,
whatever you got to do. And, you know, people should keep in mind that what the president
talks about this issue is probably aligned with the way a lot of Americans think about this issue.
Yeah. John and I talked about this a few weeks ago after the state of the union,
when there was that criticism of the president not using the word abortion.
It's just like we – in all kinds of worlds where you wish the president was more comfortable talking about it, that he used the word.
I mean, the 81-year-old Catholic president stood in the State of the Union and said that if you sent him a law to restore Roe v. Wade, that he would sign it, right?
In the first five minutes of the State of the Union.
Like, that is wild that a Democratic president talked about protecting access to abortion in the first five minutes of the State of the And I think, and the president has been aggressive about this. He's not, has not been shy. It,
there was a little bit of a transition period after Dobbs, but is talking about it everywhere
and should keep, should keep doing it because he has the biggest megaphone, right? And it's a,
like talk about it all the time,light the worst examples of these proposals.
Put him on Trump.
He owns every bill.
I don't care what he says.
He owns the Florida law.
He does.
That is the net result of his action to overturn Dobbs and it is the result of his position.
What he said today is absurd compared to what he said on Monday.
It's absurd.
And we should just hold him to what he said on Monday
and make him pay for all these things.
Well, and even if we,
even if like,
even he's talking about the future,
it's like,
you own this.
Why are we in this situation?
Arizona shouldn't be in the situation
of having to vote to like,
have a constitutional amendment to clean this up,
to clean your mess up.
You made this whole debacle.
None of this is necessary.
Women are dying because of what, because of what mess up. You made this whole debacle. None of this is necessary. Women are dying because of what you did.
Like, this is just, just no, you know?
I think that it's, you know,
I think that the more people get tripped up
on the particulars,
the less salient the argument becomes
because, like, he just, he did this, he owns this,
he has the most extreme,
the most extreme position is what's already happened.
Yeah, and he is responsible for all of it.
And he has said so, right?
So there's all this video of him saying it.
So let's use that.
Happily, he continues to say that.
But even in that video.
We got him on tape.
Even in that tape, even from today, he did it.
Yeah. Okay. Speaking of the president, President Biden is continuing a major push
to win over Latino voters, a group with whom he is struggling and losing ground to Trump,
according to at least one new poll. In an interview that aired last night on Univision,
one of the main Spanish language news networks in the country, Biden talked about democracy, gun violence, inflation, and the
border. Let's take a listen. What, in your view, constitutes the primary threat to freedom and
democracy at home? Donald Trump. Seriously. Donald Trump uses phrases like he's going to
eviscerate the Constitution, he's going to be a dictator on day one.
But he'll stand in Mar-a-Lago and say to his friends,
I know you're all wealthy.
I know 20 of you guys are worth a hell of a lot.
We're going to make sure we get you a tax cut, a tax cut.
And they're all cheering.
Well, guess what, man?
It's about time they start paying their fair share.
Have you made a final decision on taking executive order in terms of what you want to do at the
border that includes the power to shut down the border as it was suggested?
Well it suggested that.
We're examining whether or not I have that power.
I would have that power under the legislation when the border has over 500,000 people, 5,000
people a day trying to cross the border because you can't manage it,
slow it up. And that's why I also put in $14 billion in Spanish speaking institutions of
higher education. So it's overwhelmingly the interest, not only of the community,
but the country to grow the capacity for these students to be able to learn.
Jen, how did the president do? What'd you think of his message?
I mean, like you just like as a former communications director, you want to give him an A-plus for, like,
managing to weave so many messages into that answer, right?
I mean, I'm really, he managed to work into a question about the border, how he's invested
in, like, in, you know, Spanish-speaking education, right?
He managed to work that in uh he ended with a question you know and then he managed to work and remind people what trump
said about the about billionaires um you know and and getting getting more tax cuts like you said
that the mar-a-lago um and he reminded us that the republicans had blocked the border security
bill from going through uh He could have been better
on that. He could have said like specifically they did it to help Trump because Trump doesn't
want this to be solved. And so, you know, I felt like that was all, I felt like that was good.
Yeah, he clearly went in with a punch list of things that he knew from polling or his political
advisors were important to get done in this interview.
And I thought it did well.
What do you think of his answer on the border?
It seems like he is very seriously considering an executive order to shut down the border.
There has been some serious concerns raised about that from immigration groups,
from progressives on Capitol Hill.
What do you think?
What are the politics of it?
It's difficult, but I think that he did seem to lean into that. I mean, you know, we went through,
it reminds me of DACA, right? It was election year, re-election year, June of 2012, when we
finally, our legal team in the White House and justice and DHS finally figured out how you could
do DACA.
So it's the same process they're going through now.
You know, there'll be blowback, but I think they do it.
I think that they make the calculation that there's something does need to be done.
And I think that that probably spills over, you know, the benefit of taking some kind of decisive action doesn't just apply to the border, right? That just,
you know, his team democracy, Trump's team chaos. He's got to show I can get stuff done for you,
you know, even when he's got these difficulties in Congress. But it'll be,
you know, that will be some tough, you know, race because that will be some tough
weeks to go through after he does that, if he does.
Yeah, I'm torn on this one because there have been some very legitimate policy concerns
around taking this move, right?
That people who have legitimate asylum claims will now not be able to have those claims
heard.
The president's obviously managing an impossible situation without the resources he needs to do that because Congress, because of Donald Trump, won't take the
action, won't give him the funding, won't give him the officers, won't give him the technology,
all the things he needs to deal with it. So you have this crisis happening, right? From a pure
substantive perspective, if you take action, there will be some bad downside effects. And if you
don't take action, we already know what some of the bad downside effects are because they're happening right now to the people who are – to happening in the cities where people are being sent, to the migrants who are being bused, all the terrible things that are happening.
From a pure political calculus, from just being a hack about this, the blueprint, the research and polling organization actually pulled this very specific question. And majority of voters support it, and more than 6 in 10 independents support it.
When you take executive action, it is always best to do it in the face of a specific congressional failure.
That's what DACA was. the messaging of this is I didn't want to do this, but Donald Trump and the Republicans forced my
hand because Donald Trump blocked the bipartisan bill that would have given us the resources to
better secure the border. So I have to do this. And if Republicans will come back to the table
and work with us, if Donald Trump will get out of the way, then we can do this through the normal
course of business, right? There is a message here. And presidents always look better when
Congress isn't working and is broken,
and particularly because one party, the Republicans in this case, are being overly partisan,
and then you're taking action, right? That's what DACA was. That's what much of President
Obama's executive actions in the run-up to the election were about related to the economy,
right, when the Republicans were blocking his JOBS Act and he was trying to do as many things
as he could. And so the politic, you know, will there be blowback? Absolutely. Is it going to
be blowback that could cost him, uh, or at least further inflame some segments of the party who
are already unhappy with him over other issues? Absolutely. So there, I mean, there is no,
he's president of the United States. There's no risk-free, there are no risk-free choices,
right? It's like, it's only 51, 49 decisions, uh 51-49 decisions that you have to make and take your gut on it.
So it sounds like they are headed in this direction.
Maybe they're holding out some hope that Congress could resuscitate something, maybe as part of a deal around Ukraine.
Or at least be vocal about giving Congress the opportunity to do so, right?
So one more time he's established that I tried.
Yeah. And that's important, right? Congress the opportunity to do so. Right. So one more time he's established that I tried.
Yeah. And then that's important, right? That's especially given what we say and what he says about in the beginning of that clip from the interview about Donald Trump being a dictator,
right? You have to, you have to like, you have to show your work before you take the executive
action. I think he has done that, but Joe Biden has an eternal faith in the ability of Congress to get things done that has actually worked quite well for him as president.
Yeah, yeah, it does.
He will always – I mean, you and I know this from working with him.
He would always want to give a deal – Republicans a little more time than necessarily folks like you and I would before we took the deal off the table, took an executive action, blamed them for not doing the deal.
And that's why he's president of the United States and we're doing this podcast right now.
All right.
The context for this interview is struggles with the Latino community in polling.
A Axios-Ipsos Latino poll, which is quite a thing to say, and I don't know how Axios and Ipsos decide not to rebrand this, but an Axios Ipsos Latino poll shows that Biden's lead over Trump among Latino voters
has dropped from 29 points in his first year in office to only nine points now, and a mere three
point margin among Latinos who say they will vote in the fall. Those numbers are, as they say,
not great. There's no way to win with those numbers. What do you think is going on? Do you
buy that biggest shift among Latino voters? There's no way to win with those numbers. What do you think is going on? Do you buy that big a shift among Latino voters?
There's been some people pushing back on the idea.
Yeah, I don't buy that.
I don't buy that big of a shift.
And I know some of our colleagues that work in this space with doing GOTV, other voter rights work in the Hispanic community.
Like, they don't, they're like, that's just not going to, you know,
same thing I hear from people without, you know, work in the Black community.
It's like, that is not going to happen.
That's not, that number is not going to be what ends up being Biden's vote.
I will say, you know,
I've been to a lot of Trump rallies
and went to one in Hialeah.
And, you know, he's got a lot of support
in the Hispanic community.
You know, there's an interesting alignment
some people express to me about,
they're like, oh, somebody from Venezuela
who was like, well,
this is what happened in Venezuela.
The, you know, person with the power tries to jail their opponent.
You know, you're just like, right.
This is that's how they they think that Trump is going to, you know, all the things that we're worried about Trump doing.
They think Trump is going to stop Biden from doing right.
That's like it makes your head spin.
But that's where some people are. And then just, it's just the same thing that's happening. You know, that's
sort of, I think the white voters were first, the demographic, the gender gap. And my understanding
is that most people that are moving from the Hispanic community are moving Trump's way or men.
And mostly working class, non-college educated.
being Trump's way or men.
And mostly working class, non-college educated.
Yeah.
So it's the same shift. And his appeal, it spans over a lot of different demographics.
People are not a monolith.
So I don't think it's that bad, but he's making inroads. I see it.
Yeah. The not a monolith point is very important because whenever people talk about the Latina vote, it's often treated as a monolith. And that's just absolutely correct. people in Florida whose roots are in Venezuela or El Salvador. You have Puerto Ricans who are
voting in Florida or New York or elsewhere. You have people whose families have been here
since the border crossed them, right? Where you come from, how long you've been here,
whether English is your primary language at home or not, they're all different. And then you see
different issues that are important to them, different responses to the candidates,
different views on the parties, different views about the importance of voting. And so it's like,
it's always such a tough thing to talk about because you can actually have like a 17 hour
podcast talking about if you were to do it justice. And so it's always important to do the
not a monolith caveat before we then sort of revert back to probably painting with too broad a brush.
You know, I hear all the same things you have.
Like it's not going to be, you know, he's not going to only buy something, not going to only win by nine points or, you know, or he's not.
But Trump's not going to get 15 percent of the black vote.
And that may be true.
Like, who am I to say?
We don't know what's going to happen.
A lot.
There's going to be a lot.
You know, there's just a lot of time for Trump to make his case, Biden to make his case, organizing to happen.
But that is such a false binary because Joe Biden won by 50,000 votes across six states.
That's the whole thing.
And yes, if Trump's making inroads, that's too many.
Where are we going to,
like it, you know, in my view of it is, is, and it is fair, it's also fair to say that these polls
are all over the map. Some show a huge shift like this Axios Ipsos poll, others show a smaller
shift. Almost all of them do show a shift from 2020. And 2020 was a pretty big shift from 2016.
And so you get a sense of what's probably happening here.
And even if it's all fake and all the polls are wrong, we might as well just sort of
prepare for the worst and hope for the best, right? It's like, oh, you know what? These polls
are wrong. It's not going to be that way. We'll spend less money. We'll run less ads, right?
That's like obviously not the right way to look at it. But within the polling, there is clearly two topics, three topics really. One
of them is immigration and the border. Two is the economy and primarily costs and inflation.
And three is crime. And these are issues where Trump has been stronger than Biden
in much of the polling. And so it fits with some of the trends. Now, I guess the question
here for you is, how do you win these folks back, right? Is it building up Biden? Is it tearing down
Trump? Is it a little of both? What do you think? It is a little of both. I think, you know, and
I've talked to the Biden campaign about this. It's like, do you need to choose between shoring up
your accomplishments and tearing down Trump? Like, does the spring need to be about,
particularly with the Latino community? And you see they're, you know,
they're doing this in their travel
and in their targeted ads about,
and what the president did in the Univision interview
about what he's accomplished on the economy.
You know, I think Hispanic unemployment's at a record low.
I think small business growth among Hispanics
might be at a record high, but think small business growth among Hispanics might be at a
record high. But there are good stats that, you know, again, I feel like it goes back to like,
he has to prove he has a plan and it is working. And I think that has to be part of it.
The economic numbers, Trump has always, you know, we, I think you'll agree. I know the campaign
feels this way. Trump will always do better than Biden on the economy,
but Biden can cut into that lead by a showing that Trump is even Trump
supporters believe that when push comes to shove,
he will sell them out to help himself.
Like they,
they believe this.
So we know that that message works,
that he's in it for himself.
He is not in it for you.
And Biden is going to fight,
is going to,
is going to fight for you. And then I think you have to show what he's done it for himself. He is not in it for you. And Biden is going to fight for you.
And then I think you have to show what he's done.
It's interesting.
They did something today where I noticed
they talked about lowering costs,
taking action to try to lower costs.
This was Whitmer's message in 2022 in Michigan, right?
She didn't do ads about,
she did ads about how she was trying to fight
and help people, help things be more affordable for you.
That's more tangible, right? And then this like amorphous, like the economy is doing better when
people think that prices are still too high. And so I think that he has, and then, you know,
and then you got to make the anti-Trump argument as well. But I think particularly with
this community, there's more, there's a lot more they need to know about what he's already done.
Yeah.
You got to win people back, right?
It's like, that's easier than trying to convince people who've never been for you.
So winning them.
So I think it went in the back.
It's like, you voted for me.
It worked.
We got a plan.
It's taking hold.
He's chaos. He's all these things. Stick with us. Yeah worked. We got a plan. It's taking hold. He's chaos.
He's all these things.
Stick with us.
Yeah, I think that's right.
It's obviously a little bit of both because there is just this massive, massive knowledge gap when it comes to President Biden.
For so many voters, he basically was elected, gave the inaugural address, and then disappeared for three and a half years.
Yeah.
Right?
And just they didn't – and that is – that's not even really – it's not even a critique of the White House communication.
Just the way the world works, right?
The way the media works, the way it treats Biden.
To the extent they heard anything about him was his age.
To the extent they ever saw him speak, it was generally out of context.
Clips often pushed by right-wing interests on TikTok and Instagram that made him seem old.
It's just people tuned out of politics.
And the mechanisms by which people would run into political news sort of just organically, you kind of bump into it, disappeared after 2020, right?
You don't see political news
on Facebook anymore. Twitter doesn't really exist for most people. Meta is suppressing political
news on Instagram and threads. And so people are watching less cable, right? He just disappeared.
And so you have to reach the threshold. They really think he hasn't done very much because
he hasn't been... And Joe Biden does not – he does not want to dominate the conversation.
It isn't really his forte.
And so he – just like Obama and Trump are omnipresent in our lives during their presidencies because they were sort of cultural figures.
Biden doesn't want to be a cultural figure.
I think it's a very, if you weren't paying political news, you'd see him on ESPN talking sports but also pitching the ACA, right?
Trump is just fucking everywhere all the time, often not to his benefit.
But Biden wasn't.
So you have to sort of get back to that.
Now, the one issue that I think is really interesting, and I think it's sort of the sleeper issue in this election, particularly the Latino community, is the Affordable Care Act and Trump's plan to repeal it.
Good point, yes. If you watch the whole interview. Yes, I read your message box.
Yes. Thank you. Thank you for reading the message box. As everyone listening to this
is obviously doing. And subscribe. I subscribe. As everyone listening to this obviously should.
Thank you. At the end of the interview, Biden's been there for 40 minutes, right? The guy's like,
the interviewer is very tuned in to the wife of the White House aide miming their watch,
pointing at him from afar. And he's like, well, I guess we're out of time.
And Biden's like, wait,
you didn't ask me about the Affordable Care Act?
And he immediately goes in
and talks about how Republicans
tried to repeal it 50 times.
And like, because that one of the,
like that is a huge issue for Latino community in 20,
you remember this from 2012.
Yeah, it is.
It was even popular like back in the day
when we worked in the White House.
Yes.
The only, like, With the Hispanic community anyway.
The number one issue with Latino voters in 2012 that made them support Obama over Romney was not Obama being better on immigration than Romney, who had a very Trump-esque position on immigration.
It was that Romney wanted to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
And so I think we're going to see a ton of ads on it.
I knew this.
Biden was clearly briefed that you've got to get the ACA in there.
And he was very focused for this interview.
He did such a good job.
Yeah, he was like, wait, you haven't asked about the ACA.
Well, I'm going to tell you about the ACA.
I don't care.
And he did it.
And so I think that's one negative argument on Trump, where he is clearly not fighting
for them, where he wants to take something away from their lives.
He's big into that.
Big into that.
That is huge.
Taking things away is actually – the fear of something being taken away I think is now more present for voters than the hope that they'll get something new because they have so little faith in the system.
And this is partially because of Dobbs, right?
You had the right to choose and then you didn't, right? And you're now you have healthcare
and now you may not. That's always been true though. That was a big lesson that Bill Clinton
would teach us in the Clinton White House is like people, like we were trying to sell healthcare.
They are always going to believe that the government is going to take something away
from them. They are not going to believe that what you're offering is going to benefit them.
It's going to benefit someone else. So what we're, you know, just to say like lay the groundwork for like what we're
trying to do is really hard. And yeah, and now they're, Trump's in the position of being the
one that's going to take something away. All right, man, that was hard. That healthcare thing
was hard to get done, wasn't it? Yes, it was. Nothing makes me happier to see that Kaiser
Family Foundation tracking poll every month showing it's more popular than it's ever been
before. It just makes me very pleased.
One last thing before we go to break.
In case you missed it, Tommy and Roger Bennett of Men in Blazers
have teamed up once again for another season of World Corrupt.
This is one of my favorite podcasts that Crooked has ever done.
This time they unpacked how Saudi Arabia,
yet another oil-rich nation with a troubled human rights record,
has secured the role of 2034 World Cup host.
You can listen to the whole series right now by heading to the Pod Save the World feed.
I promise you it is fascinating.
It is funny.
It is interesting.
Check it out.
Look, it's an election year.
And if you aren't using your children to push out political messaging, I frankly don't know
what you're doing.
Therefore, go to the Crooked store to pick up brand new I Can't Vote But You Can onesies and toddler tees for all the kids in your life. Shop all Crooked Kids merch by heading to
crooked.com slash store to shop. Last month, you're on Polar Coaster, my subscriber exclusive podcast that everyone should be
listening to and if they aren't they should go to crooked.com slash friends to subscribe
we love an organic plug or maybe a not so organic plug in this podcast but
anyway you're on right after the new york times sienna poll came out and the vibes weren't great
but since then i can't believe that was only a month ago oh my god yeah yeah okay yeah i mean i recognize time no meaning anymore, but I'm pretty sure it was a
month ago. Yeah. Or it was last month. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Okay. I'll check my calendar. It's been a
while. But since then, the president has given a fiery state of the union and the campaign's
ramping up with millions in ads. There's now been more than a dozen polls in recent weeks that show
Biden with at least a narrow lead or tied with Trump. So with seven months to go here, it now seems like a good time to take stock of the campaign. What do you think?
Has the race moved in Biden's direction? Are you feeling better than you felt when we talked last
month? Yeah. Yes, I'm feeling better. That seems enthusiastic. No, no, no, no, no. I am definitely
feeling better. I mean, I think that the State of the Union was key because not like I,
not that I expected the polls to move out of the State of the Union, but everyone saw, first of all, like all the nervous Democrats and everyone,
you know, who did, who did watch, which is, you know,
more people watched the State of the Union than the women's basketball game,
but not a lot more. It's like, what you saw was like, oh, he's fine.
And he will be fine through the election
right like the man who delivered that state of the union is not going to crumble between now
and the election so we're like okay joe biden is great he was feisty i thought that speech was
really well crafted particularly well suited for him like that was all great and i i think you and i are both like
in other and other venues we're both telling people don't expect the polls to change if they
do that's great but don't they may not change until labor day right like that um people it's
march and just because the election it's like okay general election is happening we want all
the polls to change it's like it was march The polls were not going to change. And the fact that he, what makes me feel good about it is they have a plan. They have a lot
of money. They're executing their plan. And at a time of relative quiet where they can kind of
control things, I feel like that's the period we're in right now with big asterisks of Gaza,
they are moving the polls. So that shows you their team is good.
It shows you that they have a smart plan and they're executing it.
There will be times something terrible will happen, you know,
it's a long way to go.
Bad things will happen.
Those polls will go up and down.
But I have this sort of foundational faith in him and the campaign.
I just said before that I have like faith in the ground operations
and the battlegrounds too. When was the last time a Republican won a statewide in any of those
states except for Brian Kemp and the governor in Nevada, but not, but not, you know, not the
Senate race in Nevada in 22. So yeah. Yeah. I mean, I think you have to feel better, right?
So, yeah. do it and that he can do it quite well. And people who saw that or saw clips of it feel better. And I've seen this in focus groups that had a real effect on people where they were believing the
caricature of Biden. And now you have Biden, you have that great ad where he talks about his age,
he's out there more, the campaign. They're driving a message now in a way they have not done in a long time. They've been sort of on their back foot for several months, just largely dealing with Gaza, dealing with just
the challenges of being president, the attention the Republican primary was getting, and just this,
like they were stuck in this cycle of Biden's too old, so the polls are bad. Now the polls are
worse. No, Biden must be really too old. It's just, they kind of broke out of that.
Biden keeps getting older.
Yeah. He keeps every day he's older. What are we going to do?
Zero days since Biden got younger. And he, and so like that, like there Trump's on the defensive a
little bit more than he has been in a long time. And that's all great, right? Like that's what you want, right?
We should be realistic that a tie national poll is a – given the bias of electoral
colleges is a race Trump wins.
So Biden, he won the popular vote by millions of votes last time and lost the electoral
college.
So he's going to have to do better. You want to start seeing some movement in the swing states. We've seen a
little of that in some polls. You want to see more, but all good, right? Like I said, let's
take the win here, right? You mentioned how the campaigns are funded. So let's say Trump claims
they rate $50 million in one night from a bunch of billionaires. Whether that's true or not,
who knows? But as of April, the Biden campaign
had twice as much cash on hand as Trump.
They've hired 300 paid staffers and opened 100 offices.
And according to NBC News, Trump and the RNC
just hired their state directors for Michigan, Pennsylvania
only last week, and they have less than five staffers
in every battleground state.
Look, as every MAGA Yahoo on Twitter will point out, Hillary Clinton famously outspent
Trump. How much does this money actually matter? And what's your take on how Biden is spending it
thus far? So I feel like it matters. It's really important that Biden has more money because he's
the one that's not being heard, right? You kind of made this point before. So it is he needs money
more than Trump does because Trump doesn't have any problem being heard. And Biden has. And it's not just Biden. It's been a hard time getting heard.
Biden has this amazing story to tell. So it's not like, oh, we got a message.
We got to do ads to message to these people like why they should continue to hang in there, even though we got nothing done.
You know, sometimes Democrats are in the position of doing he has a great story to tell.
So I think that and also the, you know, and the ground game.
Right.
That's like I feel like that's why it matters.
And from what I can discern from the way they're spending it now on ads, I mean, I don't you know, I don't have a good sense.
I don't do you have a good sense of how it's going digitally?
It's going digitally because, you know, I'm just assuming that and this is, you know, what I understand to be the case is that they are that the ads that we see pop up, you know, because they get announced are then going are being tracked to the, you know, platforms that the voters that you need to reach actually are. Yeah, that's right. Right. you got to, you know, I'm just like taking on faith that that is happening.
But I think it's good.
I mean, you know, I feel good about that.
Yeah.
You know, there had been this talk when Trump sort of glided through the primary without
having to face too much, you know, too much challenge, no real diminishing moments, no
losses of consequence,
that he had sort of eroded Biden's incumbent advantage. But the way the campaign has come
out gangbuster since the State of the Union, I think proves that's not the case. They've been
planning for this moment. They had been building the infrastructure to do it. They had a strategy.
They had a message. They'd done the testing. They'd cut the ads. And they were ready to go.
And they were kind of waiting for the starting gun in the State of the Union. And
what they have done and the way they've turned up the volume, the ferocity of response on things
like Trump's abortion statement today, some of his crazy things he said at Mar-a-Lago over the
weekend is a sign. The $25 million fundraiser, right, is a sign that they have the infrastructure in
place to do it. And they were very well prepared for this moment. I have very little concerns
about, I have no concerns really about the execution of the Biden campaign, right? I don't
think if he were to lose this race, it's not going to because he didn't run a good campaign,
right? Infrastructure-wise, organizing-wise, running smart ads. I think they know what they're doing, right?
We know all those people.
They're all of our friends.
We worked with them in the White House.
We worked on previous campaigns.
They know what they're doing.
They're going to be very good.
And even if the Trump campaign is better than it's been in the past, I think the Biden campaign
is still much better, much, much better.
I wonder what you thought about that, the notion that the Gabe Sherman piece in Vanity
Fair about how the Trump campaign is a discipline.
I have a lot of thoughts about that piece.
They are better.
But being better
does not mean being good. And I think one thing that I think, and this is important on the money
thing, because everyone says 2016, 2016, 2016, and in Trump and Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles
are clearly better than the complete group of knuckleheads and grifters who ran the previous
two campaigns. Like, yes, God, the grifters.
And they're better than replacement-level GOP consultants, right?
Chris Lasvita in particular has a long record of winning races for Republicans.
So he's a person actually qualified to run a presidential campaign, which Trump has never had working for him at any level before.
But the way in which he was able to win despite or come close in 2020, even with
having much less money to spend, those ways are not available to him anymore. He does not get the
free media attention he used to get, right? No, he doesn't.
Trump was the monoculture in America from 2015 to 2020, and then he disappeared. And his ability to,
like, he just doesn't dominate the conversation
anymore. Just the ability to speak to, for there to be this one singular political conversation,
that does not exist anymore. The social media platforms don't allow it to happen.
That's not how media works anymore. It's not how people consume information. We're living in these
algorithmic, individualized algorithmic prisons in some of our news consumption. And so he just can't do the thing where he's so dominant that he drowns out everyone else.
And I think this is one of the most important things about this election that is not talked
about enough is that Facebook was a massive asset to Trump all the way through.
And that's how a lot of people were being fed his messaging was because you'd go on Facebook for whatever reason,
people went on Facebook, right?
You're looking at your friend's kids.
You're checking on an event.
You're just mindlessly scrolling in line at the grocery store.
And you were getting, because of the way the algorithm worked,
a ton of very pro Trump content or very anti Biden content or anti,
very anti Hillary content, 2016.
That doesn't happen anymore.
They've changed the algorithm.
And so that was free.
That was absolutely free messaging.
And that's gone for him.
And I think that's a huge deal.
That's a really good point.
Yeah, huge deal.
His campaign is going to be better.
It's going to be,
they're clearly strategically smarter, right?
What he did on abortion today was clumsy,
but it's a sign that he reads the polls and is trying to win.
And he would- We have to make sure it doesn't work,
but it was the right, it was the smart thing to do.
That's right. Yes.
That's right. So I think they're doing better, right? But I still think Biden's advantage is
huge. And on the money thing, I think this is really important too, is he raised $50 million,
but a lot of that money, as far as we can tell, goes to super PACs. And this is the
thing that I think people forget is a dollar to a campaign is worth exponentially more than a dollar
to a super PAC because by law, TV stations have to charge campaigns, the actual campaign, the Biden
campaign or the Trump campaign or the Gallego campaign or the Casey campaign, the Biden campaign, or the Trump campaign, or the Gallego campaign, or the Casey campaign, the lowest rate. And they can gouge the living shit out of a super PAC. So oftentimes,
you'll see these stats at the end of the campaign, which tells a lot in 2022, which is like,
on the Democratic side, there was $100 million spent. That's funny, I'm making this up. And on
the Republican side, there was $150 million spent. But when you actually do the measurement called share of voice of the number of ads run or ratings
points behind ads, the Democrat number is way larger because they're getting more ads per dollar
than the Republicans. So the super PAC money matters, but the fact that Biden's raised $25
million for his campaign and Trump raised $50 million, some for his campaign and some for a
bunch of super PACs, there's a difference there. And I think that's just an important thing to remember as we talk
about the money. All right, Jen, you were recently in the battleground state of Michigan talking to
voters. What did you hear? Did you come away feeling better or worse? Why were you in Michigan?
Why were you at the Trump rally in Hialeah? That's a question I meant to ask you earlier
in the podcast, because after you were on Polar Coaster, you cited being at many Trump rallies and many people, including some of our producers, were
curious as to why you went to so many Trump rallies.
So at least you maybe put your trip in Michigan in context and your frequent attendance at
MAGA events in context.
The circus would send me to a lot of Trump rallies, but I got to tell you, I miss going
to them.
Sadly, the circus was canceled.
Showtime kind of doesn't exist anymore.
But I miss going to Trump rallies because you just learn so much, right? And you just get texture that you don't get anywhere else. And so I still make it a point to go to battlegrounds
and just get a feel for how things are going on the ground. And my husband had to go to battlegrounds and just get a feel for how things are going on the ground.
And my husband had to go to Grand Rapids for the,
you'll appreciate this,
for the National Wildlife
and Natural Resources Management Conference.
Oh, a wild event once again.
I know, Jim, you know, that's my husband does,
he's a conservationist.
And so I was like, oh, I'll go to Grand Rapids with you for five days for spring break and just see what's going, you know, what's happening.
And so Granholm was there.
I got to tell you, like Biden, Evan Ryan, the head of cabinet affairs at the White House, is doing a when I, when I was there, I saw three cabinet secretaries.
Well,
coincidence,
obviously.
Yeah.
It was like Granholm.
Yeah.
The secretary of energy,
Jennifer Granholm,
the acting secretary of labor,
Julie Hsu.
And I think it was Buddha judge.
I think Buddha judge was there too.
but what was good,
they did Granholm was doing a tour.
She went from Ohio to Michigan to
Wisconsin. I think it was like the kind of route she took. And she had like massive announcements
every single stop, you know, like just, she just drove. She didn't even have to get into a plane,
massive announcements, every single stop, a lot of local press, all about investments in these
three States. And I talked to one of the
members of Congress there. Um, and she, and you can say she, and you don't know who it is because
there's so many women members of Congress, um, for Michigan. Um, she's like, she's like, the
investments are starting to break through. Um, the people know about broadband. They know about
those investments in broadband. They certainly know about infrastructure.
Some of the EV stuff, while it's complicated in Michigan, there are jobs that are coming because of it.
That's a positive.
People are making the connection back to Biden.
They know about $35 insulin, and they're starting to pare back to her the national abortion ban being on the ballot.
And that's really important in Michigan because they just passed a constitutional amendment to protect abortion rights. So in 2022, so you could
think, oh, maybe Michigan's not going to really care, but they know that that's a possibility if
Trump wins and Republicans win the Congress. So it felt like there is a lot of, even there's
whatever the Biden campaign is doing in Michigan, but then there's a lot of Biden administration, you know, legit activity as well. And the one, you know, just
one quick story that I think it showed the power of this is there was a there's a nuclear power
plant in it's called the Palisades in Western Michigan. It was decommissioned a
couple of years ago. The plant stopped operating and it is going to come back from a bunch of state
incentives plus a loan from DOE. And there were workers at that event that had worked at the
plant for 25 years, lost their jobs, had not worked anywhere for two years,
and now are getting their jobs back, you know? And it was like, people are crying. It was like
a big family reunion. And you're like, that is changing people's lives, right? Like that kind of,
that's not a stat. It's not like, you know, the unemployment rate is this point percent,
whatever. That's just, you know, that's like real impact. And so there's a really great story to
tell, I think, in the in these battleground states. So I came out and people are engaged,
you know, so good. That's great. That's great. Yeah. I mean, you know, like you don't know,
you don't you don't you don't know, you don't know what's going on on the Trump side.
But in terms, again, in terms of executing the Biden strategy, it felt good.
That's a great place to end this.
Thank you, Jen, for joining us this week.
And we'll talk to everyone again soon.
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