Pod Save America - Trump’s Get Out Of Jail Free Campaign (w/ Gov. Tim Walz)
Episode Date: February 16, 2024Joe Biden goes on offense, Nikki Haley calls Donald Trump unhinged, and Trump's hush money case gets a court date while his Georgia case gets complicated. Later, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz sits down ...with Tommy to talk about how much you can get done when Democrats have full control of the legislature. 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, Joe Biden goes on offense, Nikki Haley calls Trump unhinged,
Mike Johnson has lost control of the House,
and later Minnesota Governor Tim Walz sits down with Tommy to talk about
how much you can get done when Democrats have full control of your legislature.
But first, it has been a big week for Donald Trump's Get Out of Jail Free campaign.
The Supreme Court is now set to make a decision that will determine whether Trump will stand trial for attempting to overturn the 2020 election sometime before the 2024 election.
We should get that decision sometime within the next week.
A judge in Georgia heard arguments about whether D.A. Fannie Willis should be removed from that election subversion case because of a romantic relationship with one of her co-attorneys.
We're about to find out how much Trump and his businesses will have to pay for committing fraud in New York.
And Trump showed up at another Manhattan courtroom on Thursday,
only to have the judge deny his request to delay the case,
where he's being charged with violating election law by falsifying business records
to cover up hush money payments to the porn star he had an affair with.
Jury selection in that case will now begin on March 25th,
and Trump, of course, used the opportunity to campaign just outside the courtroom.
This is no crime, but outside, right outside their courthouse, this courthouse,
people are being murdered.
So it's a very unfair situation.
They want to keep me nice and busy so I can't campaign so hard.
But maybe we won't have to campaign so hard because the other side is incompetent.
The other side has done a horrible job running this country.
They've done a horrible job at the border.
Add up the countries that make up NATO.
It's about the same size as our economy.
So we're in for $200 billion. They're in for $25 billion. And it's much more important to them
because we have an ocean in between. It's a much more, much different thing. So the NATO countries
have to pay up. They're not paying up. They're not paying what they should. And they laugh at
the stupidity of the United States of America.
They're definitely laughing at some stupidity. I will say that. There's people being murdered right outside the courtroom. Right outside the courtroom. He should watch out. That's where Donald Trump is standing.
So, lots to unpack here. He's really doubling down on his war against Europe, huh? He said something about NATO again at a rally on Wednesday night. What do you think's going on here? and I'm not sure I need a lot of polls for this. So I don't think the public supports
presidential candidates inviting Russia to invade Finland. I think people are probably
generally against that. I do think that his general message that the United States is being
asked to carry more than its fair share of the burden and that US taxpayers are paying for stuff
they shouldn't pay for is probably pretty popular.
It is one thing that Trump has talked about for a long time. Now, this may come as a shock to you,
but Donald Trump does not know how NATO works. No.
There are no NATO bills. There's no NATO dues. It is just some guidelines that you spend 2%
of your GDP on defense. The United States does. We are the biggest country with
the biggest military, so we carry more of it. But it is an absurd thing. But I think it is
that he is right to – right is not the word. He's definitely wrong. But he is politically – there
is some political savvy in fitting this gaffe of his under his larger narrative of America has been dumb.
We're paying for things we shouldn't pay for, and I'm going to fix all of that. And so that
probably works for him. And so he is trying to, I think, shift away from the please invade Russia,
please invade countries to the part of the message is more politically effective for him.
Yeah. I mean, if you were to poll test, why are we spending more to defend
Europe than those deadbeats in Luxembourg? I think it would probably pull pretty high,
right? It would test pretty well. People say, yeah, that's bullshit. It is, of course, untrue.
Like you said, there is no like it. NATO, we talked about this on Tuesday's pod that,
like you said, it's a guideline. Every country should spend 2% of its GDP on its own defense.
Many countries do that in the NATO alliance.
The United States is one.
Poland is one, right?
There's like a lot of countries doing that.
Some countries aren't spending 2% of their GDP on their own defense.
The question then for Donald Trump is, are you suggesting defense cuts in the United
States?
Do you want us to spend less on our own national defense?
Because I don't think that's what he's advocating for either, though I do think that's probably fairly popular across parties to spend less on defense.
We do have a bloated defense budget in this country.
But like you said, the better message here to count about what Donald Trump has said is, why does Donald Trump want Putin to take over Europe?
Do we think Putin's going to stop there?
why does Donald Trump want Putin to take over Europe?
Do we think Putin's going to stop there?
Do we think that the ocean between us and Vladimir Putin is going to protect us from a third world war?
Do we think we're going to be able to stay out of World War III
if Vladimir Putin sets his sights on Europe?
Is that what's going to happen?
I mean, the guy is building space lasers right now, as far as we know.
So I don't think the ocean's going to save us.
You know what, Dan?
Tommy Vitor just asked me, are you guys going to talk about the space lasers? And are you going to talk about
the Russian space nukes? And I told him that we weren't, but you know what? You being the worldo
that you are, you brought it up. I have some worldo thoughts right now about how so many
Democrats have been worldo pilled and are fucking up the response of the Trump-NATO thing. If I see
one more Senate Democrat be like,
Donald Trump does not respect our multilateral institutions,
I'm going to lose my mind.
I know, I know.
It's the international order.
Here's the thing, though.
You know if we were in the White House right now with Barack Obama,
he'd be talking about the international order.
You know, I think not, actually.
I think not.
You think you and Axe and everyone would get to him and be like, it's about Putin taking over Europe.
I think Barack Obama, one thing he does understand is how to fit these things into larger narratives.
And so while he does have a true passion for multilateral institutions in the world order, he absolutely does.
I think he would get to the argument here is that Donald Trump is an erratic dunderhead, right?
Not that he is a principled isolationist at a time of global interaction.
No.
All right, let's get to the legal stuff.
So Jack Smith's election subversion case was supposed to go first on March 4th.
But now that we're waiting for the Supreme Court to decide the immunity question, And now that there was the ruling in Manhattan today,
it looks like the first Trump trial
will be the hush money case.
Jury selection on March 25th.
It's happening.
Not ideal that it's the first case,
but I don't know.
What's your take?
Yeah, I would agree.
Not ideal.
CBS did a poll last year at some point
where they asked people about the various things
that Trump had been indicted for, overturning an election, hiding classified documents, possibly falsifying
business records and violating campaign finance law to cover up extramarital affair, which is,
that is the subject of the New York trial. That was the least concerning to people.
Now, I do think a conviction in any case is bad for Trump.
And so we may have given the Supreme Court, given what's going on in Fulton County today,
we may not be in a place where we get to pick which conviction would be best for us.
We have to take whichever convictions on the menu.
And this may be the only one.
But yeah, this is not the one I would have chosen to be the first trial because I think
it's the least politically damaging to Trump.
I think a lot of this is background noise, even for the small minority of voters who are paying
attention. Like Thursday was wall to wall cable coverage of the hearing to decide whether Fannie
Willis is disqualified from the Georgia case because of a romantic relationship with another
attorney. Like how many people do you think turned on their TVs and had
no idea what the hell was going on? Fannie Willis, she took the stand. She's yelling at
prosecutors. They're yelling at her. They're going back and forth over what counts as physical
intimacy and who paid for what on a wine trip. I mean, it's like I'm a news junkie and it was
still tough to follow. No one is getting deep into the weeds in any of
these things. I think that people are going to be surprised about the content of this trial when it
comes, which actually I think may have some prejudicial impact on how people view the other
trials, which is why I think this one being for us is suboptimal. I would say too, if you're right
that I think any conviction, probably trump would rather not have a conviction
although this one unlikely comes with prison time but right but i even think that if he is
if the jury acquits him in this case in the first case uh the hush money case i think there's an
argument to be made that if you have because if a jury acquits him in this case then he'll say oh
see the people have spoken the the prosecutors the Democratic prosecutors tried to come get me, but the jury saw it differently and I'm exonerated.
And then he gets a conviction from a jury in D.C.
It's going to be hard.
It's going to be harder for him to say, to start attacking juries, if suddenly he goes on the side of the people.
The people have exonerated me in the Manhattan case, but the D.C. people did not. So I guess he's just going to have to attack. I'm sure,
I'm sure, I have no doubt that he will attack the jurors in D.C., but.
Well, you raise a good point, John, because Trump is known for his logical consistency,
and he definitely will. He will be pinned in by his argument on the jury in this one,
if he is convicted by jury in the second one.
I think his argument will be, hey, I'm batting 500 in jury trials, which is better than Ted Williams.
I'm one and one.
Yeah, that gets you in the baseball Hall of Fame pretty fast.
And Jack Smith was rigged.
I love Alvin Bragg.
I always said Alvin Bragg was a great guy.
Anyway.
So meanwhile, Nikki Haley is out there fighting the good fight.
Anyway, so meanwhile, Nikki Haley is out there fighting the good fight.
She went on the Today Show this week to call Trump unhinged and predicted that voters won't elect him if one or more of these trials ends in a conviction.
Let's hear it.
The problem now is he is not the same person he was in 2016.
He is unhinged.
He is more diminished than he was.
He's just trying to control as much as he can control. But we don't want a king in America. That's the problem. There is no way that the
American people are going to vote for a convicted criminal. They're not. But you said you would.
They're not. But you said you would. No, that is not the question. I mean, how ridiculous is it that you're literally saying
that I'm hurting him by staying in diverting resources? No. When. OK. Resources from a man
who spent 50 million dollars of his own campaign contributions on his personal court cases
where the RNC is broke. I'm the one hurting in resources.
I don't think so.
I'm the one that saves the Republican Party.
She had some good points.
She had some not so good points, I think.
I don't know if she's going to be the one who saves the Republican Party.
A lot of her comments about Donald Trump were correct.
I don't know what she was trying to say there when he was like, yeah, you said you'd vote
for him because she did raise her hand on stage at that debate.
Maybe maybe that was will you support because I guess she signed the pledge to support the Republican nominee no matter what, even if it was I mean, if it was Trump.
So maybe that's what she means.
And she's not really going to vote for him.
I don't know what the hell she's saying there.
But I think she just didn't want to answer the question.
I mean, he made she was trying to make an electability point.
And Craig Melvin, I think it was Craig Melvin in a very good follow up question, said, well, you said you were going to answer the question. I mean, she was trying to make an electability point, and Craig Melvin, I think it was Craig Melvin, in a very good follow-up question said, well,
you said you were going to vote for him, but her voting for him isn't going to deliver him
to the White House, I guess. Who knows? She's in a pickle here because she said she would support
him. She said she would vote for him even if he was convicted. She said all these trials were
shams, and then she decided to start running against him. And her past positions are a little bit of a prison here.
Yeah, maybe she's like, well, I might vote for him, but most people aren't going to vote for him.
It's not great.
Just because I want to vote for a convicted felon doesn't mean most Americans are.
She's also got a new ad in South Carolina up.
It's a $6 million ad buy.
It hits Trump on his plans for a 10% across the board tax increase.
And of course, you know, asking for a Russian victory that will bring more war.
But the latest polling average in South Carolina is Trump 66, Haley 30. If anything, his lead has
grown slightly larger over the last few weeks. So it seems like this is the wrong message for
the Republican electorate, to say the least. But do you think that Haley's message could move some Trump-curious voters
in a general? I think this is not the message. It's the messenger in the Republican primary.
This is a MAGA party, and she's insufficiently MAGA. And she was insufficiently MAGA before she
decided to actually start attacking Trump. And so this is where we were always going to end up,
as much
as we wanted to. There is no phrase she can come up with. There's no slogan. There's no argument
against Trump that she could do now that would change the dynamic. However, I do imagine that
somewhere in the bowels of the DNC or the Biden campaign headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware,
they are taking every one of these clips and they are saving them. They're going to use them to target Haley voters across the country because everyone
who is identified, I hope folks are polling these states where the primaries are never
going to happen, to ID Haley voters, particularly registered independent Haley voters, and targeting
them with these ads.
And this is a universe of voters who are very ripe for Biden
to get. And we have to work very hard to keep them from moving back to Trump. And so I think
all of these clips, as are any clip from a Republican criticizing Trump, can be very,
very powerful in this media environment. I'm interested in whether they polled on the
10% across the board tax increase. What she's talking about there is, of course,
10% across the board tax increase.
What she's talking about there is, of course,
Trump and his advisors have talked about their plans to slap tariffs on all imported goods,
10% across the board.
And think about how many goods that would mean,
how many things you buy are either made in other countries
or have parts in them that are made in other countries. I mean,
it would just, that level of tariff, like talk about inflation, that would just send inflation
skyrocketing. Imagine everything that you buy that has even a small little part that's not made in
America costing 10% more. I think that is very ripe for attacks. Forget about the primary and the general
election. Yeah, I think absolutely for general election. I think it is incumbent upon Democrats
to lay out very specifically why Trump will be bad for the economy. And this is one of those
things. And we should spend more time arguing about what Trump will do going forward than
trying to argue that what he did in the past was not as good as people remember it. I don't think that's an argument we can win.
In the primary, I'm sure a 10% tax increase is very unpopular among Republican primary voters.
I also think if you ask them a follow-up question is, do you believe that Donald Trump
implemented a 10% tax increase? They would say no. But in the general election, I think it's
favorable. You got to really pick a fight with them on it and you got to make it an issue.
So Politico ran a piece this week arguing that Haley is doing something similar to what Bernie
did in 2016, basically arguing that if Trump ends up losing, she'll have made the case that there was
a better path and be able to influence a post-Trump Republican party going forward.
I don't know why I'm asking what you think about that because I know what you think about that
awesome I mean how many people
are going to write stories comparing Nikki Haley to Bernie Sanders
it's a take
it's a take
look it is hard to get
your takes off in these days to get them so
unique they can be talked about on this
popular podcast
I'm going to do something that's very in
vogue in pod save America
these days which is I'm going to agree something that's very in vogue in Pod Save America these days, which is
I'm going to agree with Chris Christie. I don't think this is about influencing the party. This
is about setting yourself up for 2028 if Trump loses. If Trump wins, she cannot run for Republican
dog catcher anywhere in America. But if he loses, I still do not necessarily think that she would be a favorite. It's still a MAGA party.
Favorite.
But parties do – they often have reckonings when they lose elections they should win.
And could that happen in the Republican Party?
Who knows?
But I think there would be a lot of people who would get behind her campaign, just money people, elected officials, stakeholders, operatives, because she made an argument. She said he couldn't win and then he did win. Now, what happens when the voters
get involved? Maybe a lot like what's happening right now, but if she's trying to, there is a
element of delusion in every presidential campaign. And so I imagine she has eyes on 2028
and that's why she's still doing and making this case. She's decided if he wins, she's toast. If
she loses, if Trump loses, she may be in the game for a political future in the party and that's that's why she's still doing and making this case she's decided if he wins she's toast if she loses if trump loses she may be in the game for a political future in the party and that's why
she's doing i think it's less like she's going to get to pick the rnc chair next or help edit the
policy platform i think it's about running for office again but i even i could name 20 republican
politicians and media stars who would have a better chance to win the nomination in 2028 than
nikki haley or chris christie or like it's just or Mitt Romney. Like it is not the party, the base of the not just the
base of the party, like 65 percent of the voters in the party, if not more. They just they want
Trump like candidates. They want xenophobic, isolationist, faux populist candidates. That's
what they want. Yeah, for sure. I mean, it all depends on who runs and how the vote splits, right? If you are
getting 30% of that, there is a 30 to 40% of people who, depending on the state, who say they
don't identify as part of the MAGA movement. If she were to get those people and the other people
split the MAGA vote, then she could win. Trump won in part because the MAGA part was a minority
back then and everyone else split
everyone else.
And so who knows?
There's that point is who cares why she's doing it?
Keep doing it, Nikki.
That's my point.
Keep doing it.
Keep going.
Don't drop out after South Carolina either.
Keep going.
Go to the convention.
Go to the convention.
Take your delegates that you've won.
Just go to the floor.
All 12 of them or whatever it is. Take whatever you that you've won. Just go to the floor. All 12 of them or whatever
it is. Take whatever you get. After South Carolina. Yeah, take all your delegates. Put them in one
minivan where they would all fit and go right to the convention. After South Carolina, Trump and
his new, you know, RNC chair, his daughter-in-law. I'm sure they'll just change the rules and be like
the rest of the primaries. The only way you can win a delegate is if your last name begins with T. That's just the rule. Sorry. We are moving forward.
All right, let's talk about Joe Biden, who's out there. He's out there trying to show that he is a well-meaning, elderly man who can still kick Donald Trump's ass in November.
He's hitting the road with the rest of his cabinet to whack Republicans for voting against all the new jobs that his climate and infrastructure bills are creating.
He's now on TikTok with the rest of the cool kids.
And he took a shot at Trump over his nato comments let's
listen no other president our history has ever bowed down to a russian dictator well let me say
this as clearly as i can i never will for god's sake it's dumb it's shameful it's dangerous it's
un-american i'll tell you nothing nothing's going to be more viral than a debate about NATO on TikTok.
I think Biden did that right there, though.
He did.
No, we talked about this on Tuesday, and we were hoping that he went out there and whacked him on the NATO stuff, and he did it well, and he didn't do too much multilateral institution stuff.
He did the message we were just saying.
It was good.
And he sounded energetic and sharp there. Yeah. And I actually think he probably could have gone
out. I think Trump made these comments on Friday night, maybe. It's been four. It had been like
four days. But I think Biden was in a position where he felt like he had to wait until the
Senate voted on the foreign aid bill before he could give Republicans anything. Do I think that
is the actual reality? No. But I know what the alleged affairs people always say.
I don't know if you do this,
we could lose Tom Tillis's vote.
It's really up in the air.
And then either way they lose Tom Tillis's vote.
I think he, did he vote the right way?
I don't know.
I just picked Tom Tillis as a funny,
as a generic replacement level Republican Senator, but.
Yeah, that's about right.
All right, so we are a week out from Biden's Justice Department reminding the world that he's old, which special counsel
Robert Herr will likely do again now that Republicans are going to have him testify
before Congress on March 12th. Mark your calendars. It's going to be a great day. It's
going to be really fun. How do you think Biden and his team are handling this so far?
And do you have any more advice from the cheap seats?
I think there are two related issues here.
One is how are you doing with the Her report?
And I think they're doing that very aggressively.
They are going out.
They're pointing out where he was overly partisan.
They've gone after him.
It has helped make it. Her has helped them by hiring Steve Bannon's lawyer, hiring Jeff Sessions'
spokesperson to help advise him on this, pointing out the partisan nature of this.
What you want to do with that alone is impugn the messenger and give your supporters a permission
structure to ignore this. And I think they're doing that well. Who
knows what happens when her testifies and how that goes and Democrats, that's really going to depend
on the Democrats and on the Judiciary Committee to help carry that case. Then there's the broader
question of how do you deal with the issues that existed before the her report were exacerbated by
the her report and exists afterwards, which is voters' concerns about Joe Biden's age and ability to do the job. And that is not a problem that you have to solve right now, but the way it
is going to be solved is by Joe Biden being out there a lot, demonstrating, as he did in that
clip we just played, that he has the ability and the energy to do the job. And not just the job
of president, but the job of running for president, which is different and easier in some ways, but harder physically in terms of physical stamina than
just being president, I think, because of the travel and the rallies and speaking in public
all the time. And that, you know, I think there's going to be a ramp up of that. There's a tour you
mentioned, there's a State of the Union coming. And I think the one thing that the Biden folks have, and I think this is largely about the
president and less about his staff, have struggled to do in recent years is find moments, high
leverage moments to grab the nation's attention, right? Where people will actually break through.
And that's going to be picking some fights. That's just why the NATO thing was smart.
It's going to be how he does the State of the Union.
If he delivers just a normal State of the Union
with no conflict with the people sitting there
who are torpedoing his agenda
and impeaching his son
and doing all these other things
and holding hearings on his son,
impeaching him,
that would be a mistake.
And so it is going to have to be performing,
but performing in moments that will actually,
in finding moments
where it will actually break through.
And I think that is still an open question. And there's and I, like, there's no doubt that the very,
very smart people who are working for President Biden on these very things, like Ben LeBolt and
Anita Dunn and the people on the campaign are thinking about that. But that just being good
at midday Roosevelt room events is not going to solve this problem. It's going to have to be in
the big moments. They're gonna have to create some of those moments because there aren't enough of
them already penciled in on the calendar between now and Election Day.
And again, I keep coming back to Biden has, you know, a ton of smart people around him.
And I think that the campaign and the White House are doing a great job.
But this is about Joe Biden figuring this out.
Like it's about his performance.
And I'm sure the people around him know what he needs to do, but he actually needs to do it.
I think you can put him I think more informal settings are good.
I think he needs to show passion, but passion for people, not passion about defending himself, not sounding defensive, not getting snippy with the press.
I know that's like fun for libs on Twitter to see Joe Biden like, you know, tussle with the press.
But like that's I don't think that's helping him.
I think he can be self-deprecating about the age thing, which he's already doing.
I think he could do that, continue that.
I think he can be mocking of Trump and the Republicans, use mockery with them.
Like there's only so many times you can get up there and say that Donald Trump is like a threat to democracy.
He is.
And Biden said it. He's done really well well saying that but there's plenty to mock with
donald trump and he started to do that a little bit with the uh nikki haley nancy pelosi mix-up
so probably should do more of that what's your take on the new tiktok account
i don't know why that's so funny because it just is. Obviously, you know, Jon Stewart's back on The Daily Show.
It was great.
He made fun of the campaign's first or the first TikTok with Biden in it because he was mumbling about cookies.
I don't know.
What do you think?
I can't believe you brought up Jon Stewart, that traitor to the resistance on this podcast.
Unbelievable.
Some people are very mad at Jon Stewart for also criticizing Joe Biden and Jess. Oh, I know you know. This is for the listeners.
I know exactly how you feel about it. Don't get me wrong. The TikTok was fine. I don't know that
I'm the right person to judge TikToks. Great. Good job. And you're going to have to do a lot
of them. And I think it's good that campaign's on there. Ultimately, when I talked to Rob Flaherty
on this podcast a couple of weeks ago, he's the
deputy campaign manager who oversees all the digital and a bunch of other stuff on the
campaign.
He made the point, although he could have broken the news of the TikTok account in the
interview with me, he chose not to, which-
Come on, Rob.
Seems like maybe you're not that digital, Rob.
But he-
You know who likes to break news in this podcast?
Chris Christie, Liz Cheney oh man but he made the point which i think is true that it's less about what joe biden himself
and the campaign does on tiktok than what all of the people who have platforms on tiktoks do
and building a network of influencers on t are going to carry the message. And I
think that has value. I know that's something they're working on. So one in three adults under
30 get news from TikTok. And that number has nearly quadrupled since 2020. So it's going to
keep going up. And so you have to be there. It is where probably the most important political
conversations are going to happen that aren't happening in people's group chats. And so having
a presence there and a strategy for it is absolutely essential. I'm guessing that the
reason they had Biden in one of the early ones is because that gets more attention. They can
announce that they're there. I think that the best utility of that campaign TikTok account will be
TikToks of why Donald Trump is awful. Because I don't think you're going to at 81 years old right
now, make Joe Biden cool or have him, you know, record a ton of videos that are going to go viral
in a positive way on TikTok. You know, already all the comments are all the comments. Most of
the comments under most of their tech talks are about Gaza. But I do think that it is it is useful
to get out sort of the the negative information and the contrast with Trump.
But then, like you said, and like Rob said to you, the most important thing is going to be
allies and Biden supporters who are on TikTok, who have bigger platforms to start spreading
the message that way. Do you have other thoughts on reaching voters who aren't political junkies?
We spent a lot of time talking about the infrequent voter that Biden has been, at least according to the polls,
not doing as well with. How do you reach those voters? Do I have thoughts on that question?
How long have we known each other, Sean? That's right. Again, I don't ask questions. I don't
know the answer to that. That's right. I mean, obviously, as you know, and I think people who listen to this podcast probably know, this is something I think about to an unhealthy level. And I think more and more in this campaign, we're just in this world where, as you talked about with Peter Hamby on Offline a couple weeks ago, the media ecosystem is collapsing around us, right?
the media ecosystem is collapsing around us, right? Local newspapers essentially gone for all intents and purposes. Local TV still has some value, but mostly watched by older people.
The number of people who have access to cable news cut dramatically in an incredible rate,
particularly among young people. Facebook is downplaying political content.
Instagram and threads are not going to recommend political
content to people. Twitter's a total husk of itself. And so the political conversations
that happen in the mainstream media powered by the big social platforms, that day is over
in politics. And now they have moved, the most consequential political conversations are now
going to happen with the exception of TikTok, which I think has tremendous import to one segment of voters.
The most important political conversations are now happening on what's called the private internet,
on text chains, group chats, WhatsApp groups among family and friends.
And what Democrats are going to have to do is empower the millions and millions of people who fund our campaigns
$5 at a time, who are text banking at home, who are knocking on doors, who are doing phone banks
all the time during the campaign, empower them to be our messengers, right? We have to give them
the content and the ideas to insert themselves in those conversations that they are already
having about politics with the people in their lives because they're the most trusted messenger. No, people don't trust politicians and they don't
trust the media. So the only thing they trust is people they know. And so we have to leverage that
power. And that is ultimately something that I have really hoped was going to end up being sort
of how Democrats think about communication for a while. And I think now necessity has come and we
have to do it. It is ultimately why I
started MessageBox a few years ago, which was my idea that we have to give the same messaging
advice and strategic guidance that we give to candidates to average everyday people, right?
Help them understand what the polls say, help them understand the political environment,
so they can be grounded in those conversations. And so I think that is what this is going to be.
It's going to be less about who has a smarter strategy to get on 60 Minutes or who has the most viral tweets. It's
going to be whose supporters are carrying the weight in the most persuasive ways with the most
people in their lives. And that is ultimately how we're going to reach people because they are not
going to tune into the news. You can do 7,000 fucking MSNBC town halls or CNN town halls. You're
not going to reach any of those people.
They're not going to know those things happened, right? We can scream about the New York Times for
hours. Let me clear it. Let me step back and allow you to answer this.
No, I will not go on another rant about this. But the reason, this is not a defense of the New York
Times or the political press. My views on all of that is well known, has been for many years.
It's just that it doesn't matter as much anymore because it's not reaching as many people.
It's certainly not reaching many people at all who are persuadable.
Again, 90% of the New York Times 10 million subscribers are Democrats.
Democrats.
These are the people that are showing up to the special elections in the midterms and voting for Joe Biden and Democrats and who are still supporting Joe
Biden and Democrats and who we who are going to go to the polls and probably vote anyway. Right.
So like and the reach of The Times, cable news, all the people that were yelling out about their
chyrons and their headlines, it's just not the same as it was even in 2020, let alone 2016.
And so it's just it's a lot of it's And so it's just, it's a lot of,
it can be understandable outrage,
but it's a lot of wasted energy is my point.
But no, I totally agree.
And the other thing is, you know, in 2022,
in the midterms and a lot of these specials,
sort of the difference you saw,
especially in the midterms,
between how Republicans did in places where there weren't competitive campaigns
versus the states where there were heavily competitive and contested campaigns,
and you saw Democrats do better, it's because they did exactly what you said.
It wasn't just television ads that were run in those districts and states.
It was a real campaign happened.
And the supporters and the staff of the campaign and the volunteers and the field staff, all those people, they carried the message.
They had those conversations you were talking about with neighbors, with friends, with social networks.
And those it's one of the reasons the Democrats overperformed how the poll suggested, how the pundits suggested, and even how they did in states where there weren't competitive elections.
how they did in states where there weren't competitive elections.
And the challenge just goes way up in the general election because the percentage of people who are going to vote in November who don't consume political news is dramatically
higher than it is among the people who vote in midterm elections and especially special
elections.
So we need to reach more people, do much more than we did in 2022 to succeed in 2024 because
more people are not going to consume the
news in the way the midterm voters did. Yeah. And that work has to happen in those swing states.
So we mentioned this, Biden's going to have the chance to reach maybe the biggest audience
he'll get all year during the State of the Union. It's a few weeks and he'll go to Congress for
that. And boy, have they become a useful foil, especially House Republicans.
Punchbowl on Thursday called them, quote, the most chaotic, inefficient and ineffective majority we've seen in decades covering Congress.
Unless you think, why are you quoting Punchbowl?
Chip Roy, Republican Chip Roy on the floor of the House today was like, you know, Jake Sherman and Punchbowl was right about us.
Big day for Jakeake sherman and democracy and chip roy right so trump and mike johnson killed the bipartisan border deal they won't hold a vote on the bipartisan national security bill they can't
pass the bipartisan tax deal republicans are turning on mike johnson now uh we are just a
few weeks away from another potential government shutdown,
and they're leaving town for a two-week President's Day recess. When they come back from
President's Day recess, they get 13 days, apparently. There's only gonna be three days
left until the government shuts down. Unbelievable. So you and I haven't talked about the special
election to fill George Santos's seat, but the winning candidate, Democratic Congressman Tom Suozzi, spent a lot of the campaign hammering House Republicans for killing the border deal. Do you think Biden and Democrats should try to replicate that strategy nationally?
Yeah, I think there are elements of what Tom Swasey did that are pretty instructive. And I think it's important to focus on what we can learn from it instead of arguing online about whether it tells us that Joe Biden's definitely going to win because that debate on Twitter is- But that is fun. But that is fun.
Yes. The do special elections, predict general elections, fight on Twitter is mind-numbingly simple.
Something to behold. And if you're wondering what we're talking about, just move on.
Yeah, just, you know what, if you-
Thank your lucky stars.
If you don't get this reference, pat yourself on the back.
There are a couple of things I thought from Tom Suozzi's strategy that Democrats should emulate.
One is he was on offense the whole time. He did not wait to be defined on the other side's issues.
He took them on himself. He was aggressive.
on the other side's issues. He took them on himself. He was aggressive. Two, he was able to make abortion a much more salient issue in 2024 in his district than it was in 2022 by specifically
and aggressively not running just on the Dobbs decision, but on the idea that a Republican
Congress would pass a national abortion ban. Because New York, one of the things we learned
from underperformance in California in New York in 2022 is those voters, because they live in Democratic states with Democratic governors and Democratic legislatures, were not afraid of an abortion ban passing in their state the same way voters in Georgia, in Wisconsin, in Pennsylvania, and Michigan were.
And so it did not maybe have the same political impact that it did in those big states. But he aggressively went after his opponent for her
backers who supported a national abortion ban, put his opponent on the defensive on abortion
because she, just like every other Republican since 2022, can't figure out how to appease the
far-right extremist GOP base and not anchor the larger electorate, which hates these extreme
Republican abortion bans. And then he was, Swazi was particularly
vulnerable on border issues because he's in New York where the Republicans busing migrants to
New York has made it a very big issue, a completely gross and cruel and cynical stunt, but one that
has been very politically damaging to Democrats. And when he, as Lovett and Adesu talked about, when Swazi was the Nassau
County executive, he kicked ICE out of Nassau County at the request of his police commissioner
because they were hindering, the police commissioner thought that ICE was hindering
their crime prevention efforts. But there's this video of him in his gubernatorial primary saying,
bragging about kicking ICE out of N out of nassau county which was in
basically a gazillion ads so but but he had this vulnerability but he took it on aggressively and
one thing he did that every democrat can do is he attacked his opponent for opposing rejoining
with trump to oppose the bipartisan border security deal and i think that is a very
effective strategy now the hard part on the border stuff, every other Democrat can run on this, which is he was
pretty critical of Biden. He separated himself from Biden on border stuff repeatedly throughout
the campaign. And obviously, Joe Biden can't do that, credibly, I think. But there is a downside
of every Democrat adopts that strategy, which is in swing states, Biden will have negative ads on
the border from Republicans and negative ads on the border from Democrats. And that would be
unhelpful. But the idea that you'd be aggressive on border and try to put Republicans on the
defensive and use the bipartisan border security deal, I think is something that every Democrat
can do. You hear some Democrats say, okay, well, Republicans are now, you know, we're playing on
their turf. They want to make it about immigration.
So we shouldn't make it about immigration.
They want to make it about crime.
We should make it about crime.
The way I think about it is it's not about what issues Republicans want to make the election
about necessarily.
It's about what voters are concerned about.
And thinking that voters are concerned about an issue only because Republicans try to make it an issue or only because Fox News demagogues it, I think is sort of missing how actual people live their lives, especially people who don't tune into the news.
And it is fairly clear from all the data everywhere, it's not a close call, that a vast majority of Americans are concerned, somewhere up around 70, 80 percent
about what's going on at the border. And they think it's chaotic. And I don't think that means
you have to then take those concerns and adopt Republican policies. But it means that you have
to acknowledge that the concerns are real. And look, it's happening on the Republican side with
abortion,
right? It's not just, oh, well, now Democrats want to fight the election about abortion,
so we shouldn't talk about abortion. It's that people, including Republican voters,
are very, very scared of the fact that you could have a national abortion ban. And they've been saying that in elections over and over again. And Republicans have decided they refuse to listen to
those concerns and they refuse to acknowledge them. And I think on the Democratic side, if people are concerned about
the border, then we have to acknowledge it and we have to put forward our own proposals
and our own language that is true to our values, but still take on the issue.
And I think the bipartisan border deal, which is tougher than a lot of Democrats would have
designed themselves, is the perfect opportunity to say we compromised,
we didn't like all of it, we wanted to work with Republicans, and we wanted to do something about
the border, and they killed it because Trump wanted it dead because he thought it would help
him win in November. And that's the kind of people they are. And by the way, it's not just
happening on immigration, it's happening on everything. They don't want us to support Ukraine because Donald Trump's out there saying Russia can attack whatever ally they want if NATO doesn't pay up.
So, again, Trump's Trump's making us, you know, Trump's helping Putin. Right.
Because he loves dictators. Trump's killing the border deal because he thinks it's going to help him politically.
We can't they can't pass a tax deal that both parties agreed to
that would help lift children out of poverty.
And I also think it helps Joe Biden.
The challenge that he has now is
Trump is the challenger
where he is most comfortable
and Biden is the incumbent.
And the danger here is that Biden
will have to defend the status quo
at a time where people are not happy
with the status quo.
And what Congress is doing
right now, what House Republicans are doing is giving Biden an opportunity to say, things could
be better if you give me a bigger Democratic majority. I've made certain progress and here's
the progress I've made, but I could make a lot more if you send me a bigger Democratic majority.
And if you just stop the madness that's happening right now because
donald trump and his hand-picked speaker mike johnson are just you know paralyzing the government
because they think it's going to help him politically and we've just got to end this we
got to end the chaos and if you give me more democrats and get out the and and uh vote down
the maga republicans like you did the last several elections and vote down donald trump, then we can actually get moving as a country and we can fix a lot of things.
I think it's a powerful message. Yeah. And I think this is where the State of the Union comes in,
which is Republicans have the... Biden is in this place. I've thought about this.
Every time I see a piece of bad news anywhere in the country, I worry this is bad for Joe Biden
because he is the incumbent and he has become a vessel for everyone's anger about what's happening.
Things he has nothing to do with, right, or get blamed on Joe Biden.
Because why aren't things better?
Well, he's the president.
Why didn't he fix it?
And he's in a position right now where the – and this incompetent, extreme clown car of a Republican House majority is blocking anything from getting done. The border
security deal, aid to our allies, all of natural disaster aid, that's all being blocked by this
group of chaotic MAGA knuckleheads. And Biden has got to make them own. And Trump's pulling the
strings. That's the best part, right? For the political argument is that it's not just like,
we did this in, you know, like, it's not like there's the Republican Congress and then there's the Republican candidate.
The Republican candidate for president that he's running against is controlling the Republican
Congress.
He's the one that's making it happen or not happen.
He's got to make, and every Democrat has to help him.
We have to help him.
Senate Democrats have to help him.
House Democrats have to help him.
Everyone else out there with internet access has to help them. Make what is happening in this house under Mike
Johnson's leadership a preview of how government will function if the Republicans get their reins
of power again. And that has not happened yet. And that is why I hope the State of the Union
is used to tell that story because you're going to have your audience to do it. And I hope they
boo the shit out of them because that'll prove the point right there.
And the other important part of this is you need a forward-looking agenda that everyone remembers and is on board with because it's not just enough to say, oh, look at the stuff they
blocked over the last couple of years. Look what they're blocking now. It's here's what I want to
do for the country. Voters are concerned about X, Y, and Z. Here's how I want to solve those
problems. The only way I'm going
to solve those problems
is if you get rid of these guys
and you get rid of Donald Trump.
That's it.
That's the way I'm going
to solve these problems.
And so you need
that forward-looking agenda,
which I expect that he'll
at least start laying out
in the State of the Union.
All right.
Two quick things
before we go to break.
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When we come back,
Tommy talks to
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.
I'm so excited to welcome into the studio the Governor of Minnesota, the Chair of the Democratic
Governors Association, Tim Walz. Welcome to the show. Well, thanks for having me.
Pretty exciting to be here.
It's great to have you.
Now, I wanted to tell you this on air.
My first job in politics was for a Minnesotan.
I don't think I've ever talked about this on the pod.
So you remember this backstory.
Listeners might not.
There was an heroic, amazing U.S. senator named Paul Wellstone, tragically died in 2002.
Governor Jesse Ventura, Jesse the body
Ventura, Jesse the governor Ventura named his replacement. It was this guy named Dean Barkley,
who is his campaign chairman, I think, or something. And I think what happened was-
This is fascinating. I'm glad you're telling this story.
You remember this history?
Oh yeah. This is Minnesota in history.
So Barkley, I think he either decided to caucus with the Democrats or not caucus with the
Republicans. He did the Democrats or not caucus with the Republicans.
He did the Democrats a favor.
So Daschle's office helped him staff up.
Yep.
I was an intern for Ted Kennedy at the time.
So they got me in there and I answered phones for two months for this guy.
For Dean Barkley.
As an interim senator.
Yeah.
That is a good story.
That's my guy.
That is a good story.
And then it was all the Obama staff in Iowa was like all Minnesota people.
Like Paul Tooze was all Minnesota people. Like Paul
Tooze was our state director. Like everyone from those Senate races came down. Yeah, no, I don't
know if you, for your listeners, not from Minnesota, I can't stress enough the impact of
Paul Wellstone, politically one thing, but culturally on the psyche of what it means to be
progressive Minnesotans, to lean into issues that improve people's lives. And I think there was this sense of, uh, you know, be courageous for people who don't have a voice and that,
that just resonates. A lot of people who were surrounding me early when I ran for Congress
were former Wellstone folks. And I was a graduate of camp Wellstone, which was a training program.
Uh, I think it was Dave Lobsack from Iowa. And I were the first two elected to federal
office through that program. I did not know Dave Lobsack did that too yeah like just the most inspiring guy uh everyone should read his
book conscience of a liberal yeah great book inspiring person no there's a lot of there's
a story out there um i i'm surprised there hasn't been more written on it because it's still very
powerful still very uh hard for minnesotans felt like it was a loss i think many of us thought that
they probably had a president there yeah yeah amazing Yeah. Amazing guy. Well, you folks in Minnesota have managed to inspire a lot of
people in present day with how much you've gotten done over the last couple of years. So
full disclosure, I stole this summary from an EJ Dionne column who stole it from some
Minnesota-based reporters. So don't get me fired, Bill Ackerman, for plagiarism. But
you guys codified abortion rights, passed paid family and medical leave and sick leave,
banned conversion therapy and put in place protections for trans people, voting rights,
voter access bills, tax credits for low-income parents, free breakfast and lunch for K-12
students, gun control, legalized recreational weed. I could go on a lot longer 2040 carbon
decarbonization one of the most aggressive moves we could go on forever on this you did it with a
one vote advantage in the state senate two votes i think in the house right so i know you folks
like the dfl folks are progressive but you're not california i mean how did you pull off this
incredible list of accomplishments?
Yeah, the Republicans always say, you don't learn anything from us, Tim. And I said, yes, I do.
I learned what a one vote majority is. It's a majority and you move. I think the biggest thing
about this was, is there was just such a pent up desire for a progressive state like Minnesota
that led on so many things from education to access to healthcare. I think the resistance
from Republicans of stalling on a lot of those built some of that up, but I think there was a fierce sense of urgency of now. There's a whole
generation of folks, me being one of them kind of, that we believe the politics of bad happens
really fast and that we just got to be patient on these things. Look, 20 years we were trying
to get driver's licenses for folks after, you know, we took driver's license away from undocumented
folks after 9-11, had nothing to do with terrorism.
It took us 20 years to get that back, and I think, which we did that to this last year.
But that idea that there's a fierce sense of urgency of improving lives now, and if you do those things, the policies are good.
The good politics will follow.
And you saw just this fallout of excitement.
It was really kind of funny to me.
We had a few young interns working in our office, and we got all these things passed within about a three-month period.
And they had worked on the campaign before their first campaigns. We got reelected in 22,
elected the House and Senate. And they're like, well, this isn't that hard to get that done.
These are things like paid family, we've worked decades on. I mean, my entire life,
I've been working on some of these things. So I think it was more about appealing to what really improved people's lives. And it was such a contrast to see
the reduction of rights. Don't underestimate what Dobbs did of people like feeling a sense
of urgency. Yeah. I love that you're in terms of being like, this is easy. Politics is easy.
What are you guys complaining about? We worked real hard. We won an election. We came in,
we got all this stuff done. Now what do we do?
What's next? I read this great quote from you, which I totally agree with.
You said you don't win elections to bank political capital. You win elections to burn the capital to improve lives. I wish more people governed like that. I will say there's
one other path available to you. Wisconsin Republicans did it back in 2010, which is
where you gerrymandered the hell out of the state and lock in power for a decade. Did you consider that? Yeah. Well, and I go way back on this one as a
member of Congress. And I talk about, people would always ask me, this was the time when,
what was it? Game of Cards was the big thing. Game of Thrones.
No, no. House of Cards.
House of Cards. What's wrong with both of them?
Yeah. And they would ask me, is DC like that? And I'm like, no, it's like Forrest Gump. These
are outdated things. I
said, stuff just happens for a reason. And the one thing I said that was so frustrating to me
in Congress was, is that gerrymandered districts and money in politics. Look, if we fix those
things, that would fix it. But I also came to the conclusion on this, and Eric Holder worked on this,
a fair redistrict and all that. I did get to the point where saying, look, they do it.
It distorts the entire electoral map in the electoral college by what they do.
Isn't there a responsibility of us to do something at least to shore it up?
But no, we didn't think about it.
And coming to this, I think we have to figure out how to get back to at least where there is fairness in that system.
And that's what I think they're trying to get to.
That's what Tony's trying to do in Wisconsin,
but it is hugely distorting because we're almost mirrors,
Wisconsin and Minnesota,
very long progressive history there.
We shared a lot of things back and forth and electorally pretty close.
We're still purple state.
But I think doing it that way,
just how horrific that undermine things.
But it doesn't mean that, you know,
I'm not appointing judges who believe in rule of law, personal freedoms, things like that.
Right, right. You served in the House of Representatives for over a decade. It is
obviously an incredibly important job. I mean, your job description is Article 1 of the
Constitution. You know, that's pretty cool. But the job itself, I mean, you sort of alluded to
it. It seems like it can be pretty brutal at times, right? There's the chaos of like Speaker Johnson's, you know, what looks like it might be brief era, the constant fundraising, the lack of ability to do things in the minority. Am I wrong? And are there things you think we could do to make the job feel more fulfilling or more rewarding so that good people stick around
and like the matt gates's of the world maybe resign yeah and i represented a i think i was
the second democrat since 1892 that represented that and the good news was i was a school teacher
and running i had no clue like oh you didn't know and then once you're in you're like uh yeah tell
me that the incumbents continue to win continue to win it was a challenging district but here's
the thing.
I think there is still something about who are we sending to Congress and what can they do.
I focused heavily on, like, veterans issues.
I'm a veteran myself, spent years in that.
So I focused on improvement of veterans' quality of life, those types of things,
of really seeing this as positive governance.
And it was incredibly rewarding.
It was, you know, now I think back on it, you know, after you deal with COVID,
we deal with civil unrest after George Floyd's murder. I would obsess about a vote I'd have to take,
you know, this was really stressful stuff, one vote type of thing. But there was work that you
could get done, that you could build around things that you could actually deliver on.
And I think if you got the right people there, I proudly said I served with that. Speaking of Matt
Gates, that was Jeff Miller's district at one point in time. Jeff Miller was the rank, was the chairman of the VA committee when I was ranking member.
And I considered him a friend. We did good work together. We delivered on things together.
And it was all about that personality. That district hasn't, you know, geographically
changed that much, but philosophically. And I think this goes back to, I mean, in the age of
Trump, I don't know if any of these questions are relevant because it's so distorted on what they think.
Well, I mean, and also I think people who knew Matt Gaetz back in the day will tell you, like, he was just like a normal country club Republican.
He sort of saw the way the winds were blowing.
He adopted the kind of Trumpian demeanor and tactics and trolling and nonsense.
Yeah, it's performance art.
I agree.
I see these guys every day in the gym when I was in Congress and it was just stunning to me, you know, the
changes. Right. But you're, you know, you're a governor, like you, people vote you in or out
based on whether you accomplish things. That's your mindset. But then you have someone like a
James Langford, Republican Senator from Oklahoma, who was getting threatened by the Republican
party in his state just for working
with Democrats on a bill.
Nobody questioned his conservatives.
I served with him in the house.
Very conservative, Christian conservative, but honest in that.
And yeah, that's the problem now.
And you know, when you have these wave elections, it's not the extremists that get wiped out.
It's the folks that are in the purple districts.
You know, I went through that.
I think thousands of people voted for President Trump and me in 2016, where they were still
lit ticking voting.
I lose sleep over that, of why they did that, but I won.
But they would still be willing to do that.
I don't think that's true today.
Yeah, it's tough.
So you are the chair of the Democratic Governors Association.
We've got 11 races up to 2024.
I would love to hear your thoughts on some
of our best opportunities for pickups, where we need to play some defense. I know our team here
at Vote Save America is particularly focused on New Hampshire and North Carolina. And my mom
spends part of their time in Vermont. So I want to know why the hell we can't win
a governor's seat in Vermont. Yeah. Well, and again, DGA is a great organization. We represent the majority of Americans right now. And if you don't know
the difference, I said, my state's one of those, you look having a democratic governor in Minnesota
versus a Republican governor in the Dakotas, women's lives are put at risk, just bad decisions,
books being banned rather than hunger being banned. So we talk about why it's so important. And those states you mentioned, North Carolina being one where Roy Cooper is
term limited, incredible governor, expanded Medicaid, doing the things that we know improve
lives. That one's going to be a priority. Washington State, Jay Inslee, we all tried hard.
Jay is the godfather of moving climate. He finally calls me and says, it's good to see Minnesota catching up finally on these things.
Delaware with John Carney.
But I agree with you, New Hampshire is a golden opportunity.
We've got a good couple of candidates up there, a mayor and a council member.
They're going to have Kelly Ayotte, you know,
extremist on these issues that we care about.
And Vermont, I mean, the thing is, is that, and I say this, I think it's Democrats do
this.
We see it in Massachusetts.
We see it in places like New Hampshire and we see it in Vermont that Governor Scott is
pretty moderate by Republican standards trying to do good, but he's still Republican on this.
Democrats, when they're asked how the Republican governor is doing are kind of generous about
this.
Like we used to say, Charlie Baker would be the top rank, Larry Hogan.
We liked Mitt Romney for a while in that season exactly and we do this there's not a republican
say we're doing a good job no matter what it doesn't matter that oh mayo clinic's investing
five billion dollars you know good for the governor no no it's why aren't they investing
10 billion that type of thing so i think the biggest thing is is governors still matter
the quality of the candidate. I think in this mood
that we're in, having the backing of the DGA, having some oomph behind it, you saw us pick up
that seat again and hold the seat in Kentucky with Andy Beshear leaning in. So I think this idea that,
well, we can't play in some of these places, I'm with you. I think we just need to go out and get
a good candidate on this. Find them, make sure we're there to support them. And we have to play everywhere. I got a daughter
living out in Montana. We'll reelect John Tester, but my God, we have Steve Bullock. We went from
Steve Bullock to what we have right now. Yeah. I think last time I saw him, he was beating
reporters in Congress. Yeah. He body slammed a reporter. Body slammed a reporter in Congress.
Nice guy.
So now you've got property taxes skyrocketing there because, you know, trying to shift the property burden back onto regular Montanans.
So look, DGA will play where we've got an opportunity.
We're going to be out there across the country trying to make a difference.
And the message here is we're going to reelect the president.
We're going to do the best we can to take the household, the Senate, but the things that impact
your life immediately, like protections of
reproductive care, you know, banning hunger in
our schools rather than books, those types of
things are on governors.
So we're going to go, I would encourage folks to
think heavily about their governor's races.
So yeah, tell me more about that.
So help us understand what does the DGA do?
And if someone's listening, they're like, yeah,
I really care about governors. Like how can they plug in and help out?
Yeah. I'm going to do my, my shameless plug for DGA, Tim, T-I-M, uh, to text me at, at 30201.
Okay. You'll get information. You'll get on there. You'll get on every email you want to have. We
know how this all works. Um, but it does matter. DGA is out there and it's become, uh, one of the
most effective and efficient of taking
resources and putting them into the races where we need to be we can work as uh you know our
independent expenditures helping these candidates we also provide resources on training on media on
on some of uh the things that help a candidate get there look i saying about the wellstone thing it's
not as if everybody comes up but we got folks that are coming out of classrooms we've got math
teachers say i want to run and i'm going to make the case that fourth grade
teachers can be good governors. They can get this stuff done. They're out there doing it.
We've got veterans wanting to run. So the DGA is there to provide the resources to lift these folks
up, to help organize and to bring national attention to these races. And I like the idea
that we're smart about where we invest, but I think folks who are running realize we'll be in
every state. We feel like we can play. Governors can win. I mean, Andy Beshear is the walking
embodiment of that. Yeah. And that's an amazing race. He's done an incredible job.
Amazing. And the difference it makes is, is he's protecting reproductive rights. He's making sure
that affordability of college for working folks in Kentucky. He's thinking about climate change,
promoting bourbon,
doing the things he's supposed to be doing.
Do you have like a little rivalry
with the RGA folks?
It's Governor Bill Lee and Brian Kemp's
the deputy, am I right?
Yeah, just I guess the rivalry is
that I don't know what they're running on
other than chaos and just craziness.
Their candidates come out,
we're going to see it in North Carolina.
You've just got weird folks running. And we've got folks that want to improve lives. So yeah, the rivalry is in
this is that we're going to go out and raise the resources. We're going to make the case. And
again, governors are the firewall and you see the difference. And I talk to good friends with
all the Midwestern governors, but Tony Evers, I mean, my God, thank God Mark Dayton won in 2010
or Minnesota would have been Wisconsin. When Scott Walker won, unlike you said, from the redistricting to the judges to everything else, they're still clawing back.
Yeah.
And we're getting close.
So I'd make the case, go on, get information about this.
If you're in a state like Missouri or Indiana where we got good candidates, but it might be a little tough for road. It's only been, you know, in some
cases, less than 10 years that we've had great democratic governors like Montana. I mean, we had
16 years straight between Schweitzer and Bullock. We can do that again. Yeah, we can win. There are
some headwinds. President Biden's numbers are not great nationally at the moment. I know Biden won
Minnesota with 52.6% of the vote in 2020. I saw a survey from late January that has him at 42%
and Trump at 39%. So that suggests even in Minnesota, he's struggling. What do you think
the president needs to get those voters back? And how do you guys decide where and when to ask Joe
Biden to come in to stump for you? Yeah. Well, and those are on the individual states. And I
always say this to house candidates in Minnesota. Look, if you need me to be there, I'll be there.
If you need to pretend you don't know me, do that.
I just want you to win.
That's what it takes.
And I think the president's the same way.
The numbers aren't that surprising at this point in time.
Those are not all that much worse than President Obama was when everybody was fretting in 2012.
Look, there's challenges.
There's headwinds.
We've not been in a climate like this with the threat to democracy that's coming from
former President Trump.
I think for us, it's telling our candidates, and they know this, focus on the things that
are improving lives.
And Joe Biden's delivered on that.
He comes to Minnesota.
We're replacing that bridge up in Duluth Superior, $2 billion bridge.
He's delivering on that.
Medicaid expansion in these states where we have governors running that said, look, if
you elect me as governor, we're going to have another 100,000 people get health insurance
in Missouri, those types of things.
So I think it's watching that.
And then for all of us, it's do the work that's in front of us.
Do the work that's in front of us.
These campaigns are about grinding it out.
It's about, you know, don't doom scroll through the polls.
Just get out there, get on the doors know that this
because the choice is not age in this one if it is it's age versus insanity um true you know
bat shit crazy ideas um nato you you name it uh a cruelness you know i think we we kind of make
letters but the cruelness look we got to deal with immigration we're all going to talk about it we
need to secure our borders but at the same time show humanity we're not going to go down the road that you know
of of just the strange ideas that that president trump tells us even though he had four years to
do something about it and didn't do a damn thing yeah i love that you know he talks about ripping
nato apart basically and people like marco ruby are on tv saying oh he's just a novice you know
he talks like a normal person.
Like, well, he was the president for four years.
I feel like you should know better.
But I had German parliamentary members in this week and they are deeply concerned.
And, you know, they come with the council general.
The council general is a little more diplomatic, staying neutral on this.
Not the not the members of parliament.
Like, look, and I'm reassuring them we're we're allies with you.
We have close ties as Minnesotans with Finland and Norway. We've done trade missions there and things like that.
They need to know that we're not going to turn our back.
And this is one of our great accomplishments in securing peace around the world was our alliances, especially the NATO alliances, done amazing things.
And I don't know, you guys hit on it too, this idea of paying your bills and the simplicity of this, of a Russia expansion.
It just makes no sense.
So I think governors, well, governors will focus on kitchen table issues. Governors will focus on delivering good jobs, security, and that. I think for all of us to think about is they're not going
to be able to do any of that if we're not able to secure the presidency too.
Absolutely. I just want to ask you a couple of questions about you.
I saw that you taught in a Chinese high school from 1989 to 1990. I did. Were you there like
during the protests? I was in Hong Kong. Okay. Yeah, I was in Hong Kong. So we were the first
group of American high school teachers to teach in Chinese high schools. There'd been folks there
earlier than us, but they mostly taught in universities. Got it. This was a group that
was through the Philip Brooks house at Harvard. They picked 25. I didn't know this at the time. When we got there, there were 25 of us. We were going
to be spread throughout China. 12 were from the East Coast, 12 from the West Coast. My roommates
were Harvard, Columbia, and Stanford. And I was from Shadron State. And that's when I realized,
I'm the geographic affirmative action guy out of middle America. But yeah, when we got placed in
the Chinese high schools,
so they teach us Mandarin,
and then they drop me in Foshan in Guangdong,
where it's Cantonese.
And I would tell, oh, you're going to teach in Mandarin.
It'll be fine.
And I'd go in the classroom, and everyone's speaking Guangdong.
They're speaking Cantonese.
So I would go to the headmaster.
He said, no, no, they're speaking.
Because the government says you teach in China in Mandarin. Well, weren't doing it so it was an interesting uh interesting oh so
they were like saying no no no don't listen to your lying years yes yes facts yeah but so i spent
a couple years but i was in hong kong when it happened i was in hong kong on on june 4th when
tiananmen happened yeah um several of our quite a few of our folks decided not to go in. You trained in Hong Kong and
then went to Guangzhou and then you spread out across the country. I was in Southern China in
Guangdong, but crossing over in Hong Kong, there was a lot of European in Hong Kong, don't do this,
don't go, don't support them in this. And my thinking at the time was, is what a golden
opportunity to go tell how it was. And I did have a lot of freedom to do that taught
american history and could tell the story yeah i mean the idea that going to teach in a high school
is somehow supporting the government crackdown doesn't make any sense it was that it was there
was a lot of there was a lot of uh that that coming out but i just thought it was just too
good of opportunity yeah it's an incredible opportunity. Also, I feel like that kind of person-to-person exchange
is increasingly rare.
It's huge. It's huge. And then you think about in the early, some of your listeners,
if they can imagine being there at this time, this is eight years after Deng Xiaoping opening
back up. Like in Foshan, I was the first foreigner since liberation, as they would say,
1949. So what I immediately did when I came back was organized and set up a little nonprofit and
started taking American high school students because they would see older tourists there
or teachers. And so my wife and I took about 500 kids back to ride the trains and go. And it was
that person to person. And at that time, I was pretty bullish that we were going to see maybe a,
you know, because the older Chinese knew that America was their greatest ally during world war II. Like we were allies until
the situation, uh, uh, with Taiwan. And so, um, but that gives us the opportunity to try and build
some of those relationships, see if we could strengthen that. I think that's honestly,
I think that's missing. I think it's getting worse and worse. And this is like leading to
this cold war. It is, it is, you know, the, the, the panda hugging dragger slaying, isn't it? You know,
it's more about, we're going to have to work with this or we're going to, we have to tackle
climate change. The Chinese know it's real. They're, they're moving towards, you know,
electrification. They're going to own the market on electric vehicles. There is a partnership here.
And I mean, we, we can't just get into this cold war situation over, you know, uh, South China sea
again or something. Or spy balloons or something, something stupid. Um, you were also a social studies
teacher. I was geography teacher. Mankato West high school. That's correct. Is that right? You
were also. Yeah, I was just going to add, I hope you were going to add that in the football coach.
That's what I want to ask about. Well, thank you. Were you a position coach,
offensive guy? I was a defensive coordinator. Okay. What'd you run? Yeah, we ran a 4-4 where we read guards at the time.
I had really good athletes and good linebackers.
How are your corners?
They were good.
That was an age when I was coaching that, you know,
it was unusual to see a 2,500 to 3,000 yard passer on the other side,
but it was starting to come along.
So they were running the ball a lot.
Yeah.
I appreciate you bringing this up.
These guys were crowding the box, making sure they didn't.
That's exactly it.
And our guards, you know, because in high school,
if you pull a guard, it pretty much know where the ball's going.
And if you can teach kids to do that.
Like student body rights, student body left, that kind of stuff.
Yeah.
Everyone is tuned in.
Thank you for not allowing the yearbook to close on this chapter of my life.
I do think it's important.
Like this is.
It is important.
And I have to tell people this.
So look, I did 24 years in the military. I was teaching it's important. It is important. And I have to tell people this. So
look, I did 24 years in the military. I was teaching and then I started running for Congress.
I'm absolutely convinced. And people have told me this nuts because you won that state championship.
Really? Well, we were 0-27. When I took the job, they said, well, we're kind of struggling. We
were 0-27. But I had some other coaches I worked with who were great guys. And we said, this is
nonsense. Let's just turn this thing around. Three years later, state champion.
Now they're the state powerhouse.
You guys went from 0-27 to state champs in three years?
Yeah.
Who was your steroid guy?
No, we got him in the way.
Jesse Ventura?
No, no.
That's really impressive.
Yeah, it's impressive.
Good athletes.
That's real football too.
Do you guys send anybody to any big D1 schools?
University.
Our linebacker ended up playing fullback at the University of Minnesota.
Cool.
And, uh, a lot of them played, you know, uh, division two, like North Dakota State.
Yeah.
Uh, Mankato, big powerhouse in that division too.
So.
Cool.
A lot of fun.
Very fun.
Um, I think your term is up in 2026.
Is that right?
That's right.
So we, we did some pitching to see if you run
again for something we're not saying what it is if you want to announce anything today that's great
we're not term limited in minnesota so you could run again you could run again okay you could run
for you know president something like that too we wanted to pitch you some bumper sticker ideas for
your next campaign okay i hope that's okay um walls out for the middle class no okay um walls to the wall for democracy yes i'm liking this tim
is him no i'm looking at your staff they're all giving me the axe to the window to the walls mr
gorbachev you can't tear down this walls um came in like a like a came in like a wrecking walls
yeah that could be more of a post-governor thing. Okay. What if your last year is,
um,
the last walls?
Oh yeah.
There you go.
Like the film.
Yeah.
For the kids listening.
Um,
if these walls could,
they're going to go Google that now.
Cause they've not seen that.
You're my wonder walls.
I didn't put my best stuff at the end.
Um,
well that's not bad.
Okay.
You like that one?
Yeah.
You know,
some of them are a little more risque,
you know,
things that rhyme with walls.
Yeah. I'm sure you got some of those there's not a lot of that one happened a
lot yeah it's easy it's lazy on that that was lazy i blame myself you know my my campaign my
unofficial campaign theme when i was running 2018 was it's walls or wisconsin i like that so we like
we were going to turn into wisconsin that's very good so, I had that. So I would make my team say it because I thought
it was clever. So, uh, governor Walsh coach of the state champion football team, Makota,
Mankato, Mankato, Mankato football team. Great to meet you. Thank you so much for coming in.
Yeah. Thanks for having me.
Thanks to governor Tim Walsz for joining us today.
And before we go, we have John Lovett here because we have to settle a bet.
So the Super Bowl happened.
It did.
Usher took his shirt off.
And then whatever.
So the Chiefs won.
Now, you two, we did the prop bets, but because the red Gatorade wasn't thrown.
Or orange.
Or orange.
It was purple.
This whole thing came down to someone named Mahomes and someone named Purdy.
That's really what it all boils down to in the end.
And who threw more completions.
And you bet on Mahomes.
John did.
And Dan bet on Purdy.
Mahomes beat Purdy.
So John beat Dan. It was as simple as that.
There was no proposal on the field, though. Did you see that there was a microphone pickup of the
dialogue between Travis and Taylor? And it was beautiful because you could just see their
connection because Taylor says, oh, my God, that was amazing. And Travis said, there's going to be
a big party. So I love that for them and there was and there was and you know who
you know who she was next to her mom that wasn't one of the prophets right right right well and
ice spice also not one of the prophets and blake lively was blake lively and blake lively
yeah wow did you see the photo of taylor's box where everyone is having a blast paying attention
and super in it into it and then the kardashian box where they look like they're bored of their
fucking minds
and just being kind of jetted around the world
to various events of which they have no interest.
And then Elon Musk next to his son,
who he just was not looking at.
I didn't see that.
I didn't see that.
I didn't see that.
Anyway.
So, Dan, you've lost.
I did lose, yes.
And that means you have to post a tweet.
That's what they're called.
And we have the text here that was drafted by the Intrepid Ponce of America team.
It reads as follows.
Taylor, look what you made me do.
We have no choice left but to beg you for a Biden endorsement.
We remember Trump's presidency all too well and think we should never, ever get back together
with that man.
Please, please, please give us 2024
biden's version you're just going to put that online and i want to be clear about something
it's not one of those situations where you can say you can't ask the genie for more wishes
and you can't say i have to post this you just simply must put it out into the world
well i had there's one wrinkle here.
Uh-oh.
It's an important wrinkle, which is minutes before this podcast, I deleted Twitter.
That's not actually. What?
No, I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I feel like I just saw you tweet like a.
I believed it.
Well, you know what's sad about that?
Daniel, like minutes ago, I did something you could be proud of me for.
No, you didn't do it.
You didn't do it.
You're still in the muck.
That was like a little bit of the end of Goodwill hunting there.
Like, someday.
Someday I'm going to come.
Someday I'm going to go to your Twitter feed.
I want to see about a girl.
I want to go see about grass.
All right.
Well, Dan, the text is coming your way.
On exit we'll go,
and you'll just face the consequences
of putting that into the world.
That's so great.
Maybe it'll work.
I hope we screenshot it.
I hope we put it on Instagram.
We should put it everywhere.
Look what we made Dan do.
Look what we made Dan do.
Yeah, definitely do that.
A few scheduling things here.
We will have a special Sunday episode
that is my interview with Elizabeth Warren.
That's going to go out Sunday.
And then on Monday, it's President's Day.
So, of course, we're all celebrating.
And then on Tuesday, you're going to get a special feed drop.
It's going to be Oprah.
It's Oprah.
It's not us talking to Oprah.
It's Oprah talking to more important people. Yeah. Believe or not uh oprah came to us to do some promo like no no no
we got chris christie why can't oprah why can't oprah why can't we go to oprah why isn't oprah
promoting our stuff that's the platform we need oprah needs us we need oprah she asked for friday
and we said nope we got we got Tim Walz.
Ask not what Oprah can do for you.
Ask what you can do for Oprah.
For Oprah.
So you'll hear Sunday episode of Pod Save America.
That's me talking to Elizabeth Warren.
And then we'll be back on Wednesday.
So we'll see you then.
Have a great President's Day weekend.
Bye, everyone.
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Our show is produced by Olivia Martinez and David Toledo. Our associate producers are Saul Rubin and Farah Safari. Thank you.