Pod Save America - Trump's Shooting Upends 2024
Episode Date: July 16, 2024After surviving a horrifying assassination attempt, Donald Trump announces J.D. Vance as his VP pick and promises to shift the tone of the Republican convention. Jon, Lovett, Dan, and Tommy talk about... the VP selection, whether it's possible to "lower the temperature" of our political discourse, and Joe Biden's testy interview with Lester Holt. 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 Jon Levitt.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
Tommy Vitor.
Well, quite a bit has happened since Friday's show, and absolutely none of it has been good.
Donald Trump was shot in an assassination attempt at a campaign rally.
His hand-picked judge threw out his classified documents case.
He picked MAGA heir J.D. Vance as his running mate on the opening day of the Republican convention.
And new swing state polls give him an even larger lead over Joe Biden,
who spent the last few days giving a number of high profile speeches and interviews as he tries to convince
Democrats and all Americans that he's still the best chance to beat Trump. But let's start with
the assassination attempt. Words that still feel just awful and shocking to say out loud.
The investigation is still underway. Here's some of the new details we've learned as of this
recording Monday night. Head of Secret Service did new details we've learned as of this recording, Monday night.
Head of Secret Service did an interview with ABC News today where she said, quote,
the buck stops with me, but she's not resigning.
So far, the picture that's emerging of the shooter, 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks,
does not suggest he was a Trump hater, a Trump fan, or even that political.
It looks like he once made a $15 donation to one of those
scammy progressive groups that fucking emails you all the time. But after that,
he registered as a Republican and neighbors just told a Pittsburgh news station they've seen Trump
signs around the family's house. Some classmates have said he was conservative. Others said he was
bullied. Others said he liked guns. Meanwhile, the wife of Corey Comprator, the rally goer who died, told the New York Post that President Biden did reach out, but she didn't take the call because her husband was a Trump guy and wouldn't have wanted her to.
But even though she's voting for Trump, she said that she doesn't blame Biden for her husband's death and that President Trump has not yet contacted her family.
has not yet contacted her family.
So before we get to all the politics,
obviously just terrifying, horrendous news for the country.
I heard about it from you, Tommy.
You texted.
Like, how did you hear it?
How did you learn about this whole thing?
Were you watching the rally?
I was just sitting at home.
I was with James, my two-month-old,
and doing nothing, sitting on Twitter.
And all of a sudden, just coming through,
shots fired at a Trump rally.
I turned on the news, and I think it live. Like a lot of people did.
It's just wild that the footage was just there for everyone to see it play over and over again.
Dan, where you were, you were like not home, right? I was driving back from a trip with my daughter. And the last text before I got in the car was
from time. I said, shots fired at a Trump rally, which I thought just, there were shots at the shots at the rally right and not someone had shot at trump and then i didn't look at my phone
for an hour and a half got home to one million texts mostly from you guys about everything that
happened just that i couldn't believe that trump had someone had shot at trump trump had been hit
that he was fine but then there was the you saw the image of Trump with his fist in the air, the bloody image.
Some of the photos of the one from Doug Mills, who we know from the White House.
Great guy.
Great guy, incredible photographer of the bullet right at Trump's head.
Just almost an impossible thing to process, to learn all about in one fell swoop.
Yeah.
Yeah, I just sort of felt sick.
I was like, what is going to happen now?
Yeah.
I felt sick.
I really did.
That was my instant reaction.
I felt sick.
I was instantly worried, even after we knew that it was only an attempt about the implications,
about the potential for retaliatory violence, about what we might learn
about the shooter. I also just was instantly worried about what it would be like for this
to be processed by social media. And the other strange- Good worry, good concern.
Because that was the right, yeah. And the other strange piece about it too was,
in the same way, you know, you see,
oh, you see the shots fired at a Trump rally.
My first instinct is,
oh, this is some kind of false or overblown,
made up story.
Probably because you want it to be.
You want it to be and you expect it to be because there's so much misinformation.
There's so much sensationalism out there.
So you've at first, oh, it's just an airsoft gun.
Oh, it was shrapnel from a teleprompter. It wasn't actually a shooting. Right. All that is circulating. And then it's slowly becoming clear from real sources what's going on. only an attempt because of, and angry, and I was angry, just because it takes control of our
ability to talk about politics, about ability to talk about anything, and just takes it away from
us in favor of what a random mass shooter or assassin wants us to talk about, which is whatever
their intention or act is. Tommy, just quickly, what do you make
of the Secret Service's lapse here in their response so far? I mean, it seems like having
eyes on a shooter who was on top of an elevated building within sight of the president is like
the most basic part of the job that Secret Service does to protect any event with either a president,
next president, or whoever they're assigned to protect.
Yeah. The idea that an elevated position 140 yards away with a direct sight line to the candidate
was not covered by someone somehow is shocking to me. Secret Service, there's a bunch of different
parts of it. There's PPD, who are the men and women around the president,
the personal protective detail for the president. What you saw on TV was them reacting and dive on
him pretty quickly. And those people are incredibly brave. Those individuals literally
threw themselves in front of a bullet to protect the president and they did their job and they did
it pretty quickly. But then they partner with local law enforcement. It's not at all clear if
local law enforcement was supposed to be securing this building it's not clear to me why the sniper teams that were on
other elevated positions didn't see the gunman sooner so we'll figure it out there will be an
investigation um i think it's a massive fuck up i mean obviously yeah i'm surprised that the secret
service director is not offering her resignation if If a, if a candidate, if a president or candidate got shot on my watch and I was running secret service, I would feel like I'd failed at my job and resign. I'm sure there will be independent investigations. There will be internal investigations. Biden's in a weird place on this because he's standing by an agency that he is in charge of through Homeland Security.
standing by an agency that he is in charge of through Homeland Security. But I mean, I hope that, you know, Congress will get involved. Maybe there'll be some sort of slick committee set up
to look into what happened because the Secret Service has had a bunch of near misses and a
bunch of bad scandals. And I think as an organization, they are not doing great.
Yeah. And that's been true for a while.
Yeah. I mean, it was true when we were in the Obama. I mean, even though we knew a lot of secret services did an incredible job, but I was
at the White House when the guy made it into the White House, the guy who jumped the fence.
Yeah, that's right.
I was there when they found the bullet holes at the top of the White House that no one
knew when they came from.
So this has been a problem for a while.
Biden did ask for an independent investigation of this, which I think it becomes the basis
for making
a decision on the future of the head of the Secret Service.
So after the shock passed and it was clear Trump was okay, the first understandable reaction
from a lot of folks in politics and media was that, you know, everyone needs to tone
down the rhetoric and lower the temperature of the political debate in this country.
Biden said as much a number of times over the weekend.
Trump himself posted unite america
in all caps uh and he did a print interview with uh selena zito of the washington examiner where
he said he tore up the draft of his convention speech that he said was the original draft was
a humdinger um and was rewriting it about bringing the country together. Axios ran a piece Sunday evening about how
Trump advisors are planning a more unifying convention. The piece quoted Tucker Carlson.
They interviewed him. He said, quote, getting shot in the face changes a man. And an unnamed
Trump advisor said that Trump's view is, quote, now Democrats can't come after me anymore as a
fascist. So what are they going to do now?
So lots to unpack there.
Let's start with the timeless classic.
Can Trump pivot to become someone who's unrecognizable to those who've watched him for the last 77 years?
Dan, what do you think?
I'm going to go out on a limb and say no. No.
I do not think he's become a uniter and not a divider.
I do not think he's become a uniter and not a divider.
I do think that the press seems very thirsty to believe this narrative in a way in which they haven't with Trump in a very long time.
It has been very credulous.
COVID.
COVID was the last time.
Remember the beginning of COVID?
Even that lasted like six seconds, right?
Yeah, the first six seconds of his first press conference.
No, I think it was the moment when he went and got into the Secret Service vehicle with
all the Secret Service agents infected with COVID for the driver on the block oh yeah there's that too well that was later that
was when he had i was saying when covid or it should be hit remember the in march the first
couple weeks everyone was like oh he's a new president he's great blah blah then he became
crazy then he got covid yes and then there's the point being whether it was our collective near
death experience or his personal near-death experience and we have yet to see a fucking change. I do think he can be just less divisive enough
to get a disproportionate amount of undeserved credit
in his speech on Thursday night.
Yeah, I mean, it's can you hang on for four months?
And before the shooting,
we were saying this about how he reacted to the trials and like he the fear of
potentially going to jail has really driven him in this campaign to be slightly more disciplined
than usual not because it's out of the goodness of his heart but because he's like i this is how
i'm going to win this thing i've got to just be a little normal for a little while longer well it already brought me already says like what does unity mean it means dropping
all the charges against me right so it's of course he's giving up the game pretty quickly
yeah but i think in 2016 was it super tuesday when he won the election and then did like a
giant product placement thing where he had all the trump products he'd ever made on a table before
like the stakes have gone up since that time to to your point. Very much so. Getting out of jail. Yeah. And again, like you said,
already in this campaign,
he has said,
I mean, every day has said something
that would sink any other candidate for office
and it just completely makes him
unfit to hold the office.
Just want to put that out there.
But relative to Trump
and what people expect of Trump,
it's been a little different.
What do you guys think about the whole
Democrats can't call
him a threat to democracy anymore thing? Love it. Political violence is destructive in a democracy
for a lot of obvious reasons. But one reason is that it gives control over our ability to make
decisions to random bad actors. We should not give to a random person, whatever their motivations,
whatever we discover, we should not voluntarily give up what that person wasn't able to successfully
take by force, which is our ability to make a decision about the fate of the country.
And that requires being honest about the threat Donald Trump poses that because that requires
being honest about what it will take to win this election. That is, you know, the fact that this event took place does not remove Trump's menace
or the challenge Biden faces.
And the sooner we get back to having that debate, the more of a failure this assassination
attempt will be.
Tommy, go ahead.
No, it's a good point.
I also think like politics is how we resolve differences without resorting to violence.
And those debates are inevitably going to get emotional and heated at times.
And they should, because that's our release valve. That's how we settle differences.
But that said, there are limits. You can't encourage violence. You can't condone violence.
That's why what Trump did on January 6th is unforgivable in my mind. But I do think people
take cues from leaders. And it's important not to take it too far, because once political violence
starts, it can be very, very hard to stop. And it can just get out of control.
Donald Trump told his supporters to beat the shit out of protesters at his rallies. He has amplified
calls for violence. Remember the video of one of his supporters? This was after George Floyd's
murder. And one of his supporters said in a video, the only good Democrat is a dead Democrat. And
then he posted that. That's one thing he did. He told police and the military to
shoot protesters in the legs, to shoot immigrants who crossed the border, to shoot suspected
shoplifters, suspected shoplifters. To rough up suspects when putting them in the car.
Rough up suspects. He, of course, sent a mob of his armed supporters. He knew they were armed.
We know this now. He sent them to the Capitol so they could intimidate our representatives
into throwing out our votes. He refused to do anything to stop the violence kevin mccarthy the republican speaker
of the house calls him he says they're trying to fucking kill me do something and donald trump said
in response well kevin i guess they're more upset about the election than you that's what he said
like and then now he wants to pardon them has joe biden done any of those things has any democratic
official done any of those things anywhere close any Democratic official done any of those things?
Anywhere close to those things?
No.
So, of course, you're going to talk about Donald Trump as a threat to democracy that you have to oppose through Democratic means.
Peaceful means.
At the ballot box.
By convincing other people to vote against him.
It's just so stupid.
Also, Donald Trump is a threat to democracy.
He's a threat to freedom.
For all those reasons.
But also, don't take my word for it.
He says it himself.
He's the one who said to be a dictator on day one.
Over the last couple of weeks, the media, people in politics, us have not been paying
as much attention to Trump.
He has been truthing about how he thinks that various people should have military tribunals.
Yeah.
Liz Cheney, military tribunal.
Yes.
He has talked about jailing his opponents.
He has talked-
Is that how democracy works?
Is that not a threat to democracy?
I guess that's just democracy, right? You can go to trade tribunals for Liz
Cheney. Yeah. And so the idea that after this horrible thing happened, and it would be wonderful
that if we could lower the temperature on politics in this country, we could get back to sort of
normal debates. But Donald Trump is an abnormal candidate. He has offered a dangerous policy
agenda. He has been a danger to democracy and the press cannot all
of a sudden become the civility police and try to chastise Democrats into not saying what is true
about Donald Trump. And by the way, one of the reasons that should, that one of the reasons
that's actually important is because it gives to allow this act of violence to dictate what we can
or cannot say, even when it is true,
is to give power to this person and potentially to inspire people in the future to think they
have the power at any moment to change the landscape of American politics. The reason,
like I am very, look, if people want to say, oh, this is an opportunity for all of us to come
together and turn down the rhetoric, great, that's fine. But the reason we talk about the danger posed by violent rhetoric is not because it creates some miasma of risk. It's because it
can inspire people. It's because people will take it literally and act on it. We have seen that
happen multiple times. We have seen right-wing violence in multiple places and multiple times.
We have seen mass shootings. We've seen what happened in Charlottesville. We've seen what
happened at the insurrection. There is a trend.
The reason you worry about the rhetoric is because you start to see it manifest in a trend of
violence. We don't know anything yet about this versus motive, but there is no evidence as of yet
that they were motivated by some sort of political rhetoric, right? If that evidence comes back and
shows that, we should talk about that. But but as of right now everyone is just jumping to the conclusion especially people in the media
who love this conversation are jumping to the conclusion they want but also yeah right even if
it even if for some reason it did like there are going to be people who are inspired by political
rhetoric whether it's on the right or left to commit violence and what you can do about that
as a political leader is to condemn that unequivocally and to do everything in your power to avoid inciting or condoning that kind of violence, which I think most leaders in this country and and previously the Republican Party before Donald Trump, a lot of elected officials would take care to do that at all. And even worse, he's joked about and mocked when there
has been violence, like the attack on Paul Pelosi
or the attempted
kidnapping of Gretchen Whitmer, right? All of that
was something they either
claim as some sort of false
flag or make fun of or mock.
It was a lover's
quarrel, right? When this guy was, when
Paul Pelosi was nearly beaten to
death. Or when his VP was almost hung. He was is like nearly beaten to death or when his vp was
almost hung he's cool with that too that was very very cool with that apparently so swapped him out
we're not in the prediction business we don't have a lot of polling numbers yet it's only a couple
days in but i'm sure you guys were getting this message from friends you saw it online like when
he the picture of donald trump that's now the cover of time magazine fist up in
the air it's the cover of time oh yeah oh yeah well i mean both candidates did lengthy interviews
with time dance oh i know i know even though even though you're shitting all over the magazine on
the polls in the 1986 election just shifted six points anyway we all know the picture now we all
know the picture everyone who's listening to this and a lot of people are good that's it it's over
it's over he's won this is This is like a show of strength.
So that was some of the more extreme. Then there's other people like, oh, this is going to help him.
There was a quote from Axios on Sunday that immediately was everywhere on the Internet.
It was about Democrats feeling worried that Biden's going to stay in the race and then lose.
And then it also combined with the assassination attempt and Trump, you know, looking strong and surviving an assassination attempt.
And the senior House Democrat said anonymously to Axios, we've all resigned ourselves to a second Trump presidency.
Thoughts on the political implications?
I mean, that person is a defeatist idiot.
And I please just don't talk to the press.
If you have those thoughts, keep them inside your head.
Like Donald Trump's instinct.
He has some political genius in him. We have to be honest, like his instinct to stand up and pump
his fist after getting shot in the ear. It's incredible because it created this iconic image.
And if you want to run an entire election that where you're arguing, I'm strong and my opponent
is weak, it's pretty powerful. You know, that said, I think what will likely happen is it will make the people who support Donald Trump even more certain to turn out for him.
Right. They seems to have inspired the base.
It's certainly it's it's the image is traveling in U.S. culture in ways that Donald Trump doesn't usually go.
Like 50 Cent put up a photo of his Get Rich or Die Tryin' album cover at his
concert a couple nights ago with Donald Trump's head on it. It's probably the first time that's
happened. So you're seeing people talk about Trump, calling him a badass. There was, you know,
the Barstool Sports affiliates were selling t-shirts with the image on it right away. So I'm
sure it will appeal to a subset of people. But four months is a lifetime in politics. That's
just what everyone has to remember. We have no idea what could happen between now and then.
So giving up and giving up in a background quote
to Axios on July 14th is ridiculous.
Yeah, go to Politico, you know?
Dan, what do you think?
I think we have had major events in this race already, right?
Donald Trump was convicted of a crime like 60 days ago.
Amazing. The polls move like about
a point and a half. In front of 50 million people, Joe Biden had the worst debate performance of any
presidential candidate in modern history. The polls moved two and a half points. The idea that
this will dramatically shift the race is absurd, right? It belies everything we have seen to date.
And there's no real obvious historical precedence here. Like Reagan went up in the polls after he was shot in 1981.
He was a freshly elected president at the time.
And he was seriously wounded.
Yes.
And it was a different era where you would get, with much less polarization, where you would get Democrats and independents who did not like Reagan to approve of him in a moment like that.
You saw that up until just a few presidents ago.
It does matter, I think, that this happened in Pennsylvania, the single most important state in both Biden and Trump's electoral college calculus. But the race is basically where it was before this, is Trump has an advantage nationally and the battleground states. That advantage is slight but steady.
has an advantage nationally and the battleground states. That advantage is slight but steady.
And I would be shocked if this were to dramatically change the equation. We're never really going to know because this happened. Basically, no poll can really go into the field
that won't include the Republican convention as well. It's very hard to untangle this. Because
you're going to have a convention balance, which is usually two to three points. We'd be surprised
it was that big this time around because the race is so steady. But happening at the same time,
those are usually very temporary. So we're never, Trump may go up in the polls to the next week,
whether that'll stay or not, I'm not sure, but we're not going to know if it's from the
shooting of the convention or something else. Yeah. There's polling. And then there's just
trying to think about the person who was like, I think I'm going to vote for Joe Biden. But then
Donald Trump, you know, uh, survived an assassination attempt and put his fist up in
the air. I like, I have a hard time imagining that person saying,
oh, I'm going to vote for Donald Trump now.
I have an easier time imagining someone who's like leaning Trump.
And then this gives them like a permission structure to be like,
yeah, it's okay.
He's like a badass.
I'm going to do it.
Like, if I think they're going after young men,
they're going after men like 18 to 29.
It's like, you see that image.
You're like, oh, this guy's a badass.
Maybe I'll vote for the first time.
I think you had to have, I mean, I don't know.
I don't know.
We'll see.
But I think you had to have leanings that way anyway.
And I wonder if those people were already like sort of priced into that.
I think that is, you're moving someone from undecided to Trump, not from Biden to Trump.
That's what I was going to say.
And that's really how most of the movement is going to happen in this race is there is
this small but still significant pool of undecided voters.
And Trump may pick some up from that.
Will those people stay with him? Will they actually vote? Open question. What happens
over the next four months? We'll decide that, but he may get some of those votes.
Also, by the way, this is why it is so important that this debate not be about Trump as a person
versus Joe Biden as a person. That has to be at the stakes. Because if someone's thinking about
abortion and taxes, I don't think Trump's fist pump is going to matter. The other, you know, I add the same reaction to the photo that Tommy did. But I also like there's
been reporting over the years about how much Donald Trump has actually thought about this,
that he has thought that he is he's afraid of this kind of thing. He has thought about it
and about assassination, about about being in crowds. He has he has thought about this in the
past. And I have no doubt that Donald Trump, who is a creature of the 80s, is very aware of how Ronald Reagan said, honey, I forgot to duck, that there's
this video, I think it's years after, but Ronald Reagan is at an event and a balloon pops and he
goes, they miss me. And the whole crowd goes wild. He is a showman in the same way Reagan was a
showman. And I think he, in that moment, that part of him that's been worried and thinking about this moment his whole life uh was there and he
made the most of it and he's like i'm okay now yeah i would have been thinking about a second
gunman myself before i before i got up there and jersey shorted but you know i guess what do what
works for you don maybe yeah yeah well gtl but yeah resigning ourself come on people it's like
we're not resigning
ourselves just like yeah if you do that you're definitely going to get another trump presidency
i'm guaranteed if you try at least to avoid that by going talking to voters who are undecided or
who haven't made up their mind whether they're going to vote yet then we have a chance to avoid
a second trump presidency so let's do that as a replace the people who would take you up on your
call to action could go to undertake such activities? You could go to Vote Save America.
And what we will do is make sure that your time and money is spent on the most efficient
candidates and organizations and places to make sure that you have the biggest impact
on politics.
How's that?
That was pretty.
I thought it was pretty good.
It was unclear.
Was that quote saying we should resign ourselves to Trump winning because of the assassination
attempt or resign ourselves to Trump winning because the assassination attempt means we can't
have an honest conversation about Joe Biden. And therefore, because we can't have that conversation,
Joe Biden is going to...
It was unclear from the quote. It was a story about both. So it was sort of all mixed up.
One of the weirder strains of post-shooting we need to tone down our politics reactions came from people like Senator Mike Lee,
who wrote right afterward that the Justice Department now needs to drop all charges against Trump.
That's unity. That's how we come together.
Sure enough, after Mike Lee tweeted that on Monday morning, Judge Eileen Cannon did just that.
that on Monday morning, Judge Eileen Cannon did just that. She dismissed classified documents case entirely, basically out of nowhere, saying that the appointment of a special counsel violates
the Constitution, which also Clarence Thomas had said in the immunity case. He was like the one
justice that said that in one of his concurring opinions. Jack Smith is appealing. Experts think
the dismissal is almost certain to be overturned on appeal, particularly because none of the other
justices signed on to Thomas's concurrence, not even Alito. But who knows? Trump seized on Cannon's ruling, writing
on Truth Social that all the other judges should now do the same thing, framed, of course, as a way,
again, to unite the nation. Here's what I can't figure out. Cannon had already made sure there was
no chance that this case was going to trial before the election.
It was not going to happen.
She succeeded in delaying.
Why did she do this?
Was she just like feeling emboldened?
Is she just, as some legal scholars have said, not that bright?
Well, it seems like Clarence Thomas gave her an idea.
I don't think it has to be more complicated than that.
She had not thought of that before.
Clarence Thomas gave her a roadmap for what she could do to get out of this. She's like, well, I better copy his
work. He's a smart guy. I'm just some schmuck who got confirmed during a lame duck.
In his dissent in the immunity case that came out, what, two weeks ago? So she saw that,
read it, and was like, ooh. Yeah. I think she wanted to get rid of this case,
not just for Trump. As you said, she'd already delayed it past the election. She'd already done
him the favor. But also, this is a way to not have to deal with this every single day.
Yeah. She's also though been, she's been playing this game where she didn't want to give Jack
Smith anything to appeal to the 11th circuit and then ask that she be removed from the case,
which like it really has to be pretty extreme. He can now like, so a lot of the legal nerds think this is getting overturned
for sure like that she's not gonna be able to throw it out but they think it's now possible
for her to get booted from the case for doing this not not probable but possible so it's a
little risky you see uh matt gates's tweet said future supreme court justice cannon good troll
good troll and uh possibly a solid prediction yeah yeah yeah and
also future uh middle judge decider which she's the swing swing but i like joe and i couldn't
think of the term swing but swing but anyway i shouldn't go on speaking of speaking of way too
young maga leaders uh the other huge news on Monday was
Trump's announcement that his running mate will be J.D. Vance of Ohio the 39 year old senator
author of Hillbilly Elegy and former CNN contributor who went from calling Trump America's
Hitler to becoming the MAGA heir apparent and one of Project 2025's best friends here he is talking
to Sean Hannity at the convention on Monday night, giving us a preview of what his potential debate with current Vice President Kamala Harris might
sound like. First of all, the Democrats want to try to run from this. And they're saying that,
you know, Joe Biden has to step down or Joe Biden can't run for president. That's not public
spiritedness. That's political cynicism, because they should have been saying it three years ago.
Kamala Harris has allowed America to be saddled with the president who clearly doesn't have the middle capacity to do the job
It is not public spiritedness to call for him to step down when he's about to lose an election
They should have been doing it years ago, and it's not just Kamala Harris
It's Nancy Pelosi the entire Democratic apparatus lied about this guy i just want you guys to know
we did add that music every time we will play a jd vance clip we will be playing that music
that's tommy's weekend uh dad band that's a uh it's a cover band called six wire and they're
just shredding at the rnc he's always doing the research yeah i did do a google just now um okay
what do you guys think about the Vance pick?
What's your take on why Trump took a pass on our boy, Doug Burgum, little Marco Rubio,
and dozens of others in favor of JD?
Dan?
Well, I think in the interview that Trump did that you and I talked about on the pod
last week, Trump kind of answered these questions.
Doug Burgum, it was the abortion legislation in North Dakota. They have gone to great lengths to try to essentially lie about what their abortion plans are and their abortion policy is.
So that takes Doug Burgum off.
Marco Rubio, one, the Florida residency thing I think was probably a little bit complicated.
Also, he doesn't like Marco Rubio.
He doesn't want to spend time with him.
He doesn't trust him.
He thinks he's a huge wuss um and not that bright yeah so that probably
takes him off you take you talk you talk mark ruby talks a good game now but a couple years from now
you're gonna have to hang him that's what he's thinking really right is he is he a good hang
he's a good hang jd vance is a good hang pod title yeah j. Vance is a good hang. Pod title. Yeah. J.D. Vance is a good hang.
Rubio is going to be someone you're going to hang good.
Can we put in the civility alert, please?
Civility alert.
Guys, guys, can we please lower the temperature?
Lower the temperature.
What have you done to lower the temperature?
So you think it was process of elimination then?
It was process of elimination because there's no good political argument for J.D. Vance.
He adds almost nothing to the ticket.
There is no, he doesn't bring it.
He doesn't, has no geographic appeal.
Yeah.
He doesn't moderate the ticket ideologically.
He doesn't address a specific weakness, right?
If you go through people's picks in the past,
they either bring a state into play.
That's a little more pre-pollination,
but that was a typical reason.
They are, they, they appeal to a group that the nominee is weak with, like the reason Trump picked Pence
for the evangelicals, or they address a weakness, right?
Bill Clinton picked Al Gore because Bill Clinton was scandal plagued and Al Gore had a reputation
as the most ethical and frankly boring member of the Senate.
And so he picked him.
But Vance offers nothing in that way, right?
He's doubling down.
The only group that Vance has appeal with are the voters that Trump already has, which are hardcore MAGA voters.
He doesn't even, like Rubio at least would have given some signal to like normie Republicans that there's like an establishment person there.
Vance doesn't do that either.
I would say two things. I think one thing he does do is he signals to a certain set of rich Republicans or libertarian types that Trump's fully on board with their program.
And then I think the second thing is J.D. Vance can articulate, he does it with Sean Hannity, he can articulate a version of Trumpism that is more sophisticated and rational sounding than it sounds when it comes
out of Donald Trump's mouth. And I think that is of some utility. My thought on the political aspect,
I don't think it's about necessarily winning a state or even winning the election. First of all,
I think J.D. Vance is a pick Trump made because he is confident that he is ahead. And so he felt
like he could take a little bit more of a risk. We'll see whether that's right. But if you read Tim Alberta's interview in The Atlantic with Susie Wiles and Chris Lasavita, very long
interview, spent a lot of time with them about their strategy, they're running the Trump campaign.
And they basically say in that interview that they don't care that much about losing
suburban women to either Dobbs or Trump's character, things like that, and that they are going after younger
voters, particularly younger working class men, white, black, Latino. And when you talk to these
younger working class men, when you listen to them, and I just thought about this because we
did our wilderness focus groups with a whole bunch of young people a couple weeks ago all over the
place. And what do they talk about? they talk about they're struggling financially they blame corporate greed but they also blame government they talk about spending
too much money on foreign aid and foreign wars they're more isolationist they talk about some
of them talk about immigrants taking their jobs so there's this weird sort of populist anti-establishment
it sounds like jd vance's version of MAGA and Trumpism.
And Trump doesn't really articulate.
Trump has like a sort of gut instinct about it.
J.D. Vance actually, whether he believes it or not,
it's a whole conversation for another time.
But he articulates it, right?
And I do think that if you are the Trump campaign,
they're thinking we're going to go,
we're not trying to bridge the gap with the Nikki Haley old establishment
part of the
Republican Party we're changing the party this is a new party and we want to go after younger
a new generation this is now the first millennial on a ticket right J.D. Vance is 39 years old
and obviously Ohio's not going to matter as much because Donald Trump will win Ohio but maybe they
think Michigan Pennsylvania and Wisconsin those that's those three states are Joe Biden's last chance. And maybe whatever appeals to Ohio voters about
J.D. Vance could similarly appeal to him in those Midwestern states.
Yeah. I also wonder, I mean, Donald Trump Jr. is extremely close to J.D. Vance. And it's
interesting. Look, we make fun of the Trump relationship with his children because he's
a narcissist and only cares
about himself but I do think having your son constantly in your ear about this one person and
his charisma and his political abilities is probably powerful and look Doug Burgum he's
not necessarily lighting up a room he's got a lot of money and I assumed that Trump would like the
old rich guy but also he put all that time in with Tiffany that was stupid right the uh the uh
I do think also the Don Jrr piece of it too is what john
don jr is loyal and he's saying this is our guy yeah the bergham maybe but rubio is never going
to be your good hang but the um uh vance did this long interview with uh ross daffod in which he
lays out close listeners of the pod would know that i already brought up this this long interview
and everyone made fun of me for oh yeah i remember that love and i specifically made fun of you well out close listeners of the pod would know that i already brought up this this long interview and
everyone made fun of me for oh yeah i remember that love and i specifically made fun of you well
i first of all and tommy brought it up literally three minutes ago like did you did you bring it
up on the pod you said do the show but first of all uh uh i think we should embrace republican
politics in which hypocrisy is a sign of strength.
And but anyway, you go through that interview and he is articulating a populist economic message.
And as a reminder, too, that when Donald Trump wins in 2017, the biggest worry was that he would pursue a more economically populist agenda. And instead he embraced repealing Obamacare and tax cuts for corporations
and the kind of Paul Ryan style of governance.
And it was to our benefit.
And so I think it is very,
like this is a kind of,
it's a scary version of Trumpism
because I think it is a far more sophisticated version.
Look, just in simple terms,
he's got a compelling personal story.
Like Hillbilly Elegy was a good book.
It just was.
I enjoyed reading it.
He's a veteran. And I think J.D. Vance can talk about how, look, liberals loved me. Was it Rob Reiner
or someone? Ron Howard. Ron Howard made my book into a film. Gone close and a moo-moo.
Hollywood loved me until I came out for Trump. And then Trump can point to how J.D. Vance used to
criticize him, but he came to love him and now he bent the knee. So I think there's a compelling
story there. The one thing that's just worth pointing out is that the
Washington Post had a good analysis of J.D. Vance's political weakness in Ohio. In 2022,
Vance won by six points, but he underperformed every other statewide official. Mike DeWine won
by 26 points. The attorney general won by 20 points. The Secretary of State won by 19.
Even the Supreme Court nominees won by double digits.
J.D. Rantz had the closest race, in part because he had extreme views on a lot of policy areas.
So there could be some risk here.
And Tim Ryan.
Yeah, and Tim Ryan.
And a lot of credit to Tim Ryan there.
Well, you know, he was Ohio.
I mean, he basically ran, J.D. ran even with Trump.
He ran behind him.
I mean, he basically ran, J.D. ran even with Trump.
I think, John, you are right that this is a pick that is made from a confident view of Trump standing in the race.
I just think it is more about what J.D. Vance does after they win, not what J.D. Vance can do to help them win.
Because if they were really trying to go for the kill shot here, you really would pick Rubio or Tim Scott or Byron Donalds because that is,
if you can make real inroads or even the inroads
the polls suggest right now
with black and Latino men,
that's the difference
between a narrow victory
and a landslide, right?
That's the kind of thing
that could be a form of realignment.
I think their view is probably,
again, no idea if it's right or wrong,
their view is just because
he picks a black or Latino candidate
does not mean that's going to make it easier to get younger black and Latino men. no idea if it's right or wrong their view is just because he picks a black or latino candidate does
not mean that's going to make it easier to get younger black and latino men like that it's very
that it's just as possible with a younger white man like jd vance again who knows but i'm sure
that's their yeah i just think jd vance is the pick you make if you want to turn the maga agenda
into an actual policy agenda he which is why he's so scary. Right. I think I said this
I never know what we say on Mike and off Mike
but at some point in the last week around the time you and I
recorded a podcast together. Have you heard this Ross Douthat call me?
Oh, he writes for the Times, right?
Yes. Have you talked to J.D. Vance recently?
God, it's so funny. By the way, shame on us.
None of us know how to say the guy's fucking name.
I don't care. No one does. That's his fault.
I didn't name him.
I think it's Douthat. Yeah, I think that's correct.
That's right.
You're right.
I thought that J.D. Vance was the best case scenario in terms of the election because
he has less upside than the other ones and some risk because he's so extreme.
But the worst case scenario, if Trump wins.
And I think that's correct.
So the Biden campaign statement about J.D. V, said that Trump picked him because he'll quote,
do what Mike Pence wouldn't do on January 6th,
bend over backwards to enable Trump and his extreme MAGA agenda,
enact Trump's project 2025 agenda.
And then,
and they also said,
this is someone who supports banning abortion nationwide while criticizing
exceptions for rape and incest survivors.
Um,
and he has admitted he wouldn't have certified the free and fair election in
2020.
What do you guys think of that message? Is that the most effective message? Cause there's, and he has admitted he wouldn't have certified the free and fair election in 2020.
What do you guys think of that message?
Is that the most effective message?
Because you can do the hypocrisy thing.
You know, he used to criticize Trump, and now he doesn't.
But then there's also he is for all of these extreme positions.
If you do the hypocrisy thing, wherever you are, I'm going to come and find you.
Because it is the least effective message possible. Are you just threatening the audience?
Yes.
Turn the temperature down.
Turn the temperature down, Dan.
Get that alarm going.
I'm going to go have a...
I'm going to find you to give you a hug.
Where's the red head alert?
We already played it earlier.
Dan's going to go...
Dan's putting a bullseye on those kinds of talking points.
I'm going to come to your house for a civil discussion of why your message is terrible.
And it's because... We should say say every poll, every focus group, every time you talk to voters, here's the problem.
Voters think all politicians are hypocrites.
So when you go after a politician on hypocrisy grounds, it just doesn't land.
It doesn't land with the voters that you need.
They don't care about hypocrisy.
Hypocrisy is about the person.
Policies are about the people they affect. Right. Like hypocrisy is about the person's values. What they represent care about hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is about the person. Policies are about the people
they affect, right? Like hypocrisy is about the person's values, what they represent is about
their story. And by the way, J.D. Vance is very happy to talk about this and how he evolved in
Donald Trump and how it actually came to realize that Trump was the vehicle for taking on the
villains that he talks about in Hillbilly Elegy. He has a story ready to go about how to turn that
into a feature from a bug. So, yeah.
We should at least say that J.D. Vance is absolutely more full of shit than anyone in American politics. Yes. His position this week is prayers up for Hitler. So we should just be
clear about that. That's where he's at. Well, I was just saying, I don't know how he squares,
you know, calling Trump America's Hitler, even though he has evolved on that position
with what he tweeted to me the reason
he is completely unfit for office is hours after the assassination attempt before we knew almost
anything he tweets that president biden's rhetoric quote led directly to trump's attempted
assassination which is just not true baseless didn't know that was true even if he suspected
it why would you say it without any
other information it's crazy and um also it doesn't quite fit with the convention's unity
message no it doesn't ron johnson apparently called democratic policies a clear and present
danger to the nation and then he was asked by a reporter hey what happened to the unity message
he goes like oh that was accidentally actually the old pre-unity speech that was loaded into
the prompter they accidentally loaded the the division speech and not my unity speech.
You know, they accidentally loaded
in what we all believe, not what
we think that we have to say now to win.
We're doing this because we want
to win. We're close. They want unity. We want to give
them unity. This is also true.
No more unity.
Then it'll only be unity.
Yeah, unity.
Yes, that's a scary kind of unity.
But the, the, this is also, I think, like,
why the, the, the post-assassination attempt
turned down the temperature conversation
is a little, is kind of twisted
because, like, that's a, that's a good example
of just right-wing rhetoric has become
completely divorced from reality,
even when it's not inciting direct
or even indirect violence.
It is ascribing views,
policies and outcomes to Democrats in ways that just are not true. They're just making it up.
They're saying things. They say whatever they want to make the Democrats seem as evil and
terrible as possible and Republicans as the as the saviors. And that is part of why we are so
divided. That polarization, right wing propaganda is why we are so divided is what is raising the
temperature, even if you can't point to any specific example i didn't get to see a lot of the
convention i was did the unity thing work out what did you guys it was awesome it was a good time i
was just sort of really prepping for the show no it didn't i mean let me put this way i saw that
marjorie taylor green gave a speech that i was like it was it was bad but it wasn't usually it
wasn't bad because it was as as extreme as she usually is but she wasn't softening it was just
sort of lame it was like it was like mad it was like marjorie usually is, but she wasn't softening it. It was just sort of lame.
It was like Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Well, they cut her big finish,
which was burning Nancy Pelosi in effigies for her unity.
I thought she was just going to be like CrossFit.
Nothing really stuck out at me as either super unifying
or like really mean.
I mean, some pretty gross, disgusting attacks on trans people.
I didn't see that. From Marjorie Taylor Greene.
I missed that. Yeah. I did see
an image of Joe Biden falling up the stairs.
They did that one. They did do that. But
I didn't really hear... I don't know.
Nothing too exciting this first
night, right? I'm shocked that the night
where the primetime major speaker was
Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn.
I was waiting for a big reveal.
Anyway. Sort of a tough hit on Glenn Youngkin.
Oh yeah, he was there too.
Well, I mean, he had to open for Marsha Blackburn.
Let's talk about Joe Biden.
Obviously, up until saturday afternoon most of the focus has been on
biden and whether he's still the party's best chance to beat trump the assassination attempt
to stop that chatter for now at least president biden gave an oval office address about the attack
on sunday night and he had a previously scheduled primetime interview with lester Holt at NBC News on the books for tonight.
He went ahead with it. And the attack was a big focus there, too.
Let's listen to a clip of the Oval Office address, followed by a clip of Biden's interview with Lester Holt.
Violence has never been the answer, whether it's with members of Congress and both parties being targeted and shot or a violent mob attacking the Capitol on January 6th or an attempted assassination on Donald Trump.
There is no place in America for this kind of violence, for any violence ever.
But in America, we resolve our differences at the battle box.
That's how we do it, at the battle box, not with bullets.
On a call a week ago, you said it's time to put Trump in the bullseye.
There's some dispute about the context, but I think you appreciate that word.
I didn't say crosshairs.
I was talking about focus on.
Look, the truth of the matter was, what I guess I was talking about at the time was
there's very little focus on Trump's agenda.
Yeah, the term was bullseye.
It was a mistake to use the word. I didn't say crosshairs.
I meant bullseye. I meant focus on him. Focus on what he's doing. Focus on his policies. Focus on
the number of lies he told in the debate. I mean, there's a whole range of things.
Crosshairs just coming out of nowhere there. So what do you guys make of Biden's overall response to the shooting?
I think he has met the moment with the sobriety and seriousness that it deserves.
He did what he's supposed to do.
He went out and addressed the nation after it happened, after getting briefed by his team, returned immediately to Washington, met with his team in the Situation Room, then came out and updated the country on what he had learned.
met with his team in the situation room, then came out and updated the country on what he had learned.
And then in an attempt, I think, to bring the temperature down and return to what I think he believes is his sort of core political identity to try to give a call to unity in the wake of this. Like that is that is what you want the president to do. Right.
At a time of great stress and tension and fear and concern for the public,
the president should be out there. Put aside the election, the debate about his political future,
this is exactly what you would expect him to do in that moment. And he did all of those things.
Love it.
Yeah. I mean, I think what Dan is saying, I obviously agree with. I think he did all the
things that he was supposed to do. I think what is, I think, so troubling in moments like this is the best you can hope for from President Biden is that he does no damage rather than going out there and, I think, doing anything particularly inspiring or excellent.
There is a lot that could be said about what led to this moment.
There's a lot that could be said about the politics and culture as we head into this election that he, I don't think, can be a voice for. The best we can do is to have a short, to- defensively to every question from Lester Holt, even where he shouldn't be in a way turning every question into a kind of gotcha question where he feels as though he is, I think, reacting from a place of weakness. And the whole thing is very dispiriting. what he did basically from the shooting on Saturday through Sunday night in the interviews.
I think those are two separate things. Yes, of course. There's a long history of presidents
rising to rhetorical heights in times like this. Bill Clinton after the Oklahoma City bombing,
Reagan after Challenger, Obama after Newtown. We've seen that before.
Joe Biden has given a pretty inspiring moving speeches around January 6th.
I think his inaugural address, I think his address on the anniversary of January 6th,
he rose to the moment for sure.
Yes.
Sunday night was not that.
I thought the message was appropriate and fine.
Like, yes, he stumbled over some words, but he did fine.
He did fine.
And I think that we should at least point out
when he does fine right there are times when he landed the interview he landed the plane he landed
in the oval office address the interview less a few bumps on the way down well i can say the oval
office but you know i mean i really like lester holt but i i felt the questions at the top that
suggested that biden's rhetoric had anything to do with the shooter felt pretty baseless and unfair. And I could see why Biden was annoyed at those questions in particular.
But the frustration really came through.
And I think I counted two or three times where he kind of got annoyed and defensive and lashed
back at Lester and was like, why aren't you guys covering Trump's lies?
Why aren't you covering this?
Why aren't you?
And like, I just don't think that that that doesn't it didn't land great at times in the interview.
It felt defensive.
The question about the bullseye is extremely annoying question.
And what would have been the very easy answer is like, what do you mean?
I was talking about putting the focus on on Donald Trump.
Right.
That's what I said about his policies.
I said it at a fundraiser with a bunch of people.
That's what I'm going to.
So I'm going to incite people at a fundraiser. I'm going to say it's time to put the focus on Donald Trump. That's what I said about his policies. I said it at a fundraiser with a bunch of people. That's what I'm going to. So I'm going to incite people at a fundraiser. I'm going to say it's
time to put the focus on Donald Trump. That's what we should put the focus. I mean, it's just
such an easy response to an unfair, annoying question. He could even, by the way, say,
you know what, Lester, if people found that term to be wrong, I won't use it again. But I think
everybody knew exactly what I mean. You know, there's a lot of there's a lot of things a person
who is, I think, has a more of a capacity to respond quickly and effectively to a question could provide in those moments.
But instead, you get just a very hard to follow, defensive, confusing response.
Yeah. Well, Lester also asked Biden about the debate and the calls for him to step aside.
Let's listen to some of that.
The last TV interview you were asked if you had watched the debate.
Your answer was, I don't think so. No. Have you since seen it?
I've seen pieces of it. I've not watched the whole debate.
The reason I ask, because I guess the question is, are you all on the same page?
Are you seeing what they saw, which was moments of, frankly, that appeared to be you appeared to be confused?
which was moments of, frankly, that appeared to be confused.
Lester, look, why don't you guys ever talk about the 18 to 28 lies he told?
Where are you on this?
Why didn't the press ever talk about that?
28 times it's confirmed he lied in that debate.
I had a bad, bad night.
I wasn't feeling well at all and I had been
without a make up
I screwed up
I just asked a question because
the idea that you may or may not
have seen what
some of these other folks have seen
I'd have to see I was there
I'd have to see I was there
and by the way seriously you won't answer the question but why didn't the press talk about all the lies he told I had to see it. I was there.
By the way, seriously, you won't answer the question, but why didn't the press talk about
all the lies he told?
I don't know anything about that.
We have reported many of the issues that came up during that debate.
No, you haven't.
We'll provide you with them.
God love you.
Okay.
But if the opportunity came up to do one between now and then, is there a sense of wanting
to get back on the horse? I'm the horse where you've been i've done 22 major events and thousands of
people overwhelming crowds a lot happening a lot is happening tommy what'd you think of the uh
what'd you think of the interview i think i mean i thinkester's question, are you seeing what they saw is kind of
the core question that a lot of people are asking about the election generally. Like, does Joe Biden
know how bad the debate was or does he really think it was 90 minutes that didn't go well,
but four great years of policy? Is Biden seeing the bad polling that's out there or, you know,
polling from swing districts from people that don't work for him?
Is Biden hearing on Varner's concerns from down-ballot elected officials?
And again, I think what you heard was a response that just felt very defensive and angry at the question
more than looking to find an answer to kind of assuage those concerns more broadly.
There's another part in that, towards the end of the interview where Biden says,
when he talks about the events he's doing, I'm out there proving to people that I have my faculties.
So I have my faculties. And it's sad to see it's because if that's the threshold, right,
that's what he's out there proving. then we have a, that's not enough.
It's a massive problem, right?
The fact that we all, that he doesn't respond.
Lester Holt's question, right?
Like, do you know what we saw?
Like, were you confused?
We don't, it points to the fact that we still don't feel like we have gotten an adequate answer from Joe Biden about what happened that night.
We have gotten an adequate answer from Joe Biden about what happened that night.
And it just means that maybe he's right that the polls are closer and that people are sensationalizing gaps that are closeable.
But the question is, can he close them?
And the fact that we're going to get questions like this about Joe Biden over and over and over again,
and that the answers he provides doesn't feel like they give us the space to move on, is why people are so concerned. It's not just
what the polls are. It's the fear that he does not have the capacity to close them.
Dan, I keep trying to think about when you're advising a president or presidential candidate
and they keep screwing things up in interviews, right? Let's put the age coherence question
aside. Let's just talk about his message, right right so you see after the first couple times he's getting very defensive he only talks about his
account i'm the guy who did this i'm the guy who did this why aren't you reporting about the lies
the 28 all of which we know from research polling i'm sure his advisors know this are not effective
responses right even if you said them like super coherently and crisply. And after the first time you do that,
like maybe in the Stephanopoulos interview,
I would imagine everyone gets together with Joe Biden
before the next interview and say like,
hey, less defensive.
You don't want to be so defensive.
You want to talk about the choice in the election.
You want to pivot to the,
and then what do you think is,
do you think that's what they're telling him
and that he's just not doing it? Do think he's stubborn like i can't figure this
is what i can't figure out is like why can he not just get to the right message when he has these
same questions over and over again and you know they're going to be annoying you know you're going
to get questions about what was happening at the debate why was this bad like that's just how
reporters are and you just have to like figure out how deal with it. I am not sure he is getting all of the information and advice that he needs.
Yeah.
There have been multiple stories.
There's one in the Washington Post tonight about Biden shrinking his circle of advisors.
Some of the people who we know, we even know the people on the inside of the circle,
and they're all very smart.
But I think that there is a process to manage the president here.
And it does
not include necessarily giving him information he does not want to hear. And that includes that
your answers are not working. Right. Because there is just no basis in research, strategy,
or recent political history to suggest the approach he has taken to answering the questions.
Put aside the delivery, right? Let's just say he's delivered that. That's what I wanted to do. Yeah. Let's just put that aside. The answers are almost a masterclass in how not to persuade a swing voter. Yes. Right. And that is,
it is just, he is making the election all about himself. And there is, everyone knows in the
strategic imperative of their campaign, when they say is what they have to do is why they had that
first in the, they had that early debate in the first place was to try to shift the focus to Trump, to make it about Trump. And Biden has been incapable of
doing it. He's unwilling to do that in his answers, right? He keeps saying, I'm the guy who
did this. I'm the guy who did this. I'm the guy who did this and not, he doesn't even talk about
Trump in this interview or the future, by the way. Right. I mean, he, like, I will say on Friday,
I think that was, he went to Michigan and he gave a great speech.
Yeah.
Right. It was well delivered. It was energetic.
It was one of the best speeches he's delivered in many months.
Yeah. And both in delivery and content.
Yes.
It had a proactive, really impressive, very progressive second term agenda. It put the focus on Trump. It took his age.
Focus. The word is focus. The word is focus. And
it used his age as a asset, right? He took it on with some humility and they handled it. And that
is not translating off the prompter. But that, that to me, that was what I was, that's why I
brought up the future. Because what you want is for Joe Biden to take the speech he gives,
right? That everyone's reviewing and saying, finally, he's doing it. He's making the case
he needs to make. Get in front of Lester Holt and says, Lester Holt,
like people are worried about what you're going to do, what's going to happen in the next four
years, whether you're up to it. Not only am I up to it, here's what we're going to get done.
Here's what Donald Trump wants to do. But he does not do that. He just doesn't in these
interview settings. He's very defensive right now. He's in a defensive crouch since the debate.
And I think, because frankly, every conversation he's having with any person who is not in his immediate inner circle is a Lester Holt interview.
Right?
Just, he had these meetings with.
Truly a nightmare.
Members of Congress.
It is a nightmare.
Terribly, yeah.
I mean, he did these Zoom calls with a bunch of members of Congress.
All the reports are they went quite poorly.
Quite poorly.
And people are raising concerns.
He yelled at Jason Crow, who is a representative from Colorado,
who asked him about how do we make sure that foreign leaders have confidence
based on reporting.
And he said, stop with that.
Enough with that.
Don't give me.
And then he walked and then he left the call.
He could be right.
His team could be right.
We could all be wrong.
But he has just a fundamentally different view of where the race stands, the state of his campaign, and the state of his candidacy.
And I think it's challenging when the people closest to you, and it's a very small circle, are telling you potentially what you want to hear.
I remember a story in the 2004 campaign.
Barack Obama went to some event.
We were running against Alan Keyes at the time.
We were winning by 30 points, 40 points, right? There was not a real race. And Obama let Alan
Keyes walk up to him. They got in some sort of verbal exchange and it became a thing. It was
on all the news. And Obama gets back in the car and Robert Gibbs is sitting behind him and just
silently staring daggers into the back of the seat. And Obama kept turning around and being like,
what? What? What is it? You got something to say to say you something to say to me and gibbs goes you didn't just take the bait you swallowed the whole
goddamn hook right and it's like got in his face and was like you fucked up man don't do that i
don't care that you're up 30 when you say that to the candidate the candidate doesn't say thank you
you're right they hate you for days but you're like i'm just gonna do it because it's the important thing
to do and look i'm not saying we're none of us are saying this that like this is not happening
at all we don't know like it could be happening and biden could just be saying fuck you i don't
care i i just knowing the people around him i cannot imagine that they are all telling him
what he wants to hear that's we know all of these people there's there i like well there's some
there's some reporting that like some of his closest aides
are saying that they don't believe in polling,
and maybe that's where kind of
the rejection of polling language
you're coming from.
That's what I'm specifically talking about.
But even then, I read that today,
and it said...
There's some anonymous person
quoting the post.
Take this for what it is,
but it says that Mike Donilon
and Steve Ruscetti,
two of his closest advisors,
do not believe in polling.
That is going to come as a gigantic shock to the several pollsters on the Biden campaign.
Some of the best in the Democratic Party on the payroll, especially in a general election.
You get like, this is what this is on Kerry and Obama.
You get like a collection of five or six pollsters just so you have different different different strategies.
But yeah, you want the whole you want a big, diverse crew of pollsters.
I think that they are managing Joe Biden's moods right now.
I think he is a very prideful person.
And I imagine this debate knocked him for a loop.
He also hates to be called old.
He prides himself.
Like the aging, you see this in a lot of reporting.
He bristles at being, because he's been the youngest person.
He says this, but he's been the youngest person his whole life.
And now he is the oldest, to the point where people are saying too old.
And so you are trying.
Because if you push.
And Obama was a great boss to work for.
I've worked for more challenging bosses.
Where you have to.
You want to tell them what they.
You can't do what Gibbs did to Barack Obama there.
Because you will get the opposite effect.
With Biden.
Right.
So you got to.
I can't say whether that's how Biden is right now,
but sometimes you have to just sort of like take every inch you can get.
Cause you push too far.
It's going to go the other way.
I do remember that when there was a,
we were working on a speech for president Obama and in the speech,
it said something about how you can't make decisions based on the polls.
And as we're having that conversation with David Axelrod,
there was a giant binder on his desk that said polls on it and they're like hey what how how big is the binder
when you do make decisions based on polls and he shouts out to his assistant at the time now state
legislator eric lesser uh eric get in here and change this binder to say research
it was so funny i did just but like i do think like this is about politics we care about
this because the stakes for politics but it is what is happening with joe biden is not political
it is psychological it is human and personal and i do think that is really really hard and it's hard
i am sure for the people around him whatever whatever they are trying to do to make the
situation better it I, it is
an incredibly difficult situation. Well, there was some, a lot of discussion over the weekend,
you know, it does this sort of stop the conversation about, you know, whether Biden
should step aside in favor of Kamala Harris or another candidate. Um, because, you know,
now we've gone through this assassination attempt, and now we have the Republican convention,
so all the attention now is on Trump and the Republicans for the week.
Based on, it's Monday, but based on some of the polling that came out today,
there was some New York Times, Sienna, A-plus polls, swing state polls.
He's down four in Pennsylvania, three in Pennsylvania?
Three in Pennsylvania, and he's only up three. Biden is only up three in Virginia state that he went by 10 points. That would be a seven point swing to the right. He won Pennsylvania by one point. So that would be a four point swing to the right. Uh, in those polls, there was a number of other swing state polls. Uh, you go have polls came out in every swing state. He's behind four or five in every one.
behind four or five in every one. You can square some of this polling with the Biden campaign theory of the case that was laid out in their memo last week, which is they said, you know,
we are, it is a margin of error race in the battlegrounds we need to get to 270. So Wisconsin,
Pennsylvania, Michigan, and, you know, margin of error, error in those states could be three points,
four points behind. So yeah, they might just be three or four points behind in those blue wall states but the
question is again how do you make up three or four points in an incredibly polarized electorate where
both candidates are at 100 name id and every time he goes and does one of these interviews it you
know people who watch the interviews forget about listening to us or anyone else people who watch
the interviews are seeing this and if he just went out and gave the michigan speech every single day
between now and in november it's like yeah fighting chance for sure but i just you know maybe
polarization gets you there maybe you get close enough just based on people not liking donald
trump people thinking and knowing that joe biden is a good man who's done some great things as president, and that gets you close enough. And if he wins, that's how he wins.
But it's certainly not because he is communicating well or making the case as a candidate.
Like he obviously did not have some dramatic improvement as a candidate or a stay in the race
since the shooting, like nothing changed there. But something did change in terms of how people
how things happen in Washington, even before the shooting. In my head, my sort of deadline for whether Biden would stay in the race was today, was Monday.
That if he could make it through the weekend and make it to the Republican convention and the VP nomination, that he would have survived long enough.
Because these things have momentum and momentum peters out.
And it's just people, there were people were feeling pressure because the media was focused on this intently. That is not the
case. There are no stories about this now. It's not as big a deal. And so maybe something else
will happen, but this is Joe Biden's decision. It's only Joe Biden's decision. And it's what
has been abundantly clear is that nothing that any other person says to him is going to change
his mind. And he met with Hakeem Jeffries on Friday and Schumer on Saturday.
We don't know how those meetings went, but Joe Biden said he is 1000% still in the race.
And so this is where he is. At no point do we have one piece of reporting or evidence that he has
ever seriously considered or been open to the idea of stepping down. And that hasn't changed.
And I hesitate to see what
will change his mind because there's i don't i think it's like you see like the you know the
new york times sienna polls show him down five or six points in those swing states and like is that
going to do it i know unless like pelosi unless like there's you know there's there's reporting
that nancy pelosi does really want him to consider stepping aside and is working the phones on this.
Maybe if Pelosi goes to him, I don't know. I don't know. I think I talked to a member of Congress today and asked this question, like,
has the momentum stalled out? And this person said, no, the only difference between a couple
of days ago and now is that the conversation is quieted because of the assassination attempt.
But I've read in many news reports and
heard from this person that Pelosi still thinks there needs to be a change and that she's working
behind the scenes. And this person, you know, is worried that Biden's strategy is basically a
run-up-the-clock strategy. And that, you know, it might be hard to do anything through the RNC.
But I think what could change his mind is a big number of elected officials
coming out publicly and saying,
you need to go.
Obviously, these Zoom calls,
private conversations,
gentle cajoling, none of that works.
This person thought that firm,
harsh, very public pressure efforts
might actually change things. i i don't know
i'm just repeating what i was told i also i look i don't know that joe biden can be
like pushed out of the race right it seems like he can't but i i do wonder of what happens in
the quiet i mean look i i just to i don't know if i'm using this term correctly but but taking
the under on dan's point that of course joe biden has to be defiant. The second he is not defiant, the second he leaves any opening to the idea that he might not be in the race is the moment he's going to have to step down. That's what Ro Khanna said, basically. The second he would even say to a member of Congress, I'm thinking about it, is the second we're all talking about that. And it's happening before his eyes.
So the moment the it
will go from i will never i will never not be running till i'm out much like joe bryant's
interviews the words you use were incorrect but i got your meaning not even close the over under
would be like you score 100 points at a game oh i'm saying oh i see i see so the odds i'm saying
i have i think the odds are better than I say it is.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
So that's why.
Wouldn't I then take the under?
No, no, no.
Different bet.
That's about the spread?
The under.
What's the spread?
Okay.
We've gone on long enough.
People love this shit.
Again, just another facts-less assertion.
Which advisors around Lovett will tell him the truth?
Hey, guys.
Hey, guys.
Is he getting good information?
This is the kind of rhetoric.
How many podcasts have to come to you publicly?
I will not step down.
Axio says Pelosi wants you to shut the fuck up.
I will finish the job.
That is our show for tonight.
We'll be back tomorrow with reactions to all the latest and night two of the Republican National Convention.
What a good time we have coming up this week, boys.
Good times.
The best is yet to come.
Remember that?
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