Pod Save America - Trump’s Surprise Q-chella Set
Episode Date: May 16, 2023Ron DeSantis tries to reboot his presidential prospects in Iowa. Donald Trump calls into Mike Flynn’s QAnon rally. Joe Biden is much more optimistic about a debt ceiling deal than Kevin McCarthy. Se...nator Joe Manchin flirts with playing spoiler in 2024. And Diane Feinstein returns to the Senate. Then North Carolina Democratic Party Chair Anderson Clayton stops by to talk about her plans to turn the state blue.Join Friends of the Pod for bonus content, exclusive access and more: crooked.com/friends 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 Succession's spoiler, Jon Levin.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
Oh, are you why we're getting yelled at on Twitter?
No, no, no. That's a separate incident.
Okay. Okay. We'll sort this out in the after.
Anyway, I know we have to be careful on today's episode because even Tommy hasn't seen it.
I haven't seen it either.
You haven't either? What is wrong with you?
It's hard to get to it now. It's Sunday. A lot going on.
Anyway, on today's show, Ron DeSantis tries to reboot his presidential prospects in Iowa.
Donald Trump calls into Mike Flynn's QAnon rally.
Joe Biden is much more optimistic about a debt-sailing deal than Kevin McCarthy.
Senator Joe Manchin flirts with playing spoiler in 2024.
And Dianne Feinstein returns to the Senate.
Then I talked to the youngest Democratic Party chair in the country,
North Carolina's Anderson Clayton, about her plan to turn her state blue.
Tar Heel blue or Duke blue?
Oh, wow.
Tar Heel?
Elijah is here in studio.
I mean, Tar Heel blue is objectively a better blue.
No offense, Coach K or whatever.
It is.
Anyway, we have some big news first, though.
Huge news.
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Some of you may be wondering, what took you so long good question but uh you know we wanted to take the time to get this right gotta
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All right, let's get to the news.
Ron DeSantis is busy trying to revive a campaign that hasn't started yet.
He had Iowa to himself this weekend after Trump canceled an event in Des Moines
because of a tornado that never happened.
So DeSantis twisted the knife by making an unscheduled stop there in Des Moines.
Talking about how sunny the weather was.
It was pretty funny.
All right.
The New York Times says that he impressed the Republicans he met,
showing off the, quote,
sometimes enigmatic lighter side of his personality by flipping burgers.
Also, he let his wife talk a lot.
So I guess that's one way he showed up his personality
by by handing it over to his wife the bumper bowling that was this article is unbelievable
i know and i couldn't tell it's so funny because like a couple days before the new york times had
an article that was like why ron desantis is limping to the starting line i think and suddenly
like two days later he's impressing voters in Iowa.
I love, I just, I just love the idea that like,
finally the pugnacious DeSantis we've all heard about
because he said, nice weather we're having.
And he started flipping a few burgers.
They called it a pointed pit stop, which I think is a very, this is.
Yeah, we're really.
Really, really stretching.
The DeSantis team also invited Politico's Jonathan Martin to Tallahassee to make their case for the governor's candidacy, which is basically a their internal polling shows DeSantis does better than Trump against Biden in swing states.
And that he also has higher favorability ratings, especially in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.
Still, after a lot of Trump attacks on DeSantis.
in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, still after a lot of Trump attacks on DeSantis.
B, they think most of the big GOP donors will back DeSantis once he announces. And C,
they think he can unite the Republicans who aren't MAGA diehards and maybe is the only candidate who can do so. Do you guys buy any of this DeSantis spin? Is he being counted out a bit
too early? What do we think, Tommy? He's definitely being written off too early.
I mean, you could make a long list of candidates that were declared.
Their candidacy was declared dead, and then they went on to get the nomination.
John McCain in 2008 comes to mind.
Remember, he basically fired all the staff, moved everybody to New Hampshire, and started over.
So it's too early to write off.
We were pretty close, too.
We were not doing well for a while.
There was a, I remember, was it a New York Post story where the headline was,
Hillary ready to accept her coronation?
Yeah, that sounds right.
In September of 2007?
I got a frame in the office.
That went up on the wall.
That doesn't mean he's doing well.
But yes, it's definitely too early to write him off.
Yeah, I mean, you can't be written off any earlier and it's true so he hasn't announced yet he hasn't announced
uh i would say that if he goes down in flames it was the right time to write him off that's right
if he comes back it was too early okay well check back in with john love it some trenchant
ridiculous like yes of course it's all silly well let's talk about their case what do you buy about
the case what do you not buy about their case so there seems to be a couple core two or three
core arguments one uh is everyone knows the majority of the republican party wants to move on
said de santis's gubernatorial campaign manager and closest aide to jonathan martin
uh i think that's maybe that's true uh Uh, but Donald Trump is far and away the Republican
front runner at the moment. So it doesn't seem like all of them want to move on. So I'm not
sure that that quite adds up yet. There's probably a lot of moderate voters who do want to move on
from Trump. There's probably voters who are worried about, uh, electability that want to
move on from Donald Trump and look at the midterms and think he's at fault and look at 2020 and know
the reality of what happened was not that the election was stolen. But I think it's probably
a little early to make that argument or to say it's conclusive. Yeah, I would say that maybe
you can make an argument that they want to want to move on. But the surest sign that they don't
want to move on is that he's being is that DeSantis is being dominated by Trump in the polls. If he
can make this electability argument, then maybe people will want to move on to DeSantis.
So I think it's true that it's definitely true that most Republican voters are not paying
attention to the primary right now. And national polls don't tell you nearly as much as about the
race as early state polls. National polls never tell you much about a primary, but especially
this early and especially in comparison to these early state polls, which in fairness, Trump is still leading in a lot of these early state polls.
But again, it's early.
I do see some problems in the DeSantis case.
One, it's hard to unite the donors and the non-MAGA diehards when there are still so many other candidates in the race besides DeSantis and Trump.
And I think some of these donors who were like
maybe high on DeSantis at first and now are sort of backing away. They're not like going back to
Trump. They're like thinking about Nikki Haley or Tim Scott or some of these other people.
They're all getting quoted in the paper saying we're keeping our powder dry.
There's something so cynical about even the DeSantis spin already. If it's too early to
count them out, I feel like it's also at this point
they're they're saying, how dare you count him out? We have all these prospective reasons. We
think he's ultimately going to win this boxing match. He's stronger. He's fitter. He's he's able
to sustain himself over more rounds, but he's also not willing to punch yet. And they make this
argument like, well, obviously he's not going to start going after Trump until after he's officially
declared his candidacy. It's like, OK, well, then we'll see how it goes once you do that.
Yeah, I think I think his central challenge here is the elect is making the electability case.
And first of all, we've seen that some of DeSantis is more extreme positions like the six week abortion ban hurting his own electability argument and spooking donors and voters who were sort of thinking about DeSantis
because they thought he was more electable than Trump. And now he's taking these extreme positions
that don't make him so. And also, as you said, love it. He's got to make that case and he's got
to make it against Trump so that it's sharp enough to get attention and draw blood, but not too sharp
that it pisses off voters who still like Donald Trump, even if they might want
to move on. And that's a, and he has not figured that out yet. And it may be an unsolvable problem.
I mean, like there was another story, uh, I forget where, but, um, DeSantis can't even say
that Trump lost in 2020. That's what I was going to talk about here because he, he, he thinks he
can be, he thinks he can do this with subtlety. He says, like, we have to move on from this loser mentality. Here is my electability argument. But
he's now been asked dozens of times about the 2020 elections. He will not give an answer. He
has the audacity to be annoyed that he's being asked. And so how can you make a case that you
believe Donald Trump is a loser and therefore we must move on from him while endorsing election
deniers and refusing to
say that Donald Trump lost the election and forget how hypocritical it is and how illogical it is.
He just seems weak. He just seems like a politician. So it sort of hits him twice.
The other quote in the Jonathan Martin piece was not only will Republicans have significant
problems in traditional battleground states if Trump is the GOP nominee, but any of these
reach states would already be off the table. And I agree with you. I mean, that might be true, but DeSantis is
steadily weakening his own case with the abortion ban, with his culture war fights, with getting
beaten up by Disney and Bob Iger. So what the big takeaway I had from the Jonathan Martin piece was,
is DeSantis' staffers realize that they need to get in the game and play the game a little bit.
They can't cocoon him in Florida in a legislative session.
They can't only talk to bloggers at TPUSA or whatever.
They need to play the game a little bit.
So they call in the media elite that all the other elites read,
and they try to spin Jonathan Martin for a while.
I don't know.
I think Jonathan's piece, I saw him this weekend.
I talked to him about it.
He came away thinking, okay, these folks are getting in the game now. They're going to try, but they still have a lot of convincing to do.
What did you make of his Iowa trip as our resident Iowa expert?
Thanks for asking, John. I mean, like, so he's got a, what are those?
Corn cob?
No, no, no.
I know what you're thinking.
Like a hay, a piece of hay.
I'm really in touch with rural America here. Like what are those corn cob? No, no, no. Like I know you're thinking like a hay piece of hay. Really?
Real in touch with rural America.
He's got a chicken.
I don't know.
What do they do over there?
I can't.
It's hard to see from up in the plane.
Piece of straw.
Yeah.
Piece of straw.
Straw.
You know, we're landing on straw.
Sure.
All right. So this is what the guy.
Let me get on my hay bale real quick.
Tom Sawyer.
Chew on.
So the Des Moines Register headline was DeSantis in Iowa calls for positive alternative to Biden,
though absent Trump's presence was felt. So he was even felt in the headline. It was a completely
standard trip to Iowa. He went to Northwest Iowa to do this sort of fundraising event with a member
of Congress. All the Republican elites from the state were there, the governor, the AG,
all these statewide elected officials. So good thing to do. It's kind of like the Harkin steak fry, right? You flip some burgers,
you press the flesh, you meet with a bunch of influential people. Then I think he went to Cedar
Rapids, which is in Eastern Iowa. And I guess they just added this last minute stop to troll
Trump a little bit because he canceled his event with his fake tornado warning. So they went to
some barbecue place right by the airport in Des Moines, and I guess probably flew out that way. It was fine. You got the coverage you want. You check all the cliche
boxes. You talk about Casey's breakfast pizza, blah, blah, blah. The really weird thing about
this is DeSantis' super PAC announced a bunch of endorsements. I just don't get how you can
have a super PAC announcing endorsements for a campaign that doesn't exist yet.
Right. It's also weird that they're not allowed to coordinate.
So I guess it must mean that the DeSantis, some DeSantis org published the list publicly
and then the Super PAC had to run with it or they're just breaking the law, which is
just plausible.
It's so weird.
Speaking of this, the Super PAC, one more thing I wanted to say about that is after
the CNN town hall, DeSantis' super PAC just like
unloaded on Donald Trump. Yeah. They basically, they tweeted something that could have come from
like the DNC about everything that Donald Trump did wrong in the town hall, particularly focused
around electability. If DeSantis starts making a case like his super PAC has been making recently,
then I think he's got a, he's got a pretty decent shot, but he's kind of got to get to that level. Well, I think it's he has to actually make a case against Donald
Trump and then we will see. Is it working? Is it is it are we finally going to see if there's
actually going to be a contest here or not? Yeah. The only really interesting thing from the Iowa
standpoint that jumped out at me was this guy, Bob Vander Plaats, who's kind of a right wing
religious conservative activist, criticized Trump via tweet about for criticizing the six
week abortion ban. So it does seem like the first little inkling that maybe some activists think
there is some room to attack Trump from the right on that issue. I don't think it's going to work
personally, but it was notable. Yeah, I thought it was interesting about the the J-Mart piece,
too, is the way he framed it is like desantis has
to unite the like evangelical conservatives like the people who would have who are like behind ted
cruz in 2016 with like the more moderate john casick type republicans right with the mitch
mcconnell gop establishment those are like three pretty disparate groups to get together and i
don't know if he can i don't know if he can do that. Kept himself in the news by giving a long interview to a new outlet called The Messenger, where he mocked CNN for being traumatized by the town hall.
DeSantis for having, quote, no personality.
And he also, as you mentioned, Tommy, seemed vaguely critical of the governor's six week abortion ban, even though he refused to say whether he would sign or support a national version.
Trump also called into the Reawaken America rally on Saturday night,
which is a Christian nationalist organization that has ties to QAnon and Nazis,
and told convicted felon Mike Flynn that he will bring him back if he gets a second term.
Let's listen.
General Flynn, he's some general, he's some man. He took abuse like nobody could have handled, and he came out bigger, better, stronger than ever before.
We love him. He's a leader.
And you just stay wealthy and healthy and well and everything.
I want you to have great lives in general.
You just have to stay healthy because we're bringing you back.
We're going to bring you back.
My wife's going crazy.
Not the only one.
Yeah.
Trump always wants people to just have great lives.
He was reaching for healthy, wealthy, and wise, I think.
And he couldn't find it.
Stay wealthy, stay healthy.
You gotta stay healthy.
So I counted exactly three media mentions of Trump's call into QAnonpalooza.
A tweet from Never Trump pundit Ron Filipkowski
and pieces in Newsweek and Rolling Stone.
That's it.
Don't you think this should have been bigger news?
And why wasn't it?
Should it be bigger news?
I mean, is it that?
Any news.
Sure.
Any news.
Forget about bigger news.
Yes, I guess it should have been bigger news.
Dabbling with QAnon.
I don't know.
It's like he's been doing this sort of footsie
with QAnon on true social and Twitter forever. He's been he's been he pardoned Mike Mike Flynn for his crimes already. So, I mean, it's hard to get. I don't know. At this point, it's like, was this worth another cycle similar to the cycle that happened when Trump met met with anti-Semites and in Mar-a-Lago?
when Trump met with anti-Semites in Mar-a-Lago?
Probably, yeah, I think so.
But I don't know.
I don't know.
So this event, the Reawaken America tour,
I think it's bigger than even just QAnon.
It's like conspiracy theory Coachella.
Like you got the guy from Loose Change,
the 9-11 documentary, I think spoke at it.
There's a bunch of 5G conspiracy people that's anti-vaccine.
It's like white christian nationalists
they're all there they bring all these people together they cross-pollinate their crazy shit
and then they sell them merch and that's how they make money so it's just like grifting conspiracy
thing i agree it's like objectively a weird and big deal for the president united states to embrace
this conspiracy theory that if you really understand it says that uh jfk jr is still
alive and he's going to be president someday soon but But I think the truth is QAnon has become,
like truth social is the home of QAnon now. Trump re-truths Q people all the time. And I think a
couple of years ago, he was asked about QAnon and he said, is that supposed to be a bad thing? If I
can help save the world from problems, I'm willing to do it.
So he's been on the record kind of like endorsing it.
It felt incremental to me.
So everyone got very upset about the CNN 10 Hall.
I don't know if you guys noticed that.
Yeah.
Wait, when did that happen?
There's some people, people were a little upset about that.
I think that the greater danger in the media coverage of Trump this time around is not giving him a platform to say extremely unpopular shit.
I think it is failing to report when he says extremely unpopular shit because voters need a constant reminder of that if they are going to assess him as a candidate because no one has
any fucking memory whatsoever anymore. For sure. But did he come out in favor of Q at this rally or did he just call into a rally that is pro Q?
I think that's sort of the bank shot that makes it a little more complicated to report on.
He continues to associate himself with and seek the support of and praise some of the most heinous and unhinged people in our political process.
And also there were this was held at Trump Doral, one of his resorts.
There were two like neo-Nazis who they had to like disinvite from the thing.
There's so many horrible people associated with this.
And again, like, yeah, there was a whole news cycle around Kanye, Nick Fuentes and him meeting.
Like there should just be another one.
Why not remind people that he's doing this that is news there's a lawsuit out today against rudy giuliani by a
former staffer that is full of truly heinous allegations but one of them uh in this complaint
she alleges that rudy giuliani told her he was selling pardons for two million dollars each
and splitting the money with donald trump so yeah there's yeah, there's a lot of string to chase right now. Also, Mike Flynn, convicted criminal,
pardoned by Donald Trump,
but also wanted Trump to declare martial law
and seize voting machines,
spread a conspiracy that Italy used military satellites
to switch votes from Trump to Biden.
Well, that happened.
That's true.
Thinks COVID vaccines are infused with microchips
designed for mind control,
took a QAnon oath,
and then pled the fifth when asked by the January 6th committee if he believes in the peaceful transition of power.
And then Trump calls into a rally and says, want you back in the White House my second time around.
Think that's worth reporting.
Wish you well.
It's worth reporting.
Could be for lunch.
I mean, it's not good what it is.
The outrage over CNN letting Trump just say a bunch of shit that will make it less likely that he's elected president.
All right.
So Trump was asked by the Messenger, which is a new outlet that has raised a ton of money, run by the former editor of The Hill, Jimmy Finkelstein or something.
Yeah.
Who cares?
Trump friend or something.
Anyway, so the Messenger asked Trump why he's doing all these non-MAGA media interviews.
And Trump said, the one thing I find is that if it gets ratings, they know it.
They cover you, even if they say they're not going to.
Seems like a fairly accurate observation about the mainstream media.
But what do you guys think?
Absolutely.
Yeah, of course.
I think this goes to what you're saying before, though.
I feel like there are these two competing ideas that we have to have in Trump talked about the way Trump is covered and how we react to it, which is that like there is this valid and earned criticism of how like the mainstream press covers Trump.
They can, as you were saying, elide the threat, downplay or just do the work of making Trump make sense, right? Describing what he is, his rhetoric is having some cogent to it when it doesn't.
describing what he is, his rhetoric is having some cogent to it when it doesn't. Or even more damaging is just covering Trump actually, I think fairly, which they often do, but then trying to
elevate the sins of Democrats to kind of make it feel more level attacking Democrats or Washington
or Hillary or Biden. And like, that is something I think we have worked the refs pretty hard on
for the past, like now six years. And I think we've moved the needle, but not enough.
But then there's this other side of it, which is this fear that trump has these magical powers
and when he says deeply unpopular things in a town hall basically open to a national abortion
law proud of a turning road doesn't support ukraine supports default whatever it may be
pardoning the j6 pardoning the january 6 uh uh insurrectionist or not. Which even Josh Hawley disagreed with him on.
Really?
Yeah. Welcome to the resistance, Joshua. But there's this, I think this fear comes from a
lot of bewilderment about the fact that Trump could even get close to the White House in the
first place that we, the kind of careful watchers of politics can see how bad and dangerous he is,
but most people can't. But that's not true, right? And
there's a little bit of, I think, working the refs or attacking CNN because you're afraid of
what happens when Trump's words hit people's ears. And I think that to me is, can be, I think,
the least helpful form of sort of media outrage. I think it's, what do you think the media's job
is? I don't necessarily think that the media's job is to defeat donald trump or when they
interview him it's certainly not to when they interview him to like act like we would if we
interviewed donald trump that's not their job i do think their job is to just report in an objective
way what he's doing what he's saying and then let people decide for themselves and you're right most
people in the country have made up their minds about Donald Trump.
But again, it's just it's it's reminding people what he is doing, what he is saying all the time,
because otherwise, you know, it all sort of gets mashed up and you forget all the crazy shit.
We forget everything.
I forgot all that Mike Flynn stuff I just read.
I forgot most of that until I read it today.
And that Donald Trump is at his least popular when he's most present, which is another lesson
that I think we kind of, our memories lose resolution.
And I think there's a lot of people who remember rightly that Trump sucked up the oxygen in
the 2016 primaries and no one else could really kind of catch up to him.
And there was the CNN with the empty podium and it was all treated like a joke.
And so when they see a CNN town hall coming, they go, has the media learned nothing? As if it's a rhetorical question. It's
like, no, they've learned a lot, but also they still do things that are pretty shitty sometimes.
It's actually more nuanced than that. And I think in hindsight, when you look back on 2016 and to a
lesser extent 2020, was the problem the amount of coverage that Donald Trump had got or was the
problem the kind of coverage he got and the way Democrats were covered in the horse race
that sort of denied enough attention to the actual stakes. And also probably don't take them live
with a friendly audience. You know, Caitlin Collins did a lot of good work there, but like,
let's give a shock collar on the guy. You're not going to fact check everything. So it's,
you know, expectations management here for everybody. To your point about 2016, though,
if you gave me a choice between, uh, I wish we had more fact checks everything so it's you know expectations management here for everybody to your point about 2016 though if you gave me a choice between uh i wish we had more fact checks
on donald trump speeches or uh a fewer stories about hillary clinton's emails i definitely take
the fewer stories about hillary's emails over the course it was the we're not we are not fact
checking our way uh to a donald trump defeat in 2024 that is not the fucking problem if the if the
if the if the fact
check gun fired uh strong enough rounds i think we would be in a different situation oh i didn't
know he was a liar oh my goodness my goodness my goodness my god i would not have voted for
what do you mean it's not true he's a liar none of this is true but he went on television
let's talk about joe biden uh who's meeting with congressional leaders Tuesday in an attempt to avoid a catastrophic default that's just a few weeks away.
Janet Yellen on Monday came out again and said, oh, yeah, June 1st, still the deadline, still the X stage.
Janet Yellen being.
Here we go.
Jesus.
Wow.
I was not.
We're going to make another Janet Yellen poop joke.
No,
I wasn't.
I was going to say,
I was going to say she is being,
you know,
Congress is filled with children and she is being a teacher,
giving them a deadline,
uh,
that,
uh,
they probably can blow through safely.
That's a good metaphor.
I like that.
Um,
while she,
uh,
desperately,
desperately tries to...
John, keep going.
Anyway, the president told reporters over the weekend
that he's optimistic about negotiating a deal with Republicans
and laid out some policy conditions.
He's a no on work requirements for Medicaid,
sounded like a maybe on work requirements for other aid programs.
Meanwhile, House Republicans are now adding border policy
to their list of debt ceiling demands,
which doesn't seem all that constructive. I kevin mccarthy gave a press conference on monday
where he's like no we're not at all close things are bad we're not making progress i think joe
biden doesn't really want a deal all that bullshit so let's talk about biden he certainly seems to
have moved off his position of refusing to negotiate over the debt ceiling you think that's
a smart move? Did he
realistically have any other options? I mean, I think what the White House would say is we will
negotiate over the budget. We will not negotiate over the debt ceiling. You can tell me it's a
distinction without a difference. But I think the point they are trying to say is you are not giving
us something when you offer to raise the debt ceiling. If you want to negotiate, let's negotiate.
But the Washington Post just reported that the White House proposed closing about a dozen tax loopholes to get money in,
reduce the deficit. It got immediately rejected by the Republican Party. Congressman Dusty Johnson,
real name, who is a moderate apparently, said their two red lines are no clean debt ceiling
increase and no tax increases. I'm sorry, that's just not a serious position. You're not seriously concerned about the debt if you won't
consider raising more revenue. One of those loopholes was in the stock market, there's
something called the wash rule. So if I bought shares of Apple, the price went down and I sell
it for a loss, I can't immediately buy Apple again, and then write off that loss
for my taxes, and then still own the stock. You have to wait 30 days. There's no wash rule for
cryptocurrency. So they proposed creating one as one of the loopholes to raise a bunch of money,
and the Republicans in the House said no. That's a stupid position to take. Of course,
you should not be able to just game the system by buying and selling crypto all the time and writing off all your cap gains. So the Republicans are not
serious about this. Kevin McCarthy's comments show that they are not serious. I think the White
House is just looking for concessions on the other side, and then they'll probably offer some of
their own. But it doesn't feel like we're getting close. Yeah, I will say there's something
interesting about the contours of this negotiation that Biden
can go out there and say, I'm optimistic. I'm feeling good about the progress we're making.
And he views that as good for his politics. And Kevin McCarthy goes out there and says,
we're nowhere. We're getting nowhere. And he sees that as good for his politics.
That doesn't bode well, I think, for where we're headed.
I think for where we're headed. I'm sure the white house like believes that this Republican house is very likely to blow up the economy if they don't get their way and then hope that voters
will blame Biden because he's the guy in charge. I'm not sure they're wrong about that. Um, so that
leaves for Biden, the choices of unilateral action, like invoking the 14th Amendment or
negotiation. And as Tommy said, a negotiation where you say, look, even if there was no debt
ceiling, we would still have to have these negotiations over all these programs, these
spending programs, because we need a budget or else the government shuts down, which is not as
bad as a default, but still something that we have to deal with. So these negotiations would happen
regardless of the debt ceiling.
And so they're going to try to separate those two. But unless, you know, the Biden folks decide that they can legally do the 14th Amendment thing or mint the coin or whatever the fuck you want to
throw out there, they have to negotiate. There is no other way.
Yeah, it's interesting. You know, Biden having been part of the 2011 negotiations, which were seen as a mistake by the consensus was that, oh, Obama and Biden made a blunder by opening up the debt ceiling to negotiations and they wouldn't do it thereafter.
When you that line, which was a really good line to draw, draw meant that the only ways Republicans could open up debt ceiling negotiations again in the future is not by just feigning crazy, but by being crazy. They actually had to radicalize to the point that we now sincerely and I think rightly, as opposed to in the past, believe that they truly would default.
And once they have that power and it is power, the willingness to bankrupt the country and to destroy the global economy to extract concussions, they have a lot of power.
And you're also getting even more conservative members, senior senior members in the House trying to add things like, you know, immigration policy into a debt ceiling deal.
And, you know, like that's impossible. The goalposts are being moved on on Joe Biden every single day.
I mean, if you can't get dusty johnson to the table
what are you gonna do and not just immigration policy i mean they want they want to finish the
wall they wanted to they just passed a bill republicans passed a bill through the house
uh on immigration on border policy that would like finish trump's wall crack down on asylum
seekers even more etc etc so it's like i don't know what do you think the politics are republicans
threatening to blow up the economy unless b agrees to finish Trump's border wall? people would hold Joe Biden accountable. A lot of the mainstream and like even sophisticated political coverage ultimately sort of redounds to, oh, they're so far apart. This is politics
today. Politics is broken. And I don't I don't think we have successfully made any kind of a
case that Republicans are holding the economy hostage or want to bankrupt the economy to get
these spending cuts. And we that's a case that we just need if we're if we really are pushing
towards this abyss, that case has to be made so that they worry that they will face the consequences. Well, the other issue is that the
coverage and a lot of the elite opinion is, yeah, we know Republicans are crazy and that they would
blow up the economy. But President Biden's supposed to be the adult. So shouldn't he give a
little bit? Right. Which is so fucking annoying. The Green Lantern just leave. I do think on your
immigration question, John, I think immigration is probably the last thing that Joe Biden wants
the conversation and the coverage to be about, because I think it's probably the area where they're pulling the worst. It's the thing where the country is the most united in frustration with the bill that the House Republicans passed to avoid the debt ceiling,
that in itself would cut border enforcement, border security. So they know that's on people's
mind. That's sort of a political issue that's that's tricky. There are pieces of that House
bill, though, that would ultimately be part of a comprehensive immigration reform proposal that
even Biden would support. Like there's E-Verify in there, which is about
just making sure that when companies hire people, that they verify that they are eligible to work.
There's rules around visa overstay, which sounded pretty draconian to me, but would again,
be part of any kind of compromise. Who knows what's going to come out? They're meeting again
tomorrow and we're in the middle of a negotiation. It seems like it's in a lot of flux,
but one way the negotiation widened beyond budgeting is that now permitting reform is part of the conversation. So there are some ways in
which the widening of the scope gets you away from needing to give on things like crazy draconian
caps, right? And you can find other policies where you can have given something. So who knows?
I just can't figure out how they do this because unspent COVID funds, it seems like they can agree
on that. Permitting reform, it seems like you could like they can agree on that permitting reform it seems
like you could get to an agreement on that they want budget caps right cap on spending republicans
want it for 10 years the biden folks say they want it closer to two years i don't know how you meet
in the middle on that and then this this work requirement stuff where republicans said they
they must have work requirements on medicaid and that's a red line for President Biden and Democrats.
So like, I don't, we also, by the way,
there's only currently scheduled four days
between now and June 1st,
where both the House and the Senate are in session
at the same time.
Joe Biden goes to Japan this week.
Wednesday, yeah.
And like, unless he wants to,
unless Biden cancels his trip,
unless they cancel congressional recess next week,
great week for recess.
Take some time.
Let's just pause for a moment
to talk about the fact that adults have recess
as long as you're elected.
I'm sorry, it's a work period.
It's a district work period.
As Janet Yellen eats another full fucking roll of Tums.
Just trying to get something.
Something going.
I feel like the opposite of that.
But sure.
Yeah.
I'm not sure that's why.
Anyway, it doesn't seem like we're in a good spot.
All eyes turn to Dusty Johnson in the moderates.
How about the 14th Amendment?
I would love that thing.
Send it through the courts now.
See what we got.
14th Amendment.
No skips.
That's the beauty of it. People don't talk about it. Every fucking article we got 14th amendment no skips that's the beauty
of it people don't talk about it uh every fucking article the 14th amendment is a banger it's a
banger it rules all right we've talked before about how the uh democrats debt ceiling strategy
might be complicated by uh perpetual pain in the ass joe mansion but dc's most famous houseboat
resident may also tank the party's 2024 prospects and with it democracy
mansion is a co-chair of the third party spoiler group no labels which says it's quote laying the
groundwork for a potential independent unity ticket in 2024 and they have already gained
ballot access in swing states like arizona and colorado umchin recently met with a 170 Iowa business and community leaders in D.C.
and has been issuing cryptic statements about his political future, like, quote, I will
win any race that I enter.
Now, I would say there's one thing I've seen that number, 170 business leaders in Iowa.
Several of them were cows.
Leave that in how worried are you that uh joe mansion might be the uh connor roy of 2024 con heads i am very worried about a third party bid i'm worried if that third party bid is led by Joe Manchin. This could be the difference.
I mean, having a spoiler that got a bunch of votes is the reason Hillary Clinton didn't become
president and not having one in 2020 was one of the reasons that Joe Biden was able to become
president. So I think there is reason to be concerned that something like this can gain
traction and then kind of spin out of control and gain its own momentum. And then even after it is mostly, if not fully abandoned, there are enough ballots
where they have some godforsaken ticket garnering votes that it can make the difference. I really,
we should be worried about that. I'm going to put on my optimist hat. Let's hear it. Yeah.
And just hope that Joe Manchin's play here is to understand that to get reelected in West Virginia,
he has to put as much distance
between himself and the White House and Joe Biden and the Democratic Party as humanly possible.
And maybe flirting with no labels is a path to doing that. He's also threatened to hold up
all of Joe Biden's EPA nominees because he's mad about the implementation of the climate bill.
He's really like making a lot
of noise. He's attacking the White House. It has worked for him in the past. You know, running and
getting reelected in 2024 in that state is going to be tough. But that's my optimistic take.
Here's what I think we got to root for. There are probably two candidates running on the Republican
side in West Virginia for the Senate nomination. One is extremely popular governor, Jim Justice, who used to be a Democrat. He's basically like
another Joe Manchin. And everyone in the state knows him, very popular governor there. If he
wins the nomination, I really worry that Joe Manchin will bow out and potentially make this
third party no labels bid. If Mooney wins the super right-wing kook
that Manchin has beaten before,
then I think Manchin probably sees,
okay, I have a chance to win.
The only thing though is like,
if Manchin runs as the no labels third party,
like he's going to lose.
And so I guess you do it, why?
Because you're promised some sort of job
by the Republican side.
I mean, both outcomes end in a humiliating defeat.
So I'm not sure what's in it for him.
Or Joe Manchin is as dumb as we sometimes think he is and and believes, as no labels says, they believe that there is some path for a third party candidate.
And we should say that it's not in no labels. It always makes this known.
It's not a an independent ticket. It's a unity ticket, meaning you would run one Democrat, which presumably would be a Joe Manchin or a Kyrsten Sinema or someone like that, and one Republican.
Susan Collins is also co-chair of this.
But some kind of Republican, so then you'd get both of them.
And perhaps they wrongly see a path to win, which, again, it's crazy that you could imagine a third-party candidate winning.
There was a call that the head of No Labels did with a bunch of donors that was reported by Puck.
And first of all, there's one part in which Nancy Jacobson, who leads No Labels, says that they got Pearl Harbor'd by Third Way.
Yeah.
Because Third Way is the one that said, hey, everybody, look out.
This third party bid is coming.
That was their Pearl Harbor.
And so they got Pearl Harbor'd by a memo, which I just enjoyed the phrasing of.
But they weren't planning to have this out there yet, which is, I think, why.
And basically, they knew that what was coming is you're just going to be a spoiler.
But what was interesting in the call is there's one point where Jacobson says this.
And I do actually find this reassuring.
But what was interesting in the call is there's one point where Jacobson says this, and I do actually find this reassuring.
If this is not a national sensation and the crowds are not coming out, then it's not happening.
We're getting out of this. We can get out of this by the end of August.
Pull the plug.
That's the latest we can get off the ballot.
I know there's a lot of fears about all this.
What I'd love to hear on these calls is more of a can-do spirit of why can't we convince other people?
Why can't we do this? So even on this call with donors, there was a little bit of what she
described as dark and doom and gloom. So that to me was reassuring and that at least underneath
the bravado and the bullshit, there's some understanding that this may be a completely
futile and stupid and grift Pearl Harbor. Here's one example of how dangerous this could be.
In 2016, voters who didn't like Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton voted for,
tended to vote for Donald Trump. He won those voters. And partly because some of them went for Jill Stein or Gary Johnson.
In 2020, voters who didn't like Trump or Biden still chose Biden by 15 points.
You give those voters a third choice in 2024, it's going to hurt Biden.
And it doesn't have to hurt him by that much.
A couple states.
Arizona, Colorado, that's it.
You're done. It's an enormously dangerous and stupid
organization. They're raising 70 million, they said, or they want to, including 100 grand from
Clarence Thomas's sugar daddy, Harlan Crowe. So that's fun. Also, the voters who happen to be
the weakest partisans also happen to be the most low information voters and the most, the more
likely to think maybe a unity ticket could win because
they're not paying close attention to politics so that's again another reason why this is dangerous
yeah it's very bad it's yeah cynical and gross maybe i'll get 9-11 by the brookings institute
i don't know i'm just thinking out loud here i do think at some point we just got like
the third way memo of the great the pearl harbor attack um a day that will live in infinite that will that
needs to be like you know democratic groups super PACs all that they need to get the message out to
more people that if this does happen there is no chance the unity ticket is is winning and so
you're just throwing away your vote if you're voting listen i i think i'm opposed to mindless partisanship and you know the silly tribalism that we sometimes see politics, but I will wait for it
I can mindless sentries mindless centrism is equally stupid just combining Republicans and Democrats together
It doesn't mean you stand for something
I'm a Democrat because I believe in a bunch of things that unbalance the Democratic Party supports
That's why people join political parties. Treating that like a sinful act
or like it's gross or distasteful,
stupid and annoying and classic,
like DC idiot centrist debate.
But maybe he'll run on permitting reform.
That's great.
It's also just like you step back from all of it.
It's like Joe Manchin,
who has confirmed all these Democratic judges
who has supported,
who made possible passing the
inflation reduction act which is the biggest investment in climate in history it's like
well i love it love is cutting an ad for no labels here well no no no it's my point like
put aside all the put us all all the kind of process stuff that joe manchin really cares
about about the way that washington works like this guy has like he by by his policy votes he
should be like terrified of a trump presidency man Man, your criticism of Dianne Feinstein and praise of Joe Manchin is troubling.
Speaking of which.
Speaking of whom.
She's back.
Yeah, she's back, baby.
She has returned to the Senate and already voted to advance six federal judges who'd been stuck in the Judiciary Committee because of her absence.
She lifted a Volkswagen off a kid.
That's also true.
She also said, though, that her doctors have advised her to work a lighter schedule due to lingering side effects from shingles.
So, all's well that ends well, or should Lovett stick with his plan to stay to sit in outside her Senate office?
I would say this.
All's well that ends.
Like, she's back.
She's not resigning.
I don't know how much more pressure we could have put on this 89-year-old woman.
We all collectively did a great thing, which is got her to travel before her doctors
wanted her to. Now she's voting in the Senate. She's not going anywhere. We got our judiciary
votes. Let's make sure she votes for the fucking subpoenas. I don't know what else we're supposed
to do at this point. I don't know how much more, how much more heat we can bring on this old lady.
I'm glad she's doing the bare minimum. Left unsaid is the opportunity cost of having a
senator that's, I don't know, working really hard for the biggest state in the country.
Yeah. A senator is more than an arm that goes like this at the right time.
Hey, as long as we can hear eyes.
You can put an eye together. Yeah.
Her staff refused the Washington Post request for any sort of memo from her doctor detailing
what's going on, the complications that prevented her from traveling. They're just
not disclosing anything. So this is not a good situation I I'll also say
that the fact that the day she got back um she voted for six judges who'd been stuck out of
committee to advance them sort of uh belies the argument yeah or some other Democrats that this
was not causing any problems sure does yeah that was that turns out it was causing any problems. Sure does. Yeah, that was, that turns out. It really was causing some problems. Yeah.
Yeah, not having a senator causes some problems
on the Judiciary Committee.
Yeah.
It was ridiculous.
We live in,
we live in the fifth largest economy
in the world here
and we're represented by,
we've been being represented
by one senator.
One senator.
Here in California.
Well, fucking Wyoming's got two,
you know?
Yeah.
You know, state less than,
I don't
know 500,000 people versus like 10 million in LA county okay I kind of like Wyoming though it's a
nice place to go man of the people I can see both sides mindless yeah mindless part I'm sick of all
this mindless partisanship anyway what anyway when that's it that's all we have we got when we come back i will talk to
the uh up and coming 25 year old who is the state party chair of north carolina anderson clayton
and she's got a lot to say about how to turn north carolina blue in 2024 Joining us now is the chair of the North Carolina Democratic Party.
At 25, she's also the youngest party chair in the country.
Anderson Clayton, welcome to Pod Save America.
Thanks, John. I'm so excited to be on and just happy to be here.
Well, we're happy to have you.
So I was on the Obama campaign
when we won North Carolina in 2008. And we all thought that by now, the state would vote more
like Virginia or even Georgia. But no Democratic presidential or Senate candidate has won the state
since. Why do you think that is? I mean, I think Obama really had a inspiring and galvanizing across North Carolina support.
He was one of those once in a lifetime type of candidates that I think that just really
touched people from all across North Carolina.
And I think in order to be able to campaign in our state, you have to hit all 100 counties.
And I remember, honestly, people in Person County, I took over.
I was the Person County Democratic Party chair before I became the state party chair.
And I had people that would look at me and be like, I remember when Barack Obama had an office
here. And I was like, there's no way that Barack Obama had an office in Person County. But he had
an organizer here. And they remember him being like the person that everyone went to and that
everyone saw that campaign. And so I think when you see the trajectory that North Carolina has
taken, we've let go of the grassroots a little bit more since Obama's campaign here.
But also our state's just had a hard time with Republican majority.
And also since 2010, when they took back our state maps, we saw an increase in gerrymandering, racial gerrymandering across our state.
And so when you really look at what we've been up against, I think, over the last decade and a half really here, it's been hard for us to beat Republican extremism in that capacity.
So The Washington Post reported today that President Biden does plan to invest in North Carolina and hopefully win the state in 2024.
What would you advise the campaign to do differently from what they did when they lost the state in 2020?
I think that for us, that comes in a lot from the party perspective, too. You know, we didn't have
100 strong county party operations when Joe Biden ran in 2020. We didn't have a Democratic messenger
in every community, in every county getting out his message. And for me, really this year in rural
North Carolina in particular, I want to go ahead and I want to tout, you know, the bipartisan
infrastructure bill and the American Rescue Plan. But genuinely, because I
think that both these two pieces of legislation are historic. And for the first time, you know,
I'm from a rural part of the state. And, you know, Joe Biden is looking at rural North Carolina and
rural America and basically saying, we believe you deserve to have a future 50 years from now.
And there's such a powerful thought to that message, because that's not happened in the
last 50 years of a federal administration. We've never seen the investment in trying to bring back
manufacturing and really make things locally again. And Joe Biden wants to do that. And
particularly when you look at North Carolina's history and economically, you know, we had a
huge downfall in 2008. My dad lost his job in 2007. He was in manufacturing before that in
textiles in Western North Carolina. And we saw a
big population of our state just lose their jobs. And Joe Biden is trying to rectify that by bringing
manufacturing back to North Carolina and back to the United States again. And I think that that's
something we can run on in North Carolina. And we need to run on it really strong, honestly. And
that's what I plan to do, John. So, yeah. Nice. I like it. I want to ask you more about state politics. Republicans in the legislature just passed a 12 week abortion ban. Democratic
Governor Roy Cooper vetoed it over the weekend. But Republicans in the legislature hold a
slim supermajority so they can override the veto if they all vote together. Is there anything
Democrats can do to prevent that from happening? What are you guys thinking? We're trying to
organize the best that we can. You know, Cooper has done an amazing job going across the state
over the last week and a half because Republicans did this under the cover of darkness, right? Last
week, we had 48 hours to really understand what the 12-week abortion ban would be in North Carolina,
one of the strictest abortion bans that we've seen throughout our state. When you think about
the actual ramifications of the bill inside of the 46 page piece of legislation, also it basically takes medication abortion down,
limits it down to 10 weeks. And there's also stipulations in there where women have to go to
their provider at least three different times before they're able to actually have an abortion.
And so really when you're looking at women that are coming in from across the country and
especially across the Southeast region, it just makes that access harder and so we're really trying to push these republicans
and let them people in their districts know what's going on right now because not everyone is paying
attention to what's happening in raleigh and that's an unfortunate reality when you have
so many other things that are going on across the state and also in your life but we're trying to
make sure that the voters in those districts are aware of it and we're doing phone banks banks, hosting really like strong rallies, trying to bring as much attention to this as possible because Republicans are afraid and they should be afraid of the people that they're doing this to. her party affiliation and went from campaigning on abortion rights to voting for the 12-week ban.
Do you have any insight into why she switched parties? It's a real head-scratcher for a lot
of people reading this from outside of the state. Yeah, there's a lot of speculation,
I think, going around right now about why Representative Cotham made the choices that
she did. And for me, I think it just comes down to the fact that she maybe was never actually a champion for any sort of values that she has,
in particular about how she's taken the vote last week, right? I mean, she voted with Republicans.
And I think that she owes it to the people of this state to be able to explain why she's having
them question democracy right now. People voted her in to represent their values and their best
interests. And right now, Tricia Cotham represent their values and their best interest.
And right now, Tricia Cotham is representing politics above party.
And I think that's something that's really interesting to me.
But it's also a head scratcher for us to be real with you, John, right?
Like, I tell people, I'm like, you know, I wish folks would actually ask Tricia Cotham that because I'm not a mind reader.
I don't know why she's making these decisions.
And folks can't get her to answer the phone for some reason.
I mean, it's hard when your constituents are demanding things of you and
want to see, you know, whether or not you're going to uphold the values that you ran on. But yeah.
Well, you mentioned your constituents. Do you think Democrats can win back her seat
or break the supermajority in 2024? What are the chances?
I plan on it.
All right. I like that. I like that confidence. Governor Cooper is obviously term limited,
so you'll have a very important governor's race in 2024, especially since the Republican running
for his seat, Mark Robinson, is one of the more extreme candidates we've seen. What should people
know about Robinson and how do you feel about the potential Democratic candidates?
I think that folks need to understand that Mark Robinson is someone to be fearful of.
And he's someone that's not to be taken lightly.
And I think that a lot of folks brush him off as though no one in North Carolina would ever vote for someone that extreme.
And I need my party to get the reality drilled into them that, yes, they would.
And it's because I think that he's relatable in some capacities, especially to rural North Carolina. And North Carolina has the second largest rural
population in accordance to Texas, right? And people don't often know that about our state,
but we have really dense rural populations, including in, you know, Northeastern North
Carolina and Southeastern North Carolina, heavy majority black and brown communities that live in
these areas. And I think that our job
as a party is to really educate folks about who Mark Robinson is, the positions that he stood on.
You know, he's someone that said if he could pass a heartbeat bill tomorrow for abortion, he would.
Even in the case of rape and incest, he would not allow a woman to have an abortion.
And he's calling the LGBTQ community filth. He doesn't believe that you should be allowed to
be who you are. And I think that
it's devastating when you look at what he would do to our economy here in North Carolina, what he
would do to our public schools here in North Carolina. I mean, he basically believes in
segregation of schools again. And I think that you have to see the reality of that for what it is,
rather than the picture that he's painting right now. But he paints a dang good picture,
to be honest with you, John, and has so far since he's announced. And so my job has really become, I need to help
explain this to people and help folks understand what we're fighting for as a party this year,
which is everything that he's not. And do you feel like you guys have some good
Democratic candidates? I was about to say, but to your point about my Democrats this year,
I think we've got some good ones. And I think that we're going to really make sure that we,
there's a good juxtaposition there with not just, you know, who are you voting against, but who are you voting for?
And in this election cycle, there's so much good to vote for in North Carolina.
When you think about, you know, marijuana passing in our state, you know, making or pushing that forward in some capacities when you're actually legalizing that and bringing in the tax revenue back to our public schools, hopefully.
that and bringing in the tax revenue back to our public schools, hopefully, when you actually think about, you know, we just got Medicaid passed through our state legislature, finally, because
they finally realized they could not repeal that or go back on it. And I think that there's a real
opportunity for us to message on that. But in general, also municipal broadband access, making
that something that we campaign on this year in rural North Carolina, our Democratic legislators
and our Democratic governor, people that are running for governor this year in our state, but also
running for every position on council of state this year, I think are exciting, dynamic, ready
to get out across North Carolina and really campaign everywhere. So that's what we're gonna
have to do. You've mentioned Democrats needing to do better in rural parts of the state. I know you're from a rural community
in North Carolina. How much of this is about sort of infrastructure showing up in rural communities
and how much is about the message when you're in a rural community? It's funny that you asked that
because I've really looked at folks lately and I've said, I don't think we have a messaging
problem. I think we have a showing up problem. We just don't do it. Like we, we have everything to message on right
now in rural North Carolina. Like the fact that the reason your community has got three to $5
million and you're for you, not only your municipality, but also your County as a whole,
like, where's that money going? If I'm in rural North Carolina right now, the only meeting I want
to be going to is my city council meeting and my County commissioner meeting. And I want to go,
where's my money? Where's my money for my Democrats at the federal level right now?
And where are you putting it? Because this money was supposed to be given to communities to make
them better and to actually bring them back out of the pandemic crisis that we've been in,
especially for a small economy. And it's supposed to be bringing revitalization back to your
community. And so how are your county commissioners and your local municipal elector elections, like, or folks that were elected municipally, right, focused on, like, bringing
that change back to your area with the money that's coming down from the federal government.
And so I think that there's a huge opportunity for us to go in and talk about, you know,
the affordable connectivity program right now, $30 off a month of your internet bill, if you make
200% below the poverty line.
And in North Carolina, fun fact, John, that is $44,000 a year.
And when I go into rural North Carolina and I say that, folks look at me and they go,
Anderson, that's a good job.
What you talking about?
And I'm like, yeah, you're poor.
That's what that means.
Like, you're poor, unfortunately.
And I think that there's a reality to put a number with the legislation and the things that are coming down from the federal government to really help folks realize like, wow, this is talking about me.
It's helping me at the end of the day.
And, you know, as someone from a rural community, you know, oftentimes rural communities have more culturally conservative values. And then the question is always, can a strong economic message, economic populism,
talking about sort of the economic benefits the Democrats can bring to rural America,
is that enough to sort of overcome folks' positions that are a little more culturally
and socially conservative in those areas? What would you say about that?
Does it have to overcome it? And like, I think that people are really thinking of, and when I say I'm talking about organizing rural North Carolina,
folks go,
well,
how are we going to win back rural North Carolina?
And I'm like,
I'm not talking about winning them back just yet.
That's going to take a long time.
We got to trust in these areas.
We got to let them know that Democrats are not some sort of scary,
like apparatus anymore.
And like,
we're not,
we're not the party of coastal elites,
honestly.
Like we've got a rebranding problem to do in some of these areas where it's just like, we haven't been there for
so long. So the Fox News rabbit hole that people have been down has been able to message for us.
They've been able to put out that intricacies for us, right? Or that stereotype, I want to say. But
I really do think that there's an opportunity to break margins. And I tell folks all the time,
I'm not just telling you to go out there and talk to rural voters. I'm talking to rural Democrats. Like, who do we still have in this party that's
in these areas that haven't been talked to by us, haven't been tapped into, aren't getting out to
vote? And in North Carolina, that's the problem, right? In other rural areas that I've been in,
that's not the issue. You know, that's not the issue maybe in Iowa. It's not the issue maybe
in Eastern Kentucky sometimes. But I do believe that it is a reality in North Carolina. We have
black and brown
populations that live in rural areas that are just not being talked to. Their doors are not being
knocked. And when we're losing, you know, 80-20 in a rural area versus when we used to lose by 60-40,
like those margins matter. And I think we've gotten so far away from believing that elections
are won on the margins. But Joe Biden losing by 2020 or by a hundred thousand votes in 2020 to me is a margin. Like it's something I haven't done, right? It's Sherry Beasley losing
by 134,000. Like that's a margin. And I, and I'm chasing those this year, everywhere I can find
them from rural to my young folks, to like every place in between that, like, we just have to pick
up those votes because I know they're there. Um, and not even talking about the new registration
efforts that we're trying to do. Like, I want to get more people registered to vote this year. That should be the job of a party
always is how are we engaging new voters and getting them there. So yeah. What made you run
for party chair at 25? I was mad. To be honest with you, I was really, really mad. At rural
North Carolina being ignored because I'm like, people like me live in rural North Carolina right now. And I grew up there believing that no one ever thought the
same way that I did or wanted to see this place change like I did. And I'm like, no, it's worth
going back to. And it's worth having that fight because there are more people like me that live
there. And I grew up with a gay best friend in Person County. And I think that, you know, there
are more folks that are part of the LGBTQ community than we realize in North Carolina and like rural North Carolina and rural America in general.
And they need a place to also feel like they can be themselves growing up there.
So, yeah.
That's great.
There's a lot of people your age who aren't super excited about a second Biden campaign.
What would you tell them?
I'd tell them that the Democratic Party is the only party right now putting up a fight for your right to exist and to love who you want to love, to have the rights to
your body that you want to have, and to actually make change. I know a lot of young folks feel like
the parties are broken, the party structure in general, the two-party system is broken.
And I will give them, when you're looking at how politics is run right now, it's really divisive.
It feels ugly, and it doesn't motivate people to get involved with it, but better people, unless better people get involved
with politics, politics doesn't get any better. And I think that there's a whole movement that
we have to change as young folks of saying like, there's one party that we can change though.
There's one party that wants us to get involved though. And that is the democratic party. And so
when you're, when you're, when I'm looking at how do I welcome new folks in? I'm like, what do young
folks want to do? Like, how can I train you?
And there's so many young people.
The thing that I heard most when I was running for this office is they said, Anderson, where are the young folks?
Like, none of them want to get involved.
And every young person I've talked to has been like, how do I get involved?
How do I bring my skillsets to the party?
Like, what can I do differently?
And I was just talking with someone earlier about how do we do an organizing boot camp for young people this summer just because I've talked to so many of them.
In particular, in rural North Carolina.
I was in Davidson County the other day and met like six young folks that just came out of the blue.
And I was like, oh, my gosh.
Like, they're here.
And we just have to find them and tap into them.
Anderson, your energy and optimism about the future of your state and the party are inspiring and infectious.
It's been it's been such a pleasure to talk to you.
And I I really wish you luck because we could we could use more of that in the Democratic Party.
So thank you for it. Thank you for joining.
No, thank you. I'm going to know that look that I can get.
And thank you for everything that you've done for the party.
Like genuinely, there's a whole inspirational speech that I go on about that,
but I just want to say,
thank you.
Iowa was a dream.
And that's where I think I really learned like retail politics and how it
should be run.
So,
and I feel like Barack Obama set that off for everybody.
He sure did.
He sure did.
Well,
thank you for saying that.
That's very kind.
And again,
good luck.
And thanks for coming on the show.
Yeah.
Thank you.
OK, before we go, Republicans took control of the House six months ago with a lot of big promises about investigating Joe Biden.
But so far, they've come up with nothing. Last week, House Oversight Chair James Comer released a 30-page memo on the Biden family's business dealings that didn't implicate the president himself
in any wrongdoing whatsoever. When asked about the much-hyped whistleblowers and informants by
kooky conspiracy theorist Maria Bartiromo, here's what Comer said.
Where is that informant today?
Where are these whistleblowers?
Well, unfortunately, we can't track down the informant.
We're hopeful that the informant is still there.
The whistleblower knows the informant.
The whistleblower is very credible.
Hold on a second, Congressman.
Did you just say that the whistleblower or the informant is now missing?
Well, we're hopeful that we can find the informant.
Remember, these informants are kind of in the spy business,
so they don't make a habit of being seen a lot or being high profile or anything like that.
Yeah, it's like the girlfriend he met at summer camp that no one uh no one has ever met
informants are like airpods they just they fall on the couch you drop you drop that thing it flies
that informant fly halfway across that case you gotta explode open i do like that maria tried to
change that quickly from we can't find to has gone missing yeah well i was just glad to see that she
learned her lesson from the dominion lawsuit yeah about you know good guests and sources and you
know sort of checking everything twice yeah the imaginary the imaginary informant is quickly
turning into the informant that the biden white house may disappear right the the biden i'm sure
uh sure he was on hillary's list the informer hillary's kill list yeah found somewhere with
adrenochrome they are they're all talking about this Like there's a whistleblower, there's an FBI.
And it's also like,
you know what?
I'm sure there is some
disgruntled FBI person somewhere
that's going to be able
to say something,
some salacious allegation
against Joe Biden
that is probably unsupported,
most likely unsupported
since they have now
been investigating this
for the better part of a year.
Right.
Can't find anything.
A former FBI agent was prosecuted on January 6th, too. So, yeah. Right.
Yeah. Come in all different shapes and sizes over there. Yeah. Yeah. It's it's a lot of like
innuendo, which is it's we're late in the game for innuendo. They've been doing this for months.
Yeah. I don't know. Doesn't sound like they got anything. They have not tied anything directly
to Joe Biden, any of his decisions. He releases his tax returns every year, like show us where he he benefited financially. They haven't done any of this.
And yet it gets an audience on Fox News. And I know that, you know, DOJ is deciding now whether
to prosecute Hunter Biden for, you know, gun charges or whatever else. Art crimes,
crimes against art. But even then, it's like, you know, well, that's that's going to be,
you know, it's going to be really tough for Hunter Biden's presidential run in 2024. Like they, they,
they have not connected anything directly to Joe Biden. They haven't even alleged,
they haven't even been to, been able to allege anything that's connected to directly to Joe
Biden only to say that, oh, how could he have not known that his family was making some money from
foreign sources, which is also again
not illegal they maybe didn't ask them yeah a lot of insinuation uh they haven't tied anything to
joe biden uh trump has a chinese bank account the hunter biden getting in trouble for like
lying on a gun application saying a permit application saying he was not using drugs
when he wasn't it's almost like silly, unrelated charge.
They don't want Hunter Biden to be able to use the Second Amendment rights?
I guess not.
Wow. Disgusting.
Anyway, tough for James Comer.
Thank you, Anderson Clayton, for joining us today.
And we will talk to you later this week.
Bye, everyone.
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