Pod Save America - “Well that was terrible.”
Episode Date: August 28, 2020Jon, Jon, Tommy, and Dan break down Donald Trump’s acceptance speech and discuss how the Republican National Convention will shape the final 67 days of the 2020 campaign. ...
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Welcome to Pod Save America.
I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's pod, the gang's all here to talk about Donald Trump's acceptance speech in the entire Republican National Convention,
which I think has been going on for about three months now? Four? Five?
Forever.
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Yeah, I was going to say, use that code crooked volunteer yeah i was gonna say use that code
crooked still please thank you okay so uh the best news i have for all of you today is the
republican national convention is over um in the middle of a pandemic and a recession donald trump
delivered a fairly low energy acceptance speech on wednesday night that lasted well over an hour
in front of about 1500 mostly unmasked supporters who were crowded together on the South Lawn of the White House.
Here is a clip. My fellow Americans tonight with a heart full of gratitude and boundless optimism.
I profoundly accept this nomination for president of the United States.
Profoundly.
He profoundly accepted.
I want to spend most of our time on the substance and message of the speech, but I do think this is a case where the setting and the optics
were part of the intended message.
What did you guys think?
Did you say the medium is the message, John?
I can't remember what I'm saying.
But the optics of it look impressive, right?
If you're just seeing images of it, it looks grandiose and presidential because he's standing in front of the president's house,
which is illegal, obviously. But I want to separate sort of like the people who just see
the image of it from people who will see coverage of the image of it, because those are two separate
things that have different impacts. If you're someone who just happens to pick up a newspaper
and you see a picture of Trump standing before the White House with a crowd before him, I think that evinces some
measure of strength to some number of people. If you are reading coverage of it, I think that is a
much messier deal where you were reading about the potential illegality, the norm breaking of it,
the unprecedented nature of it, and the huge non-socially distanced unmasked crowd,
which I think muddled his message a little bit. He would have
been much better off doing this like Pence did somewhere other than the White House. I don't
think the optics were worth the noise since the overwhelming majority of people will consume
coverage of the speech, not the speech itself. Yeah, Tommy, I'm more wondering about like
people like most of us who are watching the speech from their homes, which they have not
been able to leave in months or and when they do leave them have to wear masks and socially
distance and not see their friends and then they and family and then they see the speech with just
a couple thousand people on the White House lawn all crowded together with no masks on.
Yeah, I mean, look, we'll get into this even more when we talk about his message. But like last
night, the White House lawn looked like the coronavirus does not exist.
And maybe projecting normalcy makes people feel like there's light at the end of the tunnel.
But given how bad his COVID handling numbers are, I would worry about making that bet.
I mean, so, yeah, I don't know.
I mean, look, what I saw that watching him and Melania walk down the stairs in that long, like boom shot, like it
looked to me like some fascist leader who has used the entire power of the state to benefit himself
politically. That was my takeaway. Yes, it's pretty. The White House is gorgeous, but it was
like it hit me in a dark way. Love it. What do you think? Yeah, I think I felt the same way. I think it was a fascist event. I think we should
be very angry and upset about the Hatch Act violation. I think we should be angry and upset
about reporters diminishing it or dismissing it because of assumptions about what works and what
doesn't work. That said, I also think we all we live in a country that doesn't fetishize the White
House as much as Donald Trump thinks we do. I think that he used the bully pulpit. There are plenty of images of Donald Trump giving speeches
in front of, around the White House. He was denied a big convention moment, but I don't know that
being on the South Lawn is that much more impressive or presidential in terms of what
it projects than if you were doing it in a convention hall or to Dan's point somewhere else.
But so that was sort of my feeling
on it. I think what makes it important is that, you know, consistently Donald Trump is, you know,
he's a raptor testing the fences. And this is yet another way he is showing that he can abuse his
office, even the language that we use around it. You know, Trump blurring the lines between the
Trump campaign and the White House. It's not really true. He's not blurring the lines. He's
using the White House to do a campaign event. The White House did not become part of his campaign.
He just abused the White House. If we manage to get Trump out, we won't have to reassess
whether or not the White House continues to be part of Trump's campaign. There's no blurred line.
There's an abuse of power.
Are you saying that we shouldn't call theft blurring the lines of ownership?
That's right. That's exactly right. Yes. That's a great way to put it, Dan. What a smart
communication of what I was trying to say. I'm so grateful. So grateful.
I guess what bothers me more than all the Hatch Act problems is just like,
More than all the Hatch Act problems.
It's just like, I'm watching him at the end of the speech.
Like, look at his name be spelled out in fireworks over the Washington Monument.
There's like tens of millions of people unemployed, millions of people sick with the deadly virus. We've lost 180,000 people to this pandemic.
Like, it's the most out of touch thing i've ever fucking seen a president do in
the middle of a re-election hugo chavez on a balcony cheering for himself as fireworks go off
and millions of people live in poverty it was it was nuts i can't believe that happened you know
it's like i just i almost i want us to go at it i want more democrats to go at it from the like
you are fucking over the working people of this country who are also
sick and scared of getting sick so that you can live in your fucking, you know, with all of your
rich friends on a lawn watching fireworks. I'd rather that be the argument than like,
you're violating the Hatch Act. I think the COVID part is probably the most
politically significant part of it, just in the way that the abnormal setting of the Democratic convention reinforced the
message about Trump's mishandling of the pandemic.
Seeing all of these unmasked people sitting together in ways no one has seen anyone sitting
anywhere, not at a Trump event for six months, reinforces the great critique of Trump that
he is not taking the virus seriously enough.
And they did do work over the first three days of the convention with videos about testing and people talking about the China ban and all of that. And they undid that and more with the images of those events.
or, right? Like we're not the Biden campaign and like picking a message. I think that yesterday,
the Washington Post reported that over the course of the first term, taxpayers have paid Trump $900,000 at his personal resorts because he takes trips there all the time. Like the Hatch Act
violation, that self-dealing, it all rolls into one narrative that I think is a story we should
be telling and should be part of this coverage. On top of that, having a fireworks display for
yourself in the midst of 30 million people unemployed is nuts for an entirely different reason.
It's completely out of touch, as you said.
I think it's a very good point that it is all one story for sure.
And I do want to note that a senior White House official also said to CNN last night about the non-socially distanced crowd that was sitting there.
Everybody is going to catch this thing eventually.
And I'm attending and then reading that and be like,
what?
Which is the plan.
This is the white house.
This is Donald Trump's plan for their coronavirus is everyone's going to
catch it.
Eventually it is herd immunity.
That is the policy of this country.
Goes to Herman Cain is like,
uh,
Oh,
yeah,
but still, but still tweeting. Love it. i was gonna from him from a speech writing standpoint from a technical standpoint what did you think about the overall quality of the speech
and the delivery yeah so so the delivery was terrible it was very um it was very halting he
kind of does his teleprompter voice he He seemed tired. He seemed hot. You know, everybody was baking. It was like, you know, it was 90 degrees,
very humid in DC. Seemed like he was feeling it. I've been trying to articulate this. It's hard to,
it's hard to get right. But like, there's something about him saying, I profoundly accept
your nomination that I think captures like the reason his speeches are so terrible. And you
realize like, what is that speech? Well, it's Stephen Miller, kind of a vicious, you know, little creep, no empathy, no kind of real deep
appreciation for any sort of positive values, channeling Donald Trump, a similar kind of
person with really kind of no ability to capture the grandeur of the presidency,
the importance of the presidency, the actual stakes, the actual profundity of what's happening
in our country and in this moment. And so what happens when these two people try to do an
impression of big, emotional, patriotic ideas, you end up with just actual, just gibberish,
just big words. It's like somebody went through the kind of history of presidential speeches,
took out the words that Lincoln and Eisenhower and Reagan,
Obama would use, and then just like, well, that's your vocabulary. See what you come up with. But
of course, they don't have the ability to use those words to tell any kind of moving or real
grounded story because they're terrible human beings who don't know how to empathize with
anybody. So we're left with shit. That's what I think. It was more than three times the length
of Joe Biden's speech. It was the second longest convention speech in history.
The longest speech in history was Donald Trump in 2016.
That's actually another thing, too.
It was actually shocking how much it bounced around, how many times it came back.
It had a terrible, lazy structure.
He kept coming back to crime, circling back to Joe Biden, circling back to earlier messages.
It ended three or four times.
It was just a mess.
Like, structurally, it was not a story. It was just a series of the hits they were trying to deliver
over what felt like an eternity. There are two reviews that he definitely won't like.
Surprisingly flat and didn't seem to have the bite he usually has in his speeches.
That was Fox News's Chris Wallace. And then Chris has a point. Brit Hume said the speech was very
long. It's a tough, tough two weeks for Trump when Fox News says that Wallace. And then Chris has a point. Brit Hume said the speech was very long.
It's a tough, tough two weeks for Trump when Fox News says that Biden gave a great speech and he gave a bad one. Not ideal. I mean, listen, I thought it was boring, too.
I think that my reaction to having watched the whole speech or the whole RNC is probably much less important than the narratives that spin out.
And my takeaway was Trump does seem to finally have settled on a message, which is that no one will be safe in Joe Biden's America.
And the evidence is violence currently happening in Donald Trump's America.
And time will tell if that cognitive dissonance plays.
But, you know, Kellyanne Conway admitted again that they want more violence because they think it helps them politically.
politically. I think that's a risky bet to prioritize crime when polling from like this month shows that the coronavirus is like at 35% the most important issue people see.
I think crime was 4%. And it's just not the thing voters are most worried about,
but like maybe they can shift the numbers. But like, you know, my biggest personal takeaway
from his speech was just exhaustion. Watching the Tulsa rally, hey, that
was kind of fun, right? This was a brutal four-day slog. Every minute of the event was littered with
constant brazen lying. And the big picture, very sad political takeaway is if you lie all the time
about everything, it's impossible to hold you accountable, so he's going to keep doing it.
And then if you break the law by violating the Hatch Act or other ethics rules, the media will kind of give you a
pass. And that just sucks. That's the reality we live in. Yeah, Trump's Trump's challenge is that
when he reads prompter speeches, it's clear that he's only read them for the second time at most,
maybe the first time. And so you can get him on message, but then his delivery is pretty boring
because he hates the speech. Or you can get him at the Tulsa rally where he's interesting to listen to and keeps the crowd's attention, but says 85 crazy fucking things during the speech that gets you off message.
So it is sort of a...
But Tommy, you mentioned sort of the larger takeaway.
Let's talk about how Trump attempted to frame the race as an existential choice about the future of the country.
We have a clip this election will decide whether we save the american dream or whether we allow a socialist
agenda to demolish our cherished destiny it will decide whether we rapidly create millions of high
paying jobs or whether we crush our industries and
send millions of these jobs overseas, as has foolishly been done for many decades, your
vote will decide whether we protect law-abiding Americans or whether we give free rein to to violent anarchists and agitators and criminals who threaten our citizens.
And this election will decide whether we will defend the American way of life or whether we
will allow a radical movement to completely dismantle and destroy it. That won't happen.
dismantle and destroy it. That won't happen. Oh, Dan, who do you think the intended audience was for Trump's speech? And what was sort of the overall strategy behind it?
That is a great question, John, that frankly, no one knows the answer to.
I mean, the Republican convention was largely a mess, but there were some relatively effective
moments throughout the week. I don't think Trump's speech was one of them.
who have left him to try to bring them back into the fold and to try to fire up the base,
and particularly the non-voting or sporadic voting likely Trump voters in the Midwest.
And so it's this, it is equal parts, I'm not as bad as you think, and I'm even worse than they let you know.
So wink, wink, come support me, right?
So it's like
for the people in the suburbs, I'm less racist. For those other base voters, I'm even more racist.
You know, so like, I'm not sure that works. I do think to Tommy's point is they have a narrative
about Joe Biden now that they are running with that. I don't know if it'll work, but it could.
running with that I don't know if it'll work, but it could.
Yeah. I thought this was a suburbs message, especially suburban women,
because he's been saying for weeks on Twitter, hey, you like that suburban neighborhood you live in with only single family homes? It'd be a damn shame if something happened to it when Joe
Biden installs low-income housing in your neighborhood, right? I mean, the subtext has
become the text. Chris Murphy, U.S. Senator Chris Murphy tweeted, our president is now a proud vocal segregationist.
And, you know, we know Biden is up 16 points among registered women and 13 points with suburban
women. So I thought he was maybe trying to close that gap. I agree. And I think it was more of a
cohesive message than I even thought at first, which is like Joe Biden and the radical left are
going to destroy the suburbs. They're going to let crime run rampant. There's not going to be
law and order. And they're going to tell you that if you worry about that, you're racist,
but you're not racist. And neither am I, because here's all the black people speaking at my
convention. But also here are the racist things I'm going to say. But it's like, I can say these
things and they're not racist. And the
proof of them not being racist is the people I've surrounded myself with at the convention
and the fact that I have pardoned Alice Johnson and done other criminal justice reform stuff that
should show you that I'm not racist. And this is just purely a law and order chaos issue, right?
That is sort of the whole thing they've been trying to put together.
And I would just add that if they can, and if as part of that sort of broader strategy, they can muddy the waters enough to pick off
just a small number of Democratic-based voters, just get enough people to stay home or come along,
right? Just win just enough of the black vote in Wisconsin, win enough of the black vote
in Pennsylvania, they could potentially, potentially eke out a win because this is going to be
potentially so close. So he did have a couple different arguments about Joe Biden in
the speech. Tommy, you mentioned, you know, no one will be safe in Joe Biden's America was sort
of the main argument. And he actually spent the majority of the entire speech, not just his attacks on Joe Biden, his entire speech on the issue of crime, lied again about Biden being for defunding the police, all that kind of stuff.
And, of course, Mike Pence also had the line, no one will be safe in Joe Biden's America in his speech.
So it was a concerted message.
There were a few other messages about Joe Biden in the speech.
speech. So it was a concerted message. There were a few other messages about Joe Biden in the speech.
He accused him of being a tool of Washington who, quote, spent his career outsourcing the dreams of American workers, offshoring their jobs, opening their borders and sending their sons and daughters
to fight in endless wars. He said Joe Biden's agenda was made in China. He accused him of
socialism. What do you guys what do you guys think is the most effective argument against Joe Biden?
Do you think it's the main argument about crime or do you think it was some of these others?
I mean, I remember Robert Gibbs once taught me early on in my career that the first rule of spin is it has to be believable.
And I would go with the argument, hey, the economy was rocking.
I'm a business guy.
I know how to do this.
We got hit with a once in a century pandemic.
We're climbing back out.
Give me the keys.
I'll get us back there fast. D.C. Joe will give you more of the same.
I found myself the same. I thought when he was getting to the Washington stuff that he's been
there for 47 years. I was like, well, that's an argument. It's very hard, I think, to say
Joe Biden has been there for 47 years and he hasn't done anything. But now he will destroy
the country with by partnering with the radical left.
It's just a hard, that's a hard message.
I don't want to over give them more credit than they think.
I think those, they work together
because saying Joe Biden has been there for 47 years
is part that he is part of the establishment.
It's also saying he's old.
And what they're trying to say,
they're not trying to say that he has this vigorous desire
to make America socialist.
It's just that he is old and weak, and therefore AOC, the squad, Bernie Sanders,
Nancy Pelosi, pick your Fox News bogey person du jour will drive the agenda.
And it's what they're looking at there.
And it's not a crazy strategy.
Like all things-
It's a little complex.
Well, I think the idea that Joe Biden is old and weak,
and therefore the people calling the shots are the Democrats you don't like, not like Joe Biden,
who you think might be OK, who's a Democrat who might be acceptable to you. That's not a crazy
message that can't bring some of his voters back. I don't think it's executed particularly clearly
in this speech or throughout this convention, but it could, you know, it could
absolutely work if it's not responded to appropriately. So Trump did acknowledge the
raging pandemic in his speech, though it was mostly to say that actually his administration
has handled everything perfectly. Joe Biden has a plan to shut down the entire country,
which is not true. He did not for much of a plan to actually control the virus other than to say
that we'll have a safe and effective vaccine this year. Good news, everyone. And that and then he
said this, quote, We are focusing on the science, the facts and the data. We are aggressively
sheltering those at highest risk, especially the elderly, while allowing lower risk Americans to
safely return to work and school, which really is just another way of saying everyone's going to get it eventually.
Do you guys love it?
Do you think he did anything in the speech or this week to fix his COVID problem,
knowing that it's the top concern for voters, if not tied with the economy,
and that large majorities believe that he's handling the issue poorly?
I mean, look, that's what's so absurd about this this whole conversation about like the incredible threat Joe Biden poses to the
country when we're in the midst of a massive crisis that has leveled the country. We're in
as deep a hole as we've been in in our lives. I can't imagine that that super spreader event
is going to help people believe that Donald Trump is taking the virus seriously,
is going to help people believe that Donald Trump is taking the virus seriously.
You know, super spreading lies, if you will, just workshopping it. And, you know, the event itself is like an epidemiological version of the lies that they told throughout the campaign, which is
just a kind of brazen disregard for anybody who takes the virus seriously, takes the truth
seriously. It's I think one of the reasons that it felt so painful to watch this convention,
I think, to Tommy's point, like why it was so like enervating and depleting is because
it's not that they don't know that what they're saying isn't true. And it's not that they don't
know that liberals and some in the media will try to make them pay a price for it. It's that
they're saying to all of us, they don't care.
They don't care that you're going to call this a super spreader event.
They don't care that it's morally reprehensible. They don't care at all because they're trying to tell us that this is no longer a conversation.
It's no longer a conversation about the law.
It's no longer a conversation about what's best for the country.
It's no longer actual debate about solving problems.
It's about power.
It's about subjugation.
It's about winning at all
costs, even if they have to do it illegally or by stealing the election. That is what to me
is so ultimately scary about this political event. It is the combination of the law breaking
and the lack of respect for the pandemic because it's sending everyone a message
that they don't care about anything but power. Here's my question for you guys. So like our
lives in L.A. and San Francisco, they are unrecognizable to what
they were last year, right? I'm still locked in my house. We never worked together. I was talking
to a friend yesterday who had just gotten back from Michigan. And she said, kind of felt like
things were all back open, like gyms were still closed, but like people were acting like the world
was moving on a little bit. I don't, I can't confirm that, but I guess my point is,
I don't know how things feel in Philadelphia or Pittsburgh or Milwaukee right now. The national polling suggests that 60% of the country is worried about social distancing ending too soon
versus 30% who worry it will go on too long, but that could change over time. I mean, Trump's kind
of rolling the dice on one, projecting things being better through this event, through his rhetoric could maybe make you think it's better. And two, that he can roll out some like snake oil miracle cure between now and Election Day. Those are big bets, but we'll see.
I think about that more than I even think about the effect of some of these protests and some of the violence that has taken place in some of the protests in some of these cities and how that will have an effect on the race. I think of sort of like the shape of the pandemic and where it's going.
Like, are we in another period like we were in in May, in June, where it seemed like things were calming down and everything went back to normal?
And then around the 4th of July, there were outbreaks around the South and the Southwest. And here
where we live in Los Angeles, there was one, right? So like you're starting to see that too
with some of these schools opening, like colleges are opening and then they're closing down again,
schools are opening and then like hundreds of people are testing positive. Like the one thing
that the virus has shown from the beginning is that like the virus is incredibly patient and it can wait us out.
And the only thing that's changing are policies around social distancing and closing things down or opening them.
The virus isn't changing.
Right.
We're getting we're getting a little better at treating the virus.
Right.
Like when people do the hospitalizations are improving, when people do go to the hospital, they're less likely to die.
Like just because we're getting better at treating it.
But the virus isn't,
the virus is gonna keep spreading
if you give it the oxygen to spread.
Yeah, I would just also add that too,
that like it is also true
that sort of the risk ebbs and flows
in the sense that, you know,
there have been outbreaks,
places have opened and had to close as John's saying.
But the aggregate is more and more people in the country,
no people who have had it,
no people who have died from it or faced serious consequences from it. And like the order of magnitude now, like we're
not talking about something that's rare. We're talking about, you know, you know, places in like
Arizona where like one in 30 people have had it, right? Like that's a huge percentage of people
in a population to have had something because that means everybody knows people that have had it. So
like, I don't, I, you know, I think it's a totally fair question. But like, you know, all evidence that I have seen
makes me think that Trump is underestimating people's fears about this virus. Yeah. So as far
as sketching out a second term agenda, the speech was fairly short on specifics. Trump made a vague
promise to create 10 million jobs, reduce taxes and regulations, appoint more judges, keep out immigrants, kick the shit out of China, battle cancel culture.
One of the best lines in the speech, in a funny way, was at the end when he said cancel culture never created America.
So good.
Or like America wasn't built by cancel culture.
It was something ridiculous.
It kind of was, though.
It kind of fucking was.
The Declaration of Independence is canceling King George III.
The Declaration of Independence is a declaration of cancellation.
And it's time we talk about it.
He also proposed putting the first woman on the moon.
That was just thrown out there.
Yeah, it's Hillary Clinton.
That's who he thinks we should send.
Good one.
Dan, did Trump say enough about his second term agenda?
How much do we think it matters?
I don't think it matters that much.
I mean, he gave people an impression of what a second term of Trump would be like,
which is the first term up until six months ago.
If you like that, then you should want four more years of that.
And whether he was never,
he didn't really have any plans when he ran the first time other than the wall, that's still the centerpiece of his agenda. I don't, I wish we had a president who had some desire or idea of what he
would do with the power given to him to improve the country one way or the other. But Trump has
never been that person and he won despite being that person in 2016. So it's not about necessarily for the vast majority of voters to specific policies,
it's about whether you have a vision of what it looks like. And I think he did paint that,
whether that is a broadly acceptable enough vision to win reelection, that's a very debatable point.
But he is not someone who is known for or needs a laundry list of policies because he's a
moron, basically.
It's such a weird choice.
I agree with you, Dan.
His message has always been, bet on me.
I alone can fix it.
That was literally the slogan.
But build the wall, lock her up, end the wars.
He's delivered on none of those specifics, but he used to say them.
her up and the wars, right? Like he's delivered on none of those specifics, but he used to say them.
But wouldn't you want to have a 10 part plan to make America great again, again,
continued like that is full of proposals that are more popular than your 41 percent?
It could be simple lies like the rest of it, like get all troops out of Afghanistan and Syria,
cut taxes for the middle class, a billion new jobs. Why not just roll that out?
I don't, I mean, you could, like, he did put out that bullet point document last week or 100 years ago, whatever that was.
But he never says it.
Yeah. I mean, he's incapable of, right? I think it is much more about painting a vision of what
your second term would look like for voters. And I think he did accomplish that. There's
definitely many better ways to run his campaign than he is currently doing it. Like, yes, you
would certainly adopt policies. And I think this is the one thing that is a fair critique of him,
is that in 2016, he had a bunch of rhetoric that alluded to policies that indicated that he was a
different sort of Republican. Right.
That's what trade was about.
I mean, he promised not to cut entitlements.
He said publicly that he would raise taxes on the wealthy, even though his tax plan cut taxes for them. But he said a bunch of things that made people think he's not like the Republicans I don't like.
And the danger for him is that he has governed much more like the Republicans you don't like. And he could have ways to hearken back to that that he doesn't. So I think that's fair.
Yeah, I noticed that he did combine the message of the whole week basically combined like
traditional Republican policies and hot button issues for them like abortion with donald trump sort of the outsider anti-establishment guy
who's going to fight the system with the like more trumpian sort of insane fox news cancel culture
like all the stuff that drives the base which is not really issues today which drives trump's base
yeah exactly so he put all those two things together.
Let's talk about the final night of the convention, where the two and a half hours of programming was both heavy on Trump's message about crime and on his criminal justice reform record. It also
featured a number of former Democrats, black Americans and Latino Americans talking about
how they're now supporting Trump. One of the big speeches was from a woman named Alice Johnson,
whose life sentence for drug trafficking, Trump commuted.
Lava, what did you think of the final night and particularly the message from people like Alice Johnson?
Yeah, you know, there was there was Alice Johnson.
There was also the family of Kayla Mueller, who, you know, who was killed by ISIS in Syria.
And it's like it's harrowing and difficult to watch.
You know, Alice Johnson's story is powerful.
That family story is incredibly tragic and powerful. And I don't know what it means for
this convention to be effective, but I think what struck me is ultimately examples, stories that are
told during these events are meant to elucidate a deeper set of policies and goals and interests.
They're not just supposed to be trying to pick off constituencies or attack people or score points. They're meant to tell a
story, right? That Alice Johnson's story is meant to convey the fact that Trump is somehow sympathetic
or against mass incarceration. The naturalization ceremony is meant to convey that Donald Trump
actually wants naturalization to
take place as opposed to what he's actually doing, which is trying to stop it at every turn.
And so what I took away from it is that just inside of the very obvious lies that have been
told throughout this week, there is a kind of deeper bit of misinformation going on throughout
the convention, which is they are using examples not to show us who Donald Trump is, but to hide
who Donald Trump is, right? To pretend he's a good person, to pretend he cares about these issues, to pretend he's been some kind of a leader on
foreign policy, to pretend that he actually believes in any kind of immigration. And so
that was sort of my takeaway in what happened last night. Tommy, what'd you think?
I mean, there were like kind of two parts, right? You had the weird like
Rudy Giuliani sweat plus impeachment variety show section. you had like Lou Holtz coming out of
nowhere to remind us why everyone hates Notre Dame football. Like Dana White, the MMA guy,
probably did a decent job. There were those really like searing emotional moments though.
Like Kayla's parents offering a testimonial about how basically Trump killed Baghdadi,
who had treated, who had raped their
daughter. Just a horrific story. I think that their argument that if Trump had been president,
she would have been rescued alive, it's obviously unprovable. I suspect it's over the top,
but it's incredibly emotional. We also heard from Deborah White, whose husband, David Dorn,
was a retired police officer who was murdered in St. Louis when he tried to
stop people from robbing a store after a protest. That was another incredibly dark, intense law and
order moment. I think the day after coverage will be complicated by the fact that David Dorn's
daughters asked her not, she's their stepmom, not to politicize their father's death because they
said their father didn't like Trump, thought he was ruining the country, thought he was a racist.
So, you know, it was it was very intense, I guess, kind of like the best way I could describe it.
Yeah, I don't know if it's it's effective.
I don't know if it's smart, but I do think it was a recognition that he is losing partly because of the view that he is a racist asshole like it was very it was a
very defensive convention in many ways it was them recognizing that part of the reason he is losing
right now is because people think there is something faulty about his character and they
think that he is xenophobic they think he is racist whatever it may be and so much of the
convention i actually thought the convention would be heavier on anti Biden stuff like they got.
They certainly got some of that done, but they spent most of it.
They spent most of the convention trying to build up Trump and telling people he's not he's not racist and you're not racist for supporting it.
That was like the main message to me.
Even his even the speech at the White House itself is still there's this implicit desire for them to be like, it's actually not that crazy that we made him president.
You know, it's actually not that big of a deal.
It seems OK.
That's sort of it's the same.
It's him taking pictures behind the desk as well.
It's like he belongs there.
It's fine.
It's fine that he's president.
Don't worry about it.
Dan, what did you think?
I mean, the whole night, like the rest of the convention, was sort of a mess of very
different messages that were relatively conflicting.
I agree with what Favs, what you and Lovable said about sort of what the message was, is
that he's not a racist.
He's not as bad as you think.
There is a better version of that message that Ivanka, in her pretty terrible speech,
did do, which is one that was actually in the very
first ad of Trump's reelection, which is that he's kind of an asshole, but he's an effective asshole.
He's your asshole, which is a better message than Trump is this empathetic, nice person,
because that's just not believable. And even if you convince people of that in the moment,
he is going to do something moments after leaving that stage that will undo that work.
So you might as well just spin the benefits of his assholery as opposed to trying to convince people he's not.
The Trump is not a racist, and we're going to prove it by finding every single Black and Latino Republican we can possibly find and give them very prominent speaking spots within the convention is probably pretty effective
for people who want to be Republican but are concerned about that.
And they did it with – like with all Trump things, it lacks – it has no – there's
no subtlety to it, right?
It's just they're going to – the brute force of it is probably actually effective
because it's so shocking because what you hear all the time is what a racist Trump is. And all
of a sudden you have all these people from Alice Johnson to the Attorney General of Kentucky and
everyone else out there speaking about him. And I imagine that that to the extent that people saw
that, that probably had some impact on some voters that Trump needs to get back.
You mentioned Ivanka's speech. I think we have that clip that you're referring to can we play that i recognize that my dad's communication style is not to everyone's taste and i know
that his tweets can feel a bit unfiltered but the results the results speak for themselves
what'd you guys what'd you guys think of uh iv's speech? She was one of two potential presidential
candidates in 2024 who spoke last night. Tom Cotton was the other.
You know, it's funny, this idea that like he's a little unfiltered, but he gets results like that
would have been the heart of their message if there hadn't been a pandemic. When we were first
having conversations about what Donald Trump was going to campaign on last year, he said that thing
of, you know, like me or hate me, you have to vote for me.
Right. That was going to be the core of his message.
It's now, though, it's like I'm an asshole, but look how good things are has been now just reduced to I'm an asshole.
It's pretty tough.
It's a pretty tough message.
Yeah.
The results do speak for themselves, Ivanka.
They do.
They do.
We're trapped in our fucking houses. Yeah. The results do speak for themselves, Ivanka. They do. They do. We're trapped in our
fucking houses. Yeah. The Biden new theme of like, does Trump even know he's president? I think is
really great because the truth is he is impotent. He tweets about violence. He tweets about COVID.
He doesn't do a goddamn thing to stop it. There is no way he is going to turn this around. He's
bad at the job. He doesn't get shit done he rode an obama economy for three months until it tanks because he couldn't deal with covet that is the truth
i'm an asshole that's the message it's so crazy that i remember being we were all sort of worried
about that ad right because it is a it's you know he's not nice you don't like him but he gets stuff
done it doesn't work when you haven't gotten anything done not only not getting anything done but the fucking you know the
country's falling apart well i think that's where he's betting on the normalization in people's
views of the pandemic either it gets better there is a vaccine which seems highly unlikely obviously
or people grow more numb to it the thing that have, I watched pretty carefully is in the Navigator survey, they do word clouds
for the conversation and how big COVID is in the word cloud has a lot to do with where
Trump's COVID approval rating is.
And there is a world where we just, it doesn't flare up.
It just stays at this steady, terrible place where we are.
And people are a little more used to it by the time November
comes. And if that happens, you know, that's sort of, I think maybe what Trump's betting on,
if it's not going to get better is that people will, it will recede slightly in people's concerns.
And then he's got a shot.
So Tom Cotton also spoke. He was one of the other big speakers of the night he delivered a four
minute speech that focused primarily on trump's supposed foreign policy wins and how joe biden
will be weak on china here is a clip joe biden would be as wrong and weak over the next four
years as he has been for the last 50 we need a president who stands up for America, not one who takes a knee. A strong
and proud America is a safe America, safe from our enemies and safe from war. No one
who's seen the face of war desires to see it again. Too many of our fellow Americans
are already honored at the hallowed grounds of Arlington.
But if we want peace, we must be strong.
Weakness is provocative.
Tommy, how much do you love Tom Cotton?
Give that guy a cup of coffee.
That was a Breitbart comment section version of a foreign policy speech.
And I expected to be really pissed at it when I read
the excerpts because it's so full of lies. The whole bit on Biden in China, it's A, absurd,
and B, we know from John Bolton, the former national security advisor, that Trump asked
Xi Jinping to help him get reelected. We know that Trump told Xi that building concentration
camps for Uyghurs, a million of them, to be reeducated or worse is
the right thing to do. And we know that he gave China cover as they strangle Hong Kong's democracy,
right? So like that policy throat clearing aside, Tom Cotton is just a bad speaker. It was not
compelling. Eric Trump was better than Tom Cotton. And honestly, I felt better after it was over
because it made me go from thinking this guy is like a serious threat in 2024
to like, this guy is kind of a mediocre goober.
That was my non-foreign policy expertise view
of the Tom Cotton speech too.
I was just like, man, all this time
we were worried about Tom Cotton in 2024.
I suppose we still should be worried,
but like, that guy has the charisma of a fucking shoe.
Yeah, I mean, I think, look, i think what we saw in tom cotton speech is the danger of what happens when someone like kim guilfoyle uses up all the cocaine on night one
and also it's just like look tom cotton is not a famous speaker he's a famous op-ed columnist
and now we see what happens when he is what he tries to translate that to a new medium harvard
educated new york times columnist Tom Cotton.
Before we go, let's talk about where the campaign goes from here.
We won't really know how or even if the conventions will affect the race until we see more polling next week.
Again, the polling this week is still not got to wait till next week.
We also know the convention bounces usually fade away.
But I do think conventions are a good indicator of where each campaign is going and how they think about the final homestretch.
We've talked about how Trump's all in on the message that Biden will make America unsafe.
Kelly Ann Conway told reporters that more violence helps their campaign.
So the question now is how does the Biden campaign respond to this going forward?
campaign respond to this going forward? George Packer has a much talked about, tweeted about piece in The Atlantic today saying that Biden should immediately go to Kenosha and give a
speech about bringing the country together. There is a lot of angst in Democratic circles,
a lot of discussion in media circles about what the Biden campaign will do in response to this.
Dan, what do you think about how the Biden campaign should respond to the RNC and Trump's
latest line of attack here?
I'm somewhat mystified by the entire conversation around this.
And look, I come at this from the perspective of worry about everything.
So people are definitely worried about this.
But we had this exact conversation two months ago.
Is it possible for Joe Biden to speak out against violent protests and keep his base?
Yeah, he did it after George Floyd.
And so I don't, is it possible for Joe Biden to say he's not for defund the police and keep his
base? Yes, we know that because he did that two months ago. So of course, we like images of chaos
have potential to be weaponized by Trump and the Republicans. But this is one place where
there are a lot of unknowns in this campaign, but how Biden responds to this is something we know
because he has done it once before and he has done it successfully. And so I think everyone is looking
for things to worry about. And if we find a well or overwritten piece in The Atlantic that speaks
to those deep concerns, maybe people will freak out about it. But I think
Biden has demonstrated how to handle this. And we saw a member of Jacob Blake's family say either
last night or today that Biden called and spoke to them for an hour. Donald Trump did not mention
them. Where Biden has the ability to demonstrate his empathy and decency and the part of his story that is about dealing
with grief and helping others deal with grief, that is a place of strength for him.
And it's a place, a huge comparative avenge against Trump.
And so I think he has been doing that and will continue to do that.
And I think we know how that will play out.
Tommy, what do you think?
Yeah, I was a little surprised by the George Packer freak out this morning. Tommy, what do you think? ever in recorded history, right? He's always in the same place. And I think the Biden people are presumably have polls in key swing states like on a daily or weekly basis,
and they're tracking these number and they can closely watch these law and order attacks.
And if those numbers move, they will need to respond in some way. But I would wait before I
take the bait on bad faith attacks from Donald Trump. Biden should speak about
racial justice and police reform in his own way, on his own terms at the time that he sees fit.
In the interim, I think that the entire country is incredibly worried about COVID. They're really
worried about the economy. I would not let Donald Trump suck me away from talking about those core,
far more important issues to people in
polling. Love it. Yeah, no, I agree with all that. Like fundamentally what Donald Trump is saying
and trying to imply is that the people protesting, fighting for equality, fighting for dignity for
black people is a threat to you,
right? That's what he's basically saying, that like, if these people succeed, if they're able to achieve any kind of victory in this fight against racial injustice and racial injustice in policing,
that will cost you, it'll affect you, it'll hurt you. And I think Biden can be much bigger and he
can talk about the fact that equality doesn't hurt anybody. It's not going to hurt you. It's
not going to hurt you to allow everybody to have dignity, that there's enough
dignity to go around. There's enough America to go around. Right. Like that's been a kind of core
part of what he's been saying. And I think he can make that a big part of what he's saying. He can
speak to the protests. He can speak to what's happening in Kenosha without giving in or taking
the bait from Trump. Yeah, I've been trying to think of what happened to public
opinion between the protests after George Floyd's murder in June and today. And what you can see in
the numbers is that opinion around the protests and specifically around instances of looting and
violence has begun to polarize around on party lines. And so most of the decrease in support
comes from Republicans, Republican-leaning independents, people who watch Fox News,
which since June has been running footage on loop of fires and violence and everything else. So it's
not terribly surprising that a bit public opinion would change a bit. And so, you
know, you see some evidence in some focus groups already that people have been talking about where
there's people who voted for Trump in 2016, who say they're undecided now, who are now tending
to think maybe they'll go back to Trump because of some of the things they've seen in Kenosha or
Portland or elsewhere. You're hearing anecdotal evidence of this. We may see it in polling in the next
couple of weeks, but it is on the margins and it is sort of like Trump voters who were
thinking about leaving and maybe coming back. And you'd almost expect polls to tighten
as things become polarized closer to Election Day anyway, regardless, as like some Republicans come
home. I think the question is, to what extent that happens. I think in terms of what Joe Biden should do, he's been doing the right thing so far. He, you know, like you said,
he's called Jacob Blake's family. He has stood on the side of the protests and racial justice
and police reform, while still saying, obviously, you know, burning down a city is bad, right? Like,
and I'm sure he will continue to say that. But I tend to agree with Tommy,
which is he can't let the conversation
get away from the pandemic and fixing the economy.
And the more he talks,
the more he's like wraps himself in an axle
trying to figure out exactly how to comment
on every instance of violence,
the more that the media conversation
will be about Trump versus
Biden on crime and violence, as opposed to Trump versus Biden on the pandemic, which is where the
Biden campaign wants to be. And you can tell that with all of their statements and all of their
responses to the convention, they keep bringing it back to COVID because they know that's the
best fight to have with Donald Trump. I mean, ultimately, the trick with Trump is always to
call out his game, don't play his game, right? And the trick with Trump is always to call out his game.
Don't play his game. Right. And so explain what he is trying to distract from. Explain why he is
trying to divide people and who benefits from that is the best way to handle because that gives you
the ability to bring it back to home base. Well, I mean, like this morning, Trump tweeted about how
Governor Evers sent in Wisconsin, sent in the National Guard. And he's like, and Wednesday was
a perfectly peaceful night. It's like, well, you know what? Governor Evers in Wisconsin sent in the National Guard. And he's like, and Wednesday was a perfectly peaceful night.
It's like, well, you know what?
Governor Evers, the Democratic governor of Wisconsin, made that decision on his own.
You didn't do shit.
Your top advisor went out and said that the violence helps your campaign.
That's what you did.
He continues to pour gas on the fire.
And Joe Biden needs to say that.
You want four more years of this guy putting gas on the fire and screwing up the pandemic and everything else. That's go for it. If you want to change,
if you want to go, if you want things to be calm again, you want competent government. Let me know.
The other way to make the connection to me is that they're going out there and saying,
they're burning businesses, they're destroying businesses. And if COVID were arson, right,
you know, Donald Trump has lit 20 million jobs on
fire, right? Like the damage that he has done to the economy is so much so far beyond at a scale
so much greater than anything anybody can point to with these protests. If you are worried about
this kind of destruction, look at the destruction Donald Trump has wreaked. Yeah, I mean, like,
safe in Joe Biden's America. Do you feel safe in Donald Trump's America right now? We can't
fucking leave our houses. We're not safe in Donald Trump's America.
This is crazy.
I mean, that's the way to flip all of this messaging on Trump is Trump,
like, and Tommy pointed this out earlier,
is that Trump is saying that,
look at all of these horrible things that are happening
under my presidency in the first term.
I will stop them in the second term.
But all the imagery about the White House, the fireworks, the safe in Joe
Biden's name, that's all about Trump, the strongman, right? He's trying to say that I am the one who
can protect you. I alone can fix me. Yes. And it is a not very subtle message to white people that
I'm the one who can protect you from black protesters, brown immigrants, terrorism, all
the things. It's all about driving up white fear, the classic Republican strategy of years.
But there's a way that Biden can take all of this and use it to undermine Trump's strength.
And when you undermine Trump's strength, all of his argument falls at the bottom.
Yeah, I agree.
All right, guys, we did it.
We're at the end of the two convention weeks.
We have the takes have all been offered
the conventions are over and now
68 days I believe
67
67 days until the election
so go to votesaveamerica.com
slash adopt
pick a state let's get to work
and we'll see you guys next week
bye everyone
bye everybody
Pod Save America And we'll see you guys next week. Bye, everyone. Bye, everybody.
Pod Save America is a Cricket Media production.
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