Pod Save America - Who won the first Republican debate?
Episode Date: August 24, 2023Ramaswamy dominated, DeSantis dodged, Christie attacked the wrong guy—and Trump and Tucker Carlson talked about Jeffrey Epstein. Tommy and Dan recap the lowest lows of the first Republican debate, a...nd Republican strategist Sarah Longwell joins to explain whether any of this matters to real-life voters. 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.Â
Transcript
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Welcome to Pot Tape America. I'm Tommy Vitor. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. And we will never get those two hours of our lives back, Dan.
We just watched the Republican primary debate, the kids' table debate.
Consolation bracket.
The consolation prize debate. It was a doozy, but we'll tell you about all of it.
We also watched most of Donald Trump's insane interview with Tucker Carlson on X, which is Twitter now.
Wait, did we say that?
No, we don't.
Okay, I say Twitter.
I don't say Meta either. I don't say meta either.
I don't say any of these things.
And then because we know that our opinions or our gut instincts about what Republicans
want are not always attuned to where the MAGA base is, we bring in Sarah Longwell, who has
done hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of focus groups with Trump voters to help us
understand what tonight,
if anything, might have changed the dynamics of this race.
Did you get the sense that we did not fully understand the Republican base when
Pod Save America guest Chris Christie was ruthlessly booed off stage?
Yeah, they're like people chasing him with pitchforks and all. It's like, I like that guy.
I do too. He seems great. I like to have a beer with him. What are you going to do, Dan? Well,
that guy i do too he seems great i like to have a beer with him uh what are you gonna do dan well listen the best part about the debate i think was for you being in the crooked media discord
which all the listeners can join at crooked.com slash friends if you want to be in the discord
next time so you don't have to watch this alone or on elon musk's site x twitter you get to be
you get to be with friends you get commentary it's a communal experience yeah i'll do it together
and uh you get first access to upcoming live shows in places like Cleveland, Louisville, San Diego, and San Jose.
End of plugs.
Dan, let's talk about the debate.
Nine people on the stage.
Fox News hosted.
What was your general takeaway?
I kept thinking the entire debate about the scene in Billyy madison after billy madison gives his speech
and the principal judging it says we are all dumber for having heard that and have may god
have mercy on your soul yeah that is part of the quote that gets left out a lot yeah i mean it it
was terrible it was stupid it was scary the things that were cheered or should make us all worry
about the future of our country or at least in segments of our country the from a perspective
of just pure political strategy it was idiocy run amok i mean it was terrible it was a terrible
experience and it had the feel of i used the term consolation bracket before, but that's what it felt like.
Where no one, it felt like the consolation bracket, like in the World Cup, like after you've lost, people kind of want to win.
They don't try that hard and the stakes feel pretty low.
And that's what this felt like. Yeah.
Playing for third, it just doesn't have that kind of same joy to it.
Getting the bronze.
Yeah.
I think the story of the debate, and we're going to go through all the candidates individually to the extent that they warrant it uh the story of the
debate was the vivek ramaswamy show he made the entire thing about himself he managed to get
attacked he was attacking others he sucked up a lot of airtime although i did see someone just
tweeted you know how the reporters will do a summary of everyone's aggregate talking time it
doesn't sound like mike pence had the most but I think that's just because he talks like a slow motion Westworld
robot programmed to be Ronald Reagan. There's nothing that explains Mike Pence's struggles
in politics more than the fact that he spoke the most, but we thought he spoke the least.
I really did think he spoke the least. No one remembers a single word he said.
Not a single word. I'm just going to whine for a minute. The stupid like extended drone shot and voiceover by Brit Hume for the first six minutes was bizarre. Starting the debate off with a bunch of questions about the Richmond north of Richmond song was like the Fox News is new Joe the plumber moment, which for you old heads out there, you might remember the 2009 campaign and Barack Obama got in a repartee with a guy named Joe the Plumber and it became this little cause celeb.
But yeah, I mean, I think everyone was watching to see if Chris Christie was going to land some
haymaker on Donald Trump. I don't think that happened. A lot of people were watching Ron
DeSantis to see if he would manage to catch up to Donald Trump in any way. I don't know that
that happened. So yeah, I mean, Vivek was kind of my big takeaway and not a lot else.
Yeah, I think somewhere in Bedminster, New Jersey, Donald Trump is sitting at home feeling very happy about his decision to not go to the debate because there was no one on that stage did anything to make him think twice about skipping the next one or the one after that.
Yeah.
Because they didn't put pressure on him.
They didn't attack him for not being there.
They didn't do anything to try to alter the shape of the race.
They just tried to come in first among the people who were fighting for second.
It didn't really make sense to me.
Yeah.
Somewhere in Bedminster, the ketchup and burgers are in his belly, not against the wall, because
he's a happy camper.
He's so mad because there's nothing that he can TiVo to watch on Fox because it was all
of his favorite shows were preempted by this. Although all the Fox hosts, they felt like it was like they were
the section about Trump that we'll get into and whether, uh, you know, he should be prosecuted.
Fox was so apologetic for even raising the question or asking about the issue. They,
they were like apologizing to the audience, to the candidates. They couldn't move on fast enough.
No, I mean, he is for all intents and purposes, their boss. Yeah. He is their boss,
the assignment editor. Uh, so we've mentioned we've mentioned how Vivek Ramaswamy
dominated the night and was the story of the debate. Here's a super cut of some of the things
he said that might help explain why. Who the heck is this skinny guy with a funny last name? And
what the heck is he doing in the middle of this debate stage? President Trump, I believe, was the best president of the 21st century. It's a fact.
And Chris Christie, honest to God, your claim that Donald Trump is motivated by vengeance and
grievance would be a lot more credible if your entire campaign were not based on vengeance and
grievance against one man. And if people at home want to see a bunch of people blindly bashing Donald Trump
without an iota of vision for this country, they could just change the channel to MSNBC right now.
But I'm not running for president of MSNBC. I am running for president of the United States.
And the reality is you have a bunch of people, professional politicians, super PAC puppets,
following slogans handed over to them by their 400-page
super PACs last week.
The real choice we face in this primary
is this. Do you want a super PAC
puppet, or do you want a patriot
who speaks the truth? Skinny guy with a funny
name, Dan? That's a pretty good line.
Felt familiar, though. It does feel
mildly familiar. It's
interesting to kind of rip off
the incredibly popular former Democratic
president, Barack Obama, in your kind of opening salvo in the campaign. I wonder why he did that.
It worked for Obama? Yeah, it did. If it ain't broke. What do you think of those clips? What
jumped out at you there? It's very hard to know how voters will interpret this performance. Yeah. But the thing about being on a stage with a lot of candidates is you have to have a
plan to get noticed.
Yes.
Because if you just speak, if you just answer the questions you're asked, you're not going
to have a moment.
You're going to fade into the background.
And we'll talk about some of them.
Many of these candidates faded into the background.
Not Doug Burgum's eyebrows.
They were there all night long staring into my soul.
That was, they actually went up three points.
Kind of pillars falling high in Iowa.
I mean, in credit to him, he did attend the debate with a torn Achilles.
That must be so painful.
He seemed like he might've been on some painkillers.
He definitely seemed happy to be there.
I mean, I don't have anything to judgment because I've never seen the man speak before.
So I don't know what he's normally like.
I can't remember his name.
But Vivek came in with a plan to dominate the conversation.
And he did that quite well.
He owned the debate.
He picked fights.
He had lines.
He was well-prepared.
He knew the attacks were coming for him, and he had a response to every one of them.
And he might have sounded like a slightly deranged carnival barker but he didn't sound like a
politician and everyone else on that stage sounded like a typical politician so he stood out and
they're you know i think the likely thing here is that there's he at least has given himself an
opening to make a move in this race what does that mean in a place where donald trump is 60%
the vote who knows but the stories will be about him. Most people won't watch this debate, but they will see clips of him. They'll just hear just that, hey, do you hear
about this guy? Because most people have never seen him speak, don't know what he looks like,
don't know who he is. All of a sudden, he's sitting center stage and he's dominating
former Vice President of the United States, the former co-front runner in Ron DeSantis,
a bunch of senators you've heard of, and he's sort of kind of kicking their ass left and right.
And so that at least will give him an opening with some number of voters.
Yeah. He'll be, he'll dominate all the coverage tomorrow until Donald Trump turns himself in.
That is the small problem that we'll get to.
At Fulton County. He'll probably-
He might go to Fulton County.
Yeah. Attica, like wave a cup against the bars. Yeah. I think the, your campaign is all about
vengeance and grievance line against Chris
Christie was pretty damn good. And I thought defanged Christie in that moment. I think,
like you said, Vivek benefited so much from getting attacked by Mike Pence, the most wooden,
robotic, phony, typical politician sounding goober I've ever heard. Like, the way he paused, he's like,
I want to talk about the oath I made on January 6, 2017.
And then I said a prayer.
I put my hand on the Bible of Ronald Reagan.
Oh, my God.
And the way he paused, like, the place was basically groaning.
But, yeah, I mean, like, he also,
the I'm not running to be president of MSNBC line from Vick wasn't bad.
Like, hey, buddy, you're not qualified for that job either.
But like probably played in the room.
The Super PAC puppet was a hit I thought was coming.
It would have been a good one if they could remember to name who he was talking about.
You have to be a broken brain weirdo like us to know that there was a New York Times story about Ron
DeSantis' super PAC releasing a memo for him about debate strategy. Which is interesting. We go back
to that memo for the non-broken brain people who may be listening to this. The memo from the super
PAC that was leaked online through idiocy, as far as I can tell. The strategy proposed to DeSantis was defend Trump and hammer
Vivek. He was sort of prohibited from doing that because the second he did that, he was going to
come back with that line. And I think because DeSantis had not done it, he just tried to
get it. Yeah, he pre-butted him. Well, Vivek came in with a list of moments, which is how you're
supposed to prepare for a debate. And he realized that the clock was ticking. He hadn't done the
400-page super PAC memo.
So he just like swerved out of his lane to do it.
But I think the big takeaway from him is he is an interesting experiment.
He believes none of this.
He didn't even vote in 2016 or 2012.
He voted for the libertarian candidate in 2004.
This is some sort of experiment in reverse engineering a candidacy where you go see what
the voters want, and then you build a campaign platform to fit that. Identity. Yeah. Yeah. You
build an entire identity around what you think people want to hear. It is, you know, usually
because politicians enter presidential races at a point at which they have a record, what they're
really doing is taking, you know, to sort of use a bad business at which they have a record. What they're really doing is taking,
you know, to sort of use a bad business metaphor, they take a product and see if it fits with the market. What Vivek did was he looked at the market and they built a product that fit the market. And
that's what all of this is. He knew there was a constituency for America first, anti-Ukraine aid,
pardoning Donald Trump, the fracking, the anti-climate change stuff. And he says it
in a way that doesn't sound like a politician, which the last time someone did that, that was
Donald Trump. I'm not saying he's going to have that level of success, but he understands what
better than I think the rest of these people, other than maybe Trump, what the electorate wants,
which is an outsider who's not a politician who wants to burn the system down. And that's what he sounds like. Yeah. It's hard to remember how different Trump sounded from
everybody else when he first emerged on the scene in 2015. But I think Vivek was trying to recreate
a bit of that kind of feeling and magic for the Republican electorate. Not that I agree with it.
Like you said at the top, I don't know that he's going to come close to defeating Donald Trump in this election.
In fact, I would bet big money against him.
I do think he drastically improved his name ID, his standing amongst the base by defending Trump and probably did himself a lot of good in this campaign.
It's not a strategy to win.
You're not going to beat Trump by being a mini Trump.
You could possibly win if Trump were to go away somehow, but I don't think that's going to happen.
You could possibly win if Trump were to go away somehow, but I don't think that's going to happen.
But it is a strategy to make yourself a star in the Republican Party, which will allow you to either become sort of some sort of mega media personality and then run in 2028, which I think is probably how he's thinking about this.
So everyone's watching Ron DeSantis at this debate.
It was seen as kind of a make or break moment for him.
If he did not do well enough, people wondered, well, will a donor stop giving him money?
Will his supporters just fully turn away and look elsewhere? I don't know that I buy the donor piece of this that much.
He's sitting on $100 million in a super PAC, but look, he's not had the best run.
What did you think about Ron DeSantis in this debate?
I didn't really think about Ron DeSantis. Here's the nice, kindest thing I can say about him,
which is he exceeded the exceedingly low expectations everyone had from this debate. He didn't like have one of those sort of like moments where it's like brain snaps and he just laughs awkwardly in a, in a random moment. He didn't make any mistakes, but he didn't demonstrate anything that would make you think that he was a guy who could beat Trump or beat Biden. Like his whole pitch was he was a
better, more disciplined, more talented Trump without the baggage. And he didn't really show
that. He just sort of seemed like a politician who had some views that probably have some appeal
in the MAGA base. And that was sort of it. And I don't feel like he probably survives another day
because I do think that this there's
been a lot of reporting that some of the big super pack donors who gave some of that initial money
were not going to keep funding a super pack they're the ones who were calling glenn yunkin
and brian kemp trying to get them in the race so if he had had a really bad debate i think or made
some real mistake or been sort of memed coming out of it that would have been a huge problem for him
and i think he probably he did nothing to help himself but i'm not sure he
hurt himself either yeah i think he muddled through um he did have one moment he tried to
manufacture a moment actually tim miller recommended he do this where he like good job tim jump jump on
the moderator kind of push back against the question when there was a show of hands question
asked and he was like we're not children we can talk about the issues but then he just got big
footed by vivek who was like i think climate change is a hoax. He raised his hand. That moment just explained the differences between those two
candidates, which is Ron DeSantis seems like a politician because he don't want to answer the
question. He doesn't want to put his hand up because he's thinking about the general election
and he knows that putting his hand up there is going to look really, really bad. And not to
mention, climate change is literally drowning his state. Parts of it are going away every day because of climate change.
And so he tries to do this thing.
And then Vivek just puts his hand up and says, no, why don't you just raise your hand like
a normal person instead of trying to be a politician?
And it stepped on him.
It didn't look good.
I think all of us think that were Ron DeSantis to win the nomination, the issue that would
be the most likely to defeat him would be his position on abortion.
He signed into law a six-week abortion ban in Florida. He got asked about that tonight. Here's a clip.
I'm going to stand on the side of life. Look, I understand Wisconsin is going to do it different
than Texas. I understand Iowa and New Hampshire are going to do different. But I will support
the cause of life as governor and as president. So I viewed that answer, Dan, as him continuing to refuse to sort of take a real position on
whether he supports a national abortion ban. You had a different view of what you might do
if you were running against him.
As the self-appointed fact checker of Crooked Media, I declare that what Ron DeSantis said
there when he said, I will defend life as president, is he endorsed signing a national law similar to the abortion made in Florida?
I think that is, we know that's what he's going to do.
Are you giving me Pinocchios for my position here?
I'm just, I'm trying, that's not how we do it here.
We're not trying to judge all lies on a four character scale.
Thank you.
Okay, thank God. For cartoon character scale.
Thank you.
I want to persuade you as to why I think what he did is he essentially was trying to send a signal to the evangelical voters, particularly in Iowa, and the groups that have been pushing Republicans to be more aggressive on abortion bans.
The ones who pushed him to sign this ban, which he did, I think, pretty gleefully in Florida to do the same thing nationally.
And Nikki Haley had this whole thing in here.
She tried to adopt the moderate position where her thing was, well, we need 60 votes.
We've never had 60 anti-choice votes in the Senate.
You don't need 60 votes
because I can promise you this,
that if the Republicans have a trifecta,
they will end the filibuster
to sign a national abortion mandate.
They will not be able to sustain
the pressure from the base to avoid that.
Nor will they try. Nor will they try. I totally agree. Yeah. I think regardless of how you
interpret his comments about abortion tonight at this debate, I agree with you that if he were to
win the nomination, I would tie his views on abortion around his neck and do it every single
day and make that the primary thing I ran against. I did think the one moment where he did seem to
get the crowd going was he
was asked about crime in Florida and he sort of fact-checked Brett Baer, whoever had asked him
the question, and then said, you know, I'm the one who's done something about these George Soros
funded radical left-wing prosecutors. We had the Soros, we had some Soros DAs elected. I removed
them from their office. Now they're gone. And he got like big applause for that. And it's, you know,
sort of a corny canned thing. But I think, you know, look, I think that talking to
Republican primary voters about crime and, you know, the Soros boogaboo is probably working
better for him than like picking another fight with Disney, but low bar. Yeah. I think you could,
he seemed DeSantis who seemed somewhat uncomfortable throughout the whole debate,
which is kind of his natural vibe, but he seemed his least uncomfortable talking about crime.
And then in the education section where he started going off about banning critical race theory and quote unquote gender ideology and all like that's his comfort zone are things that are the shittiest culture wars that are bigoted.
Right.
That is where he is most comfortable.
right? That is where he is most comfortable. If you're picking on gay kids and trans kids and you're making racist accusations against teachers and all that, that's where he is.
That's his happy place. Yeah. Yeah. There was some very weird, there's some clips worth checking
out on Twitter of him attempting to smile after answers that just show how unbelievably awkward
he is as a human being that are worth watching. Obviously, it doesn't work in an audio medium.
awkward he is as a human being that are worth watching. Obviously, it doesn't work in an audio medium. Mike Pence, this is becoming a theme, Dan. Mike Pence was a little like he was the
Reagan Westworld robot, but he was also like a feistier Mike Pence than I think we've seen
previously. He went after Vivek Ramaswamy, too. Here's a clip of that.
Now is not the time for on-the-job training. We don't need to bring in a rookie.
We don't need to bring in people without experience.
We don't need to bring in a rookie.
We don't need to bring in people without experience. We need to bring...
So, I mean, maybe a compelling argument against Vivek Ramaswamy, but from Donald Trump's vice president?
Does that work?
I don't know.
The whole Pence thing is...
It was Mike Pence.
It was totally not memorable.
He's just mayonnaise.
Yeah.
Right.
You kind of know he's there.
You don't really pay that much attention to it.
People who hate it really, really hate it.
No one really loves it.
It's just, it's not it.
Even the crowd, like there was some, it was unclear what they were cheering or booing,
whether this was a very bizarre crowd and sort of the reactions.
But for most of the debate,
even in his canned applause lines,
no one clapped.
No one.
The main time people laughed
is when he invoked Jesus's name.
Yeah.
And the rest of the time,
they sort of just ignored Mike Pence.
Jesus got tepid applause.
They're either ignoring Mike Pence
or they're trying to murder him.
Those are the two ends of the spectrum
in the Republican Party.
I would love to know who the audience was
because sometimes it's a bunch of donors
and the campaigns buy tickets.
That might've been the case here.
Yeah, I think that's what I think.
Almost certainly is donors, political leaders. It's not
base voters. Yeah. There was one moment where the candidates were all asked about Mike Pence's
conduct on January 6th and Chris Christie jumped in to defend him and say, Mike Pence stood for
the constitution. He deserves not grudging credit, but our thanks, blah, blah, blah.
And it was just notable that Christie defending Pence gets you a combined 113 unfavorability rating in Iowa. So I think tells you about all you need about that moment.
The last thing Mike Pence needs is Chris Christie defending him.
I know he's like, oh, this fucking guy. Are you kidding me?
All right. Our next sort of bucket of folks are, you know, Chris Christie, Nikki Haley, and Tim Scott.
We kind of bucketed them together because they didn't do that much.
Chris Christie in particular, I think, you know, he's been feeling himself when people talk
about his performance against Marco Rubio in the 2016 primary, where he really kicked the shit out
of Rubio in that debate when Rubio was kind of glitching like a robot, repeating the same line
against Obama over and over again. But Christie, instead of going after Donald Trump, the person
we all thought he was going to go after, decided, like everybody else, to go after Vivek Ramaswamy.
Here's a clip. I've had enough already tonight of a guy who sounds like ChatGPT standing up here.
And the last person in one of these debates, Brett, who stood in the middle of the stage and said,
what's a skinny guy with an odd last name doing up here was Barackack obama and i'm afraid we're dealing with the
same type of amateur standing on stage tonight give me a hug just like you did the same time
i don't totally get what it means to sound like chat gpt like it means nothing groundbreaking new
technology yeah i don't. I don't know.
I don't know what it means.
Yeah, like a kid cheating on his homework?
It's a line written by a middling debate advisor.
Yeah.
I assume what he meant was someone who is learning about all the issues in the world
for the first time in the last six months, which, by the way, is something Vivek said
on Hugh Hewitt's podcast.
You would know that, Chris Christie, if you listen to Pod Save the World
and not this Pod Save America bullshit that you come on.
But yeah, he just seemed like he got annoyed with Vivek.
That was sort of the theme of the night.
It seemed like all of them were genuinely very annoyed
at Vivek Ramaswamy in kind of like a,
who is this kid attacking us tone?
Yeah, for sure.
And just for some context for people who may not be
nerds of a certain generation like us, what Vivek is referring to with the hug is that in 2012,
in the waning days of that campaign, Hurricane Sandy hit New York, New Jersey, the East Coast,
Obama visited New Jersey during the campaign, came off the campaign trail,
started dealing with the response to the hurricane, visited New Jersey, and Chris Christie hugged Obama right as they were getting on the plane to thank him for all the work the federal
government had done to help New Jersey. That was the moment that Chris Christie's 2024 presidential
campaign died. Sadly, sadly yeah his approval rating
among republicans went in the toilet after that because the republicans blamed him
for electing obama obama would have won without the chris christie hug but and so this is this
goes to why chris christie can't win because republicans hate him yeah and why vivek was
quite well prepared because he knew someone, but probably Christie
was going to do the Obama line because Christie's probably done it somewhere because he does
all media and was prepared to do it and nailed them.
Yeah, he really did.
Yeah.
I mean, come on, Chris, you like your whole promise was you're going to get up there and
you're going to take the Donald Trump and that's why we need you on that stage.
And you just didn't even try.
He didn't know how to operate.
Two things I think happened.
One, he had no plan for what to do without Trump on stage.
Yeah.
And second, I think he really reacted.
You could see in his face when he got booed.
The first time he went after Trump and said, whether you think it's criminal or not, his
conduct is beneath the office of the president.
And the crowd just basically booed him into silence.
He backed off then.
And they all backed off then.
There was never a critique of Trump after that.
And he did,
I mean, he did nothing to help himself and probably hurt himself. And he may
owe all the Democrats who gave him money to get him on that stage a refund.
Who would have recommended the Democrats give him a dollar to get on that stage? I don't know
anyone that would do that. Yeah, in his defense, it is kind of hard to figure out how to pivot
from a Richmond, North of Richmond question into a Trump hit. But we digress. So Nikki Haley was also their former ambassador to the UN.
She fancies herself a foreign policy expert and is really focused on foreign policy in this campaign.
She also went on the attack against Vivek Ramaswamy. Here is a clip.
Putin has said, if Russia, once Russia takes Ukraine, Poland and the Baltics are next.
That's a world war.
We're trying to prevent war.
Look at what Putin did today.
He killed Pergozin.
When I was at the UN, the Russian ambassador suddenly died.
This guy is a murderer.
And you are choosing a murderer over a pro-American country.
choosing a murder over a pro-American country.
First of all, Mr. Ramaswamy, you have 30 seconds.
Mr. DeSantis, you've got 30 seconds. I wish you well in your future career on the boards of Lockheed and Raytheon.
That's a pretty good hit.
And one that his staff previewed in Politico today, I believe.
By the way, Haley's referencing Yevgeny Prigozhin,
who is a Russian oligarch slash head of the Wagner
mercenary group who was killed when a Russian air defense missile hit his plane today and
killed everyone on board.
Do you know of any place tomorrow morning you'll be able to learn more about that?
I do, Dan.
Pod Save the World.
It's a great podcast.
Comes out on Wednesdays.
Someone tell my wife she only listens to Keep It. Look, I don't, Haley,
I respect her for waving the flag here and fighting for supporting Ukraine because I do
think it's the right thing to do. And I do think like I'm really concerned about where the Republican
Party is going in terms of general isolationism, but also on this issue. But it's an electoral loser. It's got to be really challenging.
And to make this the thing you focus on in the debate against a rival, I mean,
she really went after Vivek on him saying that he would essentially get rid of USAID to Israel
by 2028. He has a whole bunch of conditions for how he would do that. But that was the attack
she wanted to go after here. But he didn't back down on that front. He just went right back at her.
She did not do a very good job of explaining that attack. No one really got it. And it is
a potentially potent attack because there's obviously a lot of support for Israel in the
Republican party, but particularly among the evangelical community that dominates the Iowa
caucuses. And so you could, that you, you're going to see a lot more about that in the coming days.
If, as we suspect Vivek has a little bit of a moment here, it's going to get
pretty nasty, pretty quick on some of those things. A lot of it's going to be, uh, racist
and religiously bigoted and all above. Yeah. Dan and I were talking about this before the show,
what these candidates say on, on the air at a debate or what they say in interviews is usually
a highly sanitized
version of what shows up in people's mailboxes in the form of direct mail pieces.
That's where these campaigns get really, really, really nasty.
The other thing about Haley, and this is true of a lot of the candidates who try to run
on their foreign policy experience and knowledge is twofold.
One, they assume a base of knowledge about foreign policy from voters that greatly exceeds
like, what does killed Pergozan mean to anyone who has not yet listened to the forthcoming episode
of Posse of the World? That's one. And then two, they try, they explain why these things are good
for the world and not why it's good for American families.
And so there is a very strong argument.
The Biden folks have actually made this on multiple occasions about why supporting Ukraine is good for American security and how it protects the interests of American families.
But none of the Republicans did that last night. It's very – it's all like Mike Pence did.
It's all Reagan-esque short version.
It doesn't connect with anyone's lives.
Yeah. Pence tried to make the case that, look, we want to arm Ukrainians so they can fight the
Russians and not allow Russia to steamroll through Ukraine and then go next to a NATO country like
Poland, which means Article 5, part of the NATO charter, means that the United States has to
respond militarily. That's a compelling case, but boy, is it complicated. It's also going to be hard to explain to people why we'd have to
stop the invasion of Poland. Yeah. We should, obviously, but not a lot of people know what
Article 5 is or why that would be a thing. And Donald Trump famously flirted with not
supporting it. Senator Tim Scott, South Carolina, also on the stage tonight. Scott is in some polls,
he's in second place or third place in Iowa. He's at 9% in Iowa in the Des Moines Register poll. He's got a ton of money because he's a lot of the donor class like him. He's an incredibly conservative voting record, deeply religious individual, but I think has sort of a kindler, gentler presentation on some issues. But I don't know. It just seemed like he kind of disappeared up there tonight. Yeah. He did not have a plan to get attention
and he missed a moment and the clock is taking on all of these people. They are not making
progress. Trump is gaining ground on them as a collective. Individually, they're swapping around
the 40% that exists for the non-Trump vote. And you can't pass these moments up. And there aren't
enough debates. When Obama struggled a little bit early on in 2008, being one of 10 people on stage,
as he would say, he's Midwestern polite. And so he'd really struggle to interrupt or speak when
it was not his turn. We really had to beat him up to be able to get him to do that.
Scott and Haley, I think, suffered from a similar thing, which is they just didn't seize the moment at any point.
And so they got there a lot of the amount of time.
None of it was that memorable.
They didn't do anything to help themselves.
And that's a loss for them.
Yeah.
Finally, we got kind of our also-ran category, our Burghams, Doug, our Hutchinson's
ASA or ADA. If you're Donald Trump, we'll get to that in a second. I don't remember a word they
said. Do you? I think that their presence on that stage is a full-on indictment of the Republicans
debate requirements because they should not be there. Yeah. It makes the whole thing worse when
you have eight people up there or nine people or whatever it was i mean i mean usually you're like well you know only six of the people on that stage
got a chance to be president i want to why are we wasting time with other people i was really sure
you can say that so it's like yeah that's fair uh okay so the person who wasn't there tonight
was donald trump he obviously no showed at the debate because his view on this was basically
i'm kicking everybody's ass why would i bother to show up? And he hates Fox News. Fair points. Instead, he did an interview
with Tucker Carlson on his new show on Twitter. Here is a supercut of some of the things they
talked about. Do you think Epstein killed himself sincerely? A case could be made. Look,
I'm not going to get involved in it. The Panama Canal, we built it and we gave it away
for one dollar. Think of that. How stupid are we? We have done the stupidest things in this country.
You have states, many, many states, most of the states have so much water, you know,
comes out of heaven, right? The water pours down and you have it. It's not like a big problem.
Now, in some states, they have a problem. You know, you have some desert areas and all,
have a problem, you know, you have some desert areas and all, and for that it's okay. But they have sinks where no water comes out. You turn it on, no water comes out. I call him Ada Hutchinson.
It's Asa, but I call him Ada. Why do you call him Ada? You know, I could tell you, but I don't want
to get myself in a little trouble. Probably not a friend of yours, Chris Wallace. He was the
moderator. Not a friend.
I said, why is it he wants to be Mike, but he doesn't have the talent? It's one of those-
He's a bitchy little man.
He wanted to be his father, but he didn't have the talent of his father. His father was great.
His father-
He's a little fussy man.
It was just a weird 45 minutes. Tucker Carlson, he just asked really strange questions. Did Epstein
kill himself? He followed up three or four
times he suggested that the attorney general bill barr covered up epstein's murder uh trump was like
i think he probably committed suicide man like i don't know what to tell you tucker asked trump if
he's worried that the democrats are trying to kill him they asked if joe biden was going to make it
to election day uh tucker suggested that Kamala seems senile also.
Yeah, it was just weird.
Yeah, the ostensible purpose of this,
I guess there were two purposes of the interview.
One was to try to, quote unquote,
take viewers away from the debate,
to step on the debate.
I don't think that worked.
It's not a live broadcast.
Yeah. I mean, but you could just pause it. But they, yeah, right. I don't think that worked. It's not a live broadcast. Yeah.
I mean, but it,
you can just pause it.
But they, yeah, right.
That's true.
They have invented the capacity
to pause television
and record things
and watch them later.
Or Twitter.
Yeah.
It is.
So that part didn't really make sense.
The other reason was pure spite.
Yeah.
Like it is just a giant
fuck you to Fox News
to do this with Tucker Carlson,
who they fired,
who is in violation of his non-compete agreement doing this other show where he just shits on Fox
News all the time.
I don't know what was gained from it.
I don't think it, there's just nothing big enough happened in the debate that it's stepping
on it.
The bigger thing that's going to happen is when Trump surrenders to the authorities and
is arraigned and has his mugshot taken tomorrow tomorrow's the news that will step on the i
don't even know what it's stepping on what is it like coverage of a vector almost mommy i don't
think you think that matters to trump yeah and the vehicle probably do 100 sunday shows tomorrow
because that's what you do to seize these moments and he'll do more importantly shows sorry but
he'll do the morning shows but more importantly
he will just
do every right wing
podcast YouTube show
there is.
Yeah he'll be co-hosting
Jordan Peterson's show
for six months.
Politico had a really
couple months ago
weeks I don't know
time means nothing
a really smart story
about his media strategy
and how he is
everywhere all the time
doing everything
he possibly can.
It's very
I hesitate to make
this comparison
but it's very reminiscent of hesitate to make this comparison,
but it's very reminiscent of how Pete Buttigieg built Name ID to give himself the opportunity to take off.
So he had a press strategy to go everywhere,
do everything, introduce himself, go bottom up.
And even around the media who were,
the traditional media weren't paying attention to him.
And so we'll see how Rahm Uswami takes advantage of this,
but he's going to be, and he's in a good position
because he's running as mini Trump who wants to pardon him. And so we'll see how Rahm Aswami takes advantage of this, but he's going to be, and he's in a good position because he's running as mini Trump who wants to pardon him. So he actually
has something that is on his message to say about this tomorrow that is helpful to him.
Yeah, I know that there was another piece in Politico. Adam Wren wrote a profile of Vivek
today. That's basically about how his campaign office is just, they built a studio. They built
a TV and podcast and media studio for 80 grand in the campaign office. He has another podcast studio
in his basement. He says yes to everything, 11 PM, 6 AM. It doesn't matter. He's also got no job.
He's got a private plane so he can get everywhere he needs to go whenever he needs to get there.
So like, yes, he's, he's super energetic and active and out there. But back to this,
this Tucker thing, like even Trump was kind of like, it's kind of was like, I don't really know what this format, I don't even really know what this show is, but we're going to get better ratings.
My favorite part of the night was you and I were watching some of the pre-debate coverage and Sean Hannity was on.
And he just had that scorned, jilted lover kind of vibe.
You know, he like had to suck up to Trump for like six years, take his calls late at night, do every softball interview. And then Tucker Carlson, you know, gets the gets the big bracket interview tonight, screws him over.
He looked genuinely hurt by the whole thing.
I mean, Sean Hannity was an active participant trying to overthrow the government while Tucker Carlson was Texas producers.
How much he hated Donald Trump.
This guy.
Yeah.
And maybe Hannity got lucky and scored a Pence interview tonight.
Who knows? Good for you,
Sean. Yeah. I don't think this interview did anything for anyone. Like, by the way,
Twitter is such bullshit. The little ticker under the interview claimed it had 80 million views.
I don't believe that for one second. Yes. More people watch it than the Super Bowl. Yeah,
exactly. Just like whatever, Elon's bullshit.
Okay, we are going to take a quick break.
When we come back, you'll hear from Sarah Longwell from The Bulwark.
She has done hundreds and hundreds of focus groups of Republican voters.
She knows what they think for better, for worse.
So stick around for that to get her welcome to the show the co-host of the Next Level podcast and the Focus Group podcast, Sarah Longwell.
Sarah, it's great to see you.
Hey, guys. Thanks for having me.
So we, you might not know this, but Dan and I are giant libs.
And what we think about Republican primary debates probably doesn't matter.
So I wanted to name this segment, Check Your Lib Bridge.
But Dan told me it was bad.
So we just really want to know what you thought of the debate.
If anybody, based on the hundreds and hundreds of focus groups you have done, move the needle tonight in terms of the Republican primary
electorate? Yeah, so I watch this stuff with two parts of my brain. There's the me part.
And so my reaction as Sarah Longwell is that was terrible. That was very stupid. I can't believe I
was ever a member of that political party. Anybody who said something sane got booed. Anybody who
said something insane got cheered for.
But then there's the other part of my brain that watches it through the eyes of voters that I
listen to week in, week out, these two-time Trump voters. And I don't know. I mean, it was such a
weird debate. DeSantis was left almost no impression. I was, you know, just just the sheer number of them on stage and the way that Vivek was just chewing up time cost DeSantis a lot.
He wasn't fighting to get in. And so it was easy to forget he was there.
And so I'm not sure he did himself any favors with voters.
I'm not quite sure how to assess Vivek's performance because on one hand he got himself
a lot of time he just was on camera a ton he was fighting with mike pence uh but he was equal parts
the crowd was with him cheering and then the crowd was getting pretty annoyed with him he was a foil
for some of the other people's best moments like nikki haley uh when she was beating up on him. But whenever I find somebody
deeply repellent, I know now that I need to adjust and assume that them being repellent to me means
they're probably going to get a five point bump in the polls from base voters. And so Vivek,
probably people who didn't know who he was, probably there's people out there who like him, like how hard he defended Trump.
He really took the air out of DeSantis being the one to defend Trump.
I mean, every canned line that DeSantis had that he really wanted to hit hard, Vivek had said like five minutes prior.
And it was just really like, yeah, taking the wind out of DeSantis's sails.
It was like there's a little bit of a weird crowd there.
I couldn't get a bead on.
I think maybe like half the room was cheering sometimes while the other half was booing.
Like Nikki Haley was getting these big applause lines when she's going to bat for Ukraine.
But I know that Republican based voters are not excited about sending more money to Ukraine.
So I couldn't quite understand exactly where everybody was.
But I do know that the Asa Hutchinson's, the Chris Christie's, the people who were explicitly expressing anti-Trump sentiments, Pence, when he did it, they were getting booed and shouted down.
The crowd did not like that. So those are sort of my that's my top line thought. anti-Trump sentiments, Pence, when he did it, they were getting booed and shouted down. The
crowd did not like that. So those are sort of my, that's my top line thought.
No one in the room other than Christie and Hutchinson that you met and made any sort of
argument against Trump. Last I checked, Trump is winning by a lot of points. He, and if we stay on
this trajectory, all those people are going to get their ass kicked. Based on what you've seen with voters, what is the size of the anti-Trump lane? And what's the
best way to get there if you're going to get shouted down for making a case against Trump?
Is there some other better way than Christine Hutchinson tried to do it? Or do you just have
to hope Trump collapses under his own weight? Yeah. So the way that I break up the Republican
Party right now is sort of there's 30% always Trumpers, 30 percent maybe Trumpers, 30 percent move on from Trumpers, and then like 10 percent never
Trumpers. And so Chris Christie and Asa Hutchinson have like a 10, you know, a ceiling of 10 percent
from the never Trumpers because the move on from Trumpers, those are DeSantis people or Vivek
people. Those are people who worry that Trump can't win. They have electability concerns, but they're not anti-Trump.
There's just not.
And that's the thing.
There's a difference between the always Trump base and then being anti-Trump.
And I would say 90 percent of the party is open to Trump in some way.
The move on from Trumpers who prefer a DeSantis, let's say, they'll still vote for Trump in a
general election. And so they're not anti-Trump per se. They're just don't think he's the best
person to go forward with. The problem is, is they're not consolidated around anybody. And I'm
not sure there was anyone tonight who made them say, oh, let's all consolidate around this person.
They're the obvious person jumping, you know,
jumping off the stage. So I'm, I was watching old debate clips from 2015 and 2016. And it took me
back to just how different Trump felt on that debate stage. You know, everyone else was kind
of black and white. He was showing up in color. He was dominating the stage and he was sort of loving the chaos.
And I felt a bit of that tonight with Vivek, the way he made the entire debate about himself.
But I was a little bit surprised. Like I kind of thought that he knew he was going to get attacked.
Everyone was telegraphing like Haley was telegraphing that she was going to go after him on funding for Israel and that he would respond, but kind of do it with a smile.
Instead, he got hit that first time he got called chat GBT or whatever it was by Chris Christie.
And then he just started lobbying attacks at everybody. And I'm just wondering,
do you think that plays because we always hear from all swaths of the electorate,
they don't like the negativity in politics. They don't like the attack, but they do like Trump. So I'm just kind of trying to sort out my own mind, like
what to make of what we watched. Yeah. They're lying about not liking the attack, um, or the
negativity they do. I mean, that's just the thing everybody says, like they are, it's a revealed
preference, the Trump stuff, uh, that, that they actually do do want and some of it is that they they want
people to signal that they are the fighter for them uh right and so they want somebody that
they think's gonna go really hard uh the vivic stuff though i was also trying to figure out
because there's a some of the time it felt like oh this guy's stealing the show he's jumping off
the page um But then there were
other times where people, the crowd seemed actively annoyed with him. Like not some of
the other candidates certainly seemed really annoyed with him. And so I couldn't quite,
I couldn't quite figure out how people were reacting to him. I will say, as I've done
focus groups, especially in Iowa, where he is showing up a lot,
there are a lot of voters that are very Vivek curious. And the way that they talk about him
is the way that they used to talk about DeSantis like eight, nine months ago, where like, oh,
he's got really good ideas. I really like him. I'm really interested in hearing more from him.
But he was a chaos agent tonight. And I guess I've seen Trump be a chaos agent and that worked for him.
I'm not sure if it works for Vivek, but it might. I mean, just the sheer volume of time,
like the sheer amount of time that he got tonight to showcase himself versus, I mean,
the two other, the two people who are, you you know even remotely in contention uh tim scott for the donors
and ron desantis for the move on trumpers they were both surprisingly just in the back like he
overshadowed them tim scott in particular he just was gone and even now right we're talking about
vivek we're not talking other than talking about
how DeSantis didn't really pop. I think that Vivek's the one who tomorrow is the name that
everybody hears for better or worse, right? And I think we know that when you're trying to just
get your name and your brand idea up, that that kind of thing can work for you.
Another argument that was not made really on stage at all was any
sort of argument about electability as relates to Trump. It was no one has brought it up.
There's been sort of conflicting anecdotal accounts of how important electability may be
to Republican voters. Some, you know, in some polls, they'll say it's the beating Biden's the
most important thing. I think that's kind of a dumb question, because why would you pick a
candidate who couldn't
win?
But also, those polls showed that a lot of people think Trump can win.
Then there was this New York Times story the other day, which basically tried to undermine
the electability argument by saying, and this was really anecdotal.
So I'm curious if you've seen this, your focus groups that people who watch Fox News
are sort of in the right wing media ecosystem have been fed so many clips and stories about Joe Biden being too old or not mentally competent.
They think he can't win.
Is that a real are people concerned about electability?
Do they think that about Joe Biden?
Is that giving Trump more permission?
Yeah, the reason I like to break the party up into those buckets is because the move on Trumpers,
they do care about electability.
That was their whole thing about DeSantis to begin with.
You know, he's Trump without the baggage.
He's Trump, you know, not on steroids.
And so they still saw they liked the Trumpiness of him, but they thought he was electable.
The problem is, is that for the Trump base and even the maybe Trumpers, those are the
people who are really deep in it.
And they think that Joe Biden sits in the Oval Office drooling on himself while somebody spoon feeds him,
you know, oatmeal. And so why wouldn't they think that Donald Trump could be him also,
especially the always Trumpers, but by a lot of measures, up to 70% of the Republican Party,
they believe that Donald Trump won last time. And so, you know, they think that why they didn't lose to Joe Biden.
It was rigged against him. And so revenge for another shot. He deserves it.
And the other thing voters say all the time, and this includes the move on from Trumpers.
They think he was a great president. They think he did a great job.
did a great job. And I think that's one of the difficulties these candidates are having, is that they don't want to go after Trump's record, because the voters like Trump's record,
and they think he did a good job. But the fact that nobody went after him, period, tonight,
the moderators had to set up a segment in which to talk about Trump and the indictments, and then it broke wide open with a rousing defense from Vivek.
I don't know what these guys are thinking.
I just don't know what,
Donald Trump is beating DeSantis by 30 or 40 points
in most of these polls,
and everybody decided to not say,
including Chris Christie.
Like they had to be set up to say anything.
Pence was kind of waffling.
Where was Chris Christie. Like they had to be set up to say anything. Pence was kind of waffling. Where was Chris Christie's big attack? I mean, I've been a kind of a defender of him ready to say,
like, let's unleash this guy. He was nowhere on Trump. And so anyway, back to your question.
I do think that the electability matters to a portion. I don't think it matters to a big
enough portion. And I also think that it is true that, yeah, people think Trump is perfectly electable against senile Joe Biden.
Which is so funny since he lost to quote unquote senile Joe Biden two years ago.
Again, again, a big chunk are not so sure.
Right. Which is why Rhonda, I can't understand why Rhonda says we refuse to take my advice where he should say that Donald Trump let Sleepy Joe steal the election from him.
Problem solved.
That plays.
Yeah.
I hate to keep bringing up Vivek, but, you know, he said the most interesting things.
And he said the climate change agenda is a hoax.
The anti-carbon agenda is the wet blanket on our economy.
More people are dying because of bad policies than because of climate change.
on our economy, more people are dying because of bad policies than because of climate change. I'm wondering if a, you hear views that extreme reflected in the voters you talk to, or B,
whether I'm overthinking this and voters might like that because it tells annoying libs like
me who care about climate change, where they can shove their, you know, electric vehicle charger
or whatever. Exactly. Yeah. Uh, Again, it's a little bit of both.
There's going to be an audience for the climate change is a hoax stuff.
Because he's just, this is the thing that Vivek was doing, right?
DeSantis, when he was asked to raise hands or whatever, give a straight answer, he let,
you know, worked himself into a pitch.
Vivek just comes out with climate change is a hoax.
Now, the crowd seemed to boo him, unless I'm mistaken for that.
And there are a lot of voters in the Republican Party that will think that that's ridiculous.
It's actually the environment is one of those things that you get a lot of voters,
including Trump voters, that are real squishy.
You know, they want, Nikki Haley was closer actually to where a lot of people are.
We want clean air.
We want clean water.
We just, you know, and Republicans can do this.
That being said, you know, there's definitely 35% of the party who will be like, hell yeah,
he just got up and said it.
Straightforward.
And it'll be memorable.
And so that's why I just
think when it comes to this undercard, you know, how do we shuffle things around for second place?
Vivek probably did himself the most favors, uh, by just being an insane person that appeals to
the section of the party that likes insane people.
Yeah. Are we just wasting our time here?
Is there a path for anyone to be Trump?
There's a slim,
like here's,
here's the thing.
It would take a bunch of things to happen.
One,
the big exogenous event of something happening to Trump or something
happening that like really kneecapped him
going into the general that people believed was a real deficit. I don't exactly know what that
would be. But it would have to be that the problem is, and it has been the problem all along,
you can't beat something with nothing. And these guys are showing us nothing, right? There's nobody
if you the problem that you can you can talk yourself into. Well, this could happen to Trump. This could happen with the legal stuff. But can you talk yourself into, boy, what I just saw from DeSantis shows me that he can consolidate 40 percent of the party around him, 50 percent of the party.
So did we see Tim Scott?
Did we see Nikki Haley?
Nikki Haley did herself some real,
some,
some real favors with the donor class. I think that people who are writing Tim Scott checks are going to start
writing her checks,
but like,
yeah.
Which one of those people on the stage looked like they were gonna beat
Trump.
Yeah.
I didn't see it either.
I will say though, what is Trump?
Did he do his Tucker thing?
I saw people were at least our our people, the tweeters were watching the debate.
Dan and I watched 30 minutes of 45 on 2X speed.
And it's just weird.
There's like a rant about the Panama Canal and Epstein being dead.
And I don't know that it did him any solids.
We turned it off.
Well, you would, Libs.
I mean, don't you know how important the Panama Canal is to Facebookers?
Listen, Jimmy Carter gave it away, and I've celebrated that decision ever since.
Sarah, thank you for staying up late to help us better understand an electorate that is challenging to understand.
Let's be honest. We really appreciate your time and hope to see you soon.
Yeah. Thanks, guys.
Thanks again to Sarah for joining the show. Thanks to everyone here on the Crooked Media team who's
sitting in a studio that's about 105 degrees.
It's so hot.
There's not one drop of breeze.
I'm so tired.
We've been awake for so long.
My daughter was teething
and woke me up at 4.30 in the morning.
I've been up since 4.30 myself.
Because we're weirdos.
Yeah, I have to beat my children up.
What?
I'm sorry.
Rephrase that.
Leave it in.
I've been up since 4.30.
I have to beat my children
to who gets to be awake first.
To the breakfast table.
Okay.
We probably shouldn't talk anymore on a microphone where it's recorded.
Thanks, everyone, for listening.
Talk to you next week.
Bye, everyone.
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