Pod Save America - Will Chris Christie Back Biden?
Episode Date: February 14, 2024Democrats win George Santos’s seat back, the House impeaches the Homeland Security Secretary instead of addressing the border crisis, and Biden joins TikTok. Addisu Demissie joins Lovett to break do...wn the news and Chris Christie talks about what it will take to defeat Trump and whether he will support Biden in order to do it. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pond Save America. I'm John Lovett.
And I'm Adisu Dumisi.
Good to see you. Thanks for being here.
Good to be here, man. Live and in person.
Live and in person. On today's show, Democrats win back George Sanchez's seat on Long Island.
The House impeaches Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for his role in a border crisis they refuse to solve.
Joe Biden gets on TikTok and just in time for Valentine's Day.
Never Trump heartthrob. Chris Christie stops by the show to play fuck marry kill with trump
biden ronald reagan good luck with that but first in an eight-point victory that exceeded polling
showing a tighter race democrat tom swazi beat republican mozzie pillup in a special election
to replace billionaire astronaut george santos in new york's third district my childhood district
and uh philip is an Ethiopian, like me.
Yeah.
Oh, really?
Yeah, exactly.
Ethiopian Jew, I believe.
Yeah, that's not me, but.
That's not you.
The race boiled down to a fight over immigration policy and abortion access,
and Democrats are holding Swazi up as an example of how to parry attacks over the migrant crisis.
This felt like a tight race, and then it wasn't.
What do you think went into the win here?
Yeah, I think a couple things.
First,
candidates matter. Philip, God bless my Ethiopian sister, but not a particularly good candidate,
spent the whole race running away from the press. Swazi, a former congressman, a former candidate
for governor, former county exec. In a short, compressed special election, it's actually hard
to rebrand folks. And he was a good candidate for
the race. I think the other thing is campaigns actually can make a difference. Like if this race
had been the day that Santos was expelled, I'm not sure it would have been as big of a gap, but
Democrats poured a lot of time, energy, money into this, 7 million by HMP, House Majority Pack,
4 million I saw this morning from the DCCC,
door knocking from unions and LCV and other partners. And so you put a good candidate
together with an actual campaign that's communicating with voters and suddenly you
can move the numbers on the margins and get what, six, seven points is like a blowout in
competitive house district. Yeah. I want to spend time on what they did right,
but I want to talk for a second just about what the Republican did wrong, because there was a lot of criticism that
they weren't going to events, they weren't answering questions. But one of the challenges,
they were trying to avoid abortion related questions. And, you know, we went through a
midterm in which Democrats weren't able to hold the House because we lost in places like New York and California
where abortion didn't feel as salient. Has that changed as Republicans have embraced an abortion
ban? Yeah, I think the answer is yes. There's no doubt in my mind that now we are, what,
two years almost removed from Dobbs. It is as salient an issue today as it was then. I think
it's going to continue into the fall. I didn't think that was going to be the case, if I'm going to be honest, in the fall or summer of 2022. But
I think continuing to hit Republicans over the head with the abortion issue is going to be a
strategy that House, Senate, presidential, every campaign takes going into the fall.
It is still as salient as ever. And you got to do it both in paid media, earned media,
you name it. It's top of the list and it's going to continue to be top of the list. And I think the DTRIP, the HMPs of the world,
the campaign, Swazi himself did it and went on the offense, right? That's the other thing. You got to
set the terms of the debate. If you're playing poker, you want to be the guy going all in,
not the guy put to a tough decision. And Democrats need to do more of that. I think the Swazi
campaign did that pretty effectively. So let's talk about where Democrats did feel like they were a little bit on defense,
which was on immigration. Swazi openly characterized the immigration situation at the
border as a crisis. He talked about migrants streaming across the border. Republicans attacked
him for saying two years ago that he, quote, kicked ice out of Nassau County. That's referring
to immigration and customs enforcement. Here's a clip of an ad that Swazi ran in response. You've been hearing a lot of nonsense, blaming Tom Swazi for the
migrant problem. Really? As the left pushes to abolish ICE, here now is one of the few Democrats
who voted to support this vital agency. ICE is an important government agency. They have an
important job to do in this country, securing our border. They support strong border security.
Tom Swazi will work with both parties to close illegal immigration routes,
but open paths to citizenship for those who follow the rules.
And anything else you might hear is garbage.
I'm Tom Suozzi, and I approve this message.
It's a very Long Island.
It's a very Long Island.
It's a very Long Island.
The accents, the man on the street accents really just sort of like shove me into a locker, you know.
So what do you what do you what was your take on his messaging around immigration?
Yeah, look, I think it is a it is a tricky issue for Democrats. I don't think there's any doubt about it.
It is it remains to the top of the list of voter concerns, even in a place like New York that is pretty far away from the border.
the list of voter concerns, even in a place like New York, that is pretty far away from the border,
I would say, whether you like it or not. And campaigns are often, we want to fight them in one place, but the voters tell us what they want campaigns to talk about. And I think it goes back
to what I just said, go on the offense, say what you want to say before you're being put in a
position to respond to what the other candidates have to say. And Swazi not only, you know, took a,
I would say more moderate position on immigration and paid communications,
but he actually attacked Pilip for, you know,
opposing the deal in Congress and basically doing Trump's bidding in terms of
killing what I think voters and all of us alike want to see,
which is Congress actually to do something about this.
So go on the offense,
talk about it in the way you want to talk about it because it's not like you're going to be able to avoid it. The voters
are going to make you do it. And certainly the Republicans are going to make you do it. So say
what you want to say instead of waiting. Yeah. I was also a little bit surprised to see in the
very limited real estate you have to do any kind of message on immigration. There was still space.
It was still important to include a positive pro-immigration message in there. There was
still a case for making sure people can come if they follow the rules. There is still, I think-
There is, yeah. That's what the voters are. The voters aren't, maybe the mega Republican
base is in one place, but they're not a majority of the electorate. Democrats,
moderate Democrats, moderate Republicans, to the extent they exist in the electorate,
if not in Congress, independents, they want Congress to do something that is fair to the people who are here.
They want to solve DACA. They want to certainly tighten up border security. There's room for a
deal. Congress is apparently trying to make a deal, right? Which is crazy. You got 70 senators
voting for a deal a couple of days ago on this. It's really the MAGA base that is pulling the
Republicans to the right. And we have to take advantage of that by kind of seizing that middle.
So Democrats outperformed the polling. We've done well in these off-cycle elections. It seems like
there's been a kind of flip in the script where Democrats now do better in some of these low
turnout elections. At the same time, it does give us some glimmer of hope for our ability to win in
some of these close New York districts. New York Forest currently held by Republican. He won by 4%.
The 17th, Lawler won by 0.64%. That's where Mondaire is running. The 18th, 0.3%. The 22nd,
0.98%. The 19th, 1.6%. So there's a ton of really, really close races here. How much of a lesson can
you learn from what just happened? Well, I will say, and I would have said this if the Republicans
won on Tuesday as well, you can't read too much into a special election. We all have to just take
a breath, right? It's February. There was a snowstorm on Long Island. Who knows what's going
to be happening in November. With that said,
I do think it shows, like I said, you know, to start campaigns matter. Candidate quality matters.
We saw this in 2022, right? If the Republicans in all these primaries nominate right-wing lunatics,
it creates a lot of space for us. And I think they're going to, it creates a lot of space for
us on the left and Democrats to win these elections, right? And Swazi obviously took advantage of that. I think you're going to see that in New York,
you're going to see that in California. We can basically, not basically, we can take back the
House basically just winning California and New York Republican-held swing districts. So
it's interesting because that's a map that's totally divorced from the Senate map and from
the presidential map, but it's where this thing I think is going to be won or lost and the House might be our
best chance to pick up a chamber. And so let's talk about what's actually
happening in the House where Republicans, I don't think are really helping themselves.
Last night, Republicans succeeded in impeaching Alejandro Mayorkas, the Secretary
of Homeland Security, allegedly for not following the country's immigration laws. The resolution
passed by a single vote after Majority Leader Steve Scalise arrived back at the Capitol from cancer treatment.
Mayorkas becomes the first cabinet official to be impeached since 1876.
The mutton chops era.
It's a joke.
It would need two thirds, obviously, in the Senate, which is controlled by Democrats.
Yeah, Democrats in the Senate are just figuring out how quickly they can get rid of this thing.
Only three Republicans voted no. Mike Gallagher, Ken Buck, Tom McClintock. Gallagher
isn't running again. Now, at the same time, just to underscore the politics here, a blueprint poll
found that when voters are presented with a generic ballot, Democrats lead by three points.
But when presented with a Democrat who supports the bipartisan border deal versus a Republican who supports impeaching Mayorkas, the Democrat leads by 13 points. Why were only three Republicans
able to vote in a way that is just good politics? Yeah. They are terrified of Donald Trump. The
answer is they are terrified of Donald Trump. And I think when we were in San Jose, the last time I
was on the show, I said this, the Republican Party is the party of Donald Trump and MAGA now.
It just is.
If 214 Republicans are going to vote for a political stunt that they know has no future
and is, frankly, a terrible precedent for the United States,
just because basically Donald Trump told them to do it, that's where we are, right?
The reason why Republicans won't vote for this is because they're scared that Donald Trump
is going to bash them over the head.
They're going to lose in a primary.
They're going to have the MAGA base turn against them.
They're more scared of that than what hopefully is going to happen in November, which is that
they lose the general election against a Democrat.
And obviously in some of these Republican districts, there's, you know, that's not a
possibility.
But these swing district Republicans who are voting to impeach Mayorkas, they're putting
themselves in danger, but they're showing that they're wholly owned subsidiaries of Donald Trump.
Is this in any way like a sop to the base to Trump because they know that as bad as
the politics on Mayorkas are, the politics on impeaching Biden would be that much worse?
Yeah, I think it is a bit of a cop out on the Biden impeachment stuff, which, you know,
it's like, okay, well, I want steak for dinner, but instead I'll get,
you know, beyond meat or something with all due respect to the vegans out there or vegetarians.
But yeah, I think it's a cop-out, right? But it also, I don't think it's going to play well,
right? It's not going to play well with swing voters who understand that impeachment is something
you use for extraordinary circumstances. And this is a policy disagreement, right? Sure, you might disagree with somebody, but you don't impeach
them because you think they're running bad policy. You impeach them for high crimes and misdemeanors.
And voters are smarter than we give them credit for, oftentimes, I think all the time. And these
folks are, again, they're more scared of the right base than they are of losing in a general election that should play to our benefit in November.
So it's very hard to change. I think a long held perception, one of which is Republicans are just
tougher on the border and Democrats aren't. That's what we see in polls. When people are concerned
about the borders, they support Republican policies over democratic policies. They,
they are more likely to trust a Republican over a Democrat. Is their bumbling in the last couple of weeks bad enough to change that
dynamic or it will, or will it, can it turn an advantage into a disadvantage or is it only bad
enough to mute an advantage? That's a really good question. I think, I think playing to a draw is
probably, it's good, right? And obviously an advantage is better, but playing to a draw on this is good.
You know, Republicans have traditionally
had an advantage on this issue.
And I think they just lit that on fire
with what they've done this week.
Not just the Mayorkas thing,
but now the House not even taking up this border deal
that the Senate passed in a massively bipartisan way.
And so they are showing pretty clearly
that they just want immigration as an issue.
They want the issue.
They don't want to solve it. And I actually think from a message perspective going forward for House
candidates, for Senate candidates, for President Biden, that works with voters. It worked in 2020
that Biden is the one who's actually going to bring people together, solve, try to solve problems.
He's proven that over the course of the last three years and once again 70 senators voted for something that's a fucking miracle in 2024 yeah and and yet uh you know matt gates and his merry band band of idiots
and in the house are gonna are gonna stop something that majority of senators and majority
of americans agree with it will hurt i think it will hurt if we push that message as uh you know
publicly come come the fall campaign yeah so chris chris murphy i think has a lot of righteous
indignation right now in part because he spent a lot of time trying to figure out this border deal.
And so the Senate passes a foreign aid bill that has money for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan,
humanitarian assistance for Gaza. This is the version that strips out the border security
deal that Murphy and Lankford made. It goes over to the House. Now, House
Republicans said they won't vote for a Ukraine bill unless there's a border bill. Then Trump said,
don't do that. I want the border chaos. They said, okay, we won't pass the border deal.
They strip out the border deal. Now Mike Johnson says, well, we can't pass the Ukraine bill
without a border deal. So House Republicans have now basically set up a situation
where they've impeached Mayorkas over a crisis
they will refuse to solve.
There's a majority of Democrats and Republicans
that would like to vote for Ukraine aid,
Israel aid, Taiwan aid.
He has an even slimmer majority than ever before, right?
He just lost-
Yeah, one fewer as of Tuesday.
As of Tuesday, George Santos just posted minus one.
The next time he doesn't have a hope
of filling a seat is in May
when McCarthy's seat
could be filled by a Republican.
What happens?
Smarter minds and I
are going to have to figure that out.
I think, look,
I've never been Speaker of the House.
I don't want to tell.
Which is frankly a shame.
I know.
Exactly.
If you want to elect me next January, guys. You don't have to be a member. You don't have to be a member of the House, I don't want to doubt. Which is frankly a shame. I know. Exactly. If you want to elect me next January, guys.
You don't have to be a member.
You don't have to be a member of the House.
No, please elect Hakeem Jeffries.
But when you only have a four-seat majority, two-seat majority, I think, as it is right
now, or you can only lose two votes, everybody matters, right?
And that's the problem that, if I'm giving Johnson the benefit of the doubt, that he
has to deal with is that Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene can torpedo literally anything that might come
to the floor of the house. And they've proven themselves willing to do that. And so he's in
a pickle. If this thing came to the floor, it would pass. I truly believe it. It would lose
some votes on the left. It would lose some votes on the right. It would pass in the middle. The
question is, will he be willing to take the political hit, I think, from the right, he being Johnson, to bring it up? I don't
know with a guy. I don't know if he's willing to do it. I think the honeymoon period might be over
in the post-McCarthy era, and we might be stuck in this position where a majority of the House,
a majority of the Senate, the president's willing to sign it, the majority of American people want
to do it, and the Gateses and Taylor Greens the world are stop us from having a real solution to a real
problem. Yeah. I wonder too, it's the, um, the fact that only three Republicans were able to
buck voting for the impeachment does not bode well for like a discharge position, which would
basically what that would mean is if there was a majority of people in the House that want to pass a bipartisan aid bill for
Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan, they can if everyone signs a letter.
Democrats have all, 213 Democrats have already signed that kind of a letter.
A few would probably drop off because they don't believe in unconditional aid for Israel.
But nonetheless, you need a dozen or so Republicans to say, I'm willing to do this, but none of
them want to go first. Yeah, I think it's a collective action problem. As always. As always, right?
No one wants to be that first Republican. If you can get a group of whatever, I can't do the math
off the top of my head, but 12, 15, whatever it'll be once you subtract the Democrats, it would drop
off maybe. But I think the odds are low. I think it ultimately is going to be a Speaker Johnson
question and whether or not he wants to govern or whether or not he wants to be a tool of Donald
Trump. And I think I know where this is headed. It is just so galling that they would not like
that. So there are Republicans or establishment foreign policy types that just want to do the
Ukraine aid because they understand and believe in the importance of supporting Ukraine in that war.
And they have seen, they all say that in their kind of closed door briefings that Ukraine
could lose and the consequences would be catastrophic.
But they were also open and willing to do the border deal until Trump tried to squash
it.
Then because the border piece of it
got killed, they did just the aid. And then Attorney General of Texas Ken Paxton posts,
unbelievable that John Cornyn would stay up all night to defend other countries' borders,
but not America. That's what Ken Paxton posts on X. Now, Cornyn replies,
Ken, your criminal defense lawyers are calling to suggest you spend less time pushing Russian propaganda and more time defending longstanding felony charges against you in Houston, as well as ongoing federal grand jury proceedings in San Antonio that will probably result in further criminal charges. in the Texas Republican Party. Who knew? I love it. Yeah, me too. I love it.
Ken Paxton is a fucking prick.
Yeah, he deserves it.
He deserves it.
Also, John Cornyn fucking deserves it
because he went along
with stripping out the border deal
that they demanded.
So there you go.
They're making misstep after misstep, I think.
And it's putting them in a,
to your original question here,
they are giving up an issue
that they had an advantage on.
And they're doing it in the most clumsy, dumb way possible. The question is, can we take advantage
of it politically speaking? Right. Well, I think the first question is, can we actually pass
something? Cause I do think from a, from a messaging perspective, it would be fantastic
for Democrats to be able to go out there and say, we did something about this, or we tried to do
something about this. Good for Biden, good for Senate and House Democrats to do that. But in the event that
what I think will happen happens, they have given us all the tools. They have given us the hammer,
they have given us the nail. We just have to pound it in here. And it's clear that there's
a divide within their own party between the sort of traditionalists and the mega folks
on this particular issue, and we need to exploit it.
It's also, you know, Washington Post found that every Ukraine aid vote has gotten at least
73% support in the House. So every vote has been bipartisan. Why? Because when even though the
Republican base and actually the country is, I think, less behind foreign military support in
general than I think Republicans, Democrats in Washington are. Regardless, a majority understands the stakes and that they're not just about pleasing Donald
Trump or winning over the base.
There's a real conflict with real consequences, very dangerous, that they all understand.
They have a role in supporting our ally.
And the fact that we're in a place where mike johnson is basically boxed him into the point where he
can't do what 73 of the house thinks is essential for national security despite the politics and i
would guess a majority or close to it of his own caucus right for sure for sure the majority of
the democratic caucus um i mean the majority of the republicans would absolutely vote for this
if it was an anonymous vote oh they may be afraidionably. They may be afraid of their base on the floor.
Unquestionably.
And yeah, it's, I mean, it's sad.
It's a sad commentary on the Republican Party,
and on the state of Congress, as it were.
But it's a political opportunity, right?
And I am a political practitioner.
Yeah, yeah.
What I think of-
That's exactly what you are.
Yeah, it's true.
What I think of first is how do we use this to win the election so that
we have more Democrats in Congress so that Hakeem Jeffries is the speaker. So Chuck Schumer stays
the Senate majority leader. So Joe Biden stays the president. So we might actually, you know,
I would rather Hakeem Jeffries be sitting there making this decision than Mike Johnson. And we
have that choice in nine months.
So speaking of crass political concerns,
Trump is asserting his control,
not just over the house,
but over the Republican Party at large. In a statement on Monday night,
Trump announced that he is endorsing his very talented daughter-in-law, Lara Trump,
to serve as RNC co-chair. Trump also endorsed his friend, the chairman of the North Carolina
Republican Party, and announced that one of his top campaign advisors will become the RNC's chief
operating officer. Nikki Haley said she thinks Trump is trying to swing the election by taking
over the party apparatus, which is just, I can't believe she'd think that.
Yeah.
Let's hear the clip.
He's named who's going to be the new RNC chair.
His daughter-in-law will be the co-chair and he is making his campaign manager the
officer that runs the party.
Think about what's happening right now.
Is that how you're going to try and take an election?
I mean, yeah.
Oh, yes. Yes. The answer is yes election? I mean, yeah. Oh yes.
Yes.
The answer is yes.
No,
no,
we like this.
This is good.
Wow.
Laura Trump,
she must've,
she must've really wowed him in the interview.
Yeah.
I mean,
again,
this is the guy who brought,
put his daughter and son-in-law in the,
in the West wing.
So we can't really,
I mean,
this is at least down the street a little bit,
but I mean,
do you expect any more from Donald Trump?
No.
Right.
The RNC,
by the time election day comes around, is just going to be another account for him to pay his
legal bills. And that's what he sees. And is this actually rigging the election? No. It's another
Trump, evidence of Trump just taking over the party, literally, right? Putting his family member
who's never been involved in Republican politics in a position of considerable power. Yeah, he likes putting his name. I mean, his name was already all over this. He likes putting his family member who's never been involved in Republican politics in a position of considerable power.
Yeah, he likes putting his name.
I mean, his name was already all over this place.
He likes putting his name on the outside.
Yeah, he might just put a big Trump sign on the RNC building
after he's the official nominee,
which would be par for the course for the guy.
Is there any actual practical implications of this?
So Ronna, Ronna, nay, Romney, McDaniel,
it looks like she's going to step down
after South Carolina.
Latest polls showed Trump beating Nikki Haley
in South Carolina by, I think, 35 points.
He already is in control of the party, right?
Is there anything that would change
after this exchange of keys?
No, I don't think so at all.
Romney, McDaniel was a tool of Trump,
certainly in 2020. It's just going to be a a tool of Trump, certainly in 2020.
It's just going to be a new tool for Trump to use and a new bank account to pay his legal bills.
Like I said before, like that is what the RNC will be come the general election.
And so it doesn't really matter.
And let's be fair, like the nominee of the party should have control over who the chair of the party is in the presidential cycle.
Joe Biden
helped put Jamie Harrison there. It is what it is. So the bad part here is it's just another
evidence of nepotism and Trump treating politics like a family business and not like
a government to help regular people. But it's not going to materially affect the election at all.
I think it's pretty standard politics to install your person at the, at the head of the, at the party.
So, uh, before we let you go, there was, there was, uh, John and, and Tommy and I, we sort of
talked a bit through the democratic freak out after this, her report that kind of
made aspersions about Joe Biden and his age and his memory. Uh, I, first of all,
just sort of curious what you think the Biden campaign
should be doing strategy-wise
to fight back against this narrative here.
Yeah, I think they're doing a lot of it now
or they're starting to do a lot of it now
that the campaign is switching into a new mode.
Trump is the, if he's not the actual presumptive nominee,
everybody kind of knows he's going to be there.
The campaign has been messaging that more.
And you switch into general election mode and that means putting the president out there. We've seen him go to
North Carolina, sit down for dinner with families, visit with folks who had their student loans
forgiven, et cetera, et cetera, and be in these environments where you can see him be president
and be a presidential candidate in real time. I think that is what people want to see. And he's
up to the job. I believe he's up to the job.
But voters need to believe it, right?
And the way they believe it is by seeing him do the job and do the job of campaigning as well, which we expect from a presidential candidate, even if he's the incumbent.
So ultimately, it's up to the president to perform.
I have every confidence he will perform.
Got to put him out there to perform.
And we'll see more, I think, obviously.
We got the State of the Union coming up next month. You got the convention after that. You've
got nine months of a campaign in front of us. The more we see him, the more we'll understand.
Sure, the number might be high in his age, but the question isn't actually just about the number.
It's about fitness. Is he fit for the job? And he is fit for the job, and he will prove it over
the course of the campaign. Yeah. I mean, the other number that's high is the number of people who
say that they have a very serious concern up to saying they believe he is not up to the job. And
we can blame the media for this, whatever, but they're seeing something with their own eyes and
coming to a conclusion. I want to believe that that is surmountable, that Biden being out there can address this issue.
How will we know before November 6th that Joe Biden has successfully shown people that while
they may not stop having a concern about age, that it is a surmountable concern compared to
the insurmountable concerns about Donald Trump's chaos and fitness? I don't know how we'll know.
I mean, I think we'll
know on November 6th when we see the votes come in, because I do think it is a threshold issue
in the election. But I guess my point is, it is not an insurmountable one. And actually,
the solution is pretty clear, which is show that you're up to the job. And he does that.
You think about the January 6th speech, the speech after October 7th, last year's State of the Union,
which I think was one of his best moments of his entire presidency and performance.
The debates, obviously, in 2020, when the debates in 2020 in the primaries, when he was up, you know, and on his last legs and politically speaking and performed and took over the primary in a few days.
So when the chips are down and where things look bad, Joe Biden tends to perform. Right.
So when the chips are down and where things look bad, Joe Biden tends to perform, right?
And I think the question is, will he do it, right?
That's the political question right now.
I believe he will, but we'll know when he does it, right?
And there will be plenty of opportunities between February 14th and November 6th for him to show that to the American public.
There will also be paid advertising. There will be an entire campaign. Just thinking back to our original conversation about New York three and Swazi, like things change over the course of the campaign and things, you know, and nine months is an eternity, right? So there'll be advertising,
there'll be things we can't expect, there'll be things we can't expect. And he will have to prove
in the crucible of a campaign that he is up to the job, but I think he will do it. And I think
we'll know it because he'll win the election. So they launched a TikTok during the Superbowl.
Yeah. Is that good? Is that helpful? I think so. I think so. I think it's a tough one, right? I
think we also talked about this in San Jose with respect to Facebook and all the, and X even,
these platforms that are problematic in certain ways, right? TikTok in a different way
from a national security perspective. But Democrats, I think we talk a lot about having
message problem, which sure we do. There are things we can do better. There are things specific
candidates can do better, et cetera. But I actually think we have more of a message delivery problem,
which is that the media environment is so fragmented now that it's just hard to reach people. And it used to be the nightly news and three old white
guys giving the whole country their political news. And it should be three younger white guys.
Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Exactly. But now it's just, it's fractured, right? It's really hard
to get to people, young people in particular, but it's true of older people as well. And I think using TikTok as a medium to communicate with people, using X, using Facebook, et cetera, it's just required. Whether you like it or not, it's a required part of actually reaching people where they are. And if you are running for president and you're not there, you're missing an entire swath of people and where the conversation is happening. So they have to do it. And I think a smart thing to do and i think they've done from a content perspective a good job it'll get better
i'm sure they'll have some cringe moments too like it is what it is i just it is my official
position is cringe is good more cringe do cringe it's just get to people man you gotta you know
i'd rather people have hear from the president than not right and and uh hear from whatever
right pokemon go to the fucking pulse but but But no, my feeling about this is that,
of course, he should be on TikTok.
And of course, they should be, I think,
trying to make content that is made for TikTok.
But what I've been thinking about
just the last couple of days,
especially since this report came out,
is one way I think people,
one big challenge we have, right,
is that there's this perception- perception reality disconnect. And if I was
being honest, what I would say is Joe Biden, by all accounts behind the scenes, he's not as
energetic as he was as an older man, but he is sharp. He is on top of these issues. And he has
been certainly on domestic policy, an extraordinary president. Even, you know, Kevin McCarthy says,
you know, that Joe Biden, you know, is as sharp as attack, even if he pretends otherwise in public.
And yet I think sometimes he seems older and he seems frail.
Donald Trump felony indictment will sharpen the mind.
He is energetic and bombastic on stage, which assuages people about his advanced age.
Yet behind the scenes, he is mentally, psychologically, emotionally unfit to be president.
He is mentally, psychologically, emotionally unfit to be president. And I wonder if there are ways in which the Biden campaign can show and not tell this
story about that beyond just giving energetic and good speeches, which I think you're right.
January 6th speech was excellent.
The State of the Union was excellent.
What can we do to show people Joe Biden as president to make that argument rather than
tell that argument.
Yeah, I think, I mean, like I said, I think what they've been doing, particularly in social media
spaces, is put him with real people. It's where he always has excelled. If you think back to
even his 08 campaign, but certainly when he was chosen as vice president and what the Obama
campaign did with him in 08 is they sent him out to, you know,
where white folks are basically and let him be Joe.
And he,
you know,
with all it's,
it's it's warts and it's,
it's pluses and minuses.
And I think people still,
I know this from research and I know this from my gut still think Joe Biden is a
good and decent man.
He might be an older,
good and decent man, but he's a good and decent man who has the best interests of the
country at heart. And reminding them of that by putting him in sort of positions where he can show
it can overcome sort of the reality that he's older, four years older than he was four years
ago. And so that is to me,, you know, that's the campaign strategy piece
of this, right? You got to put him in positions to be himself and show the best of himself.
And that's what a campaign is. I'm going back to that. Like we have nine months to do that.
And I think they will do that. I hope they will do that. And it will find its way to the voters.
Then you have on top of that, you have to layer on advertising and other, you know,
the other things that go into communicating a message and sort of mainlining it to people,
the earned media, the paid media, et cetera.
But ultimately, it's about the president and his ability to show it.
And you got to, you know, put him in places where he can show it.
I think that's a good place to leave it.
Yeah.
So good to see you.
So good to see you so good to see you
too good to be here in person have you so smart so helpful i try realistic yet reassuring but
not too reassuring it's good gotta keep it 100 we'll be right back uh with my conversation with
governor chris christie which was a good time on the whole but before we get to that exciting
pre-announcement announcement our our new tour dates for Pod Save
America are about to be announced.
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through Friends of the Pod.
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Go to crooked.com slash
friends to join. If you haven't joined yet,
please do it. Get in there. Join the community. Joining us now, he's the former governor of New Jersey and GOP
presidential candidate and author of a newly released book, which I believe is called Reagan
Good. Chris Christie, welcome back to the pod. I was happy back and it is not Reagan Good. Chris Christie, welcome back to the pod. I was happy back, and it is not Reagan good. It is what would Reagan do?
Oh, what would Reagan do? Sorry. I'm sorry.
That's okay.
And we'll get to it, and I will ask you that question.
So, Laura Trump, for co-RNC chair, not the obvious choice, but she must have written quite a cover letter.
Will the Republican Party be safe with her at the helm?
Well, I mean, she's not going to be at the helm.
I mean, you know, her father-in-law will be at the helm and he and his political team
will be telling her what to do and then she'll do it.
So, you know, I think she's, you know, if you look up figurehead in the dictionary, a new digital copy would probably have her picture next to it.
Does it matter who's in charge of the Republican National Committee under Trump?
Or is this just a kind of proof point of how much he's taken over the party?
It's a proof point of how much he's taken over the party. It's a proof point of how much he's taken over the party.
I mean, when you can install your daughter-in-law
as the co-chair of the Republican National Committee,
I would say you pretty much have taken control.
So speaking of Republicans bowing to Trump,
you were critical of Trump's NATO comments.
John Bolton put out a statement saying to Republicans
who have said something like,
this is just Trump talking like Trump, that he was in the room when Trump damn near withdrew from NATO. Marco Rubio,
meanwhile, said he has zero concerns after Trump told a story encouraging Russia to do whatever
the hell it wants to America's NATO allies. Does Rubio understand that president and vice president
both can't come from Florida? Yes, he does understand that. But look, this is typical of what everybody
on the Hill, just about everybody on the Hill is doing, which is, as Trump himself said,
in talking about Tom Emmer, they all bend the knee. And that's what Marco Rubio is doing. Look,
I know Marco, and Marco is much smarter than that comment.
And it is just him being compliant.
Why go on television?
Why drive from your house to a studio on an issue that Marco Rubio used to care about,
right, which was America's national security, American foreign policy.
It was something that he talked about a lot as one of the reasons he should be president
of the United States.
Why drive across town to say something you don't believe on behalf of Donald Trump? Why not just
stay home on Sunday? Mystery to me. I have to tell you the truth. I see what some of these guys are
doing and saying right now. And I will tell you this, the only thing that keeps me feeling even
slightly okay is that they're all going to own it when this is over.
And this is going to be over sometime soon. It'll either be over in November when Donald Trump loses the general election, or it'll be over in four years. But one way or the other, it's going to
be over. And all of these things that people like Marco and Ted and at least Stefanik and all these others are out there saying they're going
to have to own it. And it's going to be, I think, a very, very rude awakening for all of them when,
you know, people get out of the spell that they're under with Trump and realize what these folks were
willing to sacrifice for their own personal ambition. So one Republican still taking on
Trump in the primary is Nikki Haley. You were caught on a hot mic when you were withdrawing
from the race saying she'd get smoked. Have you talked to her since? And are you at all surprised
by how much she's sharpened her message since then? It does seem that something changed. She
doesn't sound like someone who's on their way to endorsing Trump, at least as much as
she used to.
The only reason I think she did it is because it became personal.
You know, she got sharp when Trump was personal about her husband.
And it shouldn't have to take that for you to take on Donald Trump.
But that being said, you know, the spending numbers for
through the end of January just came out in the past day or two. Nikki Haley's super PAC
has spent a total and they've spent over $130 million. They spent a total of $2 million on ads that attacked or criticized Donald Trump.
So what I'd urge you and the people who are listening to this is don't give Nikki Haley
credit because once he starts personally picking on her husband, she starts to get a little sharper
at him. You judge people in politics by where they spend their money. And how about this?
by where they spend their money. And how about this? My super PAC, which has been shut down now for over a month, has still spent a million dollars more on negative ads against Donald Trump
than Nikki Haley's has to date. And I had an eighth of the money that she has.
So then what's she doing? What's she running around running this campaign for? What's the
goal? If the ads aren't going after Trump, if you don't think it's going to work, what's the point?
2028. And I said that during the campaign. There's no way to explain that Ron DeSantis
and Nikki Haley spent a combined $48 million attacking each other and that small amount of
pittance, a couple million bucks attacking Donald Trump, except
that they were trying to set each other up, themselves up, for 2028 and didn't care about
2024.
And if lightning struck and something happened to Trump and they happened to get it this
time, that would have been fine by them.
But if it didn't, they're trying to set themselves up for next time.
So speaking of what could potentially happen to Trump on the legal front, Trump's lawyers are trying to delay his various criminal proceedings. In a filing to the Supreme Court, but most think that it's sort of basically frivolous.
But they still have the ability to slow things down, to push a trial until after November.
Are you concerned about that?
Do you want to make sure voters have a verdict on whether or not their presidential candidate is a convicted federal felon before casting a ballot?
Well, first off, I'm not concerned that the Supreme Court will delay it. I mean, they acted very quickly on the ballot question. They didn't delay that.
I think they'll act quickly on this too. And I don't believe that they'll take it
because I think that the circuit decision is pretty airtight. I think it makes sense legally
and logically. And the Supreme Court doesn't take circuit cases where they agree with the opinion and there's no
conflict in any of the other circuits across the country. So I happen to think they're not going
to take the case and I think that in the end that'll mean Trump will probably wind up being
on trial sometime in May of this year. According to, I want to just sort of look outside of Trump
for a second. According to Monmouth, a poll that was out today, nearly one in five Americans believe Taylor Swift is part of a
covert government effort to reelect Joe Biden. Now you've already spoken about this, but this
is what I thought was interesting that came out today. Among that group, 83% are likely to vote
for Trump and nearly three quarters believe Biden won 2020 by fraud. Obviously, Trump exacerbates a conspiratorial mindset
among some Republicans, but he also reflects it. He reflects a conspiratorial mindset that was
there before he came along. How are you going to get the Republican Party to change if they still
have these tinfoil hats on? How do you get them to take the tinfoil hats off? Well, I'd say, look, I'd do more than say he reflects it.
He not only induces it, he gives it oxygen.
Every day he gives it oxygen.
And he wants to because he knows that that's part of his base.
Now, when you think about that,
the people who are convinced that the election was stolen
and the ridiculous Taylor Swift stuff. Um, you know, this, these are people who, who
I think fall into three categories. Category number one is people who really, really, really
believe this stuff. I think that's the smallest of the cohorts. Then there's a group that, that
really despises Joe Biden and his policies, and they want to believe the election was stolen.
That's probably the largest of the cohort.
And then the third piece are the people who say, look, I know Trump's nuts, and I know that this doesn't make any sense. But I'm going to stick with him and support him in all these things
because I really don't want the Democratic Party completely in charge.
And I say that's the second largest cohort.
And they justify everything that way by saying,
well, I agree more with his policies,
even though he's somebody who wanted to take the Constitution and burn it. And they're willing to walk away
from that because they like his policy on taxes better. To me, as important as taxes are,
they're not more important than the constitution. So I know you've said, I mean, that actually I
think goes to sort of this larger question. You've said you won't vote for Trump and you've said, I mean, that actually I think goes to sort of this larger question. You know, you've said you won't vote for Trump and you said you're not prepared to vote for Joe Biden or you can't see yourself voting for Joe Biden because you have a lot of disagreements, you have concerns about his age.
Do you see more of a through line between Reagan's optimistic message and Joe Biden's message about America's fundamental decency than you do with Trump's message about how
there's American carnage and America is corrupt, America is broken?
Yeah, sure.
Absolutely.
I don't think Ronald Reagan would recognize the Republican Party as it stands right now.
I don't think Ronald Reagan would recognize the Republican Party as it stands right now.
And worse than not recognize it, he stood up against it.
Remember, back in the mid-60s, early to mid-60s, the John Birch Society, which was, as you know, greatly racist and anti-Semitic, was a big force in the Republican Party.
And Reagan was one of two people who publicly stood up against it.
It was Reagan and William Buckley.
And I write about that in the book.
So I think not only would Ronald Reagan
not recognize this group
and would have more in common
from an aspirational perspective with Joe Biden,
but I think Ronald Reagan would have been like me
on the campaign trail.
He would have been campaigning against this
because there were certain principles he was unwilling to abandon. And I think protection of
the view of America as a shining city on a hill and an example for the rest of the world
is one of those things Reagan would not have given into.
So I'm not going to push you on the vote question, although you'll blink twice
if you're waiting for the convention. But just because you're not willing, you have frustrations
that a lot of voters have by this choice, by the way. That doesn't mean you don't have a preference.
It doesn't mean you think the choice doesn't matter. Do you believe that the choice between
Joe Biden and Donald Trump matters?
What I believe is that we don't know yet what the full choice will be.
And I do think there will be, put Bobby Kennedy Jr. aside, who I think is a joke and probably
won't wind up on the ballot in most states. But I do think the no labels effort is a real effort.
I think they will get on the ballot in most, if not all, of the states.
So part of the reason why I'm not making a decision yet, other than my decision to definitively
never vote for Trump, is they might nominate somebody who I'd prefer to Joe Biden.
So for instance, if they nominated Joe Manchin, I would vote for Joe Manchin.
So for instance, if they nominated Joe Manchin, I would vote for Joe Manchin.
Even if we are heading into an election in which polls are showing that that candidacy is not leading to a third party winning, but actually dividing the anti-Trump vote and
potentially putting Trump back in the White House.
I don't think that's what, I think you care too much about this.
I think you don't want Trump to win.
I don't want Trump to win.
And I would certainly, that would be something I would evaluate as the time went on. I wouldn't be an early voter.
I would go on election day. So I had all the information I could, but I'm just telling you
dispositionally, I think Joe, Joe Biden is not more qualified than Joe Manchin to be president of the United States in this
term coming up.
And so if it was somebody like Manchin, Larry Hogan's now decided to take himself out and
run for the United States Senate.
But if Larry had turned out to be the no labels candidate, I would have clearly voted for
Larry Hogan over Joe Biden or Donald Trump.
But I understand what you're saying, and I'm not an impractical person, but let's really
dig in deep, okay?
Given the way our elections work, my vote in New Jersey is not going to matter a lick
because Joe Biden's going to win New Jersey.
No matter what happens, I think, unless they're a really strong third party candidate um that
looked like they could win new jersey otherwise you know donald trump lost new jersey to biden
i think it was by 22 points four years ago i can't see him doing any better this time so as a
practical matter too i'm not i'm not using this as a way to get out of answering, but I'm just saying also, as I make this decision, I may decide come election day in November that it's more important for
me to make a statement about how broken the two-party system is and how bad these two
candidates are by voting for a Joe Manchin, for instance, because it won't matter in my state anyway,
for the practical reason you just talked about. It's not an, it's not a popular vote system. It's
an electoral system, right? So that's probably deeper than any of us ever wanted to get into
determining my vote, but I'm just telling you the way I would think about it.
Yeah. Well, I know I'm not, obviously your vote in New Jersey. You know, it's a it's a moral victory. But but your vote matters insofar as I agree with you about the threat Donald Trump poses. And that to me means I want people of good conscience to stand up and say not just that I don't want to do say support Trump, but I actually think even though I have reservations, even though I have very big policy differences, as Liz Cheney said, the country can survive policy differences. Not sure it can survive
four more years of Trump, that despite that, that this moment requires me to do something I don't
find particularly tasteful, but is necessary to save the country. And I'm not telling you that
I won't. I'm just telling you I'm not there yet. You know, I mean, the only thing that I have
decided firmly is that I will not vote for
Trump under any circumstances.
But the rest of it, I'm leaving open till I see what all my choices are and how the
landscape plays out.
Because as we know, I suspect this is going to take like three or four different twists
and turns for both of these characters between now and November.
So let's see how it plays out.
I really appreciate it in your speech
dropping out of the race.
You talked a lot about how the decision stays with you,
that it was stubborn.
So for all the people who have been in this race,
who have put their own personal ambition
ahead of what's right,
they will ultimately have to answer the same questions
that I had to answer after my
decision in 2016. Those questions don't ever leave. In fact, they're really stubborn. They stay.
How does the stubbornness of your realization around your previous endorsement of Trump, how does it affect how you think about
your role in this election? It makes me believe that I have to be as outspoken as I've already
been and continue to be. But even though I'm no longer a candidate, that was not a surrender of
my principles. It was a surrender to the reality of the primary. And so I intend to
be just as vocal, just as active in pointing out to Republicans and independents all over this
country why he is not a fit option to be president. And I feel like I have an obligation to do that because in my heart, I believe it to
be true.
And in my head, knowing him as well and as long as I do, I know it's the truth.
So before we let you go, obviously, I presented you with the big hypothetical, but I just
want to understand your mindset on a few other rapid fire hypotheticals on Biden versus
Trump. Okay. Just to see where your head's at. Sure. Who would you trust to water your plants
if you're out of town, Trump or Biden? Trump. Oh, come on. To water your plants? Your plants
are fucking dead. I'm afraid Biden would forget. Oh, there, you know, I knew you were going to
fucking do that. I was trying to get out of the way. Who would you trust to peacefully transfer
power between administrations? Biden. Who would you trust to peacefully transfer power between administrations?
Biden.
Who would you trust to watch your stuff at Starbucks when you went to the bathroom?
They're both so bad.
Come on.
I would ask the barista to watch my stuff.
All right.
All right.
And now look, this is a little Mormon and maybe it's, I don't mean it to be glib, but
I do just mean it about the men, which is who would you rather give a eulogy if you were to die?
Biden, because I've known him for 40 years, and I think I can more honestly say the kind
of things you'd like to say at someone's funeral about him than I could about Trump.
Final question.
What are you doing for your wife for Valentine's Day?
And you can't be buying flowers on your way home because anyone married to you deserves so much
more. Well, I'm already home. So I blew that. Oh, wow. We I have gotten her a card and written
a note. Hold on now. Let me give the full answer. We, um, we made an agreement
with each other this year at my wife's suggestion. She said, look, I don't know what I want to get
you for Valentine's day. I don't want to waste the time trying to figure it out. Can we please
don't make me feel guilty though, by going out and getting me something, and then I'm going to have nothing for you.
So let's not exchange gifts this Valentine's Day.
And I'm going to stick with that.
We're not going to exchange gifts.
And by the way, we've been married for 38 years.
We've been together for 40. And so we've exchanged probably 37 or 38 Valentine's Day gifts.
So when you get to this stage, it's a little bit different.
But if you read my card.
What a trap you fell in.
What a trap.
But look, if you read my card, it would bring tears to your eyes.
Oh, it's.
You'd weep.
All right.
You'd weep.
All right.
All right.
The book is What Would Reagan.
The book is What Would Reagan Do?
And apparently it's whatever you think you should do.
Uh,
and,
uh,
it is not,
I know you're,
look,
I am,
I,
I know you're not going to buy the book.
So I'm not going to buy the book.
I know you're not.
So I am going to send you a signed copy of the book.
Right.
And I just want to know,
we have a book.
All right.
And I'm just saying,
if you're hearing this and you're even considering buying Chris Christie's book and you haven't
bought our book first, you can go fuck yourself.
Oh, well, look, why can't they buy both?
Oh, now I feel this.
Now I feel dirty.
The stock market is at an all time high.
People, you know, are doing a little bit better.
Why can't they go buy both books?
Thanks to Joe Biden's leadership.
Thanks to Joe Biden's leadership.
And the convention speech writes itself.
I don't know about that.
I might say it was because of the great work of the chairman of the Fed.
Fucking get out of here.
Governor Chris Christie, this sucks.
You love this.
You love this.
Happy Valentine's Day to us both.
And to both of us.
Absolutely.
Feel the love.
Adizu, thank you so much for being here.
That was really great.
Really appreciate it.
My pleasure.
Anytime.
I'll be back when you ask me to come back.
Fantastic.
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