The Daily Show: Ears Edition - The Second First Presidential Debate and Beyond | The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
Episode Date: September 16, 2024Jon covered the first presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump on The Daily Show, and yet he’s still talking about it on his podcast, The Weekly Show. He just won’t let it ...go. In an election cycle where debates have been more impactful than ever, what influence has the first, and perhaps only, meeting between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump had on voters? To unpack the debate and its implications for each campaign, we’re joined by Ashley Parker, Senior National Political Correspondent for The Washington Post, and David Graham, staff writer at The Atlantic. Together, we explore how debate formats constrain real messaging, which candidates gained or lost ground, and, of course, where the campaigns go from here. Catch new episodes of The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart every Thursday, wherever you get your podcasts. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast > TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpodSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Roll out from the director of Toy Story 4. Buckle up. Transformers 1 is the best origin movie ever made.
It's the biggest and best surprise of the year. This is going to change everything. Awesome!
Transformers 1 now playing only theaters with PG. Hey everybody, Jon Stewart here, bringing you an
episode of my podcast, The Weekly Show for all of you TDS ears edition listeners. We drop new
episodes every Thursday in our feed. So be joined us over there.
For today, we are bringing you our latest episode, which we dropped
after the debate to the ears people.
So here you have it.
Hey, everybody.
Welcome to the weekly show podcast with me, John Stewart.
We are back. We are back with Brittany Mametovic, Lauren Walker, our airswild producers.
We have been away for months, for years.
When we left, I don't even know who was in the race.
It was it was Donald Trump versus Michael Dukakis.
And then things switched around. Now it's Donald Trump, Kamala Harris. We've only been gone for two weeks.
And now we come back to the earth shaking debate, which will as ABC told us, will change everything.
Nothing is the same. No, it's raining dogs. Night is day. Nothing is the same. No. It's raining dogs, night is day.
Nothing is the same.
Our lives are changed forever.
I assume that you both watched with bated breath.
I found myself really nervous based on just how consequential the last one was, where
two minutes into it, I was like, oh,
he's going to have to leave, he's not going to be able to run for president. So I was happy to see
it not necessarily be revelatory or answer a lot of questions, but at least bring us back to a
slightly more normal cycle, even if that meant Donald Trump yelling about people eating pets.
Yeah, it's weird that that's normal.
That's where the bar is.
I think we've gotten to this point where because there's so much coverage of everything, there
is an expectation that everything is the Super Bowl.
And I guess the debates are probably the closest thing that you can have to that.
But I do think it might be nice to get back to the idea
that these political campaigns are grinding it out,
convincing people that you've got policies
that are going to positively impact their lives
rather than a series of gala events
that will change everything and do that.
Because I think that drama feels very manufactured.
Where did you watch the debate, Lauren?
Oh, just my house.
Watch Party of One.
I ate a sandwich and I kind of like white-knuckled it for two minutes
because it seemed like the energy was nervous.
Right.
The handshake thing, I was like...
I liked the handshake, John.
What did you think?
I would have done bro hug.
I'm always, I'm a big bro hug.
Like if I were her, I walk in...
First of all, I love the way she did it because it was very clear that she had
decided on a game plan and it sort of, to me, it set the tone for this idea that she had a very clear idea of what she
wanted to execute and he really was like, what time's the debate?
Let me show up at eight and whatever happens happens.
So I like that it sort of set this idea that she was going to be intentional and purposeful
throughout it.
He wouldn't look at her for the entire debate.
It was so weird. I thought that was super odd. and purposeful throughout it. He wouldn't look at her for the entire debate.
It was so weird.
I thought that was super odd, but I can't remember.
He did look at Biden a few times,
but I think that was more like, is this dude all right?
I never felt like he had that relationship
with like Hillary Clinton.
So you could say like, well, she's a strong, smart woman.
So maybe he's intimidated by that.
But with Hillary Clinton, like, he followed her around
like a looming shadow.
I don't think he would have done that to Kamala Harris.
I do think he's oddly kind of not sure what to do.
He's intimidated.
He can't be normal.
Yeah, I feel like that.
He doesn't know what to do.
Well, that could be the title of his biography. I can't be normal. Donald Trump, I really can't be normal. Yeah, I feel like that. Well, that that could be the title of his biography.
I can't be normal.
Donald Trump. I really can't be normal.
I have a very difficult time being normal.
Well, we've got two reporters
that are actually covering these campaigns
that are going to give the insight because we can all talk.
I talk all the shit I want.
I very rarely know what's actually going on with any of those.
So our two guests today are reporters and we're going to get their thoughts talk all the shit I want. I very rarely know what's actually going on with any of those. So
our two guests today are reporters and we're going to get their thoughts on what the hell happens. So let me jump in on that and I'll see you guys on the other side.
All right, everybody. We are in post debate glow aura enjoyment. We are going to be joined by Ashley Parker, senior national political correspondent for
the Washington Post.
She's covering elections, won Pulitzer prizes as a team covering elections.
We've got David Graham, staff writer of The Atlantic, written about Harris and Trump and
following these things very closely.
Guys, thank you very much for, for joining us, David and Ashley.
Of course.
Yeah.
Thanks for having us.
Uh, let, let, let's talk about the debate and, and I feel sorry for, uh, the
national political reporters, the people that are following after us.
This may be the last event that we have.
It may now be just 10 weeks of following people around on a bus.
Have you interviewed both candidates extemporaneously? Have you spent time with
Trump, with Kamala Harris? I have spent a tremendous amount of time with Donald Trump. I started-
Ashley, I'm going to stop you right there. I hear the exhaustion and the pain in your voice.
I see it in your demeanor change.
When I said, have you spent time, you said it in the way of someone that perhaps has
been at the DMV for 30 to 35 years.
And there was a pain in your voice.
I could feel it.
Not going to weigh in.
But I mean, I will just say I started covering, this was when I worked
for the New York Times, but I started covering Donald Trump two days after poor, sad, curmudgeonly,
but ultimately sweet Jeb Bush dropped out.
I have basically covered him in some capacity ever since.
Imagine you start your presidential campaign with the high hopes of adding an exclamation point
to your name. That's how well you thought this. What punctuation should we use here? Question mark
period. Jeb Bush put an exclamation point next to his name on the posters and two days after
running into Trump, he had to leave.
Why was Donald Trump so successful in sort of steamrolling
all of the Republicans back in those days?
I think, I mean, a couple of reasons.
One, and this is why he's still fairly successful.
A certain thing is I think shamelessness is his superpower
and he covering previous candidates, we might do
if I covered Mitt Romney, you might do a fact check on Mitt Romney, something he's saying.
You say, well, actually Massachusetts wasn't always number one in job creation. That year
it was tied with Texas or that other year it actually came in third. Mitt Romney would
then change what he was saying on the stump, not because he cared that
the Washington Post had given him four Pinocchios, though we think those noses matter.
It was a solid, solid rating system.
But because he believed he would pay a penalty with voters for seeming dishonest, and Trump
sort of realized that there would be no penalty with his base and his voters, that if he just
repeated something enough and confidently enough and forcefully enough
and shamelessly enough that it could become a certain type of truth.
That I got to tell you, that's the confidence.
But what was most surprising was Donald Trump immediately in the spin room, confidently saying,
I don't think there's going to be another debate because I won this so,
I believe the phrase was tremendously.
I believe he said he won it tremendously.
And it was such a knockout that he didn't think,
he said, the only people that asked for rematches
are the losers, I've so clearly won it.
Is that the process that he was going through, of what Ashley was saying, which is, I'm
shameless. I know I got my ass kicked. I'm just going to run out
there and go, Wow, I'm awesome.
Yeah, I mean, it's amazing. You know, even his allies were
saying, well, you know, he had a hard time he was going against
the three on one because the moderators and you see Trump
just being like, No, I won. I had that. I think that is very much the kind of bravado and the willingness to say whatever he feels
like he's got to say.
What about the Harris campaign?
What was your feeling of how their team was reacting to it?
I mean, I think they were already kind of floating and then to receive the Taylor Swift
endorsement on top of that.
I don't think their spirits could have been a whole lot higher. Is that actually me? Is the Taylor Swift endorsement on top of that. I don't think their spirits could have been a whole lot higher.
Is that actually me?
What is the Taylor Swift endorsement act?
Like I knew it was a nice piece of pop culture, and I know that she obviously has very dedicated fans.
But is there any thought that there were Taylor Swift fans sort of in the Venn diagram that were not,
you know, that she was going to say, you really should look at this Kamala Harris character
and her fans would be like, I don't know,
I've been really leaning Trump on this one.
Like, is that a meaningful thing?
I think maybe.
And I think the reason is it turns people out.
It's not about persuasion,
it's about whether people will do it.
And so, you know, she puts in a link
to voting registration website and the government said,
I think they'd gotten three or 400,000 hits on that site, just from
her Instagram post.
So, you know, enough of those votes in swing states could make a difference, not because
she's going to persuade anyone, but just because maybe if they were kind of on the fence about
whether to vote or feeling blasé, that'll get them fired up.
I was struck during the debate by which subject areas the candidates were most confident in.
It was very clear during the abortion part of the debate that Kamala Harris was feeling
it on a visceral level, was able to deliver, I thought, maybe her best moment, maybe that
in Ukraine, where she was confident, she was purposeful,
she was visceral in her response. And I thought it put
Trump back on his heels. I thought Trump was most
confident in the warning for people's pets. Ashley, in your
mind, what were the areas that you thought were most confident
and least
confident?
Yeah.
So I think you're absolutely right on abortion.
It was interesting because the vice president, her first kind of broad answer, you could
tell her voice was like a little shaky, a little nervous, and then abortion came up
right afterwards.
She 100% hit her stride, and I feel like that sort of gave her the confidence and sort of just the
sense of grounding to proceed with that vibe throughout the debate. I mean, the other thing
where I thought she was very confident and in talking to her team, this is something
they practiced, they rehearsed from that opening handshake, right? Which they described to me as
a power move. They're into- Wait, that was, so the handshake is, everything is choreographed like that you're going to
walk out there and no matter what, you're going to him and you're hitting him with a
handshake.
Yes.
I mean, their goal was to make sure, and this started before the debate, their goal, and
it was born out as successful, was to make sure that as they put it, that Trump was triggered
by the time he walked on stage.
So that started with they released an ad featuring former president Obama talking about crowd
size on the morning of the debate.
With Obama doing that hand motion, they blanketed Philadelphia where the debate was held with
billboards and ads designed to troll Trump, right? One had,
was a crowd size one that featured a full Philadelphia pretzel for Harris, and then a piece,
just a mere piece of a Philadelphia pretzel that looks like a limp pretzel for Trump, right?
And so. So the idea being as he's being driven in a van
towards the venue, he's going to look at that and go, Lynn Pretzel. Wait, what? No. I'm a full pretzel.
Right. Like Lynn Pretzel, I have to abandon all self-discipline and control when I step on that
debate stage. So then, and you could watch it from that, again, that opening handshake, walking over,
getting in his space, introducing herself, pronouncing her name correctly. Then there was-
Oh, so she literally was going up to him
and trolling him with the pronunciation.
This is unbelievable.
I have to say coming off of the NFL's first weekend,
this is sounding so much like
when you listen to football analysts
talking about schematics and a game plan for their,
I mean, it is, we have a scripted first 15 plays,
you're gonna go in there,
they have a weakness in the backfield.
I mean, this is, it really feels like a football game plan.
And they had, I mean, I won't take you through all of them,
but you could watch that debate step by step.
They had these little Easter eggs,
things she would say and do
that they had practiced and believed that Trump and they were almost always correct would be unable to resist wasting time digressing into that.
So a very subtle one that people might not have noticed was when she used, you know, there's a million analyses you can pull on.
But when she wanted to rebut his economic plan, she did so by mentioning Wharton, which is of course, where Trump famously went and takes a
lot of pride. And you saw him, he kind of, he kind of rears back and says, well, I went to the Wharton
school and- That's when she said the 19 Nobel prize economists, including ones from Wharton,
and he couldn't help himself. He couldn't help himself. That was the first one. That's
very subtle for those of us who have been covering Trump since 2015.
A more obvious one was when she invited people to watch his rallies and then the crowd size
says people are leaving out of boredom.
First he responded to that.
It was the first time he saw us.
His eyes went wide.
Yes, you saw the eyebrows went up, the eyes went wide.
He adopted that like 10,000 foot gaze scowl. Right, right, right.
And it was that thing that then led him into the now most viral digression about our nation's
cats and dogs.
Which by the way, as a pet owner, as somebody myself, I was watching with my dog and there was
a lot of, I could see a lot of fear. That's actually been my favorite thing for them. If
you go on like a TikTok or an Instagram, they're putting out these reels of Donald
Trump saying that, and it's just reaction shots of pets who are looking unbelievably
frightened.
David, you were kind of writing more about Trump during all this.
Did they have a similar Belichick-like game plan as they walked in down to, I mean, everybody talks about his game planning as,
you know, he's ready for anything.
Did they do any of that?
Right, they say, you know,
he's been preparing for this his whole life.
And while the Harris campaign was letting it be known
that she had spent all this time
and talking about who was doing the prep
and how, you know, there's an aide dressed up like Trump
in a boxy suit
with a whole nine yards. They went method. They had to go method. Yeah, they totally went method.
And they wanted people to know they were going method. Yeah, sure. Trump is blustering about,
oh, I don't need to prep. And it was interesting to see, you could hear his allies, some of them
saying, oh, he's going to be fine. And then other people a little bit nervous about that.
In the moment that he started to get off track, you know, the moment we started hearing about the cats and dogs, then you see the
recriminations and you see people think, you know, is it really too much to ask him to prepare?
And what we've seen from a decade of this is it is too much to ask him to prepare. And if Joe Biden
collapses on stage, that works for him. But if Joe Biden doesn't collapse on stage, then he tends to kind of struggle. Right. I thought he did have a good first, I thought, two and a half to three minutes.
I thought then as it, you know, his preparation for that early two and a half to three minutes,
I thought worked out very nicely. But then you could see he started to get distracted and,
and things started to collapse and fall apart. Okay, we gotta take a quick break.
The candidates for November are set.
I know Donald Trump's tight.
Between now and election day.
We are not going back.
A campaign season unfolding faster.
Kamala Harris is not getting a promotion.
Than any in recent history.
Make America great again.
Follow it all with new episodes every weekday on the NPR Politics Podcast.
We're back.
I want to talk about the people around them and how that manifests for the candidates'
psyche.
And I want to start with Trump.
My sense of him is, look, a monarchy makes a lot of sense to him.
He runs the Trump Organization.
He doesn't even run, it's not a public company.
He doesn't have a board of directors.
It's Donald Trump.
When he hosted The Apprentice,
my favorite part of The Apprentice is,
after he mediated a dispute between Meat Loaf
and Gary Busey, you know, in the end,
and Busey had to leave and Meat Loaf was gonna stay,
there was always two people next to him at the table.
There was always that last coda of the end of The Apprentice.
And it was either, you know, Ivanka or that dude George or somebody else.
And he would go, oh, that was tough.
And they would go, you made the right, you made the good call boss.
Well done. That was, you couldn't have done anything else.
Is that the vibe around him?
Are there people there who tell him the truth or is he bathed in the kind of you
are our little prince world that seems like has been following
him his entire life?
Yeah, he gets a lot of that. I mean, there are people who try
to tell him the truth. And what happens is they tend to fall out
of favor. They don't hang around long, or as is the case with a
lot of Trump people, they sort of cycle through.
So they come back again, but they don't stay long. And I think, you know, what you're describing of his experience of the Trump Organization has been born out in how he runs campaigns and it was how he was president too.
I mean, you'd see him frustrated that he couldn't just do things unilaterally.
He had not watched the schoolhouse rock and he couldn't believe that he couldn't just do things with the power of the presidency. And that's just his attitude
is he knows best and he wants to do his way.
Is that in some ways comforting in that maybe his authoritarianism isn't malevolent. It's
born of spoiledness. It's born of a more adolescent view based on being the golden child.
No.
Wait, do you want to take some time?
David, take your time with this.
You don't have to answer right away.
I think the result is the same, unfortunately.
Right, so there is, the anger is real.
The malevolence is real.
Yeah. Oh boy.
For those of you who are on the podcast.
David is just nodding enthusiastically about that.
Ashley, what about the Harris campaign?
Can she be told the truth?
Is she surrounded?
You know, how much of this?
I'm always struck by how insulated and isolated these politicians are.
So a couple things. insulated and isolated these politicians are.
So a couple things.
It's different from the Trump campaign, first of all, because she, on the one hand, she's
cycled and churned through a tremendous amount of staff, going back to her days in California,
to the Senate, to the campaign, to the vice presidency, which is normally an indictment
of someone's management style.
But all of that staff, and this is something she has done very deliberately, is she has elevated and surrounded herself by women,
by people of color, by women of color. So her staff just look like physically look different
than Trump's staff, and they bring different perspectives and life experiences. So that's
one thing. The second is recently after she moved to the top of the ticket, a small handful,
but a significant handful of sort of top people
from Obama world and one from Clinton world came in, right?
So David Plouffe.
Obama world and Clinton world.
They sound like closed down amusement parks
where they came in, there was Obama world.
It was opened up in Nashville for a while,
but then it closed down. So she brings on people who have run or have been involved in other campaigns for
Democratic leaders. Yeah, and not just that. I mean, the thing that's striking to me, especially
about the Obama people and she brought in Jennifer Palmieri, who was key in Hillary Clinton's
unsuccessful campaign, is these are people who have done two things successfully that she will likely need to do successfully to win.
And it's sort of the question of can they recreate that magic?
One is they were able to harness Obama's sort of authentic excitement and enthusiasm into
actually like getting information from voters and mobilizing that to the polls.
That's something she'll need to do.
And the other thing is Obama and Clinton took
a very different approach and got a very different electoral outcome. But Obama sort of did not make
race the center, the historic nature of his candidacy, the center piece of his-
Let that speak for itself.
Yeah. His view is people would look at him and understand he was a black guy, right? And so he
didn't need to constantly talk about it. And he talked about race in a way that too many
Americans felt inclusive and inspiring. And that's also
something you're seeing Kamala Harris doing with her historic
candidacy.
David, is it in your mind? You know, we talked about boy, that
was a terrible night for Trump, he's gonna have to do
something. Does he have to do something? It, in some measure, the day he came down the golden escalator and said,
I think most Mexicans are rapists, but sometimes they send some good people.
From that moment on, it became somewhat clear,
this was an antibiotic resistant candidate.
The normal things that would take out a candidate have no idea.
Oh, the Access Hollywood tape and all those different things.
Well, that was 2016.
He's been through more of this than anybody.
It doesn't seem as though these moments that
would be disqualifying.
I mean, honestly, in any other political campaign,
in any other environment, if you stood on the stage, true
or not, and just shouted, immigrants are eating dogs and people's pets.
I mean, Howard Dean was a little loud with a scream.
Michael Dukakis somewhat answered a question intemperately like they'd be done. Right. Doesn't seem to have any impact in any way, shape or form
on his political fortune.
Yeah. I mean, the amazing thing about him is just how how consistent his support is.
He's always there in the mid 40 percent when he's winning, when he's losing.
It just doesn't move no matter what he does.
And I don't think we've ever seen anyone like that in American politics who has such stable approval. He can't get above 50% and he can't
fall below 40. So it doesn't matter what he does. But even within that stable approval, it's, you know,
now they talk about he's picking up more support in the black community or the Hispanic community
or, but he's losing more support women. There are groups that move in and out, but he is consistently reckless.
Right.
And it seems to matter not.
I think one thing we're seeing this campaign from Democrats is a
realization, and it took a long time for them to get to this,
that there's not going to be like the moment or the
Gaff that doesn't Trump I think there was always this hope like well, you know, he's gonna do it this time and and they seem to
Have realized that just it's not a thing
My favorite thing about Democrats. My favorite thing about Democrats was that he got indicted now. We've got him
There's all these things that oh there was always that moment moment where like, as soon as that Mueller report comes out, goodbye, Donald Trump. Like at each turn, it always seems like this is
the conclusive moment. Look, he's on tape saying, I want Putin to win because I love him. And just
everybody's like, oh, that'll do it. None of it does it. Right, exactly.
And so what pressure does he feel?
What does he think he has to do?
I think he thinks he has to turn out the base.
He consistently does not do things
that would look like outreach.
And he, you know, people make fun
of his kind of silent majority rhetoric
as being out of touch and being like Nixonian.
But that doesn't mean he doesn't believe it.
For all the things he will say that he doesn't believe.
I think he really thinks that if everyone goes to win, he should believe it
because they always underestimate him in polls.
And when the elections come out, he always has,
you know, that that silent base.
I wouldn't call them the majority, but they're certainly there.
I mean, I think the reason he shouldn't believe it is
in 2016, he won less of the vote than Hillary Clinton.
In 2018, when he made himself the center of their campaign,
Republicans did poorly.
In 2020, he lost.
In 2022, when he made himself the center of the campaign,
again, Republicans did poorly.
So there's evidence for it,
but he still is really, he believes it. What's fascinating, I never understood it. In addition to the belief that
Donald Trump would win and become presidential, there was also this belief that he could win
and move to the center, which seemed a little more legitimate because he. Oh,
dear God, how many times has Van Jones given you that dewy eyed CNN? I believe Donald Trump today
giving you that dewy eyed CNN. I believe Donald Trump today has become the unifier for it.
There's always that moment where somebody's like,
he's really different now, never.
But what is fascinating is that his base is immovable.
He is almost certainly never going to lose them.
And so there is this world where he could maybe
bring them along a little bit, but since covering him, there's all these moments.
So the second thing is Donald Trump, the way to understand him or one way is he's always
trying to win the minute, the hour, the day, the person directly in front of him.
This is not four dimensional chess.
So people would never understand.
Well, why when he was talking to the Dreamers did he say, you guys are wonderful valedictorians?
Of course you should stay in the country.
And then 10 minutes later,
when they brought in a group of sheriffs, was he like,
the Dreamers are just out in the outer awful.
Let's round them up and send them back, right?
Like it makes no sense,
but he's always trying to win the people in front of him.
But when he is faced with those two things,
as we've seen on say abortion,
where he's been all over the map,
he will always, always ultimately retreat back to
what his far right base wants. He'll move to the middle, the right wing echo chamber will freak out
at him and he will ultimately come down on their side. Does he though, you know, so let's talk
about that. Is that a purposeful move? You know, is it the idea that he so understands how loyal his base is that he can stand up on a
debate stage and say, I actually created IVF, I will personally inseminate any woman with sperm
that wants it. That's how much I believe in IVF. I love it. Does he do that because he thinks I've delivered so well for my base?
They'll never leave me.
I can say whatever I want.
No, because then he freaks.
So this even that's not strategic.
Because then he freaks out, right?
He said something on the Florida abortion rule.
He thought it should be longer than six weeks.
Six weeks is too short.
Right. Six weeks is too short. Then his base flipped out and then he came out and said, well, actually, I am going to vote.
That seems very reasonable.
Right. I think it's interesting that, you know, look, what has been the Trump or far right kryptonite, it would seem to me is the court system. So anybody can say anything
about anything on the radio or on Fox News other than the false claims about Dominion
and getting sued. But it's very clear that when they talk about, oh, the fraudulent voting
and there were so many illegal immigrants, and then when they go to court, they get thrown
out because they have no proof and they get laughed out. I do think her style as a prosecutor Kamala Harris, in
some ways embodies a little bit of that kryptonite. And I
thought, in the debate, she could even do more of it in the
way I was I was struck that, especially when talking about
the economy, when she talked about abortion, she took that prosecutorial style, when when talking about the economy, when she talked about abortion,
she took that prosecutorial style.
When she talked about the economy, she didn't.
Ashley, is that because they lack the confidence
in that narrative,
or they hadn't thought through that litigation yet?
I mean, the economy is an incredibly tricky issue
for the Biden-Harris administration,
because there's an actual,
there's a lot of
economic indicators, right? If you're like pointing to these tangible things, you can
argue that the economy has improved under their administration versus former President
Trump. But the things that people actually feel, right, which they vote on, which is
like, what are interest rates and can you afford to buy a new house or do your three
kids still have to share a bedroom? And what is the, I mean, this sounds cliche,
but what is the cost of eggs and milk?
And when you're driving, you know,
I had someone in the Biden administration to say,
every single gas station with the cost of gas
is a billboard that hurts us when you're driving.
Those things have not changed yet, right?
Because they're lagging.
Well, the gas certainly has.
The gas has.
The billboards for that has, yeah. But sort of, again, like the vibes, the feel and the sense, people feel that things
felt better under Trump. And so there's something incredibly insulting to voters who are stressed
about money or stretched to get to the end of the month to hear Harris saying things are fantastic now. So it's hard to prosecute that case.
All right, we'll be right back.
This election cycle has already been quite a ride.
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We're back. So let me, I think this is a great place for us to talk about a little bit because I think
this talks to how you just described it, Ashley, sounds perfectly reasonable to me.
And I don't understand why a candidate feels that at least that beginning framing is something
that they are not allowed to do, that they're not allowed
to say, look, the economy is incredibly complex.
I think we've made some strides in the right direction
through the pandemic.
Let me walk you through what some of those decisions were.
I know that if you're at home and it
doesn't feel that way to you, the economy
is very personal to people.
Why can't that be the discussion instead of,
are you better off than you were four years ago?
And the first thing is,
I'm gonna give everyone $6,000 for childcare.
And you're like, wait, what just happened?
David, why can't candidates,
and I thought this was a real issue during the pandemic
with our healthcare officials.
Why can't they trust us enough to talk to us
like human beings in those areas where they feel
like it's not completely black and white?
The people who they're talking to,
they think are not the most sophisticated voters.
And I think they are probably right.
Like undecided voters are not the people
who are paying close attention.
They don't necessarily, some of them
may have really nuanced views, but a lot of them don't.
And so there's a certain amount of,
they're pandering to the lowest common denominator
and they feel like they can't get nuanced.
It's not that they're dumb
or that the Harris campaign thinks they're dumb,
but they do understand that this is a group of voters
who is not particularly tuned into politics. They're not paying a
ton of attention. They have other things on their mind, including the cost of groceries.
They're going to tune in at the very end of the election. They're also, and this is kind
of fascinating, one of the most skeptical groups of voters. I was talking to a Democratic
strategist who said, when we do focus groups with swing voters and I say, well, what if I told you that Donald Trump appointed the
three most conservative justices who helped overturn Roe v. Wade? Would that change your
view of him? And the first thing out of these voters' mouths is like, well, if that's true,
I'm going to have to go home and Google it. Right? So there are also-
Dear God.
I'm going to have to go home and Google it. Right?
So there are also- Dear God.
So it's a group of voters who are very distrustful of institutions, of political parties, of
the media.
So that is all part of the discussion of how do we message to them?
How do we win them over?
When do we win them over?
When do we hit them with this message?
When do we just get them to trust that we're someone they should consider?
That's absolutely all part of the discussion.
See, this is the most fascinating thing. I am so struck by every debate and all the things. We all
have kind of now a boilerplate format that we go through. There's the debate, then we go to the
pundits, and then immediately you go to, and now we've got our own pollster, and he's with a group
of undecided voters, they do that and that always
struck me as one of the most ridiculous
Exercises in nothingness that I have ever seen in my life
Well, I listen to it how many of you now are for Kamala Harris. Oh, I whatever we just watched sure. That's fine
aren't we infusing that
undecided group of voters as an idea that they've been vetted
for their indecision?
Whereas like half the time it's political operatives just standing there or the same
person on the panel every four years.
You know, there's a certain when you put somebody on a news channel, there's a sense that that has been vetted.
And when you really drill down into it, it doesn't seem that way at all. Ashley, is there any
value in those kinds of theatrical moments with the panels?
So I think there's tremendous value in focus groups. Is there value in those TV focus groups immediately after debates with undecided voters?
Also let's just pause.
What does it actually mean to be undecided in the year of our Lord 2024 when your choices,
regardless of what you think, are so diametrically opposite that you're just truly, it's sort
of like an existential
question of like, how does this even happen? But, but focus groups in general are incredibly
valuable and insightful. And whenever anyone lets me sit in on one, I always do so. And like,
What is the difference between one that you've seen on TV and one that you've sat in on?
So often once you know, campaigns and these groups are running them for different things,
like they're not trying to find out who after this debate, who are you going to vote for?
You know, they're trying to find out like, how do you feel about these issues, for instance,
and what what might be a compelling message, right? So one thing I think of a democratic
strategist, I was not in this group, but he told me he said, they were talking to some voters,
and they said, you know, let's say Kamala Harris comes to your town and you get to do an activity.
You get to bring her and show her something in your town.
What would you show her?
And a voter said, Oh, it's like a bachelorette hometown.
Yes. Oh, that's lovely.
So I'm going to I'm going to take them to meet my family
and then we're going to go to the custard shop. Right.
But but this voter said, I want I would I would bring her to work with me. I would bring her to
my first job and then I would bring her to my second job. We would take the three buses
it takes to get from my first job to my second job because I want her to understand how hard
I am working and how I am still barely surviving. So that is kind of relevant and useful information
of where voters are and what they need from the candidates in their lives.
You know, for me, it's shocking that that's what it would take for a candidate to understand what people's working lives are like.
The idea that that would be revelatory speaks almost more to how insulated politicians are
from the day-to-day lives of their constituents.
I mean, that's what I seem to have learned
from my time in Washington,
is how unbelievably eccentric the culture of Washington is
and how easily it sets up barriers between the people you represent and the culture
of the town that you live in.
Washington runs on a completely different currency than the rest of the world.
Let me ask you both then, having experienced these campaigns, to you, do you feel the disconnect
that candidates have with the constituents or in the country? And for your experiences, what has struck you as the biggest disconnect between Washington in
general and the country at large? I'll start because I can double advocate it.
Before Trump was even like the word on people's tongues As a politician, I did a road trip in like 2014,
driving like the old route 60 or 66 out to Indianapolis,
which is where I flew home.
And it was just talking to voters.
It was talking to like hundreds upon hundreds of voters.
And the thing I picked up,
because again, it's always good to talk to voters,
was the sense that like these people,
Democrats, Republicans, whoever, were
furious. You would go to these houses and they all had – I was with a photographer who noticed this,
visually it wasn't me. They all had bits of Americana, flags and things like that.
A lot of houses that maybe needed a new code were kind of crumbling. What they were furious was and what they said was,
look, I did everything right. I got a job, I worked nine to five, I had a pension,
I moved to this district to go to the right school, I bought a house that my bank told me I could buy,
that it would be irresponsible for me not to buy. Now, look, every single house on my block
is foreclosed. Those clowns in New York and Washington who ruined my 401k and now I can't retire, who
did all of this, there's no consequences for them.
They were furious.
They didn't have the language, but they wanted to burn it all down and drain the swamp.
That was something, for instance, that this was not a disconnect at all.
Donald Trump, and again, I don't think it was from doing a road trip and talking to
hundreds of voters, but he viscerally, instinctually understood that anger, understood that frustration
with the system.
Right.
But that's my point.
How is it that, I mean, after the 2008 financial crisis and everything that occurred, how is
it that Washington did not understand that?
And the problem with Trump is not necessarily what his diagnosis is, it's what his prescription
is.
Look, the idea that he figured out people were disconnected and angry and all those
things and they wanted to drain the swamp is one thing, but he doesn't look like someone
who wants to reform the system in a positive way to take the corruption out.
He wants the deed to the swamp signed over to him because he wants full and total, you know, monarchical control over everything.
So I think that's, we're sort of talking about the same thing, which is how the fuck does
Washington and politicians who are from these districts not understand that in their bones and try and reform this system that's
created this anger rather than just take it over. David? I mean, I think one thing that struck me
when I first moved to Washington was how actually most of the people in politics are totally normal.
When you're reading about them
from afar, they seem like they're special
and then you get there and they're like,
oh, these are just ordinary jerks.
Like they're as cruel or as lame as everyone else.
And I think part of the problem is as you elevate,
you do get further removed from those things.
You have fewer opportunities to be a normal person
and to be around normal people.
You're around
the same people in politics and they start to rub off on each other.
And like, I don't know how you saw that because if you're running the government, you have
to run the government.
Like, I need my senators to be paying attention to the legislation they're dealing with and
also to like actually be in touch with real people.
I think that's a tough thing to do.
And I think the structures of government push against that.
And I also think like the pandemic was a
problem for that. I think a lot of politicians just recently
lost touch because they were not, especially Democrats were
not actually campaigning outside of zoom. And I think that has
created disconnect and they're, they're, they're having to work
hard to try to rebuild that and to like, remember how to talk to
to civilians.
Right. Ultimately, I think that these are great points
in getting out there.
And in your minds, would more debates be more helpful,
do you think, for voters?
Would you like to see more?
I don't know that I would want to watch another one,
because I don't feel that I would learn anything
particularly astonishing.
And it would be like watching in the way
that people watch sometimes
motor races, which is like, I just want to see somebody spin out and flip over, you know, and
have something unbelievably terrifying or exciting happening. Is there more to learn in your minds
from that, that we haven't seen already? Or would it be an exercise in spectacle?
Why not both?
I think they're important. I think you can have it all.
Yeah, I do think they're valuable.
And I think part of that is because the candidates, both of them
spend so little time in situations where they don't get to choose the questioner.
They don't get to pick a friendly person.
It's not a controlled environment.
And so whether they're taking questions from David Muir and Lindsey Davis
or taking questions from the other candidate, it forces them to do something they don't do all
the time. And that provides us a better sense of like what their character is, how they think on
their feet, what they actually believe. And so I think it's worthwhile. Ashley, what do you think?
Yeah, I mean, our, our debates is helpful with getting more information than if say each candidate
sat down with like the subject matter experts at the Washington Post, the Atlantic, the Wall Street Journal. No,
absolutely not. But are those two candidates going to do that? No, absolutely not. So to
David's point debates may be the best of like the not particularly great options.
To focus it, right. Ashley, as somebody who's, you know, had the pleasure of moderating
one of those, is there a change
that you would make in the formats?
I think, unfortunately, moderating a debate is like hosting the Oscars.
There's really not much of an upside.
I thought they did a fine job as most of the people that have done it have done a fine
job.
Is there a change that you would make in the format
that you believe would make it more informational,
more revelatory, more insightful?
It's a good question.
I mean, I actually thought they'd be moderating a debate.
It's sort of like being a kicker in football.
You're only remembered if you go wide.
Right.
Wide, right.
Yeah.
So the best thing for debate moderators to be unmemory, you remember the debate, you remember wide. Right. Wide, right. Yeah.
So the best thing for debate moderators to be unmemory, you remember the debate, you
remember the moments, not the moderators.
I thought David Muir and Lindsay Davis did a fantastic job, including it is incredibly
difficult as someone who has interviewed him to fact check Donald Trump in real time.
In certain key moments, they were prepared and David Muir, especially in some of those
moments like with the cats and dogs, I mean, he had the information at his disposal from
a verified reliable source and he was so sort of calm, which is not easy to do in those
situations.
Yeah, no, absolutely.
Do you think, would it be possible to do, you know, sort of two candidates sitting
in front of each other just talking? Is that something that we could even pull off in a
modern political era?
Can you imagine Donald Trump doing that?
Personally, I cannot imagine him doing anything where he is not the sole arbiter of the rule book and the rules of
engagement. I just think, I mean, it gets back to what we had said earlier. I think his entire
upbringing has been as the inheritor of the castle and that everything that's been done has been to his, look, his first mentor outside of his father was Roy Cohn.
Like you don't do that when your methodology
is collaboration and openness.
Like you do that when you wanna get away with shit
as best you can and go scorched earth on everybody else.
So I just think that's his methodology, but as a country, it seems like we might be better served.
You know, if, if they could. Yeah, I mean, I think it's tricky, because the reason that they,
the reason that you see people, you know, candidates demagoguing and bending the truth
and doing whatever in these things is because the cameras are rolling. And also, they're valuable,
because the cameras are rolling and voters can see that if you could somehow get them to forget what was
going on. I think that would help. But it it's a you know, in the same way that C-SPAN
You just blew my mind. Like it's so it's almost like Schrodinger's candidate. Like if we if
we weren't watching this and we weren't filming it. So how much has coverage do you think changed our politics?
Like we all talk about sunlight is the best disinfectant
and transparency, but has our transparent,
like would these guys be much better if we weren't there?
I mean, I think you can make a pretty convincing argument
that C-SPAN helped break Congress
because suddenly you can watch them doing it.
So yeah.
That's fucking C-SPAN.
I knew it.
Those pricks.
We've been all looking in the wrong direction
to blame somebody.
It's C-SPAN's fault for putting security cameras on.
Yeah, turn the camera around.
That sounds like a slate pitch to me, David.
Done, C-spans fall.
Well, guys, I know you've got another, what is this, 10 weeks of this?
What do we got now?
Somewhere around there?
Who even knows?
Yeah.
You guys aren't doing it like you're prisoners where you're just checking off days as you
go along.
You're just in it right now and that just is what it is.
Well, also I'll just say, I think people are skeptical that it
necessarily ends on election day.
Oh, right. I keep forgetting that that's yeah. Are you seeing the
campaigns being as aggressive with the post election strategizing and
scheming and game planning as they are for the debates and such?
Yeah, absolutely. And again, it's not just until the electoral, right?
It's like, will
if Donald Trump loses, will he accept the results? He's shown no indication. What will
his supporters do? Right? Like, that's another open question.
Oh, yeah. I mean, you've got the legal war rooms, but you also just have this sort of
like contingency planning. I like to take a vacation after the election because I'm
usually exhausted. And I'm just like, when is that? Is that, is that January 7th? Is it January 21st? I have no idea.
When can I use my Marriott points?
Thank you both very much for joining us and talking about that. Ashley Parker,
senior national political correspondent for the Washington Post. David Graham,
staff writer at the Atlantic. Guys, your insights into what, thank you for
and Post, David Graham, staff writer at The Atlantic. Guys, your insights into what, thank you for giving a much clear perspective, having been
involved in all this and really helping us understand sort of what's going on behind what
C-SPAN is showing us. I really do appreciate it. Thank you.
Thank you. I don't, what they do do the day to day.
I could not do that.
I would lose my shit.
It already feels too much.
I lost my shit just being in the conversation with them for an hour.
It's so claustrophobic.
Yeah, props to them.
I thought it was really interesting though.
They were like, I don't know when to plan the vacay.
Like your whole life is consumed by sort of these endless campaigns.
And they're like, oh yeah, we used to know November 8th.
I could get a Club Med and Turks and Cake Coast and decompress for five days.
And now they're like, could be January.
Might have to then jump in and cover the Civil War.
Like we don't even know what's going to happen.
Topsy turvy. Topsy turvy.
Topsy turvy.
What else we got as we roll on?
Now we're back.
Weekly show pod banging out the episodes every week.
What else we got?
Well, while we were gone, we put out a call for our listeners
to either give us some suggestions for what we should
cover, why they might be upset with you, et cetera.
So I think just to get started,
I'm gonna start with someone had a really interesting
new idea for how we should handle debates,
which I think is cool.
They said, if anything productive is gonna get discussed,
we need two desks, two pens, one prompt, five paragraphs,
dueling five paragraph
essays. If we ask that of our children to graduate high school, it's fair to ask that
of our elected reps.
Boy, what a nice idea. You give them a prompt, you give them 45 minutes, pencils down, and
then they have to read their essay and discuss it.
But can you imagine Trump doing that?
Can you? Is there anything more exciting than watching people write?
Oh, actually, this person went on and said,
we should do ASMR of the pen and paper.
You could cut that up on TikTok.
You know, this is a person that clearly put in a lot of thought
into this and in many ways should be called upon.
Forget about the legal women voters or the debate commission.
I think we should put whatever it is at Banana 12.
You know, he should be there.
She should be the producer of the next.
That's lovely.
OK.
All right.
We have a good question.
And actually, this is something that we've talked about.
But how this person wants to know,
how do you talk to someone who believes conspiracy theories?
Oh, I don't think you can.
I think it depends on how far gone they're gone,
but one of the things you realize about people
who believe conspiracy theories is they're not,
because they always say, I'm just asking questions.
But when you ask questions,
if you're not willing to hear answers,
then you're clearly not just asking questions.
What you're trying to do is just sow doubt.
The thing that always strikes me about conspiracy theories, because I'm generally skeptical,
right?
And that's always the basis of a conspiracy theory.
The official story that you've been told is not the total story, which is an ethos.
I believe in that.
I believe that oftentimes,
generally I don't believe it's through malevolence,
although I think at times it's through malevolence.
I think it's either through incompetence
or that generally stories are not linear.
And there are facts that are inconvenient
or don't quite fit in.
But the problem I have with conspiracies
is they don't apply the same skepticism
to the counter narrative. And it's very hard
to permeate that. And it's not to suggest that people shouldn't be skeptical or that they
shouldn't challenge the official line and they shouldn't be aware. But what they should understand
is very rarely do official lines have their shit together to the point that there won't be inconsistencies, but those inconsistencies are different than a malevolent and sure-footed interpretation
that it was actually fully this other thing.
That's hard.
I think a new trend is that the conspiracy theory minded people don't necessarily have
a counter narrative.
They just poke holes in
in the narrative and say something else is true. Yeah, right. Right. You don't need to have like a
full narrative anymore. Do you have friends that are conspiracy theorists in those areas? And what
would those be? Yeah, I mean, that's why this question really stood out to me was like, you know,
holidays and I, it's people I, people I'm very close with.
And it also goes to like coffee's gonna kill you, right?
Like the COVID vaccine is the reason
that you're getting skin cancer, whatever.
Like all of these things are on Instagram
and I'm seeing it on the internet.
I mean, we even saw in the debate,
like he was like, I saw it on TV.
So it becomes like a real problem
where you're like, I love these people,. So it becomes like a real problem where you're like,
I love these people, but I just can't, you know.
How do we find that balance between questioning
whether or not like a COVID vaccine can cause,
you know, bad effects.
And every time a football player gets injured,
it's because of that.
Like there's gotta be a space for, for skepticism.
It's such an important part of discourse, but it can't fall into that. Maybe that's
it. Maybe saying to them, you know, I appreciate your skepticism on that. I feel I have questions
about what you're saying. I, there's certain, I have a certain maybe that's a way to diffuse it. I have no
fucking idea. Yep. That's a tough one.
I know. Yeah, let me know when you figure it out.
Thanksgiving is coming. I gotta figure it out quickly. Yeah,
you gotta get this done.
Do you have room for one more, john?
One more. Bring. All right. Bring it. People want to know
what is the toughest interview you've ever done and why?
I got to tell you, Harry Reid was a tough one
because Harry Reid was the Senate Majority Leader,
Senator from Nevada.
Yeah, passed away, but had a really interesting life
and had written a book about it.
Was raised in a literal dirt floor shack in the
desert and really the kind of poverty that is dustbowl-y.
And so he brings on, he comes on to sit down and I'm sitting with him and I start to, you know, you were raised on
a dirt floor and to come from that to go and he really did not seem familiar with the story.
And it was when it wasn't a tough interview in that it was combative. It was more bewildering.
Oh, interesting.
I think it was about three minutes in where I was like, have you read this book? Because it's fascinating.
It's fiction.
It's your story.
You should really look at it because it's remarkable.
But it was just one of those like, look, man, these guys are, they're running around all
day, they're busy, they're up on a book tour.
And I think he just was in like a brain fart era.
But for me, I had been invested in reading the whole thing and I'm parsing it with
him. And he really was like, where was that now? Nevada? He was giving you nothing. We have to
find his ghostwriter. Nothing. Yeah. But those are the tough ones. And then there's always the
compatible ones. The ones I hate the most are there'll be people that write the books that are
like liberals liberals skull fuck
children and then you're like why would you say that and you go well I don't think we're that far apart liberals and conservatives I think or you know it's they take an incredibly strong position
for their reactionary audience in the book and then you bring them on and they're like
ah people are just people and if we all just I'd like to get back to that feeling on September 12th,
when we were all one nation and you're like,
well then maybe you shouldn't write that liberals are
an enemy column within the United States that are trying to destroy it from within.
Yeah.
So those are also, those are the ones that also can give you problems. Yeah.
Sounds fun.
Yeah, it's fun.
But it's all good.
And we've had another lovely pod.
We are back now.
Our break is over.
As always, I want to thank lead producer Lauren Walker,
producer Brittany Mametovic, video editor and engineer Rob
Vettolo, who I want to tell the audience,
survived an earthquake during the recording of this podcast.
Rob, are you still there?
Are you alive?
Hang it in there.
We're hanging in there.
Rob, you survived a 5.1 earthquake
while we were talking and didn't lose internet.
Yeah, I don't want to give any utility too much credit there,
but I do appreciate it.
You're probably right.
But you are safe and you continue to operate
in the genius manner that you always do.
And we appreciate it.
Rob's always killing it.
He's always killing it.
Audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce,
researcher and associate producer, Gillian Spear.
And as always, executive producers,
Chris McShane and Katie Gray.
What are the socials, Brittany?
We are weekly show Pod on Twitter,
Weekly Show Podcast on Instagram threads,
TikTok and the Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on YouTube.
And if any of you are listening to this
or seeing this right now,
that means that there was no follow-up giant earthquake
and that Rob was able to get this thing together enough
to send it out over the airwaves.
Thank you guys very much.
And we shall see you again next week.
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It's produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions. The candidates for November are set.
I know Donald Trump's tight.
Between now and election day.
We are not going back.
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