The Daily - A User's Guide to the Midterm Elections
Episode Date: September 6, 2022Today marks the unofficial start of the campaign for the midterm elections. This year’s midterms will be the first major referendum on the Biden era of government — and a test of how much voters w...ant to reinstall the Trump wing of the Republican Party.On today’s episode, Astead W. Herndon, a political reporter and the host of our new podcast, “The Run-Up,” offers a guide to the campaign. He’ll explore the forces at play in this election and how we arrived at such a fraught moment in American politics.Background reading: Listen to the premiere of "The Run-Up," a podcast dedicated to the 2022 midterms.Democratic leaders, once beaten down by the prospect of a brutal midterm election in the fall, sense a shift in the political winds. But it may not be enough.Heading into 2022, Republicans were confident of a red wave. But now some are signaling concern that the referendum they anticipated on President Biden is being complicated by former President Donald Trump.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today marks the unofficial start of the campaign for the midterm elections,
the first major referendum on the Biden era of government,
and a test of how much voters want to reinstall
the Trump wing of the Republican Party.
My colleague, politics reporter Astead Herndon,
is covering the election for a Times podcast,
The Run-Up, a show I hosted in 2016,
and offers us a guide to the campaign.
It's Tuesday, September 6th. Astead, welcome back.
Thank you. I appreciate it.
I like the name of the show you are now hosting.
It's a great name, great show.
It's destined to be a hit.
Yeah, no, no, no.
I, too, like the name and understand that there are big host shoes to fill.
So I'm really excited and I'm excited to do this.
I consider them more than filled.
That's one of us. I am very nervous.
So, Ested, I want to dig in with you on the stakes of this year's midterms. But first, in order to do that, I want you to help us understand
the landscape as we head into the run-up to the election. You know, until quite recently,
I think it has felt to most people like this was going to be a terrible midterm for Democrats.
Totally. I think up until maybe just a month ago, the conventional political wisdom, which I think
had some real validity, was that Democrats were going to have a really tough time this
year, that there would be a Republican wave.
And just explain why that would be.
Yeah.
I mean, when we think about midterms, I think the first thing we should say is that there
are some real structural rules that govern how we think
about these elections. Midterm elections are almost always a referendum on the White House
or the party in power. So it's your first chance as a voter to weigh in on the recently elected
president, and in this case, the Congress that's controlled by the same party. And so oftentimes in midterms, as you saw
in 2018 with Democrats, as you saw in 2010 with Republicans, it's a chance for the opposing party
to really strike back after losing the presidential election. And I think for a lot of people,
that's what folks expected coming into this year. There's also the realities of these gerrymandered House districts. So for maybe 10, 20 years, Republicans have been just further ahead of Democrats in terms of controlling state legislatures and then in turn being able to draw the House districts that govern the congressional elections. And so those rules have oftentimes pointed folks who follow elections
really closely to really expect Republicans to have a real built-in advantage when we think
about these midterms. Right. The rules of political gravity, you're saying, and political
gerrymandering just mean that from the get-go, Democrats, to be very casual, are kind of screwed.
Yeah, that was a thought.
Right. And on top of that, Republicans don't have to do all that well because the Democratic
majority in both chambers of Congress is so slim, right? About nine, 10 seats in the House and essentially zero seats in the Senate where it's
50-50. So Republicans don't have to do all that well to exploit the forces you just described.
Exactly. There is no margin for error for the Democratic Party. So while we began the year
talking about a Republican wave this year, it's not as if Republicans need a wave,
really. They need more, you know, I don't, I can't even think of a good metaphor. They need a ripple,
right? They need a little, the faucet to leak and they can take back the House and Senate.
Because as you mentioned, in the Senate, they just have to take one seat from Democrats and that flips them back into power.
And in the House, Democrats' lead is about a dozen seats. So the bar is frankly low for Republicans
in order to get a foot back into power in Washington. But even considering all of those
structures that govern the midterms, Democrats had all of these circumstantial realities that were even
furthering the hole that they were in. I mean, think about it. Joe Biden had a historically low
approval rating, which is another usually telltale sign that the party is going to experience
a walloping come November. You had record inflation fueling voters' concerns about the economy in a very real way.
You had soaring gas prices, another thing that really stresses consumers and puts real
pressure on the administration.
I think you also had, and I would say this is probably even larger than those other factors,
a general feeling from a lot of Democrats that they weren't getting a great return of investment
on their votes in 2020. People had felt like they had come out to vote in a pandemic. They had
removed Donald Trump, as Joe Biden asked. They had given him said Democratic Congress in a way
that was historic and, for some folks, surprising. And still, that agenda wasn't
being followed through on. And remember, this is happening at the summer when you also have
the Supreme Court really changing the political landscape. So not only did it feel like Democrats
weren't following through on their promises, for a lot of Democrats, it felt like the country was
moving in the opposite direction.
Right. And then things change.
And they change rather quickly.
I mean, in the last month, you have had the Democratic Party come through with a historic climate bill that goes pretty far on really big priorities for the base. They get Joe Manchin on the same page about climate action. They get Senator Sinema in Arizona to agree to some
increases in taxes. They get the Democratic caucus to join together to help lower drug prices,
a big priority for the party that has not come through in a long time.
I mean, this is not a small bill.
Right.
And I think that kicks off a series of legislative accomplishments for them.
You have the White House taking stronger executive action on the climate front to appease progressives.
You have Joe Biden, of course, recently canceling student debt, another big priority for a part of the base.
And it happens at the same time as gas prices are falling.
Right.
As inflation is tapering.
Democrats have had a pretty good run of things for the course of this summer between guns and the semiconductor bill.
This was a big week for President Biden. Another legislative win,
health care, climate deficit. And all of a sudden, the numbers ticked up from 36 to 40,
ticked up from 40 to 42. This is turning around what had been nearly a year long slide. It was
last August when the president's approval rating started to go south.
The floundering Biden of the summer.
It appears Democrats and White House staffers are trying to rebrand President Biden by turning Let's Go Brandon into a pro-Biden meme.
Is replaced by the sunglasses wearing dark Brandon of right now.
The Dark Brandon meme was originally an internet meme intended to make fun of Joe Biden,
but now it's being used to celebrate him.
Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates tweeted this,
Dark Brandon is crushing it, along with an image of Biden with red laser eyes.
People are now unironically loving dark Brandon. Dark Brandon is an ass kicker and doesn't care
about anything and will break the rules to go punish Republicans, right? And to fight back
and to get things done. Right. I mean, for months, Biden had been talked about up until this point as ineffective, a past-his-moment figure.
And this idea that he was going to be some kind of an FDR-like president, as he aspired to be, it almost seemed laughable.
And yet, all of a sudden, his presidency is now being defined by four or five major accomplishments.
And those comparisons, they don't seem as laughable
anymore. Exactly. I mean, let's remember that Joe Biden ran for the presidency,
pitching himself as someone who can make Washington work again. And I think a lot of
folks were doubting that that stuff was possible. I mean, I could say that I was doubting that stuff was possible. And I think we have to say now that this is a president who has rung the most out of D.C.
that he frankly could in those first couple years, and in doing so, has changed the prospects
of his party in the midterms. Well, let's talk about that. I'm curious exactly how you think about the impact
these accomplishments you just described might have on the midterms, these big wins for Democrats,
for example, the climate bill and student loan forgiveness. Are those potentially good for the
party in the midterms because they can energize the base and that's good? Or are Democrats hoping that these accomplishments
help convince some portion of swing voters,
voters that they have lost or risked losing,
to come over to their side?
I mean, basically, I guess what I'm asking is,
have the accomplishments of the last month or so
moved the middle of the American electorate?
Hmm. Yeah.
If you ask Democrats, they would say they want to get both,
that it's an and strategy rather than an or strategy,
that issues like climate action and student debt cancellation
will fire up core constituencies of the Democratic base.
I'm thinking of working class voters, people of color, young people,
folks who they need to really motivate to come out in the midterms.
But when we think about some other actions they have taken, and I think specifically that drug prices piece or targeting inflation and the economy, that's what they're hoping will convince swing voters that they're kind of responsible fiscal stewards.
And so their goal is to really get both pieces of that puzzle.
Because remember, in these races, they have that high bar to clear.
And so while they need to fire up their core constituencies to have a chance in those Senate races especially,
they also have to win over swing voters and independents to have a chance in many of those hotly contested, gerrymandered House districts.
So for Democrats, the good signs of the last month has been an improvement on both fronts rather than one or the other.
Right. Obviously, the Republicans are going to try to stop that from happening.
We have already seen them try to frame two of these accomplishments we're
talking about, the climate bill and student loan forgiveness, as examples of Democrats being
for the elites. And it seems like the midterms will be a test of whether swing voters buy that
characterization of these accomplishments, right? Totally. I mean, Republicans are not going to just
sit idly by and let Democrats gain in the midterms, beat them in fundraising and cruise to a historic midterms turnaround.
They're going to try to change the scope of this debate.
I think the student debt cancellation that just happened from the president is a good example of that.
Now, Democrats are touting this as something that is, and polling agrees with, very popular among constituencies that they want to grow with.
We're talking about college educated folks and people who did not graduate college but have that debt.
It polls really well with black voters and with Latino voters.
Constituencies Democrats are trying to re-energize.
Now, it may be popular with one sect of the base, but Republicans are going to
try to make it very unpopular with another sect, a moderate, independent swing voter.
And so you have seen Republicans try to say that debt cancellation is only for the college educated,
a bribe or a transfer of wealth to Democrats' elite base.
It's really interesting.
I said the question of how Americans will respond to student loan forgiveness in particular makes me think back to the Affordable Care Act, to Obamacare.
Republicans tried so hard to convince voters that that was big government socialism.
And at first, that really resonated with a lot of their potential voters.
But by the time we got to the 2018 midterms, a lot of lower and middle class Americans had experienced the ACA in a more
intimate, day-to-day way. And they experienced it as a positive. And defending the ACA, which is
what the Democrats did, arguably helped the party regain control of the House that year, 2018. In other
words, it moved the middle. The ACA won the Democrats' centrist swing voters. And we don't
know yet whether student loans might follow that same path, but it's possible that it will.
Right. But I do think that there is a critical difference here in that the benefits that student debt cancellation promises for the millions that will be affected are going to be more immediately realized than something like the Affordable Care Act. backlash to these actions, you can also see a situation in which Democrats experience an
immediate benefit from these actions because the folks who are going to be disproportionately
affected, working class communities, Black and Latino voters, young people, will, and this is,
I think, the political hope, reward the party by coming out in this November because they've
experienced these changes
almost immediately, right?
Like, if you make less than $125,000,
that will happen soon, you know?
Right.
Healthcare is a little bit different.
You have to wait for your open enrollment period.
It takes a while.
Exactly, exactly.
This is just like suddenly your bank account
is fundamentally different.
Right.
Suddenly you can, you know, save for a house.
Right. Suddenly you can, you know, save for a house. Right.
We'll be right back.
Okay, so I said you've been talking about the ways in which the Democrats' political fortunes seem to be shifting a bit based on the things that they have done. But it also occurs to me that Republicans may have also done some things to hurt themselves.
And the two big examples of this that come to mind are the overturning of Roe versus Wade by Republican-confirmed judges in the Supreme Court,
of Roe versus Wade by Republican-confirmed judges in the Supreme Court, and then the degree to which Republican candidates for Congress this fall have really embraced a pretty strident form of Trumpism
and very false claims of election fraud. So how do you think about those two things?
Yeah, I mean, these are huge factors that have shifted fortunes in the midterms. And we should say if Republicans had built in structural advantages and circumstantial ones that had given them a head start in these midterms.
Those are the two things that have really shrunk that to the degree where Democrats feel so confident right now.
The overturning of Roe v. Wade.
Roe v. Wade, you know, it actually reminds me of what you were talking about with Obamacare,
where talking about overturning something is more popular or was more popular than the actual reality of doing it. And we have several electoral proof points that after the Dobbs decision that
overturned Roe v. Wade, voters have really rallied around the idea of trying to protect the right to abortion.
Remember, you had the Kansas referendum, which I think was the largest and certainly the
first example of that.
And it wasn't just that Democrats and those who wanted to protect the right to an abortion
succeeded in that referendum.
It's that Kansas came out in big historic numbers
that really surged past expectations.
There was a takeaway from that race
that abortion was a unique driver of turnout.
Right. I mean, it told people
that abortion puts bodies inside voting booths.
Exactly.
I'm thinking about the special election
that just happened in upstate New York, where you had two candidates who are both kind of mainstream members of their respective
parties. But the Democrat really succeeds there by placing abortion at the forefront of their
campaign. But I think actually the clearest example here about how the Dobbs decision has changed
the political landscape is by Republicans' own
actions themselves, right? You have Republicans now across the country overtly backtracking
on their abortion positions. We are seeing candidates scrub language on their websites,
retract their statements, and kind of step away from supporting total bans or near total bans on abortion, which is where many of the candidates were before the Dobbs decision.
One example of that is Blake Masters, the Republican Senate candidate in Arizona of important race for this year's midterms. language on their website that showed him supporting a federal personhood act, which
would define a fetus as a person from conception and try to make abortions almost totally unavailable.
He removed that language from his website, but he also took it a step further, where
he released an ad.
Most people support common sense regulation around abortion.
Misrepresenting that change from his abortion position.
Look, I support a ban on very late-term and partial birth abortion.
But then also...
But Mark Kelly votes for the most extreme abortion laws in the world.
Trying to cast a finger at his Democratic opponent,
saying that where the Democrats stood in terms of allowing abortions was actually the extreme position.
I'm Blake Masters, and I approve this message.
So I think that's actually really representative of what we're going to see the Republican playbook on this issue be,
is a kind of deflect and distract strategy,
where they change their position from maybe something that was more out
of touch where more medium voters are. But then they also try to point the finger at Democrats,
which is going to be harder to do, though, in this post-Roe universe, where public opinion
has really flown in favor of abortion access. Right. And it's so interesting because this is
all flipped the political script. Anti-abortion used to be a motivating issue for Republican voters, and a source of great angst for Democrats was that protecting it wasn't a motivating issue for Democratic voters. It was hard to get Democratic voters to come out and protect abortion rights because they were kind of taken for granted. Now we're seeing that abortion is becoming a hugely motivating issue for Democrats now that Roe v. Wade is over and a big liability for Republicans.
It is one of those realities of politics where folks are more motivated not when things could
happen. But when they do. But when they do, right? So it is a strange twist in this year's political
landscape in that conservatives getting the thing that they have really pushed for over the last 30 years and the things that Democrats really feared has actually improved the Democratic standing and hurt Republicans. turn to that second area where Republicans may be doing themselves no favors, which is the nomination
of so many Donald Trump acolytes who embrace election denialism. Yeah, it's a huge issue.
And I think a really interesting one coming out of the 2020 election, there was an open question
for the Republican Party about where they would go for their candidates in the midterms. And that answer has been unequivocal,
that in state races, particularly in governor's races
and in Senate races all across the country,
Donald Trump has succeeded
in getting the Trumpiest candidate on the ballot.
I'm thinking of Herschel Walker in Georgia,
of Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania.
I'm thinking of the governor candidate, Tim Michaels in Georgia, of Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania. I'm thinking of the governor candidate Tim Michaels
in Wisconsin or Kerry Lake in Arizona. These are Trump picked candidates and they mirror Trump's
messaging that the election was stolen or speaking in like kind of flagrantly anti-immigrant rhetoric
and terms. And while that might help you in a Republican primary,
that isn't necessarily going to help you in a general election, as Donald Trump himself
found out in 2020. And so you have a landscape of Republican candidates that sound a lot like
Donald Trump, but don't sound a lot like the median voters in their state. And even some
Republicans are sounding the
alarm on this front. Care to share any of your projections on the midterm elections?
Yeah, I think there's probably a greater likelihood of the House flip than the Senate.
I mean, you add Mitch McConnell, you know, Senate Republican leader and, you know, I think a
universally recognized savant at getting
Republicans elected to Congress, saying very openly that he thinks the quality of candidates
have hurt Republican chances in the Senate. And so Mitch McConnell and Democrats are in agreement
that Republicans embracing Trumpism in these midterms
might help Democrats succeed in places they thought they were going to have a tougher shot at.
Right. And we should be clear that we're really talking here about the Senate, not the House,
because, of course, the Senate races are statewide races where you typically need that more broadly
appealing candidate. House races, especially with gerrymandering, support more extreme candidates on both sides. And you're saying that based on the power and the whims
of Donald Trump, Republicans are sometimes getting Senate candidates that actually maybe
look more like House Republican candidates. Yeah, they would benefit from candidates with
broader appeal or with candidates that more closely match where the median swing
voter is, for sure. That said, we should definitely do a caveat here, which is that if Donald Trump
has told us anything in the last couple of presidential cycles, it's that his type of
political message has often found a voter that is not reflected in polling. So while it certainly looks to be the
case that the transition in Republican candidates has hurt them in this midterm cycle, there is a
chance that the same thing could happen to these candidates that Trump has endorsed, right? That
there is some silent Trump voter or a person who comes out
to support these folks because of their claims of voter fraud or protecting the country against
socialism that the polling has missed. Agreed. That caveat is clearly important. But it's
interesting to see just how thoroughly the Democrats are banking on their belief that
that's not going to be the case.
Their belief that just as in Biden's 2020 presidential campaign,
the majority of American voters don't want to live in that version of the country,
the one where the extreme MAGA Trump candidate and that message prevails.
My fellow Americans.
And I think you saw that very vividly in the speech that Biden delivered late last week in Philadelphia, right?
I speak to you tonight from sacred ground in America.
That was, in a lot of ways, the Democratic Party's official kickoff to the midterms.
But as I stand here tonight, equality and democracy are under assault.
And Biden's message was that...
Too much of what's happening in our country today is not normal.
Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations
of our republic.
The Trump brand of republicanism that now dominates among the candidates we're talking
about is a threat to the American way of life.
Maga Republicans do not respect the Constitution.
They do not believe in the rule of law.
They do not recognize the will of the people.
A threat to abortion rights, a threat to democracy itself.
And so, like you said, this is the Democrats, all the way up to the president himself,
looking to exploit what they see as these self-inflicted messaging wounds that Republicans have made and make those the terms on which the midterms are waged.
And they clearly think that that message will succeed.
Because for all of his talk about making Washington work, all of his legitimate, you know, legislative accomplishments that he's been able to pull off somewhat against the odds.
He still, to your point, kicks off the Democratic Party has gone on in terms of figuring out how to deal with Trump and what it means for the country, for politics and for themes like unity.
I mean, let's go back to the original Joe Biden campaign launch speech in 2020.
We are in a battle for America's soul.
That was a message about restoring the soul of the nation through the act of removing Donald Trump as president.
Everybody knows who Donald Trump is.
And I believe, I believe and hope they know who we are.
We have to let them know who we are.
And that was the core focus of his campaign,
was that Donald Trump was a cancer to the country and that removing him would bring the unity that Joe Biden was pitching to voters.
Let's then get to the inauguration speech
after Joe Biden successfully wins the presidency on that message.
On this hallowed ground where just a few days ago, violence sought to shake the Capitol's very foundation.
We come together as one nation under God.
I think it's important to remember that that inauguration speech comes after a January 6th event.
That is the most direct attack on American democracy that we have seen in a century.
That if there is any event that should cause the epiphany among the country and among Republicans that Joe Biden has promised,
you imagine it would have been an event like January 6th.
And he makes the speech in that moment, pitching that version of unity.
And together we shall write an American story of hope, not fear, of unity, not division, of light,
not darkness. A story of decency and dignity, love and healing, greatness and goodness.
Love and healing, greatness and goodness.
May this be the story that guides us.
Saying, OK, that thing happened.
So come on, come with me and excise Donald Trump from the political sphere.
But think about what's happened between that speech and the one he gave last week.
You have a Republican Party that is still dominated by the interests and grievances of Donald Trump, that has nominated candidates that reflect those interests and grievances,
and beyond that, has nominated a slate of midterm candidates, many of whom reflect his election
conspiracies and false claims against American democracy, that is a rejection of the version
of unity Biden pitched in the inauguration speech. That epiphany has not come. And so
I think we're now seeing a Joe Biden whose speech last week is updating its language to reflect
that information. For a long time, we've told ourselves that American democracy is guaranteed, but it's not.
We have to defend it, protect it, stand up for it, each and every one of us.
That's why tonight I'm asking our nation to come together,
tonight, I'm asking our nation to come together, unite behind the single purpose of defending our democracy regardless of your ideology. He is now pitching a version of unity that doesn't say we
unite with the type of people who rioted on January 6th or with so-called, as he put it,
MAGA Republicans. He's trying to unite the country against those people.
Right.
We're all called by duty and conscience to confront extremists
who put their own pursuit of power above all else.
Democrats, independents, mainstream Republicans,
we must be stronger, more determined,
and more committed to saving American democracy
than MAGA Republicans are to destroying American democracy.
That is a different version of unity than he pitched previously.
And I think it reflects a change in worldview that we have seen Biden go on
and by proxy, the Democratic Party has gone on with him.
We just need to remember who we are.
We are the United States of America. By proxy, the Democratic Party has gone on with him. We just need to remember who we are.
We are the United States of America, the United States of America.
And may God protect our nation and may God protect all those who stand watch over our democracy.
God bless you all.
Democracy.
Thank you.
Right.
So three speeches about unity from Joe Biden.
The first one presumes that if we remove one man, Donald Trump, we can all be united.
The second speech acknowledges January 6th and says, OK, it's more complicated than that.
It's bigger than just one man.
But if we say that what happened on January 6th is not OK, we won't stand for this, then we can still be united.
The third speech, the one that we all just watched last week, says, all right, sorry, this isn't really working out.
It's bigger than Trump.
It's really the Republican Party itself.
And so the only way we get united is if we all decide to rally against what Trump and Trumpism,
which is really in some ways the heart of the Republican Party, stands for.
Exactly.
He is now trying to pitch a version of unity that unites Democrats, independents,
and Republicans who are frustrated with their own party,
of which there are some,
against the Trump and Trumpism wing. It reminds me matter all of those differences, the biggest
threat to the country is this anti-democracy wing. And this is a critical and urgent time
to unite against them. That is a message of unity, but that is not the message of unity
that Joe Biden started his presidency with. Fascinating. In some ways, it feels like Biden
has become disillusioned. He has realized over the past couple of years that
the unity he very much craved is no longer realistic. And the message now is, let's
recognize this group of Americans for what they are, in his view, a threat to democracy,
a threat to American values, and start to treat them as the enemy.
Exactly. And I think we should say something
about Biden's newfound disillusionment,
which is that he's basically arriving to the point
where millions of Americans already are
and have been way before him.
That with Trump being out of office,
it has now become crystallized
that really the American democracy problem isn't a fault of a
singular individual but is a question of a system and a country that has to wrestle with what it
believes in and so we now have the president who is framing the stakes of this election in much
more stark terms saying that it is not a question of d versus R. It is a question of a side that wants
the republic to exist and a side that does not. I think we need to acknowledge that escalation,
even as we acknowledge that it is borne out of fact that there are candidates selling election
conspiracies, that there are candidates who are seeking to change democracy at its core, right?
He is responding to fact, but it is an escalation that we haven't seen.
Right, but the risks of this seem very obvious in that while Biden is trying to talk about a very specific group of Republicans as un-American,
other Republicans could very well see it as an indictment against them as well.
That is the risk, and that is certainly going to be what Republicans try to do. You know,
there are a lot of suburban voters in this country that have drifted further away from
the Republican Party. But we're Donald Trump curious as recently as 2016. Right. There are a lot of voters who may have questions about cultural directions.
The Democratic Party has gone in about social movements that the Democratic Party have embraced, but don't consider themselves Donald Trump voters.
Right. Would not consider themselves MAGA Republicans. Right.
This is a large section of voters. There are moderates, right? Like there
are swingy people. And what Republicans are going to try to do is say that that speech
casts a negative light on all folks who have some conservative leanings. But I also think
that there is another kind of blind spot for the Biden argument here, which actually relates back
to what we were talking about before, the structures that govern the House and the
gerrymandering that really controls those elections. Because those are districts that oftentimes a
person who is more polarizing, more extreme, frankly, on the Republican side, more Trumpy, could do well. That Joe Biden can be correct that Trump and MAGA Republicans are only a small slice
of the party, and that can still be the small slice that flips the house. So both of these things can exist at the same time where Biden is actually right that the MAGA movement is not the majority of Americans, but it succeeds in creating a real foothold in D.C. through a Republican Congress this year.
Right.
Because we do not have a democracy that's about majority opinion.
we do not have a democracy that's about majority opinion. So even if Biden is right about MAGA as a fringe element and right in his bet that a majority of Americans see it that way,
the structures of our government are such that the Republicans have a very good shot at taking
back control of the House on a MAGA message. And the Democrats might well hold the Senate for all
the reasons we've been discussing, but we'd still have a divided government with one chamber actually defined by the values that Biden is now saying
are basically un-American. Exactly. And I think for a lot of people, what a Republican House would
mean hasn't really set in. What do you mean? search of Mar-a-Lago, to shut down those January 6th committee investigations that would be a
thorn in Biden's side more than legislatively, but legally, you know? And for a lot of Republicans,
they see this as exacting and settling a score that they really think Democrats started
in the Trump administration. This would be a Republican Congress that seeks
to even out the playing field for what they view as a Democratic House in the Trump administration
that unduly went at the president. Now, of course, that is wrapped up in so many false
equivalencies. However, that will be the energy from the grassroots that's driving them.
Because for a lot of those folks, they see the first sin committed as democratic actions in the Trump era.
Right. So regardless of your politics, the government you're describing is going to feel not just dysfunctional, but vindictive and nasty.
Right. And for some people, that might already be the case, right?
Like, they already feel like that's true.
But I definitely think
there is some assumption
that we're at a floor
of nastiness,
of division,
of partisanship.
And I don't think we can assume that.
Right, we're going to be going to the cellar.
Right. And if you think people are disillusioned now,
imagine the scenario we're talking about,
where folks do come out, they do turn out,
they do kind of take up Biden's message
of uniting against people taking aim at democracy.
And yet those same people gain a greater foothold in the halls of power.
Like, that is the reality we're discussing.
And I think when you look at the midterms landscape, there's a lot of evidence that
could be our future.
Well, Sted, thank you.
We appreciate it.
Thank you.
The first episode of The Run-Up,
Astead's show about the midterms,
is being released today.
You can listen to it right here on The Daily later this afternoon,
or right now by searching for The Run-Up wherever you listen.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today. The total number of valid votes given to each candidate was as follows.
Britain has a new prime minister.
Rishi Sunak, 60,399.
Liz Truss, 81,399. Liz Truss, 81,326. Therefore, I give notice that Liz Truss is elected as the leader
of the Conservative and Unionist Party. Members of the country's Conservative Party
have chosen Liz Truss as their next leader, replacing Boris Johnson, who resigned after a series of scandals. Truss, Britain's
foreign secretary, campaigned on a platform of tax cuts and loyalty to Johnson, who remains popular
with the Conservative Party's base. As prime minister, she will inherit an economy reeling
from inflation and an energy crisis created by the war in Ukraine.
Well, thank you, Sir Graham.
In a brief speech after her election,
Truss promised to do everything possible to keep the Conservative Party in power.
As my friends, I know that we will deliver, we will deliver, we will deliver.
And we will deliver a great victory for the Conservative Party in 2024.
Thank you. Thank you.
Today's episode was produced by Rachel Quester, Nina Feldman, Jessica Chung, and Eric Krupke.
It was edited by Lisa Tobin and Paige Cowett, contains original music by Marion Lozano and Dan Powell, and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
Special thanks to Maddie Macielo.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Bilboro. See you tomorrow.