The Daily - 'The Run-Up': The Blueprint
Episode Date: October 8, 2022How the Republican grass roots got years ahead of a changing country, and whether the Democrats can catch up.“The Run-Up” is a new politics podcast from The New York Times. Leading up to the 2022 ...midterms, we’ll be sharing the latest episode here every Saturday. If you want to hear episodes when they first drop on Thursdays, follow “The Run-Up” wherever you get your podcasts, including on Apple, Spotify, Google, Stitcher and Amazon Music.
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Hey, it's Michael.
Today, The Run-Up, our show about the midterm elections
and how we got to this fraught moment in American politics.
Last week, we looked at the rise of Christian nationalism
and how faith and politics have become increasingly intertwined.
Today, in Episode 5, we look at how that's playing out at the local level.
Take a listen.
So there's this show, hosted by Steve Bannon, the former Trump strategist.
It's called War Room.
And while it's controversial enough that YouTube and Spotify won't publish it,
in the conservative world, it's a big deal.
Okay, we're live at CPAC. The War Room posse is showing up.
A couple months ago, Bannon hosted a live recording at CPAC, basically the most important
gathering of influential grassroots conservatives. And he brought out a guest.
Glenn Story is the founder of Patriot Mobile.
You got to hear what he has to say.
I tell you what, this is a guy that puts his values in back of his business.
Someone with a blueprint for conservative politics in the Trump era.
Yeah, it's pretty simple. We put God first.
Amen.
The head of a Christian cell phone company.
We are a Christian conservative cell phone company.
We carve out a portion of our proceeds and donate back to conservative causes.
It's called Patriot Mobile.
We take biblical principles and we say, hey, we're going to donate to causes that really matter.
And during the interview, he lays out how they use their money.
We went and found, I believe, 11 candidates, and we supported them.
And we won every seat.
We took over four school boards.
11 seats on school boards, took over four.
Can we hear it for him?
Woo!
Wow, that's fantastic!
It's all part of a strategy to point energy at the local level and stay ahead of a changing country.
As I said last night, one of the keys is these school boards, right?
The school boards are the key that picks the lock.
Talk to us about what you did in Tarrant County.
Today, a case study in grassroots Republican politics.
So it is important to save Tarrant County.
And whether Democrats can catch up.
Are we going to save Tarrant County. And whether Democrats can catch up. Are we going to save Tarrant County?
Yes!
Let's give a big shout out for Patriot Mobile and Patriot Mobile Action.
From the New York Times, I'm Astead Herndon.
This is The Run-Up.
Um, alright, team.
We all mic'd up and ready?
I think so.
I kind of wanted to do the first question.
So my colleague, David Goodman, is the Houston Bureau Chief.
And he's the one who told me this story about Patriot Mobile.
David, what's the backdrop of how you come to report on this story?
So I moved to Texas last July. And one of the major political questions that's hung over the
state, really, in every election cycle going back several is when the state is going to turn blue,
if ever, and, you know, hope springs eternal among Democrats that it will eventually do this,
but they keep falling flat. But there's a big asterisk
to that. And it's these suburban counties that had been trending towards the Democrats in recent
years. And that was particularly the case in the surrounding county of Fort Worth called Tarrant
County, where you had the county actually go slightly blue in each of the last two elections.
So in 2020 and in 2018. Yeah, yeah. You know, as a political reporter,
the question of whether Texas will turn blue feels like omnipresent, always everywhere. But it's because it's so central, right, to the political future of the country. If that were
to happen, Democrats would have a huge, I mean, almost insurmountable advantage in things like
the Electoral College through big states like
California and Texas. But it seems like you're saying that if that's going to happen, it's likely
going to be driven largely through these suburbs that have been trending toward Democrats. Is that
right? Yeah, I mean, that's where the Democrats have been making their gains and where the
Republicans really need to make a last stand if they're going to keep some of the demographic shifts and voting patterns from overtaking them.
And so it's become this real battleground and nowhere really more intensely, I think,
than in the suburbs around Fort Worth and Dallas, just because those are suburbs that are just very
traditionally conservative and really reacted strongly to, you know, seeing their fellow, you know, neighbors and whatnot voting more democratic over time. And
so this became a real cause. You saw actually a very strong Tea Party emerge in that area,
and it sort of morphed into, you know, a pretty engaged conservative base in that part of the
state. So how does Patriot Mobile factor in here? I should say I've heard of this company.
They would pop up in my reporting
on conservative politics every now and then.
Their swag is very visible at Trump rallies.
I've seen their ads in conservative media,
but I've never gotten a full understanding
of what they're up to.
Well, it's true.
They've been around for a while.
I didn't really know
too much about them. And that's why I went out to try and set up an interview and actually talk to
them face to face. It was pretty clear to me they weren't going to agree to a phone interview with
the New York Times necessarily, that it would be better if I showed up in person and talked to them.
But when you track down the address from their campaign filings, it's a P.O. box in Grapevine, Texas, north of Fort Worth.
I dug a little deeper and I was able to find an actual address of a place.
And I drove to that office park and knocked on the door and went through and it was completely unmarked from the outside.
But when you got inside, there was all kinds of folks wearing Patriot Mobile T-shirts and there's other branding around.
So I knew I had landed in the right place, but it was not the right time. This was back in the spring and they decided they didn't want to
have anything to do with a reporter who just showed up at their door. An experience we both
had before. Well, they were surprised to see me, in fact, because they've done a lot to try and
conceal sort of their location, they would say for safety reasons. And so they were surprised
that I'd showed up, but I did have a brief conversation with the president and one of the founders, Glenn Story. And he
essentially, you know, said he'd think about an interview and thought about it and said no. But
then I decided to keep pushing it because their influence was really very clear in that area,
that they were spending a significant amount of money, and I felt like their story needed to be
told. And I followed up a
couple months later and, you know, reiterated my interest in talking. And we had a long cell phone
conversation off the record about what kind of story I wanted to do. And, you know, he came away,
at least at that moment, convinced that he wanted to sit down.
Hi there. Hi. David O.
So tell me about that. You go back to this office part and this time they let you in. Okay, so I guess I'll go ahead. Okay, nice to meet you. So tell me about that. You go back to this office part, and this time they let you in.
Okay, so I guess I'll go ahead.
Okay, so we're going.
Yeah, so it looks a lot like, you know, a typical small business.
You have cubicles and people kind of buzzing back and forth.
But it's just a little bit different and has a little bit more of a conservative feel,
namely because you have flags that you might see at a conservative rally hanging from some of those cubicles,
including one modeled on the Texas flag, except there are two silhouettes of assault rifles on it and the words come and take it
in Hebrew and in English. Who signed your guitar? It doesn't say Maggot on it. Yeah, it does. Yeah.
It's, let's just say it's a pretty notable name. Is it Trump? No, it is. Oh, it's his son. Oh,
it's Don Jr. All right. All right Jr. All right. He's a good guy.
So there's an overtness to the politics that are just not present in your typical office space.
The other thing they do at the office is every Tuesday they have a Bible study with Senator Ted Cruz's father, Rafael.
Where does that take place?
It's in that conference room.
It's just a packed conference room with people out in the hallways trying to listen in.
So for those that are interested, and it seems like a lot of people are, that's a real highlight of the week there.
So it's a normal sort of company, but it's got these aspects that make it unique.
Yeah, and what did you learn when you sat down with Glenn?
Yeah, so I sat down in Glenn's office with him and with his wife, Jenny Story, who's the chief operating officer for the company.
office with him and with his wife, Jenny Story, who's the chief operating officer for the company,
and with their VP for government affairs, Lee Wamsgans. She also runs the separate entity,
which is their political action committee. We spoke for almost two hours.
I'm actually really curious just how you got started and what your experience has been with the business. What they do, they don't operate their own towers or anything like that. They essentially buy space from T-Mobile
is the provider they take space from.
And then they will sell you your cell phone
and a plan.
And they're like the customer service part of it.
But really for these executives,
that's not the exciting part.
You know, the exciting part for them
was the conservative politics
that the business allowed them to pursue.
And we were purely political
until about three
years ago when we put God first. One of my board members said, look, you guys aren't putting your
God first, put him first and you will be blessed richly. And right after that, you know, our growth
has just gone exponential. And I'm sorry, that was... And they talk about it as this is their
for-profit mission. And they see it as a Christian mission.
On the whiteboard in Glenn's office, he has the core values for the company still sort of written in handwriting with a black marker.
In the first one, it says... Missionaries versus mercenaries.
Missionaries versus mercenaries.
A mercenary is somebody that's out here just to make money.
I'm going to sell as many cars.
I don't really care about the byproduct.
Well, a missionary is somebody that really buys into what you're doing, and we're not selling
a car. We're selling a relationship. And that's a very different thought. We are believers.
Now, the rest of it won't make any sense. And then the second one is God is in control.
And they talk about that, that all the decisions they make, they pray on, and
that's how they view their business.
So when they say for-profit mission,
what is that mission?
What are the conservative Christian causes
that Patriot Mobile is most concerned about?
We've migrated away from the pure politics
and our four, really, our four pillars.
Well, so broadly, they set out a mission for themselves
of essentially four areas or four pillars, as they would say.
First Amendment, Second Amendment.
First Amendment, the Second Amendment.
They're about support for the military.
Military and first responders and right to life.
And then the pro-life issues.
Pretty standard conservative causes.
Exactly.
And for a while, Glenn was telling me they were just giving their
money to politics and political causes that were bigger than them. And then they started to look
more in their own backyard. When you hear the stuff that some of these schools were allowing
these kids, the pictures we have going into the school and getting the books, you would be
mortified. And they just this year decided to start spending money on local school board races.
Hey, what do you think of this one? Look at this picture.
All the executives have kids in the schools in this area.
And then here, I'll show you another one. I mean, this is just awful.
And they were very focused, at least in the meeting that I had with them,
on the content of the books that were being offered to students.
Parents do not believe gender issues should be discussed in K-12.
Especially Christian parents do not want multiple genders discussed with their children.
And so it really wasn't born of their pillars per se, but more of the general sense of their
faith and being able to instill that faith in their own kids and have other parents be allowed to do that themselves for their own children.
And so what does this actually look like for them getting involved in these races?
Well, there were several. There's four different, you know, independent school districts where they
supported candidates. And the one that I looked at most specifically was one called Grapevine
Colleyville ISD. And this is a school district that spans two towns, Grapevine and Colleyville.
And Grapevine is the corporate headquarters
for Patriot Mobile.
So that's the reason I was most interested in that district
because everything was kind of happening right,
you know, in the span of a few miles.
The other reason I was interested in focusing on that area
is that it had this recent history
with the district having gotten rid of
a pretty popular new black principal at its high school,
the first black principal that they'd had at the Colleyville Heritage High School.
And he only lasted there a year.
And that year was really marked by a lot of controversy, especially towards the end.
And parents coming to school board meetings and complaining that the principal was bringing,
you know, critical race theory, quote unquote, into the schools.
And I hate to say the CRT word because people think it's some big boogeyman.
And the bottom line is, is there was teacher training that we got through public information requests
showing that they were asking teachers to judge kids based on the amount of melanin in their skin.
Really?
And was, you know, privileging conversations about equity and
diversity over concerns about the education of the students. And there was a pretty bitter
back and forth that ended with the principal agreeing to step down and the school district
moving on from him. But it was a kind of, you know, ugly chapter that came to a close only
really at the end of last year. And so this was the backdrop for
then the school board elections that come up in the following spring. And so there was an effort
to push further with more changes that they could put into place. I mean, it seems like you're
laying out a school district that has a lot going on. What kind of impact did Patriots' mobile
involvement and investment have for those school board races?
Well, these are races where really only a few thousand dollars is spent by a campaign. And
here you had Patriot Mobile allocating $420,000 to 11 different candidates.
Right, right, right, right. If you want to focus on national politics, maybe that $400,000 doesn't
go that far. But when you're looking at a school board race or
a local race, that's essentially bringing a bazooka to a knife fight. Like, right, that has a big
impact. Right. That money goes in just a dramatic way in these little races where people, name
recognition is quite low if it exists at all. And people go to the polls out of, you know, sense of
duty often on a day that's unusual. This was a vote that was in May that didn't have any other races besides a couple of local ones happening.
So that spending had just a tremendous effect.
I mean, they won each of the 11 races where they favored a candidate.
And in doing so, you know, they put more conservative school board members on the boards of four school districts, you know, solidifying control in some cases.
And in the case of Grapevine Collierville.
School boards flipped. We have a conservative majority now, and they're focusing more on education, trying to stay out of the indoctrination.
Actually flipping control from a board that had been, you know, more centrist to one that was decidedly much more conservative.
Say more about that.
There were a bunch of new policies that were under discussion. And once the school board flipped those new
policies that more tightly restricted books and changed the way students and their pronouns would
be handled, those new policies passed easily. And so it changed the atmosphere in the schools
pretty quickly. But the other thing that happened during that school board fight that kind of didn't
get as much attention, sort of flew under the radar, was that the school board, at the same
time as they were voting changes to how books are handled and how transgender students are dealt
with in the school and pronouns and all the hot button issues, they also changed the election rules.
What do you mean? Well, what they decided to do is move from a system where you had to get a majority
of the vote to win a seat on the school board to one where the person who had the plurality of the votes would win.
And so the current system, if you don't get a majority, there's a runoff election between the two top vote getters.
And what they said was, hey, that system is too expensive and, you know, pointless in these small races where we can just say the person who has the most votes
of the candidates who are running gets that seat.
So this was presented as a cost-saving measure.
It's completely within the rules of how these elections are run.
You can either do a plurality system or one with runoffs.
But they changed this at this very heightened moment.
And opponents of the new school board said they did it in order to preserve their
majority on the theory that the folks that are currently in control of the school board have a
really animated and organized base of support and that they could always turn out a plurality,
40% or so of the voters. And as long as there was more than one other candidate,
they stood to hold onto those seats or even gain
them with new candidates. So this is actually seen as a way of maintaining power by the folks
in the school board, even if a majority of voters were voting against them. As long as they could
sort of split their opposition, they can hold on to their seats. That feels like a pretty big
success story. Oh, certainly. And you've seen them get a ton of national attention for this in conservative circles.
I mean, they were feted at CPAC by Steve Bannon.
And so they've kind of become these darlings of the far right here,
especially those who really champion Christian values and want to see them more in place in policy.
You know, at the local level, there's few things that have more of an
impact on the community than how your schools are run. It's what's taught on issues of race and
gender. It's what your children are coming home with and telling you about. They know about the
world. And so it's a very direct kind of reflection back to conservatives of this changing society
that they're looking to push against. And so this is a very powerful space in
order to try and take a little bit more control. You know, and so there's this understanding of a
larger political opportunity here to own the idea of parental rights. And you've already seen other
communities sort of looking to their playbook and thinking about how it can be expanded. And it's
something that they've talked about, that they sort of put this together and hope to be able to show other places that maybe don't have the resources to develop plans
of their own, kind of give them essentially this strategy for how to win. A blueprint.
Exactly, exactly. And I talked to them about what's next, and they were not really that
interested in getting into the nitty gritty of where they plan to spend their money, especially after this election cycle here in Texas.
But you can sort of see how the model might scale.
And for example, Fort Worth, which is the largest city in Texas that's still run by
Republicans, you have a mayor there who came up under a Republican who is fairly centrist.
And that former mayor actually just lost the county race in the
Republican primary to a candidate who is aligned with Patriot Mobile and in fact is friends with
one of the folks who helped engineer Patriot Mobile's strategy. And so you could sort of see
them thinking, we're going to push not only school boards in a more conservative direction,
but maybe also start to think about how to do that at the county level and then at the level of
one of the largest cities in the state of Texas. And this feels critical because as you said,
these communities are core to the question of whether Texas flips. And that is core to the
question of America's political direction. It feels like a lot of that ties back to these
communities, which is why you went there. So how should we think then about Patriot Mobile's place in that larger story?
Well, you know, it's not that Patriot Mobile is this incredibly powerful operation.
It is, at the end of the day, a local cell phone provider.
But I think the point is that the conservative movement has these folks like Glenn who are really, you know, need to change their
values, that the state needs to change the values that it's had before. And I think what you're
seeing with this kind of very organized movement is a minority of folks, but one that's quite
organized and really animated in their values and in their
politics, it can be quite effective, especially against a majority that's much more fractured,
and maybe doesn't have the same kind of alignment around similar goals. And so you can imagine
that this will play out not just in these suburbs in Texas, but, you know, in suburbs and in areas all over the country.
Yeah. I mean, it makes me think about one of the blind spots of the demographic destiny argument,
the idea that when these changes happen, conservatives or Republicans who would have
been politically hurt were just going to sit there and not do anything. They are creating the infrastructure to really rest their community back to where they are
and even, you know, willing to change some rules to do that.
Well, that's right.
And, you know, I think the other thing that's important to point out and something, you
know, is notable when you go to Patriot Mobile is that the folks that work there are quite
diverse.
It's not an all-white employee base.
You have people of all backgrounds who are employed by the company visibly. And, you know, it's sort of
this idea that I think is overly simplistic that, you know, the demographic change in Texas,
which is largely towards Hispanics, you know, that that would mean necessarily that Democrats
would take power. But I think we've seen, and especially what Glenn and folks like him are
stressing, is
the centrality of Christian values and of that kind of commonality that actually does cross
racial lines in a place like Texas. And I think that may be core to the future of this kind of
strategy of sort of reaching across, you know, maybe racial divisions to find common ground on
questions of values and how, you know, we should be raising our kids.
So grassroots Republicans, bonded by faith and motivated by fears of a changing country,
have mobilized in local races to have an outsized impact. But this summer, they may have gone too far.
And in doing so, given Democrats,
Senator, can you...
Hold on a second, instead.
Something of their own to mobilize around.
Okay. Hi!
Hi, I heard some debate over who's a feminist and who's not.
Yeah, we're debating who's the biggest feminist in our office.
We'll be right back.
Here's the thing. Republicans have been really good at using the system to their political advantage and changing certain rules to their own benefit,
even when it's out of step with the majority.
The biggest example of that has to be
the stacking of the Supreme Court with deeply conservative judges
and the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
Nearly 6 in 10 adults disapprove of the court's decision.
So the question is,
have conservatives gotten so out of step with the majority
that there will be a backlash,
one that benefits Democrats
and finally gives the party a rallying issue of their own?
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has been sounding the alarm on Roe for years,
an issue that most of the party largely ignored while Roe was still in place.
Now that it's been overturned, I wanted to ask her,
can Democrats catch up to years of Republican unity? And is their biggest problem
in how they deliver their message? Or is it the message itself?
I read in a story that you said at a fundraiser that Democrats are terrible at messaging. It's
just a fact. I saw this week, Governor Gavin Newsom of California kind of repeat a similar thing
where he said Democrats have a messaging problem. I wanted to just pose that to you directly. Is
that how you feel? Democrats have a messaging problem? What does that mean? So I don't remember
the context of what I was talking about, but I don't think it's necessarily true. I think Democrats,
certainly during campaigns, are very good about
talking about their values and what they want to accomplish and who they want to help and what
they're willing to fight for. I think there's not the same message. Discipline, I guess, is probably
a more precise way to say it. Republicans have a brand almost, whereas Democrats have so many
issues we care about. It's just such a big agenda.
And so candidates don't talk about the same stuff all the time. They talk about different things.
And so it's not really that our messaging's bad. It's that we're not all on the same
song sheet. So you don't have the brand management in the way I think the Republicans have done.
But I think it's changing. And I think that this issue, particularly about
the right to privacy and how this has been so deeply undermined, is something that resonates
across districts and across states. Yeah. And I want to get to how it's changing,
but I think I want to look back a little more. Can you give me an example of a time when you
thought that message discipline has come to hurt Democrats?
You know, there are examples.
There's examples when people, the way they talk about an issue isn't clear. And so it's easy for Republicans to mislead people about what people mean.
What do you mean?
Let's talk about public safety.
It's just the easiest one.
You know, if you say defund the police, that scares the hell out of millions of people because they don't know what they meant.
Whereas many people meant things like fund mental health, fund social services, fund more social
workers, all things which we agree. So it just, it didn't make sense in terms of the words chosen.
And so when we're talking about things that we all agree
on, like the right to privacy and the right to access to health care and the right to bodily
autonomy, we all understand the words we're using and it all makes sense. Yeah, I mean, I feel like
I hear about messaging a lot, but I also want to pull on the idea of messaging in general. I mean,
what is giving you the confidence that's just a matter about getting Democrats on one accord rather than is a dislike of the message in general? I mean, I think some
people would say that even to use that defund the police example, that the majority of Americans
just weren't at the point that maybe some Democrats were. Also, I'm thinking about the
issues of schools and coronavirus. You know, Republicans have been able to seize on the idea that Democrats went too far in terms of masking and making issues like
parental rights rise to the top of voters' concerns. Was that a messaging problem for
Democrats or was it a substance issue that people didn't like the substance of what Democrats were pitching in terms of masking and in schools?
So I think Republicans took this issue, again, misled and lied and created massive division
in the country over it. Parents want kids to be safe. Parents want kids to be in school.
And I think the Republicans just took advantage of people's anger and
frustration with the length of the COVID pandemic to say, you're telling us what to do, as opposed
to, no, we're protecting the lives of you and your families. And I think the real corruption
within the Republican Party is to create these divisive issues and rile parents up.
to create these divisive issues and rile parents up. They stand for burning books. They stand for
extremely misrepresenting views on things that are just not accurate. And they went in to create arguments that just aren't true. I mean, it's just not true. And that division they created
within the school system was just intended to make people be misled and not understand what
was going on. Okay. So I feel like if I hear you correctly. So Gillibrand says the Democrats'
problem is not a failure of the party's own messaging. Rather, it's what she calls the corruption of Republicans.
But when it comes to abortion, Democrats have, at times, tried to make protecting Roe a priority
long before it was overturned. But it wasn't a unified effort, and voters didn't really respond.
And I wanted to know if she thought that actually
contributed to Roe being overturned. Well, I can tell you what it was like during the Kavanaugh
hearings. We were just speaking every day in front of the Supreme Court, trying to be heard on this
issue, raising this red flag of this is so bad that this president is putting in place
someone specifically to overturn Roe. I mean, we were, I can't say that people didn't believe us,
but they certainly weren't as worried as the advocates were. And why do you think? Because
they're not paying attention to what's happening in the red States. We are, we're watching the pain
and the horror that these families are having to face. And not all of our colleagues are recognizing this as the red flag that is. I think instead, it's an issue of men and women. I don't know that our male colleagues fully understand what it would be like to not have a right to privacy.
not have a right to privacy. This is crazy. You can't fully absorb what it would be like that you don't have the right to privacy in the mail. You don't have the right to privacy in your phone
calls, your discussions with doctors, your emails. That's what's happening in these red states to
implement the Dobbs decision. It's frightening. And people just weren't paying attention. And I think it's because
women in this country still don't have a great deal of power. And it's not just that women,
of course, will care more than men. It's that if we don't care, then no one seems to care.
So it's just, we don't have equality and we don't have full representation in the country.
And so these issues that might affect women most deeply
still get ignored.
I guess what I'm saying,
I don't want to be dismissive of that stuff.
I'm really asking about how you balance that moral clarity,
that need for Democrats to speak up on that issue
with the political reality of deeply ingrained sexism,
you know, of deeply ingrained misogyny.
How can Democrats lead
on those issues while at the same time messaging correctly to those crucial voting blocks that
they need? Well, on this issue, people are following the issue. So, for example, you look
at what happened in Kansas. You saw an increase in voter registration, more women registered to vote than by 70%, I think. And then we were able to defeat that
measure. You look at the special elections we've been having, one in upstate New York,
before the Dobbs decision came down, we weren't sure if we could hold that seat after we won.
That's happening all across the country. So people are very aware of this issue.
And they are hearing the message clearly that these rights are being destroyed.
And it is undermining basic life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness for all women for 40 years.
But it seems like that awareness of right now is coming after that decision of Dobbs.
Which was kind of the worst nightmare.
Yeah.
How do you wrestle those two things,
that the energy of right now is only happening because of the fall of Roe?
Right. So I think it's because up until now, a lot of people just thought it would never happen.
So they didn't believe, they weren't taking to heart what was happening in red states.
And now they realize that it is happening and they
have to take it seriously. So people are becoming more aware of this issue.
What's your confidence level that Democrats can make up some of these holes that they're in,
particularly around this issue, considering that renewed energy?
particularly around this issue, considering that renewed energy?
So obviously there's normal dynamics in midterm elections. Usually the party that the president is from does poorly. This is an existential threat to democracy and equality. So it rises
to a level that's just bigger than any one of us or any one candidate or even democratic politics.
a level that's just bigger than any one of us or any one candidate or even democratic politics,
I think it's a reflection of our democracy being broken because these justices were chosen from a list created by a bunch of lawyers in New York City who had a religious agenda. That undermines
the whole framework of our constitution, freedom of speech, freedom of religion.
So I think what's happening now instead is not about messaging and it is not about
democratic politics. It's literally taking away full citizenship rights for 50% of Americans.
That's why it's so big. And that's why I think it's breaking through as something that
people are not going to tolerate. It's structurally breaking our democracy for a
religious agenda by just a bunch of really wealthy people that took a president who didn't know much
about much and said, we'll support you if you take this list of justices. And these justices
then went to their hearings and said, oh no, precedent should be regarded. It should be protected. All their language was
so specific to lead the Susan Collins and others of the world to say, they're not going to undermine
Roe. They would never change the country in that way. And they did. And their intention is to keep
going. The worst thing about Clarence Thomas is that he says he wants to now apply this to LGBTQ equality. He wants to
private to like policing your bedroom. Like he's bonkers. And you just add to Lindsey Graham,
you know, the fact that he now wants to make a federal ban on access to reproductive services,
which is total BS because this Republican party has always said, we believe in states' rights and these red,
red states want to have their laws the way they are and you can't tell us what to do.
Well, you know what? The blue, blue states do not want to do the way you do these things. And to
have a federal ban again is going farther, farther backwards and enshrining discrimination. It's not
okay. But considering the realities that we're currently in and that
Republicans, at least on the grassroots side, are openly admitting what their next targets are,
what is the Democratic recourse? I get the kind of intellectual hypocrisy that you're identifying.
The only Democratic recourse is winning these elections, period.
What does that mean, winning? What is the bar for winning?
You have to have a majority. You have to have a set of majorities to stop these crazy judges from
being elevated and not having Mitch McConnell get to steal more Supreme Court justices.
He cannot be in charge of the Senate. And you cannot lose the House. And if you do lose the
House, you better lose it by the smallest margin possible because you need to govern on a
bipartisan basis. So that's what it
means. And if people don't realize that, then we are screwed. I hear a lot of Democrats talking
about the codification of Roe v. Wade as a goal coming from this midterms. I wanted to ask you
about that. Is it fair to say that that is the Democratic recourse that the president and most
congressional Democrats have identified? Codifying Roe? Well, on the Senate side, you can codify Roe with a Democratic-only vote. So you'd
have to amend or abridge the filibuster. And if we did have two more Democrats, you would have
enough people to say, we will amend the filibuster for civil rights issues. You could do it for just
those type of issues, or it could do for all issues. But you'd have to be able to pass it on the House side too.
So it depends. What is our majority in the House? Do we have a majority or do we have a thin
minority? It matters. It absolutely matters because if you can't pass it in the House,
it can't become a law. Yeah. So, I mean, as you mentioned, there are those laws that really
govern midterms. Incumbent parties usually suffer losses. What I hear you saying, and I think what we both intuitively know, is that to codify something like Roe v. Wade, Democrats need to not only keep the House and keep the Senate, but expand those majorities. They have to do something, frankly, unprecedented than what parties have done in midterms before. Is that fair?
have done in midterms before. Is that fair? Yeah, they do. They have to work really, really hard.
And everybody who's listening to this podcast who cares about these issues needs to fight harder.
I mean, make phone calls for the Pennsylvania Senate race. Make phone calls for any candidate that you like in your state or in your community. Go door to door. Send resources. Do what you can.
Elevate their voices. It all matters. I think we both agree there's such renewed enthusiasm and interest on the national level.
We're seeing Democrats really outpace Republicans in terms of fundraising and interest on those
House and Senate races, on a lot of state right races. I know there has been a consistent
criticism of Democrats that they haven't focused enough on local races. Do you think that that
energy has shifted our Democrats' infrastructure now, putting adequate enough on local races. Do you think that that energy has shifted our Democrats' infrastructure now
putting adequate attention on local races?
I think we're getting much better at it.
And I also think, you know, a lot of the Republican,
you know, they had a number of billionaires
just funneling money into this very right-wing agenda
of taking away reproductive freedom,
taking away LGBTQ equality, literally going after this right-wing agenda of taking away reproductive freedom, taking away LGBTQ equality,
literally going after this right-wing religious agenda and doing it on a local level. And I think
that constant spending did have an impact. And so I think Democrats fully understand what's at risk
and what's at stake. And I think people like Stacey Abrams, for example, just said, I'm going
to deal with Georgia. I'm going to make sure every voter votes. I'm going to make sure we really register to vote. People feel engaged. People feel valued. People feel that their voice matters. That's really good democracy building.
on voting, getting people registered, strengthening our voting rights. It's why,
you know, if we ever did amend or bridge the filibuster, the first thing we'd vote was to guarantee voting rights that are being reduced and eroded in red states across the country.
So I think we're quite aware of what we're up against, but it's a lot of corruption and it's
money in politics that is extremely corrupting and we have to fight against it. And the way we fight against it is by getting people to vote and getting people to understand
what's at stake and trying to strengthen the democracy. Can Democrats make up the gap without
ending a filibuster, without ending gerrymandering, without changing those kind of rules? It feels like
because of, you know, how Republicans have kind of outpaced Democrats in some of these local races,
it can sometimes feel like the solutions being presented for this midterms are inadequate,
that like Democrats had $10 taken away from them and this midterms may give them back five. I mean,
how does that gap get made up without those structural rules?
You can do it through hard work. And I think making sure we organize and get people to vote
and also just the
common sense of what's happening in this moment. There are allies. I mean, we had a good decision
out of Indiana. We had a great vote out of Kansas. Like these are different states that are quite red
and purple that are doing the right thing in this moment because it's so shockingly big and very important. So I'm optimistic. I'm
not pessimistic. I believe in our democracy. I believe that actually doing the hard work of
registering people to vote and getting them to vote is the solution. I mean, people are frenetic
over this issue and they're frenetic in red places and blue places, it's hard to put yourself in somebody else's shoes, but denying
basic bodily autonomy is really stark. It's something that it's hard to imagine for this
generation because we've never been under that. So I think it matters.
Thank you. I'm being, I have a note from my producers to ask about, there was a buzz
that was happening.
Yeah, it's just the vote being called.
I got to go vote.
Oh, okay.
That buzz means I got to go to the Senate floor and vote.
Yeah, that buzz is a buzz for me and for you.
I have to go vote.
Cinda, I really appreciate your time.
Thank you so much.
Thanks, Cinda.
Take care.
What I hear from Senator Gillibrand and many prominent Democrats
is that the party is hoping that backlash to overturning Roe
has given them the opportunity to use the Republican blueprint
and energize their own grassroots.
But the Republican blueprint isn't just reactive, it's proactive.
From Patriot Mobile's work in the Texas suburbs,
all the way to the Supreme Court.
What Republicans have really done
is craft a political strategy
that anticipated the country's changes
and got ahead of them.
So much so that it's raised the bar for Democrats
in these midterm elections and beyond.
Now, Democrats have to do more than just defy expectations.
They have to defy political gravity.
Next time on The Run-Up.
My campaign manager and I wrote a playbook that lays out what it takes.
But what is so important is that people remember that while we're writing our playbook, the other side is writing their playbook.
We talked to the woman whose vision for how to do that will be tested in November. The Run-Up is reported by me, Ested Herndon,
and produced by Elisa Gutierrez and Caitlin O'Keefe.
It's edited by Franny Carthoff,
Larissa Anderson,
and Lisa Tobin,
with original music by Dan Powell,
Marion Lozano,
and Alisha Ba'iitub.
It was mixed by Dan Powell
and fact-checked by Caitlin Love.
Special thanks to Paula Schumann, Sam Dolnick, David Halfinger,
Julia Simon, Mahima Chablani, Shannon Busta, Nell Gologly,
Jeffrey Miranda, and Maddie Maciela.
See you next week.
To hear more, go wherever you listen to podcasts. See you next week.