The Daily - Trump and ‘the Squad’
Episode Date: July 16, 2019In a second day of attacks, President Trump said that four Democratic congresswomen hated the United States and were free to leave the country. The lawmakers — Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cort...ez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna S. Pressley of Massachusetts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan — said they refused to be silenced. Guest: Julie Hirschfeld Davis, who covers Congress for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. This episode includes disturbing language.Background reading: President Trump appeared determined on Monday to amplify remarks that members of his own party called racist. The lawmakers he singled out responded by charging that the president was pressing the agenda of white nationalists.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, in a second day of attacks,
President Trump says that four Democratic congresswomen
hate the U.S. and are free to leave the country.
The congresswomen say they refuse to be silenced.
It's Tuesday, July 16th.
Julie Davis, where should we begin?
So last Wednesday, there was this meeting. It's the weekly gathering of the House Democratic Caucus.
They're there to talk about their legislative agenda, any issues that they need to address as a party, what's going on that week.
And it's a closed-door meeting.
No press is allowed inside.
But because it was such a remarkable kind of monologue from Nancy Pelosi, a number of sources who were in the room filled me in on what she said.
And what did she say?
So she basically starts to say things like, some of you are here to make a beautiful pate, but we're making sausage most of the time.
You know, the process can be ugly. We don't always get what we want
out of it. But, you know, we can't have our ideal perfect outcome all the time. And what she's
focused on, what she says House Democrats need to be focused on, is coming out with the best
version of what they can get, given that they have just one chamber, the House, and the Senate
is controlled by Republicans,
and the president is a Republican and obviously wants very different things.
She says, don't play into their hands.
Every day, some of our members have to fight the fight for their re-election.
It's easy for me in my district.
But then she goes on to say, there are some members who are not in that situation.
These members, some of these moderate members,
actually are the reason that we are in the majority. And so all of the representatives,
even if they come from safe Democratic districts, need to be thinking about them.
What is she saying there?
She's essentially saying it's great to be ideologically pure. It's great to have the
energy of the progressive base. But if you're not going to
do things that are going to advance legislation that we can actually kind of deliver on,
then it can be detrimental. And she ends her comments with a pretty sharp warning to her
members to essentially keep these fights in the family. If they have a problem, she says,
they should come to her. She says, you got a complaint? You come and talk to me.
Julie, why is the speaker giving this lecture at this moment? What is she up to?
Well, she's really talking to four members in particular, freshman members of Congress,
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from New York, Ilhan Omar from Minnesota,
Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts. They're known as the squad.
And she's sort of trying to tamp down on this tension that's been simmering between her and
this group and between really the broader Democratic caucus in this group now for many,
many days.
And what are those simmering tensions really about?
Where do they start?
Well, they start in many ways right after the midterm congressional elections.
When, you know, you had this new crop of women coming in
who had a very strong kind of progressive bent. They made it very clear they
really wanted to dramatically change the direction of the institution, change the face of the
Democratic caucus. And I just want to let you all know how proud I am of each and every single one
of you. Before the new Congress even convenes, right after the midterm congressional elections,
some climate protesters stage a sit-in outside of Nancy Pelosi's office.
We have to get to 100% renewable energy in 10 years.
There is no other option.
And who joins them but the newly elected congresswoman from New York, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
protesting her soon-to-be speaker.
Should Leader Pelosi become the next speaker of the House, we need to tell her that we've got
her back in showing and pursuing the most progressive energy agenda that this country
has ever seen. And it's this moment where you can see that, you know, she is coming to Capitol Hill really as an activist with an
agenda to really push things forward in a way that is not your typical member of Congress.
She's not sitting there, you know, waiting for her committee assignments. She's sitting in outside
of Nancy Pelosi's office. But it also then starts to play out over many weeks and months.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the squad all vote for Nancy Pelosi for speaker.
And, you know, they all have some pretty good committee assignments.
Thanks to Nancy Pelosi, they're able to have a seat at the table.
But rather than simply acting like most freshman members of Congress do,
where they maybe introduce some legislation here and there
and sort of keep their mouths mostly shut.
I am so excited. I got to do the...
They're very active and sort of demanding action on various legislation that they think is not getting enough attention.
Because we're going to go in there and we're going to impeach the motherfucker.
And they start to make that very clear.
Using Twitter and using the activist community that they're very close to to sort of really start to criticize Pelosi and some of their Democratic colleagues for essentially sort of tiptoeing
around what they think should be much bolder policies.
I learned a long time ago that when change happens, it's either because people see the
light or they feel the fire.
Pushing things like the Green New Deal, things like Medicare for All, some of these multi-trillion
dollar progressive agenda items that are very sort of popular with the base.
And you see a lot of the Democratic presidential candidates running with them.
But realistically, they don't have much chance of getting off of Capitol Hill.
And for the first several months that House Democrats are in control, Pelosi keeps a pretty tight rein on it. And it all seemed
to be working out pretty well until a couple weeks ago. And what happened then? We have gotten our
clearest picture yet of the growing crisis at the southern border just today. So a couple of weeks
ago, there were all these reports of the horrible overcrowding in facilities holding migrants at the border. The report shows migrants held in standing room-only cells
for a week at a time,
while others confined for more than a month
in overcrowded rooms.
Terrible pictures of subhuman conditions in these places.
We're now hearing from a lawyer
who visited one center in Texas
and a doctor visiting another,
describing it as, quote, torture.
And the administration had been asking for some humanitarian aid funding.
And there was an effort to bring a bill to the floor of both the House and the Senate to sort of deal with this.
They needed to pass some emergency money and just get it to the border quickly.
So kind of standard fund the agencies, fund the facilities, as Pelosi might say, kind of
sausage, not pate. Exactly. And, you know, they had, it was going to be a strictly humanitarian
bill. They had already talked about the fact that there wasn't going to be any wall money,
no enforcement money. This was really just supposed to address the humanitarian crisis.
And for some members, including the squad, this was seen as sort of a perfect opportunity to
really protest the entirety of President Trump's immigration agenda. And because it was a must-pass
bill, because it was in some ways seen as so pro forma, it was in their minds a perfect vehicle
for really registering their antipathy, their discontent with the entire immigration agenda.
And in the end, Pelosi is able to pass it with an overwhelming majority.
All of the House Democrats, including all of the progressives, vote for it, except for the squad.
And what does this vote against this bill mean for the conflicts that have been
simmering between the squad and Pelosi? Well, it just brings them all to the fore because what
ends up happening is that the House bill that the four of them voted against ends up getting
scrapped and the House has to accept a much weaker bill that the squad hates even more
and that many Democrats hate even more. And that's
where the finger-pointing starts. We didn't even bother to negotiate. The squad is really angry
about this bill. And instead what we're doing is that we're immediately going to just saying yes
to what got passed out of the Senate. They basically consider it to be selling out to the
Trump administration, letting them do what they like, giving them a blank check. I will not support anything that is broken and that dehumanizes
people. But guess what? Mitch McConnell sent you back something that was worse. It is very
disappointing that the speaker would ever try to diminish our voices in so many ways.
They're making statements about Nancy Pelosi and how she's mishandled the process.
And I think with the Democratic Party, we're so busy oftentimes trying to appease everyone, we end up appeasing no one.
AOC's chief of staff tweets that the moderate Democrats who were supportive of this result, he compares them to segregationists, calls them the new Southern Democrats.
Wow.
Yeah, it gets pretty intense.
He deletes the tweet, but it's really ratcheting up.
And then you have activists on the left very upset at Pelosi.
There's an article in the Huffington Post saying, you know, what the heck is Nancy Pelosi
doing?
And it's in the middle of all of this churn about her and the squad that she sits down
with Maureen Dowd.
Our colleague, an opinion columnist.
Our colleague, right, who asks her about all of this blowback that she's getting
from the squad and from progressives in general about how she's handled this whole thing.
And now this has become more than just about the humanitarian aid bill,
but it's criticism of her whole leadership style and somehow painting her as an apologist for President Trump. What does she think about all of this? And Pelosi basically
comes back to what touched this all off, which was this legislation, and says, and I quote,
all these people have their public whatever in their Twitter world, but they didn't have any
following. Pelosi has this very sort of dismissive way of speaking about people and things.
She basically says,
There are four people.
But there are four people.
And that's how many votes they got.
Ouch!
AOC and Ilhan Omar are not so happy with Pelosi for that comment.
She's basically acknowledging that they have a large public following.
They're very active on social media.
They're influential in that way. But in
the way that managed to Nancy Pelosi, which is advancing legislation, coming up with a product
that can pass, they don't matter at all because there are only four of them and that's how many
votes they control. So after Maureen's column runs and these comments sort of go viral. There's an almost immediate response from AOC and the squad basically clapping back at Pelosi. She tweets, you know, that public whatever is called public sentiment, directing that toward Pelosi. And wielding the power to shift it is how we actually achieve meaningful change in this country. So she's essentially saying, you know, you may dismiss us as nothing but Twitter loudmouths, but like that's the whole game,
is getting public opinion to our side so that we can actually make the change that we think
needs to happen. It's not long after that that Pelosi calls this caucus together to basically say all of this tweeting, all of this sort of public
bickering has to stop. What I said in the caucus yesterday, we respect the value of every member
of our caucus. The diversity of it all is a wonderful thing. Diversity is our strength.
wonderful thing. Diversity is our strength. Unity is our power. And we have a big fight, and we're in the arena. And that's all I'm going to say on the subject.
And do they take that message to heart?
Not entirely. What happens is that AOC clearly felt that she and three other members were being singled out. And she then says to
the Washington Post, after Pelosi has given her behind closed doors lecture, that she essentially
feels bullied by Pelosi. And why is it that Pelosi feels the need to call out four women of color
and target them in this way? And she doesn't say it outright,
but the clear implication is that this is somehow about their race
and about the fact that they are women of color
who are threatening to her in some way,
and that the leadership of the Democratic Party
is complicit in this as well.
And that's basically where things stand when President Trump decides to
send a series of tweets about the squad.
We'll be right back.
We're going to go to Washington now, where President Trump has sparked a storm of outrage
after a series of racist tweets targeting members of Congress who are women of color.
Julie, tell me about the president's tweets.
So the president wakes up on Sunday morning.
He's at the White House and he starts tweeting about...
The president Sunday called out progressive Democrat congresswomen.
Quote-unquote progressive Democratic congresswomen.
Tweeting, why don't they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came?
Who he says originally came from countries whose governments are a complete and total catastrophe.
The worst, most corrupt and inept anywhere in the world.
Now, loudly and viciously telling the people of the United States, the greatest, most powerful
nation on earth, how our government is to be run.
And he basically says,
Why don't they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which
they came?
Why don't they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which
they came?
broken and crime-infested places from which they came. He never mentions AOC or Ilhan Omar or Ayanna Presley or Rashida Tlaib, only one of whom was not born in the U.S., but he clearly is targeting
them. And he ends the series by saying, these places need your help badly. You can't leave
fast enough. I'm sure that Nancy Pelosi would be very happy to quickly work out free travel
arrangements. So he's clearly talking about them and alluding to their kind of rift with the speaker. And what do you make of that,
that the president, the leader of the Republican Party, decides in the middle of this Democratic
battle to send that tweet? Well, I think it's a couple things. I think that the president is trying to really sort of focus attention on these four Democratic women who he views as extreme and he thinks most voters, Republican, Democrat or independent, think are, you know, outside of the mainstream and really trying to essentially drive a wedge among Democrats and make it clear that when you say Democratic Party,
these are the four people I want you to think about.
But I also think that it's notable that he mentions Pelosi and he likes the idea that she has these divisions that she has to sort of bridge and that in some ways she's not
in control of her caucus.
He wants to call attention to the problems he sees Democrats are having rather than comfortable place for him to be.
And did it work?
Did this racist trope drive a wedge between the squad and their speaker?
No, not at all.
They all sort of very quickly came out with statements and tweets.
This is our country, and no amount of hate-filled bullying from the White House is going to change that.
We're going to fight back together, and we're going to become stronger for it.
The squad reacted directly to him.
Presley tweeted back today, quote,
This is what racism looks like. We are what democracy looks like and we're not going
anywhere except back to D.C. to fight for the families you marginalize and vilify every day.
Basically saying that, you know, he was wrong and they were what America was about. He wasn't.
And so for a news cycle or two, his comments and the reaction that they got and how beyond the pale they were basically shifted the focus away from all of these infighting that had been going on and allowed them to do exactly what Nancy Pelosi had told them last week they should be doing, which is essentially don't direct your fire at inside the party.
Direct it at President Trump.
Right. And I noticed Pelosi came out very quickly and very prominently to defend these lawmakers.
Right. She basically says, you know, when he targets them, she said he reaffirms his plan
to make America great again has always been about making America white again. So it's her opportunity
to really prove what she has been saying privately, which is that she's not trying to target these women.
She's not trying to take them down.
She's trying to protect her caucus.
But also when it comes to House Democrats, she's going to defend them against this kind of attack from the president.
So what did the president's tweets end up doing to this conflict?
the president's tweets end up doing to this conflict? It's kind of a reset button on the whole thing, where instead of talking about their differences, they're talking about the president
and how unacceptable what he has said is and how united they are in pushing back against it.
And it's also kind of a vindication of what Pelosi has said to them privately, which is if Democrats are divided
and making a big public fuss about being divided,
that only helps the president.
He's going to take that and run with it.
And that is exactly what he's done.
I want to welcome everyone to the White House.
We're very excited to be hosting
our third annual Made in America showcase.
And we saw him just sort of double down on it at the White House.
What were you talking about in your tweet about going back to America?
Well, I didn't mention names.
On Monday, where he just went out at an event about manufacturing and...
If you're not happy here, then you can leave.
Basically restated everything he said in his tweets, only more so.
As far as I'm concerned, if you hate our country, if you're not happy here, you can leave.
And that's what I say all the time.
That's what I said in a tweet, which I guess some people think is controversial.
A lot of people love it.
And said that these women hate America.
He made all sorts of accusations about not loving their country.
One of them is polling at 8%.
One of them is polling at 8%.
Their polling is in the gutter, he said.
We should point out that all of these claims are unfounded.
They're all unfounded.
And again, he's talking about women, all but one of whom were born in the United States.
If they're doing nothing but criticizing us all the time,
you see these people walking down criticizing the United States.
And he's suggesting quite inexplicably, quite racially,
and quite without any practicality that they would somehow leave the United States.
Right. And he's also making the point that somehow if you criticize the United States,
that you are un-American, that you don't belong here, and that you need to leave.
Thank you all very much. Thank you.
Thank you.
What are these four freshmen supposed to do with the lesson of this moment?
It feels like they're stuck between these two divergent strategies.
On the one hand, there's the Pelosi strategy,
which is to say that the squad is not the entire party,
that it's just a small part of the party,
and to project a message of moderation
that can keep the party's control over swing districts.
Trump's strategy, on the other hand, is to portray these four House freshmen as absolutely the face of a Democratic Party and
to mock them and by extension the rest of the party as radical. And so when they're loud about
the policies that they think need attention, the moderates and the party as a whole get branded
as something that it's not. Both of these strategies, the Pelosi strategy and the party as a whole get branded as something that it's not.
Both of these strategies, the Pelosi strategy and the Trump strategy,
punish these lawmakers for being outspoken.
I think that it's a really hard spot for them to be in because part of why they came to Washington
was to be lightning rods. They always have seen that as part of their role to sort of attract attention,
attract conversation, and by doing so, pull the debate in the direction they think it needs to go
in. So you have a speaker who's saying, you know, keep quiet, keep this within the family, and that's
not what they're about. And at the same time, you have a president who's essentially confirming
what they're always saying, that, you know,
he needs to be confronted in an aggressive way and he needs to be held to account, not in sort
of an incremental way, but in a very kind of dramatic way that matches his own tactics.
And so what do you expect them to do?
I think that they're going to keep being who they are. They're going to keep being
loud and insistent about what they believe needs to happen because you have President Trump
constantly kind of goading them and goading Democrats to essentially go where they naturally
are comfortable going, which is to be activists, not really legislators, and to work outside the system rather than within it.
Julie, thank you very much.
Thank you, Michael.
On Monday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called for a resolution in the House to condemn the president's remarks about the four Democratic congresswomen.
Well, first I want to say thank you to all of you for being here today.
And I want to send a message of gratitude and thanks
to the solidarity that we have received
from every corner of our country.
A few hours later,
during a joint news conference in the Capitol,
Representatives Presley, Ocasio-Cortez, Omar, and Tlaib
denounced the president's attack on them,
calling it an attempt to disrupt and distract
from their agenda. Despite the occupant of the White House attempts to marginalize us and to
silence us, please know that we are more than four people. Our squad is big. Our squad includes any person committed to building a more equitable and just world.
And given the size of this squad and this great nation, we cannot, we will not be silenced.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The Trump administration will begin enforcing a new rule today that automatically denies asylum to migrants who travel to the U.S. by land and pass through other countries on the way.
pass through other countries on the way. The rule is premised on the concept that migrants should seek asylum in the first country they pass through, rather than the U.S.
The rule is expected to face immediate challenge in federal court.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.