The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Biden Out, Harris In: A Media Disasterpiece
Episode Date: July 25, 2024In the turbulent month since President Biden’s disastrous debate performance, the media has been speculating as to whether it was probable, or even possible, for him to drop out of the race. Turns o...ut, it was both. In light of Biden’s historic decision, how effectively did the media guide the public through the election chaos? This week, helping us to contextualize the moment and understand the challenges in covering it, we’re joined by Doris Kearns Goodwin, presidential historian and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, whose most recent book is “An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s", as well as Eugene Daniels, POLITICO White House correspondent and Playbook co-author. Together, they examine the flaws in our electoral process and media coverage, offer some possible fixes, and provide facts —not speculation — about what to expect in the weeks ahead. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more:  > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast > TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Researcher/AP – Gillian Spear Music by Hansdle Hsu — This podcast is brought to you by: ZipRecruiter Try it for free at this exclusive web address: ziprecruiter.com/ZipWeekly  NetSuite For more info, head to netsuite.com/Weekly Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, everybody. Welcome once again to The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart. My name is Jon Stewart.
And so last we left off, Joe Biden was the nominee. There was nothing that anybody could do
to not have Joe Biden be the nominee. It's just too damn late. It's too damn late. It's too damn
hard. The American people won't stand for it. The Democratic Party won't stand for it.
stand for it. The Democratic Party won't stand for it. Donald Trump is now the inevitable next president. They are unified, deified, and on their way. And now there's a new candidate and
she is deified and on her way. And Donald Trump can't believe that he chose J.D. Vance,
Donald Trump can't believe that he chose J.D. Vance, who's a lunkhead.
And now it's been a fucking week.
And the whole thing is twisted on its head and none of it is really what's happening.
And we still have another three and a half months of this.
I'm here with my airswild producers, Brittany Mimetic and Lauren Walker. And I apologize for the sheer mind-blowedness of it.
And the media takes their cues from the most prognosticating and speculating amongst us
and locks it in as conventional wisdom.
And you can just see none of it is real.
It's mind-boggling. Yeah. We had such a hard time. I don't know how you guys do this.
Why is it it's difficult for us to book pundits or journalists that are on television?
Their organizations will not let them come on our podcast. Let that sink in for just a moment.
Organizations that rely on access and transparency
refuse to allow their reporters to come on podcasts
to talk about the issues of the day.
Why?
What do they say to you, Brittany, when you ask them?
Honestly, I haven't been able to get clear answers, which is part of the
frustration. We're not naming names, but we may at some point.
No, it's on the line. But it's unlike anything I've really ever seen in the decade that I've
been doing this, honestly. And even the you know, and even the simple question,
like phone calls go unanswered. It's a very, just like, we're going to, we're going to politely
decline on this. This large organization, NBC, left you on read. Didn't they leave after saying,
no, we can't have our reporter talk to you. Yeah. And then they stopped answering as to why.
And the reporters say, I'd love to do it.
Yeah.
In this case, reporters are like, would love to join, just need to get network approval.
Network approval.
Network approval comes back and says, we're going to decline on this.
Yeah.
And I say, oh, why?
Is there a scheduling issue? Is there, you know, what is the reason we're pol to decline on this. And I say, oh, why? Is there a scheduling issue? Is there,
you know, what is the reason we're politely declining? So you call and you just say,
wow, can I understand it? Like, is it, you know, any, any information? We're reasonable,
nice people. Uh, well, most of the time you are, I don't know if I get to fall into that,
that category, but, but you certainly do, but just let that sink. I don't know if I get to fall into that category, but you certainly do.
But just let that sink in. I just want people at home to let that sink in for a second.
News organizations stonewalled inquiries as to why their reporters are not allowed or being
restricted from just being able to come on a stupid fucking podcast and give their opinion,
even as just a promotional tool for either the reporter or for the organizations that they work
for. Yes. You know, I've once heard a wise man say democracy dies in darkness.
darkness. But how is it possible that a news organization would not feel shame and bewilderment at using the techniques of obfuscation that they rail against from politicians and public figures?
Lauren, you were in journalism for a long time. Do you recall there being that
type of how in the world, I understand that you can't go write articles for other papers,
or you can't host a show on another network, but these types of promotional or cross-pollinating appearances should be standard fare. Nobody's saying that
person is now hired to be a part of a regular ongoing commentary. I'm reluctant to speculate
because, you know, not very journalistic of me, but I do imagine that they feel some type of
ownership of these, you know, journalists that they pay their paychecks. Maybe they don't want
their ideas anywhere else, or maybe you appear partisan and they want to avoid.
This is NBC. I mean, they have MSNBC. Let me ask you a question. Do you think this is a universal
rule or this is me? It's hard not to take this personally. It's a once a week
podcast. But also we plug this, like we will say like NBC or CNN or MSNBC contributor.
We had the same problem with CNN. They gave us a bunch of shit for trying to bring somebody on.
Like it's, it's bonkers and it makes no sense. And I would think it's, it's an embarrassment
to those organizations, those news organizations. And the crazy thing to me is the journalists themselves think it's insane.
Yeah, they want to do it. that are running these organizations and what those organizations are supposedly there for,
which is informing the public on the issues of the day, whether they're informing it on
somebody's podcast or something else, just absolute nonsense. But I wanted to point out
because, uh, and this is inside baseball and who even knows how much of this survives the edit
into, uh, into the show. But like, I just wanted to give props to Lauren and Brittany,
who have to constantly pivot.
Yeah.
We are professional pivoters at this point.
It makes it fun.
That's so not the case.
But I am excited about today's program
because we do have access to two incredibly knowledgeable
individuals. And we're going to be talking about all the changes that have been taking place within
the presidential race. We're going to be talking about the media's inability to respond to it with
any kind of chill, but it's all grand pronouncements. It's all just news. Biden is
inevitable. Biden can't be inevitable. Biden can't win. Trump is inevitable. Kamala is inevitable.
Trump is now regret, like, holy shit, calm down. Uh, so I'm going to let's's let's jump in with that now and uh and and see where we go
all right here we are we're going to talk to our guest doris kearns goodwin presidential historian
pulitzer prize winning author whose most recent book is an unfinished love story
personal history of the 1960s and also also Eugene Daniels, Politico White House correspondent
and playbook co-author. Doris, lovely to see you again.
You too. Yay.
And Eugene, very nice to meet you, Eugene. We've not met, but I'm excited that you're on the
program and Doris is on the program. Doris, I'm going to start with you real quick.
on the program. Doris, I'm going to start with you real quick. As a presidential historian,
this is catnip, I would assume, an unprecedented moment in presidential history.
Are you tasting the Pulitzer? Are you tasting what's coming your way when you write this book?
What are your thoughts on the historic nature of what we're seeing right now? Well, you know, mostly I live
with dead presidents and I think about them in the morning and I think about them when I go to bed at
night and I'm recounting history that went long before, right? And I'm asking them questions and
they don't answer me. But this time I'm living in a clearly historic time. And for a presidential
historian, it just brings back echoes from the past constantly. I'm living in a clearly historic time. And for a presidential historian,
it just brings back echoes from the past constantly. I'm living in the 1860s or the 1920s
or this 1968. And so it's an extraordinary time. I mean, you're happy to be living in a difficult
time. When you're hearing the echoes, what's resonating the most? Is it LBJ and him stepping out in 1968 and opening up? That was obviously, I guess,
before the primaries or during the primaries. What are the echoes that are resonating the most?
I think it's clearly that's the last time that a president withdrew from the race.
He withdrew on March 31st of 1968. And as you say, he was already in the primaries.
He wasn't doing well. He had been
battered in New Hampshire. He was about to lose in Wisconsin. But much more importantly, what was
happening to him was that he'd been told that unless he sent 200,000 more troops to Vietnam,
and it could only be a stalemate if that was so, and he decided the time had come to wind the war
down. So that was the major speech he was going to give, but he knew nobody would believe it if he were still a candidate. So he prepared that speech. It stunned
the nation when he not only said that he was going to wind the war down, but that he was going to
withdraw from the presidency so he could spend all of his time on the presidential duties. And I
remember I was watching that, was stunned. My husband was up in New Hampshire, Richard Goodwin,
with Theodore White, the great journalist. And White had told him that five days before he had seen LBJ, who looked terrible,
he was under such pressure. And he felt like his face was sunken. His voice was so soft.
And now he watched him on the screen before he even said he was going to withdraw. And he looked
like a different person, composed, relaxed. The tensions had been reduced. So that's what
reminded me most, I think, of what's happening now. Now, to be fair, and I think this is for the historical record, LBJ never looked
particularly great. Let's be clear. Oh, wait a minute. I'm going to argue with you. I'm going
to argue with him. LBJ was a caricaturist dream. Every one of his features would be accentuated and exaggerated. And, uh, but,
but it's fascinating. Now, Eugene, you're in, you're in the middle of this. So Doris kind of
gives us this historical macro overview. You're the micro guy you're in there every day, the
breakneck speed at which this is all happening has got to be dizzying for anybody who's on the inside trying
to cover all the developments. Yeah. I'm hoping you can't see the bags under my eyes or the eyes
of the rest of the correspondents or reporters that are trying to cover this story. You know,
these are unprecedented times. I could use some more precedent at times myself. That would be
great. But I think, you know, the thing that was really surprising
outside of the debate, so you were watching the debate, we go to political offices, there's,
you know, dozens of people there watching that happens around the country in newsrooms.
And immediately people started to be a little bit confused about what was happening. And then
when President Biden said, I beat Medicare, that is when our phone started blowing up.
So really that sentence is really what set off kind of this entire firestorm.
I beat Medicare.
Yeah.
And then Trump said, yeah, you did.
Eugene, I want to ask you.
So reporters and White House correspondents, they're traveling with the president at all times.
Yeah. They're traveling with the president at all times. I feel like we've been watching this in slow motion for two or three years.
We understood, you know, there was a sense that Biden was, you know, he and Trump are both.
They're older men.
There was sort of a sense that Biden was going to be a one-term president.
He himself said, you know, I'm running to stop Trump and that's going to be it.
That debate couldn't have come as a shock to the people that have been with him day in and day out,
no? It did. It did. And this is why, right? So, you know, we don't get to see President Biden at
all the private moments that a lot of, like, now you have members of Congress and governors kind
of coming out and having these stories where either he didn't remember their name or he lost
his train of thought or he said something a little weird. Some of this is stuff that Biden has always
been doing, right? So we're not starting, you know, the bar is already kind of low here for
what people are anticipating from him. He's not, you know, people don't see him as like this orator.
are anticipating from him. He's not, you know, this, people don't see him as like this orator.
And, you know, if you think about it, the people around him, people who have been doing this for a really long time, if he was like that all the time, why would you debate? They decided that
June 27th was the debate that they wanted. They decided that it should be before he had the
nomination sewn up. They thought it would focus the American people on the race. It has not in the way that, that they wanted to. Right. Um,
were they, were they diluting themselves to some extent? I think part of it is like, you, you know,
when you have an older person in your life and if, as things start to change, you you're, it's like
also when you're like gaining weight in your house, right? Like as I, as I gained weight,
me and my husband don't see it, but I go home, I go home and see my grandmother. She's like, what are these 20 extra pounds?
They didn't realize Biden had a couple of had some love handles, had a couple of Dunkin Donuts.
Things were things were getting out of control.
That's the that is like the the feeling. And when you talk to people, you know, that's what they say.
And they knew he was old, but they were moving forward.
And they knew he was old, but they were moving forward. And I think the most important aspect of this is that you can put blinders on when your focus is no one else can beat Donald Trump.
Right. That is. Maybe that was the delusion. That's the thing. Right. That's the commandment within kind of Biden world and always has been.
Only one person has. And, you know, they felt like he was the best poised to do so. We don't know that that's actually true. We're going to test that. The Democrats are going to test that theory moving forward. But that was moving
and motivating them to kind of move forward in the way that they were, whether or not they saw.
At some point, everyone will write books and long, deep articles about what people actually saw.
Doris will write books and long, deep articles. Doris, what has changed? I'm curious what has changed from the sort of the
boys on the bus, from that idea of the access to the presidential candidates. In your mind,
was the Biden campaign different traditionally from other campaigns in the way that they limited
access or has access? Do we have more reporters now, but less actual access?
Oh, I do think that access seemed more limited. I mean, just think about FDR. He had two press
conferences a week, every single week, two press conferences. And that meant that the reporters
had access to him and they could ask him questions. He could answer them. And he, then he was also
having fireside chats so that I think things have diminished over time.
But they also protected FDR to some extent.
You know, there was always that idea that they would never talk about his physical infirmity.
No, in fact, it's incredible.
When he went to give an acceptance speech in 1936, as he was going down the aisle holding on to two strong people, his braces unlocked.
He fell on the floor, and they had to pick him up.
He got up there, and he gave a great speech, the the rendezvous with destiny speech. They never mentioned that he had fallen
or that his braces had unsnapped. So things were different then. And that's a problem.
But I do think, I just want to go back to one thing you said before, when you said that
how badly LBJ looked. I knew him in the last years of his life when his hair grew long
and it was white and he looked like a cowboy. And that was a good looking LBJ.
Doris, Doris, you got a thing for president.
You know, I've heard you speak rapturously about LBJ.
By the way, one of the few people in the country who believes Lincoln was a sexy beast.
That's Doris Kearns Goodwin.
I'm with Doris on that.
All right.
Abe's up there.
You know what happened, Eugene, was that I showed John a picture when I was on his show
a long time ago of Lincoln as a rugged person before the beard, and he really did look sexy.
I wish that beard had never come.
But you know, one of the things you think about is that the pressures on the president
are such, can you imagine what they were on with Biden once this debate had happened?
You know, you want to have a second term.
You feel like that's even more important than the first term because it's an endorsement of you.
You go over and you say to yourself, what if I had just done it differently? It's what everybody
who made a mistake during a debate must have said, whether it was Ford when he said something
about Eastern Europe or Mike Dukakis when he said something about capital punishment. You go the
rest of your life. You know, I've talked to these candidates and they say, you say, when did you stop thinking about, they say, what do you mean? You think we stopped
thinking about that? So for Biden, I think in those first days, it must've been almost frozen
to think about that. And then he had to consider, well, the press is coming after me, those
editorials, the donors are coming after me. And then for a while he could say, well, it's just
the elites. But I think when the Congressman told him that their constituents, the people, in other words, were 90 to 10 saying he had to stand down, then he finally had to make that decision.
It's a really tough decision. you know, if his family was violated through crime and what he would do, he was against the
death penalty and what he would do. And he gave sort of a twisted and, you know, interesting
answer that some say really lost him some support in the election. But those are having a bad debate
where you misspeak is different than something that looks fundamentally unsettled.
He was failing to put sentences together, right? And thoughts together. And, you know, they went into this thinking that
you have Donald Trump who in every debate just kind of like yells and, you know, says all these
things that are untrue and that Biden would look really smart going into the details of all of these things. Right. So they tried at one point to say that he overprepared, but he wasn't saying sentences.
He was struggling. It was very obvious. They said he had a cold.
It will be a very long time. We may never know what the actual truth is of what was happening up there.
Right. Because we've seen him since. And he's kind of back to old man Biden, as opposed to what we saw on the debate stage. But I think something that continues to be fascinating to me is that when
they were saying that it was the elites that wanted Biden out, that was almost never true.
The primary that wasn't had in polling that voters wanted something else. Voters, one,
did not want a Trump v. Biden race, and even Democrats didn't want President Biden. And then the Democratic apparatus, as it is,
kind of came together and decided, as they often do, no, we're going with the incumbent, right?
It is rare that, especially nowadays, that they would do something differently.
And then what really, I think, turned the tide for Biden was kind of the way that he and his team strategized and worked this out.
That first week when it was kind of they hunkered down and did the normal Biden world thing, which they ignore everything.
They don't they don't want to be distracted.
And then they focused on he had he had that North Carolina rally.
Then he had the one interview with George Stephanopoulos.
And they really thought that that was going to move things.
It didn't.
But they must have known that that Stephanopoulos interview
was unimpressive at best.
I talked to quite a few people.
They thought that he had done maybe like a C-,
which is like enough to pass, not enough to get you,
you might still graduate, but you have to keep going.
If you get, depending on how the grades shake out on the other tests, you might still graduate, but you have to keep going. If you get, depending on how
the grades shake out on the other tests, you might still get out of this high school. And I think
that is what they ended up doing. And on Monday, when he sent this letter to Hill Democrats being
super defiant, basically saying, get over it and get in line, that is when he started to hear a lot
of members of Congress being like, oh, we're not doing that. His Morning Joe interview was in that same vein.
So he went to being defiant. And at one point he had to be humbled. And so it, and then he
dropped out. Right. And so these, the way that those decisions were made also really impacted
how much Democrats were upset. And when he said in that George Stephanopoulos interview,
you know, it just matters if I just kind of give my darndest.
If we end up a fascist regime, as long as I gave it my all.
Right, right.
And Doris, I want to ask you.
So very clearly, the Democratic Party lined up behind Biden and made sure that the primary
season was not a real one.
It was kind of a Potemkin village.
And they put up one candidate.
I think it was Dean Johnson who—
Phillips.
Dean Phillips, I'm sorry, who we've all decided is actually not a real person, but in fact the picture on a hose sales ad.
But Trump has utterly usurped the entire apparatus of the Republican Party.
It really is in service to one man.
He controls the platform. He writes it specifically. It takes out all the things
that are traditionally. Doris, how democratic are these parties? How much do they normally control
what these apparatuses are? And how much of a say, you know, there's delegates,
there's superdelegates, there's all these things that make it not a true Democratic Party, but
at least with the Democrats, they are answering in many ways to their base, to their voters,
who are saying, this can't be, we can't have this guy.
Right. I mean, I think, you know, in the old days, the political bosses in the Democratic Party
or the Republican Party had complete control at the convention.
There weren't any primaries.
You could just decide who it was you thought would be the best leader.
And then they'd go forth in September.
They would go from September to November.
Sometimes I wish we could go back to that.
Right.
The primaries started in 1912 with Teddy Roosevelt wanting to beat Taft in his own party.
There were no primaries before 1912? No primaries before 1912 with Teddy Roosevelt wanting to beat Taft in his own party. There were no primaries before 1912?
No primaries before 1912. People should rule. That was the argument. And Teddy Roosevelt wanted to
beat his own friend and the current president, Taft. So he needed primaries because he had the
popularity and Taft had the party delegates on him. So anyway, that splits the Republican Party
in two. And that's the end of
the primary. Nobody wants it anymore until it finally comes back in the 50s and the 60s.
And where it really becomes strong is in 1968 when Humphrey wins, despite having not gone into the
primaries because he had the party delegates behind him and Lyndon Johnson. Then they decide,
we need primaries. We need primaries. All right. We're going to be back in a bit.
We need primaries.
We need primaries.
All right.
We're going to be back in a bit.
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Okay, we're back.
Picking up again, Doris.
I mean, the interesting thing we were saying about Biden is that there were only 14 million
people that voted for him.
He kept touting the fact that I was voted for by the people,
14 million votes, 51 million people watched that debate.
And that's a huge distinction because that debate one scene could not be unseen.
But also those primaries were perfunctory for, for Biden.
They were perfunctory.
But I want to talk about Doris.
This brings up an interesting point because we view the way things are done now
as though it's the way things are done now as though
it's the way things have always been done.
It's the status quo.
It's conventional wisdom.
This is the only way to do it.
And Eugene, we'll get to you with this in a second because I think it informed some
of the coverage.
What I saw in the coverage was this is impossible.
in the coverage was, this is impossible. It's way too late to in any way ever switch a candidate.
But the truth is, that is an utterly modern phenomenon. And none of this ever even takes place. Generally, I think none of it even begins to take place until the convention and moving forward. This permanent campaign that
we are in is a modern phenomenon, is it not, Doris? Absolutely. No, in the old days where we
produced Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, we didn't even start thinking about the
convention until the convention came. Somebody would come out of the convention, then they would
wait until Labor Day, and then the campaign would start right after Labor Day. And we had two months to decide
who it was going to be. And somehow we may have done a better job then. But I think the interesting
thing is where the leaders came back, the Democratic leaders came back, the Biden situation
was even before the debate, three out of four people thought he was too old. They were not
happy with either choice of Trump or Biden, but somehow they didn't pay attention to that. They thought you had to take the person who was
there. He had done a good job as president, et cetera, et cetera. But then once that debate
happened, those leaders are the ones that helped to make things change. Nancy Pelosi said the
question is, was it an episode or a condition? They started making space for the fact that he
might not be able to stay there. The pressure kept building up. They spoke up. So the leaders of the Democratic Party really helped to make this
happen because, as I say, they were hearing from the people. So finally, he had to make the decision
as hard as it was for him. So in some ways, it was the base that decided this, not the elites.
It was finally, it seemed, the elites listened to the base.
Listened to the people. That's exactly right.
The base had been saying all along, I'm not, and you see this.
Now, Eugene, this brings up an interesting point to me about the coverage.
And I want to talk about, as this thing was swinging, the sort of hot takes that come
out of this.
I'm just going to give you some of the examples of the whiplash that
people were going through. So the articles were, the Democrats who believe Biden should drop out
are insane. They are walking into a death trap. These are idiots that would say it's too late. It's too late for Biden to drop out.
Biden is your only chance. You are idiots. Two days later, they are saying excitement around
Kamala Harris are the Democrats' only chance. Thank God they finally pulled the plug on this
death trap of a candidacy that was Joseph Biden. In the same way, a week before it was,
Donald Trump is inevitable.
The Republicans are coming out of this convention.
J.D. Vance is a brilliant stroke.
And now they're writing, Trump is in trouble.
He hates J.D. Vance.
J.D. Vance is the worst.
What, do the reporters ever read their own articles?
We do, but this is one of the things, John, is that like the one of the many, is that there is so much going on right now.
Like we are on this podcast and who the hell knows what we're going to come back to, what world we're going to come back to.
You think Harris is out?
You never know.
And now Shapiro is in.
You never know.
And we're moving on.
You never know.
You never know. You never know. Like the the the speed at which even like the last like, I don't know, 40 since June 27, the speed at which the cycle has moved has been so wild. And I think what we try to do is give people kind of a sense of what's happening right now.
I think often not often. I think sometimes that we can you know, we as well as other folks missed the mark. Right.
that we can, you know, we as well as other folks missed the mark, right? You have politicians who missed the mark. And I think, you know, being declarative about it had a lot to do with how
Democrats were speaking about it, how behind closed doors, they wanted him gone, but they
didn't know how to do it. But also, whether or not they had the actual wherewithal, like inside of
them to do this, to get rid of this guy who everyone loves and thought and really thought
did a good job, but
thought that he was going to make them lose and tear all of them down?
More importantly, did they understand the rules of how an open convention or a contested
convention would actually work?
And I think that's where a lot of the, like, they would be insane to do this came from,
because Democrats were like, how would we pick?
It would be, we can't do that.
14 million people voted for this man.
Like how, what does that look like?
But I talked to Elaine Kamarck, who is an expert.
She's literally written multiple books.
She updates it every four years
about the conventions and primary system for Democrats.
Also the wife of Steny Hoyer,
one of the members of Congress
and a former leader in the House.
And what she said is,
it is just like everyone just misunderstands what is actually possible, that the power,
it's really like when you vote for a representative to Congress, they make decisions on your behalf when they can't go back to all of you and find out what you want to say, right? And so they send
these delegates and the delegates have all the power. And so have President Biden stayed in the delegates who are people who aren't just like who aren't just saying they're going to vote for him.
They're bound by him. No, they're they're they're self-selected by the campaign so that they're loyal.
They're very loyal people. Sure. So. So it's like the operation of this was, I think, misunderstood by not just reporters.
And, you know, I count myself,
you called it, you said idiots. I'm going to count myself amongst the idiots.
Not idiots. No, Eugene, you're here because you're not an idiot.
But like, it's a good lesson for all of us about like how quick the news cycle moves.
But Eugene, you know the lesson won't be learned.
I've learned it. How about that?
No, but it's, I'm going to read you, here's the, I'm going to read you the run.
Yeah. Forcing Biden out would have only one beneficiary, Trump. Right. At one point that made sense. Right. The Atlantic. Trump is preparing for a landslide win. New York Times.
This is how you know Trump smells victory. July 15th, Donald Trump, man of destiny. July 18th,
July 15th, Donald Trump, man of destiny.
July 18th, the Democrats aren't even trying.
July 19th, Republicans emerged from convention confident in Trump talking about a blowout victory.
July 22nd, pathetic Trump already trying to weasel out
of debating Kamala Harris.
Same day, why Trump suddenly thinks
picking J.D. Vance was a mistake.
Same day, Kamala Harris's shocking fundraising numbers terrify Trump.
Yeah.
Like, when are we going to learn from the media? Doris, you know, we keep talking about
the difference in the old days and the new days. There's no question back then the smoke-filled
room was the elites choosing things. The reporters had a different relationship with the candidates.
But what we have now is chaos without context or perspective, hot takes that in many ways inflame the electorate rather than illuminate the electorate.
How do we take a breath? What do we do in terms of, we can't change the speed at which events
take place, but can we change the manner by which we either cheer that on or cover it?
Doris, what's your thought on that?
You know, that's a really good question.
I mean, the problem is when breaking news happens, there's an emotion that goes with
that breaking news, whether it was the assassination attempt or the Republican convention, or then
the fact that Kamala Harris has done so well in the last couple of days, that that emotion
becomes part of what the press covers.
And it means that you're changing 90 degrees, as you're saying, or 180 degrees from where
you were before.
Maybe you can just sort of have a longer view.
I mean, the weird thing about the old days was that the political bosses, yes, they may
have been in smoke-filled rooms, but they were looking for a candidate who could bridge
the divides in the party.
So they weren't looking for an extreme on either side.
The problem with the caucus system now and the primary system is often a candidate comes
from the extreme and then has to work their way back to the middle in order to win at
the other end.
But it is more democratic.
We can never go backwards sometimes.
And I don't think people would even go back to the smoke-filled rooms, although I like
some of those old political bosses in the old days.
They had an intuition about who could possibly be the right person for that time. So, you know, when that
first primary happened, the New York Times wrote an editorial saying it was so vicious, as I was
saying, between Taft and Teddy. Taft called Teddy a dictator and Teddy called Taft a pinhead,
that it was embarrassing. And if this is the first primary system, we hope it's the last.
And they said, we must have a blush on everybody's cheeks.
I know a pinhead is kind of a weird thing to call him.
It's kind of a weird thing to call somebody.
That meant he didn't have a lot of brains in that pinhead, right?
I just find it interesting that these lions of American democracy and statesmanship, and we have no idea the day-to-day of how they were actually dealing with each other
in the pinheads.
But Eugene, I want to ask you,
look, reporters are human beings
and they're invested in this as well.
But I want to ask you,
do you think now that the ubiquity of the coverage
incentivizes reporters to the hot take?
You know, you're human beings.
You're going to see what gets the clicks
and maybe that shapes the extremity of what goes on there. But it's something that struck me during
Donald Trump's trial, is that in court, they just litigate the parameters of reality,
the parameters of what happened. There are evidentiary standards, and there are things that each side has to follow. Do you think that our journalists
could maybe take some lesson from that idea of litigating the parameters of our reality
rather than the speculation towards what this all means. Because as we see,
that is what's so temporal and ephemeral and doesn't really stand the test of time.
But litigating what's going to happen next or how it's supposed to happen seems like a worthy endeavor. Yeah, I think you're right.
I think the problem is that people who engage in the media
are asking for context, right?
What does this mean?
How does this compare to the past?
What could happen?
And I think there's a fine line between analysis
and kind of prognosticating and guessing, right?
You can say, you know,
former President Donald Trump got shot. Republicans feel X, Y, and Z. Democrats have paused on
fighting with Biden because of it. You know, Republicans feel like this is going to give them
a straight shot to November, right? That is, that is fully things that will are true at the time.
And so therefore will remain true that that happened. And that's how people felt about it.
I think the bigger problem is like the word, a lot of people use using the word journalist who
are not journalists. A lot of people who are saying reporters are not that. And so you're
having folks that are, you know, like share are sharing full opinions and on, you know, whether it's cable news on podcasts in their own articles in op eds.
Like the American people aren't really there. going to spend a lot of time to go Google if Joe Bob is an actual reporter at a news organization
or if Joe Bob used to work for the Democratic Party at one point and now he's a consultant,
right? But there are news organizations of great reputation that I just read those headlines from.
That's not from like Jimmy's blog. That's the New York Times, the Atlantic, Politico. These are reputable
organizations. And you know what, John? Yeah. I think that people should have, given what we've
seen in the last four weeks where everything changed, a greater respect for the idea that
fate could intervene at any times. And maybe that would prevent them from making whatever's
happening now a projection for the future. I mean, for example,
when Lyndon Johnson pulled out of the race, accolades everywhere. He was able, three days later, North Vietnam said they would come to the bargaining table. It was his happiest day of his
life. People on the streets were cheering for him. And then the next day, as the plane was ready to
go to Hawaii to bring people to start the negotiations, Martin Luther King was killed.
And then the riots happened in the streets. Oh my goodness. That all happened within those.
That's what I'm saying. So that should give you a sense that faith can intervene.
Things can change at any moment. And maybe even what you're feeling at the moment.
Vance is a great choice. They're heading toward the, you don't have to say where we're going for
the future. We should have more understanding that we don't know the future,
and the future keeps backing us up every single time,
as we've seen in this last four weeks.
Who could have predicted the events of the last four weeks?
So I think they should feel able.
Now Eugene knows this better than I.
I'm not a journalist.
I know 50 years from now, if I come back,
I'll tell you exactly what it was going to be and how it ended.
But they can't know that at the time.
Doris, did you just say, if I may, did you just make the prediction,
you're coming back in 50 years to put in context for the American public at that time?
Well, look, if my dead presidents are alive, wouldn't that be terrific?
No, that's a wonderful point. All right. We'll be back in a second.
All right, we'll be back in a second.
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netsuite.com slash weekly. Okay, we're back. I wanted to ask, and Eugene, this is probably
to you, what does happen now? What are the mechanics? No, I don't mean what happens now
is like Kamala Harris, but what are the mechanics now of this convention? Basically, it is an open
convention, I would assume, unless they do a nominating vote prior to that. But what are the
mechanics of what we're going to see next?
Yeah. I mean, first, the rules committees are meeting to kind of decide the rules,
right, within the party. It seems like-
Those are not set prior. That's something that happens that close to it.
Yeah, you can change it. And then often they vote on the rules,
like as a full delegation at the conventions.
Who are the rules committee made up of?
Are they delegates?
They are.
Some of them are delegates.
A lot of them are like the, a lot of names of them are people that folks will recognize as people who are in democratic politics.
They are members of different types of constituencies.
They are governors.
They're governors.
They're members.
And so they're senators. Some of them are local and state senators and members of the House assemblies. And the reason is they are certain that this kind of Ohio rule,
that if you don't have the name selected, if your person is not nominated,
they can't make it on the ballot.
Ohio changed the law.
Ohio said this law no longer matters.
We can move on.
The Democrats have chosen to ignore that.
How is it that a state could say you need the name of your nominee
before you would get your nominating convention?
That doesn't seem to make any sense.
And so they made this rule before, it seems before the convention was like fully set.
And so that is where it kind of everyone woke up and they're like, wait a second, we have to figure something out here.
So they were going to do this with President Biden.
There was a conversation about maybe we don't need to do it with Harris.
Ohio says they're good to go, but they don't trust the Republicans in Ohio to, um, at their word. And so they're going to
continue to do that. And so, um, it's by all intents and purposes, vice president Harris is
the presumptive nominee. We're not using that word because they've, they've committed to her.
They're not pledged to her. So, you know, again, with keeping, knowing that the fate can intervene
doors, they could get on that roll call vote and say, like, Jon Stewart is going to get it.
Let's go.
What?
Oh, my God.
I had no idea.
Congratulations.
I promised myself I wouldn't cry.
There's a crown girl coming your way.
You're welcome.
President Stewart.
And I'm only running in Ohio.
I accept.
Only in Ohio.
And so that part will happen early.
That also means Vice President Harris
has to pick a running mate before then
because the way that the proposal
and the draft was
is that the speed
that she actually has to do that.
Ohio is going to lead the Democrats
around by the nose
rather than trusting the process
that they have in place
for choosing it in a measured way.
It doesn't make any sense.
Democrats don't want to roll the dice here is what it is.
They don't want to roll the dice at Ohio.
And maybe this is where we end up.
And this is where we end.
And I thank you both for being here.
But I want to talk about this very quickly.
We are such a convoluted mess when it comes to our election systems, whether it's through
the financial shenanigans of super PACs and all the loopholes that exist and corporations
are people and money is free speech and the 14 or $15 billion that we're going to spend
on this election.
And we don't know where the dark money is.
to spend on this election.
And we don't know where the dark money is.
So from the financing to the rules, to the ubiquity, to the fact that it doesn't ever end, which means we are always at each other's throats and never have time for makeup electoral
sex in the country.
Like we're just fighting at all times.
Like we are a mess.
And one of the biggest things I heard.
But you know what, John?
Yes, ma'am.
I was going to say, we created these problems.
We can solve these problems.
We can change things.
We can have a political revolution.
We can make it so that money is not in politics.
We can do these things.
I mean, why are the best people not running for public office now?
Because they know they're going to have to spend their time raising money, tons and tons
of money.
They know their private lives are going to be exposed.
They don't think that they're going to be able to get very much done because the two
parties had loggerheads.
We created these problems by the system we created.
We can change that system.
You know, they talked about, we can't make a change in our candidate, even given this
most extreme and urgent new information that we've received
during a debate, because we don't have enough time. Meanwhile, France, they did two elections
in six weeks. England did it in eight weeks. And those systems can be applied here. We have an electoral industrial complex that needs to be broken up. It is monopolistic and FTC needs to getgnosticate, but I have not seen enough of the kind of excitement
from you and Doris about these kinds of things big enough to see changes actually happen.
I can be pretty cynical on some of the political things because, you know, people will say one
thing behind closed doors. I'm pointing to my door. You can't see it. One thing behind closed
doors and then a completely different thing like to your face.
And you know that the thing that both of those things happen.
So our political incentive structure is off, first of all.
And so people don't always speak the things that they feel.
Many of them do want these kinds of changes.
Many of them want money, money out of politics.
There are a lot of Republicans who are speaking this language right now, which is really interesting.
It used to be more of a democratic message.
And so there's a world in which they do come together. That world has to, and this could be
one of those moments where maybe the parties are looking around, depending on what happens in
November, because the American people want- Well, the parties won't do it because anybody
who thinks they'll lose advantage in the same way that DC will never become a state because
in the way that our system works, you can't, the Republicans will never go for a democratic area,
getting a Senator or getting, you know, they're, they're just never going to go for
that type of sharing. But I think solving the time problem solves the money problem.
And it solves the hatred in the, it helps to solve the hatred in the country, right?
Right.
You know, like the amount of attacks that we all receive come from this, like the speed, the length of time at which we're hitting each other.
There's attack ads.
Everyone's saying this person's the worst person that's ever lived.
Exactly.
There's a lot of things that if we fix this one thing could work better in
this country, I think the country might be better off for it. Doris.
So let us three pledge. Let's pledge that we're going to argue about this. I mean,
just think of how much better our lives would be if we only had to focus on these presidential
elections over a six-week period or a 10-week period. But we just have to believe that we can
do it. I mean, we've made bigger changes in our lives and our political lives over time.
You know, we ended segregation. We allowed more people to vote that didn't vote. Women couldn't
vote for so long and black people couldn't vote for so long. We've made those changes.
We have to change the system as it is now. You've gotten me really riled up right now.
Me too.
I've been living for another 50 years. I want to be part of it.
And now I've been living for another 50 years. I want to be part of this.
I want to be part of it.
I'm so riled up.
Yeah.
And I know that you and Eugene are riled up and we can do this.
And we have the technology.
This is a world and the media cycle that like if in years ago,
like if this was the sixties or even if it was the 1800s and people had to
get on their horse and buggy and go around and introduce themselves to all
the Americans, that would be much more difficult. These people can introduce themselves
at the drop of a hat. You could have the amount of ads, the amount of Twitter, the amount of
information we can get about these people in a short amount of time.
Two to three months is almost too long. People will already be sick of it. You'll already be
in that cycle of, I'm tired of this person. I want the next person. The idea that this vetting process is somehow getting us closer to more competent and better leadership is nonsense and insane. an electoral campaign system that does the opposite of what it is intended to do,
which is we've created a system so burdensome, so onerous, so expensive, so hate-filled,
that all it does is drag the worst of us to the highest positions in leadership.
And I say it changes now.
And I'm proud to announce my co-chairs of Eugene Daniels and Doris Kearns Goodwin,
and we're going to make this happen.
Hooray!
I didn't even curse once during that entire speech.
Very good. Very good.
You guys are the best.
Thank you for joining us today and really helpful and really informative.
Doris Kearns Goodwin, it's always an honor to see you and a delight.
I don't see you enough.
And Eugene Daniels, so nice to meet you.
Doris Kearns Goodwin, presidential historian, Pulitzer Prize winning author, most recent
book, An Unfinished Love Story, Personal History of the 60s.
Eugene Daniels, Politico White House correspondent, Playbook co-author.
Thank you both so much for joining us.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you.
Man.
Man. That was terrible for Rob on sound and, and, or Nicole and man, I'm fired up now. It really, there was an epiphany in the middle of it that it's not about the, the money follows the time
because the elections are never ending. The money hose is unceasing. If we change the time, we change the money, we change the atmosphere, we change the corrosive and eroding effects that it has on our souls. We shorten the time we have to endure this nonsense.
we have to endure this nonsense. That is so true. It really gave me hope because when I think about tackling the money and politics issue, it seems insurmountable, but addressing the time is a
secret way in. I think that's right. It's a backdoor hack. We call it a life hack on the
TikTok world. Yes. John, are you on TikTok? I'm in my Lifehack era.
Got it.
I'm not on TikTok, but Maggie makes me know Kamala is brat.
Doris is brat.
Doris is brat.
And I didn't know what that was, but I'm assuming it's something.
How are we doing otherwise?
I know we got some viewer questions or comments. What are we dealing with this?
We put out a call asking for people to send in some questions for you. So we, uh, have some for you.
Come at me, bro. Come at me, bro.
We have, uh, someone who is starting college and their roommates are random and they want to know how they can avoid opinion
slash political conflict in a tight dorm room. Oh, you're not supposed to. That's the whole point
of a dorm room. The whole point of a dorm room is, and then you got to read like Catcher in the Rye
and then like just get all fucked up and high and talk about it till six in the morning. The whole
point of the college dorm room is not
to avoid that, but to learn to navigate your way through it with this person that is really only
in there because you guys wake up around the same time. I think that's pretty much how college
roommates are now selected is what time do you wake up and are you a complete fucking pig?
Are you a complete fucking pig?
So that's the gradation.
But I would suggest you are in close quarters.
There is no better.
You are now in the dojo. You are in the conversation and topic dojo.
A 10 by 12 room, two twin beds with plastic covering on it. You haven't slept on shit like that ever.
And this is bootcamp for learning how to get along with another person that you don't. I think they
should switch roommates every six weeks and throw you into a whole other scenario of political and sociological tumult.
And it should always end with like 6.30 in the morning being like,
in theory, socialism does sound good, but in practice, it just never worked.
That's what I, don't avoid it. Lean in. Dive in. Head first, feet first.
And invest in a durable bong.
Or is that, that's probably old school advice
because now the kids probably smoke in those,
you know, the, whatever those are.
Vapes?
Vapes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Done.
Settled.
All right.
Next question.
And this is a quote.
Oh my God, babe, you got to drop your skincare routine.
Oh, well, here's my routine.
Don't do anything for 61 years and let the chips fall where they may.
Terrible, terrible.
Well, so far, I think we've done an excellent job at responding to
to viewers concerns do you want another one you give me one more and then and then we'll move it
on all right john here we go come on i need advice on how to end a relationship oh
that it's so interesting to me me. We're doing a podcast about social and political issues,
and everything we're getting so far is like my lifestyle blog.
I think they want me to be a get ready with me influencer. Talk about breakups and skincare.
I think I've been doing the wrong show forever. That's the next podcast.
The breakup thing is be creative.
Nobody wants just a straight thing.
Have them come in a room and go, oh, it's so bright in here.
And then lower the blinds and on it is written, get the fuck out.
Get out of my house.
And then they're going to be like, oh shit, that hurts.
But props to you for the creative endeavor
in the way that you did it.
It's like a reverse compo.
Yes.
That's our show.
Solid show. Boy, did I love Dor Yes. That's our show. Solid show.
Boy, did I love Doris.
Very nice to meet you, Jean.
As always, I want to thank lead producer Lauren Walker, producer Brittany Mimetevic, video
editor and engineer Rob Vitola, audio editor and engineer Nicole Boyce, our researcher
and associate producer Jillian Spirit, executive producers Chris McShane, Katie Gray.
You guys are killing it.
Great topics, great research, great information.
Thank you all so much.
And that's it for us.
We'll see y'all next time on The Weekly Show.
Bye-bye.
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