The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Spilling Election Tea with London Mayor Sadiq Khan
Episode Date: September 26, 2024As world leaders descend upon NYC for the UN General Assembly, London Mayor Sadiq Khan joins us to discuss the parallel challenges facing the UK and US. The conversation dives into both countries’ e...lections, explores the impacts of misinformation, immigration, and populism, and examines the responsibilities of the media and politicians to educate and inform. Later, Stephanie Kelton, Economics Professor at Stony Brook University and author of "The Deficit Myth," offers a fresh perspective on our previous episode, challenging conventional wisdom about government spending and deficits. 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/Associate Producer – 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 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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["The Daily Show"]
Hello, everybody.
Welcome once again to the weekly show podcast.
My name is Jon Stewart.
I am the host of the program.
I have my two fabulous producers, Brittany Mametovic
and Lauren Walker are gonna be joining us.
And it is UN Week here in New York.
It's when the countries of the world gather together
to not solve the problems facing the world
because they can't even solve the problem
of how to get to the fucking UN building
without ruining the rest of New York City.
Am I right?
It's maddening.
Maddening!
I'll tell you what's not maddening.
Last week we had Jason Ferman on who was an economist
who was basically daring us to give him a noogie.
I think that was, he might've had the data,
but boy did I wanna wedgie that dude.
But we got a lot of response from different economists.
We're gonna actually have one on
at the very end of the show
who's going to help explain.
Her name is Stephanie Kelton, professor of economics.
She has some interesting thoughts on the deficit.
We'll do that at the very end.
But because it's UN week, we've got some interesting people
in the city.
Siddiquan, mayor of London, is going to join us.
And we're going to talk to him about all
the different things, similarities between the UK elections,
the American elections, different dynamics.
So I'm excited about that.
So let's jump in.
We got a packed show.
And so we are delighted to have with us joining us
for the conversation, the mayor of London, Mr. Sadiq Khan.
Mr. Mayor, Sadiq, thank you so much for joining us
for the discussion today.
And by the way, congratulations to Labour.
How long has it been since Labour had their historic
smashing victory in the recent election?
Well, it's great to be in the second greatest city
in the world, in New York.
Oh, you're in New York right now?
Yeah, it is, yeah.
Look, so it's been 82 days since history was made and the Labour Party, the party that
I'm proud to be a member of, won a general election for the first time in 14 years.
And to give you context, John, and for your listeners in America who don't realize this,
but for the last hundred years, the conservatives,
our version of the Republican party,
have been in power for two thirds of that time.
So, labor has only been in power
for a third of the last hundred years.
So, us winning is unusual.
So, it's great that we've won after 14 years
and we won pretty big.
We won a landslide victory.
And in some ways, counterintuitive to the direction
that so much of Europe is going in,
and even after Brexit, the direction that the UK
was going in, generally the populists in the right
have been gaining a foothold.
This was a bit of a counter.
If you look across the globe, and Europe's not excluded,
over the last 10 years, there's been a rise
of right-wing parties and
even in some parts of Europe far-right parties look at France, look at Amsterdam, look at Germany
with the AFD, look at Italy. Across Europe we've seen this where basically right-of-center politicians
have played on people's fears and won elections using fear as a motive. We, and our election,
both my mayoral election in May, but also general election in July, talked more about
hope and about change and about positivity.
Hope and what now? Hope and change. Wait, did you read that off one of our old posters?
That's what we used to go with. We used to go with hope and change.
Well, you stole that originally from us, if you remember.
Son of a bitch! Really?
Now, are you surprised Keir Starmer?
He basically ran against the corruption of the Tories and I guess his first 100 days,
people are feeling a little underwhelmed.
He did something with restricting pensioners' funding and he's overpaying some of the folks
in his cabinet.
Was that a surprise to you that those were moves Labour made early on
in this administration?
One of the things that Keir's tried to do,
and I think in my view, all good leaders should do this
is be teachers in an unpatronizing way,
explain to people some of the challenges,
some of the problems, and then try and address them.
And one of the things that Keir's tried to do,
the Prime Minister's tried to do,
is to explain to the British public, look, we need a long-term plan
to fix their foundations, to address the inheritance we have. And I've got to be straight with you,
we've got a black hole. Just this financial year, 24, 25, we've got to find 22 billion pounds.
And rather than making false promises or over-promising and under-delivering, I'd rather under-promise
and over-deliver.
And the idea is, John, and it's very-
Wait, isn't that austerity?
Hold on a second.
Well, let me explain why it's not.
I thought you were a laborer where you just say like,
let's just print money.
Let's print a little bit more money,
go into a deficit and take care of business.
No, it's okay, in my view, to borrow to invest
in infrastructure and so forth,
but you shouldn't borrow for revenue, ordinary day-to-day running costs.
That's not a smart thing to do.
So at the same time as he's making tough decisions in the short term, he's planting the seeds
for the middle to long term in relation to growth, in relation to investment in infrastructure,
in relation to saying, listen, there's going to be a dark tunnel for the short term, but
there is light at the end.
Did he explain that beforehand? Did he say to the people during the election,
hey, by the way, we're in a dark tunnel and I'm going to have to do some things?
No, to give, one of the things that he was criticized for was the manifesto that he published,
not making big promises. He was actually criticized for the manifesto being quite sober. And he said,
during the campaign, I'm not going to make any promise. I can't deliver. I'm not going to have any any commitment in my manifesto
that isn't fully costed. And many people criticized him for because where's the hope? Where is
the where is it? Where is the excitement? And and the point he made was, look, you know,
the phrase that you know, that I've been echoing is actually stability is the new change. We've
had a situation, John, where we've had five prime ministers in the last five years.
Just think about that.
Five.
We had one prime minister who lasted 49 days.
A lettuce has a longer lifespan.
Ahead of lettuce.
I saw that.
Yeah.
I mean, for those of you listeners who don't realize, there was a competition who would
last longer, this lettuce or Prime Minister Liz Truss.
By the way, it has changed the way that I approach eating salads.
I now, I will let something sit for much longer.
It's the, I call it the Liz Truss salad
and I will eat it days after I shouldn't have even gone near.
As long as it's a salad you're eating
and not Prime Minister's, that's okay.
Now, are you surprised?
You know, we are in a very similar situation
and it's interesting how immigration and migrants has,
it's not just in particular countries,
it's a worldwide phenomenon
that is driving these populist movements.
I mean, it drove Brexit.
It seemingly seems like if Brexit had not have passed,
maybe labor wouldn't have had the great success
it had in this election.
But I was surprised.
The slogan for the Tories was stop the boats.
Correct.
And I think the slogan for labor was stop the gangs
who are funding the boats.
But both leaned into this idea that migration and
confusingly sometimes immigration is an enormous issue.
I think progressives around the globe haven't yet found the language to talk
about these issues in a way that I think we should be talking about this issue.
Look, this great country that I'm in now, this city that I'm in, I'm in New York,
you know this better than I do. What made this city, this country great
was successive waves of migration. I speak as a child of immigrants. My parents migrated
from Pakistan to London. My grandparents, by the way, from India to Pakistan. No migrant
goes through what they do to arrive in a city or a country to sit on their bum
to receive benefits. They arrive because they've got a can-do attitude, they want to contribute.
Sometimes they may be fleeing persecution, sometimes family reunion, and we've got to
explain the positives of migration. At the same time, we've got to recognize there are some
members of society who've got genuine grievances. they can't get decent healthcare, they can't get affordable housing, they can't get their
child into a decent school. But the reason for that is not because they're a migrant,
it's because politicians have failed to invest in these sorts of issues.
But there are obviously limits. I mean, if you can't, as somebody who does believe immigration,
migration is an important part of infusing
a country with new energy and new ideas and new enthusiasm and all these kinds of things,
I'm also of the mindset that we have to have a discussion of what can countries, certainly
the United States has a different absorption rate than the UK or then let's say Liechtenstein
or whatever we're going to be talking about.
That's the part that we don't ever really discuss.
So I think one of the things that I've not met a sensible progressive who says open borders.
No, I haven't either.
Anybody can. No rules, no conditions.
It's an easy demagogue.
Spot on. So there's going to be controlled borders. There's going to be a process. And by the way,
not every asylum seeker will have a successful case, right?
They may not be a genuine asylum seeker.
They may not be fleeing persecution.
There's going to be a rule system that assesses this, sends people back who shouldn't be here.
But it's going to be a process.
And if you haven't got safe routes, safe passages, don't be surprised if people use unsafe routes,
criminal gangs, and all the
rest of it and stuff. That conversation is really important. It goes back to one of the
things that I think my profession, politicians, has been poor at, which is to be teachers,
to explain to people some of the challenges, some of the issues, and to address them where
you can. I think what's happened, John, to go back to your point about the rise of populist,
nativist movements is what politicians
have been doing is rather than addressing people's concerns, addressing people's fears,
they've been playing on them.
And the easiest thing to do, and you go back histories, is to blame the other.
The reason you can't get into healthcare is the other's fault.
The reason why you can't get your mom in operation is the other's fault.
And it's easy to do.
And us progressives, they've got to get better
at responding to genuine concerns,
but also calling out a lie and misinformation
in relation to what migrants have been blamed
for doing across the globe.
Well, you had that situation in England recently
where tragically, I think three children were stabbed to death. The
misinformation about where the attacker came from, it actually turned out to be
somebody from Wales maybe, his parents had immigrated here, but it set off
really terrible riots in the streets. For those of you who aren't aware, so this
summer in July in Southport in the northwest of England, there was a lovely
kid session taking place of yoga, a Taylor Swift themed yoga event. It's a lovely event, children,
teachers. A man came into this yoga themed party, killed tragically a six year old and a nine year
old, injured eight other children and injured two
adults. Now, this person responsible is born in Cardiff in Wales, and there's a criminal
case taking place. I won't talk too much about the case. What happened then was very shortly
afterwards a lie was put out on social media which said the person responsible was a Muslim. Not true.
The person responsible was an asylum seeker.
Not true.
And this was amplified on, on social media, uh, by the way, uh, uh, one of
the owners of the social media company got involved in spreading the lie.
That's unusual for him.
Well, I mean, what happened then was John, uh, a inverted commerce
protest took place that night.
And then the far right turned up.
They tried to burn, well, they did burn down a hostile house
in asylum seekers, tried to attack places of worship
where Muslims worship.
John, they were stopping cars to see if the person inside
was a person of color or was white.
And these riots spread across the country,
combination of lies, disinformation, misinformation,
and social media.
And so in the end, Prime Minister Keir Starmer stopped this by a tough law and order.
In London, by the way, we had thousands coming out in solidarity and allyship, because here's
the irony.
In those parts of our country where there's the most diversity, actually, you don't have
these sorts of problems because people realize that actually somebody who's a person of color
isn't the boogeyman.
Somebody who's a child of immigrants isn't the boogeyman.
A migrant isn't the boogeyman.
Those parts of the country where actually there is very little diversity where these
disturbances took place.
And by the way, it's also there's a certain kind of implied problem here that I think
is also needs to be addressed, which was, well, it turns out it wasn't an asylum seeker
or it wasn't a Muslim or it wasn't a migrant.
But even if it had been, none of this is justified.
And it brings up, and I'd like to talk to you about this, this is kind of a broader
point. But we talk about democracy under threat
and what we can do to bolster liberal democracy
and the forms of government that we've all fought so hard,
sometimes even against each other.
Let's face facts, we're friends now, but we had a hard time.
But the challenge, I think, we talk about the demagogues
and the right wing using migrants and Muslims and, you know, all these other groups and Jews and people of color as weapons against each other. kind of a macro view. We are in an environment where the media and social media
are incentivized to conflict and to catastrophizing.
And so we have a population that is far more stirred up,
whose reptilian brains have been stimulated
by these media companies who are incentivized
to keep you scared and to keep you watching. And this is where it gets interesting, I think.
A democratic system, which is naturally analog, it's kind of slow moving, it's not that agile.
And so you have a government that might not be very responsive and a population that's far more
intensely engaged. And maybe that mixture is what's putting democracies at risk.
So we've got examples of this actually. 2016, the referendum you mentioned in the UK, Brexit,
we now know that lies were told, but Facebook
and a company called Cambridge Analytica were some of the methods used in relation to that election
campaign. We know there's been all sorts of serious issues in Myanmar because of lies being
spread on social media. I think a number of things just to unpack the challenge you posed in the modern time.
One is this.
When you and I were growing up, the mainstream media we relied upon for information, there'd
be fact checking.
There'd be two sides of the story and we would get both sides of the story.
And you and I as rational human beings could form a view, right?
There were young people now in both our respective countries being raised where
the way their algorithm on their phone works is they, whether it's TikTok, whether it's
Facebook, whether it's X, the way the algorithms are set up, they get one side of the story
with no fact checking.
And if you look at a certain video, the algorithms work, you get the same sort of video.
Could be a misogynistic man, could be and worse man and worse and there's no fact-checking and over a period of time you become indoctrinated and
Brainwashed and start believing that that is your truth and that's how they make money. All right, we got to take a quick break
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Back with the mayor of London, CityCon.
And what's worse is they monetize these algorithms so negativity gets more money.
So that's why this phrase clickbait is so apt for what we're talking
about. And so people know if they mention certain names, it's a trigger, which will lead to the
algorithms work in a certain way, which means there's no incentive for the social media companies to
have negative algorithms to stop that staff to stop those lies being spread. And so in the last
couple of years, X has gone the other way.
Fewer staff employed to check truth.
Algorithms designed to spread misinformation
rather than designs to take truth off.
Now, if you were to say anything on your program
that was against, you know, defamation, copyright,
in sexual property, incitement laws,
it's the Wild West on social media.
There are no rules that apply.
And the famous Mark Twain saying, you know, a lie is half around the world before truth's got its
socks on. Nowadays with social media, I mean, a lie spread. We've had riots in the UK because of
lies, misinformation, disinformation. And the context in a democracy is really serious. That's
before you mentioned foreign agents. Sure. that's before you mentioned foreign agents.
Sure.
That's before you mentioned bot farms.
People that are weaponizing it. Now, the challenge is free speech.
So in liberal democracies, we have a value on free speech, which I think is incredibly important.
I think the distinction I want to make is this isn't free speech. This is incentivizing people
This isn't free speech. This is incentivizing people to engage more with lies,
with weaponization, with things that create fear.
It's not, an algorithm isn't neutral.
It's not benign.
It drives you to further and further places of dispute.
And in some ways, I think that can be suppressive for free speech as well. further and further places of dispute.
And in some ways I think that can be suppressive for free speech as well.
Because isn't that the balance?
How do we maintain free communication,
free speech for people,
allowing them to exchange ideas
without necessarily incentivizing
the most damaging of those ideas for further engagement. Does that make sense?
It does, but I'd qualify what you've said, which is I think we've got to recognize that
even in the most liberal Western democracies, there are limitations on free speech. So you
aren't allowed to breach copyright or intellectual property or be defamatory or incite hatred
and so forth.
Incite hatred, I don't know about, but the other ones I think you're right.
So we've recognized there's some limitations to have in a civilized society.
Here's what I think probably the problem is.
Lawmakers have been slow to respond to the rise of social media.
And here's what social media companies need to recognize.
Unless they sort themselves out,
regulation is coming down the road
because we've got to regulate this.
And if you can't do it as a nation states,
there's got to be multilateral agreements
because people will try and play around.
Like nuclear power.
Absolutely.
Let me give you an example of a real life study.
You've heard of deep fake, right?
Sure.
So in the UK, we have every November the 11th at 11am,
we commemorate our fallen heroes. It's called Remembrance Day in the UK. And at the Senate half,
we have an event where veterans come along, you know, and we pay our respects to them.
Last year, we also have been having regularly protests in support of people in Gaza taking place.
It's really important in a democracy, we allow protests to take place as long as it's peaceful,
lawful and safe.
Now here's, that's the background.
So in the week before Remembrance Day last year, So malevolent people put out a deep fake, deep fake of me
instructing the police to cancel Armistice Day, to cancel
Remembrance Day, because I wanted the police to allow a
Palestinian project to take place.
So you, this is you coming out and saying, we want to cancel
our Remembrance Day and I want there to be a pro-Palestinian.
Spot em.
Okay.
Okay.
Spot on.
Okay, okay.
Spot on.
And this is a video.
This is an actual video.
This is a deep fake audio.
Oh, audio.
Audio.
Because it was supposed to be a secret recording of me instructing the Metropolitan Police
Commissioner.
So I'm instructing the police saying, listen, the most important thing is pro-Palestine
council remembrance day.
John, this thing spread and went viral, right?
What happens then is the far right
organize a protest at the Cenotaph
because they believe that I want to
council Remembrance Day.
What happens then is they rock up at the Cenotaph
and there are disturbances, they assault police,
they attack the police, there are broken bones, And here's the irony. Remembrance Day was disrupted not by pro-Palestinians,
but by these so fast patriots inverted commas, right? That is just one example of what we're
talking about. And so you're spot on. This technology has been used in a malevolent way
and we've got to regulate it
because if we don't regulate it, it's the wild west.
And that's why I'm saying to the social media companies,
look, wake up.
If you don't sort yourselves out, there'll be a problem.
Now, they must have known, John, early on,
this was a deep fake.
And if not, why don't you check with me?
Why don't you say, listen, by the way,
this thing's gone viral.
Can you please confirm, is this you or not?
Oh, but sometimes it's coming from the leaders themselves.
Donald Trump and JD Vance knew that Haitian immigrants,
most of whom were there legally,
were not actually going around Springfield, Ohio
and eating people's pets,
but they said it when told it wasn't true, said,
well, it may not be specifically true,
but that's how people feel.
And this is a larger point.
Sometimes it's not fakes at all.
It's actually coming from inside the house.
Well, in that case, what I think we need to be better at doing
is not giving equivalence.
I'll give you an example.
You've probably heard the story.
I think I may have got it from you, which is, look, if you tell me it's sunny in New
York, I tell you where I am, it's in the same room, it's raining.
Rather than it being reported that John Stewart said it's raining, Sidney Carp said it's sunny,
your job as the journalist is to say, I've looked outside the window and it's raining. Yes, that's right.
And then the recipient of the fake news, the disinformation can know that actually somebody has checked and that's a lie.
Would the Springfield Ohio story, John, don't be surprised if some people believe it's true.
Not some people. I'd say 80% of a certain political party in the United States not only believes it's true,
but is being somehow covered up and is evidence of not only the truth of what was happening
with Haitian immigrants, but of a media conspiracy.
But I want to get to the point that you said earlier, which is we do have to regulate that.
And that's again, that's the second half of this equation.
I have watched congressional hearings on social media
where they'll haul in the heads of these companies
or they'll do it.
These senators and these congressional representatives
are so in over their heads.
We used to do a big bit about Ted Stevens from Alaska,
who would very famously was, the internet is a series of tubes, as though it's literal plumbing and you know,
food goes down there.
So even when you said we've got to regulate these social media companies, well, AI is
around the corner.
We haven't effectively done anything to stem any of this in the first place. That was my point about how do we make representative government more responsive and agile to the
needs of the people as also a counterweight.
It's one thing to be against misinformation and all those things, and that is an absolute
issue.
But to be fair, government has not been particularly, especially here in the United States, and
I obviously can't speak as much to England.
No, it's the same.
It's the same.
But the discomfort that people feel in their own lives is not being adequately represented,
I think, by our government mechanisms.
And that creates the fertile ground for demagogues. I mean, I think you've been generous to lawmakers.
And I think it's not just an issue of them being Luddites
or inexperienced.
Don't forget that the social media companies are lobbying.
They're lobbying, right?
They're lobbying.
Of course.
And they're spending a huge amount of money
to avoid regulation. They're hedging their bets. There of course. They're lobbying and they're spending a huge amount of money to avoid regulation.
They're hedging their bets.
Right.
There's a very good reason why the owner of one of the companies wants Trump to win
rather than Harris.
There's a very good reason for that.
You know the impact Facebook had in 2016, both in the referendum and in the presidential
elections.
They've got skin in the game.
They're saying Trump is for free speech
while he's literally threatening to jail Mark Zuckerberg if Mark Zuckerberg acts in a way that
Trump feels is election interference. I mean, it's cognitive dissonance is rampant in this new
environment. Yeah, that's what our point is about actually the reason why it's a bit more even more
serious than you say is because there's a new generation of young people raised on TikTok
and other forms of social media who only see one side of the story.
They absorb things in an echo chamber.
There is no challenge.
And that's a big concern for all of us.
And so one of the things we've got to do, and we're trying to do this in London, is trying to, at an early age, teach young people the skills to be more stoic, to be resilient when it comes to sort of brainwashing, to fact check, to have the sort of, you know, cognitive ability to check for themselves. But also, we're trying to speak to the social media companies to make them explain their responsibility in relation to algorithms,
how they monetize certain things. I'll give you an example. If you were to record a song
today, a Bruce Springsteen song.
Hey, hey, you go easy, buddy.
You'll support me in a second. So if you were to do a Springsteen song and breached copyright,
it would come down like that because there's
a consequence of you breaching copyright.
And Bruce Springsteen's got great lawyers and it'll come down.
But there's no consequence of you doing social media a lie, a disinformation, so forth.
And that's why I think we've got to explain to the social media companies, look, you've
got to sort it out.
If you don't sort it out, there's
regulation coming, which won't be necessarily what you want.
No, but let's take the flip side, though.
So here's where I think government
finds itself in trouble.
And let's take the COVID pandemic
as our example for that.
So everything that you're saying is incredibly reasonable.
But to do those types of things, you
have to earn a certain trust from the public that
you're being upfront and even-handed. So let's go through COVID. You've got a lockdown. Everybody's
got to stay in their houses. Meanwhile, oftentimes government officials are having sex parties and
cocktail parties and doing all these things. So immediately there's a disconnect. The people
aren't going to trust it. Then they come out and say, you have to take this vaccine.
If you don't take the vaccine is 100% safe and effective.
Now, clearly nothing is.
I mean, you watch pharma advertisements.
I know they don't do them over there, but over here,
man, there's a list of 20 things that could happen to you
if you also want to cure your headache.
And now that same entity is going
to come in and say, okay, we're going to regulate and pull off disinformation and misinformation
without having a very good track record of being able to discern what's misinformation
and what's disinformation and of producing misinformation. So do you see the difficulty?
This is the point I'm making about,
we can always point to social media and all those things
and any new media form from the printing press on
has been disruptive.
What I'm saying is our governments
have to also be self-reflective and have to find a way.
How do we attack that side of it?
Well, firstly, nowhere in the globe
will you ever get a government that's perfect.
And we never have.
And we never have. No question.
And we can't allow best to be the enemy of the good.
But if you think about a rectangle,
if you think about on the one extreme,
people accepted straight away the importance of the vaccine. On the other
extreme, people no matter what think it's a conspiracy, COVID doesn't exist, people aren't
dying, the vaccines are evil. Those are two extremes in the rectangle. The vast majority
of people are actually in the middle, right? They just want to be presented with the evidence and
the science. And that's where experts come in,
whether it's experts on climate change, experts on whether the earth is flat, experts on whether
when you're a toothache, you go to a dentist, experts on the vaccines.
And I think you've got to basically, John, write off this extreme in relation to the COVID deniers,
conspiracy theorists. You've got to take those who are definitely on side and then educate
the vast majority in the middle with people who are respected, trusted message carriers.
So in London, we had a real life problem, which is this, which a lot of people in the
middle, particularly people of color, for actually good reason didn't trust the pharma
companies, right?
Because in their country of origin, they were used as guinea pigs.
Hey, we did it here in America. I mean, the Tuskegee experiments and all kinds of other things.
Yeah, sure. So what we had to do, we realized there was an issue of, the phrase was vaccine
hesitancy, which is certain communities weren't taking the vaccine for actually genuinely good
reasons, for historical reasons and all of it. So what we did, John, is I recognized that actually
we need respected message carriers
who they trusted to say,
look, I've taken the vaccine, it's okay,
or whatever, whatever, whatever.
And the same applies in relation to any issue.
I think we as politicians have got up the humility
to realize we need other experts to come in
and explain to the public.
I guess the question is, how did the experts gain?
Because here, exact same mechanism.
I think it was, and I think they would admit this now
in retrospect, that the experts were not,
were so concerned about that side of the rectangle
that you're talking about, the kind of the crazies
that couldn't have been convinced at all.
Yeah, I wouldn't love them.
That they went overboard in the way that they talked about.
They didn't educate in a manner that spoke to that middle,
that might have had valid concerns.
They went too far.
And so ultimately, they ended up hurting
the credibility of the expert class.
And listen, Big Pharma has a long way to go to gain the trust of the expert class heard and listen, you know, big pharma has a long way to go
to gain the trust of, you know, there's nobody that could look through the Sackler papers and
what's been done with Oxycontin and all those other things and think, oh, those guys are on our side.
I think we have to recognize and speak honestly and openly to skepticism. Skepticism is not conspiratorial.
There's nothing wrong with that.
That's a good thing.
I'd write, you know, the age of deference in my view
is gone and so it should be.
I'm all in favor of getting a second opinion,
you know, in relation to a doctor or, you know,
a mechanic or a dentist, but I make this point,
whatever issue it is, if my car's broken down,
I'm gonna go to a mechanic. If I got a toothache, I'm gonna go to a dentist. Of I make this point, whatever issue it is, if my car's broken down, I'm going to go to
a mechanic. If I got a toothache, I want to go to a dentist. Of course. If I got a backache, I'm going
to a doctor. And so, you know, I think my concern is politicians have tried to downplay the importance
of experts. I'll give you an example in my country. So during the Brexit campaign,
those of us who wanted to remain in the European
Union said, look, speak to these business people, speak to these university lecturers,
speak to those experts. They were telling you the benefits of the European Union. There's
a phrase used by a leading Brexiter. He said, the public is fed up of experts. And so what
happened was the public started ignoring the experts and it was an emotional
decision.
It was emotion rather than rational.
And I'm more in favor of experts because, you know, as I said to you, in our personal
life we use experts, right?
Right.
But there's a certain humility to expertise that has to be.
Spot on.
Spot on.
I think we should welcome people asking for us.
I would say to doctors and lawyers, you should welcome somebody asking for a second opinion.
Because if you're doing your research
and you've done your presentation of your case properly,
you're nothing to be scared of, nothing wrong at all.
You know, it's interesting.
And when you ultimately come down to it,
so one of the most emotional driving forces of Brexit
was that idea of these people of color coming
and changing the very fabric of England.
Ultimately, removing yourself from Europe made it harder for so-called European
white people to come in, many of them left. What are they replaced with?
The very immigrants that they feared in the first place.
That's one of the ironies. It's all turning around now.
That's one of the ironies of Brexit. Actually, immigration in the UK has gone up.
The immigration that's gone up is people of color. Right.
And so you can imagine. Wait, what happened? What's going on?
Quiet. All right. We got to take a quick break.
Quick break. Okay, we're back.
By the way, the fact that you guys do your elections
in the amount of time that you do, God bless.
I wish, I think that would take care of so many problems
in this country in terms of a never ending campaign and election cycle
that constantly provokes and pushes people's emotions.
What did it take, eight weeks for you guys?
Six weeks.
Six weeks!
Here's the issue as well.
My God!
So I've got friends who of course are American politicians.
As soon as they've won the election,
the next day, they start fundraising
for the next one.
Right?
Crazy.
And that leads to short-termism, but also, frankly speaking, you're obsessed by raising
funds, right?
Rather than delivering your manifesto, how can you make a long-term 10-year plan or an
8-year plan if your obsession is raising funds for the next campaign?
But also, you know, it's better than I do, if you're always obsessed by poetry in a campaign, where's the pros of making the tough decisions?
That's right. That's right.
Foundations making the plans.
And we'll spend, I mean, billions and billions of dollars. I think I read somewhere that
the entire election for labor was under $100 million.
Oh, no, no. So you'll love this even more.
So during that six week campaign,
I mentioned the six week short campaign,
each party maximum, maximum for the six weeks
can only spend 35 million pounds.
And for those of you who are listening at home,
a pound is equal to, I think a nickel.
That's about a dollar.
About a dollar.
So 30, and it's six weeks, and it's $35 million.
And then you've got five years.
You won't necessarily have five years,
but you've got five years to govern, to actually govern.
And that's the rhythm of our cycle.
So that rhythm is really important
because at the beginning of this interview,
you mentioned a tough decision made by the prime minister.
He will have worked out, I'm not spoked prime minister. He will have worked out, I've not spoken to him about this, he will have worked out the
rhythm is made the tough decision now and the fruits will come in before the five years
are up.
Now, if he was obsessed by the next election, he'd be thinking, oh my God, I can't do this
because I'm not able to raise money for my election.
Oh my God, the donors may not like it and so forth, which doesn't lead to good long-term
governance.
It's not conducive to making long-term plans
for the best interests of the country.
And I think it's really important because listen,
you know the Churchill saying as well as I do,
I think Churchill once said,
but democracy is an awful thing,
but it's the best we've got, right?
They say the same about capitalism as well.
Yeah, yeah.
Similar.
The point being is that, look, it's not great,
but actually we've got to try and make it work.
Because I think the problem is, if you're always
obsessed by the election, what about the governing?
And it really does open the door to these kinds
of less stable movements.
I mean, look, it really does seem like,
and we go back to kind of that post-World War II order,
there is a movement afoot to replace
what has been sort of the stable, what they call
rules-based order.
By the way, not perfect, and oftentimes exploitative of resources from underdeveloped areas.
I don't think anybody's been able to fix that.
It really does look like, at this point, it's going to come down to what are the new axes
of power.
If Trump wins, I imagine the axis of power goes through Russia,
Hungary, and the populist movement, whereas I think if not, it stays within kind of that,
who's going to carve up the world? Is it going to be China and Russia, or is it going to be the US
and Europe? Unfortunately, that seems to be where we're headed. So there's a great saying that I that's an American saying from an American Democrat politician that
I think it's really important we remember this. All politics is local, right? So you know, most
people in America on November the fifth will be voting in relation to what's best for me and my
family. And I understand that. But your elections in November are so much more important than that.
The geopolitics of who is the president of the USA,
you set the weather.
You can either send out ripples of hope
or you send out ripples of fear.
Guess which one we're leaning.
But it really matters.
No, I know, I'm with you.
If you're somebody in another part of the globe
and you see that the president of the USA,
you know, doesn't follow the rules, treats the women a certain way, treats people of color a certain way, has certain views about the second biggest religion in the world, you know, has a
certain view in relation to NATO. Yeah, destabilizing. It's very much, it's disruptive.
What impact does it have on the rest of the globe?
It's really important. It does matter. Of course, I appreciate your listeners and
those in the USA making decisions based on what's more policy is local, but understand the consequence
of this decision. You're asking us to think about other people, to think about somebody other than
ourselves. What would Ukraine have done without the support of the USA, right? In a parallel universe,
where would nature be right now? And so it's really important to understand that actually
all of us, all of us around the globe are watching with so much keen interest what happens in November
the 5th. Right. Well, we hope to have an answer for you by November the 6th, but chances of that are
not good. The question is, John, will everyone accept the results?
Oh God, don't even, all right.
Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan,
I wanna thank you so much for joining us today.
It's been such an insightful conversation
and I really appreciate you.
Enjoy your time in New York and get home safe.
Great, take care, mate, see you soon.
Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, fabulous.
Siddique Khan, the mayor of London. Fabulous.
Interesting ideas on how we balance that free speech and government.
My faith in government being able to regulate these complex and modern digital technologies
is not so high.
But we are going to talk a little bit more about the economy
from last week's episode.
For those of you who remember, we were discussing inflation
and the economy.
We had on Jason Furman from Harvard,
which he made very clear that's where he was from.
And Kitty Richards.
Often what happens when we have discussions
about inflation or the economy with economists
is another economizer.
Other economists will contact us and suggest that,
well, I've got something I could perhaps proffer
that's a different explanation.
And we had that happen with this one as well.
So we are delighted to welcome back Stephanie Kelton,
economics professor at Stony Brook University,
author of The Deficit Myth. One of the things we were talking about, Stephanie, was that these larger
deficits might be inflationary because obviously people are paying higher rates for their mortgages
and things like that. And also, if the government is paying a lot of money on interest on the debt,
it may not have the resources to do the kind of stimulus that would maybe be more helpful
for individuals, whether it be demand side or anything else.
But you've got a very different approach to this.
So talk to me.
So there has been for a very long time,
this idea that when the government increases spending
or cuts taxes and the deficit increases,
that it leaves you with fewer resources,
like you're less able to respond to a crisis in the future.
And we've heard that over and over again.
And I'll just give you an example.
When the Republicans passed their tax cuts in 2017.
Right, 1.7 trillion.
In that range of $2 trillion.
So, you know, people like Larry Summers, for example, did not like the idea of the Republicans
pushing these tax cuts through.
I didn't like it.
But when Larry was arguing against the Republican tax cuts, he said, and I'm going to quote
him, okay, so this is exactly what he said.
He said, if the Republicans are successful in pushing these tax cuts through, we are going to be living,
he said, on a shoestring for decades to come because of the increases in the deficit. Whoa.
And Larry has warned, God help us if they get away with this. There isn't going to be money.
If a crisis comes, we're really up the creek because we're living on a shoestring.
And lo and behold, a crisis comes.
Only a couple of years later, COVID is at our doorstep.
And do we find ourselves without the fiscal firepower?
There's no money. The cupboards are bare.
No, of course not.
To be fair to Summers, he was against the amount of money
that the government gave to
the American people during the COVID crisis too.
So he was consistently against everything.
And consistently wrong.
I mean, you couldn't have been more wrong than to say that because of the tax cuts and
the increases in the deficit, the government was going to be unable, would not have the
resources to respond to a crisis.
Because we can make money.
And we did. Congress authorized bill after bill, fiscal package after fiscal package,
2.2 trillion, 900 billion, 1.9 trillion, 5 trillion in the span of 12 months, John. And
for exactly the reason you just said, because Congress has this thing called the power of
the purse.
They get to spend money into existence.
There is no running out of money.
What you can run out of are things to buy.
And that's where inflation.
Or political will.
Yeah, or political will, which is what we didn't have.
And I could also talk about Larry there as well.
What we didn't have in 2008.
We had all the firepower that we needed.
That made me so angry.
We chose not to use it because politically,
people like David Axelrod and Larry Summers
were advising Barack Obama and saying anything with a T.
You cannot say trillion, right?
But Stephanie, there must be a limit
to what the government can do, yes?
Like if we got to a certain point, wouldn't it just be devaluing of currency?
That's why I said a few seconds ago that you can't run out of money, but you can run out
of things to buy.
So inflation was always the thing that we should have been preoccupied with, not the
number that pops out of the budget box if it's a trillion or a trillion and a half or whatever the size
of the deficit.
You can have very large deficits and de minimis inflation, but you could also have fairly
small deficits and an inflation spike.
So inflation is the thing to watch out for.
Can Congress spend too much?
Sure they can.
Instead of a $1,400 check, they could have sent 14,000
or 140,000.
You would have a real problem.
Stephanie, the thing that I kept trying to get to
with Jason Furman was the idea of the efficiency of capital.
That it seemed like our experience in 2008
and the experience with the Trump tax cuts
and the experience then with the stimulus money that
was sent up by the government shows that money
from the government delivered at the demand level,
like the stimulus rather than the tax cuts,
is a much more efficient use of government capital.
It stimulates much more growth, much more demand, much more GDP.
So why don't we do that more often?
We could spend less, get more pop, keep people in their homes, yet almost overwhelmingly,
politically, stimulus goes to the highest and the corporate level.
Okay.
Because a couple of things.
One is that when you think about macroeconomic policy
and you have like two policy levers, right?
One is monetary policy, that's what the Fed does.
And the other is fiscal policy, that's what Congress does.
So we have for the past 50 years or so,
just relied disproportionately on the central bank,
on the Fed.
It's like your job is to give us a good economy.
You give us full employment, you give us price stability,
and Congress will just worry about managing the budget
and trying to bring down deficits and whatever.
So fiscal policy, which you just described,
works really, really well, has been like the thing
that we put on the wall and we put the thing above it
that says in emergency emergency break glass.
We don't use it except in an emergency.
So monetary policy is more on that supply side,
fiscal is more on the demand side.
We don't use it as much.
Well, Republicans will use fiscal
because they always do tax cuts because it's in their DNA.
So any chance they get,
they will come through and pass tax cuts,
the Bush tax cuts, the Trump tax cuts, and so forth, Reagan.
But even those go to our supply side generally.
I mean, they go to the highest.
Exactly.
So then it becomes like, how are they structured
and who benefits?
So take the Trump tax cuts.
If you look at the personal tax cuts,
it is true that everybody across the income distribution
got a little something from the Trump tax cuts.
But it is very true that the people at the tippy top, those in the 1%, got the lion's share. So
some 83% of the benefits went to folks in the top 1% of the income distribution.
And corporations got like a 30% tax cut. They went from 35% to 21%.
Yeah. And then you use the word stimulus, which you asked about earlier. Yeah. You have to at some point kind of shake your head and go, why are we calling it stimulus
when it doesn't actually stimulate anything? I mean, we've been running the experiment for
50 years. The results are in, we have the data, it doesn't work. There's a recent study out of
the London School of Economics where a team of researchers looked at the last 50 years.
They looked at the data, they looked across countries,
and they found that the supply side policies
of the kind we've just been talking about
have benefited exactly one constituency,
and it is the very rich.
Right.
Stephanie, would you say, so to put a bow on it,
and thank you for this, this is really helpful.
Sure.
At what level would you say the debt
or the yearly deficits become an issue?
Like, listen, Trump is out there like,
let's just use crypto to pay down the debt.
Like now it's just about a shell game
of moving magic around.
But what, you know, and Krugman would say trillion dollar coin.
Like, does it make sense to just create something to go in there to lessen our
interest payments? What do we do then with that debt and with those yearly deficits?
John, the first thing I would say is that we should ask ourselves, why are we issuing
treasuries in the first place? Like, why do we do that? People say the government has to borrow
to cover the shortfall, the finance deficits and all that.
I don't think that's the correct way to describe
what the government is doing.
You know, the government is paying contractors.
Think of defense contractors.
They're paying benefits years.
400 billion a year.
Paying people on social security.
They're paying federal workers.
Everybody gets paid in dollars.
Government makes its payments and then it collects some tax. So let's say this fiscal year, the government's
going to spend around $7 trillion. It's going to collect back around $5 trillion. We call
that the government deficit, right? Because they're spending more than they're collecting
back in revenue. So what's really happening? What's really happening is they're putting two
trillion dollars into the economy. Their deficit becomes the surplus. It may or may not stimulate
very much, but it is two trillion dollars that goes into somebody else's pocket. You could be
done right there. You could leave people holding that $2 trillion and say, okay, the government added $2 trillion, but we don't do that. What we do is we match the deficit
each year by having the Treasury issue bills, notes, and bonds. And when they do that, we
call it borrowing, and we say they're driving up the debt. All they're doing is allowing
people to trade in some of the dollars the government has spent into their hands
for a different kind of dollar called a treasury security.
Right.
Those are interest-bearing.
So you're saying we could do this without ever selling our debt.
Sure.
You're saying we can run these deficits or run these debt without allowing the Chinese government
or somebody else to come in and buy up treasuries and hold our debt.
And then we wouldn't have to make interest payments to those entities.
You got it. And if you...
What are we... Stephanie!
John! Look, look, you know who wouldn't want to do it?
Look, the beneficiaries of this are the people who get that sweet, sweet nectar that you're talking
about which is the interest income.
It's interest income.
People talk about entitlement programs and all this sort of stuff and they wring their
hands and say, oh, this is terrible.
We have this entitlement problem.
This is the biggest, most regressive entitlement program that we have.
It goes exclusively to people who already have money
in proportion to how much they already have.
It is a subsidy largely for the wealthy.
It's unbelievable.
It's this idea, you're almost like saying like,
you could buy a house without a mortgage.
Like that's kind of what we're talking about.
But what would then hold those deficits in the real world
if somebody isn't holding that debt?
Well, okay, this is the other really strange thing,
which is that if you have a dollar in your wallet right now
and you look at it, it says Federal Reserve note,
that is a liability of the Federal Reserve,
which is part of government.
We don't call those debt.
We don't say, I'm walking around
with government debt in my pocket.
We don't put it up on a big debt clock
and try to terrorize the population
by saying, you know, all of this
is part of the national debt.
We do do a big debt clock to terrorize the population.
But that's because we're keeping track of the treasuries,
the bills, the notes, and the bonds.
Those get called the government debt. They're just as much debt as the dollar bill in your pocket, but we label one,
the national debt, and we don't call the other one the national debt. All of the dollars that
are banks have at the Federal Reserve are kept in accounts called reserve accounts at the Fed.
The Fed pays interest on those and the Financial Times had a
piece up just a few days ago that said, are you ready for this number John? The Financial Times
said that because of the interest rate hikes, the Federal Reserve has been paying out interest on
those deposits that the banks keep at the Fed, $1.1 trillion to the banks
just since the feds started raising interest.
It's just interest paid on deposit.
It's cash in their accounts.
And that's a trillion dollars that we are not able to use
for investment or infrastructure or standard of living.
None of that stuff from the government.
That's all just to enrich the banks to hold our treasuries.
But the point is to just recognize that the way we describe things, right, that we call
treasuries the national debt, but we don't call reserve balances the national debt.
We don't call the dollars in our wallet the national debt.
They're all liabilities of government.
And I think what we really have is just,
you know, a failure to communicate properly.
But you do believe there is some limit to all this.
Sure, as I keep saying, coming back to inflation
is the limit.
You cannot, yeah, you cannot just take out
the money bazooka and go wild and expect no consequences.
Your inflation is the thing you have to manage
and you have to do it carefully.
Stephanie Kelton, thank you for coming on
and offering those explanations
and thank you for doing it in an accessible way
that allowed me to understand it more clearly
without making me feel like the dumbest person
in the universe, which sometimes happens.
Stephanie Kelton, thank you so much.
Economics professor at Stony Brook University,
author of The Deficit Myth.
Fabulous, lots of show.
I hope you guys enjoyed it today.
It was very dense.
We'll have one next week.
Maybe we'll take our time.
Maybe we'll relax.
Maybe we'll enjoy ourselves.
Thanks again, as always, lead producer, Lauren Walker,
producer, Brittany Mametovic, video editor and engineer,
Rob Vitolo, audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce,
researcher and associate producer, Gillian Spear,
and the executive producers, Chris McShane and Katie Gray.
Thanks so much.
We'll see you guys next time.
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