The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Trump, Vance, and The Republican Anti-Worker Playbook
Episode Date: August 1, 2024The right-wing talks a big economic populist game, claiming that the working class is their chief concern. But their pro-worker words don’t translate into pro-worker actions. During the first Trump ...administration, for instance, Republicans killed raising the minimum wage and created a higher threshold for workers to be eligible for overtime pay. Plus, Trump’s Supreme Court justice selections represent the most anti-worker judges in a century. This week, we’re joined by Steven Greenhouse, the labor and workplace reporter at the New York Times for 19 years, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, and author of the book, Beaten Down, Worked Up: The Past, Present, and Future of American Labor, as well as Heather Cox Richardson, author of Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America. Together, they examine the history of labor in the US and explore what populist rhetoric offers Americans when it's accompanied by policies that undermine workers. 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  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey everybody, welcome once again to the weekly show. My name is Jon Stewart.
Once again, joined by our top notch, A-list, elite.
I'm going through the thesaurus right now.
Brittany Mametovic and Lauren Walker,
producer, team extraordinaire.
I can't even remember the last time we talked.
I don't know.
I think Eisenhower was president at that time.
Things are moving quickly.
Kamala Harris is now a freight train.
Did you see any of the footage of the rally in Atlanta
that she held?
Yeah, I met Kristalian.
Holy shit.
And it's the one thing I think that would,
I almost think more than any policy
or any discrepancy on economics or anything else,
the thing that would bother Donald Trump the most
is a giant arena filled with enthusiastic supporters
having a party.
Fun.
Right? Yeah.
I almost think he'd be like, what?
Popularity is my thing.
Like, I think he doesn't even give a shit
about the election anymore.
He just wants to be like, my crowd was bigger. Kamala is getting the good music.
Come on. I mean, they're pulling up people. I don't even know what they,
Megan Thee Stallion and Quavo is coming on stage and Trump's backstage with, you know,
Kid Rock and half of Big and Rich. Just like, wow, what are we doing now? But yeah,
it's a totally different thing.
How did the people feel about last week?
Everybody's good, the viewers, the listeners?
One thing that did happen this week,
John, that we wanted to ask you about
was you were back down in DC on Friday
with some K-2 veterans stuff.
Yes.
What's going on?
Well, so the PACT Act, for those who don't know the PACT Act changed for veterans,
not just of global war on terror, but Vietnam and all that.
It changed the presumptions for toxic exposures for a lot of veterans.
And it does a great job.
And they really are working hard to implement it.
And they've done a lot of great work.
The Biden administration, Secretary McDonough at the VA, they really have worked hard. There are loopholes within it. One particular one is this base K2, which
was kind of the tip of the spear of the global war on terror in 2001. It was this old Soviet
base in Uzbekistan that had housed chemical weapons. There was talk that it was a traffic
station for yellow cake smuggling.
Like there's all kinds of shit there.
So when the troops first landed,
they found radiation levels in the soil
44,000 times higher than what it should be.
They found a chemical contamination site.
They found PFAS and dioxins, all the general shit
that's like this toxic goo,
but K2 was a unicorn of toxicity.
It was a superfunds, superfund site.
And almost immediately, I mean,
people were nauseous, vomiting,
like that started right away.
And then the health problems snowballed and persisted.
A lot of them were helped by PACDAC,
but there are a few with these what
are considered multi-symptom, weird, neurological, osteo.
It's less easy to categorize.
Much harder to categorize.
We went down to DC because the VA secretary
has the statutory authority to,
with the stroke of a pen, say, along with PACDAC, which only covers certain cancers and certain
pulmonary conditions, we will presume your exposure to there is a radiation statute within VA. And
there is also, because of Gulf War Syndrome, a multi-symptom statute that they
could also enact. And it would acknowledge that they had been exposed to those things.
I think the holdup is DOD doesn't want to acknowledge that they were exposed to yellow cake.
DOD keeps wanting to say that it's depleted uranium or they don't want to acknowledge multi-symptom.
And so I think that's where the rub is. That was the original rub too, right? Like
not wanting to recognize. By the way, always the rub. Like I'm not sure DOD has acknowledged
Agent Orange yet. Like DOD is always like, what? There was not, it was a soda fountain. They were exposed to vanilla extract.
It was nothing.
So all that stuff is, look, those guys are the K2 Group
Stronghold Foundation.
Mark Jackson has been on top of this doing that.
Matt Eppardling.
These guys have been working on it for years.
We've been trying to get them in to get this resolved.
We thought we had it.
We went down there, we were called back down to DC
for a meeting with the secretary.
And what he said was, we've looked into it.
I do have the authority, but I haven't decided yet
whether or not I'm going to use it.
I think what the VA secretary said,
well, there may be more data that's coming along.
And we're like, it's 23 years.
Like, don't make this group victims of the lack of data that you will never have.
Yeah.
So you can imagine everybody walked out of the meeting pretty crestfallen.
And now it's, you know, you can't give up.
So we keep on.
I'm trying to get that group into, there is a White House
Veterans Task Force trying to get them in with that group. So, you know, look, I always remain
frustrated but hopeful. And the group that's working on it, they're so dedicated and wonderful.
the group that's working on it, they're so dedicated and wonderful and there's this fella Nick Nichols
who was there and who did the testing
and it was his whistleblower testimony,
I think a year and a half ago that reopened all this.
Wow.
I mean, we've been lucky.
There've been, the AP has been on it,
a reporter named Catherine Harridge
who did like four years of reporting at CBS.
And she's been remarkable in terms of dedication to it, but also with getting the reports from
DOD.
I mean, these FOIA reports from DOD show that Department of Defense knew that there was
enriched uranium there.
If you look at the surveillance photos,
which Catherine had gotten a hold of, it says there's a giant sign that says danger, radiation,
and they had to rope it off. Danger, chemical weapons, and they had to rope it off. The
problem was they had earth movers that were moving all of that soil into berms that they were all sleeping on.
So they've all been exposed to radon coming up
through the ground and all kinds of other shit.
And it's, I mean, they have the pictures.
But yet more data is coming, John.
And they're looking for data.
A lot of these folks, unfortunately,
have already died.
And their families are left without the DIC benefits
that come
through VA. So any support that we can give to the K2 folks, you know, call your, I don't know who
to call, Congress people, White House, VA secretary, whatever you need to do, let's get it done. But
thank you for asking about that because it's- Yeah, of course.
Yeah. It's been wild to watch.
But but we're we're we're getting there.
But meanwhile, we've got two great guests that are going to talk about this sort of
pivot to economic populism that somehow the Republicans have taken on,
even though they forgot to tell their judges and their think tanks
and their legislators and everybody else.
So let's let's get to them.
And so we welcome our guests for this discussion, Stephen Greenhouse, labor and workplace reporter at the New York Times for 19 years,
senior fellow at the Century Foundation, author of the book, Beaten Down, Worked Up,
the Past, Present and Future of American Labor, and Heather Cox Richardson, author of Democracy Awakening, notes on the
state of America.
Guys, thank you, first of all, so much for joining us.
There's so much to talk about.
The Republicans nominated as their vice president, a populist hero.
He has a beard and a mama. So clearly he is for the working man.
And he has said, this is, I'm gonna read you a quick quote.
We're done, ladies and gentlemen.
Catering to Wall Street will commit to the working man.
That was the Republicans at their convention.
I wanna ask you, first, Stephen,
and then we'll go to Heather,
have the Republicans told their judges or legislatures
or think tanks of this new switch to economic populism?
Because it doesn't seem that the policies
and court decisions that have been rendered these past,
I'm gonna go with 50 years,
have gone along with the populist route. So Stephen,
what's, what are your thoughts?
First, great to be here, John. So Donald Trump and JD Vance talk a good ballgame. They talk the talk,
but they don't walk the walk. The Republican party doesn't walk the walk. The judges they
reported to the Supreme Court and other courts are quite anti-worker, very anti-union. And the Supreme Court, there's a recent study
saying that the three Trump appointees
to the Supreme Court are the most pro-business justices
over the last century of 57 judges surveyed.
And Donald Trump-
And when we say pro-business,
we would assume the counterfactual, which is anti-labor.
Yes, anti-labor.
You know, there was this crazy decision where Amazon workers have to wait 15, 20,
25 minutes at the end of their shift to have their bags checked to see whether they've
taken anything improperly. And the Supreme Court ruled that they're not to be paid for
that 15, 20, 25 minutes. That's not part of their work day, which I think is just
one of many anti-worker decisions that comes out of the Supreme Court.
So at Amazon, you got that half hour cool off period where they're scanning you like at the
airport, like a TSA person, but you're not paid for that. You just have to wait until they discover.
That's at some of the warehouses where the contractor, subcontractors play that game.
Donald Trump says, I'm for the nation's forgotten men and women,
but he didn't raise a finger to increase the minimum wage. He says he's all for coal miners,
but his administration actually weakened standards for safety for coal miners. He said, I'm fighting
hard for coal miners, yet the number of coal mining jobs dropped by 25% when he was president.
He wants to kill Obamacare,
which would be a major, major drag
for many working families,
throw them off of health coverage, it would raise prices.
The rhetoric is not matching the reality.
Heather, what's your feeling about this disconnect?
Well, I would love to talk about
what populism actually means,
but one of the things that I would love to hear Stephen
talk about is populism actually means. But one of the things that I would love to hear Stephen talk about is the links between,
you know, those those mom and pop organizations in Silicon Valley and JD Vance, because that
seems to me to be flying largely under the radar screen in a lot of places.
And it's very hard to call yourself a populist when your major backer is,
well, two major backers are both billionaires.
Right.
So, Heather, you're very kind to ask me.
So we're on Heather's podcast.
What the hell happened here?
Do you know, honestly, I got to be honest, it's so much more interesting to hear what
other people have to say than it is to hear what I have.
Oh, Heather.
Go ahead, Stephen.
So he wrote this supposedly popular book, populist book, also popular, Hillbilly Elegy, where
he really, I hate to say it, craps on the working class saying, the reason you haven't
gone to Yale Law School like me, the reason you're not billionaires like my friend Peter
Teal is that you're lazy, you're shiftless.
It's really kind of ugly in terms of showing so little solidarity for the people he grew
up with. So as you said, Heather, Vance says, I'm a friend of workers, yet he's backed by billionaires,
Peter Thiel, one of the founders of PayPal. Now all these cryptocurrency billionaires are backing
Vance. Donald Trump says he's a friend of the working man, and yes, he's doing everything he
can to kiss the behind of Elon Musk. So Musk will contribute 45 million a month supposedly
over a hundred million dollars.
Well, he says that's not true.
Ah, yeah, yeah.
But I get it.
But look, in politics, everybody's got their billionaires.
It's not like the Republicans are the only one
that are backed by billionaires.
I think I'm more interested in this idea of,
well, what are the policies?
What are the things, you know,
everybody's talking about Project 2025
and what that's going to mean to the country
and what are the things that the Republicans might institute.
I wanna talk about Project 1980, 1980 to 1984.
Reagan comes in, we had a labor economy.
Reagan came in and deregulated Wall Street
and many of the other corporate entities. And we have
since shifted to an investment economy. The labor economy is now an investment economy,
and people that invested, people that are in finance, people that are in equities,
did really well over these last 50 years, but labor has been left behind. So I want to ask Heather, that switchover
of the Republican Party from sort of more labor
with the Democrats to a more investment economy,
and Trump has vowed to continue that.
He wants to cut corporate tax rates to 15% from 20%.
He had already cut it.
So what direction are we going in here, Heather?
Well, there's a couple of really interesting different questions in all this. And one of them
is of course, yes, it was very deliberate under the Reagan administration to switch away from the
economy that had propped up the ability of people who were starting out or her ordinary Americans to
work hard and to prosper and have a decent standard of living. And to switch from that
to the idea that if you put all the money at the top of the economy,
what you would get is better.
A little trickle down.
Trickle down. They call it supply-side economics. And one of the things that is really dramatic
about that is, of course, it transferred about $50 to $53 trillion from the bottom 90% to the top,
about one-tenth of 1%. So it was pretty clear that that was never really intended
to help individuals, but that's actually something
a little different, I think, than both labor,
which is what Stephen does so well,
and populism, which is something a little bit different
in the sense that if you have labor having a seat
at the table, what you have is everybody having a stake
in the political economy that is gonna shape the country.
But what populism does, I think,
and of course I'm a specialist only in the United States,
but in the United States, populism seems to me
to be the moment when a number of people recognize,
usually for economic reasons,
that they are not being served in any way
by the leading political classes.
When that happens, they begin to talk about what they would like to see in American society.
And so what I think is so interesting when you bring up the 1980s is that if you have this
disaffected group of people, how do you know which way they're going to jump? That is, in the 1890s, they jumped in part to
anti-Semitism, but also in part to economic reform. And I think one of the things that's
really important about the 1980s and the period since then is the control of the rhetoric and the
language around which politicians steer that populist disaffection. And what the Republicans have done so enormously effectively
is to say, hey, you might have a problem, but it's not us rich guys. It's the minority taking
your job. Undocumented immigrants coming in here taking your job. That's really fascinating. All
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Let's get back into it. So you're suggesting that the difficulty here, and Stephen will
get to you in terms of separating populism from economic populism, is that it seems like
the lever of populism is oftentimes nationalism.
This fervor of, all right, we're going
to draw the wagons in, America first.
You had that in the 1920s as well,
where you look for scapegoats that allow maybe the ruling
class to avoid any kind of suspicion,
find a scapegoat at the lower end of the table,
put all the problems on them, and still get away with it. So Stephen, are we making a mistake when we talk about populism
to not focus on really economic populism? And how do we separate what is best for workers? Because
even when you think about unionizing, you also have to recognize unions can become corrupt too,
and sometimes they can be anti-workers.
So how do we draw those distinctions, Stephen?
Great question, John.
So Heather put very well what populism is.
And generally, what do American workers want?
What do American families want?
They want stability in their lives.
If they get laid off, God forbid,
they want a good safety net.
They want to be able to afford housing. They want to be able to afford to send their kids to college,
they want work-family balance so they're not working 80 hours a week and that, you know,
one of the crazy things about the United States is we are the only, you know, wealthy country
in the world that doesn't have laws guaranteeing every worker paid family and medical leave.
So if, you know, some people, if they give birth,
they don't get six weeks or 10 weeks of paid leave.
So Trump says, I'm a great populist,
I'm a friend of the worker, I hear your grievances,
but he doesn't deliver the things
that will really help workers or help American families.
He says, blame the immigrants.
He bashes the Chinese, he bashes el you know, elitists like you, Heather and me. And it makes
people feel good, like, oh, I like that. I could blame all my problems on those bad guys, the
Chinese, the immigrants. But it's really doing nothing to help workers. And it ticks me off
that, you know, Trump poses as a friend of workers. I remember when he was running for president in 2016,
he would tell auto workers in Michigan and Ohio,
don't worry if I'm elected, no plants will close on my watch.
And then this huge General Motors plant
closed in Lordstown in 2019 when he was president on his watch.
And what does he do?
He doesn't blame General Motors. He blames the United Order of Workers Union and, and, and Dave Green, the
president of the local who fought his behind off to try to save the plant.
So, you know, part of that shows that Trump is, is very anti-union.
He, you know, time and again, he like kicks unions.
Well, not just kicks unions.
I mean, he lowers the amount of money
that you need to earn to get overtime so that workers have
a tougher time getting overtime.
He strips the national labor relations.
I mean, there are so many different things
that he's done, but it's clearly a very effective message
to the working class.
I think to Heather's point, where
you combine this kind of nationalist zeal,
this protectionist zeal.
And I want to ask you, Heather, because when you think about,
so when he goes into tariff mode and protection mode,
and Mexico is stealing our factories,
and China is stealing our IP, and all these different things,
but they never address the idea of right to work states.
So this idea that, you know,
Mexico is to the United States as Texas is to New York.
New York has a lot more worker protections in line.
It's a lot easier to form unions.
It has a lot more of those safety nets in place for people.
Why isn't right to work seen as anti-worker?
Because if you look at the data,
I think if you work the same job in a right to work state,
you earn three to three and a half percent less
than a worker would in a state that's not right to work.
Well, and the right to work states are really took off
in the 1950s and the 1960s,
but that has a much longer history in the country
of the idea that by God, you can do it all on your own.
You don't, any kind of government intervention
in the way that you interact with your workplace is socialism.
That actually comes in the United States from the 1870s,
not from after the Bolshevik revolution in 1917.
Really? Why so early in the 18th century?
I would have thought that would be a 1917,
you know, post-revolution in Russia.
Everybody thinks that, but you know what?
It's really cool actually.
What happens is that after the Civil War,
when the United States under the Republicans
for the first time had federal taxation,
so taxes are very much in the news
in a way that they had not been before.
You also get first a way that they had not been before.
You also get first a government that
is protecting black rights in the American South,
and then the right of black men to vote in the American South.
And at the same time, you get-
So this is pre-Reconstruction, Jim Crow.
This is pre-Reconstruction.
Well, middle of Reconstruction.
So in 1870, in 1868, you get the 14th Amendment
saying you can't mess with people based on race. And in 1870, you get the 14th Amendment saying you can't mess with people based on race.
And in 1870, you get the 15th Amendment saying black men can vote.
And you also in 1870 get the establishment of the Department of Justice, which goes after
the KKK.
It goes after people who are attacking their black neighbors based on issues of race.
So in 1871, white southerners, white unreconstructed southerners,
there are a number of white southerners who are like, we just want to get rid of the rich guys,
this is cool with us. But the unreconstructed ones say, hey, we never had a problem with race.
That was never an issue. Oh, really?
Same people, same people, by the way. But they say this was never a problem.
All right. What we don't want is these poor, uneducated people voting because the poor,
uneducated black men will vote for leaders. And at this point, they weren't really concerned about
black people sitting in legislatures, although that's going to come by the early 1870s. They're
going to use their political power to get leaders elected who are going to vote for things like roads
and schools and hospitals. And the only way you can pay for that is through taxes.
And who has all the money in the American South is white guys.
And you can see this thread through American history.
Think of the way that the Republicans turned
against Brown versus Board of Education.
And Eisenhower sending troops into Little Rock, they said,
they didn't say, there was plenty of racist stuff too, but their arguments in places like the National Review were, this is your tax
dollars that are there trying to get these undeserving black people into these schools.
So they're always tying it into the money that you're going to pay back into the government.
This is so interesting, is going to go to projects that are going to undercut you.
Your hard earned money,
it's the exact same argument they're making right now.
Your hard earned money is actually going
to the social safety net for undocumented people
and homeless and people that haven't earned it.
Steven, is there a vulnerability there for Democrats
because what do the Democrats say?
We got to tax the billionaires, we've got to make people pay their fair share.
But if you can't connect the tax dollars that are being raised to value for taxpayers, right?
So if you do have a bunch of working class people that are paying into the tax system,
but they're not realizing, to your point earlier, Stephen, about the things
that they would need in their lives, child care, health care,
elder care, those types of things.
If they don't see the value coming back from their dollars,
then what good is raising taxes on corporations?
What good is raising taxes on billionaires?
If you don't think the return on that is going to be any
good? And is that a place where the Democrats have to shore up their position? John, I think that
if you look at surveys, majority of Republicans want to increase taxes on corporations, the rich,
and they agree with the Democrats on that. They feel that the ultra-rich, the 1%, these huge corporations
that pay no income taxes are getting away with murder. And they say it's unfair and
they, and Americans always feel they're paying too much in taxes. So they figured, let the
rich, let the corporations pay far more and maybe I can pay less. But when Trump and the
Republicans say, we want to have tax cuts and we're going to help you,
the tax cuts that were enacted by Trump, they gave the average American household less than $500.
Yet the top 1% get a $60,000 tax cut as if they needed all that money.
And exploded the deficit at the same time.
And exploded the deficit by over a trillion dollars.
And the top 1% got $175,000.
And I guess those people making a hundred million a year really needed
that extra hundred seventy five thousand and and getting to right to work for second John.
When Joe Biden says you know the middle class built America and unions built the middle class
that is correct. So the national right to work was an effort by right-wing ideologues and corporations
to weaken unions and right to work means that if you are in a unionized workplace, you could opt out of paying one penny. You don't have to pay a cent
to the union that's- But you still get the benefits of whatever is
collectively bargained. Yeah, that's winning the raises for you and one health coverage for you.
And Donald Trump, when he was running for president in 2016, said, if Congress passes a national right to work,
I will happily sign it.
And many worker advocates say, it's
only fair that people who receive the benefits of unions
pay something to it.
He says, like, all for one and one for all,
you shouldn't be receiving labor's benefits
and being a free rider.
And talking about changes, right-wing changes
in the Supreme Court, John,
back in 1977, there was a case where some teachers in Detroit, Michigan said, we don't want to pay
any dues to our union, you know, because it violates our First Amendment rights. And we want to be free
riders, we want to get union benefits without paying. And the Supreme Court voted unanimously
with many conservative members.
So that shows how.
Unanimously against them.
Unanimously saying union members, public sector union
members could be required to pay union dues.
Fast forward after Samuel Alito was appointed
to the Supreme Court, he really had a bug up his ass
to really go vigorously.
He's got a few of them up there.
Yeah, vigorously after unions.
So there was a Supreme Court decision in 2017, five to four,
ruling that a public sector work in California
could opt out of paying dues to his union.
That created right to work for all government employees
across the nation.
And sometimes I think it's crazy that a five-four vote can
overturn a nine-0 vote.
And that shows how conservative the Supreme Court has. And since Alito has arrived on the court,
it's gone far more conservative, far more anti-union, far more pro-business.
Right. But it kind of, you know, Heather, this points to, so we're sort of approaching it in
different ways because it does seem that the parties define economic
populism in different ways. Does the left view pro-worker policies differently than
the right does? And are they sincerely believing that as long as big corporations do well,
that will trickle down even though there doesn't appear to be any
conceivable evidence that that does.
And the example I'll give you is this, and then you can go.
In 2008, the housing crisis, we saved the economy through trickle down.
We gave billions back to the banks to make them whole again.
People got foreclosed on our economy tank.
We went into a huge recession.
In the pandemic, we chose demand side stimulus.
We gave everybody money.
We recovered better than any other country did.
The economy snapped back.
Doesn't it show that demand side stimulus
is at the very least more efficient?
Well, this is one of the reasons I think
that there has been such fury
among the right about President Joe Biden
because he has proved that in fact,
the system that we had in place between 1933 and 1981 works.
I mean, one of the things that the radical right
has been able to do is rise on the idea that in fact,
the way you stimulated the economy was to cut taxes.
And that's what they always go back to is cutting taxes.
And we know it doesn't work.
It transfers money upward and not downward.
And people want services.
People demand certain things.
People actually like the government
that Biden has put in place.
And I think Tim Walz, the governor of Minnesota,
has been really articulate about this
in the last couple of weeks on his round of the talk shows.
But I think there's a really important piece here
that is different than what you two are talking about
and which I agree with, which is the way the parties are
talking about economic populism, which
tends to focus in the Democratic side on economics
and on the Republican side on culture.
So there are two different things going on there.
But the thing that fascinates me is why do people follow
certain parties when they talk about populism?
That is not so much what are the leaders talking about,
but what do the followers accept?
And this, I think, is central to a much larger conversation
about the United States, because of course,
for right to work laws, although they really take off in the 1950s,
they tap into the idea that if in fact you want
wage protections and hour protections
and all the sorts of things that really were
being decimated in states like Arizona,
they tapped into this longer history of Americans wanting to believe that
by God they were doing it all on their own, even though they never have.
Right.
So one of the things that really-
Everybody needs roads for God's sakes.
Yes, and schools and hospitals, right?
Right.
But one of the things that is, I think, so interesting about the moment we're in is that
you, the three of us can sit here and argue at great length about different economic programs
and different approaches of the different parties based on either economics or in culture.
But the people who really, it seems to me, hold the power when we talk about populism are the
people who are telling the stories about why those people have been held back. So the Republicans
have a story that says it's the undocumented immigrant. The people like me have a story that
says, no, no, no, no, it's the rich
guys. But if you look right now, you're seeing the rise of people like Sean Fain of the UAW,
the president of the UAW, who is talking, he is both incorporating the idea of Christian-ness,
if you will. He talks about Christian values, almost a social Christian value, and the need
to protect the ability of workers to have the kind
of economic security that Steve's talking about. And also says, wait a minute, we've skewed this
entire system. So I think one of the things we're seeing, you asked where we were going, is we are
definitely seeing the breaking apart of the Republican project from between 1980 until 2021.
from between 1980 until 2021. But we're also seeing a new kind of language. And it's taken a while for people like Biden to get to the point where they're not just saying, hey, we're going to help
the little guy, but also saying, and we're going to tax those people at the very top. And you saw
FDR do a similar shift. And you're seeing a lot of Americans, I think, who were in the group of people who were in
trouble in the 1980s and forward, getting to find their own voices in part thanks to the rise of the
internet and the ability to go around the gatekeepers that really managed to highlight the
Republican story about America for 40 years and to silence the populist story. Now you're seeing the populist story,
and on the one hand, some people have become virulently sexist and racist, and that's the
story that they're clinging to. And some people are saying, no, we can rebuild this country in a new,
exciting way. Now that speaks to Stephen in terms of rebuilding it in a new exciting way. So what are the ways that labor can
in some ways reinvent itself, not just through unions, unions being an important tentpole of it,
but in terms of getting a seat at the table? Now, we talked earlier about the tech billionaires
that are funding a lot of this Republican resurgence. One thing that tech has done
really well is in general, they've given their workers
shares. Is that a model that can be taken on through these other corporations?
Yes and no, John. It's good.
Stephen.
So on one hand, yes, it's good when workers get a share of corporate profits and that all the
profits don't go to management. Right.
On the other hand, the no is, which is not enough because workers don't have a voice.
It's so important over history in the United States and elsewhere to assure greater economic
justice for workers not to be stepped on, for workers to have a voice at work. And that's why
not to be stepped on for workers to have a voice at work. And that's why laws that encourage the formation of unions,
that laws that encourage collective bargaining
have made such a difference.
And Heather's the historian, I'm not,
but after World War II,
American companies were going like gangbusters.
Europe was flying us back,
Japanese industry was flying us back,
and the United States Steel and General Motors
and Ford and Chrysler, they were doing amazingly well. And workers,
we didn't have a middle class yet, workers were really doing poorly. And workers unionized and
went on strike and pressured the capitalists and said, it ain't fair. You're making so much money
and we're struggling and we're the folks who make your profits, who make your cars, who make your steel, and they won these amazing contracts that created
the middle class. And unions now, you know, Sean Fain is basically saying the same thing what union
leaders were saying in, you know, after World War II, that we're not getting our fair share.
Companies are making record profits, the stock market is at record levels, productivity has risen to record levels, yet wages are flat. And labor is really standing up again,
more than it has in a long time. And Sean Fain led this historic Tory strike last fall by the United
Order workers against GM Ford and Stellantis, which owns Chrysler. And labor is saying,
not only do we need a seat at the table, not only do we need a seat at the table,
not only do workers need a seat at the table,
whether it's Starbucks or Amazon or Trader Joe's or Apple,
but this old idea that all we deserve
is a 2% a year raise is BS.
Inflation was 10%.
We deserve our fair share.
And one of the crazy things about-
And we don't have the social safety net.
I mean, you have people that, we have a working class economy of people that
still have to avail themselves of the social safety net.
It's a part of the story that is never talked about.
All right.
We've got to take a quick break.
We'll be right back. We're back.
These are pendulum swings, right?
You have the robber barons, and then you have the New Deal that creates a safety net, and
then you have this post-World War II boom, and now you've got this Reagan era deregulation
and all these things, and it swings back and forth in terms of of workers and then it goes more pro-business.
What brings it back to the, how does the pendulum swing back now, Heather?
Well, can I just add to what Stephen said? And that is in the 1950s and the 1960s,
one of the things that really helped workers was the recognition that, you know,
people in the United States were very concerned about the rise, both of fascism and of communism
and of the idea of countries being taken over by religious leaders.
And so one of the things that you see with the construction of a strong middle class
in the United States and the support of a strong middle class in European countries
and other countries as well is in a determination to protect democracy. That they recognize that if they don't do that,
if they don't give workers something, they're going to turn. In that case,
they're really worried about communism, but there are plenty of people who are also concerned about
fascism, people like Eisenhower, for example. So, once you got the fall of the Berlin Wall
and you got the collapse of the Soviet Union,
there was a sense that you no longer had to worry about that.
That as long as you spread capitalism, you would also be spreading democracy.
And of course, where that's ended us up is a place where authoritarians are on the rise
all over the country.
So one of the things that I think-
And all over the world.
Yes.
I'm sorry, I meant that.
All over the world.
And the right is cozying up to, I mean, to think that the right would be admiring of Putin and Orban
would be utterly unrecognizable to anybody that,
or on the left.
I mean, it's just, it's a bizarre,
and it makes me think that maybe the fight now
around the world isn't capitalism versus communism
or democracy versus authoritarianism.
They found it to be woke versus unwoke.
They've just found a different axis
by which to cleave everybody.
And maybe capitalism requires that entrenched poor working
class to function the way they want it to function.
And maybe that's the thing we have to address.
Well, certainly, I think unregulated capitalism does
and capitalism itself is another discussion.
You know, you gotta love a historian, right?
I'm gonna split hairs on all these words,
but here's a big piece that I think I would love to hear
what Stephen has to say about this.
I mean, one of the things that you're seeing
in the United States is the first generation
of American women who have had jobs,
professional jobs outside the home.
We've always worked outside the home, but professional jobs outside the home. We've always worked outside the home,
but professional jobs outside the home.
They have good educations, they have skills,
many of them have money.
They also have for the first time in our history,
20 to 30 years after their children have left
or they've gotten as far as they want to in their careers
to get involved in the public sphere.
And that, at the same time that they're recognizing
that their daughters and granddaughters
have fewer rights than they did. And I think that throws a monkey wrench into both populism,
and also into how we will reconstruct a future. Because I don't think, at least in the United
States, and I know other countries jumping to mind, I think that changes the entire way we're going to be looking
at the issues of the American story, for example, or the issue of who should have a say or the issue
of equal rights going forward. And I think it's one of the things driving the extraordinary fury
on the American right now against things like childless cat ladies. Stephen, what do you make of that idea that this generation of women is really, as Heather
was saying, they were professional and now they're seeing those gains slip?
Heather's absolutely right and it is terrible, worse and terrifying.
I'm in my early 70s.
You're in your early 70s?
Yes.
I've got to start your regimen, whatever you're doing.
I've got to start juicing.
I don't know what's happening.
I'm sorry.
I have children.
I have grandchildren.
And I speak to friends.
They're horrified that things are moving backwards
for their daughters and for their granddaughters.
And I think that's one reason why
women have become so active in politics
and so active in unions. and that's one of the reasons
there's so much enthusiasm about Kamala Harris, she's been leading the fight. One of the things
that really gets me is when I really have to rack my brains to think of what exactly did Trump do
for workers and I could think of one and a half things. Yes, the North American Free Trade Agreement was way too friendly to
corporations and didn't do enough to protect workers and people blame Bill Clinton for all
this, blame the Democrats. It was negotiated by a Republican, first President Bush. Bill Clinton
wanted to be a good bipartisan guy and he got it passed through the Senate. Overwhelmingly,
it was Republicans who voted for it in Congress, not Democrats, but the Democrats get all the blame. But Trump, the one thing I will most
praise and force that he renegotiated NAFTA, so it's much friendlier to unions, much
friendlier to workers. And then half the thing where I say Trump has, you know, Trump did absolutely nothing to raise the minimum wage.
I think he's such a chicken because he's worried
if I call for a higher minimum wage,
I'm gonna piss off my business supporters.
And if I oppose a higher minimum wage, then I'm gonna,
so like he's been mum.
The great courageous Donald Trump is just too scared to,
so, but he has, he was campaigning in Nevada
the other day, right?
And he said, I have this great idea.
No, no taxes on tips. Yeah, no taxes on tips he was campaigning in Nevada the other day, right? And he said, I have this great idea. No taxes on tips.
Yeah, no taxes on tips. Like, where did that come from? He says, he got it from speaking to a
waiter. No, I'm sure one of his, someone in the brain trust said, this would be a great way to
win votes of the tens of thousands of hotel housekeepers and waiters in Nevada.
Right. And, you know, but of course, you know, I say it's only half a pro worker thing because so many,
you know, waiters and housekeepers, they don't earn enough money to even pay income taxes.
Right. And still have to have a social safety net behind them. Yeah.
So if Trump really wanted them to earn my money, he should, you know, support them unionizing and
he should raise them in a wage. But he's too pro-corporate.
That's not going to happen. I will give them credit though for this. And Heather,
I want to ask you about this. Globalization and automation decimated, I think, the American
middle class, the factory workers. It really did have a terribly corrosive effect on people's
ability to have stable manufacturing jobs or stable,
and all the support jobs that go along with those sorts of things. So the changes in,
whether it was Amazon or factories being able to go overseas and all those other things,
was devastating. And I don't think the Democrats recognized the devastation fast enough or with
enough empathy,
because they would always say things like,
we'll send you back to school and you could be a coder,
we'll teach you how to be a coder.
And they'd be like, well, I kind of dug what I was doing
and I don't think I wanna be a coder.
And I think that was a real weakness
and one that they've had a really tough time overcoming.
Heather?
Yeah, I think that's right, except I would say
that one of the things that always jumps out to me,
I am from a rural area.
I am from a place where there are an awful lot
of Republican voters and a lot of Trump voters.
And we always do this thing where
we examine rural people like they're zoo animals,
like what's wrong with the rural Americans.
And I'm telling you, there's nothing wrong
with the rural Americans, except you can see the line
between those people who are Trumpers
and those who are not Trumpers,
because one group watches the Fox News channel
and one does not.
And the fact that the Democrats felt that they were unable
to make the sorts of protections for the workers,
but also, I mean, it sounds like we're just talking
about unionized workers, and of course,
that's not at all what we're talking about.
We're talking about people who have been left behind.
And the gig economy, the gig economy,
all these workers are unprotected.
Which by the way, is much more reflective
of the way American history has always been.
The idea that you have a single job
and it's gonna carry you through for your entire career
is very post-World War II. And the Democrats, I think, wanted to protect those people, but they seem to have this idea
that they had to go along at the top level with the sorts of market-based reforms or
market-based legislation that was blanketing our media space. And there weren't the options to talk about other ideas
because those people didn't get returned to office
and they didn't get time on the talk shows and so on.
And that locking up, I think, of the public conversation
looks very much like the locking up
at the public conversation in the 1880s and the 1890s
when it was just like, you know,
Andrew Carnegie is the best thing since sliced bread.
Anybody who stands against him is
an anarchist, right? This mirrors the sort of Robert Barron era in your mind? Oh, yeah. Oh,
yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And that's in many interesting ways. But part of what has been
a problem for the Democrats is the fact that if you didn't go along with the market-based economy,
you know, the idea that neoliberalism was going to be the answer to everything. You simply got purged out of the lawmaking, the lawmakers, so that you didn't get to say,
hey, wait a minute here. And you can see in some universities, there will be a holdover from the
1960s or the 1970s in the economics department. And the guy is sort of like back behind his desk
with long hair going, that's not how the world works.
And every time something goes wrong, you can watch this.
They pull them out and they're like, hey, look,
we found one from the past.
Who's gonna tell us what?
But so I think that that has limited options.
And again, the breakdown of Fox News
because of the lawsuit against it,
the fact that Rush Limbaugh died in 2021
and didn't give those
talking points to everybody on the right and the rest of the media didn't follow suit with those
talking points, I think has opened up the ability for us to have a larger conversation.
And then of course, with Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying very upfront
that the loss of our supply chains to other countries is a national security
issue. The loss of our manufacturing to other countries is a national security issue. The fact
that we've had a very few people, very few corporations being able to monopolize baby
formula, for example, but ever so many other things is a national security issue. That's
made them able to reshore manufacturing
and to reshore supply chains, which Buttigieg has done really,
really well.
And also to launch lawsuits against people like Amazon
to say, the idea that as long as prices are getting lower,
it's good for the American people is not the case.
We've got to make sure it's good for workers
and good for national security and good for consumers as well. So it seems like there's a lot of things breaking apart right now. And one
of the things I'm really interested in is trying to make sure that the conversation that we engage
going forward is much fairer and that doesn't have this sort of cookie cutter smashed down onto it.
So that for 40 years we're locked into something. Conventional wisdom that pushes things away.
That's an excellent summation. Can I just, can I just, I'm pretty sorry. cookie cutters smashed down onto it so that for 40 years we're locked into something. Conventional wisdom that pushes things away.
That's an excellent summation.
Heather, Steve.
Can I just jump in?
Oh yeah, please, Steve.
So I agree with everything Heather said.
So one of the craziest things is like jobs relieving
Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania,
and heading to China and Taiwan and Bangladesh,
you know, for years,
not just under democratic administrations,
but somehow the Republicans are great at blaming
the Democrats for everything. And you're right, John, that the Democrats, most notably Barack
Obama was saying, yeah, these jobs are disappearing, but go to college. Everyone should go to college and
then you live happily ever after. And there are many, only one third, 40% of Americans go to college. And a lot of
working class families said, I can't afford to send my kids to college. Barack Obama is really
a luffa. And I think that was one of Obama's biggest mistakes. The Democrats did try very hard to
provide much more money for retraining, much money for unemployment insurance for people who
lost job to foreign trade. And the Republicans
kept blocking it, but the Democrats get blamed for not doing enough. Now, as Heather said,
Joe Biden got the message. He wants- Right, these infrastructure acts, the Chips Act,
all these things. So for people who aren't going to college, he's emphasized manufacturing.
The Infrastructure Act is going to create hundreds of thousands of great construction
jobs, many of them for people who don't go to college.
Plus he has really tried very hard to make it easier for people to go to college.
Canceling student debt, he wants many colleges to be free.
He borrowed Bernie Sanders' idea for a while to make the first two years of college free.
I mean, Biden gets that there isn't enough
economic opportunity for the typical American family.
Maybe this is the inflection point, maybe,
and we'll kind of, I'll give you both a chance to sum up,
but we'll end it there.
Maybe the inflection point is the recognition that
the globalization and the ill effects that it had on
so many of these workers must be
addressed with a real urgency.
And there has to be a great deal of money and intention behind it to try and rebuild
the things that were hollowed out during that time.
And obviously, it gives us a portent to what AI may offer the country, and how devastating
that might be as well. But
in your guys mind, is the pendulum swinging back? And do both of these parties offer anything positive
to labor and the working people in the country at this point, Heather?
I don't think that the Republicans, dominated as they currently are by the Magus, offer anything to anybody who is not extraordinarily rich, except those under-educated evangelical Christians
who simply want to be able to impose
their Christian nationalism on the rest of us.
Who want the culture.
It's the culture for them.
And that's only about 6% of Americans
who actually want Christian nationalism.
The Democrats right now, under Biden
and soon to be under Harris, I think,
have recognized not only what you were talking about
with the off-shoring of manufacturing, for example,
but one of the key parts that Biden went forward with
and has not really succeeded to the degree he would like
is the shoring up of the service economy.
And the service economy for childcare, eldercare,
and so on really again,
speaks to women being involved in the economy,
as they always have been,
but they've always done it on their own hook
and at their own peril.
So that I think is a reshaping
of the entire issue of populism.
And as I say, what really matters, I think to me,
is watching how those conversations take shape
and who gets to drive the conversations to say,
hey, wait a minute, we really need a country
that's based on the good of everybody,
especially those people who are hardworking
and trying just to put food on the table
and get their kids, have their kids safe and educated,
rather than saying, you know, we can turn it all over
to the Silicon Valley billionaires
and they will treat us little people well.
They will design it and they'll put us in a crisper
and change the genetic.
But you're right, the economic system cannot,
by its definition, rely on an entrenched underclass
and entrenched poverty.
Stephen, for you, what's the one hopeful thought
that you hold in your head moving this forward?
So young people are much more concerned about how hard it
is for them to rise up.
They're told that they're the first generation
in American history that might not
do as well as their parents.
A lot of young people have taken to the streets for the B2
movement, for the Black Lives Matter movement.
And so much of the energy of the union movement to raise wages is younger people.
And I agree with Heather that when you look at the Republican Party, they're really not
doing anything to help workers.
Like if you try to pass a paid leave bill, which so many American families support, 80%
to 20%, overwhelmingly, the billionaires, the corporations
will block it.
They'll say, it's a horrible employer mandate.
It's going to get in the way of the free market.
We can't have that.
We can't raise the minimum wage.
That will gum up the works for corporations, which already
have had maximum profits.
And just the simple act of, if we removed health care
from your job, if we just gave that to people,
that would free up
everybody to be able to take more chances in their lives. Corporations would no longer be on the hook for it. There's so many different things that we could do, but I appreciate you both
coming on and having the conversation. Steven Greenhouse, labor and workplace
reporter at New York Times for 19 years, senior fellow at the Century Foundation,
author of the book, Beaten Down, Worked Up, The Past, Present and Future of American Labor, and Heather Cox Richardson, author of Democracy
Awakening, Notes on the State of America. Really interesting stuff, so I appreciate
it.
Thanks, John.
Thank you.
I got to tell you guys something. I think there should be a historian. In every, I don't, can we use historians as like mods,
as moderators, just in every conversation that occurs,
because there's so much history
that echoes the current state of affairs
and it gives you so much context
and so much knowledge into it.
When Heather started bringing up, well, in the 1870s, you know, before these movements,
and it goes back to Jim Crow South
and the way that economically nobody wanted to grant,
and then black people, they didn't want them to vote.
Like, it so brings into focus
how we get to this current moment
and how we can get out of it.
No, definitely.
I think that historians really add to this, and it does all come back to slavery.
That's what it has to be. It all comes back to slavery.
You're like, oh, right. There was a group of people in the country that got labor for free.
And that was the default.
And so anything off of that is going to be seen as a concession. And it
just informs everything moving forward. And I really feel like sometimes I wish I had
like a pocket historian, like that's what they should do. A pocket Doris Kearns Goodwin,
a pocket Heather Cox, like is like Siri. Yeah.
And whenever you're talking about something,
it can be like, you know, they used
to say the same thing about Andrew Carnegie.
They said he couldn't be stopped.
He was the bad guy.
You're like, who?
You're like, the robber barons.
And then they bring that, like, just add in context.
The news organizations should have a pocket historian
at all times so they could just a context theory.
I'd pay for it. Right? Totally. Along with fact checking, maybe. Well. Let's not get crazy.
Context and fact checking. But it can be done in real time. If these historians can do it in real
time, it can be done. Anyway, I thought it was a very, very fascinating
conversation there.
And boy, do they know their shit.
When Stephen starts throwing out Supreme Court cases
and quoting the thing, I was just like,
I'm just going to go get a drink of water.
This guy's killing it.
He's killing it.
The news keeps coming fast and furious.
Yeah, so that's that.
Brittany, the socials are going? Oh, yeah. We're getting some really goodious, yeah. So that's that. Brittany, the socials are going?
Oh yeah, we are there.
We're getting some really good responses, John.
Actually, do you wanna hear some of the questions we've got?
Sure.
Yeah, I'll pull up the first one.
What do you got?
So this question is, how do you keep your composure
when debating someone with drastically
different views on politics?
It's an excellent question,
and I think if you've watched me do that,
you would see I don't.
I don't keep my composure.
I often lose my shit, which is why I make,
people always say, you should get into politics.
And I'm like, I really think that would be,
I'd last like 20 minutes.
And then all of a sudden, I'd be like, you're fucked up.
You don't know what you're talking about.
Shut up.
You know, it's so hard.
Contrary to what it may look like,
I'm not a huge fan of conflict.
I think you guys know me probably in a different context,
so you would be like, yeah, I get that.
So when you're doing those things,
I find it very discomforting.
I don't care for it.
But I do it because I think I should suffer.
I think I've earned that.
I think we've both seen you do it.
Is it uncomfortable for you guys to watch?
Brittany, you've seen it a lot.
You've seen me do it a lot.
I've seen, like I've personally hid behind polls
as it was happening,
because I'm like, I don't want to make contact,
eye contact with anybody.
I'm definitely like the grimace emoji
during some of the moments where I know
you're like dying inside, but not really showing it.
Here's what's so terrible too, because Brittany,
so in order to book guests, you've got to,
there's a process that is somewhat of a sales job.
Come on the show, it'll be great, you'll have a robust discussion, but always friendly,
always professional, always doing that, like with Larry Summers.
And Larry Summers, he did a little research on me. It was like, you know, in 2011, John Stewart called me the devil incarnate.
Is he going to do that on the show?
And Brittany has to be like, I don't think so.
Probably not.
He may call you that, but ingest.
So Brittany had to put me on the phone with Larry Summers before he came on the show to allay his concerns.
And I generally do the Costanza in those situations,
which is what is the opposite of what you're supposed to do?
So he said, you know, are those your feelings?
And I was like, yeah, they are.
But, you know, I still don't,
I don't mind having the conversation.
I really disagree with you on almost everything,
but I'm certainly, I'd be open to talking about it.
And he was like, okay, that's all I wanted to know.
And then he was like, great, let's do it.
Yeah, my favorite part is you've had to do those calls
a couple of times throughout our time working together.
And the best is when John calls after and will be like,
I don't know if I just helped or hurt the situation. I don't think they're coming.
But for Larry Summers, that conversation was,
unfortunately, very uncomfortable,
but I thought pretty great.
Yeah.
I think a lot of people did.
Well, not Apple.
Not the people we were working for,
but the other people who were not.
They didn't think it was particularly great, but that's fantastic.
Okay, next question.
Yes.
How can I start performing stand-up comedy if I have terrible social anxiety?
Oh, I don't know.
So, I don't know enough about social anxiety to know if standup comedy would
trigger that because in truth, standup is not that social.
Like I'm very introverted.
So one of the reasons I like doing standup was that it's one of the reasons I like bartending.
I didn't have, it's like you can be out-ish, but you're not actually out.
You have a job to do and you can focus on that
and you don't really have to talk to anybody
other than taking orders, giving orders.
So it's not, and standup is oddly enough, very similar,
like Friday and Saturday night, what are you doing?
You go into that party, you're doing those things.
I gotta go do a gig, I gotta work.
You're social with the other comics,
but you don't really have much to do with the audience
other than in a performative way.
So I actually think for social anxiety,
stand-up's not a terrible business to be in,
even though it may seem like a paradox.
If that, does that make sense?
No, I think totally.
I think there's a difference
between having a one-on-one conversation with someone
and being amongst it or putting on a show in a way.
And, you know, it's a character, even if it is you.
And a performance. Yeah.
And you're not like, like you.
OK. You remember how, like at the show, we would have parties?
Yes. And remember how, like, you guys would go?
Yeah. And you guys would drink and have a great time.
Yeah.
And then you guys would be like, John, are you coming?
And I'd be like, sure.
But then I wouldn't.
Yeah.
Sure.
That's social anxiety.
That's me, but all done.
But tell people to keep going with the social.
What are the socials?
What are the things?
Definitely.
We are Twitter at Weekly Show Pod, Instagram and threads.
We are Weekly Show Podcast, TikTok.
We are Weekly Show Podcast and the weekly show with John Stewart on YouTube.
Come on.
As always, thank you so much.
This has been the weekly show.
Thanks to lead producer, Lauren Walker, producer, Brittany Mamedovic,
video editor and engineer, Rob Vitolo,
who by the way, is just kicking crazy as like,
everything is so locked in when we jump in.
Same with audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce.
You guys are killing it.
Research and associate producer, Jillian Spear,
as always arming me with the best information known to man
and our executive producers, Chris McShane and Katie Gray
couldn't do it without all you guys.
So thank you again and we will see you next week.
The weekly show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central Podcast
is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.
John Stewart is back in the host chair at The Daily Show,
which means he's also back in our ears
on The Daily Show Ears Edition podcast.
The Daily Show podcast has everything you need
to stay on top of today's news and pop
culture.
You get hilarious satirical takes on entertainment, politics, sports, and more from John and the
team of correspondents and contributors.
The podcast also has content you can't get anywhere else, like extended interviews and
a roundup of the weekly headlines.
Listen to The Daily Show Ears, wherever you get your podcasts.