Trump Closes With Small Fries and Big D*cks

1h 17m
Running on fumes with just two weeks to go, Trump raves about Arnold Palmer's genitalia and works the fryer at a McDonald's. Meanwhile, Kamala Harris campaigns across the battleground-state suburbs with Liz Cheney, and Barack Obama hits the trail for her in the Sun Belt. Then, Jon, Lovett, and Tommy discuss the legality of Elon Musk's million-dollar voter-registration giveaways, and Hawaii Senator Brian Schatz stops by to talk about the state of the race and what people can do to help.

Press play and read along

Runtime: 1h 17m

Transcript

Speaker 1 October brings it all. Halloween parties, tailgates, crisp fall nights.
At Total Wine and Moore, you'll find just what you need for them all. Mixing up something spooky?

Speaker 1 Total Wine and More is your cocktail central for all your Halloween concoctions.

Speaker 1 With the lowest prices for over 30 years, you'll always find what you love and love what you find only at Total Wine and Moore. Curbside pickup and delivery available in most areas.

Speaker 1 See TotalWine.com for details. Spirits not sold in Virginia and North Carolina.
Drink responsibly. B21.

Speaker 2 Hey, this is Jeff Lewis from Radio Andy. Live and uncensored.
Catch me talking with my friends about my latest obsessions, relationship issues, and bodily ailments.

Speaker 2 With that kind of drama that seems to follow me, you never know what's going to happen.

Speaker 3 You can listen to Jeff Lewis Live at home or anywhere you are. Download the SiriusXM app for over 425 channels of ad-free music, sports, entertainment, and more.

Speaker 3 Subscribe now and get three months free. Offer details apply.

Speaker 4 Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm John Peffer.
I'm John Lovett. I'm Tommy Vitor.
Wow. Okay.

Speaker 4 On today's show, an exhausted Donald Trump is talking dicks and flipping burgers as both campaigns race to get those last remaining undecided voters off the fence.

Speaker 5 I'd much rather be talking burgers and flipping dicks.

Speaker 4 I fived on that.

Speaker 4 I didn't even know that was coming.

Speaker 4 To surprise you guys, Kamala Harris continues her sprint through the battlegrounds with help from Barack Obama, Liz Cheney, and many others, while the world's richest man launches illegally questionable million-dollar sweepstakes to help Trump.

Speaker 4 And later, friend of the pod, Hawaii Senator Brian Brian Schatz talks to Lovett about how the race is looking and the most important things everyone can do to help. But first,

Speaker 4 Donald Trump may very well win this race, but with two weeks to go, he seems to be losing steam and his mind.

Speaker 4 A Trump advisor reportedly told an outlet that their 78-year-old candidate has been canceling interviews because he's, quote, exhausted.

Speaker 4 A recent Associated Press headline reads, A failed mic leaves Donald Trump pacing the stage in silence for nearly 20 minutes in Detroit.

Speaker 4 This was after he stopped taking questions at a Pennsylvania town hall so he could rock out to Ave Maria and YMCA for a good half hour or so.

Speaker 4 And whenever Trump does speak, his rhetoric lurches from deranged to absurd. Here he is with Fox News's Howie Kurtz over the weekend.

Speaker 6 The other day you called it a day of love. That sparked a lot of reaction.
Can you understand why many Americans would view it as a dark and tragic day in our history?

Speaker 6 The crowd I spoke before, which you rarely see, I have pictures of it, massive, but nobody wants to put them in. It was the biggest crowd I've ever spoken to, and I've spoken to the biggest crowds.

Speaker 6 I've never seen that many people.

Speaker 6 I tell you, there was a beauty to it, and there was a love to it that I've never seen before. The enemy within is a pretty ominous phrase if you're talking about other Americans.

Speaker 6 I think it's accurate. I mean, I think it's accurate.

Speaker 4 After our interview, Donald Trump flew to Pennsylvania, Arnold Palmer's hotel, where he discussed the golfer's cybersecurity of his manhood.

Speaker 7 This is a guy guy that was all man.

Speaker 7 His man was strong and tough.

Speaker 7 And I refuse to say it, but when he took showers with the other pros, they came out of there, they said, oh my God.

Speaker 7 That's unbelievable.

Speaker 7 I had to say it.

Speaker 4 He had to say it.

Speaker 4 Why do you guys think he felt the need to tell the crowd that the late Arnold Palmer was hung like a one-wood?

Speaker 4 there's a lot to talk about in that whole a lot to talk about package why

Speaker 4 there you go

Speaker 5 first of all why did Howie Kurtz have like a four packs a day voice in the interview and then he sounded normal after what's going on there so the I was just that this is neither here nor there but also Howard Kurtz, he looked like he was from the 70s.

Speaker 5 It was like a, not in a good or a bad way, but like his haircut looked like he was like reporting on the oil embargo during the Carter era. It was a deeply weird interview.

Speaker 8 Do you shower together after you golf?

Speaker 4 This was one of my first questions. Like, I'm not a golfer, but it doesn't seem like a shower afterwards type of sport.
Yeah.

Speaker 8 Ben Dreyfus did some original reporting on that.

Speaker 4 I was going to say. Did you guys see that? I did.
Tommy, I was going to bring it up, and then I was like, I don't know how to explain Ben's reporting in a way that is

Speaker 4 cool.

Speaker 5 Of the three of us, I'm not the one that went deeper into whether or not Arnold Palmer had a giant dick deep on the dung.

Speaker 4 It's a weird.

Speaker 4 Ben Dreyfus did.

Speaker 4 There's a lot of circumstantial evidence that he does not necessarily have a big dick. Had.
Circumstances. Sorry.
Rest in peace.

Speaker 5 Yeah, he's dead.

Speaker 4 He's dead.

Speaker 4 He's dead. He died in 2016.
Yeah.

Speaker 5 They had to push that lid down on the coffin pretty hard.

Speaker 4 Shit.

Speaker 4 This is what this campaign has done to us.

Speaker 8 There's nothing left to talk about except for this dead golfer's junk.

Speaker 4 This is the point, too.

Speaker 4 We're skipping over how in the interview, he was like, oh, yeah, I do think that the violent attack on the Capitol was a day of love.

Speaker 4 And I do think the Democrats are the enemy within, which, again, we predict that this would happen.

Speaker 4 I think this was like right after Mike Johnson, speaking of Johnson's, went on Meet the Press or somewhere and was asked about this. And he's like, oh, that's not what he meant.

Speaker 4 That's not what he meant. And sure enough,

Speaker 4 Donald Trump's like, this is exactly what I meant.

Speaker 8 Punish Adam Schiff.

Speaker 4 That's what I meant. Whatever Glenn Young said, whatever Mike Johnson said, whatever anyone else is saying to try to defend me,

Speaker 4 this is exactly what I mean. Yeah, it's sort of, it's, it's,

Speaker 5 if Trump were on a unicycle saying I'm going to imprison my enemies, it's still dangerous, even though it's pretty funny that he's on a unicycle. Yeah.

Speaker 4 A deranged clown can be funny, but like, you know, you give him you give him the nukes, not so funny. No.

Speaker 4 In general, how do you guys think the let Trump be Trump strategy is playing out in the final weeks here? Net positive, net negative?

Speaker 8 I think on balance it's a net negative.

Speaker 5 Like it seems it's hard to argue that if he were just

Speaker 8 had like a disciplined message about the economy for the remainder of the campaign, that that would probably help him.

Speaker 8 Calling January 6th a day of love absolutely, unequivocally hurts him. And repeating it on Howie Kurtz hurts him.

Speaker 8 I think the Arnold Palmer stuff, like, look, there's a lot of young men in particular who hear this and just think it's funny. They think Trump is authentic.

Speaker 8 He's goofy. He doesn't care about being politically correct or saying the right thing.
Like the head spinning part about this is always that he wins evangelical voters like 95 to 1.

Speaker 8 And you would think that the kind of Mike Pence's of the world are the people who would find this offensive in some way.

Speaker 8 Or, you know, the people get mad about like a Disney character not being white every few years just to kind of brush this stuff off.

Speaker 5 No, there's just, look, there's a little bit of politics in him talking about Arnold Palmer having a big dick, which is like

Speaker 5 he was a real man. He was, there used to be real men in this country.
We celebrate real masculine men, and the other side doesn't.

Speaker 5 Big swinging dicks.

Speaker 5 Big, big golfing dicks.

Speaker 4 A bunch of guys in the shower just. Yeah.

Speaker 8 Even I'm uncomfortable.

Speaker 5 He doesn't even need clubs, this Arnold Palmer guy.

Speaker 5 He's just out there with a putter, fucking buck-ass naked, golfing.

Speaker 4 Let me tell you about the only pole that matters.

Speaker 5 I just think, like, look, it doesn't matter how, look, any great golfer will tell you

Speaker 5 you can have a heavier club. You can have a lighter club.

Speaker 4 It's about touch.

Speaker 5 It's about finesse.

Speaker 4 I was waiting for Tommy to to make the motion and the... I beat him to it.

Speaker 8 By the short game.

Speaker 4 Hey.

Speaker 4 Continue. What else are we going to talk about? Yeah, I mean, look.

Speaker 5 What else were we going to talk about, John?

Speaker 4 I think you can say in these final weeks, he is not driving much of a message himself. We can separate him from the campaign, of course.
His campaign is running all kinds of ads.

Speaker 4 They are driving a very specific message. He is not driving much of one.
There was also a Time story. I don't know if you guys saw this last week, about how he's just...

Speaker 4 over the weekend, how he's just bored of the economy. That's why he's making it all about immigration.

Speaker 4 Like when he does drive a message, it's it's almost exclusively about immigration because he thinks the crowd seems bored by economic, which I think is very revealing for the crowd. He's talking,

Speaker 8 and it's what he likes. He's genuinely passionate about it.

Speaker 5 I think, like, with Trump, the medium is the message.

Speaker 5 I think when he's ranting and raving in front of his biggest fans, I think his biggest fans like it. When it gets outside of that, I think it hurts him.
I think the kind of

Speaker 8 goofy,

Speaker 5 rambling, occasionally funny Trump in a podcast setting,

Speaker 5 I think they think it's better for him than sitting down for mainstream interviews. I don't think it's as helpful as their campaign would want it to be because he is so

Speaker 5 he's just

Speaker 5 lost a step. So even when he's doing his greatest hits, he's just not bringing the same energy to it.

Speaker 4 He doesn't have many more steps to lose at this point. No.
He's almost out of steps.

Speaker 5 Have you seen these clips of Frankie Valley? No. Frankie Valley has a Vegas show.

Speaker 8 It's quite sad.

Speaker 5 I believe. And basically,

Speaker 5 they kind of wheel out into 90-some-odd-year-old Frankie Valley, and he kind of holds the mic up here and then they just play his greatest hits and increasingly that's what Trump is like they kind of get him out there and he's like we used to be tough in this country I think the Jews might be responsible it's like and it's a little bit like he's a random number generator and just like some part of the Trump large language model will kind of spit something out there's a bit of uh you'll be surprised to learn there's a bit of hyperbole that like whenever Trump says something crazy now every they try to like put everything in the dementia frame, right?

Speaker 4 He's lost it. Like the Arnold Palmer thing is, I don't think he's not that, even though some people were treating it like that.

Speaker 5 He didn't tell it as well as he would have five years ago. Right.
He would have been more charming and funny about it a couple years ago.

Speaker 4 Right, right.

Speaker 4 But I do think when you combine the, like, the weird swaying to YMCA and Ave Maria at that town hall with the 20 minutes of walking around in silence while he's waiting for a mic, also no one could get him a mic in 20 minutes?

Speaker 4 It's inexplicable. That seems crazy.

Speaker 8 Inexplicable you don't have another mic.

Speaker 4 And just like the rallies, the rambling, the speeches are going on for even longer than usual, and they've always been really long.

Speaker 4 Again, if you watch a rally or an interview with a MAGA-friendly outlet, which is the only ones he does now, I think you will not be impressed with Donald Trump.

Speaker 4 And you're right, the podcast ones, maybe some people are impressed with that, some of the podcast interviews, but I don't know.

Speaker 8 The irony is he only does stuff in his safe space. He's on like kind of podcasts with former wrestlers like The Undertaker or kind of Barcelona Sports type shows or Fox kind of friendly audiences.

Speaker 8 But he does better when he's pressed a little bit. When he did the thing with John Micklethawa, the editor of Bloomberg News, they got into into a back and forth and Trump was pissed.

Speaker 8 He was punching back and he got aggressive and it made him a little more disciplined. And also he was getting cut off by Micklethawaite.
So he couldn't go on.

Speaker 8 He couldn't do the weave for 35 minutes about some bizarre story that ends with, you know, the golden bear's ass as kind of like the punchline.

Speaker 8 It's like he gets forced to be a little more focused and like. pugilistic.
And I think when he's on,

Speaker 8 when he's just like alone at a mic, he ends up in going on these diatribes that hurt him.

Speaker 4 Yeah. Two of Trump's comms people did an interview with Semaphore where they said that the freewheeling Trump is a strategic choice to counteract the Harris campaign's portrayal of him.

Speaker 4 And basically they said that, you know, if voters see Trump laughing and joking, I've never seen him laugh, they know he can't possibly be a threat to democracy.

Speaker 4 Do you agree with that general idea?

Speaker 5 I agree that that's what they're trying to do. And I think there's some validity to it.

Speaker 5 I do think that if the only thing people saw was Trump laughing it up at a McDonald's or having a funny moment on a podcast with Theo Vaughan about Coke.

Speaker 5 And then what they see on television is Liz Cheney being like, he will end democracy. I think that

Speaker 5 that is their fair pushback, but it's not enough. It doesn't counteract the other many clips of him actually issuing the threats and doing all of the rest.

Speaker 8 Yeah, I think we're kind of trying to

Speaker 8 retrofit reality into a strategy here. Yeah.

Speaker 8 You know, I mean, I think the thing that prevents people from thinking that he is some scary authoritarian threat to democracy is his four years in office and the fact that he's like the best-known celebrity on the planet.

Speaker 8 I'm sure these interviews help him goofing around being fun and talking about like, you know, the guy who took over for Lou Gehrig. That all helps Wally Pip.

Speaker 8 But yeah, I mean, these guys are trying to make it sound like they have some sort of strategic genius here when it's just their guy doing Trump jazz.

Speaker 4 I thought what was most revealing about that is that they are concerned that he appears as a threat to democracy. And they know that that is not that is not politically helpful to him.

Speaker 4 And so that they are trying this in the first place. Agree with you guys that they're not quite succeeding.

Speaker 5 Well, yeah, I just think that like

Speaker 5 there are two campaigns running. Like Donald Trump

Speaker 5 is

Speaker 5 not strategic, but he has smart people around him. Everything they do isn't going to be stupid.
Trump is going to get wins on the board. He's going to have effective moments.

Speaker 5 He's going to have charming moments.

Speaker 5 I think to Tommy's point, yeah, they're trying to turn the fact that they can't really figure out what to do with him at a rally to stop him from going off script for an hour and a half.

Speaker 5 They're trying to turn that into an advantage. But like reading that interview, I was like, whoom, this is pretty smart.
Now, you then remember, wait, the person they're describing is Donald Trump.

Speaker 5 No, he's not having this incredibly successful interview on these platforms. He's not delivering what they're claiming he's delivering.

Speaker 5 But there's a part of that interview where they talk about why they prefer going to comedians and others than going to national media that a member of the Kampwell Harris campaign could absolutely say that like less charged and toxic conversations.

Speaker 5 And I'm like, well, that's smart. That's right.

Speaker 8 Yeah, they're just describing like the reality of the current media landscape. Yeah.

Speaker 4 Trump event that got the most attention this weekend was the big visit to McDonald's in Pennsylvania.

Speaker 4 Basically, the Trump campaign shut down at McDonald's temporarily, then picked some people to go through the drive-through so Trump could serve them fries and repeat the weird lie he keeps telling that Kamal Harris never worked at McDonald's.

Speaker 4 Just no basis in that at all. Obviously, this drove everyone a little crazy.
The one CBS reporter did ask Trump a substantive question about the minimum wage. Let's listen.

Speaker 9 Well, I think this. I think these people work hard.

Speaker 10 They're great.

Speaker 9 And I just saw something approximate. It's beautiful.
It's a beautiful thing to see. These are great franchises and produce a lot of jobs.
And it's great. And great people work in here, too.

Speaker 4 But wait a moment.

Speaker 9 So yes, ma'am.

Speaker 4 So take that as a no. Maybe.
Yes.

Speaker 4 This whole stunt, photo op event, whatever you want to call it, generated quite a bit of attention and blowback. What did you guys think?

Speaker 4 You got McDonald's this morning.

Speaker 5 I did get McDonald's this morning.

Speaker 4 It did make McDonald's.

Speaker 4 Advertising works. Branding works.

Speaker 5 Yeah, I mean, it definitely made me want McDonald's more.

Speaker 5 I mean, look, I think Donald Trump putting on and taking off an apron for the first time in his life at a closed McDonald's while he pretends to serve food to super fans, recruited, I suppose, by either the campaign or the MAGA owner of this franchise.

Speaker 5 Like, it's a good picture. I think it's a good picture for Donald Trump, but I think we have to, like,

Speaker 5 it's so hard to get out of the, like, he's in an apron, like, all the kind of like joking and making it about the picture and not about the fact that like, of course, he doesn't support raising the minimum wage.

Speaker 5 Like, Donald Trump would be a disaster for people who work at McDonald's. It is a sick fucking joke that he's putting on this apron.

Speaker 4 Last time he was president, he tried to take away health care of millions of people. Many of them probably worked at McDonald's.

Speaker 5 He's opposed to their ability to unionize. He will take away their basic health care protections.
Doesn't want to pay overtime.

Speaker 5 He will cut taxes for billionaires and corporations and make a national sales tax that regular people will have to pay to cover the difference.

Speaker 5 Like, it's just, it's the whole, the idea that he is this candidate of the working man because he's put on a fucking apron.

Speaker 5 Like, I think it's a good picture for him, but it's like our job to kind of not fall into the trap of debating him being at the McDonald's and like getting back to this, like, make the picture a fucking, a joke.

Speaker 8 Yeah, it was a really smart event.

Speaker 4 I mean, this is really, really smart of them to do.

Speaker 8 I don't know why he's obsessed with saying Kamala didn't work at McDonald's.

Speaker 8 I guess he just lets her call her inauthentic or something. But yeah, you have to raise that there.
He, I mean, like, it seemed fun and funny normal, the whole event.

Speaker 8 I mean, I watched the whole thing. It was like 25, 26 minutes of him learning to use the frying machine, doing it in a suit and tie, which looks ridiculous, but I don't know.

Speaker 8 Like, he's authentically a fan of McDonald's. He eats it.
He served it to athletes who won national championships. It was obviously a campaign stunt.
It was not, he didn't really work the fryer.

Speaker 8 Like, he dunked it once. Like in 07, remember Obama did the SEIU Walk a Day in Their Shoes event with that woman, Pauline Beck, where he like got up at the crack of dawn and went with her.

Speaker 8 They made breakfast for this man. She was a home healthcare worker.
She made breakfast for the man. He swept up.
It was an actual day of work with the SEIU.

Speaker 8 That was different. This was just a 25-minute stunt, but

Speaker 8 it went super viral on social media. Like, we're all talking about it.
I think it was very smart.

Speaker 4 Yeah,

Speaker 4 I think it's like a net neutral. I think there's like

Speaker 4 a ton of people making fun of it. Ton of people people saying it's the best thing ever.

Speaker 4 I can't imagine it's moving many people. I think it's, I think, but look, there are a bunch of people who maybe don't read about it, but just see the picture and might be like, oh, cool.

Speaker 4 The vast majority of people. Cool, people.

Speaker 8 The vast majority of people will see a clip on their TikTok or social media or something and be like, oh, there's Donald Trump, the McDonald's. That's kind of fun and different.

Speaker 4 Well, it broke through to like, you know, people in my life that don't pay attention much to politics. And I got some text people who were just like, what the fuck is this? It wasn't like cool.

Speaker 4 It was like, what the fuck is this?

Speaker 5 Yeah, I just think that like the the the trump people liking it i just think it's a great picture it's a great picture and then people making fun of it because like oh he's like the it's like the worst undercover boss like all those kind of jokes i just i like i do think you have to kind of get to like

Speaker 4 this is somebody pretending to care about working class people right that's what he will not and like as it has to just be very like not jokey i think the responses that that drove me uh most insane are uh this is just like dukakis in a tank it's like no exception

Speaker 4 oh that was one of the popular liberal responses on Twitter. Those people are stupid.
Another

Speaker 4 one. You got to deal with it.
Got to face it. Oh, by the way, did some investigative reporting, and that McDonald's got fined for health violations.
That I thought was kind of funny.

Speaker 4 I will not see that.

Speaker 4 I'm like, what? I'm sorry. I like that.

Speaker 5 I'm sorry. But McDonald's serves millions of people every day.
Nobody gets fucking sick. It's amazing.
Nobody gets sick. It's amazing.

Speaker 4 Nobody gets sick. Very rarely.
Very, very rarely. Obviously, the Kamala Hires campaign would do this, but they were showing some of the responses on TikTok, which I do think were very funny.

Speaker 4 It's just just some like young kids being like hey grandpa just put the fries in the fucking bag well the best part of it is he was obsessed with the fact that you didn't actually have to touch the fries to get them from the fryer to the container before the packaging to the packaging i was like what did you think happened at a restaurant do you think people were hand scooping your fries well and he was he was doing a very trump thing which was just like talking a lot about how this and that and the other thing when like the people are just sitting there like waiting the the people who've been hand selected by the campaign are just waiting there for their fries in their bag so they can drive off set.

Speaker 8 But then he did a little press conference from the takeout window, so he was taking questions from the press.

Speaker 4 And that window was so good. It was good.
It was good. It was well.

Speaker 5 It was good. It looked like, yeah, it kind of reminded me of when John Amos was in coming, coming to America and running the McDowells.

Speaker 4 I'll tell you what,

Speaker 4 if he wins, the picture of him smiling and handing out fries is going to be the picture. If he loses, the picture of him sitting behind the window like this,

Speaker 4 which was another one, that will be the picture.

Speaker 8 It really just will be him at like MSG or him in Coachella being like, why are you in California? That's true. So he went for an auction.

Speaker 4 Here's one response to the whole McDonald's thing from a Democrat that I did find compelling.

Speaker 13 You've got Donald Trump putting on a little McDonald's costume because he thinks that's what people do.

Speaker 13 They're not trying to empathize with us. They are making fun of us.

Speaker 13 They are making fun of us.

Speaker 13 Donald Trump thinks that people who work at McDonald's are a joke.

Speaker 13 Elon Musk thinks that dangling money in front of a working person is a cute thing to do when the election of our lives is before us.

Speaker 13 Because that's what people and billionaires like that do.

Speaker 4 That was AOC, of course. I liked that because I think it turns it into a real populist argument and sort of exposes the fraud without being like, meh.

Speaker 4 No, I think that's right. Which that was my scientific term for what I thought most of the responses were like, meh.

Speaker 4 Yeah.

Speaker 4 Speaking of the world's richest man, Elon's now running a sweepstakes in Pennsylvania where he gives a million dollars a day to someone who signed his Super PACS petition.

Speaker 4 You sign a petition saying you support the First and Second Amendment. The only requirement, of course, is that you live in Pennsylvania or in one of the other swing states and are registered to vote.

Speaker 4 He's already given away at least two checks.

Speaker 4 But if you Google how to sign up, all the top results are articles examining whether this is legal. Tommy, have you read some of those articles? And can you tell us if it is in fact legal?

Speaker 5 Tommy's read an article. He's here to tell us what he found.

Speaker 8 Much like Elon, I skimmed a couple.

Speaker 4 Much like Donald Trump learning the fry later for the first time.

Speaker 8 Hey, here we are. Campaign Finance Law.
So the law specifically says you cannot pay or offer to pay someone to register to vote or to vote.

Speaker 8 And those who do so can be fined up to $10,000 or get five years in jail or both. Because basically, we don't want the election turning into a bunch of billionaires paying the most people to vote.

Speaker 5 Well, some of us don't want that. Some of us don't.

Speaker 8 Furthermore, the Department of Justice clarifies in its guidelines about prosecuting election offenses that bribes include lottery chances or sweepstakes.

Speaker 8 So making this sort of a sweepstakes for Elon does not a get out of jail free card. So some election law experts think that this gambit from Elon is clearly illegal.

Speaker 8 The must defenders will say, no, he's just offering a reward to people who sign his petition. He's not encouraging you to register to vote.

Speaker 8 But as you know, Dajo, to be eligible, you have to be registered to vote or live in one of these seven swing states.

Speaker 8 And the deadline for entering the contest just happens to be the deadline to register to vote in Michigan or Pennsylvania. So it's not subtle.
It's very clearly just designed and

Speaker 8 talked about in concert with a bunch of messages about registering or voting early. With all election law things, you can find experts who say it's illegal.
You can find those who say it's not.

Speaker 8 Big picture, I think Elon is betting that no one will enforce it.

Speaker 8 That if they do.

Speaker 4 Good bet when you look at the history of the FECA.

Speaker 8 Trump-friendly judges will probably get your back because they're greenlighting all kinds of campaign spending these days. And if Trump gets elected, obviously he will just

Speaker 8 never, ever prosecute Elon Musk.

Speaker 5 Down the list of pardons for him.

Speaker 8 Yeah, so I know Jamie Raskin talks about this in some more detail in today's What a Day newsletter, so check that out. But, you know, I think the bigger picture is like, what are the politics of this?

Speaker 8 Will people think it's gross?

Speaker 4 I kind of do.

Speaker 4 Gross or just like, oh,

Speaker 4 you got to pay people to vote for Trump? That's what I'm saying. Is that what I'm doing?

Speaker 8 It does not, I think Americans might inherently be offended by paying people off to vote.

Speaker 4 Well, that's why I, that's actually the part about the AOC clip that I liked even more than the McDonald's part is just like, oh, this billionaire is going to dangle a million dollars in front of the plebs to see if you'll vote for it.

Speaker 4 You know, it's like such a

Speaker 5 that said, if I were, I'll just say that if I were a registered voter in any of the swing states that were eligible, I would, of course, sign this pledge.

Speaker 5 Everybody listening, if you feel like you could sign this pledge, I would consider doing it because you can do a lot more with a million dollars than Elon Musk can. And yeah, no,

Speaker 5 what honestly it reminded me of is there's like old footage and photographs of like Belgian and British colonists like throwing coins and candies at the children in their colonies.

Speaker 5 And that's what Elon going out there and like dangling money in front of people like genuinely reminded me of.

Speaker 4 Yeah, it's.

Speaker 4 I don't think it's very, I don't know.

Speaker 4 I also don't think it's very effective just from a, like, yeah, you can sign the, if you're a registered voter or you register to vote, this still doesn't mean you're going to go vote.

Speaker 8 No.

Speaker 4 And the suggestion is like, okay, well, it's a First Amendment, Second Amendment petition so you're only gonna get republicans and then you're gonna have their contact info and then you know elon can get them with messaging and actually turn them out it's like no you just have a bunch of people who want money so they'll pretend to care about the first and second amendment and sign your dumb little petition and again you'd have to take our word for it uh a lot of they interviewed some trump campaign officials about this who of course all in background about elon and the ground game and everything and to a person they were all just like yeah he's got his own thing we've got our other things and he's just doing it where we're happy to have him out here but uh sounds like they but this is like I feel like this is the honorable Palmer's dick of the of the Elon shit, which is like, no, it's not the million dollar pledge.

Speaker 5 It'll make sense in a second. It's the tens of millions.

Speaker 4 He's doing the weave. He's going to be.
I'm doing the weave, baby.

Speaker 5 I've been weaving. Listen.

Speaker 5 Do you think Trump invented the weave?

Speaker 8 He has been weaving dicks forever. Yeah.

Speaker 5 It's the hundreds of millions of dollars being dropped on the race by Elon, by the crypto bros, buying ads. Like, this really is now like in the home stretch.

Speaker 5 There are these, like, there's like the, there's the Kamal Harris campaign and then there's the kind of twisted, bizarro, evil version, right?

Speaker 5 Like the Kamala Harris campaign has raised a billion dollars. Trump has Elon's money and all of this crypto money and all this billionaire money from Ken Griffin and others.

Speaker 5 There's a real field organization. There's their paid for field organization, which I really hope is working about as well

Speaker 5 as you would expect an Elon turned on field organization in the last weeks of this campaign. Then you have a turn out the vote operation versus a

Speaker 5 undermine and scare the vote operation. Like there are these two things sitting side by side, and Elon is a big part of that.

Speaker 4 Last thing before we get to Kamala Harris, we mentioned already the Democrats have different theories of the case about how to attack Trump and company.

Speaker 4 We haven't talked about our former boss, Barack Obama, who's been having a really good time on the campaign trail,

Speaker 4 just tearing into Trump. Let's listen to how he did it recently.

Speaker 5 You would be worried if your grandpa started acting like this.

Speaker 10 you would.

Speaker 4 I mean,

Speaker 4 right?

Speaker 10 You'd like call up your brother, your cousin, or something, be like, have you seen grandpa lately?

Speaker 2 What are we going to do?

Speaker 5 But this is coming from somebody who wants unchecked power,

Speaker 10 wants the most powerful office on earth

Speaker 9 with the nuclear codes and all that.

Speaker 10 Now,

Speaker 5 the point is, we don't,

Speaker 10 we do not need to see what an older, loonier Donald Trump looks like with no guardrails.

Speaker 5 America's ready to turn the page.

Speaker 4 Speaking of people who like dick jokes and speeches.

Speaker 4 So that's basically another version of the unserious man serious consequences that Kamala Harris has used. I don't know.
I like it.

Speaker 8 Yeah, I mean, I think threat to democracy can sound a little vague and hard to understand in practice. I think don't give kooky grandpa the nukes.
Like, that's, that's not complicated.

Speaker 4 Yeah, they'll

Speaker 4 see that one.

Speaker 5 Yes, I think that that was great. And it was much, it was actually much more like there's, it's basically just like Donald Trump would be a mad king.

Speaker 5 Sometimes we talk more about the mad, sometimes talk more about the king. And like, that was, I think, more mad focused.

Speaker 5 But you saw a little, little of the kind of the threat to democracy rhetoric with the phrase guardrails with no guardrails. It's very like kind of threat to democracy.

Speaker 4 It's, it's, it's, it's like the word guardrails just because it, uh, you can conjure up a picture at least, as opposed to some of these words that, uh, that the democracy defenders use.

Speaker 4 Yeah, no, for sure.

Speaker 5 Maybe everyone knows what a guardrail guardrail no i i i agree with that but i think like if you don't what do you mean guardrail like the argument that like donald trump is just a uh like he's losing it and you just don't want somebody who's losing it as president you don't really need the other party argument that like oh he mike pence doesn't support him he's gonna have a different group of people around him that is a different argument i i thought it was like i think that's a i well i think that second part is a very effective argument because i think i think the big obstacle here the big hurdle you've got to overcome is what tommy pointed out which is everyone's like oh yeah we survived the first trump term and they i think what you have to, the argument you have to make is, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's fine.

Speaker 4 And maybe you haven't tuned in since then, but this would be much different because he's fucking crazier.

Speaker 8 This has to be new information.

Speaker 4 He's crazier and the people around him that were like somewhat normal are all gone.

Speaker 4 And the people that are there, your Laura Loomers, your Mike Flynn's, all these people, they are fucking the bottom of the barrel.

Speaker 5 I completely agree with all that.

Speaker 5 I just think that like Barack Obama, even at his most death, like he's, we're all struggling to make this, to tell this story that's connecting the fact that he's a kind of

Speaker 5 a doofus who's losing a step and wandering around the stage and not totally control of his faculties from the authoritarian strongman that's coming towards us i think both are part of the story and we're all figuring out different ways to talk about them i think that that guardrails thing is just like that's a larger argument that we don't see there but i i get it

Speaker 4 What's poppin' listeners?

Speaker 12 I'm Lacey Mosley, host of the podcast Scam Goddess, the show that's an ode to fraud and all those who practice it. Each week, I talk with very special guests about the scammiest scammers of all time.

Speaker 12 Want to know about the fake heirs? We got them. What about a career con man? We've got them too.
Guys that will wine and dine you and then steal all your coins.

Speaker 12 Oh, you know they are represented because representation matters. I'm joined by guests like Nicole Beyer, Ira Madison III, Conan O'Brien, and more.

Speaker 12 Join the congregation and listen to Scam Goddess wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 4 The 2026 Chevy Equinox is more than an SUV. It's your Sunday tailgate and your parking lot snack bar.

Speaker 8 Your lucky jersey, your chairs, and your big cooler fit perfectly in your even bigger cargo space.

Speaker 8 And when it's go time, your 11.3-inch diagonal touchscreen's got the playbook, the playlist, and the tech to stay a step ahead. It's more than an SUV.
It's your Equinox.

Speaker 4 Chevrolet, together Let's Drive.

Speaker 14 Running a business is hard enough, so why make it harder with a dozen different apps that don't talk to each other? Introducing Odo, the only business software you'll ever need.

Speaker 14 It's an all-in-one, fully integrated platform that makes your work easier, from CRM, accounting, inventory, e-commerce, and more.

Speaker 14 And the best part, Odo replaces multiple expensive platforms for a fraction of the cost. That's why over thousands of businesses have made the switch.
So why not you? Try Odo for free at odoo.com.

Speaker 14 That's odoo.com.

Speaker 4 All right, we're recording this on Monday afternoon, West Coast time.

Speaker 4 And today alone, Kamala Harris did an event near Philly, a conversation with Liz Cheney, hosted by her pal Sarah Longwell from Bulwark. She was in the Detroit suburbs and the Milwaukee suburbs.

Speaker 4 Those were after we taped. Here's a sampling of the message she's driving in those places.
This is from her event in Detroit, and that was moderated by Maria Shriver.

Speaker 15 Madam Vice President, you know, everybody I talk to says, you know, I have to turn off the news. I can't read anything.
I'm meditating. I'm doing yoga.
I'm doing, I'm so anxious.

Speaker 15 I just don't even know. I'm eating gummies, all kinds of things, you know.

Speaker 7 What are you doing? What are you doing?

Speaker 15 Not eating gummies.

Speaker 4 I've said many times that I do believe Donald Trump to be an unserious man.

Speaker 16 But the consequences of him ever being in the White House again are brutally serious.

Speaker 16 And take it from the people who know him best, his former chief of staff when he was president, two former defense secretaries, his national security advisor, and of course his vice president, who have all in one way or another used the word that he is unfit to be president again and is dangerous.

Speaker 4 And that illustrates the challenge from the other side. She goes from gummies, laughing gummies, to he's a dangerous threat.

Speaker 5 It's so funny that just like, I'm sorry, sorry, but like Shriver just talking about what people are doing to deal with their stress just sounded so fucking rich.

Speaker 5 So rich. This is what it was.

Speaker 4 Yeah. What did you guys? So the headline in the Times from Monday morning's Pennsylvania event was, Cheney with Harris tells anti-abortion women it's okay to back her.
Just wild times.

Speaker 4 What's your take on what the strategy was behind these Cheney events?

Speaker 8 So, I mean, there's a Times analysis that talked about who both campaigns think are the persuadable voters left out there.

Speaker 8 And the Harris campaign thinks about 10% of voters in in swing states are still winnable.

Speaker 8 And a big chunk of those voters are Republican women who dislike Trump but need to hear more from her on the border and the economy to close the deal.

Speaker 8 And these events are laser-focused on those women. And they also, I think, generally push back on the Trump criticism of Kamala Harris as like a what's it?

Speaker 8 She's a Marxist, communist, fascist at this point, you know, whatever he's calling her, some sort of extreme radical.

Speaker 8 When you see her up there with Maria Shriver or Liz Cheney, I think that really rebuts

Speaker 8 those criticisms in a pretty strong way.

Speaker 4 I was watching the Pennsylvania one and when Kamala Harris got a question about abortion and she started giving her answer, I was watching Liz Cheney and I'm like, well, this is awkward because it's like usually they're just talking about things they agree on.

Speaker 4 And then Cheney asked to step in and then gave that answer on abortion.

Speaker 4 And it just made me think, you know, there's been some criticism from some corners of the internet on the left that like, oh, Kamala Harris is out there with the Cheneys and now she's blowing the whole thing.

Speaker 4 But like not only has Kamala Harris not moderated any positions or given up anything in order to get the support of Liz Cheney, there's Liz Cheney saying, oh, by the way, I'm against abortion, but I'm here because I think this is so important.

Speaker 4 And by the way, these abortion bans have gone way too far.

Speaker 4 She was talking about how in Texas, Ken Paxton, the attorney general, is suing to get women's private medical records because he wants to see if they've traveled over state lines to get an abortion.

Speaker 4 And Liz Cheney's like, we can't do this anymore. So I thought it was like, I thought it's really effective.

Speaker 5 Yeah, I just,

Speaker 5 Liz Cheney, I think, is an incredible spokesperson in that setting. It is

Speaker 5 like she's doing the thing we have been asking everyone to do.

Speaker 5 And it speaks to both what it clearly took for her to do this and also the cowardice of so many others that she is basically alone up there. But like, that was a great event.

Speaker 5 It was just a great event, and it's incredibly persuasive.

Speaker 8 I don't want to see Dick Cheney out there ever, but yes, Liz Cheney is a very good spokesperson.

Speaker 4 And I don't think he'd be useful many places.

Speaker 8 No. And I think she's like shown herself to be a principled person from impeachment until now.
And I think people give her the benefit of the doubt on a lot of the other stuff.

Speaker 4 And it, again, it just sends the message like, yeah, we don't agree. Yeah, I'm conservative, but like, there's just bigger things at stake right now.

Speaker 4 I want to talk a little bit more of that New York Times story that Tommy brought up about how both campaigns are identifying and thinking about undecided voters.

Speaker 4 Another group of undecided voters that both the Trump and Harris campaigns are targeting are disproportionately younger and less white. And they talk about that in the piece.

Speaker 4 One example, a 22-year-old in Arizona, they have him in the Times piece, who said he doesn't care who wins and that he only registered to vote because his mom made him.

Speaker 4 But he will vote for Harris if someone brings a ballot to his front door. I mean, I hope the Harris campaign gets his address.

Speaker 8 That's why I have a failed program.

Speaker 4 His name's in the piece. Give him a call.
Find his address. Send him a ballot.

Speaker 5 How long did the Times interview take, my man?

Speaker 5 You care a little bit. You care enough to spend a whole interview talking about it.

Speaker 4 That's a good point.

Speaker 8 That's a fair point.

Speaker 5 How much you don't care.

Speaker 4 Trump campaign thinks that about 5% of voters are undecided.

Speaker 4 And like you said, it's funny because we're going to talk about Pluff's interview in a little bit with John Heilman, but Pluff said there's about 4%.

Speaker 4 But I think what you mentioned from the Times piece is the Harris campaign thinks that up to 10% are persuadable.

Speaker 4 And the reason I think it's bigger is because of those Republican women or right-leaning independent women who just do not like Trump, but are not yet sold on Harris.

Speaker 5 Yeah,

Speaker 5 it's hard to tell just sort of how people slice and dice the numbers between like the group of voters that either won't vote or almost certainly would vote for Trump, the group of people that won't vote or almost certainly or probably would vote for Kamala, and then the group of people that are truly going to vote or may or may not vote but are actually undecided.

Speaker 8 Yeah, the Times found that they think that 3.7% of voters in Battleground States are undecided, which is only 1.2 million people. So 1.2 million truly undecided.
But I think you're right.

Speaker 8 These numbers, these percentages swell when you're talking about

Speaker 8 not voting to voting or

Speaker 8 people who might be persuaded to stay home, basically.

Speaker 4 Anything else you guys found notable in that story?

Speaker 5 I just

Speaker 5 the

Speaker 5 refrain of how people want more information and then

Speaker 5 how hard it is to get that people, the readily available information. And even that when Kamal Harris does this huge round of press, how little it ultimately gets to those voters.
It's one piece.

Speaker 5 In the Tacorni Times, no single program reached more than one in three of those undecided voters.

Speaker 4 It's just like, I feel surprised by that other direction. direction.
Yeah, because so it says

Speaker 4 in the Times piece, it said internal surveys, the Harris campaign internal surveys, showed that two-thirds of undecided voters in the Battleground states had consumed at least some of Kamala's interviews during her big media blitz week or two weeks, but no single program reached more than one in three of those undecided voters.

Speaker 4 But two-thirds of undecided is just seeing something.

Speaker 4 That shocked me.

Speaker 5 I just like. Big daddy gang? I gasped.
I just like, what does it mean for, I just like, how hard it is. Like, these are all people saying they want more information.

Speaker 5 She's doing a full court press across every kind of media and like maybe

Speaker 4 maybe one in three is getting some clip of one thing it's just like it just reminds just like I thought where you were gonna go with the more information complaint is the woman that they interviewed at the end of the piece she's like a 40 something woman in Pennsylvania and she doesn't like Trump but she's like worried about the economy she goes you know I've heard a little bit about Conway Harris's plans but on housing she wants to give like first-time home buyers a $25,000 credit on their down payment.

Speaker 4 And I just don't want to be given more money. And no one's talking about the supply of housing.
And I was like, oh, she wants to build 3 million more. But she also said she might write in RFK Jr.

Speaker 5 as a protest of the same woman.

Speaker 4 Yeah, that was

Speaker 4 tough. Undecided voters are tough.

Speaker 5 And we love them. And we love them.
And we don't want to say anything other than we love them. I just love their whole energy that they're bringing to this.

Speaker 4 I also found it interesting that of the more than 100 clips during her media blitz that the Harris campaign tested for their effectiveness in increasing her support,

Speaker 4 her proposal about providing home care for adding home care coverage to Medicare coverage for seniors ranked at the top, which is interesting because, again, who's going to talk about that on shows like ours

Speaker 4 and cable and everywhere else? I mean, we mentioned it, but like it's not, it's not going to get people, get pundits excited, but it moves votes. Yeah, it's the thing people care about.

Speaker 8 I also thought the Trump campaign found that upper grabs voters were six times more likely than other Battleground voters to be motivated by their views of the war in Gaza.

Speaker 8 They didn't really say in which direction.

Speaker 4 I found that interesting too, especially since the Harris campaign doesn't seem to see that.

Speaker 5 So there was that fact, and then the other point that the other, the other fact from the Trump campaign is that the undecided are more likely to work two jobs on average, and they earn $15,000 less per household than the battleground voters who have made up their minds.

Speaker 5 And I saw those two facts side by side, and I was like, I'm trying to make sense of this.

Speaker 5 So undecided voters are working two jobs and really struggling, but also more motivated by the Middle East than other voters. And I wondered if some of that was a little bit of them

Speaker 5 wishcasting and kind of putting a little something out there.

Speaker 4 I think it's also who the pool is that you're talking about. If these voters are younger, you're just going to get more of them that care about Gaza than older voters, I think.

Speaker 8 Yeah, the other sort of last thing I noticed on this was they talked about how Kamal Harris bought ads on daytime Fox because more women are watching Fox during the day than at night when it's more opinion-focused.

Speaker 8 And then the Washington Post had a bunch of swing state polls out today where they asked people about their main news sources, and they found that about a quarter of those who consider Fox a main source of news said they're considering voting for Kamala Harris, with about one in six saying they have already or definitely planned to vote for her, which is just a very surprising fact, I thought.

Speaker 4 Well, on the last pod we did, I can't remember when, with Dan, I had looked at the latest New York Times poll, and that showed that 10% of undecided voters say that Fox was a news source for them.

Speaker 5 Yeah, but then I wonder, like, okay, so then the kind of person answering these polls is the kind of person consuming this news. And I don't know.

Speaker 5 It made me think, like, well, does that tell you more about the poll than it does about the voters?

Speaker 4 Well, we also got more insight into how the Harris campaign is thinking about this extremely close race from David Pluff in a new interview with Puck's John Heilman. Here's some of that.

Speaker 5 This race is just dead even.

Speaker 17 And listen, you know, I think the Trump campaign would admit that too.

Speaker 17 And you can tell based on their activity and what they're saying, I guess my confidence confidence is more based on looking at who the undecided voters are.

Speaker 17 And, you know, data these days is incredibly rich and sophisticated. Every battleground state of the seven, there's at least 4% who are still trying to decide who to vote for.

Speaker 17 And the early voting data we're seeing so far, there's no suggestion that they are turning out a bunch of irregular voters.

Speaker 2 Does your data in the seven battleground states show any sign that Trump has momentum and that he's tight?

Speaker 2 Whether you say, I get that, that it's it's mathematically, statistically, this is going to be a toss-up race within the margin of error in all seven. But you could see

Speaker 2 there is momentum that's coming through in your data that's not noise. Does the Trump campaign have any of that in any of the seven battleground states?

Speaker 4 No. I would listen to an interview with David Pluff.
Maybe he should just give like a five minutes every night from now until

Speaker 4 the next two weeks. Wouldn't that be nice? For sure.
Because it's not like, I call this it's prestige hopium.

Speaker 4 It's not like everything's going to be fine kind of thing, but it is because

Speaker 4 at the end, he's still like, yeah, we could lose this race. It's very close.
It's tied, right? But it is, it's just a lot of great insight from Pluff. I highly recommend you listen to it.

Speaker 4 And Pluff, if you have any more stuff to say, just come on Pods.

Speaker 5 We'll do that five minutes here or the Call Map, by the way.

Speaker 5 But yeah, it's also like, there's a point of the interview where

Speaker 5 Heilaman asked him like, what do you say to people looking at the swinging of

Speaker 5 the Nate Silver average? And he's like, I wouldn't look at at that.

Speaker 4 I don't look at that. And it's just like,

Speaker 4 it's based on public polls.

Speaker 8 Yeah, they just don't look. He won't look at any public polls because he thinks they're junk.

Speaker 5 But that, but just that like,

Speaker 4 that they're based on public polls.

Speaker 5 And if the Nate Silver model says it's 52, 48 versus 48, 52, it still means that in 48 times out of 100 Kamala wins or 48 times out of 100 Trump wins, like these little changes don't matter.

Speaker 5 And it was like what Pluff said to Dan a couple of days ago, very similar to what he's saying here, which is basically like these ebbs and flows in the public polling that are causing these like epic swings and vibe shift and text to me are like, they're just not real.

Speaker 5 They're just not real.

Speaker 8 Yeah, I mean, I think some of the, another important point he made was that Trump is just so dependent on turning out these first-time or irregular voters, and that's a real risk.

Speaker 8 And he repeated his observation that they're not seeing incels marauding to early vote locations. So that was good to hear.

Speaker 8 And again, we talk a lot about how Democrats are struggling to win over male voters, but Pluff talked about Trump's massive disadvantage when it comes to women, especially college-educated women and women under 29.

Speaker 8 And then again, for all the talk about shifts in the Latino vote, he made the point that a lot of the numbers are coming from these national polls where you're sampling like 300, 400 total people.

Speaker 8 And, you know, there are going to be states like Florida where Trump is going to win overwhelmingly and is going to win with Latino voters.

Speaker 8 And that's going to skew what sort of the aggregate picture looks like. But really, the Harris campaign is concerned about Arizona, Nevada, and parts of Pennsylvania.

Speaker 4 Yeah. I I also thought, just in general, he said, look, Trump's going to get 48, 48.5% of the vote.
And that's probably higher than he got even in 2020.

Speaker 4 He's like, that's just a fact that we all are going to have to live with. And he thinks that any tightening that we have seen in the polls lately is just polls that had Trump at 43, 44, 45.

Speaker 4 And then finally, he's getting his vote share, which he's going to end up getting. And she's, you know, sitting at 49

Speaker 4 in a lot of these. And so I think when, you know, he keeps, he has said before to Dan too, 48, 48 or 48, 47 in like all these swing states.

Speaker 4 And he said that the reason that he has confidence, that he's cautiously confident is what he said, is that the, he thinks that they have a higher ceiling, that Kamala Harris has a higher ceiling than Trump does, and that the remaining voters who are undecided look more like Harris voters than Trump voters.

Speaker 4 But that said, They still have to get those voters out. They still have some persuasion to do.

Speaker 4 And he also said that he thinks door knocking and canvassing and like going out there is going to be more important this year, this election, than it has been almost any other election.

Speaker 5 Yeah, and partly because the campaign started later. There are people that truly are undecided and want more information, and it may be somebody coming to their door to give it to them.

Speaker 4 Like that kid in Arizona who needs the ballot dropped off at his door.

Speaker 4 How are you guys feeling?

Speaker 8 Terrible.

Speaker 4 Yeah, I don't feel great.

Speaker 8 I just want to be over.

Speaker 5 I just, I went into the CBS and I got a two-for-one Pepsid so that I could have one in my house and one in my car, which is, I think, maybe just being 42.

Speaker 5 I think that, I think if we were up by five, I still probably would need it, but I can't be sure.

Speaker 4 I can't be sure. I feel fairly zen.

Speaker 4 You know, I was a little angsty over the weekend. I did go to a children's birthday party and was talking to one of the parents.
And of course, you have to, you know, you do the pod wherever you go.

Speaker 4 And

Speaker 4 I was giving what I thought was just a pretty not optimistic or pessimistic neutral analysis of where the race stands. And I finished up and then she walked back up to me 10 seconds later.

Speaker 4 She goes, you made me feel awful. This is scary.
And I'm like, yeah, we can lose. Like, it's not.
No one should think that.

Speaker 4 I think there was, I think there was some, a lot of good feelings, as there should have been,

Speaker 4 after the switch, after the convention, after the debate.

Speaker 4 I know that I thought that there was a possibility if she did well in the debate, maybe she'd open a little bit of lead that would be stable and that would be that.

Speaker 4 It's just, it's going to be a tied race.

Speaker 8 What feels bad is that this piece of shit is even in the running. Yes.
Of course. And that will never not be the case.

Speaker 4 Yep. Of course.

Speaker 5 But it's also like, I just don't want us to do the same thing we've did in 2016. Like, who gives a shit how you feel over the next two weeks? I'm sorry, Maria Shriver.

Speaker 4 It doesn't fucking matter.

Speaker 5 No, but it doesn't matter how. No, thank you.
And thank you for asking.

Speaker 4 I'm just checking with you. Thank you for the question.
Thank you for the question.

Speaker 5 Like, oh, what are you doing to deal with all the stress? The stress over the next two weeks?

Speaker 4 Who cares?

Speaker 4 Who fucking cares? And I know

Speaker 4 you guys have done this too, and you felt the same thing. Like, I ended up doing a kickoff call for the Wisconsin Democrats, their organizers, the whole staff Sunday night.

Speaker 4 And after a weekend of feeling a little angsty about everything, I finished that call and I heard all the stories about the doors they knocked on and the voters they talked to.

Speaker 4 And I was just listening. I was like listening on the call after I like talked to them for a couple of minutes and I stayed on for the whole half hour and I'm like, this, I walked out of that call.

Speaker 4 I'm like, this was better than any good poll. I just felt, I felt so great.
Now, is that feeling valid because it's all anecdotal? Who knows? Maybe not, but it felt good.

Speaker 5 Well, that was a point that like you'll hear with Schatz where he was talking about that moment where Kamo says, oh, you're at the wrong rally. You're looking for the smaller one down the street.

Speaker 5 And he said that when he was first running, there were no polls. He's running a state legislator race in Hawaii.
And that like you did mat, the vibes did matter.

Speaker 5 They mattered both because they represented how things would go, but also vibes will help you get things to where you need them to go. And so a lot less angsting, like, are we going to be okay text?

Speaker 5 It is not known. It will not be known until a few days after the election.
Everybody's just got to go to Vote Save America and do the shift you haven't done yet.

Speaker 4 Well, who needs polls, though, when we now have actual votes coming in that we can analyze before they've even been counted?

Speaker 4 That's right, more than 15 million people have already voted early, which means tea leaves are being read and lessons are not being learned.

Speaker 4 And either of you guys want to remind folks what the early vote can and can't tell us?

Speaker 5 Yeah, it can't tell us anything.

Speaker 4 Nothing.

Speaker 5 It can't tell you anything because this

Speaker 5 early voting has gone

Speaker 5 2020, 2022, 2024.

Speaker 5 each of these elections, like the pandemic, post-pandemic, the rise of vote by mail and early voting, a Republican candidate who has just has come out against vote by mail and tried to push people towards election day.

Speaker 5 Like the influence of all of this means we just don't know what the vote share will be on election day. And an election that will be decided by a point or two, if we're lucky, that will really matter.

Speaker 5 And so the margins are what matters, and there's no way to know the margins.

Speaker 5 Like maybe there's value to it for a campaign and very specific kind of targeting and information, but for us out here in the world, not particularly useful.

Speaker 8 Yeah, unless you're doing very sophisticated like regression analysis based on blah, blah, blah, math, math, like don't read this stuff. Yeah.
It's useless.

Speaker 4 Yeah. So everyone knows because you know, we heard Pluff talking about the, they feel good about the incels not showing up at the polls.
You might be thinking like the ballots aren't coming in sticky.

Speaker 4 So, wow, this is a real setting a real record on this episode.

Speaker 4 Good episode.

Speaker 4 What the early vote can tell you, and again, it can really tell campaigns this who are who have so much sophisticated data and are calling thousands of people a night and ground game and all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 4 You know, they can tell you party, demographic information, vote history. I think that's what Pluff's referring to.

Speaker 4 So in some states, you know if the voter who's voted early has voted a lot before or are one of those low propensity voters, and then you can see if the low propensity voter looks like a Harris voter or looks like a Trump voter.

Speaker 4 So you can make some educated guesses if you're the campaign.

Speaker 4 And that only helps you insofar as not knowing if you're going to win, but knowing, okay, we've got these voters, but we still need to go after these voters because they haven't early voted yet.

Speaker 4 And so now we need to go make sure that they send their ballots in. Like that's what early vote is good for in a campaign.
It's not good for telling you like, oh, yeah, now we're going to win.

Speaker 4 Because even if you ask a campaign with sophisticated data analysis about what the early votes are in, they'll say, well, we're a little down.

Speaker 4 but hopefully on election day, everything, you know, we're going to chase all those ballots that didn't come in yet. That's what they'll say.

Speaker 5 And by the way, that's not necessarily a false hope, right? Like, there have been elections where the early vote people took that to predict a Democratic lean that wasn't there.

Speaker 5 There have been times where I used to predict a Republican lean that wasn't there. Like, it's just, it's not been predictive.

Speaker 8 There were people in 2016 looking at the early vote predicting landslide Hillary Clinton victories, and they could not have possibly been more wrong. Let's just not make that mistake again.

Speaker 4 And, and, you know, because, again, the behavior, the voting behavior has changed so much that even in, I remember in 2022, the early vote was sort of bad for Democrats, quote unquote, bad compared to 2020 because everyone was using the 2020 comparison.

Speaker 4 And it turned out that was all wrong because people's behavior started changing.

Speaker 5 We will find out just after the election what we learned about early vote and what we learned about the polling this cycle.

Speaker 4 But there's really

Speaker 4 next

Speaker 4 overapply them.

Speaker 4 We will fight the last war yet again. The last war.

Speaker 8 There's come alo to the end cells.

Speaker 4 Do not come.

Speaker 5 Do not come. That's for the vol cells.

Speaker 4 Do not come. Oh, God.

Speaker 8 You can yes and a joke once.

Speaker 4 Yeah.

Speaker 4 That's some funny shit.

Speaker 4 Okay, when we come back from the break, Lovett's going to talk with Senator Brian Schatz about the latest with the key Senate races in the future. In a senator on this episode,

Speaker 4 Schatz is like,

Speaker 4 how did this happen to me?

Speaker 8 That's the throw to shots of me doing that. Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 5 Anyway, you know who is coming on the pod? It's Senator Brian Schatz.

Speaker 5 Is that what you want, Tommy? Want me to add to your little joke?

Speaker 4 Okay. You're like your little

Speaker 4 joke, see?

Speaker 4 Oh, you can tie a little joke, too.

Speaker 4 Oh, my God. You can make us already scorecards.

Speaker 4 We're already in the ads. Anyway, yeah, we have two quick announcements.

Speaker 4 First, the entire season of Empire City, The Untold Origin Story of the NYPD, is finally out.

Speaker 4 The series that was named one of Vulture's best podcasts of 2024 takes listeners through pivotal moments in the NYPD's history that shape modern policing, including how the police got militarized, what happened when New York City cops started policing abortion, and the first ever investigation into police corruption.

Speaker 4 You can binge all episodes now by following Empire City wherever you get your podcasts and enjoy ad-free listening by joining Wondery Plus and the Wonder app or on Apple Podcasts. Also,

Speaker 4 you don't need us to tell you this, but the most effective messengers in these final days are not people like us. What? They're people like you.

Speaker 4 That's why we've launched what we're calling Last Call. Last Call.
Last Call. We feel like we should have like a ding.

Speaker 4 Let's add a ding in the post. Let someone add a ding there.
We need everyone listening. That means you.

Speaker 4 if you're listening, we're talking to you, to think of three people you know in swing states, okay?

Speaker 4 Three people you know, Arizona, Nevada, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, or Georgia. Friend, former colleague, a one-time hookup,

Speaker 4 a frenemy, an acquaintance.

Speaker 5 The love of your life who moved away, broke your heart.

Speaker 4 Yeah, the one that got away. Here's the ask.
Scroll through your contacts list, find those names, and text or call them or message them. Do whatever you have to do.

Speaker 4 Then do that five more times before election day. Reminders work.
Ask them if they have a plan to vote. You can send them to Vote Save America.
They can look at their ballots.

Speaker 4 They can figure out to make a plan to vote.

Speaker 4 And if you don't know anyone in those states, which fuck you, coastal elite, you definitely know three people who could use a nudge to vote no matter where they live.

Speaker 4 And that's important too, you know.

Speaker 5 And if, and if, and for one lucky person who does it, we're giving you a million dollars.

Speaker 4 That is for the lawyer. The right person.
A million dollars. That is not true.
That's not true. There's a million dollars in it.
That is parody. For one lucky person.
That is parody.

Speaker 4 One million dollars. Wow.

Speaker 4 What a contest. Your move, FEC.

Speaker 4 Again, if you don't know what to say in those texts, DMs, and calls, go to votesaveameric.com slash vote, where you can sign up to get scripts that you can put in your own words to send to your friends, maybe even written by John Lovett.

Speaker 4 Just go to votesaveameric.com slash vote and click get the script to get started. This message has been paid for by Votesave America.
You can learn more at votesaveameric.com.

Speaker 4 This ad has not been authorized by any candidate or candidates committee. When we come back, Brian Schatz.

Speaker 11 Hey, weirdos, I'm Elena and I'm Ash and we are the hosts of Morbid Podcast.

Speaker 18 Each week we dive into the dark and fascinating world of true crime, spooky history, and the unexplained.

Speaker 11 From infamous killers and unsolved mysteries to haunted places and strange legends, we cover it all with research, empathy, humor, and a few creative expletives.

Speaker 18 It's smart, it's spooky, and it's just the right amount of weird.

Speaker 11 Two new episodes drop every week, and there's even a bonus once a month.

Speaker 18 Find us wherever you listen to podcasts.

Speaker 12 Yay! Woo!

Speaker 14 Running a business is hard enough, so why make it harder with a dozen different apps that don't talk to each other? Introducing Odo, the only business software you'll ever need.

Speaker 14 It's an all-in-one, fully integrated platform that makes your work easier. From CRM, accounting, inventory, e-commerce, and more.

Speaker 14 And the best part, Odo replaces multiple expensive platforms for a fraction of the cost. That's why over thousands of businesses have made the switch.
So why not you? Try Odoo for free at odoo.com.

Speaker 14 That's odoo.com.

Speaker 19 At Marisa's, we're all about great jeans. You know, the ones that fit you just right? The ones that simply make you feel good.
Because you don't just wear jeans, you live in them.

Speaker 19 Find great jeans starting at 29.90 in stores and at marisas.com.

Speaker 5 Joining us today, friend of the show from the great state of Hawaii, Senator Brian Schatz, welcome back to the pod.

Speaker 10 Nice to be back here, John. Good to see you.

Speaker 5 Yeah, it's great to see you too. Senator Schatz, I just want you to know

Speaker 5 I'm now losing it. So this is going to be, let's see what happens.

Speaker 5 The anxiety is through the roof. The priless ex not working.
I'm having fever dreams. I'm having stress dreams.

Speaker 5 So we have two weeks left.

Speaker 4 People are voting.

Speaker 5 How are you feeling? How are you feeling about the state of the race here?

Speaker 4 Look,

Speaker 10 I have to say it. I'll say it this way.

Speaker 10 We are slightly ahead. And if we do everything we're supposed to do, we will win.
And if we do anything we're not supposed to do, we will not.

Speaker 10 So I like our chances,

Speaker 10 but we really do have to execute in the next couple of weeks. Now, Kamal, the good news, right, is that our candidate is executing at a super, super high level.

Speaker 10 And that's not just important from the standpoint of vote getting. It also gives a lot of confidence to the grassroots out there, the people who are giving money, the people who are knocking on doors.

Speaker 10 When you see your candidate kicking ass, you kind of want want to, you know, follow that example. So I think it's, it's as important that she sort of lead us that

Speaker 10 as it is that she sort of demonstrate that she's the right person to be the next president of the United States. So I'm feeling pretty confident, but definitely not overconfident.

Speaker 10 And, you know, there's an old line in an old movie, I don't trust happiness. So I'm going to be scared all the way through.

Speaker 5 Yeah, that's.

Speaker 5 Sounds Jewish.

Speaker 5 So let's talk about what we need to do.

Speaker 5 I was talking about this with Tim Miller, and he used a sports analogy, which is it's now about the 12th man, it's now about the crowd and what the crowd can do.

Speaker 5 But on the other hand, you know, we have to do everything right, and we can't do anything wrong in order to win. Why does that logic not apply to Donald Trump?

Speaker 10 Well, listen, I don't know. And maybe it does, right?

Speaker 10 Maybe some of these hiccups, maybe the fact that he's starting to turn down media opportunities, maybe the fact that he's not even campaigning in swing states, but going to California and New York, like all of that could end up being, in retrospect, the reason he loses.

Speaker 10 All we can control, though, is what we're up to. And we have to execute as well as we possibly can because of the Electoral College.

Speaker 10 If this were a popular vote thing, I think I'd feel a little more confident. But I do feel confident, and it's a weird thing, right? The polling is fine, but not dispositive.

Speaker 10 But I will tell you, last night

Speaker 10 when when the vice president was interrupted by some hecklers and she said oh no you must be you must be at the wrong rally there's a smaller one down the street it was such a small thing and yet it was such a big thing you only do that if you have a spring in your step and i have very look i you know i started in politics in in state legislative races where we had no money for polling and so it was a lot about body language and organization and kind of the vibes on the ground and we could predict with some regularity, with some confidence, who was going to win without any polling.

Speaker 10 And so I would say if you took all the polling out of it, Kamala Harris is kicking ass and Donald Trump is melting down.

Speaker 10 And then if you put the polling into it, it's damn close.

Speaker 5 I love that. I love a vibes-based analysis.
Let's talk about Trump. So we've got...
I think two stories right now. One is Mad King.
He's bouncing and swaying to the music.

Speaker 5 He's rambling, seeming confused. He's canceling interviews and events.
The Harris Walls campaign is asking on social, are you okay?

Speaker 5 And then we've got the two-bit authoritarian. He's starting to deploy the military, handle his enemies, promising mass deportations, threatening democracy.

Speaker 5 How are you putting those two stories together right now?

Speaker 10 Well, I don't think it's that hard.

Speaker 10 I mean, I think that the problem with characterizing him as a threat to democracy is that you're sort of inherently giving him a ton of power, power over our collective psyches, power over the American experiment.

Speaker 10 And then he seems strong.

Speaker 10 And so i think what the harris campaign has done and sort of unlocked even in a way that the biden the successful biden campaign um did not was this idea that sure he is a threat but he's also a joke yeah and if you look through history lots of people who did lots of bad things were also ridiculous figures in in in human um history and so he's both of those things he's a legitimate threat to the American way of life, and he's also a jackass.

Speaker 10 And one of the things that I think Kamala is doing well, and one of the reasons that we were doing poorly with Biden, frankly, as our standard-bearer, is there's just at least some portion of the electorate that wants someone who's on the ball, who looks like they're kind of like smacking the other side around.

Speaker 10 And they're not really sure what they think about the issues, but they want someone who looks like a good television president, right? Like someone who looks like they're kicking ass.

Speaker 10 And Kamala Harris looks like she's kicking ass. And whatever Donald Trump's like, you know, personal flaws and policy flaws

Speaker 10 and his sort of

Speaker 10 almost evil way of viewing the American experiment, he had some game back in the day. Like he could actually be fun to watch, interesting to watch, infuriating to watch, but like good television.

Speaker 10 This is not good television anymore. And I think that there is something pretty significant about Kamala pointing that out.

Speaker 10 It's, of course, not the main thing, but remember, people vote for your side for their reasons, not yours. We are not looking to get vindicated here.
We're just looking for the W.

Speaker 5 Yeah, it's funny as you say that.

Speaker 5 I hadn't thought about it that way because I remember early in like 2017, 2018, I would say, like, hey, everybody, we got to like accept like Trump has some charm here. He has some charisma.

Speaker 5 He can be funny. And people really, they did not care for it.

Speaker 5 But it, it reminds me, have you seen these videos going around of Frankie Valley being brought out to the microphones to lip-sync his old hits? There's a little bit of a Frankie Valley energy

Speaker 5 to it where

Speaker 5 I actually thought about it that way, that he really is kind of,

Speaker 5 he's trying to do

Speaker 5 the performance he used to do. And it's not, it isn't working.
It isn't working.

Speaker 10 Listen, when I, so, you know, I grew up in Hawaii and we used to go, you guys call it karaoke, we call it karaoke. And, you know, I would always sing, you know, just once by James Ingram.

Speaker 10 It was a blast. I was 16 years old, then I was 26 years old.
And there was some point at which, you know, I'm in my 30s. I'm singing just once by, is it fun anymore? Is it charming anymore?

Speaker 10 Is it hilarious anymore? I feel like he's sort of the last guy at the karaoke bar, you know, and he won't let go of the microphone.

Speaker 5 You know, that story is,

Speaker 5 I think it's helpful. It's a good analogy.
It does make me sad. I think you could keep doing karaoke.
I don't think you need to stop.

Speaker 5 I don't think you can age out of it. And I think that you should let that go.
That's something, that's projection.

Speaker 10 Listen, I'm not saying that I shouldn't sing. I'm just saying I should maybe pick a new song.

Speaker 5 Yeah, no, okay, pick a new song. Pick a new song.
So it's a close race. You'd rather be us than them, but Trump could win.

Speaker 5 And based on what you're seeing right now, and only to point us to places where we have to work harder, close some gaps, if Trump eks it out, how did he do it? How did he put together the coalition?

Speaker 5 What are we missing?

Speaker 10 I still think we need more actual human beings in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, and we need more money in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Ohio for Sherrod Brown. You know, look,

Speaker 10 it is fair to say that some of these races, you know, the die is cast, the money is spent, and the voters, you know, it's basically up to the voters now.

Speaker 10 But there are a couple of places where it's close enough and the turnout operations matter enough and they are sophisticated enough where you could take a person from, you know, who lives in Santa Monica or lives in, you know, South Texas and just wants to help and they get on that online phone banking thing and they actually make a difference.

Speaker 10 So I would still help in the Midwest, both by sending money and by either showing up physically or making phone calls.

Speaker 5 So Trump has been pulling out of events.

Speaker 5 It's clear his campaign is trying to take him out of these sort of more national platforms, whether it's an NBC interview, a CNBC interview, 60 Minutes, and they're just sort of resigned to what he's going to do at the rallies.

Speaker 5 Meanwhile,

Speaker 5 the thought might be, okay, so they're letting his freak flag fly in these debates that are mostly reaching his supporters.

Speaker 5 They're counting on the media not covering it really that effectively or kind of sainwashing him or people not really seeing what he's saying at these rallies, but they're going to make up for it with ads that are more mainstream.

Speaker 5 And yet in Pennsylvania, they're running millions upon millions of dollars of ads demonizing trans people as opposed to inflation or the economy or what have you. Can you make sense of it at all?

Speaker 5 Is there any theory to it that we might look back on and say, oh, that actually was smarter than it looked?

Speaker 10 No, it's not smarter than it looks. They tried it the last couple of cycles.
It doesn't work. It is their happy place ideologically, and it is where they go when they don't have anything to run on.

Speaker 10 Look, they want to be closing with an inflation message, right?

Speaker 10 They want to be closing with an economic message.

Speaker 10 But Kamala Harris and the Democrats, Bob Casey, and Sherrod Brown and John Tester and Tammy Baldwin and everybody else have basically erased the Republicans' lead on the economy.

Speaker 10 And so they just sort of like dig in. You know, it used to be the caravans.

Speaker 10 And

Speaker 10 because, first of all, border crossings are at an all-time low, but at a low over the last several years, and the Republicans killed the border security bill, they don't have that one.

Speaker 10 They don't have inflation. And so they're just kind of like digging around

Speaker 10 in their trunk trying to find something. And this is their sort of ideological safe space.
There's no evidence that this moves swing voters.

Speaker 10 And I think Tim Waltz and Kamala Harris and everybody else is handling it well, which is to, you know, stand for equality, but not to dwell on it. Because frankly,

Speaker 10 what people find offensive about that,

Speaker 10 regular folks, is like, why are you even talking about that? Like, that has nothing to do with my life.

Speaker 5 So Trump is doing a fair amount of a certain kind of press, which is interviews with podcasters and influencers in the kind of loosely part of the manosphere trying to reach these lower propensity, less political men.

Speaker 5 A, do you worry about it? And then B, should Kamal Harris go on Joe Rogan?

Speaker 10 Sure. Listen, I worry about everything, but that doesn't mean that I think this is like the winning strategy.

Speaker 10 I think the winning strategy would be for him to, you know, wake up one morning and pretend to be a moderate and, you know, say nice things about democracy.

Speaker 10 That would worry me. Whether this will work or not, I have no idea.
Yeah, I think she should go on Joe Rogan. I know people who listen to Joe Rogan.
I think she can handle Joe Rogan.

Speaker 10 I think as I've, you know, and I've watched clips, I haven't listened to like a whole Joe Rogan podcast because I can't set aside two and a half hours necessarily. But,

Speaker 10 you know, one of the things that I think is true about Joe Rogan is that he's kind of impressionable and likes to be kind to his guests.

Speaker 10 And I just don't imagine that he's going to come in like loaded for bear.

Speaker 10 I'm sure he'll have some prepped questions, but in a sort of political discussion between Kamala Harris and Joe Rogan, I do think Kamala, you know, wins the exchange.

Speaker 10 Now, does that end up in, you know, a bunch of clippable memes that, you know, are designed to make her look bad? Sure. But I still think, you know, they're going to do that anyway.

Speaker 10 Those memes are going to be created anyway. And I just think she looks strong.
She looks unafraid. And

Speaker 10 I think one of the other things that, you know, I got a couple of buddies who, you know, have difficulty with Kamala, but not for any real reason other than they have been sort of poisoned by

Speaker 10 the internet. And so sometimes you just have to break through that palace guard and talk to people directly.
So, but like, do I think the whole campaign is going to hinge on going on Joe Rogan?

Speaker 10 I do not. I just think she should basically find whatever audience she can find.

Speaker 10 And I think what the cool thing about their campaign is I think they've figured out both like probably statistically speaking, because they have real data operations, and intuitively that basically wherever she goes she and she presents she ends up slightly more popular than when she came in and so yeah my view is if that's true then joe rogan's got 12 million people and you should talk to him yeah more more more kamala is more more trump is less yeah and also like brett bear she went she did it i think there were good moments and there's moments they're exploiting whether you call it a big win a medium win a draw whatever you want to say about it it's not going to get tougher than that.

Speaker 5 It's not going to get harder than that. The combination of

Speaker 5 questions designed to go for biggest vulnerabilities, the interrupting, all of it was like, I think, as tough an interview as she could possibly have.

Speaker 5 So any logic for that interview to me says like, go, go there. Like, just like, fuck it.

Speaker 5 Let's talk about the Senate.

Speaker 5 Your colleague from Texas, John Cornyn, who's leading candidate to succeed Mitch McConnell, whether in majority or minority, vowed to block nominees for Kamala Harris he deems too far left.

Speaker 5 He said, I'm not going to schedule a vote on some wild-eyed radical nominee.

Speaker 5 So if Kamala Harris wins and the Senate flips, would Kamala Harris be able to replace a Supreme Court justice or even have a cabinet?

Speaker 10 I don't know the answer to that. And that's why I really don't.
And I, you know, I don't like the hypotheticals just because I don't even like to stipulate either a win or a loss on either side.

Speaker 10 But I, but I do think it illustrates how important it is for us to focus on these Senate Senate races.

Speaker 10 Like there is no path to a Kamala Harris cabinet or to a rebalancing of the Supreme Court or to climate action or to codifying Roe

Speaker 10 or to codifying LGBTQ rights or any economic progress without a Democratic Senate. And I just don't want anybody to get sort of despondent here.

Speaker 10 We were here two years ago and four years ago, and it was predicted by all the smart people that we were going to lose the Senate. And then we kept the Senate, and then we kept the Senate again.

Speaker 10 And we've passed the biggest climate action in human history. And we reduced the price of prescription medicine.
And we've done all these incredible things only because we won the Senate.

Speaker 10 And so, yes, the presidency is job one, but you know, job 1A is making sure Sherrod Brown and John Tester and Tammy Baldwin and Alyssa Slotkin and Bob Casey return to the Senate.

Speaker 5 So, talk to me about Nebraska, Texas, Florida.

Speaker 10 I'm not going to talk about Nebraska at all.

Speaker 10 I don't know very much about it, and I don't want that to polarize.

Speaker 10 What I would say about Texas is that

Speaker 10 Beto got very, very close, and I think Colin Allred is running a slightly more disciplined campaign and a very well-funded campaign.

Speaker 10 You know, he's very close and does need money.

Speaker 10 And I think the theory of the case in Florida is basically the same, except that we have reproductive choice on the ballot.

Speaker 10 And so in a scenario where the turnout projections are slightly undercounting the number of pro-choice individuals showing up,

Speaker 10 then I think we could either win Florida on the presidential or lose by a little. And then Debbie Mucarcel-Powell can win.

Speaker 10 She's running an extraordinary campaign, but both of those campaigns are campaigns that actually need hard money cash.

Speaker 10 So, if you've got 500 bucks laying around, send the campaign, not some campaign committee, not some super PAC, send the campaign some money, and they will put it right into communicating with voters.

Speaker 5 So, I really enjoy that. Nebraska is not happening.
Sorry, I even raised it. Forget about it.
Huge mistake on my part. Forget Nebraska.
We don't even know what's going on there.

Speaker 5 What's not even really has nothing to do with us, frankly?

Speaker 4 Correct.

Speaker 5 So, interesting about Nevada, Arizona, and Florida. These are states with competitive Senate races.
They are states that

Speaker 5 Florida is tougher, but where traditionally we've considered them swing states in the presidential, and they're states with abortion ballot measures.

Speaker 5 Two theories here. One is the abortion ballot measures turn out people that care about basic reproductive freedom.

Speaker 5 The other, place like Arizona, you have voters who are going to vote for Ruben Gallego. They're going to vote to protect abortion.

Speaker 5 And then they are considering whether or not to vote vote for an anti-choice, anti-abortion president under the feeling that they're balancing, that they're protecting abortion in Arizona anyway.

Speaker 5 How do you deal with that kind of false sense of comfort?

Speaker 10 Well, I think

Speaker 10 the Harris campaign has done a pretty effective job in making it clear that Donald Trump really is going to push for a national abortion ban.

Speaker 10 And so it won't matter what kind of statutory protections you have at a state-by-state level. And the problem is, I mean, for us, is that they talk about minimum national standards, right?

Speaker 10 And that is a ban. That's what they mean.

Speaker 10 And Donald Trump is going to do that. There's no doubt about it.
That is part of Project 2025.

Speaker 10 I think we've done a very good job of getting the word out and making it clear that you sort of can't have your cake and eat it too and vote for an anti-choice federal candidate and a pro-choice ballot amendment.

Speaker 10 But the problem is that even if that is something that has gotten through for, say, 80% of the voters, we kind of need it to get through to 95% of the voters in order for us to fully align and have the abortion rights referendum in Arizona win, Gallego win, and Harris win.

Speaker 5 So I'm losing my mind. You surf.
Should I be surfing?

Speaker 10 Yeah, sure. Of course.
Southern California.

Speaker 4 Wow.

Speaker 5 It's a lot of ballots, huh?

Speaker 10 Yeah, I mean, but you're young. You'll be fine.
And, you know,

Speaker 10 you did a reality show that required all kinds of fitness. You'll be fine.
And

Speaker 4 never got to use it.

Speaker 5 Never got even to, never got, I have my balance is actually really good. Never got to fucking use it.

Speaker 4 Oh, yeah, I'm sorry.

Speaker 10 I didn't watch it, as you know.

Speaker 4 No, I know. You should, you should surf.

Speaker 10 But the problem with Southern California surfing is like part of part of what's good about surfing, like fishing, like hiking, like lots of things, is that you kind of can escape the hustle and bustle.

Speaker 10 Southern California surfing is like as stressful as driving on the on the freeways because it's just packed and a little bit aggressive. So, you know, those are not my vibes.

Speaker 5 Honestly, just like using stereotypes about my culture to just putting them together. Oh, we're all sitting in traffic here in California.

Speaker 5 You and Chris Murphy, Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut, you seem close. Have your hands ever brushed in a weird way?

Speaker 10 Chris Murphy and I? No, we don't. He's very Northeastern.
There's no touching.

Speaker 4 So that's good.

Speaker 5 That's interesting.

Speaker 4 So,

Speaker 5 home stretch, just let's reiterate what you feel like people need to do.

Speaker 4 Sorry.

Speaker 4 Go ahead.

Speaker 5 We got, we got, you want people to go to Pennsylvania. We got to get calls in and feet on the ground in Pennsylvania.

Speaker 5 We need money in Ohio, Florida, Texas, Wisconsin, and we need calls and volunteers in Wisconsin. What else is the other priorities for you right now?

Speaker 10 That's it. I mean, the other thing I would say is like, don't agonize, organize.
I do think that, you know, we're a party that tends to agonize too much. We're a party that doesn't trust happiness.

Speaker 10 And we're a party that can sometimes talk ourselves out of having the winning momentum. Now, Kamala Harris has done a lot to give us a spring in our step.

Speaker 10 And it is our obligation, seriously, it is our obligation to stuff our phone in a sock drawer and go out there and campaign.

Speaker 8 Do it, people.

Speaker 5 You know, we know this show is very popular. So I know how many people are listening, and I know how many people have signed up at Vote Save America.
And I don't like the ratio center shots.

Speaker 5 There's a lot of people listening to this that haven't done a goddamn thing.

Speaker 10 Well, I'm not going to scold anybody except to say that here's what I would say: Look, I,

Speaker 10 my first race 26 years ago, I was running for the state house, and I came out of the primary election kind of bruised. I didn't look super strong.

Speaker 10 And a mentor of mine said, Let's assume you're behind by about a thousand votes, and you've got 90 days left. So, you got to win over something like 12 people a day.

Speaker 10 And let's assume you win over one in four people that you talk to. You're not winning over everybody.

Speaker 10 Okay, you got to go talk to about 50 humans every day for the next 90 days, and then you're going to win this thing. And that's what I did.

Speaker 10 I actually knocked on doors to the point where people told me to stop calling and coming by.

Speaker 10 I wore my shoes out to the point where I had to buy a new pair of rock ports from the local Ross on Ward Avenue, and I won by 425 votes.

Speaker 10 And I would not have won by 425 votes if I stared at a screen wondering if I was going to win by 425 votes. What happens next depends on us.
It does not depend on events far away.

Speaker 10 It depends on what we all do, what all of the listeners do.

Speaker 10 So if you haven't sort of taken the step to either press the donate button or to get on the phone and start calling family and friends or a list provided by the campaign, now's the time.

Speaker 5 Now's the time. What a great message to end on.
And I just also want to say, wherever you are, even if you cannot physically get to Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, or any of these other swing states,

Speaker 5 you can call into those states. You can donate into those states.
And I guarantee you, wherever you are, you are within 90 minutes of a house race.

Speaker 5 that could swing the balance in the house and you can go knock on doors there. John Tommy and I are beginning to hitting some of the doors in California as well.
So go to votesaveamerica.com.

Speaker 5 The time, it's it. We're at the two-week mark here, people.
Phones down,

Speaker 5 knocking fist up, you know? Senator Brian Schatz, always, always so good to see you.

Speaker 10 It's good to see you better.

Speaker 10 I look forward to watching Survivor for the first time.

Speaker 5 That's great. Maybe something, something we can do after we win.

Speaker 4 Okay, take care.

Speaker 4 That's our show for today.

Speaker 5 Wow, what a show.

Speaker 4 Thank you, Senator. Dan and guest host, Alex Wagner of MSNBC Primetime Fame will be back with a new show on Wednesday.
Bye, everyone. Wonder whose dick they'll talk about.

Speaker 4 If you want to get ad-free episodes, exclusive content, and more, consider joining our Friends of the Pod subscription community at cricket.com slash friends.

Speaker 4 And if you're already doom scrolling, don't forget to follow us at Pod Save America on Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube for access to full episodes, bonus content, and more.

Speaker 4 Plus, if you're as opinionated as we are, consider dropping us a review to help boost this episode or spice up the group chat by sharing it with friends, family, or randos you want in on this conversation.

Speaker 4 Pod Save America is a crooked media production. Our producers are David Toledo and Saul Rubin.
Our associate producer is Farrah Safari.

Speaker 4 Reed Cherlin is our executive editor and Adrian Hill is our executive producer. The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.

Speaker 4 Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer with audio support from Kyle Seglund and Charlotte Landis. Writing support by Hallie Kiefer.
Madeleine Herringer is our head of news and programming.

Speaker 4 Matt DeGroote is our head of production. Andy Taft is our executive assistant.

Speaker 4 Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Phoebe Bradford, Joseph Dutra, Ben Hefcote, Mia Kelman, Molly Lobel, Kirill Pelavieve, and David Toles.

Speaker 20 What is the secret to making great toast?

Speaker 18 Oh, you're just going to go in with the hard-hitting questions.

Speaker 20 I'm Dan Pashman from The Sporkfold. We like to say it's not for foodies, it's for eaters.
We use food to learn about culture, history, and science.

Speaker 20 There was the time we looked into allegations of discrimination at bon appetite, or when I spent three years inventing a new pasta shape.

Speaker 8 It's a complex noodle that you've put together.

Speaker 20 Every episode of The Sporkful, you're going to learn something, feel something, and laugh.

Speaker 5 The Sporkful, get it wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 21 Not sure if you have the experience to start your dream job?

Speaker 4 Good news.

Speaker 21 These days, it's the skills that count.

Speaker 22 Udemy can help you get those in-demand skills. Want to be an AI mastermind?

Speaker 4 Learn with us.

Speaker 5 Game developer, we've got you covered.

Speaker 21 AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner?

Speaker 1 We can help you prep.

Speaker 22 You'll learn from real-world experts who love what they do so that you can love what you do.

Speaker 21 Go to udemy.com for the skills to get you started and get set for your dream job.