Can Democrats Lose the Downer Image? + Chris Murphy in Conversation (Crooked Con)
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Speaker 2 Hi, everybody.
Speaker 3 Wow.
Speaker 2 I'm John Lemmon. We're live at CrookedCon.
Speaker 2
All right, he's got people. Everybody here has got people everywhere.
Amen.
Speaker 3 We're in the Reagan building, baby. I've co-opted your ass.
Speaker 2 Can't lose control just yet. In his 1992 convention speech, Bill Clinton, who is perfect,
Speaker 2 said of Republicans who were at the time angry about Murphy Brown being a single mom on television, if other politicians make you feel like you are not part of their family, come on and be part of ours.
Speaker 2 Republicans were the hall monitors we were welcoming.
Speaker 2 Three decades later, Trump found an audience among pretty apolitical comedians and media personalities and their fans who see Democrats as pious and scolding. The Democratic Party is widely reviled.
Speaker 2 A broad survey of working class voters described Democrats as, quote, woke, weak, and out of touch, coming out of Tuesday, which was awesome.
Speaker 2 Semaphores Dave Weiger woke Sharia.
Speaker 4 What? Woke Sharia, baby.
Speaker 2 We're all living in Mamdanistan now.
Speaker 2
Semaphores Dave Weigel put it best in summarizing the exit polls. What do you think of the Democrats? They stink.
Who did you vote for? As many Democrats as possible.
Speaker 2 So where do we go from here?
Speaker 2 Joining me, our streamer and political commentator, Hassan Piker.
Speaker 2 MS Now Simone Sanders,
Speaker 2 the Bulwarks Tim Miller,
Speaker 2 and the co-host of the five, Fox TV Jessica Tarla.
Speaker 2 Tim, I want to start with you, and I want to just concede that this is like a big topic, and it can be hard to
Speaker 2
tease out style from substance, strategy, ideology. But I want to start with that 2024 dynamic.
You have Trump and his allies on Rogan and a whole bunch of apolitical shows and media.
Speaker 2 In hindsight, Democrats say, oh, we need Democrats that can go everywhere. They have to go everywhere just like Trump did.
Speaker 2 But then we look around and we say, well, who are the Democrats that can do that?
Speaker 2 And as a former Republican, as a pilgrim in an unholy land, who's gone from viewing Democrats being annoying as an asset,
Speaker 2 to a liability, where is your head at?
Speaker 3 Well, I was happy about the woke Sharia in New York, but you you do have to remember that the CIA has taken over in Virginia across the river. So the deep state establishment is also on the rise.
Speaker 3 Big tent, big tent. Big tent.
Speaker 3 You know what, Lovet? You guys are kind of annoying.
Speaker 3
And it is something that we're dealing with. And I think that it's important to just accept it and think about it.
And
Speaker 3 the fundamental question that you got to, which was,
Speaker 3
okay, well, we need a Rogue of our own, or we got to be able to go hang out with these folks. We got to be appealing more to the comedian set.
And then it's like, well, who would go on the podcast?
Speaker 3 And then it's like, well,
Speaker 3 are you available?
Speaker 3 Are you?
Speaker 3 Like, the list is kind of short, right? And so
Speaker 3 we can't create people from scratch, but I think that it's important.
Speaker 3 When I look back at the mistakes the Democrats made that got us to this place, it's like,
Speaker 3
Biden wins in 20 when everybody's inside, right? So you didn't have to be out there. And then in 22, it's like, well, we didn't have a red wave.
So it's like things are going pretty well, right?
Speaker 3 And so I just think that there was a lot of just inertia and status quo happening. And a lot of the problems that
Speaker 3 were undergirding that, a lot of things people were frustrated with about COVID or about,
Speaker 3 you know,
Speaker 3 the not as fun parts of Wokesharia, right? Like
Speaker 3
there wasn't a lot of reflection on that. And I think that it's good to reflect on it now.
And I think that Tuesday was awesome.
Speaker 3 But just because we did really well on Tuesday, because Trump is fucking everything up, does not mean that we shouldn't also think about how we can continue to kind of expand out and appeal to more people.
Speaker 3 Simone,
Speaker 2 it seems like Democrats are often in a trap, which is Trump or one of his acolytes does something genuinely offensive, whether it's attacking or undermining a democratic institution or going after a vulnerable group of people.
Speaker 2 And Democrats want to defend those people, right? But then at times, sometimes they seem like they're writing their own version of the Federalist Papers,
Speaker 2 or they are doing what is then described as identity politics.
Speaker 2 And so, how do you fight back against Trump when he's attacking people, when he's making an issue of marginalized groups, without then being seen by a broader group of being focused less on, say, the economy?
Speaker 2 Like, how do you square that circle?
Speaker 5
Well, you know, I'm from North Omaha, Nebraska. Shout out to the Midwest people in the room.
Yes, there are black people. There are black people in Nebraska, all over this country.
Speaker 5 Maybe not North Dakota.
Speaker 5
And so I say that because earlier this summer, a black man who is a Democrat unseated a three-term Republican mayor in Omaha, Nebraska. And we can clap for that.
His name is John Ewing.
Speaker 5 And John Ewing, I grew up knowing John Ewing. I know him very well.
Speaker 5 But in that race, like in many other races across this country that have happened since 2024, one of the issues that the Republican candidate tried to pull to the forefront were bathrooms and trans issues and you know what John Ewing's answer was well first of all he had an answer He put up an ad to answer the attacks which I think is really important you cannot let attacks go you cannot allow your can't your opponent as a former strategist you cannot have the your opponent defining you and you not answering so that's part of it I think
Speaker 5 specifically coming out of 2024 a lot of candidates did not answer the attacks and some people were just like oh no no that's not me and it's like well who are you but John Ewing put up ads and went out there and did speeches and was on the streets talking to folks doing the doing interviews and whatnot and campaigning and saying, she's doing this because she don't want to talk about the potholes.
Speaker 5
She doesn't want to talk about the issues that are affecting you. She's going to make up this issue that have you, I'm not talking about.
She doesn't want to talk about the potholes.
Speaker 5 And so I think the answer is not to run away from the confrontation. Like, you're not about to make me,
Speaker 5 as I used to always tell candidates, don't allow these folks, anybody, any of your opponents to to to make you believe believe that you're for an issue that you've you've never taken up like I don't know what the hesitancy is from some of the campaigns and the strategists over the last you know couple of cycles to just not be clear about what folks are for and what they're not for because in 2024 that they them ad was seen everywhere and black people in Philadelphia told me the organizers in Philadelphia said that everybody had saw that ad and there was no counter and they believed it.
Speaker 5 So I do think that I don't think Democrats need to do a wholesale like,
Speaker 5 you need a full brand rebrand because I think frankly the Democratic Party brand, it might never be popular.
Speaker 5 But what may be pop, and that's okay, because what you need are candidates who people like and they want to vote for and who they believe in.
Speaker 5 And if the brand is popular or not, I'm not, I think the Democrats need to be less concerned about rehabilitating the brand of the Democratic Party apparatus and more concerned about running candidates that are close to the issues in the districts and places that they're trying to win.
Speaker 3 Tim don't agree.
Speaker 5 Tim, Tim don't agree.
Speaker 3
I know. I mean, the brand is.
The brand is in the
Speaker 3 brain. The brand was poo-pooed and people voted for Democrats anyway.
Speaker 5 So to me, that says people are willing to support candidates even if they think your brand is shitty.
Speaker 2 Well, I think, I think that, I don't know, I think it's an important part of what I think the dynamic we see, right? Which is, you know, there was just a
Speaker 2 report that came out that said, or here's a set of policies that are broadly popular that Democrats should embrace going into the midterms. And they're pretty moderate and sort of.
Speaker 5 Oh, a bunch of these people that lost some races and hadn't won recently put this report out.
Speaker 4 It was shocking.
Speaker 4
I, for one, was shocked when I saw that report. I was like, wow.
So do the exact same thing that the Democrats have been doing that caused them a sequence of failures.
Speaker 4 That's good. I like that.
Speaker 2 I knew that there was no way.
Speaker 4 Moderate enough. That was what the issue was.
Speaker 2 There was no way I was going to get to the end of that sentence. I don't even know why I considered starting it, but
Speaker 2 taken. But
Speaker 2 when I hear what you're saying there, when I see a report like that, I see a group of people struggling against a brand that is in the toilet and a bunch of people trying to win despite that, which is another way of saying we're in a ravine.
Speaker 2 Let's find the highest spot we can. here in this trench that we're stuck in.
Speaker 2 But there's the reason I think this question is important, even if you're right, like people win despite disliking the Democratic Party, people hate Congress like their congressperson.
Speaker 2 I do think it's worth asking what it is like to imagine a world in which Democrats are broadly popular.
Speaker 2 So,
Speaker 3 how many gummies you take before coming out here?
Speaker 2 So, which brings me to Jessica.
Speaker 2 So,
Speaker 2 I'll reveal something to all of you,
Speaker 2 which is John Tommy and I share an office, perfectly.
Speaker 2 and we often if not more often than not now switch over to Fox News during the day and we do because we want to see what's happening over there, but also it's entertaining.
Speaker 2 It is they're having fun over there. True story.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 2 Jessica, I want you to talk about like what it is like to be in that environment because part of what is so fun is they're just collective appreciation and shared view of Democrats, which is that they're kind of feckless and funny and ridiculous.
Speaker 7 They definitely enjoy that part of it.
Speaker 7 And I'm so glad that this conference is this week and not last week because we'd all just be sitting around crying and looking at that memo and saying, well, you know, this is 57% popular.
Speaker 7
So I think we should go with that. But now we have some wins and we have this diverse set of wins.
So I have had a way better couple of days.
Speaker 2 They get almost circumspect.
Speaker 7
Oh, yeah. I mean, sometimes they got a little rowdy too.
But,
Speaker 7 you know, you can't dispute results like that. You can't dispute a Mom Donnie win and a Spanberger win and whatever happened in the Mississippi State House.
Speaker 7 And I'm obsessed with whatever a public commissioner is in Georgia.
Speaker 3 I still like to. When nobody shows up to vote, we win.
Speaker 3 Oh, people. It's important.
Speaker 7 Remember. But
Speaker 7 the joy is important.
Speaker 7 to the formula that makes Fox so appealing as a set of programs to watch. And
Speaker 7 I think about it in context of the joy campaign of 2024 that was not, right? We were being told all the time, like, you're having so much fun. Like,
Speaker 7
Brat Summer feels great. And I did feel great at the DNC because I thought that was the moment of like, maybe we have a chance.
But it was fleeting. And
Speaker 7 It's always on our side, I think, since the 2016 election, it feels like it's forced upon us versus it's coming from within. There may be individual candidates that we're into.
Speaker 7
I've gotten super excited about people, you know, down ballot all over the place or, you know, I love Ruben Gallego. Like that's always fun for me to talk about.
But
Speaker 7 because we have this kind of uniform policy of stay in line, it's joyless.
Speaker 7 because you can't feel free to criticize somebody that you disagree with or you know you're gonna get scolded by this person and that person and the Republicans generally speaking live free of that amongst themselves I mean criticizing Trump is a whole other thing but they go about their business in a way that we don't and that I think that we're adapting to in at least based on these election results and Fox captures that that there are people who have kind of like a shared core set of values maybe, but they're not taking themselves that seriously.
Speaker 7
They're not scolding each other. Like it also matters in the quality of the programming.
It looks great. Our graphics are beautiful.
Our lighting is fantastic.
Speaker 3 Are you making a face?
Speaker 4 Look, I'm your fetayen. I'm your biggest die-hard fan, okay? But no, I don't think the Fox News graphics are beautiful.
Speaker 4 Look, I respect what you do, especially because, like, if I had to sit next to Jesse Waters and Greg Buttfeld the entire time, I would kill myself.
Speaker 4 And the fact that you have been able to successfully sit in that room every day and just white knuckle through Jesse Waters' snide-ass remarks is impressive.
Speaker 3 It is.
Speaker 3 Concur.
Speaker 7 Thank you. And it is nice to be amongst my people, which I'm usually not
Speaker 7 like cautiously weaving through here. But my point I'm bringing it up, and you don't have to love our graphics, even though they're copied in every movie and things like that.
Speaker 7 It's like the official look of it.
Speaker 3 But
Speaker 5 even when the PR people love Jessica, she is a favorite of the Fox PR folks.
Speaker 3 But
Speaker 7 nothing is taken that seriously. And that's not the case in liberal media.
Speaker 7 And that doesn't mean you're not talking about serious things, but there's this feeling like it is not the end of the world in every topic that you're discussing. And
Speaker 7 this idea that we can just go and show up in conservative spaces or come for an hour and you have to be open to those kinds of things, like doesn't capture how hard it is for people who vote like me and some of the things that I think to genuinely form bonds and interact on an ongoing basis with people who you disagree with.
Speaker 7 An hour, two hours, three hours is not getting to know the other side. Living amongst them and spending time with them is.
Speaker 7 And I think that's why I'm able to do my job and have a reasonable therapy bill, like not insane, but you know, we know each other like the family that it looks like, which is dysfunctional, but it's still a family.
Speaker 7 And people who watch the show, and you know, we have 20% Democratic viewership, like still get that.
Speaker 3 Hassan. Sorry, I know.
Speaker 7 It's not maybe not the answer you guys wanted, but
Speaker 4 you're not getting a lot of claps because you're defending Fox News in this room.
Speaker 3 Well, I know.
Speaker 2 Let me let me speak. I want to talk to Hassan about what you just said.
Speaker 2 But before, I heard something from the crowd, and I think it reflects what they're feeling, which is, well, they're not taking it seriously because
Speaker 2 these are people that are not appreciating the consequences or are praying or telling themselves a story about the consequences. And I know you know that,
Speaker 2 but that's a challenge for the left. I think sometimes we are seen as
Speaker 2 upset or
Speaker 2 scolding because we're motivated by like a deep set of values and when you watch Fox there's a frivolousness to it but maybe that's a kind of carelessness about what's happening to the country.
Speaker 7
I totally agree with you about certain issues. Absolutely.
And I make that very clear and they can make fun of me or whatever, but elections have consequences.
Speaker 7 And we saw on Tuesday night that the American public sees through it. That's the point.
Speaker 7 Like people get all hot and bothered about how conservatives are reacting to certain things and that they're being dismissive, but they are the ones that think the American public is stupid.
Speaker 7 And we're the ones ones who know that they can see what's going on.
Speaker 7 So whether you get 90 seconds of talk time or you get to talk for hours a day on your podcasts or on your live stream, all the things for Hassan,
Speaker 3 like
Speaker 7 they're the ones that are doubting people's capacity to understand. And so
Speaker 7 I get what you're saying and I feel it.
Speaker 7 And sometimes I don't like being made fun of sometimes for being upset about American citizens taken into ICE detention and not getting to call their loved ones.
Speaker 7 But Tuesday night, people showed up all over the country and said, fuck off. That is unacceptable.
Speaker 2 Hassan.
Speaker 4 I gotta pause.
Speaker 3 Hassan hasn't gone 17 minutes without talking since 2000. Honestly, like.
Speaker 3 The stage is
Speaker 3 about to happen.
Speaker 2 The stage is vibrating, and I'm sorry it took this long to get. to
Speaker 2 the fact that what we saw in New York on Tuesday in many ways feels like an antidote to some of this problem.
Speaker 2 Zoran Mamdani is having fun out there.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 he's also representing an incredibly enthusiastic base of people who are finding community in being part of politics. And that does seem like something now that is more easily formed on the left.
Speaker 2 I can think of all the candidates and campaigns that have been left driven that have built built that energy and enthusiasm and sense of fun. Brad Summer was an exception.
Speaker 2 There was a moment where, look, we can all look back and be like, I knew, we, I was full, I went full Brad.
Speaker 3 I mean, I was there.
Speaker 6 We were, yeah.
Speaker 4 No, I, and as someone who was there to the DNC before I got kicked out, but
Speaker 4 on the last day, I actually found myself feeling a sense of anxiety. Over the course of every single day that passed where I was like, why is everybody just like celebrating?
Speaker 4 Like, we're at the end zone here when it is not a guarantee that Kamalair is going to win?
Speaker 4 And I kept warning over and over again that there were a lot of unaddressed issues that the Democrats just kind of never wanted to acknowledge at all.
Speaker 3
And we would not just be excited we had somebody who could talk, though? Could we just have had one week? We were excited for a week because she could talk. No, I don't know.
That was great.
Speaker 3 So just give us a break.
Speaker 4 No, but
Speaker 4 the excitement that came into the DNC was actually because
Speaker 4 for some reason, right? And the reason is because people finally realized Joe Biden was, you know, his brain was leaking out of his ear. I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 4 for that reason, I know there's probably a lot of Democratic Party staffers in here. They're going to get really pissed off for me for saying this, but
Speaker 4
it almost felt like we had a competent party for once, and they were responsive to the people's needs. And that's the reason why everyone was excited.
I was excited.
Speaker 4 When I saw Kamala Harris choose Tim Waltz, when she could have just as easily gone with Josh Shapiro, for example, I was like, oh my God, is this like, is this happening?
Speaker 4 Is there like an actual progressive momentum backing this candidacy, backing this campaign? And then they backpocketed him. And Kamala Harris went from saying that she was going to do price controls.
Speaker 4 And she actually very decently messaged around that by saying, we're just going to go after price gougers, right, at the grocery store,
Speaker 4 which was her most popular policy at the time, and directly addressed one of the main economic anxieties that people were experiencing.
Speaker 4 And then, lo and behold, her brother-in-law, who's head of legal at Uber, came on and was like, cut this economic populism shit out.
Speaker 4 And then you had $50,000
Speaker 4
in tax credits for small business owners. And that was not addressing the problems that people were experiencing.
And I think that
Speaker 4 we have to do the honest autopsy of this campaign and realize that maybe people were excited for the progressive momentum that they perceived the campaign actually was going to have and the responsiveness that the party finally had to the people's desires, to the basis of voters' desires.
Speaker 4 But then they kind of just threw that into the wind and just kept pumping Liz Cheney and
Speaker 3 refused to talk about.
Speaker 3 Sorry for wanting to help
Speaker 3 poor Liz Cheney. Well, Chase, can I just do one thing on the honest autopsy, though? Because here,
Speaker 3 I actually, we can find some common ground on the economic populist stuff. I think the Commonwealth should have probably, in retrospect, obviously,
Speaker 3 had a more tangible message on economic populism. My problem with the walls thing, though, is that
Speaker 3 that relates to the topic of this panel, is that I think if we're having an honest autopsy and looking back at the campaign, there were a lot of liberals that live on the coast that were like, whoa, this dude can change a carburetor and I can put on a camo hat.
Speaker 3 Like, he's gonna really that like that guy is really gonna connect with rural america because he seems like a guy that really connects with rural america and people who like grew up in rural america who are who lived in red spaces are like no like that is the guy who is was the p-flag teacher at the rural high school and by the way being the p-flag sponsor at a rural high school is awesome that's a great thing to be that everybody loves that that's great but like everybody who's from that world did not look at him and say you code conservative or like you you have conservative values like me They coded him and it's like oh, you're the nice liberal at the school right and so I think that if we're gonna have an honest reflection on the last campaign the economic populism stuff was a miss too was a miss for sure but the but being seen as being to the cultural left and being out of step with with the country culturally on a wide variety of issues whether it be social issues or COVID or free speech or just being able to chill on comedians podcasts like that was a miss and it was a and people misunderstood what Tim Wallace was bringing to the table
Speaker 3 because he was not able to do any of that.
Speaker 4 Yeah, I think the cultural stuff is only relevant if that is ostensibly the only thing that you're bringing to the table.
Speaker 4 And unfortunately for the Democratic Party, I mean, these used to be wedge issues for a reason, right? These were
Speaker 4 concocted in think tanks with the deliberate design to make it seem as though there was some significant disagreements between the two parties.
Speaker 4 And they were created to make make the Republicans more popular so that people would focus on whatever, you know, the Family Foundation decided was a more successful way to present anti-trans narratives after focus group, focus testing their message.
Speaker 4 And
Speaker 4 when people are focusing on that, they're always going to go, okay, well, the Democrats are silly. Why do they care about this? This is like a tiny sliver of the population.
Speaker 4 Instead, they should, like, every moment that they're talking about that is a moment where they're not talking about, like, affordability, where they're not talking about like a working-class-centered party.
Speaker 5 Where are the Democrats that ran on trans issues? Show them to me, people.
Speaker 5 Where are they?
Speaker 3
They did it. No, I didn't.
They did it. I agree.
They did it. It was the Republicans.
Speaker 4 You actually brought that up, and I 100% agree with you.
Speaker 5 Sorry, I jumped out of my seat.
Speaker 4 No, I 100% agree with you because you said the potholes, right? Yeah. Like, if you're talking about the potholes and your opponent is constantly being like, well, what about trans people?
Speaker 4 Then they look insincere and they look silly and there is no reason to betray uh marginalized groups and and decide that we're going to actively write them out of the equation because they're working class as well and this is something that i have never compromised on and yet seemingly i've been able to find like a very populist and robust movement in in my own audience that that does not compromise on these issues, but also is always in the affirmative, making the argument that we have to focus on kitchen table issues, if you want to use that kind of language around it, but like center the working class and try to seek out what their problems are, address them, and also make this earnest attempt and show that we are honest about actually fighting for them.
Speaker 4
And I think Zoran's campaign and its success was a fantastic example of this. I know people say it's in New York, but that's precisely what he did.
Five key issues.
Speaker 4 He went out, he asked people, what's your problem? I'm going to solve solve it. And he centered his campaign around five key issues of affordability in New York.
Speaker 4 And lo and behold, in spite of 22 billionaires spending hundreds of millions of dollars trying to take him out, in spite of a very hostile media environment, especially leading up to the primary or certainly after the primary, they genuinely did a little bit by the end, but
Speaker 4 and
Speaker 4 all of these attack ads, he still won.
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Speaker 2 God, this is going great.
Speaker 3 Are we having fun yet?
Speaker 2 I'm at it. Are we having fun yet?
Speaker 2 No, Jessica, I want you to respond. And then I want to kind of tease two things out here.
Speaker 7 Well, I agree.
Speaker 7 I totally agree. I just exist in a world where we can't behave that way.
Speaker 3 Like,
Speaker 7
not everybody who's going to run for office or who wants to have a voice can build the platform that you have. You're ridiculously talented.
And
Speaker 4 damn, thank you.
Speaker 3 No.
Speaker 7 No, but even being able to talk that long or to, it's a skill set that I
Speaker 7 don't have.
Speaker 7
But when you say... We don't need to deal with this.
And I agree with you about that. And I remember when that happened, there are people who are running in races where you need to do more than that.
Speaker 7 Like we were talking earlier, I was overdoing Tim's pod with him. We're talking about Jared Golden not running in Maine.
Speaker 7 And Jared Golden can't afford to not talk about the issues that his constituents genuinely care about because they also vote for Donald Trump.
Speaker 7 And for some of them, they just want to hear someone say, listen, I want to protect everybody. I'm an inclusive guy, you know, but I,
Speaker 7 whatever happened with Leah Thomas, or that's always like the lightning rod, you know, trans athlete issue. I understand your concern about, you know, trans women in women's sports.
Speaker 7 That doesn't mean Jared Golden needs to say, I want to ban on this.
Speaker 7 It means Jared Golden says, like the head of the NCAA did when they testified, this is, we're talking about 10 athletes out of 500,000.
Speaker 7 So it is a small fraction of the population, but I am not going to dismiss your concerns. And this big tent and a winning coalition across this country
Speaker 7 has to be compromising about what people need to do to win their races. I'm not talking about being bigoted.
Speaker 7 I'm not talking about being nasty, but the country operates differently in different places. And I feel like we give lip service to that, but don't always behave that way.
Speaker 3 Like,
Speaker 3 I,
Speaker 4 the thing is, like,
Speaker 4 if the Democratic Party was defined by
Speaker 4 five key policies, okay, Medicare for all, a single-payer system, socialized medicine, right? Something of that sort, and a plan to expand the available housing units. I want socialized housing.
Speaker 4
That is not even broached. That's not even discussed amongst the Democratic Party.
I want a federal jobs guarantee and a jobs program to build those houses, right?
Speaker 4 Free college and better education overall from K through 12.
Speaker 4 If those were like your five key signature campaign promises that directly tackle all of the issues that people, the economic hardships that people in the heartland are actually going through, and not just like, you know, highly educated liberals in big cities, then any moment that these people would turn around and be like, well, what about trans people?
Speaker 4 They're going to get health care too. You could just be like, okay, what do you not want health care because you think a trans person is going to get it? Well, I just want to be clear.
Speaker 5 There was a moment on a debate stage where they weren't talking about trans people, but in the Democratic primary in 2020, they asked, there was
Speaker 5 one of the large primary debates, and they asked, well, do you think undocumented people should have health care?
Speaker 5
And people raised their hand and it was used as an attack ad, and it was an effective attack ad. So I think sometimes we, I agree with.
Some of what you're saying.
Speaker 5 Okay, the digit small businesses, I disagree with because the biggest driver of wealth in African-American communities outside of government jobs, which is why the fact that 300,000 black women have lost their government jobs is a blow to like wealth ascension in this country for black women, is small businesses.
Speaker 5 And so the small business plan was a plan that spoke to working class black and brown people in this country who do not work at large corporations, but had an idea, wanted entrepreneurship, and then
Speaker 5 they saw a plan for them. And so it was a wide, a wide, you know, tense situation.
Speaker 5 But I guess my point is to Jessica, what Jessica is saying, yes, I do think candidates have to be, you got to to run for your district. You got to run for the race that you're in.
Speaker 5
As a, as a, you know, I'm a black woman from the Midwest every day, everywhere I go. Okay.
I live in Washington, D.C., but
Speaker 3 I'm black and I'm bald.
Speaker 5 So there are some things I think I hear when these conversations come up, and I've said in strategist rooms when they've come up, they've come up on campaigns I've worked on, and I hear them on the sets and the commercial breaks when we have some of these candidates on our show.
Speaker 5 It feels like to some people that look like me that the people within the party apparatus want folks to compromise on issues that
Speaker 5 for me are not are uncompromisable when folks say that. And so like I do think that if the party is like, look, people need to,
Speaker 5 I think the answer is people need to run for the race that they're in. Okay, well, what does that mean?
Speaker 5 Does that mean when, because let's just be very clear, Donald Trump and the Republicans, they aren't looking for a big tent.
Speaker 5 They're like, mass deportation, F you, look at my one good black person, shithole countries in africa all the brown people need to be deported women got blood coming down their eyes but like yay uh we're going back to a meritocracy and that means only white men like what are what hold on what but they're with but they were winning and so they didn't win because they opened up the aperture and let people do what they need to do they won because they tripled down on what they believe even if what they believe right that's just not i'm sorry that sounds good and i like it i want it to be right it's just not right they didn't they didn't win because they tripled down on what they believe no they did triple down on what they believed yeah they tripled down on racism.
Speaker 5 Yeah.
Speaker 5 It was populism, but it was a...
Speaker 5 Populism is a thin ideology mixed with a thick ideology, according to Cass Mudd.
Speaker 5 His populism was a little, it had a lot of things in it. It was an economic populace, but populism had a little white supremacy in it, a little racism.
Speaker 5 Like Bernie Sanders is a populist in a different way than Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 Yeah, here's the thing.
Speaker 5 No, I don't understand.
Speaker 3
Here's the thing, though. Can I just say really quick, though? Here's the thing.
Like, yeah, he doubled down on a bunch of terrible shit that they believe that's extreme. No doubt.
Speaker 3 No doubt he also was seen as left of Kamala on foreign policy he was seen as an anti-war candidate he was seen as anti the Republican establishment of war he cut to the middle on that he lied about that for sure he's a liar
Speaker 3 but then maybe our guys should lie about some things that are popular too okay
Speaker 3 now
Speaker 4 sound like me during the campaign where I was like what the fuck are you guys doing when you're not like addressing this stuff where Donald Trump can present himself as the peace candidate that was insane to me but obviously sending Bill Clinton to Dearborn to talk about Judea and Samaria as most people were seeing.
Speaker 3 All right.
Speaker 3 Most people were seeing.
Speaker 3 I want to bring us back.
Speaker 3 They didn't moderate on things. That's all I'm saying.
Speaker 2 I'm having so much fun.
Speaker 3 No, no, I'm sorry.
Speaker 5 You cannot have a convention where you have signs that say mass deportation now.
Speaker 3 I'm not saying he wasn't a moderate. I'm not saying he moderated on things.
Speaker 5 Ethnocentric nationalist version of this country and say that he moderated what he did is say people and gaza you should vote for me because joe biden ain't doing what what you want that's not a moderation he had good rhetoric but his policy was consistent and the vice president on that debate stage said all of the things that he was saying that he would do and he has outdone them he said he was going to send the military into the streets he was saying it on the campaign that's not moderation That's fascism.
Speaker 5 He said he was going to deport all of these people in this country.
Speaker 5
That is what he said that it's not just the criminals. He's coming for anybody that is in this country who is undocumented.
So
Speaker 5
I just, I can't, I can't get with the, well, Donald Trump didn't moderate a bit. No.
They tripled down on the bad stuff and had nice graphics and good and smiled through it.
Speaker 3 So can I just
Speaker 2 bring us back? Simone is.
Speaker 3 All right.
Speaker 2 Hassan, quick, and then I want to bring us back.
Speaker 4 Simone is absolutely right, 100%.
Speaker 4 And these were things that I was screaming about non-stop.
Speaker 3
But there was also. It was me that that he ran to the left of Kamala on foreign policy.
On foreign policy. He was moderating.
He modeled.
Speaker 3 He didn't run with unpopular Republican views on politics. However,
Speaker 4 he ran to the left on foreign policy only because the Democrats came out and said, I'm going to have the most lethal military.
Speaker 4 Because unfortunately, and I mean this sincerely, I don't think the Democrats actually saw the threat of Donald Trump as a significant enough threat because if they were, they would have locked in and had better messaging overall and tried to at least establish a base of support with counter narratives with counter messaging leading up to the election not in the aftermath or not during the election but leading up to the election because republicans they act as though there is an election every single day.
Speaker 4 They are constantly on message.
Speaker 4 They're constantly creating an alternative reality with lies, saying that undocumented migrants are actually responsible for a metric ton of the crimes that are taking place in American cities when that is an abject lie.
Speaker 4 Okay. And when I talk to congresspersons, whether it be at the DNC or even before, even after, and I tell them, why the fuck aren't you guys counter-messaging against this?
Speaker 4 We are a nation of immigrants. America is the most diverse nation on the fucking planet.
Speaker 4 It is literally the reason why we are such a domineering force beyond all these other, beyond all the other, you know, violent reasons. But,
Speaker 4 but, like, that is what that is one of the most redeemable aspects of America that I personally love that the Democrats completely dropped because they were scared.
Speaker 4 They saw that one poll from the Pew Center of of Research that said, that said
Speaker 4 that 66% of Americans want mass deportations. That exact same poll also showed that if given two options, mass deportation and mass amnesty, that the majority always chose mass amnesty.
Speaker 4 So why is that never communicated? Because Americans, sure, the median voter, trying to understand where the median voter is coming from is impossible, okay?
Speaker 4 You will kill yourself if you try to understand what these people are.
Speaker 5
You just lost me, Hassan. I was with you halfway through that, but you lost me.
But I'm with you.
Speaker 4 But what I'm trying to say is this, okay?
Speaker 3 There are Trump.
Speaker 3 There are...
Speaker 3 There are... You're doing great.
Speaker 2 I want to hear this point and then I'm going to go.
Speaker 4 There are Trump supporters out there, okay, that
Speaker 4 have been deluded into thinking that Donald Trump represented a change. And obviously, we saw that buyer's remorse this past Tuesday, right?
Speaker 4 Especially in Hispanic communities where they were like, oh, I can't believe that he is actually doing mass deportation. And
Speaker 4 it's, you know, we're in D.C. This is a fairly liberal crowd and we laugh at those people.
Speaker 4 But like I talked to those people every day and there were people that genuinely thought, they genuinely believed that Donald Trump was actually excising the violent criminals.
Speaker 4 And the only reason why people are led to believe this lie, aside from the faucet of misinformation that comes from independent outlets on the right and also Fox News as well, is because there is no robust response from the Democratic Party that says, that's a fucking lie.
Speaker 4
That's a lie. Undocumented migrants in this country are responsible for a lower rate of per capita crime than natural-born U.S.
citizens are.
Speaker 4 If you pair that up with documented migrants, it's negligible. It is marginal.
Speaker 4 And they're hyper-focusing on it specifically because this is a vulnerable population that is easy to target and it's easy to ridicule. And there is not enough of a robust defense mechanism out there.
Speaker 4 And that's the reason why people end up believing this bullshit. And then they get shocked when it's actually implemented.
Speaker 2 So I think that's a good point.
Speaker 2 And I think I sort of agree with Tim and with Simone about this.
Speaker 3 Impossible.
Speaker 3 Something that's not a problem. No, that's fine.
Speaker 3 No, well.
Speaker 2 Because
Speaker 2 one of Trump's gifts, one of Trump's gifts is he is a, I think he convinced a lot of people he was going to go after criminals, but he also said at the convention that they were going to do mass deportations.
Speaker 2
And I think how to bring it back is that is possible because of a big void. So Trump can do a lot.
Trump has room to operate, to maneuver. Why?
Speaker 2 Because he has built an authentic connection with millions of people who believe him, who have his back, who think, yeah, he'll compromise.
Speaker 2
It is inconceivable that Kamala Harris would appoint Mike Pence to be Secretary of Health and Human Services. Inconceivable.
We wouldn't live in that world.
Speaker 2 But Trump can appoint a Kennedy to run the health department. Why? Because he has built such a credible, loyal following that he, because of the authentic way in which he, you don't agree with that.
Speaker 3 Cults. No, it's just
Speaker 3 cult.
Speaker 2 Look, you can, yes, it has certainly become a cult, right?
Speaker 2 And then you look at our side, and you find the politicians that have that kind of authentic connection to the voters. You look at the list of leadership of the Democratic Party.
Speaker 2 How far down do you go before you have somebody that can fill
Speaker 2 an arena? You have to get to Bernie Sanders, you go to Barack Obama, you have to go to Zoran Mamdani, you go to AOC. It is largely on the left.
Speaker 2
That is the truth of this moment, but it wasn't always true. Barack Obama didn't run from the left.
He ran against Washington. Bill Clinton had that kind of momentum.
He actually ran from the right.
Speaker 2
But right now, that energy and connection is coming from the left. And so Hassan lays out a group of policies that are from the left.
Like, I'm not for socialized housing.
Speaker 2 I'm for building a ton of housing.
Speaker 3 That's okay.
Speaker 2 But...
Speaker 2 But it is a void that the left is currently filling that
Speaker 2 the leadership of the Democratic Party is not. How does Trump get away with all this stuff? How do we get defined as being anti-trans?
Speaker 2 The other day, Bernie Sanders was asked about the border, and he said, oh, a country's got to have a border. That pissed off some people on.
Speaker 3 Me too.
Speaker 2 It pissed off some people on the left. Did it piss off us on?
Speaker 4 I mean, yeah, I disagree with Bernie Sanders' message around that because obviously, yes, nation states have well-defined borders and boundaries.
Speaker 2 But my point about it is
Speaker 2 he can say that
Speaker 2 with confidence because everyone knows what Bernie Sanders stands for. Yes.
Speaker 2 And so when he is asked about trans issues, when he is asked about issues in which Democrats are not at 55, 45, but at 30, 70, whatever it may be, he can either say, you know what, I don't care about that.
Speaker 2 I'm not talking about that. Or he can answer in a way that maybe riles some of the base, but you trust him.
Speaker 2 And that to me is the connection between honestly the kind of like what seems a bit frivolous, like, are we having fun and the actual hard work of politics.
Speaker 2
Like Zoron, you said, was moderating in the last few weeks of the campaign. I was glad to see that.
Tim and I are both people that pushed him hard. I almost got teaching him.
I am to the left.
Speaker 3 I am to the left of this.
Speaker 4 Now, see, I mean, he was, the reason why Zorhan was moderating on, I don't know what he was moderating on, I guess like maybe you guys were talking about like the policing stuff, even though it was now that the election is over, we can be honest about it.
Speaker 4 Zoran Mamdani did this brilliant thing that got liberals to basically come to terms with a lot of things that liberal media had considered radical, right? Because he had a way with,
Speaker 4 he had a really good way of communicating these.
Speaker 2 Can you generously call that he did a good job of listening, seeming curious, and being persuasive to bring more people into his? Sure.
Speaker 3 Yes.
Speaker 4 But one of the things that he did, but he was still uncompromising.
Speaker 4 Defund the police always was about making sure that the headcount either remained stable, but then we actually turned around and restructured some
Speaker 2 now who's doing now. You're the TR guy.
Speaker 3 That's the most politically you've sounded. No, no, no.
Speaker 4
But the thing is, the thing is, it has a bad rap. No matter what you say or do, Democrats immediately attacked it.
They said this is a danger, and it's partially because Americans really love police.
Speaker 4 It's unfortunate. I don't know how because they don't do their fucking jobs ever.
Speaker 4 And I wish they would because
Speaker 4 I'm not saying we can
Speaker 3 live in it. We never do their jobs ever.
Speaker 5 I want to be able to call the police. I just don't want them to think I'm a suspect when they show up.
Speaker 3 Exactly. Exactly.
Speaker 4
We want a presence of law and order. And unfortunately, in many communities, police's presence is lawlessness and disorder.
Now, having said that, having said that, he wanted to
Speaker 4 not reduce the headcount necessarily, but at least like bring in social workers to take away some of the bandwidth, some of the workload from the police.
Speaker 4 And that was a message that resonated with even Tim Miller, it seems.
Speaker 2 I want it, but I.
Speaker 3 He liked it.
Speaker 2 He was.
Speaker 4 You want to fund the police now. No.
Speaker 3
Can I just just really quick? Because I think, like, like Simone, I'm like, you're talking, you're talking. I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Then you say something like, dude. Bro.
Speaker 3 But here's, I think, what Zoron did well that kind of combines part of what you're talking about with what maybe I think
Speaker 3
I'm happy he didn't take your advice on part of part of his campaign. But what he did well to the, are we having fun? Fun yet? Zoron was happy.
He was having a good fucking time.
Speaker 3 He was a fun hang here on MyPod. We had a great time.
Speaker 3 He had a couple of specific things.
Speaker 4 You cooked them on Globalize the Intifada.
Speaker 3 That wasn't his best answer.
Speaker 3 That wasn't his best answer.
Speaker 3 But we were vibing, though, and the people that listened to the pod liked it. He had four issues, like you mentioned.
Speaker 3
It's kind of hard to know what Kamala's issues were. I think if you quizzed all of us on here, everybody would say different things.
Everybody knew what Zoran's issues were. That was good.
Speaker 3
He was good on that. He could go on a pod with me or with somebody else.
He could have gone on Rogan for three hours and hung out and had a good time. So he could communicate.
He's happy.
Speaker 3 three issues, but three or four issues.
Speaker 3 But he also just did like making the practical decision to say he was going to keep the police chief rather than doubling down on the tweets that he sent in 2019 was smart practical politics.
Speaker 3 Like you can
Speaker 3
have clear left-wing policy issues that people understand. You can be positive and optimistic and you can also be practical.
He did all of that like quite well, actually.
Speaker 4
I'll give you, I agree with that. I think his messaging was good on that.
And that's precisely what I was talking about.
Speaker 4 Like, for example, okay, especially not in like the the broader population's understanding of this issue but like in mainstream media and in American politics there's a major division between how the population is receiving what Israel is doing and and how our politicians are responding to it right and how the media even responds to it anti-Zionism is like a scary term or a scary word for a lot of media professionals in a way that like you know being anti-Israel is not necessarily scary at all for the average person as a matter of fact they are very anti-Israel now, and there's polling to reflect on that reality.
Speaker 4 Now, what Zoran did so perfectly was to communicate his position in a way that liberals understand it.
Speaker 4 He turned around and said, yeah, Israel has a right to exist as a nation state that has equal rights and representation for all people. That is
Speaker 4 identifying that Israel
Speaker 4 has a Jewish ethnostate project, right? That is identifying that Israel has an exterminationist policy on the Palestinians and
Speaker 4 incredibly repressive policies on the right.
Speaker 3 Does Qatar have a right to exist only if everybody has equal rights for all religions? Is that true for Qatar? I don't. Or just Israel? No, I don't care.
Speaker 4 I mean, yeah, okay, no nation state has a right to exist, including Qatar. Like, I don't know why you're bringing up Qatar as though I'm going to be like, oh my God, Qatar.
Speaker 3 They pay me so much. I'd just say, I don't know why that's the only country that doesn't have a right to exist unless they have equal rights for everybody.
Speaker 3 Who's an ethnostate?
Speaker 3
All of those countries in that region are an ethnostate state. No, if you can.
Qatar's an ethnostate, Iran's an ethnostate, Jordan's an ethnostate, Saudi's an ethnostate.
Speaker 3 So I'm okay with criticizing Israel. I'm just saying, let's not like that.
Speaker 4 So you're okay? So you're okay with all of these other countries being ethnostates then?
Speaker 4 And you're not just using that as a deflective mechanism to move the attention away from Israel, a country that literally receives more aid and more political support from the United States of America than anyone else.
Speaker 4 As a matter of fact, a lot of people actually get mad about Qatar because now the Gulf leaders have realized, oh, if we give this guy fucking jets, he's going to defend us too. We're oil barons.
Speaker 4 It's awesome.
Speaker 4 And that's the reason why it almost feels like people who defend Israel are jealous that now other Gulf nations are trying to do like Israel style things over there.
Speaker 5 I love it. Please bring us back.
Speaker 3 Sorry. Anyway,
Speaker 3 I would say
Speaker 4 I'm not moderate.
Speaker 2 Without complaining, I have disagreements with you on this, as you know.
Speaker 2 I will say that Zoran had a challenge, right?
Speaker 2 And part of his challenge was reassuring a lot of Jewish New Yorkers that are deeply worried about about some of his past comments and which he has and he spent a lot of time trying to reassure those people, I think,
Speaker 2 because he recognized that there was a liability in some of the ways in which his previous statements and some of his positions were seen by a lot of New Yorkers, which is where more Jews on earth live than in any other place than in Israel.
Speaker 2 It's true.
Speaker 2 And he sought to address it. Now, without getting into the details of where we were.
Speaker 4
I think he had to do that because he's Muslim. I'm going to be honest.
I think it was racism. Straight up.
Speaker 4 He had never said a single thing that wasn't even remotely anti-Semitic, and yet the media constantly kept needling him on that.
Speaker 2
I don't agree with that. And I don't agree with it because it's honestly impossible to know because it's over-determined.
Do I think there's anti-that there is Islamophobia in the reaction to Zorwan?
Speaker 2
Of course there is. Do I think there's genuine concerns about some of the things he said? Of course there is.
You can't tell me what's going on. Hold on, you can't tease it out.
What was concerned?
Speaker 5 Well, he got elected, so does that argument really matter? He is now the mere leg.
Speaker 3 So the reason I...
Speaker 5 So whatever he did, worked.
Speaker 2 So the reason I don't want to stay on it is because I think there's a lot we can say about it.
Speaker 2 But what I'm trying to say is he had people that were really glad to see someone who had taken his views run for mayor and succeed.
Speaker 2 He also had people he needed to reassure who had disagreement, but he recognized that he was in coalition with a lot of people who had different views, including he was asked about Abigail Spanberger and he was asked about Mikey Sherrill.
Speaker 2
And he said that this is a party that has room for everybody, not just people who look like me. And I think that to me is what I...
I hate Republicans.
Speaker 4 If you can unseat a Republican, it's good. It's good in my book.
Speaker 4 But that was my anger and resentment with like the way that the Democrats were representing themselves during the campaign, where it kind of felt like they didn't hate Republicans too much.
Speaker 4 Whenever I hear Nacy Pelosi say, Oh, we need a strong Republican Party, I'm like, No, we don't need a Republican Party.
Speaker 4 We want to run for this country in every seat and be so successful that you have a weak, feckless, and ineffective Republican Party that cannot undermine the agenda that centers the working class.
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Speaker 2 Talking about the overlap of the ways in which Zoran built a big enthusiastic base of support, talking about the ways in which Democrats have a void of not people not really knowing what they stand for, which lets them be buffeted by issues where they're kind of, whether it's trans issues or other kind of issues where they feel like they're on their heels and there's this debate about throwing people under the bus.
Speaker 2 What are the lessons that you think Democrats should be taking from the success on Tuesday?
Speaker 8 You know, Chuck Schumer was afraid to.
Speaker 2 So I
Speaker 3 yeah.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 this is now going to be the third time Chuck Schumer has been booed at a Democratic event I've been at in 48 hours.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 right, you ready? The former Republican's going to praise Chuck Schumer right now. The shutdown strategy has worked pretty good.
Speaker 4 We're doing great.
Speaker 3
I'm going to start giving him a little claps. Shutdown strategy turned out to work pretty good.
Everybody's like, oh, Chuck.
Speaker 4 Yeah, we had to drag him to finally do that.
Speaker 3
He had an opportunity to do it. At least he's there.
Yeah, no, what is Jessica?
Speaker 2 Simone, you were going to leave the Democratic Party in Marxist.
Speaker 5 Well, you know, about every six months, I got to do a gut check. Every member of the 92%, that's how we sustain ourselves.
Speaker 3 It's like renewing your vows.
Speaker 5 Very much so.
Speaker 4 Very happy to be with my husband.
Speaker 3 So
Speaker 2 Chuck Schumer is being afraid of Democrats being tied to Zoron.
Speaker 2 He is less afraid, it seems to me, about the young people and people that support Zoran not seeing Schumer on their side.
Speaker 2 And so, Jessica, how do Democrats confidently assert that we are a big tent that includes everyone from Mikey Sherrill and Abigail Spamberger and Tim Miller and Hassan and Zoran without dealing without ignoring the genuine and real politics of moderates not wanting to be tagged as New York or San Francisco socialists, which is real and we can't ignore?
Speaker 7
Yeah. Well, I think so.
I just want to say, since I've been looking and reading, Are We Having Fun Yet? The last 10 minutes were the opposite of fun. And
Speaker 7 I think that, no, but it's important for our electoral strategy because that fight is the opposite of fun.
Speaker 7 It doesn't mean that it shouldn't happen, but when you are the party that is being represented by that kind of screaming back and forth versus saying the stuff that we agree upon, that we're like all of the candidates that won were affordability candidates.
Speaker 7 It sounded different out of Abigail Spanberger's mouth and what she was talking about than out of Zoron's mouth, but we all got to the place where they thought the Democrats want us to have more housing and more money in our pockets, and the Republicans have been dicking us over with their policies.
Speaker 7 And so that's where we have to be.
Speaker 7 I was so excited by Zoron's campaign in that it finally felt to me like there was some Obama energy back.
Speaker 7 And as an elder millennial who spends a lot of time with Gen Zs, I'm sad for them that they don't know what hope and change felt like.
Speaker 7 They don't know, you know, what it meant to watch him from the DNC convention through, you know, when he left. Tim's like, it was terrible.
Speaker 3 But
Speaker 3 he was good.
Speaker 3 I got some goosebumps every now and then.
Speaker 4 No, I hated a DNC for sure.
Speaker 3
Like, I'll stand on that. Yeah.
But
Speaker 7 people finding community, people combating loneliness, people having shared purpose, you know, getting outside, touching grass, all of that. That's what politics means to me.
Speaker 7 And you want a great policy agenda, of course, but you really want to feel common cause with people. And you can have disagreements about
Speaker 7
various issues. But that is the path forward for me.
And that's not going to come from Chuck Schumer. I think Chuck Schumer is
Speaker 7 past his sell-by date in terms of leading.
Speaker 7 the party this way.
Speaker 7
But, you know, Chuck Schumer, I think that he was right to recruit Roy Cooper and Sherrod Brown to be running for those Senate seats. And I hope that they're going to win.
And I feel good about that.
Speaker 7
And I think that, you know, his Momdani stuff is about himself. And he's, you know, he voted in the election.
He's a Jewish New Yorker in Brooklyn there.
Speaker 7
And Momdani got 30% of the Jewish vote, which is very low. He has work to do with the community.
I hope that he will do that work.
Speaker 7 But I don't think we can focusing on Chuck Schumer is the answer to it. It's the energy and that there was energy across New Jersey and there's energy in Virginia and there's energy in New York.
Speaker 7 And that's the kind of organizing. It's not big Democratic energy.
Speaker 7 It's individual candidates that have this affordability message and are communicating as a naval pilot, as a CIA officer, or a community organizer.
Speaker 2
And this can be for everybody. So Trump is also now giving us a pretty big opportunity.
On the one hand, he's been going after comedians and he's
Speaker 2
trying to get Kimmel canceled. He's angry about Seth Meyers every other day.
He's tearing down parts of the White House,
Speaker 2 which was a strange choice, which I tried to walk to see it, and they've built giant walls so that we don't see the construction site.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 2 Trump is not doing as many rallies as he used to do. He's really kind of ensconced now in Mar-a-Lago and the White House at his Great Gatsby
Speaker 2
parties. He's tweeting out photos of marble bathrooms.
Even some of his top staff now are living on military bases. They've isolated themselves in a lot of ways.
Speaker 2 Like, do we now have the opportunity to say, hey, they're the hall monitors and out of touch scolds.
Speaker 2
We're the ones that actually understand what's going on. Yeah.
And is there a way,
Speaker 2 to me, like, is there a way to have a unifying agenda that does what Hassan is talking about,
Speaker 2 but is one that is appealing to maybe not every single most centrist Democrat, but a broad enough and big enough agenda that would unite, that you would like and Tim would like and Jessica would like that we can get behind.
Speaker 5 I just think, I just come at this from as a former strategist. I was a comms person for most of my career and I did campaigns from state legislative races to judges racist to presidentials.
Speaker 5 Yes, I worked in the White House. I don't know if you'd agree with me here, Tim, but I think that the wrong, the answer is not, okay, just these five things and then da-da-da-da.
Speaker 5 I think the answer is about the strategy and the what things you put under your strategy depends on what candidate you are and where you are running.
Speaker 5 Because coming up in 2026, there are gubernatorial races, there are state legislative races, like 2026 and frankly, 2027 are really about 2028 and then 2030.
Speaker 5
And you have to win state legislative seats. You have to win the governor's races, but you also, you know, you should want to take back the House and the Senate.
Okay. And how do you do that?
Speaker 5
It is not by saying we only do these five things right here. No, it is about what is the strategy.
And the strategy does have to be touch grass, talk to people.
Speaker 5 What are the under, you need to understand your constituents in your community.
Speaker 5 So whether it's Abigail Spanberger, Mikey Sherrill, or Zora Mandami, the thing to Jessica's point, that they all did well is they understood what the people wanted.
Speaker 5 Affordability in Jersey and Virginia also meant energy. Energy prices are way up.
Speaker 5 One of the things that Mikey Sherrill said that people got behind is that she wanted to declare a state of emergency on energy on day one. And that is what she plans to do.
Speaker 5 I talked to a lot of, I talked to the folks whose job it was to go out there and organize African-American voters in New Jersey. And they said for the black voters in New Jersey that they talked to,
Speaker 5 that for them, it was bigger than Mikey Sherrill. They were dealing with all of these issues that they listed that had to do with affordability and whatnot.
Speaker 5 And they felt like what was happening in the the other states and places in this country, voting for Mikey Sherrill was going to keep that from happening because Jack Trudarelli was very much so aligned with Donald Trump.
Speaker 5 So I think that you have to just stay close to the issues and the races.
Speaker 5 But the answer is not the party apparatus says this is, the answer is not those policy papers that these people keep putting out.
Speaker 5 That's not the answer from my perspective because that's not how you win races by campaigning. And you go out there and you talk to people and you earn their votes.
Speaker 5 You do not win a race by a policy paper. And I just think that there's all this focus on how can we align on these five issues except and not a focus on, well, what is our strategy?
Speaker 5 Isn't our strategy staying close to the people? It's why Democrats, the shutdown fight,
Speaker 5
it is terrible for people in this country who work in the federal government. That is absolutely terrible.
But what the Democrats are doing is
Speaker 5 in the end, at the end of the day, it's going to benefit all of those people because they are fighting, but they settled on a strategy.
Speaker 2 And isn't it a a good example, though, this shutdown, exactly what we're talking about, which is Democrats chose an issue. There are people, I was skeptical.
Speaker 2 I was skeptical of every choice.
Speaker 2 To be honest,
Speaker 2
I didn't think there was a good option for Democrats for not playing with the best hand, but we chose health care. We chose it.
And we said, we're going to take this to its logical conclusion.
Speaker 2 And it's worked better than anyone, I think, really proved.
Speaker 5 But can I just know they didn't just choose health care?
Speaker 5 They chose a very specific thing that was happening in Congress that was tangible, that connected to people's everyday lives, that they could see.
Speaker 5 And so, when I say we don't need to choose all the, like, that was a strategy.
Speaker 2
Exactly. No, I'm agreeing with you.
I'm agreeing with you.
Speaker 3
Yeah, I just want to, we're getting, I think, I was having fun, by the way. We could do a whole nother hour.
Yeah, and I think the disagreement, I think, I think the disagreement is necessary, though.
Speaker 3
I'm also like, you know, I'm pretty easy to please. I mean, like, Zoron had me.
I got to know what more of you people want from me. You know,
Speaker 3 I voted for three straight Democratic presidents, and I was going to vote for Zoron for mayor. So I'm pretty easy to please.
Speaker 3
So you can get me on board. Here's what you have to do.
We'll agree with this. Some specific things.
Speaker 3 Have some fucking balls. Like run a fucking campaign.
Speaker 3 Tell us what your campaign is about.
Speaker 3 Don't be a fascist and be able to talk and be able to talk and be able to communicate to people and lift them up.
Speaker 3 And like it's that seems like that isn't that hard, but it's kind of been for us for the last 10 years. But like that's how I would summarize it.
Speaker 2 I do think so, you know, we're coming from behind in part because I think we've paid for having, like, if you were someone coming up in politics and you see who the standard bearers of our party have been for the last 10 years,
Speaker 2 you might not know exactly the Democrats used to be fun and cool.
Speaker 2 So we have one minute left. Hassan, final thought?
Speaker 4 Yeah, we got to get rid of the gerontocracy within the party. Down with the seniority structure that we have.
Speaker 4
We need real whips in the party. This is something that I talk to you about.
It's something that I talk to the Pa Johns about every single time. If you have people who don't want to play ball.
Speaker 3 what kind of whips?
Speaker 4 Like, you know it.
Speaker 3
I don't. I just don't.
It's like whipping votes.
Speaker 4 I don't mean it in the unless, unless it's, it's Joe Manchin, in which case, you know, maybe.
Speaker 4 I'm kidding. Of course, I can't use spicy language here, but we need to.
Speaker 4 We need to make sure that we earn the trust of the working class back. And I think that they have been hyper-focused on culture war narratives.
Speaker 4 And the only reason why they've been hyper-focused on culture war narratives is because we have not done enough on the left left flank to say no we are with you we will fight for you we're going to make sure that we solve your economic hardships and
Speaker 2 and jessica um
Speaker 2 you're just going to go back in there and you're going to fight all these people and you're going to defeat them for us
Speaker 3 yeah no you got this girl
Speaker 7 but
Speaker 7
agree with all of what was just said as the kind of final wrap-up stuff. But, you know, this idea, you need to be able to talk.
You need to be able talk where I talk.
Speaker 7
You don't need to be able to talk for three hours with people who agree with you. You know, it's easy.
I launched a podcast last year like everybody else.
Speaker 7 I can get anyone who's going to be running for president to come on my pod. They're dying to do it.
Speaker 7 The tougher conversations are the ones that we need to be having because that's how you can get in people's faces and say, that isn't what my party stands for. We're not a communist party.
Speaker 7
We're not a socialist party. We're a big tent party.
Sorry.
Speaker 2 We're a big tent that includes some socialists.
Speaker 7 Yeah, a democratic socialist is not a socialist.
Speaker 7 I mean, they use these words interchangeably.
Speaker 3 Hassan was pro-USSR this week.
Speaker 2
We're wrapping it up. We're ending on a high note.
Are we having fun? Are we having fun?
Speaker 3 All right.
Speaker 2 And I do think, by the way, like,
Speaker 2 I hear, look, what's great about being part of a big coalition is being comfortable with the moments of tension and discomfort and disagreement because Republicans can't, you're right,
Speaker 2 they've been a little less scoldy, but also are running to squash dissent because they're not comfortable with discomfort.
Speaker 2 They're trying to tell people that politics is easy and there's never any time where you need to feel conflicted or bad or that anything is hard. That's a kind of part of the appeal of fascism.
Speaker 2
Democratic politics can be tough. Democracy can be tough.
But we are part of a big coalition, and I just think we can all have fun together.
Speaker 3 All right.
Speaker 3 Thanks, everybody.
Speaker 2 Thanks for coming to this. And thank you to Jessica Tarlov, Tim Miller, Hassan Piker, and Simone Sanders.
Speaker 3 Yeah.
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Speaker 3 Vamonos.
Speaker 3 Joining us live here at CrookedCon, he's one of the Democratic Party's loudest voices calling out the dangers of the Trump administration.
Speaker 3
Welcome, Senator Chris Murphy. Hey, thanks, Dan.
Hey, everybody.
Speaker 3 Before we get started, I would note the senator has a vote, so we're going to probably have to wrap this up a little about five minutes early because we can't let him miss the vote, but we're going to be here for as long as we possibly can.
Speaker 3
All right. Let's start with the good stuff.
Yeah. So the mood, as you can tell in this room, is much better because of what happened on Tuesday.
How are you interpreting those results?
Speaker 3 Well, democracy is, for the time being, still alive and well.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 listen, obviously, the election on Tuesday was first and foremost a referendum on Trump's corruption, his chaos.
Speaker 3 It was an important statement in every corner of the country
Speaker 3 that the American public are not ready to turn our government over to a would-be dictator. But there's another message I think that comes from Tuesday as well.
Speaker 3 And it's one that I hope Democrats are able to learn, which is that people want an opposition party that is willing to stand up and fight in this country.
Speaker 3 It is not coincidental that we got that big victory at the first moment when the Democratic Party is showing real resolve, is showing a willingness to stand up to this guy.
Speaker 3 And so, as I've said over the last few days, it's important for us to hear the voters and continue the fight that we're engaged in right now. So it was, I think, a really important moment.
Speaker 3 I think the result of Tuesday will be that a lot of folks who maybe had been thinking of sitting on the sidelines, some of the corporate elites, the higher education elites, the legal elites who were maybe thinking that Trump had already won this fight will now realize that the fight is still on.
Speaker 3 And I think it ends up giving confidence to a lot of people and a lot of institutional players all around the country to maybe re-enter the fight to save democratic norms and the foundation of our democracy.
Speaker 3 Obviously, huge wins,
Speaker 3 but these wins are mostly in bluish states, right? New Jersey, Virginia, two states, Kamala Harris, one, California. I mean, Georgia is obviously the exception.
Speaker 3 Do you worry that there's maybe a danger of overreading this, right? To think that maybe it kind of as Democrats did after 2022, that the voters are with us.
Speaker 3 I mean, like you can ignore some of the hard questions that still exist after 2024.
Speaker 3 I think that's exactly right.
Speaker 3 I think it's interesting that the party has not been able, I think, thus far to find the oxygen to do a real autopsy as to how we got to this point.
Speaker 3 And that's understandable at some level because we've had to be engaged in this,
Speaker 3 I mean, just epic scale fight to save the country. But the reality is, if you look at the United States Senate,
Speaker 3 the best right now that Senate Democrats can do if we run the table is 52 seats.
Speaker 3 Because right now, for the time being, we're not competitive in a lot of states that just a decade ago we were competitive in.
Speaker 3 And so we do have to wrestle with why we have lost a lot of low-income voters, why rural areas have abandoned Democrats. And Trump will
Speaker 3 make us more electable in some of those places, but it probably doesn't get us over the hump in like in a place like Missouri or Florida, where just two seconds ago we were running candidates that won.
Speaker 3 So I am certainly worried about the fact that the party has only 12 months to go before the midterm election and maybe hasn't done enough of that reckoning with what went wrong that will allow us to once again be a national party able to win everywhere.
Speaker 3 Not that I expect you to have all the answers here, but one of the reasons we're all gathered here together is to try to figure out questions like this.
Speaker 3 Do you have some thoughts on sort of how Democrats get back to a world where we can win the Ohios, the Iowas, the Montanos, or even some states in the South, some things we should do differently, different kinds of candidates we should be open to?
Speaker 3 Yeah, I do.
Speaker 3 And I'll give you sort of three simple ideas.
Speaker 3 First, I just do believe that it's not a mistake that the only person in our party that draws crowds of 50,000, 60,000, 70,000 is Bernie Sanders and AOC.
Speaker 3 I just think you have to tell a story. And you obviously are better at this than anybody, but you have to tell a story, a narrative.
Speaker 3 And that narrative has to not only tell you how we're going to make your lives better, but it has to tell people who's screwing them.
Speaker 3 And there's a true story out there about the corporate class, the billionaire class, consolidated economic power, making people's lives miserable in this country.
Speaker 3 And the Democratic Party has become this sort of technocratic party that only talks about solutions, solutions that are largely about just rearranging the pieces on the existing marketplace playing field.
Speaker 3 We've got to be a party that talks about who has too much power and exactly how we are going to radically and immediately shift power from people who have too much of it to people who have not enough of it.
Speaker 3 The second thing we have to do
Speaker 3 is become a big tent party again. And I know this is a tough conversation for our party, but if it were up to me, we would be a party with two big tentpoles.
Speaker 3 A tentpole that talks about unrigging our economy and a tentpole that talks about unrigging our democracy, right? Getting big money, anonymous money, billionaire money out of politics.
Speaker 3 And by the way, like admitting that you have to do big things to do that, like if it takes a constitutional amendment to get big money out of politics, we should be a further constitutional amendment to get big money out of politics.
Speaker 3 but dan that means that means um that you are letting people into the tent perhaps nominating candidates or being present in areas where you know folks might not be with us on all of the social and cultural issues might not even not be with us on you know issues that i care deeply about like guns but i just think we have a better chance of convincing them if they step inside because they align with us on a higher minimum wage or on campaign finance reform.
Speaker 3 So I just think we have to become that big tent party again. And then the last suggestion I'd have is just how we spend our money.
Speaker 3 We've been corrupted by a consultant class in the Democratic Party that tells us to spend money only on 30-second TV ads and digital ads.
Speaker 3 The Republican Party goes out and builds a permanent messaging and mobilization infrastructure.
Speaker 3 We talk about that all the time, but we end up spending almost all of our money on ads that disappear as soon as the last election is over.
Speaker 3 And so if you want to win in this country as a Democratic Party, be a big tent, be a pugilistically populist party, and spend money on permanent messaging and mobilization infrastructure.
Speaker 3 Speaking of populism, what do you make of Zoran Mandani's win in New York City and some of the discomfort that some Democrats, including some of the Democratic leadership, have had with that sort of candidate?
Speaker 3 You know, it was, it almost got to the point of being hilarious.
Speaker 3 You look at Momdami's interviews in the final days of the campaign, and you couldn't ask him a question that he didn't answer by talking about the cost of living in New York, right?
Speaker 3 I mean, he was so laser-like focused on cost.
Speaker 3 There was a survey done of Democratic social media posts maybe two or three years ago, and it showed the percentage of our social media communications that talk about the economy.
Speaker 3 You know what the percentage was? 10%.
Speaker 3 One out of 10 messages from the Democratic Party is about economics. Now, we were talking about a lot of other stuff that's really important,
Speaker 3 but when you only spend 10 percent of your time talking about economics, people start to take you know the hint that maybe you are not going to fight as hard as you say you're going to fight when you get into office.
Speaker 3 So, that relentless focus on the economy.
Speaker 3 Um, second, just being authentic and not being worried about making mistakes in your communication, not vetting every single thing you say through communications professionals.
Speaker 3 And then, like, a realization that if you don't, listen, I don't agree with Zoran on everything, but like you are actually perceived as illegitimate to voters if all of your views are inside the 40-yard lines.
Speaker 3 Like if you don't have one or two things that a voter vehemently disagrees with you on, they get suspicious of you. And so just being true to what you, and also they have a bullshit.
Speaker 3 sensitivity that voters probably didn't have as acutely decades ago.
Speaker 3 And so if you aren't authentic, if you don't have a couple views that are a little outside of the mainstream, you are actually not perceived as real and thus not electable as a Democrat in this country today.
Speaker 3 Let's talk about the shutdown, right? We are, I don't even know what day we're on now, but it's the longest shutdown in history.
Speaker 3 Some of the people who are here today are people who would be at work in the federal government somewhere were it not for the shutdown. You know, there's been all this talk.
Speaker 3 since the, you know, before the, right before the election, even after the election, about some group of Senate Democrats who are negotiating with or open to negotiating with the Republicans around some sort of deal to open the government in exchange for a vote on the Obamacare subsidies.
Speaker 3 Sort of what is the status of those negotiations? You can tell us, and
Speaker 3 what do you think Democrats should need in exchange to end the shutdown? Well, I mean, first, let me say this. In this audience, I know are people that, A, right now
Speaker 3 have been furloughed, have been without a paycheck for over a month, people in this audience who have been illegally fired from their jobs, first and foremost, let me just say from the bottom of my heart, thank you for what you have done for this country.
Speaker 3 Thank you for the sacrifice that you have made.
Speaker 3 So I went down to South Florida on Monday with Elizabeth Warren and Tina Smith. And we went down there because in South Florida is the highest concentration of people who have ACA plans.
Speaker 3 In some parts of South Florida, 25% of residents have an ACA plan.
Speaker 3 And if these premium increases go into effect, and you're talking about premiums doubling or tripling for folks across the country, but particularly in this area
Speaker 3
where we have a high concentration, we're talking about a meltdown of the healthcare system. And so, yes, there is deep pain in a shutdown.
People are not getting paid.
Speaker 3
Food stamp benefits are at risk. Obviously, travel gets interrupted.
But if we don't stop these premium increases from going into effect, there is life and death pain as well.
Speaker 3 And so it is important for my colleagues to realize that there is no good choice here. The Republicans have put us in an impossible position.
Speaker 3 Listen, for me, coming off of Tuesday, when the people of this country told Democrats to fight, it would be heartbreaking for Democrats to make an immediate decision to stop fighting.
Speaker 3 So,
Speaker 3 I guess the question is, how does it end, right? Like there is, you know, a Senate vote without a guarantee of a House vote is,
Speaker 3 that's fake, right? Like that's, you're not actually solving, you're getting something, but it's really, but the people who are premiums are going up are getting nothing. And I just,
Speaker 3 like,
Speaker 3 I really feel like you guys are in an impossible position of you're negotiating with people or
Speaker 3 you're standing off against people who do not seem to care about hurting their own voters, right?
Speaker 3 Like you're in Florida, which has the highest percentage of people on plans, people using, get the subsidies.
Speaker 3 The subsidies largely benefit people in states that did not expand Medicaid, which are red states.
Speaker 3 So how do you sort of think about how to bring this thing to a close when there's no good faith partner to negotiate with here?
Speaker 3 Yeah, I think it's charitable to suggest that they don't care about hurting their voters.
Speaker 3 They actually do seem to care about hurting their voters in that they are deliberately trying to make the shutdown as painful as possible.
Speaker 3 These are nihilists, right,
Speaker 3
that we're dealing with, which makes it hard. I mean, listen, I think you have to listen to Donald Trump.
What did he say on Tuesday morning? He said that the shutdown is hurting Republicans.
Speaker 3 We should realize that most Americans have not actually gone on to the website to see what their new premium increase is. Many of the rates were just posted a few days ago.
Speaker 3 We should understand that Donald Trump's pollsters are telling their party's leaders that they are going to lose the midterms.
Speaker 3 They're going to lose both the House and the Senate if they don't stop these premium increases from going into effect.
Speaker 3 And so I just think we have to have faith that there are a lot of reasons why the Republicans, as this
Speaker 3 nightmare of premium increases starts to become more real, are going to be willing to sit down and cut a deal. We made an offer just an hour ago to Republicans in which we said, listen,
Speaker 3
we will vote to end the shutdown today for a simple one-year extension of these premiums. Previously, we've been talking about two or three years.
We made a really, really simple offer here.
Speaker 3
I think as the days go on, it is going to be much harder for them to say, no, we can be reasonable. We were reasonable in the offer we made today.
But to fold at this point, I think ultimately.
Speaker 3 A, doesn't help the people we're trying to help in our healthcare system, but also empowers Trump to act more brazenly and more illegally, knowing that the Democratic Party really, in the end, doesn't have the stuff necessary to stand up to him.
Speaker 3 So I think if we don't get something for the people we say we have been fighting for, not only is there an immediate impact on them, but there is potential more pain coming from an emboldened President Trump.
Speaker 3 You know,
Speaker 3 this is the point in a typical election cycle where the
Speaker 3 House Speaker and the Senate majority leader become laser-focused on nothing more than keeping their jobs in the majority.
Speaker 3 Like what just maybe it's there may be some answers, but help me understand why when Trump says it's hurting the shutdown, it's hurting them, the shutdown's hurting them, Trump's pollster said it would be a 12-point shift in the generic ballot if they didn't let these things expire and he said that before the shutdown like what is like what are they doing I don't really understand like the thinking here it makes like it's there's just no logic to it is it you're asking me to try to explain what you go to the gym with these people like I mean you see them in the hallway like you have you talk to more Republicans than these guys do I think certainly than I do yeah I mean they they're they they don't have any independent thought process They are employees, right?
Speaker 3
They are. They just take direction from Donald Trump.
Now, he did give him a direction on Tuesday morning in the Senate. He said, go and change the rules of the Senate.
Speaker 3 But Senate Republicans sort of scratched their head because they just got wiped out on Tuesday. They are now increasingly likely to lose the Senate next November.
Speaker 3 And they thought to themselves, do I really want to change the rules so that when Democrats take control, we can very easily pass into law Roe versus Wade and universal background checks and an extension of the voting rights law with 50 votes.
Speaker 3 So maybe
Speaker 3 there are very limited moments when they choose not to follow his instructions.
Speaker 3 But no, by and large, even if he is telling them to take a barrel over Niagara Falls, right, which is what they're kind of doing right now politically, they are going to follow instructions like good cult members members do.
Speaker 3 It was very funny. I watched the video that Trump, the very strange video that Trump put out arguing for
Speaker 3 eliminating the filibuster, and it sounded to me almost exactly like a bizarre version of a 2021 Potsdam of America episode.
Speaker 3 I mean, we were selling abolished filibuster shirts back in those days when you guys tried to get the voting rights bill passed. Let's talk about a little general strategy here, right?
Speaker 3 Like one of the things that you have become very known for since Trump took office is like just being a very vocal spokesperson who's sort of like calling it as it is, not mincing words around the dangers to democracy, to our freedoms, to Trump becoming an authoritarian.
Speaker 3 Now at the same time, you know, you have Mandani winning this race on affordability.
Speaker 3 There's this report that's hiding the win that came out last week that's like Democrats have to talk about economic issues. Like that is, that's, that's what everyone cares about.
Speaker 3 How do you sort of think about the balance of like these obviously critical assaults on democracy that we know are very of great interest to the people in this room, but maybe not to Swing Vernon.
Speaker 3 How do you sort of think about your messaging? Yeah, so I don't think of it as two different stories. I think of it as the same story.
Speaker 3
It's not a story about his assault on costs and making people's economic lives more miserable and his assault on democracy. It's the same story in this sense.
What is his goal as president?
Speaker 3 His goal as president is to turn the federal government into a vehicle to enrich himself and his billionaire friends and to steal from people, to raise your costs in order to reserve enough money so that he can give it all to his pals.
Speaker 3 That's deeply unpopular. Nobody wants that, right? The Big Beautiful Bill is the biggest transfer of wealth from the poor and the middle class to the rich in the history of the country.
Speaker 3 It's wildly unpopular. So how do you get away with just stealing from regular people? Well, you destroy the rule of law.
Speaker 3 You destroy the ability of people to dissent, to protest, and to stand up and object in elections.
Speaker 3 And so, yes, he is trying to turn our government into a kleptocratic oligarchy in which he hurts us to help he and his Mar-a-Lago cronies.
Speaker 3 The only way he gets away with that is to destroy the democracy. So
Speaker 3 now I just explained that in
Speaker 3 60 seconds, but you can actually explain that in 20 seconds. And so I think as long as we tell those two twin stories together, people will get it.
Speaker 3
And I also do think that we maybe have overlearned our lesson a little bit from 2024. Okay, it is true.
Like our democracy message did not land in 2024.
Speaker 3 And large part because people are like, well, why do I want to save this version of democracy, right? Like this version of democracy sucks. It just works for the elites and the billionaire class.
Speaker 3 But that doesn't mean that people aren't plugged in right now to the actual threat.
Speaker 3 And the polling tells you that 80% of the American public thinks that we are in a political crisis right now, that more than half of Americans believe that their right to free speech is at risk.
Speaker 3 So I think you tell it together, and I think that you have confidence that the democracy part of the story actually does resonate and turn people out in a way that maybe it didn't a year ago.
Speaker 3 That's how I think about it. It's interesting.
Speaker 3 I think that you hit earlier when you were talking about how we reach these voters in the United States, what I think is the key solution to this challenge, which is we need a reform agenda.
Speaker 3 Because we have to be the, what happened in the Biden era is we became the party that was defending democracy as is. We were the status quo people.
Speaker 3 But if we can be the party that's trying to reform democracy, they get the corporate power out, get the money out, like that's a different message.
Speaker 3 And it gives people a sense that we're fighting for something better than we currently have. So when I entered politics 20,
Speaker 3 30 years ago,
Speaker 3 so campaign finance reform, right? Getting
Speaker 3 big corrupt money out of politics was like a top three or four issue for Democrats. And something happened over the last 20 years in which it barely cracked the top 10.
Speaker 3 Some of it is that our democracy reform agenda migrated from big money to voting rights. And that's for a good reason, because
Speaker 3
they were and still are trying to stop people from voting. But it is also true.
You were going to ban dark money in the John Lewis bill last year, or
Speaker 3
whatever. Right, but it wasn't that we never talked about what we led with.
It is just true, though, that Trump did get elected on his promise to drain the swamp.
Speaker 3 People do want to vote for a party that they think is going to clean up Washington.
Speaker 3 Right now, they don't really believe that we're much less corrupt than they are, in part because they don't hear us talking every single day about that reform agenda.
Speaker 3 And so that's why I get back to my prescription, my amateur prescription for the party, which is make the tent poll, make 75% of what you talk about, unrigging the economy, big ideas to put money in people's pockets, simple ideas like Mom Domini had, and
Speaker 3 talk all the time about what you're going to do to unrig the democracy and the influential have less power and regular people have more power.
Speaker 3 One last quick question here, because we know we got to get you this vote.
Speaker 3 How are, you know, one of the great concerns people in this audience is that the Republicans are going to do something to try to steal the 2026 elections.
Speaker 3 How are you thinking about that problem? Anything you guys are doing to get ahead of it?
Speaker 3 Yeah, I think, you know, continuing to invest in good local and state leaders, which is why these elections were so critical.
Speaker 3 We made a smart play, which was to put a lot of focus and investment on governors and mayors who are the actual people who administer elections.
Speaker 3 And so I think we can have some confidence that right now we, in the states that are going to matter, we have people who are going to protect against
Speaker 3 these efforts to try to corrupt elections.
Speaker 3 I think we have to be in a real active public and private conversation with social media companies that right now are being corrupted by Donald Trump to essentially allow for election distortion and interference to exist on their platforms, that if they do that and Donald Trump doesn't win, that they should keep their records and that there's going to be a price to be paid for essentially helping Donald Trump try to engage in election intimidation.
Speaker 3 And then lastly,
Speaker 3 just keep on turning out, right? There's this political science that says if 3% of a population is engaged in regular protest,
Speaker 3 it just becomes the secret sauce which puts enough sand in the gears to protect your democracy from destruction.
Speaker 3 The institutional players who would have to fold to essentially steal an election are just a little bit less likely to do that. And that includes the Supreme Court, right?
Speaker 3 Who are full of politicians who want to do Trump's bidding, but don't want to get too far outside of the political mainstream. They are all watching you.
Speaker 3 They are all watching whether No Kings is just a once once-a-year phenomenon or if it becomes a once-a-month phenomenon. And so the amount of buy-in you need to steal an election is pretty large.
Speaker 3 And public protest at scale is probably the key ingredient to keep the folks we need to stay straight from being corrupted when Donald Trump asks.
Speaker 3 So I wish it were more simple than that, but there's nothing more important than your ability to be present and to organize your friends and neighbors in being present during this moment.
Speaker 3
Well, that is a great place to end it. Please give it up for Senator Chris Murphy.
Senator Murray, thanks for being here. Thanks, guys.
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