Biden 2024: It Is What It Is?

58m
After a lackluster debate performance, calls are mounting for President Biden to drop out of the 2024 race. Yet, he insists he is still running. Is this the right move? Joining us to explore our current conundrum, we’re joined by Jon Favreau and Tommy Vietor, Founders of Crooked Media, hosts of Pod Save America and Authors of Democracy or else: How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps, as well as Bakari Sellers, CNN political commentator and Author of The Moment. Together, they hash out the best path forward for Democrats to defeat Trump this election and save democracy.

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Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart
Executive Producer – James Dixon
Executive Producer – Chris McShane
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Researcher/AP – Gillian Spear
Music by Hansdle Hsu


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Runtime: 58m

Transcript

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Speaker 4 Hey, everybody. Welcome to the weekly show with Jon Stewart.
I am Jon Stewart. We were off last week.
It was July 4th.

Speaker 4 We celebrated America. We celebrated the holiday of America with good cheer, with barbecues, with explosions, which in some ways feels prescient

Speaker 4 with where America appears to be heading in the present moment. Oh my God, was that an explosion? What the? Oh, the house is shaking.

Speaker 4 Now, we were here, of course, with our super producers, Brittany Mamedovic and Lauren Walker. Guys,

Speaker 4 we were going to do taxes. We were breaking down the tax bill that every American pays.
We were going to show where it goes to, how it might be disconnected from the urgent needs of the people.

Speaker 4 And then there was a something happened.

Speaker 4 Wait, Lauren, that's exactly. It is.
Brittany, yes, you're both. Yes, you are both.
There was a debate. No No idea.
We watched it. And since then, there's been an explosion of conversation amongst

Speaker 4 people

Speaker 4 online and within the beltway. Apparently, only elitists, by the way.

Speaker 4 Apparently, average people are not having this conversation. It's only elitists.

Speaker 4 Where there is a concern that the confidence in the current commander-in-chief may be waning somewhat. And so

Speaker 4 we thought, well, shit,

Speaker 4 we should probably talk about that.

Speaker 4 Have you had, have either of you had conversations

Speaker 4 with family, colleagues, co-workers?

Speaker 4 Was this in terms of triaging your conversations? Top of the list, bottom of the list, middle of the list?

Speaker 4 Where was it?

Speaker 5 I was

Speaker 6 doing what I watched my dad do during Mets games growing up, which was like lots of pacing and screaming. And I didn't really look at my phone.

Speaker 4 So you're suggesting that this debate was the Mets game of political intrigue. Yes.
Have people been, you know, in terms of post-debate, what's been the general tenor of the conversations?

Speaker 7 This is the first time I've come out from under my covers. No.

Speaker 7 I feel like

Speaker 7 I do scroll on Twitter, which makes me sad. And then, you know, conversations are split.
Honestly, there are people that are very much like.

Speaker 7 stop talking about it. Stop asking questions.
Just get in line. Support, you know, we're voting for an administration, not a single person is, you know, what I get told a lot.

Speaker 4 It is interesting, though, they keep saying, you know, I keep hearing back when they were only talking about Trump, they were like, stop talking about Trump.

Speaker 4 And now that we're talking about Biden, they're like, fucking shut up. Yeah.

Speaker 4 Talk about Trump. But we do have a good conversation today.
We got some guys for it. So I'm going to jump in there and let's see where we go.

Speaker 4 So let's jump right in with our guests for the week.

Speaker 4 Jon Favreau and Tommy Viter.

Speaker 4 They're founders of Crooked Media, host of Pod Save America, authors of democracy or else how to save america in 10 easy steps and bakari sellers cnn political commentator and author of the moment hello everybody hello hey there

Speaker 4 it is it is so nice to uh to see all of you thank you so much for joining us uh i think we should discuss maybe the obviously the kind of the elephant uh in the room that's been occurring uh skydance has bought paramount why would they why would they do something like that let me Google.

Speaker 4 No, we're going to discuss the

Speaker 4 fallout from Joe Biden's debate performance and the general sense of the Twitter commentary that

Speaker 4 I should shut the fuck up.

Speaker 4 Tommy and John should shut the fuck up. And Bakari is a very nice man who should continue talking.

Speaker 4 Would that about summarize

Speaker 4 the fallout from these situations? So,

Speaker 4 Tommy and John, I'm going to start with you.

Speaker 4 I think that the debate so shocked

Speaker 4 my

Speaker 4 conscience on what my expectation was

Speaker 4 that it felt to not speak out would be malpractice at some level. Is that

Speaker 4 what you were feeling as you watched it? What was your sense?

Speaker 8 Yeah, I mean, I think we all watched it together.

Speaker 8 I think five minutes in, we were all watching from, you know, hands over our face, between our fingers.

Speaker 8 It was so much worse than I ever imagined it could have been.

Speaker 8 And it wasn't just bad, like a one-off performance bad. It was bad in the way that highlighted, I think,

Speaker 8 Joe Biden's single biggest vulnerability, which is his age and concerns about his ability to. to complete four more years.

Speaker 8 You know, would have been like Mitt Romney driving onto the 2012 debate stage in a Ferrari and just like chucking cash out of people, right? Like highlighting your vulnerability.

Speaker 4 And then it's that would have been so

Speaker 4 awesome. If he had just walked out and like, making a rule, was that the bitches?

Speaker 5 I know. Was that the first debate when he kicked you guys' ass or not? Which debate are we talking about? Kicked our ass.

Speaker 5 Kicked our ass.

Speaker 8 But that's a good point, Bacari, because that was an ass-kicking in the sense that Obama wasn't sharp. He didn't have his message down.

Speaker 8 He didn't seem like he came ready to fight and make a case against Romney. This was bad in that, you know, Biden struggled to speak coherently and get sentences out and make an argument.

Speaker 8 And that to me was chilling.

Speaker 9 It would have been like if in that first debate with Romney, Barack Obama went out and said, look, I wasn't born here, but let me tell you something.

Speaker 9 That's, you know, I'm just, you know, I'm not from here. I'm not from this country.

Speaker 9 I'm not from this country, everyone who's been wondering.

Speaker 4 But Kari, I imagine you didn't watch the debate and think to yourself, he's killing it. But you had a very different response to what you were seeing.
Do you want to talk about that?

Speaker 5 Yeah, no, I think he got his ass kicked up, down, left, right, and sideways. I also don't think elections are won in June.

Speaker 5 I think that there is a great deal of just over excitement by a lot of my friends on the left or over concern. I mean, it is what it is.

Speaker 5 I mean, people are talking about, I mean, people are engaging in this fantasy fiction of this off-ramp, this proverbial off-ramp, where there's not one.

Speaker 5 People are talking about this open convention where there's not going to be one.

Speaker 5 If, in fact, there is an opportunity for someone else to replace Joe Biden, the only person who has the infrastructure, the cash in order to do that or at least give us a chance to last four months would be Kamala Harris.

Speaker 5 But I'm just very soberly saying we got our ask if in the debate, first and foremost, you know, we can have all of these conversations about Joe Biden needs to do this and Joe Biden needs to do that.

Speaker 5 But after July 22nd, if I'm not mistaken or 25th, whenever we have the roll call, he is our nominee. So then what are you going to do? I'm resolved to the fact that we have three choices.

Speaker 5 We have Donald Trump, we have Joe Biden, and the couch.

Speaker 5 And whether or not I was at Essence Fest or whether or not I was fishing with my good friend Jared Loadhold off a dock in Orangeburg County last week, the people I talked to are all saying the same thing.

Speaker 5 Like, let's just get on with it. I mean, we know what we're going to do.
We know who we're going to choose. And it is what it is.

Speaker 5 I mean, we have bigger things that we're fighting for other than going back and rehashing the fact that our candidate is 81 years old, probably eats at Denny's, goes to bed at four o'clock, and changes tennis balls on his walker.

Speaker 4 You just described my perfect weekend.

Speaker 5 Thank you, Bakar.

Speaker 4 So I want to to talk about, because I think, Bakar, you bring up a really interesting mindset. And I want to talk about that because

Speaker 4 I am of the opinion that democracy is not just under threat by authoritarians or by a Supreme Court that has decided maybe we shouldn't have left England in the first place and a monarchy is actually slightly preferable.

Speaker 4 But I want to talk about the phrase, it is what it is,

Speaker 4 because I think that that that

Speaker 4 is

Speaker 4 a complacency that I have seen in the Democratic Party for a very long time.

Speaker 4 That includes Ruth Bader Ginsburg not retiring on time, that includes Merrick Garland not going after Donald Trump for January 6th on time.

Speaker 4 That includes not being able to get Merrick Garland onto the Supreme Court. That includes allowing Amy Coney Barrett to get onto the Supreme Court.

Speaker 4 That includes not being responsive to urgency and to new information and just saying

Speaker 4 it is what it is, guys, and shrugging. And I think my point is

Speaker 4 there is opportunity here. It may not be open convention.

Speaker 4 It may not be a new person to take on to the ticket, but there is a vibrant and I think ultimately positive, at least conversation and acknowledgement to be had that is not being had because

Speaker 4 it is what it is. And what are you going to do? So, I want you to respond to that if you can.

Speaker 5 Yeah, I don't, I don't actually mind the conversation. I'm not somebody who wants to put you and Axe and Tommy and John and the guys and

Speaker 5 Tim, put you guys on an island and just ship you guys off. White guy summer.
White guy summer. White boy and Chet Hanks.
White boy summer. You and Chet Hanks.
I know.

Speaker 5 So I'm not somebody, like, I appreciate the thoroughness in which you're having this debate. I'm kind of looking beyond that and into your is what it is, your, your kind of

Speaker 5 monologue there.

Speaker 5 Look, the fact is, you can go back to Rahm Emmanuel not putting the impact on or the emphasis on the judiciary as he should have, and Barack Obama not doing what he should have done at the judiciary, or codifying Roe v.

Speaker 5 Wade, or whatever he could have done when we actually had the House and the Senate in 2008. Those type of things, we can go back and re-litigate those things under that mantra of it is what it is.

Speaker 5 What I'm talking about right now is very practically the choices we have before us. And so, I am geared up trying to prevent Project 25.

Speaker 5 I'm geared up trying to make sure that the things that we're talking about, the Chevron ruling, which I, I mean, I know that people are caught up on presidential immunity, but

Speaker 5 the Chevron ruling, in my opinion, was more devastating to the fabric of democracy than anything we've seen in recent years.

Speaker 4 He's talking about the ruling from the Supreme Court, which made it much more difficult for federal agencies to regulate, whether it's the EPA or SEC or any of those agencies, to regulate the people that they're charged with regulating, that they undercut those decisions from the Supreme Court.

Speaker 5 And they did what they did similar in Dobbs.

Speaker 5 Similarly, in Dobbs, they overthrew decades' worth of precedent, which the Supreme Court is not necessarily known to do unless you're like Clarence Thomas and you're getting flowed out by your billionaire donors all over the country.

Speaker 5 And so, yeah, I am just, I think there are a lot of people who sit in my seat and they have a very sober look at where we are practically and say, I cannot afford in November to go back any further.

Speaker 5 We felt like 2020, we were on the precipice of a third reconstruction and and we missed that mark and since that time we've actually been going backwards and i know that people just don't want to backslide anymore and i feel like having conversations biden is the president if we're backsliding under biden well but you're saying we're no but i i can go through his list of achievements but what we're talking about are the attacks on the attacks on dei we're talking about the attacks on affirmative action we're talking about how in arizona they passed an abortion bill from the 1800s how they passed dobbs how they we just went through presidential immunity i mean there are cultural and and legisl and policy initiatives that firmly make me believe that we've gone backwards.

Speaker 5 I mean, look at Black home ownership.

Speaker 4 No, I'm not disagreeing with you. I'm just saying the administration is the administration right now.

Speaker 4 But John and Tommy, I want you to address this because what Bakari is suggesting is that he's being strategic, that this isn't about noticing that the president may no longer be up to the job.

Speaker 4 This is about staying with the status quo because strategically, I guess, and Bakari, tell me if I'm misrepresenting this. That gives us our best opportunity to win.

Speaker 4 And I think my point is, I don't know that that's the case. I think I would disagree that that's the best strategy, but what's your thought?

Speaker 9 I mean, you would disagree, and literally all of the polling and data available would also agree with this position as well.

Speaker 9 It's not fiction at all that Joe Biden could step down tomorrow. He could announce that I am, you know what? I have an important job to finish.

Speaker 9 I'm doing two jobs right now. I'm president of the United States and I'm running for president.
And president of the United States is too important. And I want to focus on that.

Speaker 9 And I can pass it off to Kamala Harris or we can have an open convention, whatever he wants to do. He could easily do that tomorrow.
And the idea that we cannot influence

Speaker 4 Bakari just got very sad.

Speaker 5 He just,

Speaker 9 why is that not a real thing?

Speaker 5 Why is that a real thing?

Speaker 4 Let me ask you this, Bakari.

Speaker 4 Is it not a real thing technically, or is it not a real thing you think emotionally emotionally? Or technically, it's not a real thing.

Speaker 5 I think technically, emotionally, first of all, I mean, the way this works is, and I love the kind of land that we're living in, where one can assume that Joe Biden can say that I don't have the ability to run for re-election after I've already announced that I am, after I've done all of these things, raised all of these monies, have the infrastructure around the country, but yet I don't have it in me to finish this campaign.

Speaker 9 No, he can't say, I can't win.

Speaker 5 I can't win because all the polling says he can't win. Yet I can still be president of the United States.
So those things are not those things

Speaker 8 one one's can't win one's is multi-month job and one is auditioning for a four-year job i think i'm gonna i'm gonna also jump in and say like look

Speaker 4 nobody actually knows now things are looking dire for the president but four months i think any of us would agree in a modern media timeline is for

Speaker 4 ever it really is i think we i think we confuse this idea you know we just saw france uh lose terribly in the parliamentary elections Macron jumps out with a snap election. He jumps in there.

Speaker 4 Weeks later, they've stemmed the tide of Le Pen. I mean, it can be done.

Speaker 5 All right, we'll be right back.

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Speaker 4 Okay, we're back. And that's my point, Bakari.
We are complacent, and that complacency sets in a cynicism with the American public. And I think you're giving us a binary choice that's not real.

Speaker 4 I don't necessarily agree, oh, Biden can't win, or Kamala can't win. We just don't know.
And the world changes so quickly, and we don't know about those things. But here's what I do know:

Speaker 4 it's not a binary choice. President Biden's defiance, I don't think, is the right strategy.
I think the idea of not acknowledging the progressive and degenerative nature of what he's dealing with

Speaker 4 is gaslighting anybody who supports him. And this of him going out there with bromides about,

Speaker 4 Joey, my dad said to me, Joey, it's not about how you get knocked down. It's about how you get up.
And you're like, I don't know that you can get up, sir.

Speaker 4 I think that's really not the metaphor you want to go with. And there's no shame in that.
We all get there.

Speaker 4 So I don't understand.

Speaker 4 There is an opportunity here to have a more honest, adult, sophisticated, fuck the media, fuck whatever they're going to say.

Speaker 4 You are in control of how this goes down. And I don't, I think they're bungling even the response, Bakari.

Speaker 5 No. And so I don't, I've never said this choice has been binary.
In fact, I think people who

Speaker 5 analyzes race as being binary, and I may have missed your point, but have it wrong, because I've always said that, and where I am right now, today, the choices are Joe Biden, Donald Trump, and the couch.

Speaker 5 Those are the three choices that people have in this race. And so.

Speaker 4 See, I think I disagree with that. And I'm trying to figure out why you feel that

Speaker 4 it is all etched in stone.

Speaker 5 Joe Biden owns this decision. And so if we want to spend our time pressuring Joe Biden, by all means, continue to tweet, continue to talk about it.
Do those things, take that upper level.

Speaker 5 I've never in the history of history seen a white man see the, he's the most powerful man in the world, cede all of that power to anyone, let alone a black woman.

Speaker 5 That's one thing.

Speaker 5 Gandalf.

Speaker 4 I don't know if you remember Gandalf. I believe he.

Speaker 5 And two, I disagree with the political climate where anybody says that you cannot run for president, but you can still be president. Now, all of that's conjecture.

Speaker 5 None of that is technical, but I have a, I know in the field.

Speaker 4 But isn't that anybody who's already served two terms? I mean, they, they're president, but they're not running if, if it's your second term.

Speaker 5 But it's, but they're not quitting.

Speaker 5 That's a given. Like you'll be quitting the campaign.

Speaker 8 John, you mentioned the French beating fascism. You know how they beat fascism? 210 candidates stepped down in various district races so they wouldn't split the vote against the far right.

Speaker 8 That is how the French beat fascism.

Speaker 4 They put country over party.

Speaker 8 They put country over party.

Speaker 8 And when Joe Biden is the official nominee, I will shut the fuck up and I will march and I will fight for him and I will knock on doors and I will donate and do whatever it takes.

Speaker 8 But this is an extraordinary situation and it is time for courageous action.

Speaker 8 And we have a window between now and the official nomination of Joe Biden where we can do something that's never been done before in our history.

Speaker 8 And I just don't agree that a mini primary is fan fiction. I think you could find ways to compete for 4,000 or so delegates.

Speaker 5 Let me finish.

Speaker 8 I'm not saying you're saying that. I'm thinking that's what's out there.
Like you could find a way to compete for those delegates. They will all get together at the convention in Chicago and nominate.

Speaker 8 But if Biden doesn't want to do that, he is an excellent communicator in Kamala Harris waiting in the wings.

Speaker 8 And I think the subtext you hear from a lot of Biden supporters, I'm not saying you, Bukhari, is they're like, look, if Joe steps down, it's got to be Kamala and she's

Speaker 5 bad. She's not good at running.
I'm not saying bad. Yeah.

Speaker 8 They're criticizing her, right?

Speaker 8 They are knifing her. uh on background in these stories being like kama's numbers are terrible she can't win and i think the biden administration is doing that people in the Biden administration?

Speaker 8 Supporters of Joe Biden are absolutely.

Speaker 5 Yeah, certainly. So they are.
But like

Speaker 9 they did it publicly. They put out a memo where

Speaker 9 she was doing worse than him against Trump. That was the first memo they put out after the debate, which I wouldn't have done to my vice president.
But

Speaker 9 here's all that matters. Yeah.
Donald Trump is leading by more than he has ever led in a race for president right now.

Speaker 9 He is leading by more than any Republican has led at this point in a race in a general election in 20 years.

Speaker 5 Okay. Since George Bush.

Speaker 9 Perhaps all the polling is wrong, but then you'd also have to explain why the same polls that have Joe Biden down, all these Senate Democrats in tough races are competitive.

Speaker 9 So then you say, okay, well, we got a couple months to turn around. Could he turn around? Yes.
It's not that he can't win. It's the question is, is Joe Biden facing, we're facing Donald Trump.

Speaker 9 And a threat to democracy, an existential threat to democracy, as we are all, as Joe Biden says. And the question is, is Joe Biden the best candidate to give us the chance?

Speaker 9 Does he give us the best chance to defeat Donald Trump, knowing that he has not been formally nominated yet, and he could make the decision himself to step down? And you know what?

Speaker 9 Joe Biden, who is an 81-year-old white guy, Catholic, who became president, has moderated his views a lot and listened to people a lot in the last several years.

Speaker 9 And when progressives push him on something or moderates push him on something, Joe Biden listens and he takes in his advice and then he makes decisions based on what people are telling him.

Speaker 9 So the idea that we, and I know that you said this was okay, Rochari, but like in the next couple of weeks, the idea that we all don't have influence on this decision when we're talking to members of Congress and then members of Congress are talking to the president, like, I think it's worth making a run at asking him to reconsider this because they haven't shown us a plan.

Speaker 9 the Biden campaign of how they win. They haven't shown us any of their data.
They haven't shown us a path.

Speaker 9 They haven't made, they haven't talked about how he's going to turn it around there's just been nothing and like i think it's weird that they think that the joe biden we saw on stage has a is a better has a better shot of beating donald trump than kamala harris the first black woman vice president that he chose for the job who is a fantastic communicator like i just don't understand so let me there there are a lot of things a lot of nuggets i just want to jump i i it look if

Speaker 5 If Joe Biden decides one morning he wakes up after Catholic Mass, I think the most important day is actually, you know, Thursday.

Speaker 5 After Thursday, if he's able to, if he, if he, if he goes out there and falls down, literally, then, okay. But is that really where we're at? Is that the bar, Makari? I mean,

Speaker 5 president.

Speaker 4 No, I'm saying that, then he may be like, I'm not doing it.

Speaker 5 Okay. I don't know.
But if he decides, then I want to push back on the fact that it's an open primary. It's not an open primary.
It's Kamala Harris's race. I mean, she will be the nominee.

Speaker 5 And the fact is, she should actually be president of the United States to make her stronger going into that. I mean, that's just

Speaker 4 doesn't that undercut somewhat your it is what it is. Like you're now laying out, I think, a scenario that's plausible.
But I'm just also maybe even stronger.

Speaker 5 My complete thought is this. While we are, while you guys are launching a pressure campaign, which is effectively what it is.

Speaker 4 But I want to tell you something, Bicari. So this is what I would object to.
This idea that this is a pressure campaign.

Speaker 4 What it is, is a visceral response emotionally to something shocking that was seen.

Speaker 4 Joe Biden has run on this idea of honesty and decency, but they have not been honest about the condition and the difficulties that he has been facing.

Speaker 4 And so it undercuts one of the foundational arguments that they even have made. So this is not a campaign.
I am not working in coordination with various people.

Speaker 5 I have a platform and I have been stunned and disappointed and angered by what i saw and how i've been talked to that i didn't see what i saw that's all look you saw you my point is you saw what you saw you're outraged by what you saw you have every right all three of you all to be as visceral and have whatever reaction you want to have to it right my only point is that there's going to come a point in time in the next two weeks maybe where i am working over the next two weeks to try to get Joe Biden re-elected, right?

Speaker 5 That's my goal because he's the nominee. He's the presumptive nominee.
If that changes, which I really do not believe it is going to change,

Speaker 4 but do you want it to change, Buccari? I guess is my question. Do you think we have a better chance if it does change, Bakari?

Speaker 5 I'm not sure. I really don't know the answer to that.

Speaker 4 There you go. So it's, so it isn't what it is, is my point.

Speaker 5 But my point is that I think a lot of people have backup quarterback syndrome. They really do.

Speaker 5 I agree with that. I agree with that.

Speaker 4 I'm a Patriots fan.

Speaker 8 We had a hot ass backup quarterback.

Speaker 5 I was going to say, but you don't know.

Speaker 4 You maybe have Tom Brady or maybe you got Tommy Cutlitz.

Speaker 5 You don't know until you throw him in there. Drew Bledsoe got a raw deal, by the way.
That's a lot of Drew Bledsoe.

Speaker 9 Is Drew Bledsoe the Joe Biden of this metaphor?

Speaker 5 Is that what we're talking about?

Speaker 5 You know what it is?

Speaker 5 Everybody loves it. Maybe Kamala Harris is Tom Brady.

Speaker 4 Maybe some of them. Let me change the metaphor.
Let me change the metaphor. And I'll throw this to John and Tommy.
So we talked earlier about the French, you know, putting down fascism on the thing.

Speaker 4 I'm going to give you another metaphor about the French. In the 1930s, as Germany was building up their armaments, the French decided on a strategy to defeat fascism.
It was called the Maginot Wall.

Speaker 4 And they built it, and they were a series of giant concrete bunkers stationary with guns all pointing in one direction.

Speaker 4 And the Germans came through the area and went, oh, I think we can just go around this. And they went around it and then just fought and destroyed it.
And that...

Speaker 4 Can't that also be a metaphor that this idea of, no, this is our plan. It's rigid, it's status quo, it's all facing in one direction, and it's utterly incapable of holding off that onslaught.

Speaker 4 And that was the last time they tried to defeat fascism. And guess what? They didn't.

Speaker 8 Yeah, I mean, I think my part of why I'm so concerned, Bacari, is because I watched the debate and I was like, man, that was really bad. But let's give him a little time to do some more things.

Speaker 8 Then I watched the ABC News interview. And frankly, it made me more concerned because it was at times incoherent.

Speaker 8 Again, during some of the radio interviews he did, where it turns out his campaign actually gave the host the questions. Like those didn't go particularly smoothly.
Morning Joe wasn't great.

Speaker 8 And you could hear him reading papers. And so I'm like, I'm not trying to be a dick.
Like I have a lot of love and affection for Joe Biden and people in that White House.

Speaker 8 But the guy has not been doing things off teleprompter and he has not shown us that he can run the kind of campaign that he needs to run to win. And like you mentioned, a pressure campaign.

Speaker 8 I mean, I'm seeing quotes from state party leaders saying, look, we can't say what we really think.

Speaker 8 We can't articulate what the grassroots is saying because we'll get punished by the Democratic Party and we'll get robbed of resources. So that to me is kind of the worrisome Omerta that's happening.

Speaker 9 And I'm sure, Mikari, you're probably seeing these too, but like the private polls are coming back, the internal polls from like these Senate races, and it's freaking people out.

Speaker 9 It's like Biden down 10 in Pennsylvania, Biden down six in Wisconsin, even as Bob Casey's up two and Tammy Baldwin's up three.

Speaker 9 And a lot of these House members are seeing it in their districts. Safe Biden districts are starting to look bad.

Speaker 5 Like New York State.

Speaker 4 Where do you guys see all this stuff? How come I don't get to see it?

Speaker 5 I mean,

Speaker 5 I think this is kind of siloed. Like, this is kind of siloed.
This is what happens when you genuine this type of, you know, visceral, maybe rightfully so hysteria. I mean, people literally.

Speaker 4 You believe this is the tail wagging the dog, Bakari?

Speaker 5 People are panicked, right? And they're panicked. And so you're seeing the reflection of that panic.

Speaker 4 But Bakari, people are panicked for a reason.

Speaker 5 Rightfully so, because they saw it. I'm not disagreeing.
Okay.

Speaker 9 I'm not disagreeing with that okay beninson had a poll out um they did a post-debate poll and uh voters who watched the entire debate uh prefer trump over biden by 51 to 46.

Speaker 9 voters who didn't watch the debate are split 43 for biden 40 for trump so you actually biden did better with people who didn't watch the debate or heard about the debate than he did with people who actually watched the debate which shows it's not the hysteria or the reactions yeah i mean look it's the swearing people it was the debate and polls when was the last time a debate yeah i know when was the last time a debate dictated who was going to be president of the United States?

Speaker 5 And by the way, this is a question to John and Tommy because

Speaker 5 I do have like a scientific question.

Speaker 5 I was looking at all these, I was looking at all these, all these polls come out about Senate candidates.

Speaker 5 And I saw one poll in particular where Tammy Baldwin was up five points or six points and Joe Biden was down five points or six points, which would mean in the state of Wisconsin, there are

Speaker 5 the math is like 200 or 300,000 split ticket voters, which is something that's never happened in the history of mankind.

Speaker 5 Why do we think that the fundamentals of this race will be that vastly different when, to John's point, like I hear you, John, like the under the undergirding foundation of who Joe Biden is is honesty and decency, right?

Speaker 5 But you don't look at that in a vacuum.

Speaker 5 The question is

Speaker 5 tertiary. It's three things.
Like, do you think that he's more honest and decent than Donald Trump? Or do you want to stay home?

Speaker 9 That's the scenario we're in after the Democratic convention, if Joe Biden's the nominee. Like completely, I completely.

Speaker 5 Or before the convention, but I hear you. That's before the

Speaker 9 yeah, whenever he, whenever they do the roll call thing.

Speaker 4 I think, like, and I think that's too cynical. Honestly, I think that's the idea that, like, hey, it's it's the the it's the almighty or the alternative or whatever the the broad

Speaker 5 don't compare me don't compare me to the almighty

Speaker 4 to the alternative to the alternative look

Speaker 5 which is what i use with my wife and her ex-boyfriend all the time you know oh my god

Speaker 5 are you

Speaker 4 are you getting primarily in your own marriage

Speaker 5 you win primarily no no What I've done is I've eliminated the opposition. I am selling to the knowledge.

Speaker 5 All right, we'll be right back.

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Speaker 4 Okay, we're back. So, you know, when there's a large threat, there's two things that you define.
You define the threat and then you define your defenses.

Speaker 4 All I'm saying is if we are taking an honest look at what our best chance to defend ourselves against a perceived threat, I think we are selling ourselves short.

Speaker 4 And

Speaker 4 in a lot of ways, using, as Tommy put it, Omerta to stifle what could be an incredibly productive, at least conversation. Even if Joe Biden came out and said, look,

Speaker 4 I understand where I'm at in my lifespan and cycle and what I do. Here's how this government works.
Rather than coming out and becoming Trumpian and saying,

Speaker 4 you think someone else could hold NATO together? They could never. Only God can tell me to get out of the race.
Like, if he were to come out and say,

Speaker 4 here's my team, here's how we hold the line, but we're not seeing any of that. Nothing that's been done inspires any confidence other than the fatalism of

Speaker 4 it is what it is. And this is what we're stuck with.
And that's the part that I think has degraded people's trust in institutions and the government from the get-go.

Speaker 5 That's a problem.

Speaker 5 I'm a blend of both. So

Speaker 5 it is what it is.

Speaker 5 And I'm working towards what I believe to be the ultimate goal, which is to defeat Donald Trump, while others are having discussions about the visceral reaction they had to the debate and alternatives.

Speaker 5 But I also think those discussions are decently healthy. Again, I don't, I'm not trying to excommunicate the pod boys.
I'm mad they were listed in an email, a blast email, right? I'm not

Speaker 5 pod damn them.

Speaker 5 God damn, Jesus Christ. I actually have a sticker that says

Speaker 5 pricks for Biden.

Speaker 5 Me too. I got right there.
You gave me one of those two.

Speaker 5 So like, I'm not, I think, I think the discussion is healthy because I'm going to need all of you all if I'm going to win this race.

Speaker 5 And I'm going to need all of you all to want to put every ounce of your being in.

Speaker 5 Although we disagree on who the nominee is or who we believe the nominee will be, I am still, you know, working towards that same goal, which is to rid ourselves of fascism, because I believe after November, if Donald Trump is re-elected, it can go really bad, really quickly.

Speaker 4 Guys, let me ask you this. You know, when you talk about

Speaker 4 kind of ridding ourselves of that, what do I do with my anger at a Democratic Party? that honestly has put us in this

Speaker 4 rock in a hard place position that wasn't honest over over this past year about what was happening internally at the White House, was not in any way preparing the public for Kamala Harris, wasn't doing any of that.

Speaker 4 There was a, I don't know if it's complacency or deceit or whatever it was, but a Democratic Party that

Speaker 4 missed

Speaker 4 all of the threats that were coming their way

Speaker 4 and has left us vulnerable here.

Speaker 8 I just think, you know, I hear you there. I think Bukhari's right that normally incumbent presidents run again.
And I think President Biden.

Speaker 4 I know.

Speaker 8 There was a suggestion that he would not run for re-election, that he would be the bridge to the next generation.

Speaker 4 I believe that at this time, by the way, not a suggestion. He said.

Speaker 8 Yes. But he never said, I will not run again.
Anyway, step that aside, I think President Biden

Speaker 8 and his advisors took the wrong message from the 2022 midterms that this was somehow about support for the White House when in reality, it was Donald Trump helping elevate some really terrible candidates like Dr.

Speaker 8 Oz, who got their clocks cleaned, right? And then he made his decision to run again. And it sounds, look, I don't know.
I'm not around Joe Biden ever.

Speaker 8 I've seen him two or three times in the last six months, but it sounds like the

Speaker 5 humble Brad.

Speaker 8 Well, listen, we saw him in the LA fundraiser out here.

Speaker 5 We had a couple of beers.

Speaker 5 Cool as light, though. Cool as light.

Speaker 9 Let me, let me, let me contextualize that.

Speaker 8 I saw him in person at a fundraiser and then I watched him on the debate. And the in-person fundraiser I saw in Los Angeles a couple of weeks before the debate was as bad as the debate.

Speaker 8 Everyone I walked out of the debate with, John was there. We were talking to people around us in seats in the fundraiser.
People we didn't know in this fundraiser. And we were like, that was chilling.

Speaker 9 In fact, George Clooney just wrote an op-ed about how we need a new nominee and he hosted the fundraiser and he just said the same thing in the New York Times, which is what everyone at the fundraiser thought.

Speaker 9 Like everyone was there like, well, what happened?

Speaker 8 He had just flown back from Italy, right? So like everyone was like, oh, he must just be so unbelievably jet lagged.

Speaker 9 But obviously there is a more systemic problem well and that's why i don't think it was some it's not some conspiracy like i i saw him i was at the white house and i saw him in december of 22 and i thought he was fine he like remember he recognized my mother-in-law from meeting her in 2018 like i was like oh he's not he's not i mean he looks older and he sounds older but he's fine and then I saw him the the night before the correspondence dinner and he looked like he did at this LA fundraiser and at the debate and I was very worried.

Speaker 9 And then the next night at the correspondence dinner, he gave a good speech and I was like, okay, maybe he was just tired. So I do think people were wrestling with this, like, maybe he's tired.

Speaker 9 Maybe, but like,

Speaker 9 to your point, question about the Democratic Party. This is a decision that Joe Biden and his closest advisors have made and no one else.
Like Joe Biden could have stepped aside.

Speaker 9 Like no Democrat wanted to challenge a sitting president during a primary because they, usually you don't beat a sitting president, right? Joe Biden made the decision to run.

Speaker 9 He and his advisors made the decision to run again, even though he said he'd be a bridge, even though he selected Kamala Kamala Harris, who they could have built up and said, okay, now we're going to pass the baton to you.

Speaker 9 He made the decision to run. And so we were all left to say, okay, the rest of the Democratic Party was like, all right, you guys are telling us you're the best chance.

Speaker 9 You're our best chance to beat Donald Trump again, to stave off fascism. We trust you.

Speaker 9 It's on you guys. And then we got that debate.
And then we got all the interviews afterwards. So it's like, I'm only interested in beating Donald Trump too.

Speaker 5 Like we all are.

Speaker 9 That's like the, that's the number. I'm terrified of what will happen if Donald Trump wins.
I just don't know that Joe Biden is our best shot to do that anymore.

Speaker 8 When have we put points on the board? When was the last time Joe Biden put points on the board? The State of the Union? You know what I mean? Like, what is the last good moment you guys remember?

Speaker 5 Well, State of the Union. I mean, I don't know.
I mean,

Speaker 5 I try not to just stay tuned into the Washington Post and New York Times.

Speaker 4 Yeah, listen,

Speaker 4 the needle's going to move here and there.

Speaker 4 I think this is my math.

Speaker 5 But this is what drives me crazy about Democrats, though, the frame by which we, like, you know, I remember in October, right? Access Hollywood came out.

Speaker 5 Donald Trump was grabbing women by the pussy, right? And then soon thereafter, the bottom fell out.

Speaker 5 Polls were showing that Donald Trump was getting his behind kick, that all the Senate candidates were like, oh my God, like this man cannot be at the top of the ticket.

Speaker 5 Rance Priebus actually walked up to the top of Trump Tower to try to convince him to drop out the race. Rance at the time was the chair of the RNC, and Donald Trump told him to go kick rocks, right?

Speaker 5 Go pounce him. Right.
But what we saw after that, after he was resolved to stay in the race, we saw everyone then, then, I mean, and Republicans do this so well. They just fall in line.

Speaker 5 They don't fall in love. They gathered around.
They got behind this guy who is a narcissistic sociopath and they ushered him into the White House, right?

Speaker 9 But Carrie, do you think that would have happened had the Access Hollywood tape come out a month before the Republican convention back in 2016?

Speaker 9 And Rance Priebus and all those Republicans, Ted Cruz, who spoke at that convention and was like spoke out against Trump at the convention, even though he later fell in line.

Speaker 9 Like this is, it's a different scenario.

Speaker 5 I was like, where are you going with this? Where are you going going with the ticket? This is a different scenario.

Speaker 9 Like, if we were, if we were, if this was October, if this was the third week in October, we wouldn't be having this conversation right now, right? Like, we wouldn't be having this conversation.

Speaker 4 And Bakari, I would also suggest, you know, Bill Clinton on the eve of it all,

Speaker 4 it came out. He had had an affair.

Speaker 4 I can't remember, Jennifer Flowers, I think it was. And then it was the Paula Jones situation.
And then there was the Monica Lewinsky situation. And Democrats did fall in line.

Speaker 4 There were, I mean, people made, oh, this is terrible. And I'm disappointed with the president.
But ultimately, the Democrats did fall in line.

Speaker 4 I think that you are soft-selling the more fundamental aspect of people viewing somebody who, I'll be perfectly honest with you.

Speaker 4 I don't know of a job interview that you could have gone on and delivered the performance that was delivered by Joe Biden

Speaker 4 and gotten a job. And I'm not talking about the presidency.
I'm talking about like cashier at Home Depot, like a job that you would not think, okay, that is the hardest job in the entire world.

Speaker 5 The only problem with that, John, and the only problem with framing it as such is the fact that you discount everything that he's accomplished in the first three and a half years. Why, though?

Speaker 5 No, I don't.

Speaker 5 I don't at all.

Speaker 4 But he's not running for what he did three and a half years. He's running for the next four.

Speaker 5 But nothing happens in a vacuum. And what we have to do is people just want to,

Speaker 5 my friends on the left, we want to only magnify what we saw on at the debate, which is fine. I get it.

Speaker 5 We are talking about age, but I'm also talking about the accomplishments prior to and the threat that is right down the road.

Speaker 5 And I think, I mean, we do ourselves a disservice by saying our guy is old. We know that.
He shuffles.

Speaker 5 It's not old.

Speaker 4 It's not, Bakaria, I think. What is it? It is cognitive decline.

Speaker 4 It's not just age. It's cognitive decline.

Speaker 9 At the very least, it's an inability to communicate, right? Like, I'm not a doctor, but like he can't, we need the, the candidate that we run for president needs to be able to communicate effectively.

Speaker 9 That's just the most basic.

Speaker 9 It's the most basic part of the job of being a candidate for president is you need to communicate effectively.

Speaker 4 And if you can't do that, or reassure us that here's how we operate in that environment. But to suggest that this discounts three and a half years, it doesn't.

Speaker 4 But it does give you a window into the next four.

Speaker 4 And if you look at his performance in 2020 versus his performance in 2024, there is

Speaker 4 inexorable decline. It's just, it's undeniable.
So what I don't understand is, okay, fine, he stays, but deal with it head on. Stop pretending.
Stop gaslighting.

Speaker 5 Like, that's fine. Deal with it head on.
That's fine. I don't want to silence the debate.
I think it's fine. I think it's healthy.
Talk about it. Don't gaslight Pope.
That's fine.

Speaker 5 Like, I'm cool with that. But I'm also saying that there is a fucking monster that is November 4th, 5th, 6th, whenever the election is.
I agree. I know.

Speaker 5 I know. So And we're getting our asses kicked by the monster.
That's the point, right?

Speaker 9 That's what we're worried about. We're worried about the monster.

Speaker 5 Listen, polls are a reflection in time. And I do think that a lot of the hysteria that we are self-inflicting upon ourselves causes a lot of the reflection that we're seeing in these polls.

Speaker 5 And I would also argue that in 30, 45 days, you're going to see a race that is once again neck and neck and tight around the country.

Speaker 9 It's a very polarized, closely divided electorate. The safest bet is a close race, and it's been a close race, right? But I have seen, and I've sat in these focus groups.

Speaker 9 You've sat in these focus groups for like the last several years, and people just are concerned: swing voters, undecided voters, young black voters, young people, Latino voters.

Speaker 9 They say over and over again, they're worried that Joe Biden's too old to be president. And they, they, they respect him.
They don't like Donald Trump very much. They think Donald Trump's a liar.

Speaker 9 Some of them think Donald Trump's quite dangerous, but they're like, I don't think Joe Biden's up for it. And they've been telling us this for three years now.

Speaker 4 I can tell you anecdotally, the individuals like my mom and her friends who were all in

Speaker 4 responded to that debate with tears and with fears and with reality.

Speaker 4 And the administration's inability to deal with that honestly and forthrightly, to me, is almost more damaging than the actual debate itself. And it shows a disconnect with

Speaker 4 or an inability to be agile and honest. And that's more troublesome to me than almost anything else.

Speaker 5 Don't disagree with anything you said.

Speaker 5 My only, my only point would be that my mom and her friends, who usually are the ones who determine who the Democratic Party nominee is, like the black women in her chat group, they refer to themselves as the quote-unquote posse.

Speaker 5 They were, they were,

Speaker 5 they were hurt. They were saddened.
They said he got his ass kicked. They said he was old as hell.

Speaker 5 But at the end of the day, they were more resolved than ever to call their girlfriends and say, we're going to vote for him.

Speaker 5 And then one thing they admonished us or admonished me about was we don't need any more chaos. They don't want any more chaos.
They're going to ride with Joe Biden and

Speaker 5 they don't want an open convention. They don't want a prop.
They don't want any of that.

Speaker 4 But

Speaker 4 you don't think white knuckling it with Joe Biden is chaos.

Speaker 5 But it's the chaos we know.

Speaker 5 I mean, I think that's a fair argument. That is a fair argument.
That's fair. I'll take it.

Speaker 8 But one thing you mentioned, though, like you mentioned, like, we're not talking about Joe Biden's accomplishments.

Speaker 8 And, like, oh, look, we, we do a show a couple of times a week, so we've talked about those accomplishments constantly. And I give Joe Biden a ton of credit.

Speaker 5 I mean, the global weed, not the city of the city. The global weight of America.

Speaker 5 I give him credit for climate change, the infrastructure bill, Ukraine, right?

Speaker 8 All the things he's done. Great.
But what is really glaring about this White House and Joe Biden himself is he does not have a message about the next four years.

Speaker 8 They are not talking about what he's going to do, why he's the only person he's going to do it.

Speaker 8 He is just like pointing to things he's done kind of angrily and being like, why am I not getting credit for holding NATO together?

Speaker 8 And AUKUS, which no one knows what that is, by the way, it's a nuclear submarine deal with the Australians. How the fuck is that coming up in these conversations? Like, that's not your topic.

Speaker 4 I have voted in every election the past 20 years on AUKUS.

Speaker 5 Always have.

Speaker 5 The AUKUS caucus.

Speaker 4 We're the AUKUS caucus.

Speaker 8 The ship has sailed on getting credit from these things. Voters are like, we don't care.

Speaker 5 I wholeheartedly agree with you.

Speaker 5 And so prior to the debate, my main line was that I very rarely talk about Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the same sentence per se as I characterize them, other than the fact that I felt both of them were prisoners of yesterday.

Speaker 5 I felt both of them just like, but it was for a different reason. Like Joe Biden has this weird nostalgia for like.
swimming and pools with pop-pop, right?

Speaker 5 It's kind of freaky. And then

Speaker 5 Donald Trump. Donald Trump has this,

Speaker 5 he's like the king of white grievance from yesteryear. Yes.
But and I think that both of them have a fundamentally Project 25 is what it is.

Speaker 5 But you take that away, both of them have a hard time articulating a vision for the future. And that's when I think age matters because one is 78 and the other is 81.

Speaker 5 And it's very difficult when you're 81 or 78 to talk about a future that you may not be a part of.

Speaker 5 And that is the prisoner of age. And so I agree with you wholeheartedly that I've been pushing them to lay out a vision for the future.

Speaker 5 And I don't know when they're going to start doing that other than our, you know, because right now they're kind of fighting front to back, side to side.

Speaker 5 I mean, they're so busy beating up on y'all and and and Jon Stewart that they don't really have time

Speaker 5 today. But hopefully, I remain optimistic, by the way.

Speaker 4 I'll wrap it up with this because I know everybody's got to get going.

Speaker 4 And I'm going to say this, Tommy, John, and then Bakari, you can have the last word.

Speaker 4 With all the headwinds and obstacles in front of us, I remain incredibly optimistic about the resilience of the system that we're fighting over.

Speaker 4 I do believe that the challenges that are in front of us are

Speaker 4 some of them intractable, but also,

Speaker 4 you know, I never, there's never despair in any of this. It is always, all right, I guess

Speaker 4 it's buckling down. So I would ask you guys to maybe answer the question, what about the resilience of this system still gives you a hope in that?

Speaker 8 I mean, I do think you make an important point that

Speaker 8 we can't all speak in apocalyptic terms. And the left and the right does this.
The country will exist the day after the election if Donald Trump is president.

Speaker 8 I do think he might change change core things about our democracy that we can't undo and just fundamentally change the character of this country.

Speaker 8 And so that's why I am happy to be the stupid pod bro cracker talking about this now,

Speaker 8 because I do think the risk is real. And if Barack Obama lost to Mitt Romney, there would have been a different policy agenda implemented.

Speaker 8 I think Donald Trump could change the character of the country in a fundamental and dangerous way.

Speaker 5 Right.

Speaker 9 I think we have, there's two choices, right? You quit and then bad shit happens or you try and fight, right?

Speaker 9 And I think that's what we're all trying to do right now and trying to stave off the threat of Donald Trump again.

Speaker 9 And I think what makes me optimistic is like when you talk to voters, right? Voters, I know they drive everyone crazy. They're complicated.

Speaker 9 They don't follow politics very closely or the news, but they're sensible and smart and know what they see.

Speaker 9 And when you make a persuasive case that is rooted in honesty and reality to to voters, you do have a chance to change minds.

Speaker 9 And change minds meaning get people off the couch to the polls or get people to change who they're going to vote for. And so I never want to give up on that.
And that makes me hopeful.

Speaker 9 But I do think you have to make an argument to voters that meets them where they are and is based in reality of what they saw, which is why the Biden maintaining Biden as a nominee worries me.

Speaker 9 That said, if he makes the decision, if he refuses to step down and he makes the decision, then like we will make an honest case to voters, which is like, yeah, Joe Biden's too old to run for president, but Donald Trump is too dangerous to be president.

Speaker 5 Yeah, I feel like I'm kind of there.

Speaker 5 But I think what gives me hope, and I think what we underestimate sometimes as we are evaluating this is King used to talk about it, and he talked about it in the I Have a Dream speech.

Speaker 5 And everybody remembers like that rhythmic cadence of I Have a Dream that one day we show, but we forget about the most important part of it of that speech when he talks about the fierce urgency of now.

Speaker 5 And I think a lot of times we discount the urgency that many people in the electorate, voters have.

Speaker 5 As we talked about, as you talked about, your mama and her friends or your parents and their friends and then my mama and her friends, the sense of urgency that people have.

Speaker 5 And my hope comes from the fact that I believe that there are more people who want to see this country move forward than take it back to a place that is

Speaker 5 dangerous for us all. It's dangerous because of who you love.
It's dangerous because you're Jewish. It's dangerous because you're black.
It's dangerous because you're a woman.

Speaker 5 And I think that there are enough people who who have that fierce urgency of now that after we get through this little intersquad squabble that we're going through right now,

Speaker 5 you know, whoever comes out the tent on the other side, his name will be Joe Biden, we'll rally around and

Speaker 5 we'll carry him to the finish line, like, you know, you know, like the old great man that he is. Right.

Speaker 4 It always, it always reminds me, you know, they say that what's the quote, the arc of the moral of the universe bends towards justice.

Speaker 4 And what we all have to remember is, and there's a good percentage of people trying to bend it back the other way. And it's a lunch pale job to keep it bent.

Speaker 4 And no matter what happens, I don't think that job goes away. And I think that's probably where we end.
But gentlemen, I want to thank you all very much for joining us.

Speaker 4 Of course, we have Bukhari Sellers from CNN and

Speaker 4 political commentator and author of The Moment.

Speaker 4 And Jon Favreau and Tommy Vieder, founders of Crooked Media, hosts of Pod Save America, and authors of Democracy or Else, How to Save America in 10 Easy Steps.

Speaker 4 So thank you guys very much.

Speaker 9 Thank you. Thanks for having us.
Thank you guys.

Speaker 4 Oh, man. That's feisty.

Speaker 5 Yeah.

Speaker 4 There was a good amount of feisty.

Speaker 6 That was hot.

Speaker 4 Buccari wasn't, he wasn't having it. We're lucky that we were in separate studios.
I was afraid one of the pod guys was going to get wedgied.

Speaker 4 I think he was going heavy on the, listen, you nerds.

Speaker 5 You pod boys.

Speaker 4 You pod boys. They were coming after me.
The administration is so angry with the pod boys and Jon Stewart,

Speaker 4 Bakari.

Speaker 4 But I actually thought it was a good articulation of kind of the positions there.

Speaker 4 And I think the, it really is that it is what it is, is the part that I think I find so difficult. Like

Speaker 4 that idea that if you're not, it is what it is, then you are somehow a fantasy, fanfic, West Wing

Speaker 4 toady. I don't know know how else to put it.

Speaker 6 Well, when you do go down to the like logistics of actually, you know, switching the candidate, you start wondering, would this happen?

Speaker 5 Right.

Speaker 4 But it can. And you remember, oh, right, conventions, they used to not actually have a candidate sometimes until after the convention.
There is this idea that I think they are discounting.

Speaker 4 just how much in a modern media environment, how long four months actually is.

Speaker 5 Four months is not the same anymore.

Speaker 4 And by the way, Republicans wouldn't throw up their hands. They would just fucking bear down and get done the thing they wanted to get done and apologize later.

Speaker 4 Easier to ask for forgiveness than permission. And they would get it done and somehow end up at the Supreme Court with it being fined.
Like that, it's the complacency.

Speaker 4 And that's the part that just buries my soul.

Speaker 7 Yeah, it makes me very sad. I just, we've, we've stopped being able to have conversations, it seems, or even just like raise our hand to be like, uh, this feels uncomfortable.

Speaker 7 Um, it's just very much like, shut the fuck up and get in line. Right.

Speaker 4 And that's which, by the way, is interesting. They brought up, he said, you know, there's a pressure campaign to get Biden to drop out.
I would say the opposite. I think the pressure campaign is way,

Speaker 4 boy, is more like a power washer coming the other way. Like, hey, I don't know if this guy can.

Speaker 5 Yeah.

Speaker 5 Yeah.

Speaker 4 It's, it's, it's a bad scene.

Speaker 4 but uh I would, I think it would be a healthier outcome for democracy if it showed some ability and flexibility and did not continue around this feeling that it's very rigid and disconnected from

Speaker 4 real concerns.

Speaker 5 But yeah, if like the campaign, we will get to all the topics, though. Oh, go ahead.
Oh, yeah.

Speaker 6 I was just going to say if the campaign recognized reality and, you know,

Speaker 5 addressed it, exactly. We would be in a different place.

Speaker 4 But to all the people that are concerned about uh, some of those issues that we had raised that are going to be coming up on the podcast, they will.

Speaker 4 We do this every week, every

Speaker 4 week, yeah, they now out here, day in and day, or day one a week, and day one a week. We're going to get to all those great topics.
Uh, and thank you once again for listening.

Speaker 4 As always, thanks to lead producer Lauren Walker, producer Brittany Mamedovic, video editor and engineer behind the glass, Rob Vitola, researcher Jillian Spear.

Speaker 4 Oh, audio editing and and engineering, Nicole Boyce, and the EPs, Chris McShane and Katie Gray.

Speaker 4 As always, Brittany, you got the socials on there that we do?

Speaker 7 I do, John.

Speaker 7 Twitter, we are weekly show pod. Instagram and threads, we are weekly show podcast, and on YouTube, weekly show with Jon Stewart.

Speaker 4 I'm on all of those, and including MySpace.

Speaker 9 All right, kiddies, to next week, next week and beyond.

Speaker 4 The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a comedy central podcast. It's produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.

Speaker 2 This podcast is supported by Neon, presenting the documentary Orwell 2 plus 2 equals 5.

Speaker 2 From Raul Peck, director of the Academy Award-nominated film I Am Not Your Negro, comes a cinematic portrait of George Orwell, visionary writer of such literary classics as Animal Farm and 1984, made in association with the Orwell Estate, an official selection of the Cannes Film Festival.

Speaker 2 Orwell 2 plus 2 equals 5. Now available on digital.

Speaker 10 Paramount Podcasts.