Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 11/5/25: Hasan, Sam Sedar, Cynthia Nixon React To Zohran Win, Zohran Triggers Fox Meltdown
Episode Date: November 5, 2025Saagar, Krystal, Ryan, Emily and Griffin break down the elections across the country as Dems sweep, Zohran triggers rightwing meltdown, Cuomo delivers a salty concession speech. Griffin: https://x.com.../griffinpdavisTo become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.comMerch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Let's get to the show. Welcome to breaking points, everyone. Our post-election day analysis is here.
I know you've been refreshing your browsers waiting for Ryan Grimm. Dad of the century actually
traveled all night from New York City to be home for his son's 10th birthday breakfast.
And on top of that, here he is now, in the same suit he wore last night, back from the mom-doney.
Victory Party, ready to help us break it all down.
Ryan, now that you've had some time, I think you napped a little bit on your way, but
some time to digest everything you watched happen live and in person with Griffin last
night.
What are you thinking?
I mean, it was quite a romp for Democrats across the country.
So whether you're talking about, you know, the kind of Democratic socialists, you know,
who, you know, stomped Cuomo in New York City or the more center-left.
Democrats in Virginia or New Jersey or the Pennsylvania Supreme Court justices who won
re-election in Pennsylvania, or the utility commissioners who blew it out of the water in Georgia.
That's a nonpartisan race, but those are the kind of known as the Democratic candidates.
And even in Maine, you know, we talked about this ballot measure that Leonard Leo,
Leonard Leo had put, you know, an enormous amount of money into trying to restrict absentee
balloting. It was polling 50-50 going into the election. That right now is something like
6535, just, you know, absolute, you know, rejection. Graham Platner had put his campaign
resources into defeating that. And that seems to have, that seems to have gone quite well for
Democrats in Maine. California, of course, saw its, it's prop 50 pass. So they'll be gerrymandering
and adding, you know, trying to add like five.
Democrats to the House to respond to the Texas Republicans and others doing the redistricting.
And Virginia was like a sweep across the board.
Curious for your, you know, you had a pretty terrible Republican candidate who Trump never even endorsed.
Is that right?
Yeah, Trump actually never endorsed Winston Sears until the last minute.
He still refused to endorse her when he was teletown hauling.
He did finally endorse?
He did not.
He did a teletown hall the evening of the election, like the anticipated, winning.
some Sears endorsement, perhaps. It never happened. He just told people to go out and vote for
Republicans, generic. Right. Yes. And they didn't. It's kind of a catty behavior. They did not do
that. It's a little bitchy. Yeah. And then, you know, so they lost at least 13 assembly seats,
Republicans did. They lost the lieutenant governorship and they lost the attorney general race,
even to a guy who, you know, people expect at one point to just drop out of the race. And
because of these text messages that came out that he was sending to a Republican, which is fishy in its own right?
According to exit polls, Jay Jones and the Attorney General race won 9% of voters who found those text messages disqualifying.
As almost everybody would say, objectionable content in those text messages, highly objectionable content in those text messages.
Republicans thought they could really have a shot.
They did not expect to win the governor's race.
You know, if you went back probably six months or more, they were bullish on the Virginia governor's race, but that all became pretty apparent. It wasn't going to happen within, you know, the last several months. That race, they thought they could win and couldn't even pull that off because 9% of people who found the text messages disqualifying still voted for Jay Jones.
And so I think what's going on there and curious for your take is that if you, and specifically on those 9%, if you probe them further, like, well, you said this person should be disqualifying.
qualified. Why on earth did you vote for them? I think they would say a number of things. One,
well, they weren't disqualified. Like they stayed on the ballot. And then if you ask them things about
what's his name, Miaris, the attorney general who was running the nominee on the Republican side,
they would say, well, I think he should be disqualified for X, Y, Z. They clearly, and I was presumably,
these are, you know, hardcore partisan Democrats who considered those things disqualifying, but then still
had to choose between
Miaris or
the Democrat
who they wanted
disqualified.
And he's not.
He's there.
So all right,
well,
now I'm going into
the polling place
and you're giving me
these two choices,
both of which,
neither of which
I would like to see in office.
And I think people are actually
more accustomed to that type
of, you know,
having that type of choice
foisted on them than they are
accustomed to have somebody
they actually like
and feel like
really good about voting for.
So they're probably very
used to being like, oh, this bum sucks for this reason. This bump sucked for that reason.
Yeah. But I'm going to say, that's a constituency with basically no representation in
Washington, D.C. Like in professional politics, the people who hate politicians, like, whether
they're Republican or Democrat. That's across the board a lot of very normal Americans. So if you
go to Miaras and you'd ask them, okay, is this position disqualifying? I totally agree, Ryan. You'd
probably find people being like, yeah, that position's totally disqualifying. It's how
Donald Trump won the 2015 Republican primary, 2016 Republican primary.
Right. Trump disqualifies himself like once a day and stays in office. And so I think Democrats are like,
well, we're done with it. This is the most misunderstood part of the Trump phenomenon.
You can go and ask an average Republican voter, about 30 to 40 percent of them will be
hardcore MAGA rally type people. They go, they're the people that will stick with him when he
shoot someone on Fifth Avenue. Why do the other, you know, 60% of Republican voters stick with him
when he shoots someone on Fifth Avenue metaphorically? Because they think the other guy is worse.
It's always about the binary choice. And again, that has no constituency of professional
Washington, but that's actually a pretty normal perspective of people outside of Washington.
Yeah. Right. And I think you're seeing that with Platner and you're seeing, you're seeing Democrats in
general, both, you know, willing to overlook things that they, that in, in the past, they would
have said no. This is, this is disqualifying and I'm not going to vote for them. Now it's,
it's disqualifying, but look, I'm still going to vote for them. Or just straight up kind of
telling themselves things that aren't true. Yeah. That, which is also a Republican, you know,
that was a that was a that was a that was a that was a very tea party and trump phenomenon too and now democrats
like if you ask uh if you did a poll now of democrats of whether or not the um charlie kirk shooter
had you know more left wing ideology or more right wing ideology but like we and let's say it was
this guy like setting aside the people who are like oh this is a patsy the people who believe that
this person actually did it uh for democrats they believe he
did it, but they think he was a Groyper.
Yeah, there's polling on that. Yeah, there's pulling on that. And it's just not true.
Like, it's not. Like, it's not, like, it's not, like, it's not really up for debate. Like, he's, he's
really not. But they believe that he is. And I think that's of a piece, because it's easier to,
it's easier to persuade yourself of, that something's not true and then act accordingly than it is
to absorb the counterfactual, like, oh,
this guy really is disqualified, but then still have to vote for him.
So if you're going to vote for him anyway, you might as well lie to yourself about what's going on.
And we should tee up for everyone.
What's going to happen here is that Ryan and Griffin were live streaming.
If you didn't catch the whole thing, I didn't even catch the whole thing because I had to drive back from the Winsome Series victory party.
You guys went all the way to about midnight with some incredible reactions, live reactions in the moment, from people like Sam Cedar, Hassan Piker.
you had, I mean, just like Congresswoman Jayapal, Lena Khan. Lena Khan said something interesting. So that's all going to be, we're going to tee that up for you by sort of right now breaking down some of the reactions just over the last 12 hours from everyone, from Donald Trump, the folks out of Fox News. And we're just going to kind of set the stage for the midterm cycle.
I really want to hear how the Republicans are responding to the.
Well, let's start with a compilation.
Producer Mack, I know you have that ready to go, a compilation of meltdowns.
And again, what we're going to do is go through some of these reactions and then tee up our own reactions that Ryan and Griffin got live in the moment at the Mamdani Victory Party in Brooklyn last night.
But first, let's start with this compilation of total meltdowns on Fox News and other places.
Well, you can't imagine how disappointed I am.
This is...
Can't say his name right.
Last time.
I honestly feel bad.
I have friends of mine in New York.
My phone is blowing up.
They are officially depressed and scared.
And this was also a hostile takeover by the Democratic Socialists of America.
And this is a crazy situation.
True.
It's a very, very sad night.
Made him the stylish candidate as well.
The rapping video.
The cool kid.
Older people, this isn't just Gen Z or Gen X.
I agree.
And boomers and that kind of thing.
Yeah, I see this as a disaster for, from New York City and Zoran Mabami.
All right.
Well, I want to bring in our panel.
They'll cheer me up.
They'll cheer me up.
I don't think they will.
Do you feel cheerful, Ryan?
I feel like you didn't need to be cheerful.
I actually do feel a little bit cheerful.
Yeah, because the problem here for them is that it looks like he's tracking to get over 50% of the vote.
In Cuomo, and we can roll a little bit of, I can pull up some of Cuomo's.
really petulant, like, speech that he gave last night.
He said, you know, nearly half of New York voters rejected Mamdani's message.
So he's doing two things there.
He's combining his vote with Sliwas and the hardcore Slewa people who even after Trump begged
them to not vote for Slewa and vote for Cuomo instead, they still voted for Slewa.
So he's combining them with him and then saying that almost half rejected.
mom done and that's a moral victory um and he called it a you know this he that he a caution flag
for um going to a very dangerous place like it was it was as as ungenerous uh a whatever
whatever you would call it speech um as you could possibly imagine here let me let me let me play
let's play a little bit of this because it fits with the theme of the um the the republican meltdown
as well.
Here it is.
And this campaign was necessary to make that point, a caution flag that we are heading down
a dangerous, dangerous road.
Well, we made that point, and they heard us, and we will hold them to it.
Also, my friends, feel proud because we accomplished the two important New York characteristics.
We got up off them out after the primary, and we made it a real race when the media had
already commenced the coronation.
That is not what happened, for the record.
Media really in the tank for Mumdani.
And so proud
Because we fought our hearts out
And we left it all on the field
Also untrue
He did not fight hard at all
He did not even betray
Any evidence that he wanted to win
To Zoran Mandami
He pronounces his name wrong
Drawed a bunch of booze
No
That is no
That is not right
that is that is not right and that is not us now now also not true he's living for that he's living
for that moment that is us that is us that is you um and so i think uh and we interviewed um julian gerson
who wrote momdani's speech so after after his speech last night we interviewed his speechwriter
and they had kind of been editing and rewriting and i think they um crafted there as a little in a slightly
sharper tone to respond to the catiness that came from, that came from Cuomo throughout,
like, his whole speech is just, just dogging, mandami, as he keeps calling him.
Let's roll a little bit.
Not that you have the high ground on that one, right?
I don't.
I don't.
This is true.
I'm getting better, Zoron.
But you're also not the candidate.
I'm also not the candidate.
Zoron.
All right.
So here's Zoran, Mam Dani.
We toppled a political dynasty.
Electric, absolutely electric.
I wish Andrew Cuomo only the best in private life.
But let tonight be the final time I utter his name.
as we turn the page on a politics that abandons the many and answers only to the few.
Now, there we go.
So, yeah, he, yeah, Ngo, go ahead.
Well, I was going to say, this is, that's actually very interesting because, I mean, the contrast is obvious.
You have this, like, very energetic crowd for Mamdani, who I also mispronounced his name yesterday.
all guilty but you also for Cuomo see this like very angry disillusioned crowd all of that like
he's he's trying to do revisionist history and Mamdani once again the reason he won the primary one of
the reasons he won the primary in the general is that he's upbeat relentlessly smiling all of that
and what I haven't seen in the last 12 hours is actually a lot of what Andrew Cuomo said I haven't seen
Establishment Democrats who a hundred percent feel like Andrew Cuomo articulated his feelings
last night. They privately feel like that. I have not seen establishment Democrats reacting like
Cuomo to say, we are concerned this is going to a dark place. That seems to me to be
conspicuously absent from the discourse. And maybe it's because like Congresswoman Jaya Paul told us
on the stream last night.
I believe she said,
I had left by this point,
but I believe she said like Chuck Schumer
is in for a reckoning going forward.
Yeah, she did.
Yeah.
They're taking that seriously.
It seems to be right now.
Yeah.
And when you win more than 50% of the vote
in, you know,
with some of the highest turnout ever,
that that boxes in the ability
of people to respond who don't have a base.
Like, if you're Chuck Schumer at this point,
like, like who,
like on on what ground and with what troops are you challenging you know mom dani's clear mandate here
so yeah i think they're going to lay low for a while schumer himself won't even still won't tell
people who he voted for yep um i think we can go ahead and venture a guess probably wasn't
slywa slywa yeah that would be funny if it was um so yes and you know in his in his speech
was humble and gracious
toward his supporters
and towards the city
and towards the working people
of the city
but he was fiery
toward his opponents
and you saw
just a meltdown
on CNN afterwards
that I didn't watch in real time
but they're just going
just around the table
crying about how rude he was
and you know that they wanted
more of an open arm
an embrace of the people
who had just spent
the last several weeks
calling him a terrorist.
I have a Van Jones clip.
Rather than him saying
what he said,
which is that the fight is now just beginning
because our agenda is achievable
but it's not going to be easy
and we're going to have to fight for it.
So yeah, let's roll Van Jones
if you have it.
Yeah, assuming this is what you're alluding to,
Ryan, who does?
Here, I'll work on getting that
if you want to.
The gist of what he said is
He said, I felt like it was a little bit of a character switch here
with a warm, open, embracing guy that's close to working people
was not on the stage tonight.
Ryan, you were there in person.
That's a bizarre analysis.
I mean, it's, well, it's also a bizarre analysis to say that, yes, he smiled.
He was a happy warrior, you know, throughout the campaign.
But he was still a warrior.
Like, he's still, he's identifying villains saying that they are the obstacle
to what the work.
of New York want to accomplish, and we need to, you know, barrel past them. Like, that was,
that's what he's been saying. You do it with a smile on your face, but he's embracing the class
conflict that is, that is essential to, you know, accomplishing his objective, according to him
and is essential for, like, the Bill Ackman's of the world to, to win, according to them.
Now, Ackman put out a very short tweet saying he was ready to work with Mom Dani. So, okay.
Well, you know, we'll see, see where that goes.
But what Mom Donnie and what Andrew Epstein told us on the stream as well is that, you know, they now have these thousands upon thousands of people who have gone door to door and have done canvassing and other political events for the campaign.
And he's going to keep them mobilized so that if, you know, so for instance, he can't dictate to the rent stabilization board precisely what.
they can do when it comes to freezing the rent.
He can appoint over time all of the people on that board, but not immediately.
And so there will be some independent political actors there who will need to be pressured,
who will need to hear from people that, hey, I ran very clearly on this.
This was not something that was tucked away in the bowels of my platform.
This was front and center, freeze the rent.
You guys need to freeze the rent.
and we're going to politically organize in that direction when it comes to creating the grocery stores
there might be city council members who oppose it there might be you know members of the legislature
or the governor who want to try to get in the way of it when it comes to the buses you're going
to have opposition because you're and some of it is I'm curious how they're going to address
the problem of what about people that just decide to live on the buses right
that's not like that's not good for them it's not good for them there's not good for the riders it's
not good for anybody but if if i needed a place to go and buses were free why not um so they'll
you know this is something they'll have they'll i'm sure they've thought a lot about and they're
going to try to figure out but they'll have this political army that they plan to deploy
and so they need to stay fired up and so that's why van jones is not going to get the
The, like, tongue bath for the fat cats that they want.
Yeah, the rest of the Van Jones quote is, I think he missed an opportunity.
I think the Mamdani that we saw in campaign trail was a lot more calm.
It was a lot warmer.
It was a lot more embracing.
It was not present in that speech.
And I think that Mom Donny is the one you need to hear from tonight.
There are a lot of people trying to figure out, can I get on this train with him or not.
And he goes on to say, that's not the – I think he was using the microphone in a way that was almost yelling.
And that's not the mom, Donnie that we've seen on TikTok and the great interviews and stuff like.
that. So, Ryan, did you get a sense from the campaign team that I know you were able to mingle
with a bit last night? They're obviously busy, but sort of Mamdani world, that they have any
intention of making some grand pivot or, you know, as he said in that clip we just referred to,
he sees this as like a next chapter where he's turned to the page on Cuomoism and kind
of elite democratic politics and is preparing to get down to work. But,
It seemed to me, I'm curious what you heard from people on the ground.
I didn't notice much of a difference other than just, I don't know, intensity.
What's, I don't want to say unique, but what's unusual about the campaign is that it has these achievable objectives.
Like, everybody knows what he says he wants to do.
He wants to build the grocery stores, fast and free buses, free as a rent, universal child care.
And in order to do that, he's got a tax plan that, that, that, that,
its people making above certain amounts.
That's not like a socialist revolution.
That like that's not giving, you know,
free health care to everyone in the city.
It's not, it's not, it, it is within reach.
And, and it's, and it's those discrete things.
And, and I think what he said is accurate.
That it's, uh, it won't be, um, it's not impossible,
it won't be easy, but it's, it's actually within reach.
And then if you achieve those,
And things are going okay, and then you can, you know, pitch the next thing.
Obviously, even if you do all of those things, New York's still not affordable.
It's better, particularly if you have kids, and let's say you've got the child car part done.
Free buses, yeah.
Free buses, you know, so it's better.
And let's say the groceries are cheaper at the city-run grocery store, and you're saving
on the, saving on the buses and you're not paying a little bit extra on the rent. But there's
still big problems. Still need higher wages, still need more housing, still need more affordable
housing, still need better access to health care. You've got, you know, the hospital system in
New York City is in crisis, perpetual crisis. So, you know, there's a lot to do. But the thinking
is you try to accomplish these things and get the momentum to show that government can actually do
something and then keep moving.
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And she said, Johnny, the kids didn't come home last night.
Along the Central Texas Plains, teens are dying, suicides that don't make sense,
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In what seems to be, a plot ripped straight out of Breaking Bad.
Drugs, alcohol, trafficking of people.
There are people out there that absolutely know what happened.
Listen to Paper Ghosts, the Texas Teen Murders, on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Robert Smith.
This is Jacob Goldstein.
And we used to host a show called Planet Money.
And now we're back making this new podcast called Business History about the best ideas and people and businesses in history.
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Having a genius idea without a need for it is nothing.
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Here's a really interesting exit poll result that Phil Klein at National Review highlighted.
This is from NBC's exit polling.
Mom Donnie lost immigration voters by 26 points and crime voters by 41 points, but he won, quote, cost of
living voters by 36 points, and they represented 55 percent of the electorate. So when people were
asked which one of these five issues is the most important facing New York City. So it's not that
some of the voters eliminated the idea of immigration being important or crime being important.
It's just that they said cost of like, 55 percent of the electorate said cost of living was more
important than immigration or crime as an issue facing New York City. And of those, Mamdani won by 30
points. So with 55% of the electorate, he won by 36 points. And Ryan, this poll right here is a vindication of the entire mom-dani predicate that he gambled his candidacy on in the primary and the general election. And that is vindicated. I think when you look at these numbers.
Yeah. And part of this was his campaign out of the gate. And then part of it was just listening to people and listening to people since he's been in office. But, you know, we showed that video of him.
him, you know, we're just putting a microphone in front of people's faces. And if you talk to people
long enough, they're going to tell you, yeah, this place is unaffordable. It's killing me.
Imagine that. Well, let's actually roll this Vivek Ramoswamy response. And I don't know if my audio's
working. I'll try to make sure it works. So if it doesn't work, I'll send it to you, Ryan.
But Vivek Ramoswamy, who's obviously running for governor in Ohio, posted probably the most
interesting Republican reaction. Here it is so far. Let's see if we can hear it. I can't hear it.
Yeah, I want to send it to me on signal. Yeah, I'll send it your way. But yeah, what he's saying is there's
two key takeaways here. And Ryan, I just popped it in the signal message. But Ramoswamy has
two key takeaways. And the first one is basically react. I don't know if he saw the NBC exit poll that
we just referenced, but it's basically reacting to the NBC end of poll that we just referenced
and saying that Republican candidates need to focus on affordability, cost of living over and over
again and hammer that home constantly. Here we go. Here's Vivek. We got our asses handed to us
in New Jersey, Virginia, and New York City. Democrats swept all three. There's two key lessons
for Republicans. Listen carefully. Number one, our side needs to focus on affordability.
Make the American dream affordable.
Bring down costs, electric costs, grocery costs, health care costs, and housing costs, and lay out how we're going to do it.
And number two, cut out the identity politics.
It doesn't suit Republicans.
It's not for us.
That's the woke lefts game, not ours.
We don't care about the color of your skin or your religion.
We care about the content of your character.
That's who we are.
He's referring there, I think, pretty clearly to people like Elise Stefanik ending the campaign by referring to Mom Dani as a jihad.
which we've covered here multiple times,
but is completely insane, morally and practically.
It is just a crazy, insane move,
especially when the guy on the other side
is telling people he's going to make it easier to live in New York City,
and that is what's important to the average voter
who is not going to believe the guy proudly marching in the Pride Parade,
not to repeat myself with proudly marching in the Pride Parade,
but is bringing Sharia law to New York City.
I mean, so I don't know.
Like Vivek is, I think, sort of a squirrely politician, but he's completely right on those two measures.
And he's running a gubernatorial race and going across Ohio right now.
Those are, those seem to be pretty correct diagnoses.
Yeah, if he wants to, you know, push affordability into the centerpiece of the Republican agenda, that's great.
that's the whole point that's that's what you want to happen to get both let's get both parties
working on it maybe they can like half do it um so but yeah the when he's talking about woke
is he talking about israel a little bit there too like is he's saying that like maybe this
like constantly badgering him to go visit israel wasn't wasn't a good move it might have been that
it might have been a combination of that
and referring to
because Vivek finds himself
in the crosshairs with the Gropers
and McFentez.
And so when he mentioned
religion and skin color at the end,
I think he is,
you know, he gets a lot of this as well
for his own religious background
focusing on someone.
I see him getting attacked at T.P. USA events
for not being Christian.
Yeah, he gets that a lot.
And so I think my understanding
of what the vague said is probably that a lot of it is, comes from that.
Here's how Vance reacted.
So just before we went into this recording, J.D. Vance posted around 11 a.m. East Coast
time. First of all, he said, you need that the Republican coalition is lower propensity.
And that means, quote, we have to do a better job turning out voters than we have in the past.
He said, quote, we need to focus on the home front. The president has done a lot that has already
paid off in lower interest rates and lower inflation. But we inherited a disaster from
Joe Biden and Rome wasn't built in a day. We're going to keep on working to make a decent
life affordable in this country. And that's the metric by which will ultimately be judged in
26 and beyond. That is momdanism. That's what we should probably say at this point, Ryan.
And point three from JD is the infighting is stupid. I care about my fellow citizens, particularly
young Americans being able to afford a decent life. I care about immigration or sovereignty.
And I care about establishing peace overseas so our resources can be focused at home. If you care
about those things, too, then let's work together. Trump, meanwhile,
has been, I don't know if it's fair to say, crashing out on truth's social.
He's like, he's having a wild one.
This is how Trump has been reacting.
He right away said 13 hours ago, so that would have been around 11.30 p.m. East Coast time.
Quote, Trump wasn't on the ballot and shut down were the two reasons that Republicans lost
elections tonight, unquote, according to pollsters.
He doesn't cite the pollsters.
Incredible post. Then he posted about the ratings of 60 minutes. And then Republicans terminate the filibuster, get back to passing legislation and voter reform, President DJT. And then pass voter reform, voter ID, no mail and ballots, save our Supreme Court from packing, no Tuesday edition, etc. All caps. All caps. All caps. And then he said, dot, dot, dot. And so it begins all caps. Just a lot going on in the mind of Donald J. Trump last night, Ryan.
yeah uh shut down i think definitely hurt them in virginia um probably hurt them in new jersey so i think
he's right about that him his name not being on the ballot yeah so no i think i think i think
i think those track calling on a filibuster to be removed that's an interesting one in the wake
of losing elections and every time he does that thune comes out and says no um he's not going to do it
Yeah. I mean, but if Trump keeps hitting the drum beat, at first I thought it was a negotiating tactic over the shutdown. But to post that twice in the aftermath of a pretty big, dem sweep was quite interesting.
I saw Stoller making, I think it was Stoller making the, he was suggesting that Trump may worry that he's going to lose the Supreme Court case. Is it today that tariffs are getting? So Supreme Court is hearing a challenge to the constitutionality of his, of the use.
of his use of tariffs because
Congress has delegated
tariff authority
to the president
but with
but not not in a blanket way
where you can just do
it the way that he's been doing it
right you know just
on a whim and for any
and for any reason
it's got to be an emergency and it's got to be targeted
he just did a formula and
slapped it on the entire world
and two at least two courts
have struck them down
and so
So Solar's theory was that he feels like he's going to need Congress for tariffs.
And he's not going to get it with a filibuster in place.
The court can rule that the tariffs were collected illegally, and then you have to give them back, which will be a giant mess.
Because we're pushing like a trillion dollars.
It's like insane amount of money has come in on these tariffs.
paid for by consumers and businesses.
But it wouldn't be the consumers and the businesses that would get the rebates.
It would be whatever particular company, like paid the tariff.
So I think the Thelibuster thing has something to do with that.
Yeah, that might.
There's an amicus brief in that case that's interesting, too, that suggests Trump could use another authority for it.
We'll see if he, again, like another technical authority for it.
So we'll see if they lose and end up gambling in that direction.
But before we move on from Mamdani, Ryan, well, this is sort of a bigger picture one, too.
I just wanted to flag some more exit polling.
This one shows, for example, young women, 81% from Mom Donnie in New York City.
Surprising young women were not coming out in droves for Andrew Cuomo.
80% for Mikey Cheryl in New Jersey, 78% for Spanberger in Virginia. That's according to NBC's exit polls. It looked, I think I retweeted this. It looked also like Mom Donnie did well. I should be able to find it here. I saw 64%. Yeah, here it is. He was plus 40 with young men. So between the ages of 18 to 29, Cheryl was up 10 with young men. Spanberger was up 14 with young men. And Zaron on.
was up 40 with young men.
Again, that's according to NBC News's exit pulling.
Yeah, the Democrats keep asking themselves, how do we win men?
How do we win men?
And they keep being told how you win men?
And they're like, well, how do we win men without doing that?
It's shocking.
The lesson is actually just you can appeal to men the same way you appeal to women,
which is just making their lives better, promising to make their lives better.
Right, right, right.
But is there a plan B, C, what else?
Do you have anything else?
Yeah, right.
I'm like that's going to require some tax hikes on the rich and not so sure about that.
And Ryan, again, I just wanted to get your take on a little something going on here.
This is Frank Luntz looking at some of these counties in Virginia.
He says every single county in Virginia shifted blue word tonight.
These analyses in the New York Times with the Arrow are my new election night favorites over the last couple cycles.
So look at this, Loudoun County, which was, we were talking about this a bit last night, the battleground of the, like, parental rights movement in the Yonken election.
That was 12 points.
Shift to 12 points for Abigail Spanberg of all people, 12 points.
And this is with Winston Sears running on that full slate of culture war issues.
In fact, at her victory party last night in her concession speech, Sears mentioned three things, like the car attack.
I think it was girl sports, and not to pull a Rick Perry, but I'm forgetting off the top of my head what the other one was.
I think at that point she said, oh, it was expanding the economy in that order.
And it was, she's sort of a clumsy politician.
And everyone now is like, oh, she just wasn't the right candidate.
But they lost in New Jersey with a pretty good candidate too.
So I don't know that it was necessarily winsome sears.
A lot of it was political headwinds.
But it's amazing that a lot of what felt like the future of politics to many people,
during 2020 and like capital P.W. peak woke. It's clearly not the golden ticket of the future in
politics. And when you look over here, this is Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez telling MSNBC. A lot of people
are willing to talk about party unity when it serves them, but not party unity when it serves everybody.
We have a future to fight for and we're either going to do that together or you're going to be
left behind. So Ryan, the question I wanted to ask you on that is people reading the future as sort of
socialist because Zoran won in New York City. But then you also have these big triumphs for
like Abigail Spanberger and Mikey Sherrill where you're persuading kind of swing voters in places
like Loudon. Obviously, these are blue counties that went red, but you're bringing people out.
You're remaking the electorate in a way that it didn't look like in 2021. And obviously,
there are persuadable swing voters. Even the fact that people went out and voted on those numbers
to form this kind of electorate means that they got them off their couches. And so there's this
bifurcation of these, like, fantasies of the moderate Democratic establishment in Spanberger
and Cheryl and, like, in Alyssa Slotkin, and also Mamadani. So what is the lesson that is going to be
taken away for it? Is it going to be, Zaron was a fluke? If Sliwa had gotten out of the race,
it all would have been fine. We could have won with the worst candidate ever, Andrew Cuomo. Or is it going
to be um you know this is all everything is new like what's what's the lesson so let me actually
play some um Cheryl here because I think it's actually important to understand what she really
ran on uh in order to be able to answer that question so here's your Mikey Cheryl I am fighting
for you I'm fighting for affordability I'm fighting to get your cost down I'm declaring as a seat
of emergency on day one, freezing utility rate hikes.
I said last night, I said, you know what, I'm not playing, right? I'm not doing a 10-year study,
I'm not writing a strongly worded letter. Abundance.
I'm declaring a state of emergency to drive your costs down.
Thank you.
And that's just where it starts, because as I'm looking to the budget, I'm increasing
that first-time homebuyers program so you can get your foot in the door try to build your
family's generational wealth i'm taking on those landlords who are colluding to drive up your
rental prices will my opponent do that no his biggest donors one of those guys that's being
investigated right now so this is the fight and at every single level i have been willing to
take on this fight and i will fight anyone when it comes to fighting for the people have
New Jersey.
That's my commitment to you.
Fascinating.
Yes.
And so back in September, Crystal and I made fun of Democrats for how poorly Spanberger
and Cheryl were doing in the polls.
And Cheryl continued doing poorly in the polls up through New Jersey.
So we now have like Neera Tandon and all of her like a mob kind of like being like,
you shared this poll from September where they were not doing well.
And look, now they won by a lot.
aren't you guys morons and to me it's like if this is what qualifies as democratic centristism
then the left has won and i am i'm glad to like eat whatever crow that you want me to eat
and say that okay yes if mikey sherrill runs by saying she's going to declare a state of emergency
to bring prices down in the state.
She's going to crack down on landlords
who are colluding to raise prices.
She's going to increase, you know,
she's going to help people buy homes.
And she's going to, you know,
across the board, not a long committee.
Across the board, she's going to immediately
make affordability the thing that she's going to do.
And she's going to do that by fighting against
the greedy landlords and break them up.
And she can do it because,
she's not taking their money and the opponents are.
If that is what qualifies as democratic centristism, then near a tandon, amazing, wonderful.
That's terrific.
You got me.
Welcome to the party.
No, no, no, no.
It's your party.
It's your party.
Let, like, let them think it's their idea.
And if they run with it, great.
That's the whole point.
And Jayapal talked about this on the stream last night, but it's important to underscore.
people like Cheryl and Spanberger actually were quite good in 2022 when it came to the child child tax credit and actually a lot of the kind of climate money.
And they wanted to show voters that they were doing something, that they were making their lives materially better.
And particularly fought very hard around the care economy stuff.
And they lost that fight.
And Democrats are much, and the country is much worse off.
because they lost that over in the Senate.
But these are a different kind of centrist Democrats
in the sense that they're actually trying
to make regular people's lives a little bit more affordable and better.
So it's not as if they just picked this stuff up.
They were in 2022, the new Democrats,
which are the like offshoot of the, you know,
business wing of the Democratic Party,
you know, really, really rallied around this,
the child tax credit in particular.
And if that is what quality,
as the, like, right wing of the Democratic Party, then that's, you know, that there's a total
victory for the populist side. And we'll be gracious about it. Good. Like, wonderful. Congratulations
to Mikey Sherrill. Well, maybe you'll be gracious about it, Ryan. You and Crystal will be gracious.
Everyone will follow our lead and be gracious. So we're again talking about double digit wins here
for Spamberger and Cheryl. So 57.2 percent for Spamberger, 42.6 percent.
for Sears with 95% of the vote in here on Wednesday morning. Jay Jones, Jay Jones,
who Republicans thought they actually might beat even he won by what it's looking like six points.
So 52.8% more than half the vote and 46.8% for Miara's. We are looking at Mikey Cheryl at 56.2%
with 95% of the votes in to Chittarelli at 43.2% of the votes in. And of course,
Zara Mamdani right now with 91% of the votes in is that over 50% of the votes in is that over 50%
vote. He's at 50.4 percent. And Andrew Cuomo is at 41.6 percent. Incredible stuff,
right? Yes, indeed. Yeah, so big night for Democrats. I don't know what kind of breaks
it puts on Trump. I don't know how connected he feels to the electorate and the polls at this
point. He seems to have the least amount of responsiveness of any president ever, including
his first term of kind of reaction to the public will.
But this is a pretty big expression of that will.
So I guess we'll see.
Yeah, not entirely different from what happened in 2017 or 18.
And I was talking to a consultant last night, a GOP consultant last night, who was looking back on those races.
And we were reflecting on how heavily they were influenced by Russia collusion narratives.
But you'll remember, Ryan, health care was also a huge fixture in those elections.
And, you know, Virginia, obviously, the conversation about federal workers in Doge, that's front of mind for people that probably contribute.
Maybe it's to the easy win, even for somebody like J. Jones in that state. But Trumpism, you know, if you're one of the professional Republicans here in Washington that doesn't believe Donald Trump should run for a third term, as even he seems to be conceding, he won't at this point. Then right now, you're looking really seriously at how J.D. Vance is analyzing these election results. And you're realizing that you've got about three years left to kind of coast on MAGA, which has never worked.
in down ballot races unless Donald Trump, as he put it on true social correctly, is at
the top of the ballot. So that kind of artificial sugar high is coming to an end for Republicans
and they need to figure out when some Sears was seen as somebody, in fact, that could be Glenn
Yonkin was seen as somebody who could be Trump without Trumpism without Trump. That could be
the kind of early model for the future with persuadable voters and can keep the MAGA coalition
of working class, multiracial working class coalition coming to the polls.
You know, these elections are low propensity, but you have to win a whole lot of low propensity
elections to have national power.
So that's a huge question, obviously, weighing on the minds of many, many Republicans
right now.
Yep, yes, indeed.
All right.
Well, we have so many reactions.
There's nobody that you would want in your corner apart from Ryan Grimm.
or other than Ryan Grimm and Griffin,
to grab the most high-profile people
who are just milling about a campaign party
because you guys got, it's like Stefan.
That's what I was thinking about last night.
It was like a Stefan sketch.
Like, we have everyone.
Lena Kahn, a star of sex in the city,
Congresswoman Prima Jaya Ball.
That's what you guys did.
And Khan alluded last night to a role she was going to play
in the Mamdani administration.
She just said at a press conference
that she's going to join.
the transition team.
So that's,
that's going to be very good because,
you know,
Blenekon is one of the most,
is one of the most effective,
uh,
implementers of the kind of populist
antitrust vision,
the demographics.
It's,
it's one thing to,
you know,
write a paper about it,
um,
or talk about it on a podcast.
It's a whole other thing to actually go to court and go to,
and go to the lawmakers and put something into actual
practice that combats that corporate power. And so, you know, she has been doing that and thinking
about it and getting it actually done. And so if she's, you know, involved in the Mamdani transition,
that's, I think, very good news. Fascinating. And so make sure that you stay tuned to hear
exactly how everyone was reacting. We're about to roll this now. It is like a Stefan sketch,
all of the people that you would ever imagine
and then some of the people
you would never imagine hearing
from the Brangy Boys' Mom Donnie live stream.
Incredible, Ryan,
and incredible that you made it home
for the birthday breakfast today too.
Yeah, and got him
these Philadelphia Eagles
Crocs in New York
that are very cool.
Oh, that's awesome.
Well, Packers' Eagles coming up too.
So I don't want to ruin his birthday,
but you guys are going down.
We'll see.
We'll have to watch it again.
All right.
All right.
Now, enjoy the reactions live in the ground from the Mamdani Victory Party.
On the podcast Health Stuff, we are tackling all the health questions that keep you up at night.
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And she said, Johnny, the kids didn't come home last night.
Along the central Texas planes, teens are dying.
Suicides that don't make sense.
Strange accidents and brutal murders.
In what seems to be, a plot ripped straight out of Breaking Bad.
Drugs, alcohol, trafficking of people.
There are people out there that absolutely know what happened.
Listen to Paper Ghosts, the Texas Teen Murders,
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Robert Smith, and this is Jacob Goldstein, and we used to host a show called Planet Money.
And now we're back making this new podcast called Business History,
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And some of the worst people, horrible ideas, and destructive companies in the history of business.
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Make something people want.
First episode, how Southwest Airlines use cheap seats and free whiskey to fight its way into the airline business.
The Most Texas Story Ever.
There's a lot of mavericks in that story.
We're going to have mavericks on the show.
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Why don't we step back and show us where we are for just a second for the
stream here. We are in the beautiful Brooklyn Paramount Theater. It's, um, it's beginning to fill up with
people here. We're going to have a pretty good angle on the speech and the crowd. And we got Abby Phillips
behind us right now, CNN, I believe. Huge. Um, so we're in the, no other sports, but Ryan is
gained lots of attention. Naomi says hello. Naomi, do you want to say anything? Hey, Naomi, what's up?
Thanks for coming on. We need some happiness. We need some joy. We're going to get it. Yeah.
Were you out of the streets today?
Yeah.
What did you say?
I mean, a lot of people were very happy to have voted.
We were, I was canvassing with Jews for Zorham.
Excellent.
And, you know, we actually went back to the Grand Army Plaza where we had had this big action a year and a half ago outside Chuck Schumer's house, the Seder in the streets.
And I had given a speech then, and I had said to Chuck that the kids are with us.
us now and what did he say we just elected yeah are with you I think what did
Chuck said to that whole movement and it's generational divide that is ruptured over the
genocide is a huge part of why it's possible for Zoran to be elected which you
will be I know he hasn't been yet but yeah I mean the other thing that I I tried to
convey in the canvassing I've been doing the past couple days is just like even though
these disgusting ads are all about fear of momdani it's actually
of the coalition. It's actually fear of the possibility, what becomes possible when people
connect across divides. So that was, that was my like, I feel that, you know. Yeah.
Did you, were regular people coming up to you or like, were you mostly just going to the
doors you were supposed to do? We were, like, we were to, we were outside of a polling, a polling
place, like a voting place. So people were talking to people as they went in as they came out.
Yeah, yeah. I mean, people who voted for Zorm were very happy to talk about how they'd vote.
how they voted for him or were going to vote for him.
People who didn't were like...
Fair enough.
Yeah, I didn't get into any arguments.
Excellent.
What about you? What did you see today?
I have only been here for a couple hours, but everybody I talked to was like, oh, yeah,
I vote for that guy or I voted for that person or like just regular people on the street.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think like...
And they were saying, like, I think he's going to win, like, by a lot.
They were pretty...
I hope so, yeah.
Am I correct in St. Chuck Schumer said he didn't say who he voted for?
Who do you think he voted for?
I think he fucking voted for Walmart.
Yeah, I think no doubt about it.
Yeah, I think he should resign.
I mean, if New York overwhelmingly elects, Zaron...
What do you think?
What do you think he did?
He's supposed to represent the city, right?
What do you think he did that Bernie didn't do?
He managed to...
Yeah.
basically, you know, change the electorate and bring people out and excite people who hadn't
been involved in politics before. Bernie didn't quite pull that off in 2020.
What, why do you think, is it because it's a concentrated media market and like he was able
to reach more people more directly? Like, you know, going from state to state in the primary
caucus system, it's like you go to a state, you have no idea there's an election going on.
And it's just all of a sudden on a random day in August 5th or whatever.
first person to say that he is part of a of a lineage and part of a movement that you know what he's
doing wouldn't be possible without Bernie I think that part of what it means to not be you know
the first to try and is that there is more of a sense of play like more of a sense of like
actual like joy having fun and I think the fact that people in New York channels all of their
fear and rage about Trump into electing Mamdani and doing it in this spirit of being like
not just anti-fascist but the antithesis of fascism like in terms of fascists want uniformity
fascists want this like like intense discipline and the whole campaign was about celebrating the
cultural and linguistic diversity of the city was this love letter to the city it was about like
hey, like, let's not be afraid of cities.
They're actually kind of incredible.
They can be better, yes, but they're amazing.
And there's, I think, in the face of so much, like, anti-urban rhetoric coming from Trump,
it was really about time for New York to fall back in love with itself.
It really did come across that Zoran loves New York City.
And it really also looked like Andrew Cuomo really dislikes New York City.
Yeah, and all the billionaires who were threatening to leave.
Like, also.
Vote for us, or we're going to.
leave. Right, they have no commitment to this place. Whereas his whole campaign was like,
I love this city enough that I'd like to be able to afford it and stay and stay with my family
and stay with my community and friends. Like, the polar opposite message is. So I love that,
you know? Like, you know, the people who want to blast themselves into outer space and build
their bunkers and just extract from cities and extract from humans. Like, yeah, it was so sharp
that delineation. So, yeah, I think it was, it was different. Yeah, yeah. But,
Curtis Lee Waugh, too.
He seems to authentically love New York.
We'll give him.
Like a true New York character.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah.
Anyway, good to see you guys.
Yeah, yeah.
Former gubernatorial candidate.
I'll hold the mic for you.
Cynthia Nixon, welcome to the drop site and breaking point stream.
So were you out canvassing today?
I was in rehearsal today, but my wife was canvassing in Washington Heights.
What accounts for this victory?
What accounts for this victory is Zoran Mamdani, who is, you know, a once-in-a-generation leader and the movement that he has built, 90,000 volunteers.
But also that he is, we have finally found a way to show the Democratic Party, we can actually offer an alternative to MAGA that makes us the party of working people again.
And not just saying, both for us were not Donald Trump, but actually.
vote for us because we're offering you concrete things that are going to make your lives better.
One thing that he seemed to do in the immediate wake of the primary
was consolidate a lot of the institutional democratic support in a way that was almost surprising.
Like the labor unions and others who Cuomo had kind of had a stranglehold on for a very long time,
he was able to say, no, no, I won the primary and what did he do?
as far as you understand, to be able to do that.
Because if those institutional forces stay on the sidelines
and then move over to Cuomo,
maybe you have a different race.
I mean, I wish that the leaders of the Democratic Party did that.
But I think in terms of the unions
and that more institutional support,
I think they got into a room with Zoran,
and they watched what he was able to do in the primary.
They watched how he was able to mobilize.
and inspire people, going from 2%, almost no-name recognition against a multi-term dynastic governor.
And I think, you know, people are skeptical about Zoran.
It's hard to be skeptical once you get into a room with him and you talk to him.
Kathy Hockel said recently that she heard the people at the rally saying tax the rich,
but it's going to take more than one energetic rally to change her mind.
What is it going to take to change her mind?
Because he's going to need her in order to get a lot of his agenda done,
but I would assume that she's going to need him as well.
Yes, I think that Zoran needs all of us to make his platform a reality,
but I think it's very important to the older generation of Democrats
to actually see the writing on the wall and see finally we have a way of offering people
something that is going to invigorate the party.
I think you ignored the writing on the wall at your peril.
Did you, last thing from me and then, I was going to, when you were watching the campaign,
was there anything where you were like, damn, wish I'd have done that?
No, I mean, you can't, you can't compare me and Zoran.
You just, you just, different ballgame?
Totally, yeah, yeah.
We had another question from another team member.
Emily asked, do you think audiences respond to Gilded Age, like they respond to Zoron?
the parallels between that time and now?
I mean, I think the thing about the Gilded Age, it's a beautiful show,
and it shows a lot of the glitter of the Gilded Age.
And I think we're living in another Gilded Age,
and I think that Zoran is laying bare kind of the horrors of an era,
like the Gilded Age that we're living in now,
where there is so much income inequality,
and people cannot put food on the table.
or get health care.
Great.
Well, Cynthia Nixon, thank you.
So last one, definitely last.
Okay.
Because I remember you were also at AOC's 2018 primary night victory.
How do you compare that night to this,
Zoron's primary night to this night?
I think it feels very the same.
I think it's all in a line.
And I think, you know, the granddaddy of us all is Bernie Sanders.
And we are all Bernie Sanders children.
And I think AOC's victory was improbable and magical in the same way that Zorans is.
And I think that we are just going to keep going.
Thank you so much.
Back to all.
Oh, my God.
I'm so starstruck, guys.
Zogger and I'm going to be en-girling so hard.
Yeah, I love the guild age.
I self-identify as a Miranda.
Seeing her on our screen, I was like, holy shit.
I was like, I can't believe this.
I love you, Cynthia.
I know you can't hear me.
I love you.
Thank you for all the great memories.
Congressman Jaya Paul, great to have you.
It's great to be with you.
It's a good night.
Yes, it is.
So there's a bunch of stuff we wanted to get from you.
But first of all, just your reaction to Zoran Mamdani,
being the next mayor of New York City,
overcoming this sort of cabal of billionaires and Donald Trump,
backing Andrew Cuomo to Securevic.
and looking like he's probably going to hit that 50% mark, too.
It certainly does.
And it is a great night to watch that race, to watch that campaign and to see the win.
He texted me earlier today and I said, you know, you've really transformed politics
and the coalition that we knew could be built and on the agenda that is really going to deliver
for working people.
The turnout is spectacular.
And I think that the, you know, the whole.
way in which he ran the campaign, the way in which he stood up for his values, the way in which
he didn't leave anybody behind, he brought everybody in, the way in which even after the primary,
he was continuing to bring in new people, despite the absolutely horrific, horrific,
Islamophobic, just, I mean, just, it's hard to even watch that happening. And it wasn't just
from Republicans. It was also from Democrats. And I think that hopefully his win to
night resets the table and brings up all of the ways in which we as a Democratic Party have
to continue to work and make affordability center, but also make justice for everybody
center. Yeah, I mean, what do you make of Senator Schumer in particular, refusing to back
him, refusing to say whether he'd vote for him when his opponent is endorsed by Donald Trump
and had to resign in disgrace, by the way, and also, by the way, also law.
the Democratic primary by 12 or 13 points. So, you know, what is your, what is your message to him?
What do you make of that decision from him? I just think it's absolutely unacceptable. And I think
that, you know, everyone should have come on board quickly, enthusiastically. We've been saying
we want a candidate who can, you know, we want to as a Democratic Party be able to bring back
working class voters, be able to focus on affordability, be able to bring in new people that
haven't voted. Zoran Mamdani did all of those things. And I think that, you know, we will see the
reckoning will be later for Senator Schumer and, and others. I think Kathy Oakle did it the right way.
I think, you know, it was really important that, and she appeared with him several times I saw,
despite some pushback to her being there. But I think it is important. We are always told as
progressives that we've got to unite around the Democratic nominee. That's what should have happened in
this case as well. Can you talk to us a little bit about the Seattle mayoral race? We understand
there's an insurgent candidate out there. We have an East Coast bias here that we acknowledge that we
work against. Help us out. There's a big race going on where you're from. Yes. There's multiple
big races. I mean, I think it's really important that we don't take just Zoran Mamdani's win,
which is unbelievable, exceptional, has energized all of us, but that we actually look at what's
happening in places across the country. And, you know, we had some backsliding in Seattle
over the last couple of elections where we got a Republican city attorney in, unfortunately.
We split progressive votes and a Republican made it in to the city attorney's race,
and it has not been a good thing. We got a very conservative,
in, who served as council president and really pushed a lot of progressives, frankly,
out. The council in Seattle became much more conservative. And so now what we have tonight
is a number of very important races. The mayor's race is going to be very important. Katie
Wilson, Transit Riders Union, founder, very, you know, has worked on a lot of really important
progressive policies and got in late into the race. You know, didn't get
in until the spring and really built something, I think, inspired by Zoron, but also inspired
by the work that she has done as an organizer.
And so I think that this is, I do think this will be a closer race, but we'll, I think
she has a really good shot of winning.
And I think on top of that, we've got the city attorney's race where we have a fantastic
candidate that I've endorsed, Erica Evans is running and I think is going to win and is going
a win big, I hope. We also have the president that I mentioned, the council president, former
council president that I mentioned who's running for re-election. I think she's going to get pushed out
with a big win from Dion Foster, another really strong progressive who's been organizing, got a lot of
our tax the rich, you know, tax fairness reforms on the ballot, was working as an organizer for years.
And we are re-electing to a full term, a seat that was, we just won a year,
ago as a fill-in election, but now to a full-term, a wonderful progressive candidate named
Alexis Mercedes-Rink, who has already done in one short year kind of a remarkable job on really
turning the city council back towards a progressive lane. So all of those race is really good.
And then on our King County race, this may be another close race, but I've endorsed Germai Zahili,
who is worked on hunger as an organizer a long time ago, is a lawyer himself, is on the King
County Council, but running for the first time in 16 years for the King County executive seat.
And Germai is a refugee who came here when he was three years old.
He has been a staunch advocate for immigrants and refugees.
And all of these people together are going to allow us to stand up to Trump and stand up for
progressive policies as Seattle has done for so much of our history.
It's been a very good night for Democrats across the board, sort of regardless of ideological
leanings.
You know, I have more centrist candidates like Abigail Spanberger, Mikey Sherrill, doing very well
in Virginia, New Jersey, securing those races.
You know, you had two statewide races in Georgia go overwhelmingly.
Pennsylvania, Supreme Court just kind of across the board, really, you know, democratic
sweep.
And, you know, I think a lot of this has to do with backlash against Trump, but I'm just wondering what your sense of the reaction from the electorate is and why this was such a big night and so many big wins for Democrats, you know, in states and different ideological leanings kind of across the board.
Well, I think it just shows we don't have to have just one kind of Democratic candidate, right?
We can have a number of different kinds to build coalitions for different races in different states and that we need everybody.
and that there are lessons to learn from New York City about how to energize a very diverse coalition,
bring young people back in with an excitement that we haven't seen.
But also from Virginia and from New Jersey, where both Mikey and Abigail, who I served with in Congress,
and actually, if you both remember the Build Back Better struggles pretty well,
you know, they were both very, very essential in pushing for universal child care here in the House
during that whole debate. They were part of the moderate group that we reached out to as progressives
and said, hey, let's be in this together. And they stuck with us. In fact, Mikey was on education
and labor with me and really pushed back against attempts even within our own party to go for
less than universal child care. And so I think that both of them did in different ways and to different
extent, focus on affordability and on really popular populist policies that raise wages
and that, you know, elevate working class struggles. And so, yes, it's not, you know,
they're definitely running on a much more, in their words, pragmatic vision. But I would say
that their policies, actually, many of them reflect the focus on affordability that Zoron, I think,
really elevated and made so clear had to be central to any win anywhere in the country.
That is true. There was this unusual for the Democratic Party shift, where in 22, it was the
centrist and the kind of what would traditionally be called more of the corporate wing of the
Democratic Party. We're pushing the party, say, oh, we need some wins here on affordability,
and particularly when it came to the child tax credit and other things. That was,
It was unusual, whereas in the previous cycles, it would be the, that wing of the party would be pushing for, you know, deficit, you know, we've got to cut the deficit. We've got to cut taxes and, you know, that typical, that typical rhetoric there. Back on the Mamdani campaign, I'm curious, did you ever talk to leader Hakeem Jeffries, who, you know, he endorsed Mom Donnie a day or two ago, but kept getting asked and kept holding out and kept resisting.
I didn't. Yeah. Did he talk to any of the progressives in the house about what's going on here or what, like, he was just. I didn't speak to him. Yeah, I mean, I didn't speak to him about it. You know, I know he represents Brooklyn, right? And it's one of the areas that Mamdani did so incredibly. I think I got that right. But, you know, one of the areas that Mamdani did so incredibly well in. And I don't know what was going through his mind. I know other people in New York were talking to him.
I was not one of those people, but I think that, you know, this is, this shouldn't be a question.
And I think it just goes back to, you know, the fact that there are big donors who didn't necessarily want Mumdani complicated politics with some of the New York Democrats.
Unfortunately, I think that was really also outrageous to have Democrats saying, you know, we don't want, we don't want that kind of person in our party.
And I'm calling him a jihadist, yes.
Yeah, I mean, I just think that all of that is, you know, we don't forget it,
but we allow the victory of tonight to make our point very clearly that Zoran Mondani is a remarkable candidate that we all should be celebrating and that is helping the Democratic Party to rebuild itself.
I mean, it's quite a contrast between, you know, what you just said, which is, listen, we got to have all kinds of candidates.
We all got to work together.
and I had a great relationship with Abigail Spanberger versus, you know, when you see a Hakeem Jeffries, a Kirsten Gillibrand, a Chuck Schumer, a Dan Goldman, who are saying, actually, no, we don't want, we don't want the Zoran Mamdani's of the world. We don't want to, we're not going to endorse them, even though the voters backed them. We're not going to even say that we're willing to vote for them. We don't want that part of the party at all. So how do you, in a sense, unify with a group of people who are saying effectively, like, we don't want you.
Well, I'm glad that Hakeem endorsed, that Leader Jeffreys endorsed Zoron.
I think that, you know, there were complicated dynamics there.
But I want to be clear, like, I'm happy to say I don't want to be in the same party as Kirsten Cynumarjo Mansion, right?
I do still think that there is a need at some point in our country, in our country's future for multi-party democracy.
Why not?
You know, because I think that at the end of the day, you know, what we have right now is,
essentially a two-party system, and Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Zoran
Mamdani, me, Greg Qasar, Maxwell Frost, we are all pushing very hard to really build up
this part of the Democratic Party and stiffen the spines of others. And I think that the way
we've held together, I will give Hakeem Jeffries a lot of credit for holding the House together
on the shutdown vote, as an example, last time and this time, and really pushing. We want to
encourage that. And we want to make sure that we continue to show that our policies and our way of
working is the right way to work, not one that, you know, tries to say the Democratic Party is only
good if it represents moderate, conservative establishment, Democrats, or independence. No, we actually
need 90 million Democrats that didn't vote in the last election to, or 90 million people that didn't
vote in the last presidential election to come out and vote. And they're not going to be inspired
by just the regular old same old. They'll be inspired by some of the candidates we're seeing
right now. And the way I see it, and I'm curious for your take on this, is that a night like
this, with Dora and Mom Domney winning so thoroughly, he's doing a huge favor to the Democratic
establishment. You know, I'm not telling you anything you don't know. There is an enormous amount of
rage among the democratic base and among independence at everything but also at the at the democratic
party itself and what mom donnie is doing here and what grand platner are doing main and others are
doing yourself are there's they're they're finding a way to channel that energy and answering the
the problem that people have with democrats which is that they don't stand for anything with here's what
we stand for here's here's how you can channel this anger and this this this rage into something
hopeful and organized in another direction.
So the reason I say they're doing them a favor is if they don't do that,
what's plan B or C from the Democratic Party establishment?
Like an honest question, like what are they going to do with all this anger?
I really don't know.
I mean, I just think that there is no answer other than to make sure that we are actually
bringing people in, listening to them, and standing up and fighting for them.
them. And by the way, that doesn't mean just holding performative votes where you say, oh, it was a 60-vote
threshold, but we voted for it, but we can't get it done. No, it means standing up and fighting
for the things that we say we want to deliver and bringing everything we have to that fight.
Because you're right, Ryan, those people will go the direction of the 90 million that didn't vote.
And one of the most hopeful things tonight for me, whether it's in Virginia, whether it's in Maine,
whether it's in Pennsylvania, in New Jersey, or in New York, or hopefully now in California
with Prop 50 and with right here in Washington State, is that people are engaging again.
They are actually believing that their vote matters and that democracy matters.
And the only way we fight authoritarian and dictators and fascists and all the things that we are
fighting right now is if people are engaged and if they will only engage if they think their vote
matters and if they think that we want to listen to them and that we want to fight for them
and that we're going to do something different than what we've done before. And so I just,
I feel, you know, I feel I'm kind of a hopeful, optimistic person in general, but tonight
has really renewed a lot of my faith that if we just listen and if we actually fight for people
and if we actually give a proactive positive proposition vision, not just an opposition vision
of what we're going to stand up for, we can bring people back in.
And that has to be a respect for all voters, all voters, not just the suburban,
know, independent or conservative Democrat or, you know, so-called moderate Republican,
but actually our base of people that wants to believe in us if we give them something to believe in.
Congressman, my last question for you, and I really appreciate your time this evening is, you know,
if you have visibility on the shutdown, I saw some news that some senators may be, you know,
moving in the direction of caving, you know, do you have a message for them?
you have a sense of some sort of deal or negotiations that may be coming together?
Well, look, I just think that it is really important that we continue to hold the line.
We have a president who today tweeted out that he was not going to listen to a court order
ordering him to release SNAP funds.
Now, his press secretary walked it back, but he hasn't.
And we still have, right now, Americans who are looking at their health care premiums
and making a choice about whether they're going to just get off of health care,
which many of them will decide to do,
so that they can pay for their medication or for their food.
We have people right now who are going hungry
because cruelty is the point from this Republican Party.
And so the only way you fight a bully is not to cave,
but to actually hold out.
And most of the federal employees that I've talked to,
I know this is a very tough time for people who are hungry,
people who are losing paychecks,
who are working without a paycheck, furloughed,
all of those things. I am still hearing from people, you know, help us get food, get food
into the food banks, all of that, but don't cave. Because if you cave, the minute we go back
to work, he could just slash another several hundred thousand jobs the way he did before the
shutdown ever started, 250,000 jobs that were slashed. And so I really do think that what we need
to do is make Republicans come to the table to help us save health care or to,
you know, agree to our demand to save health care, to restore SNAP, and yes, then we can reopen
the government.
Last one for me, you mentioned Maine. What is your, I'm sure you've been watching from afar
this, the fight going on in Maine between Janet Mills and Graham Platner. How do you, how are you
thinking about that race? And what have, what have you heard just from your, your colleagues who are
kind of following the news there?
You know, I haven't been that engaged on the main race.
I would like to get to know Graham Platner.
I just haven't engaged on that.
I will tell you that there are a bunch of candidates across the country that the CPC PAC,
which I co-chair with Maxwell Frost and Greg Kassar, that we are looking at that we're super excited about.
And I think that this is an opportunity.
In some cases, we will have to figure out how we defeat the APAC candidate, right?
how we don't split progressive votes so that we end up with somebody who is not progressive on any realm or progressive except for Palestine or whatever it is.
And so I think that these are going to be some tough things that we're going to have to go through.
But I also think that we've got some exceptional candidates that are stepping up that really have the opportunity to win.
And we're excited that I think we'll have Christian Menafie is going to win his race in Texas.
He's going to go to the runoff, I should say, which is great.
and we have a couple of other races that we're watching closely.
And I also think that the Prop 50 race is, the Prop 50 initiative is just really, really important
because it shows what can happen when you refuse to accept what they're telling you
is your new reality, right?
Yeah, I think that's a great point.
Yeah, and now you look, and I think Missouri just dropped their redistricting plan, right?
So, and we saw...
Kansas. I think Kansas, at least what I saw was Kansas, but yeah.
Kansas, you're right. It was Kansas. My apologies. It was Sheree Stevens. That's right.
So I think that's really, really important. And so that's just another thing for us to remember is whatever seems like it's the reality today does not have to be the reality tomorrow.
Yeah, very true. Well, Congressman, thank you, Congresswoman. Thank you so much for your time. We really appreciate.
it. Thanks for having me on. Good to see you guys. Yeah, our pleasure. You too. Take care.
For people who are new to this, which I doubt there are any, there was the one of the most
ridiculous debate moments ever where Andrew Cuomo says he won't even, he won't, the debate
moment was he won't denounce Hamas or Hassan Piker. And that is a thing that actually
happens. I will not denounce Zoramam Dhani, but Zoro
I'm down. He will denounce me under the U.N. charter, occupied people have a right to
Asan Piker. That's true. It's true. People get so mad. Hi, Chris.
In fairness, hey, how's it going? In fairness, he condemned your comments, not necessarily you as a
human being, I will say. Well, it's a tricky situation because like everything that they're saying
about me, they get kind of say about him too. So it's like, you know, because he's also a 34 year old
Muslim socialist. Like, let's be real. The reason why they were attacking him is because, like,
you know, it was Islamophobia. Yeah. So it was a unique predicament, but I like to see
the silver lining where like I tanked it for Mahmoud, his dad. Like instead of them focusing on
his dad and his academic work, they had to focus on me instead. Yeah, there was a, there was a rich
vein they could have tapped with his dad. If they would have gone after his dad, there's all kinds
stuff there.
Radical.
I mean, don't give them more awful.
Jesus.
Well, it's over now.
It's too late.
You can't stop being a journalist.
That's right.
So how long have you been here?
Have you been out canvassing or what's been your situation?
No, no, I just got in.
I got in for CricketCon originally.
I'm going to D.C.
I think Zoron's about to deliver a speech.
I suspect.
Oh, no.
Cuomo is conceded.
Bitch.
Cuomo.
Sorry sad.
But yeah, I came in for,
I came in for
CricketCon in D.C.,
but I was like,
I got to see this happen in real
time, you know? So
I showed up. Was this the
first race that you were
mentioned this much? Yes.
What was it like? I hope it's the first and last.
No, it's the beginning. I don't like it. I don't like it at all.
I actually hated it, as a matter
of fact. Because
look, I got a lot of haters. I don't like
being the
contrary to what people might think I don't like being
the center of attention because
I'm just a megaphone
the way I see myself I try
to I try to offer a platform
to people that I think are doing right
and
that's why it was Zauron
and
it's obvious that
I have some high profile big
donors that are not
exactly fond of what I have to say
and I think it's a lot of it has to
do with Israel if we're being real. I think it's mostly to do with Israel as a matter of fact.
Yeah. Hassan, I was just going to say, did you see they're trying to like denaturalize Zoron?
They're trying to deport him, all the things they threaten you with. They're also trying to
threaten to use the 14th Amendment to keep him from being sworn in. How serious do you take that
kind of stuff? I mean, you have to unfortunately take everything that this administration is saying
is a joke seriously because
what they test out as jokes
sometimes do become
serious policy provisions
but
I think that Zoran has
the people's backing so it's going to be quite difficult
to do that in a very high profile manner
it's just
it's just another battle that we have to fight
it is what it is but
unfortunately that's what this administration
is entertaining is very dangerous but
we will push back
And you've watched a lot of these candidates.
When did you notice that he was going to do something different
than the traditional progressive populist candidate?
And what did he do right that others missed?
I got a lot of friends in the DSA out here.
I got a lot of journalist friends who hit me up
and was like, this guy's the real deal.
And he was at like 1% at that point.
I was like, I don't know who this guy is.
But he's handsome.
He seems nice.
it's a long shot but I'm always going to be on board if someone is out there
putting working class politics first and foremost at the center of their
campaign I'm always going to be there by their side and I'm really glad I did
because I mean look look what can happen right when you do center the working
class in your in your policy in your politics is good politics and it's good
policy it is and this is kind of an obvious point but it was it's crazy walking
around this city today, riding through the trains, taking in the massive size of this city,
and then knowing this guy is going to be the mayor of this.
That's right, baby.
We're doing white boy jihad.
We're doing woke sharia, the Islamic caliphate.
Well, I guess that's more like a sunny thing.
I'm just, as a Sunni Muslim, I assume he's going to do the caliphate, but I don't know.
He's a 12-er, so who knows?
think so yeah who knows there is division as Andrew Cuomo correctly pointed out
there is big division that's right amongst the Muslim masses he says
Zoran is divisive because he is not a real Muslim because he's Shia yeah that was
crazy that was maybe he's been hanging out with uh what's his face
Ahmed Shara or whatever no no no he's been hanging out with fucking the Jolani oh yes
yeah yeah Jolani's like yeah we've got Cuomo that's speech
right now happening.
He's got nothing we need to hear.
Let's be real.
I'll watch it later.
Yeah, I hope he can suck my entire dick, Andrew Cuomo.
That's what I have to say to Andrew Cuomo.
Suck my dick from the back, bitch.
You fucking failed because you're a dumb-ass loser who spent the last three weeks of your fucking stupid-ass campaign being like, oh, this Twitch streamer.
He's the mastermind behind 9-11.
I was fucking 10 years old, bitch.
Fucking stupid-ass motherfucker.
He lost twice.
He failed twice.
Yeah, failed twice.
Oh, my God.
He won governor and then failed twice.
Running against a Muslim socialist candidate,
you have to hang your head in shame.
You can't ever run, ever again.
You can't even be the fucking dog catcher.
You're done.
You're done.
What do you think he does next?
I don't want to say.
You think a full right-wing turn?
You think the full right-wing turn?
he's helping with the lawyers on that, right?
Yeah, I hope he has the same fucking performance
that he showed here on the ICC court case.
Dumbass attorney.
Dumbass loser.
And fuck all the billionaires and millionaires
that fucking burned millions of dollars
on this fucking campaign.
Oh, suck my dick.
Oh, my God.
It feels so good.
Maybe Cuomo can get arrested.
You guys hear that the New York Post reported
that a million New Yorkers are ready to leave the city.
Did you see this article?
Yeah, I did.
I hope.
They're ready to flee.
We're going to see the airport tomorrow.
Olivia Rangel, the free press came up to me.
It was like, that's my article.
I was like, really.
Was that Olivia's here today?
Were you as proud?
Yeah, she is here.
Olivia Rangold's here.
You're as proud of that one as you were when you deny the starvation in Gaza.
Yeah.
A million people are going to leave the city, but they couldn't be bothered to vote for Cuomo.
Yeah, I hope they're going to pack up their bags.
They're going to sell their place.
They're going to leave the city.
I'll buy it all.
I'm the wealthiest socialist in America.
I'll buy it all.
And I'll give it to the people.
Wait, Olivia Rangeld is here.
Isn't this like the least safe place for her?
I know.
You know?
It's just, she's so brave.
Right.
She's so brave.
She's in the Lions' Den.
In the Lions' Den of Sharia law.
Incredible.
Yeah, woke Sharia.
Wow.
Well, if she's watching, she's welcome to come join the stream.
Of course.
Thank you so much for having me.
Dropside news, baby.
It's the best. You guys are the goats.
Appreciate you, baby.
On the podcast Health Stuff, we are tackling all the health questions that keep you up at night.
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She said, Johnny.
The kids didn't come home last night.
Along the central Texas planes, teens are dying.
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In what seems to be, a plot ripped straight out of Breaking Bad.
Drugs, alcohol, trafficking of people.
There are people out there that absolutely know what happened.
Listen to Paper Ghosts, the Texas Teen Murders,
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This is Jacob Goldstein.
And we used to host a show called Planet Money.
And now we're back making this new podcast called Business History about the best ideas
and people and businesses in history.
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All right, so
Zoran just gave his speech.
We're bringing Julian. We're here. We've got Julian here.
What's going on to? Julian is a speech
driver for Zoran. I'm done.
He helped craft this one.
and we were just talking briefly right i noticed some like rhythm rhyme meter that was a little bit
like statistically not the substance stylistically reminiscent of obama in iowa and you were
saying yeah there actually you did because they're like i covered obama i'm an old old man
and he and he made a lot of promises and the one republics made fun for this will be the moment
that the seeds begin
received.
And this will be the moment
this is the time.
I noticed what
Mamdani said,
we're going to look back on this
which we've done it a lot earlier.
Yeah, like starting in 2008.
That's right.
When you could have started doing it,
but you didn't.
But anyway, so talk,
tell us a little bit about
the speech that he gave tonight
and why he gave it like
what we did.
Thank you.
It's an honor here.
First of all,
this campaign is one built on
the change
that we haven't really seen
the likes of a generation now at the point on this campaign are those who grew up in the era of
Obama, right? So we learn to speak, how to communicate, but also how to express hope through
political prison. And so over-learned it. You've got Democrats, like Josh Shapiro, for instance,
just sound exactly like Obama, but it's like you're not Obama, so it's weird. Well, I think one of
the takeaways from this campaign, the success of this campaign, is that if you have only
the style that's not enough you need the style and you need to pair with the substance and
this right it's he has rhetorical ability he can get these oratorial eyes that very few can and he's
not doing it by trying to imitate the cadence which is like i would say like a
plagiar way of hitting these heights but he's trying to speak in this inspirational language
and simultaneously offer this message of change this message of hope that is deeply rooted in
material tangible improvements and i think those two together why we've seen
a city that has come to come alive and really believe in the movement.
Yeah, and I want to explore this idea because the, like, the hope and the passion that people had for Obama in 2008 and, like, the aspiration that people had, like, this is, this is the moment where we're going to, we're going to turn the tide.
We're literally going to turn the tide back.
And it was, and it was such a disappointment.
But without that, but without that hope.
Yeah.
You, you, so he almost discredited the idea of hope, but Mamdani tonight, hope is alive.
So like, so like, how do you balance that without, like, because there's so much cynicism, you hear hope, you hear Obama, you're like, oh, yeah.
But so, but you, but, but if you don't have hope, then you can't, then there's no point in going door to door, knocking three million doors.
I mean, hope is truly the most powerful thing, and it has carried this campaign through moments,
of immense doubt and moments where everybody was saying it's not feasible. But I think there's
another parallel too, which is that Obama came up really, you know, not at the start, but by the
end, at the heart of the financial crisis. And this campaign right now, we are in one of the
darkest moments in American history. We're in what some would call a perpetual constitutional
crisis. And Obama offered this hope that resonated because people were sick of this broken
system, just weighing them down and not offering the solutions to this incredible, just
trash heap of failure. And I think Zoran is the same, right? We have so much just like clear and
obvious disappointment in front of us. We have elected leaders who are so clearly bought and paid
for. We have legislation sitting there waiting to be signed that people will not sign.
And it's almost like we're speaking different languages. And here comes around and he speaks in a way
that people understand and resonates and has clarity and it's straightforward. And I think,
you know, it's a similar appeal to Obama. Obama spoke. It wasn't fly.
It was just this really truthful, heartfelt, direct way of wrestling.
And so to you, what are the key, what are the, what, what was he trying to get across with that speech?
That speech?
I mean, I think fundamentally it is this question of what is possible in America and who can make it possible.
You know, he gave a speech last week at the House of Justice Reverend Sharpton's center.
Sure.
And it was about the American's right history who have shepherded in freedom, right?
So Reconstruction and the New Deal.
And it's not just asking government to do more.
It's people insisting and wielding their political power.
And I think we've seen that here today, right?
Nobody thought this was possible in December.
Nobody thought this was possible in February.
But it was truly the people who overcame, you know, a shortage of endorsements or unions going the other way.
And ultimately, these are institutions that are designed
to respect and to follow what the people want.
And I think the speech was saying the people have brought us to this point, this new age,
as Neroos says that we're ushering in, didn't happen by accident.
It happened because millions of New Yorkers, or at least over a million New Yorkers, manifested it.
And, yeah, because the Obama thing remains interesting to me because Obama was, you know,
accused of being a socialist.
Unfortunately, he was not.
Sure.
Accused of being born in Africa.
Sure.
Either way, it wasn't.
Like, it's got a neutral judgment.
Right.
Whoever you're born.
Acuse of being a Muslim.
Zeran is guilty of everything.
And I think the other part is there's no apology, right?
So often in our politics today, there is a reflexive apology.
And I never want to compare ourselves to Trump because I think there are no analogs.
But I do think that one thing Trump does well is he never apologizes.
And so he's never on the defensive.
And I think that there are many who have sought to attack.
or not guilty of and a lesser politician who is less, you know, secure in their beliefs
would have settled or would have apologized, would have bent over. That's not who Zoran is.
And I think that's the success of this campaign. It's a fearlessness. It's, I'm a socialist. I'm
not going to say sorry for being a democratic socialist to what I believe. And here, let me explain
to you what I believe, but not from a defensive crutch. And also, just to break the fourth
wall here, like, we're also, like, Mamdani, like, and independent media are collectively, like,
kind of moving into another area, and moving into another era where, like, in general, like,
the speechwriter for, like, Cuomo would not be going on CNN to talk, sure, about the
substance behind it.
They, what they, the speech writer for Cuomo would do is, like, write speeches for, you know,
corporations later and then eventually write a book 10 years later and then and then tell you like
where they got the ideas for the speech that they have rather than like just talk just just in a
transparent and open way just talk about you know what what what what's trying to be said and and
and why like what is it about mom donnie that kind of like opens up his staff and others to like
Well, I will say this is, this is my first, my first interview.
So, I mean, I think it really kind of goes back to what I was just saying.
It's like a deep pride, you know, it's a real, there's no, this victory wasn't built
atop half-truths and concessions and, you know, let's hope this doesn't get out.
It was incredibly making himself incredibly available, being interrogated in private and public,
what do you believe?
You really believe it?
Isn't that crazy?
we've never seen somebody running for this high role actually believe that, and never
flinching. And I think for those of us who have been lucky enough to work with him, to learn from him
to be part of this campaign that has bled over, right? We are so privileged to, like, not ever
want to be ashamed of what we are doing. This is resonating with so many New Yorkers. It's resonating
with my friends who have never cared about politics before. It's resonating with the city that
feels a weight. So and all of us and one thing he did the night and I don't know if this was this was
your idea or or not but like he did a kind of call in response with the audience where he'd say
all right we want the buses to be fast and read yeah yeah so that's something he has been doing
since even before I joined this campaign and I think one of the first times I ever saw him speak
he he did that and it was kind of one of those moments where you take a step back and you realize
whoa, there is power to this.
And it's not a power that's necessarily being reported.
You know, he was getting maybe one piece in the times a month at that point.
But it was a real grassroots, backyards of bars, people's homes,
and everyone knew the words.
Everybody was shouting you back.
And I think the other component of is it's a way of including people in the message.
And they're saying the three lines themselves, right?
He's not imposing it.
He's welcoming people away.
Right.
It's them about it.
And he also seemed.
at least from the stage to be talking a little bit to the city yeah to the senate and to in particular
the city council or other state leaders who like might be a little skeptical to say like no this is
we're very clear this is what we're doing yeah this is what we're running on so as you guys
are like coming into election day did you have a a number in mind where you're like all right
We hit this number, then the city council has to come along.
We hit this number.
Cathy Hokel, like, Kathy Hokel is going to be feeling more pressure.
You know, you have to remember that just as recently as February,
he was polling at 1%.
And so I think.
Generously at 1%.
Generously, right, as he likes to say, I was tied with somebody else.
I always knew I would beat that guy.
So I think there was hope, and I think we're all really.
delighted to have gotten over 50% but no I mean I think to have come so far and to have this
level of support from you know the grassroots all the way up to the highest levels of state
government is incredible and it's a testament not just to him not just this campaign but to people
raising their voices so loudly that they really can't be in court when did you start working on
this speech like because and what do you need to know when you decide what speech to give
because I also covered, as people watching,
No, the primary night.
And tell me about that.
He kind of ripped up the speech.
It's like, oh, we're not going to spend the next week
going over ranked choice voting numbers.
We're actually just going to...
I'll say that this was a much less stressful process
than the primary night speech
where the whole thing was rewritten.
And, I mean, we had a few drafts
and we had a victory speech,
but we had mostly worked on it too soon to call.
on primary night.
And so we had to really quickly adapt it to a victory speech.
Tonight, this was something that I started working on a week and a half ago
in between a constant deluge of other speeches.
And he's been engaging with it for a week, a few days at least, since Saturday.
And, you know, he, I think the other thing about speechwriting,
as you maybe alluded to earlier, is it's a bit of a dying art.
It's not, you know, it used to be in the Kennedy years, right?
You had rhetoric was like a major in college.
now that's, I think, largely relegated to, like, Oxford.
That's not such an American concept anymore.
The long-form speech has been cannibalized by two-minute videos.
But, as we've seen tonight, right, it can still be incredibly powerful and impactful,
and there's no better way to speak to a huge group of people.
But for it to work, you have to have a principal who takes it seriously.
Right.
And he really does.
He likes to read him.
He makes huge edits.
He infused it with his own personal stories.
And I think that's what makes him successful.
Did he have time to practice it?
I don't know.
He and I did not read it.
I read it out loud several times.
As far as I know, he didn't read it in front of me,
but I think he does a lot of it on his own.
Right, because he's also, like,
just been 24-7 on the street.
His calendar is an absolutely brutal thing.
Hey, here we go.
How you doing?
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
No, no, come on.
You got to come on.
All right, so we're now.
Amazing Lena Con.
Also joined by Lena Kahn, who's trying to do freebunk.
That's what we've been talking about.
Amazing, amazing writer.
Thank you.
What did you think of it?
It was fantastic.
Really hit all the right notes and was very touching.
I was just asking him if he practiced the speech.
I mean, if Zoran practiced the speech, he said he wasn't sure.
I was like, do you know if he, did he sleep the last three or four days?
Like, what's your understanding?
Not much.
I mean, he was in the club.
He was everywhere.
He was up doing that walk, you know, across the bridge.
It's also a testament to how much we believe in him that this whole campaign team was up to, you know, like there were probably 30 or 40 of us walking across the Brooklyn Bridge at 6 a.m. But no, he does not sleep. His constitution is, I don't know, unbelievable. It's unfathomable. But it's really amazing to watch. Are you going to help at all? I was thinking, like, let's say the Trump administration is like,
You know what? We're actually not going to give any money.
If the mayor could come back and be like, well, you need to talk to my lawyer, and the lawyer is Lina Khan.
I would think that that might give them a little bit of pause.
What do you think?
I think they have a lot of great lawyers.
Of course, I want to help them succeed however I can't.
Sam, come on.
All right, you're on.
What happened?
Zoran Mamdani.
I think he's going to win.
You're calling it?
I'm calling it.
I've seen enough.
You've seen enough.
Oh, yeah, there you are.
It's exciting.
The amount of people hours that went into this is incredible.
Three million doors not.
It's incredible.
100,000 volunteers.
That is, it's just incredible.
To be able to mobilize that type of excitement, huge.
Is he going to be able to keep it up?
He's saying that he's going to keep it up,
that he's going to, like, drive it at the city council members themselves or whatever.
Tonight was a very aggressive acceptance speech.
He was not humble, he was not humble relative to who he beat.
He was humble relative to the people who help him win.
And I think that's the strategy.
And I think, like, listen, the big challenge is going to be him going up to Albany.
And leveraging his vote today, leveraging that Hopewell has a challenger to her left.
And basically saying, who's running?
Delgado.
And he's running to her left.
And that's a big deal.
Come join the stream.
Join now by Simone Zimmerman.
What's up, guys?
So.
So Simone Zimmerman, if you haven't seen the film Israelism,
then you don't know her life story.
But we won't.
You know, yeah, I've got to watch it.
So we saw the, what are the numbers on the Jewish vote?
35% or something?
35% probably around.
45 to 55, somewhere around that.
I mean, I don't want to put out misinformation right now,
but I hear we won the Upper West Side,
so I'm pretty sure the numbers might be higher right now.
These exit polls are notoriously unreliable.
Going into actual neighborhoods is the better way to do it.
So what, like, I've heard a little bit of the same.
Like, what have you heard?
I mean, going into the election,
we heard it was like 39 or something like that.
So, I mean, what I'm saying right now is like the Washington Post said,
40% of U.S. Jews think there has been a genocide in Gaza.
60% say Israel's committed war crimes in Gaza.
I'm expecting we're going to see somewhere between those numbers.
The numbers of American Jews supporting Theron are the people who see what is happening
on the ground in Palestine and Israel are against it and also apply those values in New York
City.
Want to build a city that's an affordable, inclusive, diverse, and didn't pay into all the fear mongering.
So what would it take from them to break 50% in four years?
look honestly i think there's been a ton of misinformation i have a friend who came to visit a couple
weeks ago she's across the country following the race with total enthusiasm she goes to talk to family
on the upper east side she said she became an expert in zoran's positions over the course of the
weekends just because she had to fact check over and over again that so much misinformation as zoran
said in his speech millions of dollars have been spent on staring people and and lying to them and so i think
I really hope that as we have a chance to actually govern the city and build a welcoming, inclusive, safe and affordable city, we're going to see those numbers go up.
And I hope more and more people in my community will experience what I've experienced, which is a campaign that is centering joy, love for the city, love for the people in it.
And I think it was a winning message for a lot more people than we think it might have been.
I honestly think there's a significant percentage of people who are under the impression that Sharia law is going to be imposed in New York City.
And I think after two or three months, people are going to realize, like, no, actually, all he's doing is trying to get his free child care.
And a lot of that's going to melt away.
I think there are, look, there's a built-in, there's going to be a built-in, there's going to be a built-care.
within the context of the Jewish community
there's going to be a built-in
resistance
and I think a lot of that frankly comes
from fundamentalism
there are fundamentals
communities in this city
who
will vote as a
very consistent law
and I don't
know that a portion
of them are ever going to turn
but at the end of the day
New Yorkers are going to
judge him based upon what he does
as New Yorkers
and not as Jews
or Muslims or Italians
or
Ethiopians or
whatever they
their identity is
the fact that they live in New York
and that they need
certain things to make their lives
better is going to overpower
all the misinformation
they've been dealt
over the course of months
millions and millions of dollars yeah and uh is uh is brad lander going to run for sure is that
happening you know we heard earlier today it would i mean that's the rumor um to be an interesting
race and i'd like to see um he's got a lot of goodwill i think amongst new yorkers and um you know
I think it's an opportunity for solidarity to go two ways, and there's a lot of New York politicians who have gotten very comfortable by relying on the machine, and the machine just got broke.
And I think that opens up a lot of possibilities for progressives in the city, and to some extent, across the country.
Any final thoughts?
I think I want to wrap this stream up.
What happened?
I want to say something about Brad Linder, which is that one of the kind of lies that has been propagated about this campaign is that, as you said, like, that they're trying to enforce some kind of ideological conformity, ideological militancy.
And Brad, I think, is actually a refutation of that.
Brad is somebody who calls himself a Zionist and a supporter of Israel and is also showing up and articulating a vision of safety and belonging and inclusivity.
in the city and you know what people are loving it and are coming out with him he's been embraced by
the campaign he is showing that when you actually help build the coalition the tent grows and i hope
we're going to see more and more people understand that and join in to help grow this project now that
we've won and have to actually govern that sounds like you know he's running no no i don't know
anything i'm just here celebrating it'll be fun it'll be a lot of fun i genuinely don't want
Dan Goldman really, like, took ex-thought, it was like an inheritance to him.
People have to remember, Dan Goldman won because there was three people who split the vote.
Eulene and Mondere Jones.
And it escapes me now.
But there were three who split the boat.
And that's the only way he squeaked by.
Yeah.
So Lander is beloved.
in huge parts of Brooklyn.
And he really did gain, I think, like a lot of respect from people.
Him being the highest elected Jewish official in the city.
And campaigning with Mungani gave a certain license to people to say,
this is bullshit.
Right.
um so i hope so sam cedar of the majority report uh i will be on the program i will be on the program on
friday possibly like maybe dress this well you never know whether i'm actually going to show up or not
or what i'm going to be wearing if anything at all this this i did that like that all right anyway
thank you everybody what what a night crazy you believe so exciting
All right. It's awesome.
See you later.
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