Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - Mike Murphy’s Biden (retirement) Plan
Episode Date: July 1, 2024*** Share on X: https://tinyurl.com/25du5vv4 *** In today’s episode we unpack what has actually happened in American politics (up and down the ballot) since the presidential debate, we explore Bide...n’s options (which are not binary), what it tells us about public service in America, and how allies and adversaries abroad might be watching these events unfold. Mike Murphy has worked on 26 GOP gubernatorial and US Senate races across the country, including 12 wins in Blue States. He was a top strategist for John McCain, Mitt Romney, Jeb Bush, and Arnold Schwarzenegger. He’s a political analyst for NBC and MSNBC. He’s co-host of the critically acclaimed "Hacks on Tap" podcast. Mike is also co-director of the University of Southern California’s Center for the Political Future. He’s also the CEO of the EV Politics Project (evpolitics.org). Find Mike’s podcast, Hacks on Tap, here: https://www.hacksontap.com/ Published pieces we discuss in this episode: “This Isn’t All Joe Biden’s Fault” by Ezra Klein, THE NEW YORK TIMES: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/30/opinion/biden-debate-convention.html “Biden Goes Global” by Seth Mandel, COMMENTARY MAGAZINE: https://www.commentary.org/seth-mandel/biden-panic-goes-global/ “Biden's Presidential Debate Fiasco May Tempt U.S. Foes in the Mideast to Test His Resolve” by Amos Harel, HAARETZ: https://tinyurl.com/3f5kyu5f
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You know, we're not asking Joe Biden, who I think was, with my ideological arguments aside, a pretty decent president.
We're not asking him to make the decision whether or not to melt Nagasaki and Hiroshima and kill 100,000 people.
We're not asking him whether to wage the Civil War.
We're asking him at 81 to step aside for what's good for the country and the party in an extremely high stakes election. Yet apparently that is unpalatable.
And the Biden operation now is walking around with a big mallet,
whacking down Democrats who might say that behind the scenes.
And they are operating with Vichy Republican level cowardice.
It's 5 p.m. on Sunday, June 30th here in New York City. It is midnight on Monday, July 1st in Israel as Israelis get ready to start their day.
We have let Mike Murphy, a fan favorite of the Call Me Back podcast,
go on a little bit of a sabbatical while we have been consumed with events in the Middle East. But now events in American politics are coming crashing into events around the world.
And our audience around the world is trying to understand what is actually happening here.
So I called up Mike Murphy, longtime Republican strategist, who I've worked with on and off for
about three decades, and who's been the chief strategist for
more successful statewide campaigns, Senate, governor, than I can count, and has been a chief
strategist for Republican presidential campaigns, and now has a love-hate relationship with the
Republican Party in recent years, and is the co-host of the critically acclaimed Hacks on Tap
podcast. Mike, good to be with you. Good to be with you, Dan. Good to be back.
It's been a while.
Well, stuff's been happening, and now we finally had the bomb go off in American politics for a
change.
Right. So I want to jump right into that. We've got a lot to cover, so I just want to set up
where your head was at. And you talked a little bit about this on your podcast on Hacks on Tap
when there was discussion about whether Biden should do this debate, and then when there was
lead up to the actual debate, you laid out different scenarios of where Biden could land
coming out of that debate. So just set up where the Biden campaign was going into the debate,
where was the presidential race heading into the Thursday night debate, and where are we now?
Sure. Well, my view when they
announced the debate was I was for it, because my theory is Biden is narrowly losing the campaign
pre-debate. And so this highly unorthodox thing of an incumbent president asking for a national
debate before even the nominating convention was appropriate because I knew it would have two
outcomes, possible outcomes, one of two. The one I was hoping for was Biden would be good,
kind of like the State of the Union, where he exceeded expectations. It would tamp down the
building panic over swing state poll numbers within the party, and it would give Trump an
opportunity to be worse, and it would reset Biden's campaign, which he barely, really, really, excuse me,
needed.
The other outcome, the one I was hoping wouldn't happen, was Biden would be terrible.
We'd have a bad Biden night.
And then there'd be transparency to the country and nagging questions like, why didn't the
president do the easy Super Bowl interview, a tradition?
Instead, they didn't book it.
Why did that happen?
Oh, my God, it's really bad. There, they didn't book it. Why did that happen? Oh, my God,
it's really bad. There's still time to change candidates.
Just for our listeners, especially abroad who may not know what the Super Bowl, so every year,
the Super Bowl, which is after Thanksgiving, is the most important national ritual in American
societal life, American civic life. And every year at the Super Bowl or right before the Super Bowl,
the television network that is broadcasting the Super Bowl or right before the Super Bowl, the television network
that is broadcasting the Super Bowl does an interview with the president of the United States.
And it's usually not a very tough interview. Yeah, softball, so to speak.
Right, right. And it's among the highest rating interview a president or any politician is going
to get in any year. And it's unheard of for the president to say, no, thanks, but no, thanks. I'm
not going to do the pre-Super Bowl interview.
That's what you're referring to.
And Biden shocked many of us when he said, thanks, not going to do it.
Yeah, and I'm sorry.
I'll try to do more global analogies.
I didn't know we work on Radio Bucharest here.
You've gone global on me, Dan.
Hey, we've got a big audience in Saudi and Israel.
To my Uzbek friends, I say hello.
Okay, so anyway, so instead we got the clarity that he's
really not up to the job. We had a disastrous debate, and my prediction was that if that would
happen, there'd be a massive panic in the Democratic Party, and there'd be open talk of
replacing Biden. It was poo-pooed a little by my buddy and podcasting partner Axelrod, because he
likes to make the very true and very important point that
people can go crazy as much as they want. The only person this late in the process
that can stop Joe Biden from being the nominee, except for a tragic medical thing or something,
we all pray doesn't happen, is Joe Biden. Joe and Jill. There's no committee of elders,
no star chamber, no silver haired Hal
Holbrook types, the American actor coming in a seersucker suit and a Southern draw to explain
what's going on. It's all down to Biden. And that is because he did this debate before the convention,
which is in next month. But after all the states have voted in the primaries, it means that all
the delegates from those states, from those primaries and caucuses that are heading to the convention are committed to Biden.
And the only person that can release those delegates and say you are now free to choose someone else is Biden.
So that's why there's no capacity, at least formally.
Right.
Though there's a caveat to it. Under the famous Rule 13J of the 2020 Democratic Delegate Selection Rules, technically the delegates are open. The language reads, delegates elected to the national convention pledged to a presidential candidate shall in all good conscience reflect the sentiments of those who elected them. So it's not exactly a pair of handcuffs,
but it would be very hard to undo. Practically, Joe Biden has to say, you know what, I'm going
to decline the nomination. I'm releasing all delegates. I am no longer a candidate.
And then the fear is all hell would break loose and you would have an open convention. And the thousands of Democratic delegates are ideologically pretty liberal.
I mean, the AOCs of the world could get into business.
Some of the governors have power.
Many of the delegates are members of public employee unions.
So the head of the teachers union, SEIU, would be very powerful, AFL.
It could be a big Democratic mess, which I agree with,
though I am pushing a different scenario, which I must say I think is very, very unlikely because
I don't think Joe Biden and particularly Jill Biden are for it. But what I think you could
actually do is Biden announces that the Biden-Harris team, you want to glue yourself to Kamala because
moving her is part of the victory equation. The Biden-Harris team, you want to glue yourself to Kamala because moving her is part
of the victory equation. The Biden-Harris team is stepping aside. I said I'd be a bridge to the
future, and now's the moment for me to complete that. And I am strongly endorsing and encouraging
all my friends to support Governor Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan for three reasons. She is
an excellent governor who will bring energy and my values to
the job. She will continue the historic job that Hillary Clinton started because it's about damn
time for a woman president. And she will unify the country and defeat Donald Trump. And for
vice president, smart politics would say an African-American like Senator Warnock of Georgia, who's very charismatic, another key state.
That team with Biden, Biden can't walk through the curtain and vanish.
For three or four days hits the road.
There would be a media explosion.
First female president, a Democratic winner, a generational change.
What a patriot Biden is, stepping aside, putting his own personal ambition aside. What a
contrast to Trump. Biden's numbers inside the party, and I think in the country, would skyrocket.
After four days of campaigning, the polls would start coming back, and the ticket of Gretchen
Whitmer and Cory Booker, Ralph Warnock, Dan Senor, whoever, would be beating Trump by five to seven
points. It would be a surge. The Democratic Party
would be euphoric. And I think the convention would become a coronation, not a messy, crazy
Democrat fight. Now, you know, there would be leaks of unhappy people from other places. But
if the bandwagon is as big as I believe it could be, if properly created, it would run right through
the convention and Trump would
spin out into a panic because he would get beaten like a dead mule. There's risk. Whitmer's done
very well in Michigan politics, which is a tough, competitive swing state, not a safe Democratic
state. She's very good, but she hasn't been tested in the presidential crucible yet.
None of them have.
Yeah, right. A primary would give you that, but guess what? There's not going to be a primary other names they're talking about cory booker and amy klobuchar i
think and i guess pete budaj are the only ones who are talked about that have been tested but
otherwise josh shapiro gretchen whitmer jared paul is governor of colorado like gavin newsom
none of these people have been tested right but the risk of that is much smaller than the risk
of biden continuing you're saying this is the model,
pick Gretchen Whitmer and a running mate that makes sense? Or are you saying this is the model
and you're just using Gretchen Whitmer as an example here? No, it's the model because in order
to grab Kamala, another weak candidate, and say the Biden team is leaving, the identity realities
inside the Democratic Party and the Democrat delegate universe
require that if you're going to take away the first black female vice president,
you damn well better have an identity pitch that's bigger and more interesting,
which is the first female president.
So I don't think you can pick a white guy.
And you don't have to.
Whitman is a star.
Why on earth would Kamala Harris go along with this?
Because she has no damn choice if you do it right. It's a bandw Why on earth would Kamala Harris go along with this? Because she has no
damn choice if you do it right. It's a bandwagon. Really, Kamala, you're going to blow up the world
to elect Donald Trump? And by the way, she could become front runner in the governor's race for
California in 2026 if she's smart. But if she resents this scenario and she thinks this is
the closest she's had to being president of the United States, the closest shot she's going to
have. Oh, yeah, she'll hate it. She'll hate it. She'll vote for Trump.
And she'll argue to all her allies and all her surrogates that, you know, the president chose me
to be next in line. And apparently vice presidents are next in line to be president,
except when they're the first black woman. Yeah. Is she really going to do that? If there
is pandemonium for Whitmer and beating Hillary and first female president, is she's really going to say, you know who the second most selfish person in this race is after Donald Trump?
Me, me, me.
It's all about me.
You're taking my thing away.
Is she going to really tear the Democratic Party in half and elect Donald Trump?
Is she that juvenile?
Is she that?
You call her bluff.
Okay.
So do you have any other options?
Yeah, there are other options. You know, you can
call a Kardashian up, but the strongest one is Whitmer because she's the best Paul. She'll give
you Michigan, and that means you've almost won. And she gives you the cause of the first female
president to trump Harris with. You've got to have the right political murder weapon on Harris,
and you need a bandwagon. Now you're making history.
And you identified from the beginning as the team. Now, by the way, they're not going to do it.
They've made it very clear in the last 24 hours, they're out crushing dissent. They're taking the
party hostage now. That's pretty scary if you don't want Donald Trump to be president. But
Biden is making the selfish choice here, which really breaks my heart, as somebody who was going to vote for Biden, even now. But boy, he's lost his resident detra prep in your life, in your career. You have negotiated terms for debates,
including format and all these related issues
for numerous debates.
In retrospect, were the terms they agreed to
for this debate actually harmful to Biden?
Because they went into it arguing,
oh, it's great, no studio audience.
Trump plays to a studio audience.
Oh, it's great, they'll mute Trump
and Trump can't be so disruptive. But in retrospect, it may be actually the audience may have helped Biden
because he would have reacted. It generated more energy from the crowd. B, Trump popping off and
interrupting may have actually helped too. No, no, I get it. Wait a minute. Look, in retrospect,
the biggest flaw of the debate was there was a camera there. You can work backwards from that.
If there was an audience, Biden could have, if it was one of there. You know, you can work backwards from that. If there was an audience,
Biden could have, if it was one of those town hall debates, Biden could have emoted, maybe.
The problem was Biden. So my theory on the debate was they're going to reset the race because they think they can, you know, have the Biden from the state of the union and they got to do something.
So it's a little risky, but do it. And the idea that Trump can't shout him down the whole time with the microphone control
and that they're both naked on a rock and Trump can't do the cheering demagogue stuff,
I thought that would be good for Biden, assuming Biden could debate.
I have a theory.
The huge question is, why the hell did the Biden campaign ask for this debate?
They had to know what they
have there. They had to know Biden's condition. My theory is Biden wanted the debate and none of
the staff said no. Biden and Jill, we're going to go out there and show them. He's ready. He's
tired of not getting the message out because he was totally unscripted. He barely made sense.
It was a combat. He got a little better in the end. He got a line or two off. But fundamentally, he was awful from second one.
And that cannot have been a surprise to the debate team or not amateurs over there.
My theory is was totally Biden driven and the staff couldn't or wouldn't stop him.
Okay.
So now I want to say, obviously, we haven't seen a lot of polling yet.
We will.
The CBS poll is now out that says something like 72%.
Yeah, it's three to one think he's mentally not up to it.
And they think it's 50-50 on Trump, by the way.
It's not like he's, you know, Metternich here either.
No, he's below 50%.
49% for Trump.
Yeah, yeah.
Margin of error.
But 72% doesn't think he has.
I tweeted that finally in our long, proud American history, we've reached the point
where there's a majority behind the idea that crazy times demand a crazy president.
We finally got there.
USA number one.
So 72% think he does not have the mental acuity, which is just an amazing thing to ponder.
The Biden campaign has issued this fundraising email that a few people have sent to me that
shows, these are Biden donors sent it to me it shows it lists all the potential matchups of other
candidates with Biden Whitmer Shapiro you know Harris they're in a primary now with their own
people right and it's the most the two things are pathetic about it is Biden's campaign is
trying to show don't worry those people will be doing badly too. And oh, by the way, their numbers are not that much worse than Biden's up against Trump. It's crazy. They put
out a spin memo from the campaign manager, General Malley Dillon, I think two days ago.
The message was basically of ignore the Washington pearl clutchers and, you know,
so-called smart crowd. We know what we're doing. We're doing the hard work.
Our field team has never been happier.
We're winning in the East.
You know, it was unbelievable.
The Biden people have a problem, including the president, with bullshitting everybody.
The president likes to go out and tell Americans we have the best economy ever.
And you can make a statistical case for it.
But out in voter land, they were feeling inflation.
They don't believe it.
They believe Donald Trump is better at running the economy than Biden by 15 points.
And the president likes to go out and tell them they're wrong.
Not really how to move the units, as we say in the car business.
Now they're putting out spin memos saying, oh, just one bad night.
Do we all think this is going to be the only bad night Biden has going forward? Well,
maybe not. So prove it. Sit him down for some interviews. Let him go out and perform more than
eight minutes on a prompter in front of a partisan crowd. And if he doesn't, he'll have a great
comeback. If he doesn't, then we're going to be back in this soup in another week or 10 days.
The other thing that'll happen is we're in the
middle of the debate snap polls. Careful. You got to let it cook a while. You got to let all the
digital content and the YouTube and TikTok stuff and all that float and burn into people who didn't
sit through the whole deal. And the water cooler conversation, the debate performance sparked two
debates, not one. I mean, discussions now post-debate.
One is all the political hacks in the Democratic side saying, holy crap, my God, I'm not going
to show up at that John Tester fundraiser.
I'm not going to look him in the eye.
He's going to get wiped out.
All the down-ball people who already have tough races, very tough, are going nuts.
The party types are going nuts.
But meanwhile, the kind of Mount Olympus crowd is starting to openly question whether Biden can do the job.
You've got the Tom Freedmans and yada, yada, yada.
So there's a fairly legitimate debate going on about that.
So the Biden people have to answer that question with performance.
Or remember, the polls are a rearview mirror.
So give it a week, and then we'll see where we really are.
And because the electorate is so polarized, don't expect to see some 10-point swing.
But my guess is Biden will be down outside the margin of error in all five or six swing states.
And then we're going to have the panic again.
So there will be a lot of panic until Biden puts the panic out.
And the big million-dollar question is, is he capable of doing
it? Does he have the toolbox? Or are we going to have more transparency and more bad night joes?
And does the situation compound? So, you know, the first weekend here, they're not out of the woods.
They're two trees in, unless Biden can get on television interviews and perform.
One bad night. So Obama issued, put out that tweet saying and perform. One bad night.
So Obama put out that tweet saying, I had a bad night.
I remember that debate.
I was involved with that debate in that campaign,
which was the Romney-Obama, that first debate in 2012.
Obama did have a bad debate. But no one came out of that debate thinking Obama was unfit to be president.
No, it's very different.
And he's Obama.
He's allowed to trip.
You know he'll get up and perform. He's a performer. With Biden, the Republicans have said for a year he's old and
senile. And he went out and he acted old and senile. So now what? Right. You know, he's got
to put toothpaste back in the tube. Not easy. We'll see. If he can, he's back in business.
But I am low and I don't work with Joe Biden every day. I don't know. But based on what I saw and the way they were acting before the debate, which in hindsight
looks so crazy because they had to know, I don't know if Biden has great days.
And it's like the old Saturday Night Live sketch of Reagan barking orders and rushing
into the phone and everybody running around the famous mastermind sketch.
Kids, you can Google it.
Or most Biden times are bad.
Then I don't know how they perform through the campaign with this hanging over their head because now the burden is on him to can Google it. Or most Biden times are bad. Then I don't know how they performed
through the campaign with this hanging over their head, because now the burden's on him to disprove
it. Reagan in 84. Reagan in 84 had a bad few minutes of a debate, and then he ended up having
this extraordinary victory in that debate. And that bad few minutes of the debate, he did look
sort of lost in the debate with Mondale, and the press went
kind of crazy. Not exactly like this, but the press did go kind of crazy. Do you think it's
similar to the Obama in 2012? No, because this thing is based on a fact. He's really old. Looks
old, talks old, acts old, and now there he was naked on a rock being really old. I mean, Trump
had a terrible debate. But Reagan in 84, there was this concern that Reagan was old.
Right, right.
But it wasn't, it's not a TikTok universe then.
The message doesn't go everywhere.
You can do it in set pieces like Reagan gets the one line off.
Right.
It's much more diffuse now.
You don't have the control you used to have of the communications channel.
So no, I don't think they just shake this thing off.
By the way, it's not like, wow, his eight-point lead may be in danger.
It might tighten.
He was losing before the debate, albeit narrowly, but he was losing three of the swing states.
He was in pretty bad shape in Arizona, Nevada, and Georgia, where it's sunny.
I like to call them the soda states compared to the pop states, where people say pop, not soda, in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin, where Biden was in the hunt, maybe a point
ahead.
That's what I'm going to be watching.
I'll tell you one thing.
Ten days before the debate, I took a look at a private poll done actually by one of
Biden's polling firms, quite good, very accomplished Democratic firm in L.A. County, not just the
city of Los Angeles, the entire county.
Ten million people. It's as big as Michigan or Ohio.
And Biden's going to carry that county. It's three to one Democratic. It's one third Hispanic.
But Joe Biden's favorable, unfavorable rating in L.A. County Democratic stronghold was 52 positive, 46 negative.
Wow. Terrible numbers. Now, they hate Trump. Trump's
not going to win the county, but you can kind of see the rot within the Democratic Party as far as
very limited enthusiasm or affection for Biden in a super Democratic county. Now, among Democrats,
the numbers are better. Among Hispanic men, they were terrible. They were not all Democrats. So
anyway, the point is,
he was in trouble before this debate. There was no cushion. He did this debate to gain,
to reset the race. And instead, it was like scanners, and he blew his head up. So now,
we're going to see what happens. But it's clear the Biden campaign, or Joe Biden, who I think is
a huge voice in all this, has decided to crush the opposition
full speed ahead. So we'll see if they're saying that in a week when the polls get worse.
You mentioned the down ballot races. I want to spend a moment on that. Our friend Dave McCormick
in Pennsylvania already has an ad that he just posted tonight, digital ad, where he literally
just took clips from the debate and then intermixed them with clips of Bob Casey, the incumbent
Democratic senator in Pennsylvania who he's running against,
providing testimonials for how fit Biden is to be president and contrasting clips of Casey with Biden's disastrous performance
and all these pundits and people in the news saying Biden had a disastrous performance and making Casey kind of own Biden's mess.
That's going to be a competitive down ballot Senate race.
There are numerous other races that could determine the majority, certainly in the House.
How big of a problem is this for down ballot Democrats?
Well, it's a big problem. It's less the McCormicks of the world doing what sounds
like a slightly clever by half spot. It's that if Joe Biden doesn't carry Pennsylvania
and there's a repudiation of Joe Biden, that's very good for McCormick. Presidential rates at the top of the ticket has an impact. And in a competitive
Senate race, it could really make a difference. Now, the other thing is you have Democratic
senators who are very adroit politicians, but they're playing big away games this year.
Sherwood Brown in Ohio, now he's got a crank opponent, but Biden's going to lose Ohio,
and he's going to lose it by
more after this debate, unless there's a course correction or Trump does something crazy, which,
of course, you can't count out. You got folks like Tester in Montana, who's probably already
a point or two behind. The Republicans finally nominated their candidate. The party got the
veteran kind of presentable candidate they wanted. So that's going to be a tough race
for Tester. And it's just gotten a lot tougher. I've seen statewide polling in Montana where,
you know, Biden's numbers, I mean, he's never going to carry the state, but he's not where
he ought to be for the down ballot people in a war of survival like Tester. And you can kind of
go down the list of the tough races nevada's another one
democratic incumbent in a state trump may well carry and carry by more so the issue here what
i guess what i'm pointing to is i take your point that this could lead to biden's underperformance
but i also think as republicans have had to experience over the years down ballot candidates
so candidates running for the house senate governor having to answer from the press for everything Trump related creates a massive distraction, has had been created a big distraction.
Yeah.
Do you go to the Biden rally?
Do you endorse him?
Do you think he can do the job?
It's just all of a sudden you're on a bed of nails.
Yeah, exactly.
That's what I mean.
So now suddenly every Democrat is going to have to be constantly answering for what.
Do you have confidence in Biden to do this?
Do you have confidence in Biden to do that?
Do you think Biden should say, you know know it's like an endless so it's
just a distraction that's why it's down to biden he's got to sit down and do the 60 minutes interview
and talk about look it's not my style to trade insults with a toddler wasn't my greatest night
but and be able to do those interviews and if he can't then here we are again right mike the first
couple of days basically basically the weekend,
we had a lot of Democrats,
seemingly professional Democrats or donors,
on background saying what you're saying,
a version of what you're saying.
But they're all doing it on background.
We still have not had a major elected,
prominent national Democrat come out
and say what everyone's saying quietly
to say it on the record.
And I want to quote here from Ezra Klein, who's got a piece up. I think it's called It's Not All
Biden's Fault in the New York Times. I'm just going to quote here. He says, even if top Democrats
believe Biden should be replaced, they face a collective action problem. Imagine you're Newsom,
Gavin Newsom, the governor of California. Imagine you're Newsom. You want to run in 2028. If Biden drops out, you want to be considered in 2024.
Is the best strategy for you to try to push Biden out of the race publicly?
Or is it to be the most loyal of loyal soldiers so that if Biden leaves or loses, you have
a strong bond with his donors, his team, and his supporters?
And who wants to be the member of Biden's inner circle who goes to him and says, you're
not up to this anymore? What happens to your role in the White House the day after?
It doesn't serve any individual Democrat's interest to oppose Biden.
Oh, I completely agree. In fact, there is a dark, depressing irony to this,
because during the Trump era, Democrats, particularly Democrats elected, were all very
smug about this. Oh, you Republicans, you put up with Donald Trump.
You don't have the courage to call him out.
You know, you're not patriots.
You're gutless.
We're patriots.
We're calling him out.
Well, the easiest thing in the world to do in Democratic politics is trash Trump.
I've got friends who voted for impeachment in the House, and they're not there anymore.
They blew up their careers by being public and taking the hard vote.
Big hat tip to Bill Casey, who's
got a tough reelect now in Louisiana because he did the right thing, the senator. Bill Cassidy.
So now all these smug Democrats, where are they? Well, they're putting their careers
over what's right for the country because that's what people do in Washington. Careerism is the
high lantern here, not patriotism anymore. And they're getting a taste of their own medicine,
and I wonder how it tastes. They ought to be saying something. You know, we're not asking turn here, not patriotism anymore. And they're getting a taste of their own medicine. And I
wonder how it tastes. They ought to be saying something. You know, we're not asking Joe Biden,
who I think was, with my ideological arguments aside, a pretty decent president. We're not
asking him to make the decision whether or not to melt Nagasaki and Hiroshima and kill 100,000
people. We're not asking him whether to wage the Civil War. We're
asking him at 81 to step aside for what's good for the country and the party in an extremely high
stakes election. Yet apparently, that is unpalatable. And the Biden operation now is
walking around with a big mallet, whacking down Democrats who might say that behind the scenes,
and they are operating with Vichy Republican level cowardice.
Okay.
There you go.
I'm going to have a fun day tomorrow here in Washington, don't you think?
Yeah, Mike, I should say, is in Washington and is going to a series of meetings where
I think you could easily get, those meetings will suddenly be canceled.
Well, only if the Biden and the Democrat friends of mine all listen to Radio Bulgaria.
I think I have 48 hours on this worldwide global
shortwave podcast here. Under your scenario of opening it up, quote-unquote opening it up,
but Biden really saying my administration is... No, you got to rig it. Let me be clear. Open
means anarchy. You steamroll it with a winner. Right. So you rig it and you say we're getting
behind someone else. What could go wrong with that scenario?
On day two, Gretchen screws up and tells the joke about the rabbi, the duck and the pope.
It turns out she killed her brother in eighth grade and they covered it up.
You know, I mean, they she can't take the velocity that would screw it up.
Kamala Harris deciding to put a grenade in her mouth and elect Donald Trump could screw it up.
But I think you can bluff her out of it. She's young, she's somebody, she's not dumb, and she's
got an excellent shot to be governor of California, I believe, if she did this, which is not a bad
thing to try again with. So there's risk in it, but after that debate, I think it's less risky
than more Joe Biden. And then why not go the open route? So just for our listeners to understand, this would mean an open convention. So instead of doing what Mike is saying here,
instead of saying, I'm not running and I'm releasing my delegates and I'm getting behind
Gretchen Whitmer, it would be, I'm not running, I'm releasing my delegates and-
Have fun.
Right. Let a thousand flowers bloom. And then you'd see six, seven, eight candidates.
Right. Though Carville has the smartest version of this scenario,
which is the DNC picks like five. It's a multiple choice, not an essay test.
Okay. So you don't have the AOCs and the wackadoodles. And then it's going to be Pritzker
and Newsom and God, I don't know of the Tungsten wall that could stop Klobuchar from trying.
Maybe Polis. I mean, you got about nine players,
so I don't know how you fit them into a five-candidate sack. But keep in mind,
the Democratic National Committee, which has far more members than the RNC,
and the Democratic delegate world is larger, they've also kind of defanged their superdelegates
a bit. They are the grandchildren of the 1972 and 4 Democratic Convention reforms that
really democratized the Democratic Party. So there's a lot of identity involved. There's a
lot of public employee labor involved. There's a lot of liberal activists. Bernie Sanders will be
a power player. You mean the delegates who show up at the convention? Yeah, the delegates. This
is an election if you totally open it up.
Right.
And it's a few thousand people.
You're just talking about a few thousand people who represent some of the most progressive causes and organizations in American politics.
Yeah.
The Democrats are a corporatist party in the political science sense, like the old PRI in Mexico.
They're a web of interest groups.
So the interest groups would get together.
There would be blocks of interest groups. So the interest groups would get together. There'd be blocks of interest groups.
Some governors would have their bodies there.
The teachers union would have a lot of bodies.
They would be very powerful in this.
And there's an ideological factor.
So it would not be pretty from the outside.
That's why I think you've got to brush it.
Because otherwise you're going to see democracy with hyperventilating network commentators
screaming.
AOC is walking her 104 delegates off the floor.
You know, Robert Kennedy Jr. is in a hotel room across the street for secret meeting.
God knows the way the media covers things now, the Democrats would look like they can't
organize a two-car funeral.
And meanwhile, Trump is doing his neo-fascist stuff. I'm order.
Right. You know, they're anarchy and not good. All right. So I want to broaden here the perspective
and bring in how the world is looking at this. Seth Mandel in commentary on the commentary
magazine homepage website had a blog up the next day, basically looking at how the world was looking
at this debate. I'm just reading from here. He writes, the homepage of the UK Telegraph this morning was filled to the brim
with headlines like, quote, Biden under pressure to quit after painful debate performance. Biden
is a danger to the free world. The free world must have a new leader. And then he goes on to say,
the Russian press was having so much fun with this debate debacle was leading the Russian press,
Australia's Sydney Morning Herald headline, Democrats have other options after Biden disaster. The South China Morning Post uses the following quote as its headline. Biden might have imploded. And then it goes on the UAE press, the Canadian press, the on and on and on and on and on. Here's one from the Toronto Star in Canada, puts it colorfully. He writes, the headline
is, Joe Biden reportedly had a cold after watching him perform. The whole world is feeling sick.
Okay. So Mike, how big a problem is that? That is actually what I'm most worried about. A lot of bad
things are happening in the world right now. The US has high stakes in two major wars, one in Europe, one in the Middle East.
Yeah.
We could blink and there could be another one, you know, between China and Taiwan.
And you look at the press coverage just openly mocking the commander in chief of the most
powerful military in the world.
Yeah, it's not good.
I kind of break it into regions.
The Brits, you know, they're about to blow up their prime minister and crush the Tories.
So they're-
On July 4th.
Although, rejecting Sunak, there will be parallels with Biden.
Voters tired of incumbents, that'll be yet another bad narrative they'll have to deal with.
I think the Chinese are probably sitting down in an emergency Politburo meeting saying,
all right, the big dog is turning inward.
It's chasing its own tail.
That's an opportunity for us to make
a few incremental moves. But some smart Chinese communist Politburo leader is going to say,
hey, wait a minute, everybody. It can't be this bad, right? This is like some American trick.
You know, we got two clowns arguing about golf in their 80s. Now, what's really going on? I'm
sure they're a little puzzled because foreign countries and systems have trouble understanding our system. It's like a psyops thing. They tend to project their stuff on us. So the Chinese,
I'm sure, are going berserk trying to figure this out. The Russians probably are turning on the bots
again because going back to, you know, the common turn, the Russians have had a strategy of fermenting
dissent and trouble in democracies, which they see as a vulnerable system. So God
knows what we're in for on crazy Biden memes. Thank you, Kremlin, on the social media platforms.
And what I worry most about is Hezbollah cranks it up, thinking we're distracted. The Israelis
are stretched. They are isolated in the world after Gaza. Bibi is unpopular and polarizing.
Hey, why don't we turn up the heat a little bit here?
And, you know, that could be a major foreign policy crisis that could start any minute.
And as you said, the Taiwan Strait and the Chinese, though they tend to be cautious in times of crisis.
So, yes, when nobody's watching the big American star. I was in Europe at a speech, Erskine Bolz and I did it in London to a small group of very wealthy family business people, all multi-billionaires in Europe.
And one of them made a good point, which is, you know, the U.S. is the metronome of the world
orchestra, particularly the democracies, TikTok. When there's no metronome, the whole orchestra
goes to hell. And the Germans start thinking about, do they stand alone with domestic politics that doesn't like military spending?
Do we need a German bomb as insurance?
You know, all kinds of bad things start happening.
And by the way, we've got a French election that seems to be going sideways today.
So, yeah, it's very worrying. It's not a time for the U.S. to be running in circles debating whether
you want the evil Antichrist or the guy who's looking at applesauce all day long. Not good.
So just staying on that, Amos Harrell, who's an Israeli columnist we've had on this podcast a
bunch of times, he's like one of the most senior military national security columnist analysts in
Israel for Haaretz. And he has a piece up basically saying the real big risk
as it relates to US foreign policy and the way Israeli leaders are going to think about it is
we've really had Washington's attention. We, Israel, have really had Washington's attention
since October 7th. Now Washington is going to be consumed with something else. It's going to consume the Congress.
It's going to consume the White House. Now, obviously, the U.S. government is big and can
function even when its political leaders and their most senior roles are distracted. But still, this
one could be pretty all-consuming. And that's worrisome, A. B, if you're sitting in one of the Gulf Arab countries and you're being
pressured by this administration to do some kind of deal with Israel for the day after the war in
Gaza, some kind of normalization with Israel if you're the Saudis, you're sitting there thinking,
who are we negotiating here with? We're negotiating with the U.S. government? This president looks
weak. They're distracted. Or Trump. Right. Or should we just wait? Yeah. Who do we negotiate
with? Well, and I think Bibi may make a dumb bet in the long term, which is I'll just play to the
Trump thing and meddle in the U.S. elections because I think he's going to win. The Democrats
will take that as seeing Israel more from an ally to a political problem, which means if the
Democrats win the House, which they can still do, or Biden has a
miracle come back, or they do the switch to somebody who will beat Trump, because Trump is
not strong, it's a real problem for the Israelis because becoming partisan and isolating themselves
from the U.S. is geopolitical suicide in the medium to long term, I think. So there's a real
risk that people start being too clever by half. And I agree
with the risk that other things will take over. Okay, Mike, so let's end with this. What is your
prediction? Like, what do you think is going to happen here? Boy, I, in the short term, the
consensus is Biden's decided to keep it. They're turning out the apparat. And it is a true fact
that if the president wants to keep this nomination, he can do it.
But I don't think they're going to be lighting cupcakes candles in the White House on Tuesday
while we handle that because they're in for a wave of troubling polling coming next.
And if the next Biden media appearances, they can't hide them, though they tend to,
aren't good, they're going to go through it all again.
And then it'll be, well, we're not done.
It's not one bad night. It's one bad candidate. Every night's a bad night and something must be
done. And we're going to be refighting this whole war again in a week. Okay. So it's bad,
but the problem is, based on what I'm listening to you, is Biden is going to hang on.
Well, that's the signal they're sending, especially Jill, who's very influential.
You know, I heard a smart Democrat say, you know, well, that's interesting, but that's the miracle scenario.
And I'm like, well, I've never had the power in my life, and I don't think many people
have to actually create a miracle.
Biden has the power.
This miracle can come true with one presidential decision.
It's just every tell we have right now is that
Biden's not doing it. But I don't think the litigation has ended. I think this is a two to
three week long deal here. And they may declare it over, but I don't think it's over. What's the
latest they could make this decision? Boy, I've heard different scenarios. I haven't done the
research myself. But like early August, I mean, it's got to be before the convention. Oh yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think we're probably in a
full July window here. Okay. All right. Mike, thank you for this. I wish you survival in your
meetings with the power brokers in DC and all those smoke-filled rooms you're being invited to.
I'm on my way to New Hampshire for vacation. Just seeing a few old friends here.
All right. But before you go, just quickly, Hacks on Tap is your primary focus. And then tell us about your EV project.
Oh, thank you for the plug. Yeah, I'm a Detroit boy. And I really don't want the Chinese to have
90% of world auto manufacturing in 15 years. They've already gone to 25% in Latin America.
So I did a bunch of polling. And I've been meeting with auto CEOs, telling them how to get over the
hearts and minds tribal problem Republicans have with EVs.
You can see a lot of the polling, some fun Elon stuff, and everything we do.
Just go to our website.
We have two URLs that go to the same one, evpolitics.org and evrepublicans.org.
And check it out.
We have a lot of great content there.
And Mike, I will say you were the first guest of the Call Me Back podcast who has ever cited Section 13J of the 2020 Democratic Platform and
been able to recite it. That was very impressive. Well, it's a parlor trick because it was sent to
me by my friend Jeff Forbes, who used to be political director of the DNC in a text. And
there's a lot of technical discussion going on among the hack world about all this.
And again, I'll plug, if you're not a Hacks on Tap listener, we did a before and after the debate podcast with me, Axelrod, and David Plouffe, who ran Obama's thing.
The after one went up Friday.
It's quick and worth a listen, I think, because they both have real insight into this, having been there and being in the middle of democratic politics at this moment.
We will post it in the show notes.
Mike, thanks for doing this.
Thank you, pal.
I always call Dan Senor back.
Talk to you later.
See ya.
That's our show for today.
To keep up with Mike Murphy, you can follow him on X, at Murphy Mike.
And you can also follow EV Politics USA, which is the EV political project
he was referencing there at the end of the conversation. And of course, be sure to subscribe
and listen to Hacks on Tap, the podcast that he co-hosts with David Axelrod. Call Me Back is
produced and edited by Ilan Benatar. Our media manager is Rebecca Strom.
Additional editing by Martin Huergo.
Until next time, I'm your host, Dan Senor.