Fresh Air - The 'Fog Of Delusion' In Biden's Inner Circle
Episode Date: April 8, 2025Author Chris Whipple says Biden's family and closest advisors operated in denial regarding his ability to serve another term: "There's no doubt that they were protecting the president." Whipple spoke ...with campaign insiders to get a behind-the-scenes look at what happened in 2024. His book is Uncharted: How Trump Beat Biden, Harris, and the Odds in the Wildest Campaign in History. Our book critic Maureen Corrigan shares an appreciation of The Great Gatsby for its 100th anniversary.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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When Malcolm Gladwell presented NPR's Throughline podcast with a Peabody Award, he praised it
for its historical and moral clarity.
On Throughline, we take you back in time to the origins of what's in the news, like presidential
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Time travel with us every week on the Throughline podcast from NPR.
This is Fresh Air.
I'm Terry Gross.
Democrats are still asking questions like,
why didn't Joe Biden end his reelection campaign sooner?
Why did he even run for reelection
knowing that he would have been 82
when he started his second term and 86 when it ended?
Why didn't his staff tell him he wasn't up to the job?
How did Kamala Harris lose to Trump
after Trump tried to overturn the results
of the 2020 election and was convicted of 34 felonies?
My guest, Chris Whipple explores these questions
from different perspectives in his new book, Uncharted,
How Trump Beat Biden, Harris, and the Odds
in the Wildest Campaign in History.
Whipple's previous book was about the first two
years of the Biden presidency. He's also the author of The Spy Masters, how the CIA directors
shape history and the future, and The Gatekeepers, how the White House chiefs of staff define every
presidency. Biden's chief of staff during the first two years of his presidency, Ron Klain,
was a major source for the new book about the 2024 election, as was Biden's final Chief of Staff, Jeffrey
Zients. Chris Whipple is also a documentary filmmaker and has won a Peabody and an Emmy.
Chris Whipple, welcome to Fresh Air.
Great to be with you. Thanks for having me.
So you're right. The truth was that Joe Biden was too old to run for reelection, much less
govern effectively in a second term.
His advisors knew this or should have known it, but refused to face that fact.
None ever discussed with the president whether he was too old to serve a second term.
Instead, they walled Biden off from the outside world, limiting the number of people who interacted
with him.
How do you know for sure that no one ever discussed with Biden whether he was too old to serve?
Well, you know, this is what makes the book such an extraordinary story, I think. It's
really remarkable the extent to which Biden's inner circle, not just his family, but his
close advisors, were operating in a kind of fog of delusion and denial.
I, you know, I differ with people who say that this was a cover-up in the classic
Watergate sense of the word and that suggests that you're hiding something that you know to be true. What's so
remarkable about this story is that Biden's closest advisors really were all in on this delusional notion
that Joe Biden could function effectively for another four years as president at the age of 82 or 86 by the end of that term.
And I find it just a really remarkable story.
To answer your specific question, you know, at one point Bill Daley,
President Obama's second White House Chief of Staff, spoke to Tom Donilon, who
is the brother of maybe Joe Biden's closest advisor, Mike Donilon, his alter
ego. And he said, you know, Daley said, how the hell is this going on? He used a more colorful adjective.
And Tom Donilon said, you know, not even my brother
has had this conversation with Joe Biden about his age.
And you can be sure that if Mike Donilon didn't
have that conversation, it's almost certain no one else did.
What are some of the ways in which you say he was walled off
from the outside world and his staff limited the number of people who
interacted with him? Well you know I had my own reasons for wondering if the
Biden White House staff was hiding the president because when I was writing my
book on the first two years of the administration I asked for an interview
with the president. I was told I could email questions,
and I would get written answers in reply.
Clearly, they were uncomfortable even then
with the prospect of the president having an interview
in real time with a reporter.
A major source for your new book was Ron Klain, who was Biden's chief of staff during his
first two years in the White House.
And you know, in your book about chiefs of staff, you say that one of the main jobs of
a chief of staff, a good chief of staff, is to tell the president what the president doesn't
want to hear, but is true.
And you think that Ron Klain was a terrific chief of staff.
At the same time, Ron Klain never acknowledged that Biden should, you know, shouldn't be
running.
And he saw up close what Biden's condition was.
So how do you explain that?
Well, here's the thing. As I say, I think that this is much more interesting and
not nearly as simple as the notion of a cover-up.
In other words, I am convinced that Joe Biden's inner circle was convinced that
Joe Biden was capable of governing.
And they believe that he could do it for another four years.
And we can't dismiss the fact that Biden,
on the very last day, July 21st,
that Sunday when his aides came to hammer out
his abdication statement,
Joe Biden was on the phone parsing the details of a complex multi-nation prisoner swap.
He was on top of every detail.
People who visited Biden in the Oval Office to talk about the Middle East said he was
on top of every nuance of Middle Eastern policy.
This is not, this was not Woodrow Wilson.
This was not somebody over in the corner who was
incapacitated while you know the all the president's men ran the government. Joe
Biden behind closed doors was governing, capably, whether you liked his policies or
not. So there's no question that he he was a shadow of the campaigner that he
once was and and that was true from 2020 all
the way to the end but you can't dismiss the fact it's an inconvenient fact for
people who say it was a cover-up that Biden was was was capable.
So on the one hand like you say that you don't think there was a cover-up but at
the same time you also say that there was a conscious-up. But at the same time, you also say that there was a conscious campaign
to limit his exposure to the outside world,
including people one-on-one.
So is that a form of cover-up, limiting his exposure,
so that people wouldn't see the shape that he was in?
What I'm saying is the inner circle,
and I've spent a lot of time talking to his closest aides,
and I'm talking about Mike Donilon and Steve Reschetti and Bruce Reed and others.
And four months after that debate, I went to the White House and I interviewed Reschetti and Reed,
and they were still trapped in this kind of force field of denial.
They still believed that Biden would have been re-elected, could have been re-elected,
would have governed capably for another four years until he was 86.
Now, I find that to be misguided and delusional, but they believe it.
And Mike Donilon went to the Harvard Kennedy School months after the election and said
he thought the party had lost its mind by walking away from the guy who got 81 million
votes in 2020.
So all I'm saying is that those guys weren't covering up
somebody that they thought was incapable of governing.
They believed he was still on his game.
The days leading up to that disastrous debate with Trump
did not find Biden in good shape,
and Ron Klain saw it up close.
What were some of the most disturbing signs that he saw that he told you about?
He was in a terrible state.
He was absolutely exhausted.
He was unable really to follow what was happening in the campaign.
He was tuned out.
He was obsessed with NATO and with foreign policy,
particularly with Emmanuel Macron of France and Olaf Schultz of Germany. He kept talking about how
they said he was doing such a great job. Klain wondered half jokingly if Biden thought he was
president of NATO and not president of the US. He didn't really have anything to say about his second term plans.
And early on, he walked out of a session in the Aspen Lodge,
the president's cabin, went over to the pool,
sank into a lounge chair, and just fell sound asleep.
There were two mock debates that were scheduled,
and Klain ended one prematurely because Biden just
didn't seem to be up for it and Biden ended one after about 15 minutes because
he was so exhausted. The campaign was considering canceling the debate but
decided not to. Why not? Well I don't know if the campaign ever formally
considered canceling the debate. I said to Ron, given the condition
of the president that he described, I said, did you think about, wait a minute, we should
put this off?
And Klein said, no, look, it just wasn't politically feasible to do that.
Given the sensitivity, given the fact that his cognitive condition was such a huge issue.
They had to go forward.
They had no choice in Klain's view.
But as you said, and as I report in the book, Klain was trying every trick in the book
to bring the president up to speed.
He got him on the phone with Melinda French Gates,
who loves to talk about childcare,
hoping that that might kindle some interest
in talking about his second term plans for that.
And it worked for a minute, but then Biden lost interest.
So it was not a pretty picture, the that Camp David preparation.
Maybe this shouldn't have surprised me, but I didn't know that this kind of thing happens.
Spielberg and producer Jeffrey Katzenberg both prepped Biden for the debate. Is that
a typical thing or like mega Hollywood directors and producers prepare candidates before debate?
It was a typical thing for Joe Biden. It was almost like a producing a Hollywood movie
literally because Jeffrey Katzenberg and and Steven Spielberg were on a Zoom call
with him before he went to Camp David advising him on how to answer questions
and Katzenberg in particular specialized
in body language.
Katzenberg was there during the whole week at Camp David prior to the debate, again,
trying to help Biden look more authoritative with his movements on camera.
And Bruce Reed, the deputy chief of staff, was really impressed by how Spielberg
was able to coach Biden for the State of the Union speech, the one that everybody concedes
he hit out of the park when he was heckled by the MAGA congresspeople and he really owned
them in the moment. So it's an unusual but not for Biden.
How is the final decision made to drop out of the race?
So Joe Biden is at Rehoboth Beach with only his closest aides. He's there with
Jill Biden and with Annie Tomasini, deputy White House chief Chief and with Anthony Bernal, the First Lady's senior advisor.
Other than that, just secret service. Sunday morning, his closest aide Steve
Reschetti and Mike Donilon come over and they sit down with him and they have
this pivotal talk and they walk him through, they talk about the polls, they
talk about the party. Reschetti says to Joe Biden that look, there's a path for
you, but it's a brutal path, it's a lonely path, and it's a real fight.
There's a narrow path that you can walk to victory in the swing states. You can do it,
but the party leaders are against you. It's going to be divisive and it's going to be a real battle.
But Rashidi was nevertheless all in if he was ready to go there, if he wanted to run for reelection. And again, I find this
kind of extraordinary because, you know, the reality was, the truth was that there really
was no path in the battleground states by that time. And the party leaders, of course,
were arrayed against him. And I think what was decisive was that all three of them,
Reshety, Donilon, and Joe Biden, obviously most important of all, they realized that
the party leadership would come down on him like a ton of bricks come Monday, that if he didn't
make that decision, in all likelihood, the party leaders would go publicly against him.
And there was really no way out.
The Biden team was really angry with Obama. How come?
You know, the whole relationship between Joe Biden and Barack Obama
is so complex and fascinating and with so many levels to it.
I mean, on the one hand, there's no question about the fact that they really
bide, they really bonded over Bo Biden's tragic death.
And Barack Obama took Joe Biden under his wing and they developed a closeness there.
But at the same time, you know, there's a real competitiveness between
them. And the Obama camp, for example, was not amused when Biden's staffers were going
around early in his first term and talking about how the American rescue plan was so
much bigger than Obama's stimulus package back in 2009. They're just competitive, these two camps.
And the other major factor here is that Joe Biden never forgave Barack Obama for putting
his thumb on the scale for Hillary Clinton to become the nominee in 2016.
That was a really deep wound for Joe Biden. And in the end, it became clear that
as during that fateful weekend of July 2021, that Barack Obama wasn't really there. He
just wasn't there for Joe Biden. One of Biden's closest friends told me that the thing that
really got him was that Obama
never picked up the phone and called him and just said, you know, Joe, geez, are you sure
you're up to this?
That never happened.
There was a phone call earlier after the debate saying, hey, you know, it was just a bad night.
Don't worry about it.
But when things went south and Biden was on the ropes, Barack Obama never picked up the phone?
It sounds to me from your book that when Biden dropped out, the Harris campaign was kind of prepared for that.
The Harris campaign was waging what you describe as a stealth campaign to try to be prepared in case Biden did drop out.
Tell us about that stealth campaign.
Yeah, you know, this is really previously unreported.
But what I learned in writing the book was that prior to that weekend when Biden made
his decision, you know, up to that point, Harris had had to be absolutely scrupulous.
You know, she was walking through a minefield.
I mean, she had to be so careful not to give any hint that she was thinking about taking
over the top spot on the ticket.
But the truth was that she was quietly and secretly preparing.
Her camp had reached out to Democratic political operatives
who were looking at the rules and getting ready and making sure that when that day came,
I think they thought, that she would be ready to go. And sure enough, she was. But not only
were those operatives looking at the rules and figuring out how she could grasp the nomination, they
were also putting out the word to some senators that they needed to come out in
favor of Joe Biden stepping aside.
What are some of the suggestions you heard about how she
could have differentiated herself more and become more of a change agent in the
eyes of the public? Well the number one thing was that she had to be prepared
for the $64,000 question which they knew was coming and that was what would you
do differently from Joe Biden and when that day, when Kamala Harris was appearing on the ABC program, The View,
it was a disaster.
She fumbled the answer.
She was asked that very question, which she was prepared for.
And inexplicably, she said, well, I can't think of a single thing, was how she began
the answer. That was immediately turned into a campaign commercial by the Trump team, which was devastating. And that was a real turning point of the campaign. She wasn't prepared for that question. And she was prepared, but she couldn't answer the question. And I think the reason is that fundamentally Kamala Harris was loyal to Joe Biden.
That's what her campaign staffers told me that they told her they'd had several
meetings in which one, one of them in which David Plouffe had said, you, you
just, you have to separate yourself and you have
to rip this bandaid off. She couldn't do it. One of the ironies here is that her top campaign
officials, General Malley Dillon and Lorraine Voles had gone to the White House and specifically
sat down with Jeff Seitz, Joe Biden's chief of staff, and in effect,
asked for permission to separate themselves from Biden.
And Zients told them, go for it.
Do whatever you have to do.
Not only that, Joe Biden personally called Kamala Harris
and said, look, I get it.
You need to win this campaign, and don't
worry about hurting my feelings, in effect, not in those words. So it's fascinating to me that even
then she was unable to make that break. Well we need to take another break here
so let me reintroduce you. If you're just joining us my guest is Chris Whipple.
He's author of the new book Uncharted, How Trump Beat Biden, Harris and the Odds
in the
Wildest Campaign in History.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Terry Gross and this is Fresh Air.
On the latest bonus episode of Fresh Air, an interview with Yoko Ono from 1989.
She says that she became famous for her marriage to John Lennon, but her own avant-garde art
wasn't taken seriously
then.
That was the kind of natural feeling people had.
I think, well, she's Mrs. Lennon.
What's she doing anyway?
I mean, she doesn't have to work anymore, you know?
To listen, sign up for Fresh Air Plus at plus.npr.org slash fresh air.
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Psychologist Dolly Chugg studies the lengths we will go to protect the way we see ourselves.
We care about whether we're seen as a good person, whether others see us as a good person,
and whether we feel like good people.
Ideas about our self-image. That's on the Ted Radio Hour
podcast from NPR. You think or a lot of people told you that you know your
source is that part of the problem with the Harris campaign was the decision to
really focus on the threat to democracy as opposed to focusing more on like
personal finance issues and economic issues.
The threats of democracy, that really
resonated with a lot of people.
But talk a little bit more about the controversy,
about how much to stress that in the campaign.
I think what happened was that the campaign took a page
from the 2022 midterms.
And you may recall that during those midterms
the Democrats really leaned heavily on democracy and women's reproductive
rights and defied the odds and did so much better than anyone thought they
would do during those midterms. So I think the campaign took a page from that
and not realizing that they're very different animals. Midterms are different from presidential
elections. It probably didn't, those issues didn't have the same resonance in the presidential
election, which is really, really all about the two candidates more than it is about issues, no matter how effective
or resonant they might have been in the midterms.
So I think a number of former presidential campaign managers I spoke to just felt that
that was the wrong emphasis, that the real message had to be the economy had to be bringing down costs
had to be trying to to become a change candidate in an election where there was
just a tidal wave of anti-incumbent sentiment you know around the world something like 50 out of 85 elections in those elections, incumbents
lost since 2020. So there was a real wave of anti-incumbent sentiment and and she
never got out ahead of that. The Harris campaign was criticized for running a
really good more traditional campaign,
knocking on doors to get out the vote, going on mainstream media, whereas the Trump campaign
did a lot of podcasts, including with people on the right, went on Joe Rogan, and Harris
considered going on Joe Rogan's podcast, but decided not to.
How consequential do you think the decision was to take a more mainstream approach to
getting out the vote and being on the media compared to Trump?
Well, I think there's no question that Trump tapped into a very powerful network of alternative
media and Harris did not.
And of course, missing the Rogan interview was part of that.
When I spoke to Susie Wiles, who by the way is just an absolutely fascinating character
in my view. AMT – And Suzy Wiles ran Trump's successful 2024 campaign and is now his chief of staff.
BF – That's correct. Her story is really not well known. But Suzy Wiles was emphatic and candid about what she thought the mistakes were by the Paris campaign. And
she said she never had any doubt whatsoever that the Trump campaign would win. She said
in, again, not mincing words, she said, we couldn't believe how bad she was, referring to Kamala Harris.
And part of what she meant by that was that she felt that just like
just like the Biden's handlers in 2020, that they they were hiding her
not in the basement this time, but they were hiding her coming out of the convention, that there was a period of a couple of weeks where she wasn't doing interviews. General
Malley-Dillon, Harris's campaign chair, would dispute that, but Susie Wiles was
just really emphatic about the fact that they just couldn't believe how
ineffective Harris was
and never doubted they were going to win.
I want to talk with you about Suzy Wiles.
And Wiles managed Trump's 2024 successful presidential campaign
and is now his White House Chief of Staff.
One of the things you say, and I mentioned this before,
about Chiefs of staff is that
they have to be able to say no to presidents.
They have to be able to tell the truth to the president when it's not something the
president wants to hear.
They have to be able to contradict the president and set the president on what they perceive
to be the right course.
How is Suzy Wildiles doing in that job? And I'm just thinking about
the tariffs and letting loose Elon Musk and taking advice from right-wing
conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer about who to fire from, you know, then like
what national security experts to fire. Well let me start with the on the plus side when it comes to Suzy Wiles. First of all,
her relationship with Trump is absolutely fascinating and she has a certain magic with
him. And I think it goes back to the fact that she's the daughter of Pat Summerall, the famous sportscaster
who struggled with alcoholism and Suzy Wiles knows something about handling
difficult men. But that's another story. To talk about now, I think that on the
one hand this is not Trump 1.0. The Trump White House is no longer a
battlefield of backstabbers and leakers and there's not anything like the drama
that happened during Trump's first term. And that's largely because of Suzy
Wiles. She has a kind of magic with Trump that none of her predecessors had. Remember
Reince Priebus and John Kelly, Mick Mulvaney. He went through Chiefs of Staff at a rapid
clip. I think Suzy Wiles is going to be there for a while because he
trusts her. On the minus side of the ledger, you're right, the most important
part of the White House Chief of Staff's job is walking into the Oval Office,
closing the door, and telling the president what he doesn't want to hear.
Now, you know, I've talked to Suzy while since she's been in this job a number of times. She
says that she has fought these battles with him. One of them was in the case of the pardoning,
doing a blanket pardon of the January 6th insurrectionists. I said to her,
did it ever occur to you to say to the president, wait a minute, maybe we should take a look at these one by one instead
of a sweeping get out of jail free card, and she said yes. That's exactly the
conversation I had with him. I lost that argument. Well, she's lost a lot of
battles, and so that suggests that this is going
to be a long, rough road for her.
And I'll add one other thing she said,
which is particularly timely at the moment.
She told me that there were a bunch of, as she put it,
tariff zealots running around in the Trump White House. And we have certainly
seen the result of that in recent days.
Well let's take another break here and then we'll talk some more. If you're just joining us, my guest is Chris Whipple,
author of the new book Uncharted, How Trump Beat Biden, Harris, and the Odds in the Wildest Campaign in History.
We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air.
campaign in history. We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air. One of your earlier books, The Gatekeepers, is about White House chiefs of staff. And
you describe the chief of staff position as being, you know, one of the most important
positions. Why is it so important? Explain what a chief of staff actually does.
Well, it really is the second most powerful job in government.
And that was my principle takeaway when I wrote the book back in 2017.
He's critical because every president learns sometimes the hard way that you cannot govern
effectively without empowering a chief of staff as first among equals to, number one, execute your agenda. Number two, be the gatekeeper, who's the person
who gives the president time and space to think. You have to be the keeper of the message,
making sure that everybody's on the same page. You have to be the president's heat shield. Jack Watson, Jimmy Carter's last White House chief, calls that, calls him the javelin catcher,
taking the heat for the president.
It's just an extraordinarily critical job.
And again, to circle back to a question you raised earlier. He is, he or she, at the end of the day,
is the person who has to be able to tell the president
what he doesn't want to hear.
Don Rumsfeld, who was a very good chief of staff
for Gerald Ford way back in the day, said,
you know, he's the one person besides the president's wife
who can look him straight in the eye and say,
you cannot go down this road. me it's a mistake. The position of chief of staff
is relatively new it started under President Eisenhower why did he create
the position? Well Eisenhower was smart enough to know that you really need to have a chief of staff to make things work.
And he had a guy named Sherman Adams who was gruff and tough and they called him the abominable
no man.
He was the
Oh, because he said no all the time?
Yes, exactly. He was the governmental equivalent
of an army chief of staff, which is probably
why Ike came up with the position.
But anyway, it began with Eisenhower.
And really, what I've discovered in writing the book
was that no modern president has really
been able to succeed without an empowered White House Chief of Staff.
There would have been, in my view, no Reagan revolution without Jim Baker, and Bill Clinton
might well have been a one-term president without Leon Panetta, who really turned his
White House around. So it's a very
important job. I mean, Cheney told me that, and Cheney, of course, was Gerald Ford's second
White House chief at the age of 33 or 34, I think. Cheney told me that the White House
chief has more power than the vice president. That's true, except when Cheney was vice president.
Yes.
What did Leon Panetta do as chief of staff to turn around the Clinton White House?
Well, it was fascinating because Bill Clinton came into office thinking he was so smart
that he could run the White House
by himself.
He was hardly the only president to think that.
Jimmy Carter thought the same thing and learned the hard way that you can't.
Bill Clinton came in with his kindergarten friend, Mac McLarty, who was very talented and smart, but just unable
to discipline, you know, the larger-than-life Clinton. Sound familiar?
And what happened was that at about a year and a half into his presidency, he
was really dead in the water. Clinton was in real trouble. Remember, Travel Gate and
Whitewater and all kinds of, couldn't get any traction.
And it was largely because Clinton really couldn't prioritize and focus on what he
needed to do.
There was a kind of intervention staged by Hillary Clinton and Al Gore.
They had their eye on Leon Panetta, the OMB director who was tough and disciplined.
They took him to Camp David and virtually locked him in a cabin until he would agree
to do it.
He wanted to stay on as OMB director.
But Leon Panetta came in and he just turned things around.
He was able to tell the president hard truths and he organized the White House and drove it forward with help
from Erskine Bowles, his deputy, and John Podesta and the rest is history. He went on to be reelected.
You wrote a book about Biden's first two years as president and now you've written a book about the
Biden-Harris and Trump campaigns. Have your views on Biden changed from the book about his first two years in the White House
to the book about the end of his presidency and the end of his campaign?
Steve McLaughlin For sure. I mean, what's changed, of course,
is the unbelievably dramatic ending of the story. I mean, it's Shakespearean with all of the plot twists
and turns and the betrayals and the tragedy,
if you want to call it that, which I think it is for Joe
Biden and for Kamala Harris.
But I think history is going to judge Biden and his inner
circle harshly.
I think that it's unquestionable that there was just an
abdication of leadership starting within that inner circle. The inability of any of those guys
or women to sit the president down and say, look, you know, you need to, you need to look at this
clear eyed and realize that you're going to be 86 years old and, and you're not up to
this and everybody knows it. That never happened. And again, I think it's in part because there's
this gravitational pull when you're in that, the rarefied air of that, of the
Oval Office in that inner circle.
Sometimes you just don't see clearly.
But my views have changed because I think that in this sense, I mean, I think Biden
was in some ways a transformational president.
I mean, some of the achievements, rallying NATO, pulling the economy out of a free fall,
managing the pandemic.
In a number of ways, he was transformative.
But the story is a sad story and a tragic ending.
And I'm afraid it was self-inflicted.
Something that surprised me is how much Jill Biden,
Biden's wife, supported his run.
Like, I would have thought she would be really concerned
about his health and his ability to endure
all of the stresses, physical, emotional, spiritual,
intellectual, of the presidency.
It's maybe the hardest job in the world.
But she seemed to really be supporting
his continued campaign.
You write that after the disastrous debate,
she said to him, like, you did great.
You answered all the questions.
Well, answering the questions is a pretty low bar
after a debate.
Do you have any insights into Jill Biden's continued support
of her husband's campaign?
Yeah, that was an extraordinary and telling moment
when she, back at the hotel after that disastrous debate.
You would think, at least I was thinking
as I watched the debate go on,
that she would want to take him aside and say,
listen, Joe, are you sure you want to go ahead with this?
Or we need to have a doctor look at you.
And that was, are you okay? I mean maybe she did have that
conversation privately but publicly moments after that debate or minutes after it she was
gushing about how what a great job he'd done. So it's it's extraordinary and she was
she was at the end of the day all about wanting to help Joe Biden do what he wanted to do.
So as I say, we can't know what they said behind closed doors, but she was
certainly all in on, on reelection.
Chris Whipple, thank you so much for talking with us.
My pleasure.
Thanks for having me, Terry.
Chris Whipple is the author of the new book, Uncharted, How Trump Beat Biden, Harris, and the Odds
in the Wildest Campaign in History.
This Thursday will mark the 100th anniversary
of the Great Gatsby's publication.
After we take a short break, book critic Maureen Carrigan
will tell us why she is one of the many who consider it
the great American novel.
She wrote a book about Gatsby.
This is fresh air.
The Great Gatsby was published on April 10th, 1925,
which makes this Thursday its 100th anniversary.
Our book critic, Maureen Carrigan,
is one of the many people
who think it's the great American novel.
She has an appreciation.
The Great Gatsby, 100 years old? How can that be? To borrow the words
F. Scott Fitzgerald used to describe New York City in the 1920s, The Great Gatsby possesses
all the iridescence of the beginning of the world. The novel's main characters are young in a restless America, reveling in the excess of the new modern age,
an age whose anxieties have resurfaced with fresh intensity in our own moment.
Great works of art are great in part because they continue to have something to say to the present.
They're both time-bound and timeless.
And boy, does Gatsby have something
to say to us in 2025.
Recall that the novel takes place in the summer of 1922 on Long Island and in New York City,
a city that was then the center for contemporary debates about the threat of foreign influences, so-called racial pollution,
and the ascendance of the liberated new woman embodied in the novel by the professional golfer,
Jordan Baker. Post-World War I New York had been transformed by the colossal second wave of
immigrants, mostly from Eastern and Southern Europe, that had begun pouring into the city in the late 1880s.
By 1920, only one million of the city's six million residents were white, native-born Protestants.
There was also a massive internal migration going on back then. Black Americans were relocating from
southern rural areas to cities like Chicago, Detroit, and New York. No wonder
then that Tom Buchanan, that boorish bullying embodiment of white male old
money privilege, introduces himself in chapter One of the novel by spouting ideas from a
popular book on eugenics that he's been reading.
Civilization's going to pieces, insists Tom.
If we don't look out, the white race will be utterly submerged.
It's all scientific stuff.
It's been proved. In addition to ruminating about how far the promise of America could or should be extended
to include immigrants, women, and people of color, The Great Gatsby is also freshly topical
because it's our great American novel about class.
All the other major contenders, and I'm thinking of books like Huckleberry Finn, Moby Dick, Beloved foreground the
issue of race. The compressed geography of Long Island and New
York made mythic in the novel, allowed Fitzgerald to speed his
characters through high class East Egg, to wannabe West Egg,
and pass the working class Valley of Ashes
to explore the limits of the American dream of social mobility. Fitzgerald himself said
his novel was about aspiration, but aspiration doesn't guarantee success. Remember that
Jay Gatsby, the character who strives, who stretches out his arms to that
green light and all it represents, is dead at the beginning of this retrospective story. No surprise
then that the great Gatsby has been and continues to be banned as our frenzy of book banning rages on. Blame all that drinking, extramarital sex, and lurking doubt about the meritocratic promise
of America.
But the banners aren't reading the novel carefully enough, for even as the great Gatsby
tells us, the American dream may be a mirage.
It does so in some of the most beautiful language anyone has ever written about America,
particularly the last seven or so pages of the novel where Nick Carraway talks about
man's search for something commensurate to his capacity for wonder.
F. Scott Fitzgerald would be stunned to know that
F. Scott Fitzgerald would be stunned to know that celebrations of Gatsby's centennial are taking place around the world this year. The novel was largely forgotten at the time of his death in Hollywood in 1940 at the age of 44.
Back then, unsold copies of the first edition of Gatsby were still gathering dust in Scribner's
warehouse. Fitzgerald would also be stunned to know that the great Gatsby, more than any
other novel, is the one most Americans read in high school. Indeed, it may be one of the
few things that unites us. At the risk of sounding like a killjoy, I wish everyone would
ditch those roaring 20s parties and instead celebrate Gatsby's 100th by
reading or rereading this matchless novel about the troubled dream of America.
Maureen Carrigan is the author of a book about Gatsby called, So We Read On, How the Great Gatsby Came to Be and Why it Endures.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, How can one man change the whole global economy?
We talk about Trump's tariffs, why they've led stock markets to plummet,
how they're changing our relationship with allies and adversaries,
and what tariffs mean for our day-to-day lives. Our guest will be Zanny Minton-Bettos, editor-in-chief of The Economist. I hope
you'll join us. To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our
interviews, follow us on Instagram at NPRFreshAir.
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Roberta Shorerock directs the show. Our co-host is Tanya Mosley. I'm Terry Gross.