On with Kara Swisher - July 4th Special: Why Heather Cox Richardson Still Has Hope for American Democracy
Episode Date: July 4, 2024Trump’s historic felony conviction, a SCOTUS ruling in favor of presidential immunity, and a dumpster fire Biden vs. Trump debate: Those are just a few of the things that have happened on the Americ...an democracy front since Kara spoke to historian Heather Cox Richardson in January. In a special Independence Day episode, Kara and Heather replay that conversation, including history lessons from her book Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America, and then rejoin at the end. They discuss what Heather thought of the first presidential debate, why she believes changing presidential horses mid-race would be disastrous for Democrats, and how events of the past six months have (or haven't) changed her perspective about American Democracy. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find Kara on Instagram/Threads as @karaswisher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone, from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
This is On with Kara Swisher, and I'm Kara Swisher.
We've been talking a lot about democracy on this show this year, and it's the 4th of July.
So we decided to switch things up, and we have Heather Cox Richardson with us today for the holiday.
Hi, Heather. Thanks for joining us.
Always a pleasure.
So you're a professor of history at Boston College, or you're probably best known for your sub stack, Letters from an American. Now, we spoke in January after your
last book came out, Democracy Awakening, Notes on the State of America. We're going to play that
conversation in just a bit, but so much has happened in the meantime, and we wanted to get
your short reassessment about a bunch of things. First, Donald Trump is now a convicted felon. The
Supreme Court
has ruled that Trump has at least some level of immunity from prosecution for official conduct,
which could delay the trial against him for the January 6th riot. There have been several other
SCOTUS decisions that seem to point away from democracy. And of course, Trump and Biden just
had their first debate last week and things happened. Anything else I'm forgetting?
You know, I'm sitting here trying to remember six months ago, so I would say there's probably a lot you're forgetting. That's okay.
So the plan is we're going to re-listen to this episode together and then chat at the end about
your thoughts, what's changed because of everything that's happened. All right, let's go.
This episode first aired on January 22nd, 2024. See you back at the end. Professor Richardson, it's nice to be talking to another
professor who is not Scott Galloway. So thank you for joining us. And I hope you'll be 100% less
dirty. Okay, but you can if you need to be. I'm used to it from professors.
Hey, well, I will do my best, but thank you so much for having me. It's a real pleasure to be here.
No problem. So I'm going to go all across the map here. The day we're taping this is the Iowa caucuses for the Republicans, and we'll get to that.
But I want to start, in your book that came out last fall, this past fall.
You wrote democracies die more often through the ballot box than at gunpoint.
Let's start with that big idea, since that is exactly where we are.
While many fear and feel the potential for political violence, nascent fascism, and perhaps more dramatically, the end of democracy. It looks like Donald Trump is doing rather well with voters, including the college educated he was supposed to have repelled. I'd love to hear your thoughts on
why that is and that idea of more democracies die through the ballot box than at gunpoint.
Okay, but those are almost different questions. Because the idea of democracy dying at the ballot
box rather than at gunpoint, I think is an important one for Americans now, because we tend to think about the idea of dictatorships coming in tanks, for example, or with people
goose-stepping. And the reality is, in this moment, that more often people vote down a
democracy, that is, they vote into power people who are pushing toward authoritarianism. And a
great example of that, of course, is Hungary under Viktor Orban and his
destruction of democracy there and replacement with an authoritarian movement. People voted him
in. And so the idea that people can be manipulated to vote against the continuation of a democracy,
I think is a really important one in this moment. And we can unpack that. But Trump is a really different situation in a sense here in 2024. And that is that, you know, he remains popular with his base.
And yet, if you think about the way he is approaching the election of 2024, one of the
things that fascinates me is he is not trying to appeal to undecided voters. He's really not trying
to expand that base at all. In fact, he's doubling down on the extremism that attracts that very small group of people who are fervently loyal to him.
He is admitting he wants to be a dictator.
He is saying that he will be a dictator from day one.
He is talking about rounding up, putting in camps, and deporting 10 million people who are here in the United States, including citizens, citizens under birthright, citizenship, which he says he's going to get rid of. He is openly talking about staying in power longer
than one more term. I mean, he's talked about weaponizing the Department of Justice. He's
talking about weaponizing the military. He's saying all of these things.
So signaling it.
He's signaling it. And that is not what one does to appeal to the suburban moms, which are sort of that vague group that you need to have behind you to win an election in this era.
So my interest right now in him is what is he doing?
Like he is signaling that he has no intention of increasing his share of the vote.
He is perfectly happy to stay with his base, which is not a majority and on which he has repeatedly lost elections.
It's not small. It's not small. And will it work?
Well, but so what's interesting to me about that is the base, the fervent right wing base is between
25 and 33%. But you can't win elections on those people. That's not enough people. So how do you
get enough people behind you to win an election? Well, you either intimidate others into not showing up, which is what happens in Reconstruction in the American South,
or you manipulate the system. And I think we're seeing both of that happening going into 2024.
And in either case, that can make a minority become the acting majority.
The tyranny of the minority, in other words, right?
That's right.
Speaking of dramatic, while the Washington Post uses the phrase democracy dies in darkness, it really
doesn't in American history. It's more like full glare. It feels like the Salem witch trials,
very showy. The Whiskey Rebellion, which everyone forgets but me. McCarthy and the Red Scare,
none of it was hidden, really. Talk a little bit about this darker and very bright DNA of the U.S.
really. Talk a little bit about this darker and very bright DNA of the U.S. and in lockstep is this ability to forget and move on. Our country does that a lot, forgets what happened, including
the insurrection of January 6th. This is sometimes an outset and sometimes not. Talk about these
moments where we seem incredibly on the edge of something.
these moments where we seem incredibly on the edge of something.
Well, one of the things that Americans respond to are stories. I mean, all people do,
but the American story, I think, is particularly malleable for dictators or for those who wish this country ill to use to get into power. And you can see that. I mean, you mentioned a number
of things, and the Whiskey Rebellion is cool, but it's a little bit different because of the difference in the transmission of information
that early in our history. But think of somebody like Senator Joseph McCarthy from Wisconsin,
who manages, you know, when he stands up and says to a group of women voters that he has a list of
card-carrying members of the Communist Party
who are working in the State Department. He's making that up. You know, that absolutely
doesn't exist. And he recognizes, you know, at first it's just sort of shock value. He's giving
it in Wheeling, West Virginia. I don't think he really expects the rubber to hit the road the way
it does when he says that. And of course, he's running for re-election and he's done nothing
to distinguish himself. But he recognizes that this is a story, the idea that America is
being undermined from within by the same forces that have recently taken over China at that point,
for example, or the rise of the USSR, although it's China, really, that people are looking at
when he makes that speech. He manages to tap into the idea that we need to protect this country,
and we need to protect this country from those others. And one of the things that I think is interesting about the not necessarily poverty the way I talked about it in 1932.
The real enemies here are the rich people who are making sure that people like you and me don't get, not him in that case, but the workers don't get paid right.
And that, you know, one of the things that I watch for is who we characterize as our enemies. So right now, of course, Trump and the Republican Party are insisting that it's immigrants who are the enemies, which is really...
And China still. $8 million from China. I did stuff for them. And it's like, now, hang on a minute here, you're playing it both ways. But who, you know, who are the people that you put in that position
of being the ones who are destroying American society?
So you talked about that. What is happening now actually begins in the 1930s after FDR's New Deal.
Explain that.
Isn't that a cool story? So the reason I started the book in 1937 is that people wanted me to write a book explaining the questions that people ask me every day. You know, how did the party switch sides? What is a Southern strategy? But I realized that the question people ask me most often is how did we get here? What on earth is going on? And how do we get out of it? And Trump is both a continuation and something new. And we could talk about that. But the reason I started where I did in 1937 is because many people thought that when FDR was
elected in 1932, he was a flesh in the pan. And he was, you know, he was the American people were
going to repudiate him in 1936. And everything was going to go back to the way it was in the 1920s,
when business people ran the country. And okay, yeah, they drove us into the ditch with the Great
Depression. But you know, oopsie poopsie, they won't do that again, right?
Is oopsie poopsie a historical term?
It is absolutely what everybody said in the era. No, I'm making that up. Ducky is,
just Ducky is the one that they used at the time. But anyway, so when he is reelected in 1937,
there's two groups of people who really, really, really hate the New Deal.
And the New Deal is the new form of government that uses the power of the federal government to regulate business and to provide a basic social safety net and to promote infrastructure and to protect civil rights.
Although it's not really doing much of that in 1936.
It's doing enough of it that it infuriates white Southern Democrats who are adamant that they want to keep segregation.
So they're mad about the New Deal. And the Republican pro-business wing, especially in the North,
but also largely in the West, recognize that they can make common cause against the New Deal.
And so in 1937, these two groups of people, lawmakers, get together and they write what they call the Conservative Manifesto. And the Conservative Manifesto repudiates all those pieces of the New Deal. It says the government should not regulate business, because that means that a businessman can't run his business the way he wants to, can't accumulate wealth, and this is antithetical, they think, to the meaning of America, as it was embraced, at least in the 1920s.
The government should not provide a basic social safety net, because that's up to the churches. The
government should not promote infrastructure, because that too should be private. And it sure
as shootin' should not have anything to do with civil rights. Well, if you think about that,
they put this in a manifesto, it gets leaked to the press, and that sort of kills it really quickly,
because the Democrats don't want to be criticizing their own president and the Republicans recognize that they can criticize
him more effectively from outside rather than from inside. But the conservative manifesto
spreads across the country through chambers of commerce, through pro-business organizations.
And if you think about what's in that manifesto, isn't that exactly what the Republicans-
That's correct.
Yeah. Embr embraced until 2015?
But it wasn't effective. You call the liberal consensus that those Republicans opposed,
and it remained popular with voters for decades, so much so that in 1960, political scientist Philip Converse advised candidates to run on the promises of government spending, that government's
here to help you. But then you argue the federal
government's support of civil rights did change things. That was the too far, the moment too far,
correct? That people like this idea of big government and spending and the government
in charge, which FDR obviously pushed. Well, and they still do. The breaking point
for Americans, for white Americans, was Brown v. Board of Education in May of 1954, when that big federal government was being used to protect civil rights in the states, saying you cannot, as a state, discriminate against anybody, any American citizen within your borders, because the 14th Amendment makes it clear that you cannot do that. And from 54, and actually it was used before that, but 54 is what we really
point to. From 54 into the 1970s, the 14th Amendment is what expanded civil rights, not only
for black Americans, but also for brown Americans and for women. And once you could argue that a big
federal government was forcing your traditional society to change, that's when the people who oppose the liberal
consensus could get enough power together to begin to challenge it.
That was the hook that they had.
That was the hook.
They tried for different hooks, right?
Race was first, and then the women's movement, the second women's movement in the 1960s and
the 1970s really engaged what were known as the traditionalists, those Christians
who become evangelical Christians who really object to the idea of women having equal rights
in American society. And that misogyny, I think, is really important to remember as part of this,
not only race, but also gender, because if you're looking around America right now,
you see it playing out in so many ways. But the idea
that women should not have access to abortion, which is 1973.
Abortion and trans issues.
Trans and gay and lesbian issues.
Well, yes. And then now it is taking shape in these extraordinary attacks on LGBTQ plus people,
which is another manifestation of this. And, you know, that's the piece that has enabled those who
really initially were interested in simply getting rid of business regulation to break that liberal
consensus that called for it. So, in a lot of ways, you're experiencing the same political
conflict that's played out again and again in American history. But let's talk about what's
new to this moment. And what I do now every week is I get an expert to call in and put a question.
And this week it's Adam Kinzinger.
I've asked him for something to play for you.
This is what he sent me.
We know that every generation faces their own version of an aspiring authoritarian who preys on the fears and insecurities of people they use in their rise to power.
1930s Germany had Hitler, 1920s Italy
had Mussolini, and in 2016 America had Donald Trump. We know that history typically doesn't
repeat exactly, but it does rhyme. Human behavior remains consistent, and if we want indicators for
how the future will be for any civilization, we just have to study the past. So my question is,
why Trump and
why now? More specifically, why was America more vulnerable to the rise of Trump in 2016 than after
a national crisis like September 11th? When considering the historical context, it would seem
Americans would be more vulnerable to an authoritarian movement in the wake of a
collective trauma like the one we endured on that day and in the immediate
years following? Do you have any particular instances like these that may come to mind when
a relatively affluent and stable country made a sudden turn towards authoritarianism? Is this
something we've seen before or did America make its own history? We hear the usual comments about
economic anxiety contributing to his rise,
but it's hard to compare the conditions of 2016 to other moments in history when the stakes have
certainly been much higher for all demographics in America. Oh, wow. He should run for Congress.
You know, I was going to say, I hope that wasn't off the top of his head because, man.
Yeah, he's really good. He speaks in full paragraphs.
If this has been brewing since the 1930s or even the Civil War, why 2016?
Answer his questions.
Any one of them you want to answer.
I'll answer at least a couple of them.
So he's identified something that's really important. In 1951, a longshoreman in San Francisco named Eric Hoffer contemplated this very question.
And he said something that
was deeply revelatory to me, and I think it became a really profound base for a lot of what I do.
And that's, you know, everybody is running around after World War II going,
how do we get a Hitler? How do we get a Mussolini? And what Hoffer said is he said,
it doesn't matter. Stop worrying about Hitler and Mussolini, because every generation
has Hitlers and Mussolinis, and they don't go anywhere. The people to study are the ones who
followed him. Why do you get a population, and how do you get a population that is willing to
follow a strong man? Which flips the script, if you will. And what he said, I think, and this is
not, I'm not, you know, I have built on him with people like Hannah Arendt
and some of my own ideas about earlier American history. So I'm not trying to put words in his
mouth, but I think he's a very important place to start. What he said is that the way you get the
rise of an authoritarian is you take a population that feels disaffected. It feels disaffected
either politically or socially or religiously, and it feels that it has lost ground in society.
And after that has been accomplished, then you get the rise of somebody who says, you know, I know you feel like things are really bad.
And the reason that you feel like things are really bad are not anything to do with what's actually happening around you.
The reason you feel like things are bad is because of those people.
Again, those people.
And who those people are doesn't matter.
But once you have convinced them that the enemy is the one that is keeping them from having,
being relevant in today's society, you start to treat that group badly, either legally at first,
and then you look the other way when there's violence against them, and then you start to
pass laws against them that discriminate against them, And then eventually it goes to a very dark place. And the more, Hoffer said, that somebody has bought into that sort of behavior, the more psychologically committed they are to maintaining that that person was wrong and that they are the ones who've been complicit rather than the other way around. So what does that mean for the present? How did we
get here? If you think about the legislation that the Republican Party began to push in the 1980s,
it created an economically dislocated population. It simply did. We know there's not a statistic in
the world that doesn't say that wealth moved dramatically upward after 1981 when Ronald Reagan takes office.
And there's a lot of people who were in the American middle class, especially white Americans, but not exclusively white Americans, who recognize that economically they have fallen dramatically behind in their lifetimes.
The hollowing out of the middle class.
The hollowing out of the
federal government to get benefits that they had not earned. They were Reagan's welfare queen,
for example. They were, you know, by the time you get to Mitt Romney's campaign, they were the
takers rather than the makers. Remember the makers versus the takers. But you know, that idea,
and you see it amplified in talk radio after 1987, you see it amplified on things like the right-wing Fox News channel, the idea that there are these good Americans who work hard and don't want anything from the government, which is ridiculous, by the way, and all their money is being taken away.
They are being scrunched by the government in favor of undeserving black, you know, or women grabbers
who are taking stuff from the government. So what happens with that, I think, is when you get
Donald Trump rising in 2015, 2016, people forget that while Trump really doubled down on the racism
and the sexism and all that horrible side of what he was offering people in 2016.
He was also the most economically moderate of any Republican on that stage.
He called for better and cheaper health care.
He called for closing tax loopholes.
He called for bringing back manufacturing.
And he called for infrastructure.
I mean, the reason Infrastructure Week became such a joke is that's one of the things that he said he would fix.
came such a joke is that's one of the things that he said he would fix. So I think what happened and why we are where we are in the United States today is that Trump actually sort of held up a mirror
to the people who had been created by the Republican Party and gave them what they thought
they wanted in that period. Now, what's important, though, to recognize is that the Trump that we had
in 2016, as a candidate, was not the Trump that ended up in office, who gives us the travel
ban within weeks of taking office, which is obviously an explicit attempt to say, there's
the enemy, you know, we're going to go after them. The wing of the Republican Party that wants to get
rid of business regulation are happy as little clams at high tide until 2017, when they get that
dramatic tax cut for corporations and for the very wealthy.
But after the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017,
Trump begins to turn those people who were rhetorically behind him into a movement.
That's new in American society. Okay, so let's talk about it because one of the things that's being used is the Hitler comparison,
which has been used a lot with him, and that was, of course, torches, the whole thing, the Jews will not
replace us, etc. Has that Nazi metaphor been overused and then it fails to shock? And why is
it appropriate here? As you said, he started out more moderate, but then he used these tools of
engagement to create enragement and fear to paint himself the savior and to stoke this discontent.
Is this an apt comparison now?
Because people do overuse it for, oh, you don't act like a Nazi, whatever.
You know, people throw it around a lot on Twitter, everywhere else, and it loses its power.
Yeah, I suppose so.
I mean, you absolutely can make those comparisons now.
He is very deliberately using Nazi imagery.
And by the way, he was doing the same thing in 2020.
He was.
I mean, there was one period when Melania Trump very deliberately showed up at the Republican National Convention.
And by the way, that was itself a travesty because of the way that was handled.
And she is wearing a dress that is evocative of SS troops.
And quite deliberately.
It was a provocative dress.
And she knows what she's doing. I mean, this is her living, is understanding clothing and poses and quite deliberately. It was a provocative dress, and she knows what she's
doing. I mean, this is her living, is understanding clothing and poses and all that. So he'd been
doing that before. But I think for me, anyway, one of the things that's very important to remember
is, you know, the Nazis don't come from nowhere. You know, when I look at the way societies work,
to me, it's very simple. There's some people who think that some
people are better than others and have the right and maybe the duty to rule over the rest of us,
because we are not competent to control our own lives. And then there are people who believe that,
no, in fact, that the way society should work is we should all have an equal right to have a say
in the government under which we live. If you think about the rise of the Nazis, when Hitler's people try and write laws
to figure out how to discriminate
against different groups in their society,
there's a lot of discussion about how you write these laws.
And where do they look?
They look to the United States,
to the Jim Crow laws and the Juan Crow laws
and the indigenous reservations.
And so, you know, and if you think about the Jim Crow laws and the Juan Crow laws, where do they come from? They come from the Black Codes. And the Black Codes come from the pre-Civil War laws and the pre-Civil, you know, you can go back and you can recognize that the Americans don't have to look to the Nazis to find the roots of this kind of behavior, because we can take it all the way back to the first anchor dropped off the coast of North America by a European.
So we don't need to borrow from the Nazis since we gave them the material.
Yeah, I mean, they perfected a lot of stuff, for sure. But if you sort of think, well,
this is just about the 1920s and the 1930s, I think it's a much harder fit with the United
States than it is to say, for example, this looks like the 1850s.
Different language, but the same meaning behind that language.
Or this looks like, you know, and you can take it all the way back.
Sure.
And in those cases, whether it was the end of the Civil War, whether it was the Red Scare or different periods where sort of fascists tried to take control, they've always been unsuccessful.
You know, they get close, but not really that close.
And they always end up sort of eating themselves.
Why does that happen here?
Because just there's dozens of examples of these groups,
whether it's Charles Lindbergh or those groups that were in the Midwest for a while,
they tend to burn out in this country until Trump.
Well, I think there's a lot of factors that make the present different. One, we have social media,
which spreads not only alternative voices, but also amplifies those voices. And we have this
very large population that is economically disaffected. And they are a specific population
coming out of World War II and the 1950s, 1960s,
1970s. So I think those two things are there. But I also think that one of the things that I work
with, remember, I'm an idealist, so I believe that ideas change society, is that in all the
periods that you're talking about, there was a fervent defense of the principles of the Declaration
of Independence, not only among people who were in office, often they were not defending those principles, but among marginalized Americans who stood on those principles with the
argument that if we're really going to be this country, by God, we ought to act like we're part
of this country. But the fact that we have not been articulating what democracy means because
we assumed it was a given, I think has been a real problem for us. And now you're seeing people begin to pick that up.
Yeah. Let's talk about the future of the Republican Party.
To return to your theme in the book, you write about how our major political parties have changed over long history.
People, again, forget about that.
And everyone knows that Lincoln was a Republican.
Is significant party change happening?
is significant party change happening and related? I've interviewed Kinzinger and recently Liz Cheney for both. It was political suicide to go against Trump. Can there be significant party change
happening right now? And then how do you deal with figures like Cheney or Kinzinger and their fate?
Well, I would like to clarify, first of all,
that I don't think it's been political suicide
for either one of those two.
I think that that jury is still out
because what we are seeing right now,
and I find it fascinating,
as an American citizen, I find it terrifying,
but as a historian,
especially a historian of the Republican Party,
I find this moment incredibly fascinating
because what's happened really since 2021
in the Republican
Party is it has quite deliberately switched from being that, which was underway during the Trump
administration, switched from being that party that I originally described, the party of a number
of elite leaders who are interested in getting rid of business regulation and taxes and who are
using the votes of that underclass, if you will, of those racists, sexists, people who want to control society again,
using those votes with the idea that they would never actually give them any power.
And one of the things Trump does, especially after the Unite the Right rally,
is he starts to rely on those people for different reasons. And eventually,
he gives them what they want, which is, for example, three Supreme Court justices who do go ahead and overturn Roe versus Wade,
which is enormously unpopular around the country. And certainly the elite people going into 2016
recognize that it would be incredibly unpopular. That is not news to anybody who actually looks
at the numbers. That was never a surprise. But that's not what the base wanted. So what you've
seen really since 2021 is an extraordinary change in the Republican Party. So while in 2015, 2016, as Trump is rising, they're, to the idea of a very strong government that, in fact, imposes Christian nationalism on a country
that doesn't want it. And so one of the people to watch, I think, is Governor Ron DeSantis of
Florida, who has very deliberately embraced some of the exact same laws that were pioneered in
Hungary under Viktor Orban, which are using a very strong government to say, for example,
to a business like Disney or to the cruise ships, for example,
I don't care what the markets want.
I no longer care about a market economy,
which is exactly what the Republicans had stood for between 1980 and 2016.
I care about you enforcing my moral strictures on the people who come to Disney.
That is antithetical to anything the Republicans have ever stood for, really, in their history.
And it goes from being a small government pro-business to being a big government pro-religion.
And that's an entirely new moment in American history.
We've never had that before.
And, you know, watching the Republican Party do that, and knowing that that is extraordinarily unpopular around the country,
I said after Nikki Haley refused the other day to talk about slavery and the coming of the Civil War,
that the party was dead. And people have said to me for years, the party's dying, the party's dying,
the party's dying. And I kept saying, no, it's not. The party always rebuilds itself because the ideology behind the Republican Party is as central to our DNA as the Democratic ideology. And those two things dance together. They rise, they fall, but essentially, we will always have that ideology.
at the true heart of the Republican Party that gave us Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt and Eisenhower
and all those moments.
But the modern-day Republican Party
has driven itself off a cliff.
They have gone into authoritarianism,
Christianity, white nationalism,
and that will die.
There's going to be a new party, as I say,
and I don't know if it's going to be called Republican or whatever,
but it's going to embrace those older values,
and those older values may very well have a place in them for the Kinzinger's and Cheney's.
I think they're called no labels.
I think they're called no labels.
At least there's versions of it.
That's that group.
So one of the people you just mentioned, President Biden, has been trying to use this.
It's obviously in the speeches he made, and we'll get into that.
You had called him in a recent interview transformative. And at first, you were not
a supporter in 2020, I think, correct? That's correct.
Why and what changed from your perspective? And why do you call him transformers? Because a lot
of people think he's a caregiver, a gatekeeper, you know what I mean? A transitional figure
rather than transformative. Well, that's why I didn't like him. I shouldn't say didn't like him. That's why I was not a big supporter is I thought he was going to be a
babysitter. And I was like, we do not need a babysitter in this moment. And I got to say,
I was wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong. If you are watching that administration
as closely as I am, which of course I am on a really tight basis every single day,
what you see is the utter rejection of the supply-side economics or
trickle-down economics that Reagan and succeeding presidents have put into place. He has really
dramatically changed the way that the federal government interacts with the economy, taking us
back to essentially the kind of modified Keynesian economics that we had before Ronald Reagan. And
it's interesting because
when he kept saying, this is going to work, this is going to work, this is going to work,
and I kept looking at the numbers and writing every night, this is going to work, this is going
to work, I kept thinking, what if I'm wrong? Because everybody else was writing, this is all
going to hell in a handbasket. And I thought, what am I saying? Of course it's going to work.
We know it works because it worked from 1933 to 1981. So, you know, he's not inventing this. So the economy has changed dramatically.
The inclusion of previously marginalized populations in the United States into our
government is transformational, both obviously in his White House, but also in the many things
he's done with the judiciary, with the way he has remade, for example, the Democratic nominating process has changed.
I mean, we could go on in that, but also in foreign affairs.
What this country has done in foreign affairs under Biden, I will confess, I said, you know, who cares that he knows a lot about foreign affairs?
Because in this moment, we need domestic attention.
And I could not have been more wrong.
And I could not have been more wrong. And I always say to people, one of the things that literally keeps me up at night is imagining what would have happened if Putin had invaded Ukraine for the second time in February 2022, if Donald Trump were in power.
They would own Ukraine.
They would own Ukraine, but they would also be, think how weak Europe would be.
NATO would have dissolved, Europe would be on the ropes, and I think the world would be an extraordinarily different place right now.
Interesting.
We'll be back in a minute.
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So you recently interviewed President Biden for the second time. You also did so in 2022.
Explain how you approach these interviews, because as you noted in your newsletter,
you're not a journalist covering a politician, you're a historian. How do you approach that differently when you're asking that? Because he sort of has that avuncular thing going on. What you're talking about is a very muscular chief executive.
I am not looking for a scoop.
It doesn't seem to me to be any good to sit there and go, well, tell me about why you're doing X.
It's either out there or he's not going to tell me.
But what, as a historian, I want to know is what does it mean to him?
Like, how is he thinking about things?
Because we have no way to get that otherwise.
So to be able to—one of the things that has always frustrated me in this latest interview I got to ask him, he always says, I have more faith in Americans than I ever have. And I'm like, what does that mean? And I fully expected him to echo what I kind of set up. We're in a community, we all help each other out, you know, I fully expected that.
And I threw that at him and he goes, nah, Americans don't want to be told what they can't do. And I
was like, where did that come from? And it kind of makes me have to rethink the way that I think about him,
because what I'm really trying to do when I write every night is, you know, explain things to people
for sure. But what I'm really trying to do is write the history of this moment for somebody
in 150 years. And that means that, honestly, that really kind of shook up the way I think about him.
That was the answer that surprised you.
Yes. Oh, totally. And I think that, honestly, you could sit there and say, well, who cares? It doesn't matter with his policies toward the border. But to me, it really matters if you think about the way that he is approaching issues of civil rights.
because it felt like we should all be part of the same community. And it really sounded when he gave that answer, like, he's like, no, that interferes with an individual's ability to do what they can
accomplish. And of course, that makes total sense when you think about it, because he had to overcome
the issue of his stuttering, which certainly in my era, usually was interpreted as you're stupid.
And I just, you know, to me, I'm going to have to rethink the way that I have
approached him. All right. You also had lunch, you and other historians had lunch with the
president early January, just days where he was heading off to Valley Forge to kick off this
year's campaigning with a strong message about the danger of Trump and the danger to democracy.
Talk about that meeting and what you all imparted to the president or what questions he had for you.
Well, the meeting was off the record, of course. And I have to say-
I don't care, but go ahead.
I think what, well, you'll know why I say that. I think that it is significant that when you get
a bunch of academics together, the word, the plural word for a bunch of academics
in the same room is argument. And I think that that, you know, I think what was most impressive
about that was his very clear interest in understanding what we all thought about this
moment in the United States and what that meant. And that's what you argued about? Yes. Well,
actually, to be honest, academics will argue about absolutely everything. And we do. And we did. Because that's what we do.
And that's fun for us. That's not because we hate each other. But yeah, it was really, you know,
I think we're all kind of wondering where we are in this country right now. And it's, you know,
to have that set of brains in one room with very, very different perspectives,
very different political leanings.
I think that showed a lot of intellectual curiosity.
After that lunch, Biden went on to a historic site, Valley Forge in Pennsylvania, where
George Washington camped with his troops during the Revolutionary War, a very critical time.
Let's hear a clip of the speech there just weeks ago.
Let's hear a clip of this speech there just weeks ago.
In the winter of 1777, it was harsh and cold as the Continental Army marched to Valley Forge.
General George Washington knew he faced the most daunting of tasks,
to fight and win a war against the most powerful empire existent in the world at the time.
His mission was clear.
Liberty, not conquest.
Freedom, not domination.
National independence, not individual glory.
America made a vow.
Never again would we bow down to a king. Now, why do you think he chose this place to reference the start of his campaign? And is it an apt one from a historic, or would you pick a
different moment in history? I actually loved that he chose Valley Forge, and that's one of the things
I asked him because it was a surprise. I mean, presidents generally have their list of things they invoke, and Valley Forge is not one of them.
And one of the things that fascinates me is how—
I'm just curious.
I'm going to just ask you, what's the most popular?
Where do they tend to go?
You know, I don't know what the most popular one is.
I tend to think of the Lincoln Memorial.
The Lincoln Memorial, yeah.
People always hit Washington.
They always hit Lincoln, but Lincoln especially.
They always hit Washington.
They always hit Lincoln, but Lincoln especially.
But I was interested in that because, of course, while lawmakers don't usually invoke Valley Forge, popular culture does.
So I thought that was really interesting that they had picked Valley Forge to go to because in our memories of Valley Forge, which are not actually indicative of what actually happened at Valley Forge, but in our memories of Valley Forge, it's a small group of embattled people who are generally being neglected because the Congress isn't coming up with enough money to deal with the war at that point. And it's
not the same Congress we have now, of course, just for your listeners. It's under an earlier
governmental system. We remember it as this period of a small group of people overcoming a great obstacle,
and that great obstacle enables them to establish the United States of America.
And that's, you know, there's a lot compressed into that.
But it's popular enough that one of the points I made in a later letter is that
Valley Forge shows up repeatedly in our popular culture, including in Star Trek.
I mean, Star Trek uses Valley Forge not infrequently as a symbol of a little group of people who
managed to change history.
And so I thought it was interesting that he chose that in this moment.
And I think it was an attempt to hearten people who are terrified about where we are, feeling
like we can't take this country back,
and to say, yeah, we actually can. They've done it before at Valley Forge. Although, of course,
that's not actually what really happened at Valley Forge, but I thought that was interesting that he
chose that. Right. By contrast, Donald Trump hosted his first campaign rally in March 2023
in Waco, Texas, on a date that fell within the 30th anniversary of the violent standoff between the
Branch Davidians, a religious cult in the federal government there in Waco. Let's hear a clip from
that. We've been the ones in this fight standing up to the globalists and standing up to the
Marxists and communists. That's what they are. We don't even talk about the socialists anymore that
train left that station a long time ago the trump campaign denied they
were making a connection talk about the contrasting symbols i'm just telling you i'm just i have to
say it okay sorry but like yeah no no nothing to see here no dead bodies anywhere um talk about
the contrasting symbolism of those two places because waco does have much more of a resonance
in some places you know than others you know we have forgotten about it, most of us, but many have not.
Well, let's not forget that it's Waco that gives Alex Jones his start in talk radio.
That's Waco. Let's talk about that in just a second. But I would like to point out
that if you wrote a movie lining up this moment and in American history, honest to God, nobody would buy it because it's too obvious.
You know, there's absolutely no subtlety any longer at all, certainly on Trump's side.
But I would also argue on Biden's side now.
He is finally, not finally, because the administration has been talking about democracy all along.
It's not been covered, but they've been talking about it all along. But, you know, he's finally really embracing it and going, folks, now's our moment, which is precisely what FDR did in his two first elections as well the United States after Waco and in the 1990s and forward that manifested the ideology of the Republican Party as it was being rhetorically delivered by lawmakers, especially lawmakers back in Washington, saying this big government is threatening your liberty.
saying this big government is threatening your liberty.
It's making women equal.
It's making black people equal.
It's taking your hard-earned tax dollars, which, by the way— You can't have your guns.
You can't have your guns.
Yes, which, by the way, is a bit of a misnomer for the people who are involved in those militias.
They don't have a lot of money.
And you need to fight back against it.
And one of the things that I think is interesting and crucial in this moment is if you think, and let's hop back here to the revolution for a minute,
what's the difference between the guys who threw the tea into the harbor in 1773 and Lauren Boebert
standing in front of the Congress talking about 1776? because remember, the people who attacked the Capitol in January of 2021
insisted that they were 1776, you know, that they're, they're, that they are the tea,
the tea party, so to speak, that they are the people who are reestablishing what they consider
to be true American values. And they're, this is a real question, because, you know, they're,
they're bad gangs who run around during the revolution as well, people we don't even remember
necessarily because of the damage that they did. So, So is there a difference? Is it just a question of who's telling the story?
And I have come to believe there is a huge difference. That is, it is possible to have
mobs, if you will, like the people who attack the tea on those ships, who attack nothing else,
by the way. One guy starts to put some tea into his pockets and they drive him off the ship because
he's stealing, he's not destroying it. And they deliberately protected everything else that was being carried
on those ships. They are making a political statement, but they are also standing up for
the expansion of liberal democracy, not the contraction of it. And I think that's a really
important distinction when we think about whether or not people who are saying, hey, I'm the one protecting America. Well, are you protecting the idea of democracy and its
inclusion of more and more people? Or is your America the one that has been embraced, for
example, by Donald Trump or by Joe McCarthy when he's trying to exclude people from our society?
Or like the elite enslavers who said, yeah, we're protecting what America is really about.
Oh, and by the way, that means we get to enslave anybody whose color is different than
ours. That, I think, is a really important distinction to have in this moment.
They definitely try to make the comparisons. There's just something Trump is doing right now
and has been doing for years. And you brought up the people of the Capitol. Another thing new in
this moment, though, is Trump's legal baggage. There's a lot of conversation happening right
around the 14th Amendment and the term insurrection or rebellion. Now, you're not a lawyer, but can you care to weigh in whether
January 6th was in terms of attempted insurrection? And what are the implications for Trump of all
these legal proceedings? Okay, a difference here. First of all, the implications for the legal
proceedings are extreme. And that's something that I think we need to focus in. Whenever
he gets in legal trouble, he does take a hit in his polls. And we've got a lot that's something that I think we need to focus in. Whenever he gets in legal trouble,
he does take a hit in his polls. And we've got a lot that's going to happen between now with
certain people. But as I say, you don't win an election based on a smaller loyal base. You win
elections based on including more people, unless your goal is simply to create enough fear and
violence that people don't show up at the polls.
I mean, that's just the way it is.
That's just the way the equation works.
And that has me,
it's one of the other things that has me up at night.
But historically, this was an insurrection.
End of discussion, this was an insurrection.
It was an attempt to stop the peaceful transfer of power
and to overthrow the will of the voters.
So historically, you would compare it to what?
Was there anything like that?
No, Cara.
There never has been.
And I say that as I do because, to me, it was one of the most profoundly heartbreaking
things I have ever lived through.
And I'm a 61-year-old woman because, as I've said elsewhere, the Civil War is sort of viscerally
real to me because of what I study and how deeply immersed I've said elsewhere, you know, the Civil War is sort of viscerally real to me because of what
I study and how deeply immersed I've been in it. And during the Civil War, there were troops of
soldiers in rings around the Capitol protecting it. And that's where we get the battle hymn of
the Republic, you know. I have seen him in the watch fires of a hundred circling camps. They
have builded him an altar in the evening dews and damps. And by God, for four years, in a war that had casualties of 600,000 people, cost $6 billion,
that Confederate battle flag never flew in the United States Capitol. And those people brought
it in. And that symbolism itself, to me, is an utter condemnation of what they did. But it also proves what you just asked. Was it an insurrection? Absolutely. That was an attempt to destroy the United States government, and it came bloody close to succeeding.
where we are now, most people think it's going to be Trump versus Biden. Historically, have we seen something like this where round two is essentially Rocky II, I guess? What are the
assets and deficits for each of those candidates from your perspective? Let's start with Trump,
because one of the deficits I see in him that I don't think people are paying enough attention to,
but I am because I watch him a lot. I don't think he looks good. I don't think he looks good before the cameras. He wanders. He's very hard to follow. And he is all about grievance. And as I say, that's not picking up more votes. I really have come to believe that he is intending either to steal the election or to create enough violence that people are afraid to show up and vote.
steal the election or to create enough violence that people are afraid to show up and vote.
And there are many ways in which he could steal the election, not least the 12th Amendment,
which has me much more upset than anybody else seems to be. And that is if there's enough confusion about what happened. And this was actually outlined in the 2020 memo by Eastman.
This is John Eastman.
John Eastman, yes, the lawyer who comes up with the idea of the alternative electors and all that.
If you can create enough confusion, and mind you, this is not legal, but if you can create enough confusion that you can have the Congress say that they do not know what the outcome of the election was with certain states' electoral votes, then the election goes into the House of Representatives by the 12th Amendment. This is under the 12th Amendment. And in the House of Representatives, each state gets a single vote.
If there are more Republican states and Democratic states, they can put Donald Trump in office,
even if he gets just a very small percentage of the vote, which is one of the reasons I've
been watching really closely the way that states and state Republican parties, which were really
packed by Trump while he was in office and Trump's people packed them while they were in office,
have been really making sure that the Republicans are going to control those states.
And I am very concerned that nobody is really looking at that.
Anyway, he is also, as I say, I think the legal cases are going to hurt quite badly.
And you can see his attempt to push them all off, I think, is a concern that once people see things like tapes or hear things like tapes of January 6th, they're going to react the way they did when we had the hearings in Congress. That is support for him is going to drop profoundly.
he's sewn up what I call the pinpoints or the pressure points of the American democracy. He's sewn up state Republican parties. He has sewn up the Supreme Court. He has sewn up the leadership
of the House of Representatives, which is no small thing to have Mike Johnson in there. And the
Senate appears to have rolled over and played dead, at least the Republicans in the Senate.
So I'm very concerned that he's trying to manipulate the Electoral College in order to put himself in office,
even though he loses the popular vote. And then of course, he does have his legions of people
in social media, and the bots in social media, which are pushing his candidacy.
So Biden's assets and deficits.
Biden's assets are going to be, I'm going to say something different than I think people expect to hear. One of them, first of all, is that this has been an extraordinarily
successful presidency. The fact that this economy is the strongest in the world right now is nothing
short of a miracle. And I think really is one of the reasons you're seeing such extraordinary
hostility from the Republicans, because he has proven that this system works, the system that
they tried to destroy in 1980.
And really, basically, as you say, hollowing out the middle class, the system works.
It's actually put a lot of money in people's pockets.
Wages have risen dramatically more quickly than inflation has.
Inflation has now come down.
Foreign affairs have also worked quite well as well, which that's sort of a longer discussion.
But I think it's been an extraordinarily successful presidency.
But I actually think that Biden's strength is not the hat, believe it or not, but is the fact that I see what we saw in the 1850s. And that is that once Americans woke up to recognize that
there was a significant attempt to try and destroy American democracy. They made alliances across parties. They made alliances over distance,
over any number of differences.
And they came together at that period
as the Republican Party
to try and restore American democracy.
And that's what I see right now.
And one of the touch points of that, I think,
has been Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health
in June of 2022,
which is the moment in which Americans recognized
that for all the years in which people have said,
they're not coming for Social Security,
they're not coming for Medicare,
they're not coming for Roe v. Wade,
they recognize that, oh, yes, they are.
And I think the fact that Democrats have overperformed
by eight points in every special election that has been held regarding abortion since then says that there's a real trend going here.
And when you see states where the voters have tried to protect abortion access, Republicans in those state legislatures saying, we don't care what you think, we're going to do it our way.
I think that that, I honestly think there's sort of of quiet movement going on. And the deficit very quickly. The deficit, I think, is simply that his message
is not getting out because he's not getting covered in those major publications. And there
is absolutely an attempt to use social media and to use the media to tear apart his presidency.
And that is going to be a really hard thing to overcome
because I think it's not illegitimate to argue that we are in a war for control of the United
States, but it's being fought primarily through psychology. And I think people aren't aware of
that. Well, speaking of that, I'm going to finish up talking about your business. You're a sub-stack,
as you said, reportedly has over 1 million subscribers. The Press Gazette estimated the newsletter makes at least $5 million a year. Is that correct? You're
making money with history? Well, I'm sitting here listening to that last number and thinking,
really? I didn't know that. I suppose you could say that, yes. I would also push back, though,
and say that I have never been in this for the money. I'm adamant about that. I've never advertised. I've never required subscriptions or anything else because I'm trying to go into this at all. I was simply answering questions on my Facebook page. I think what we're identifying is an extraordinary hunger among
the American people, not only to understand their history, although that's there too,
but also to feel like they have a part in this society. And what I am doing is offering a story,
if you will, the story of America in which we have all participated, and people are really
eager to be part of that.
Speaking about you discussing the different platforms, you started on Facebook and are still there.
But now the Substack controversy, I'd be remiss if I didn't ask about it.
The company has come under fire for tolerating Nazis and white supremacists.
Tech reporter Casey Newton, who's a very close friend of mine, recently announced he was taking, and we talked about this a lot over the last couple of weeks. His popular newsletter platformer to ghost as a result.
What do you think of the current controversy?
Because there's been several at Substack, as you know.
And have you had conversations with them about the issue?
So I always like to emphasize that for me, Substack was always a technology platform.
I was never part of the cultural movement that they were trying
to create around there.
And the fact that
it is a cultural,
they're attempting
to create a certain kind of-
They're doing editorial
no matter how they slice it.
They're doing it.
Yeah.
And that, I think,
has always been a problem.
I don't think
it's a new problem.
Now, the problem that I have
is whether or not
there's another platform
that can handle
the volume that I do.
And the reason that that matters is because we've got this big election coming up. And I've watched
what happened to Twitter. Once Twitter got taken over by the Nazis, Twitter was an extraordinary,
I'm sorry, maybe they're not just not, you know what I'm talking about.
Yeah, I know you're talking about.
Twitter was a site of resistance. And it is no longer. And the other platforms,
and I'm on a lot of other platforms, are good for different reasons, but they are not what Twitter was before Musk took it over.
And so one of the things that I am grappling with is that if I move elsewhere, if I am able to move elsewhere with the volume I'm doing, am I destroying Substack as the center of resistance it is?
Because it's not just me.
There's Joyce White Vance.
There's, I mean, like, there's Kevin Cruz.
You are the main, you are the star.
I'm the big dog in the fight, for sure.
You are the Taylor Swift of Substack.
So I think if you can read between the lines, you will be able to hear whether or not I'm exploring other options.
Have I put pressure on Substack behind the scenes?
Yes.
And what is the reaction?
You can see how well it worked.
Yeah, yeah, it didn't.
It worked.
We're talking to five Nazis.
We're going to kick off five Nazis.
That was helpful.
But it is, I mean, their argument is that this is about free speech, and there are many ways in which that's problematic.
They're not a governmental structure at all.
They don't have to worry about the issue of free speech.
But I think that's really facile because it's not just this particular issue of these six people.
There are issues about public discourse and that they were violating their own principles.
But also, in what way do you get to shape that cultural discourse?
And I want a tech platform.
I don't want to be part of somebody else's experiment.
But they're not doing that.
They're doing that.
No, that's right.
That's right.
They're doing moderation in some fashion and editorial with their social network.
What do you think?
Do you think I should stay or go?
I think you should leave.
Go.
You think I should leave?
Yes.
I think it would send a big signal.
Well.
Yeah, I do.
Well, but just to play this out a little bit.
You've got the power to make changes.
Yes.
You've got the power to make changes. Yes, but again, you know I do my research,
but it is going to be imperative that somebody else can pick up
the other voices that I would like to preserve.
So if I leave, Substack's got itself a major problem, I would guess.
I'm not privy to their numbers, but I think they've got a major problem.
But if that takes down the site, what happens to Joyce White Vance?
You bring her with you.
You have a big boat, Heather.
If somebody else can handle that volume.
Right.
See what I'm saying?
Yeah.
So we're in the midst of this, as you can see.
I don't know if it's going to bring down the site necessarily, but that's the way things work.
People walk with their feet. You know, I've done it many times. Last question, I'm going to end on a high note. There's a scene that
comes up again and again in the book, Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, which happens to be one of
my favorite pieces of writing. 272 words, and the piece itself was not that well received at the
time, yet it remains, I think, one of the most enduring speeches in American history. Everyone knows the famous line, four scores and seven years ago, which refers to the Declaration
of Independence.
But its final line, the kicker, is profound, that I'm only reading the back part of it,
that we here are highly resolved that these dead shall not have died in vain, that this
nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom, and the government of the people
by the people for the people shall not perish from the earth. So what's your best historical guess of
how we can have that new birth of freedom? Great question, because one of the points that I made
in Democracy Awakening was that we have expanded American liberal democracy since the beginning.
And one of the things that it feels to me that we are in right now is the birth process of expanding that liberal democracy yet again. And the way we get that new birth of freedom and what that looks like is, for me anyway, taking the ideas of the New Deal that expanded liberal democracy so dramatically when it was enacted and de-centering what was then at the center of that New Deal, which
was heteronormative white men, essentially.
The New Deal was designed the same way that FDR's remaking of American government was
designed, and the same way that Lincoln's remaking of America was designed, to enable
men to be able to support a nuclear family, or to be able to support their families.
And it seems to me that de-centering white
heteronormative men from the center of American society and putting in place children, which is
ultimately the end goal of societies anyways, to protect their children, creates the opportunity
for there to be both economic, social, cultural patterns that really do enable us to re-envision what it means
to live in a liberal democracy. And I see what is happening around us. And I see the sorts of
things that, for example, Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden are trying to put
in place. And it looks to me like a real move in our society away from, you know, centering heteronormative white
men, which I, you know, think is the next step of where a liberal democracy on this continent goes.
And chances? Where are you putting chances?
So I am putting the chances of restoring American democracy with heteronormative white men at the
center of it. Excellent. Although I do worry that Trump
has sewn up the nodes of American democracy. I am putting the chances of what I just suggested
as being very good in the next generation. I think it's going to be a harder sell for people who are,
let's say, over 40. But you know, one of the things that Tom Nichols of The Atlantic always points out is that by 2028, the American demographic that votes is going to be extraordinarily different.
The baby boomers are going to be moved off stage. And the younger generations are going to be the
primary voters in the United States. And I think that they're going to have a very different view
of liberal democracy than people like you and me do.
I would agree. I would agree. Presser, this has been fantastic. And not one terrible joke. I'm so happy. Except oopsie doopsie, which, you know, but I'll accept it. I'll accept it.
This has been wonderful. I am of a believer that the world spins forward,
like Tony Kushner wrote. So we'll just have to see. But I agree with you about young people,
for sure. Well, just have to see. But I agree with you about young people, for sure.
Well, here's to it.
We'll be back in a minute.
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Okay, Heather, we just heard you were very bullish on Biden's presidency and his chances if he got
his message out back in January. On the other hand, you said you thought that Trump's legal
battles would hurt him. Trump is now a convicted felon, you said you thought that Trump's legal battles would hurt
him. Trump is now a convicted felon, as I said, and he's fundraising more than ever. Last week,
we had a first presidential debate of 2024 campaign. Talk about your thoughts now on Biden
and Trump, given what you had said previously. Well, it's important to remember that I am not
living in the moment. I'm trying to look at how this presidency and this moment looks
in the larger sweep of American history.
And I still maintain,
still is probably the wrong word.
There's just no doubting
that the Biden-Harris presidency,
the administration,
has been the most consequential
in terms of domestic legislation
and foreign policy
since at least LBJ and possibly FDR.
What he has done and what they have done is to reorder the way the government interacts with ordinary Americans. As in, since
1980, the emphasis has been on supply-side economics, on the idea of letting the markets
run everything. He has simply said, no, that doesn't work, because what that ended up doing
was it enabled a group of authoritarians to rise around the world.
So in exchange for that, he and Vice President Kamala Harris have put in place a government that instead is very careful about foreign policy,
but does things like bringing supply chains home and manufacturing home as national security issues as well as good domestic policy.
And, you know, we've gotten the American Rescue Plan and the bipartisan infrastructure law and the Inflation Reduction Act and the Ships and
Science Act. I mean, we could go through the whole list. But Trump has never been stronger in the
polls. Why do you think his legal woes and his continued, you know, focus on the past,
which he'd like to return to, is working? So I'm going to take, I'm going to disagree with that and say
something else that I think you will like. And that is that I don't think it's wrong if you,
again, look at the polls, but I don't think it's wrong that his convictions have hurt him,
and they have hurt him with the crucial demographic in this 2024 presidential election,
and that's swing voters. Because Trump's adherence, we know in any reactionary movement,
you're going to get a maximum of between about 27 to 28 percent and 32 to 33 percent. He's got
those people, he's not going to lose them. The Democrats have a similarly strong base, but there's
a lot of people in the middle. And again, we know that those people are not necessarily for Trump or
for Biden. What they are overwhelmingly is uninformed.
They're not paying attention to politics. And that's not really that unusual. Most people don't
do that until about October. So the thing that has changed for me in the period you're talking
about is not any of those larger patterns. What has changed for me is that I have been concerned
now for decades about the degree to which what I called at the
time movement conservatives, that's how they start. But I think now you have to put them in
the category of Christian nationalists have taken over crucial nodes of American democracy. And the
one to look at first and foremost is the Supreme Court. And while the Supreme Court has been pushing a pro-business, pro-Christian nationalist
agenda for a long time now, I think we can see really recently with the overturning the Chevron
decision, for example, that they are—and the delay, by the way, of the decision about Trump's
immunity, which has essentially given him what he wanted.
Time.
They have pushed that trial, that extraordinary trial, off until after the election.
Right.
So I think we're seeing the Supreme Court really putting its finger on the scale for the radical right.
But the thing that really has jumped out to me since the—I'm not even going to call it a debate because there was something else that happened on that stage, is the degree to which the American media
is failing us.
I've always been a huge proponent of the media.
I have defended them because I know it's a very hard job.
But if you looked at what happened on that stage.
This is the debate last week.
Yes.
It wasn't a debate, though, is the thing.
What was interesting about that stage was that there's certainly plenty to criticize Biden about. But Trump, who lied, who didn't answer a question, who did not say he would honor the outcome of the 2024 election, who insulted, I mean, it was just, it was a dumpster fire.
was a dumpster fire. And the media, instead of laying those things out, said, oh my God,
we got to look at Biden's age. And again, we know his age. Trump is three years younger.
We know that Biden has been extraordinarily effective as a president. And for me to see the media reacting that way was a huge light bulb moment. What could they have done differently?
Because in a lot of ways, it was hard to look away from, right? And also, from a personal point of view, a lot of people
know an elderly person, right? And they have had, there's an emotional quality to it that takes,
sucks the oxygen away from Trump. Oh, I totally disagree with that. I'll tell you what I think
happened. I think it's fine to say Biden had a really bad night. Although if you read the transcripts, I think people reacted in a different way than maybe was happening.
But that's fine to say.
But you had to call out what Trump was doing in that moment.
And I'm not even necessarily talking about fact checking.
I'm talking about the immediate reactions where, oh, my God, Biden needs to step down.
And I'm looking at it.
My head's exploding,
going, seriously? You have this guy over there that is essentially taking a flamethrower to
our country and not calling it out, giving him a pass. You called it a gish gallop in your newsletter,
use a rhetorical technique. Can you explain what that is and what Americans need to know
when people are using this technique?
Yeah, okay. So that's one, this is a form of gaslighting. I did not come up with that term.
That was a scientist who came up with that. It's just throwing so much shit. I'm sorry,
am I allowed to say that? No, you're allowed to say fuck too, but go ahead.
Throwing so much shit at somebody in a conversation that you don't know how to respond. That is, you needed to pick up this, you need to pick up that, and you end up sort of sitting
there, your mouth agape going, I'm overwhelmed. I don't know where to start. That is, you needed to pick up this, you need to pick up that. And you end up sort of sitting there, your mouth agape going, I'm overwhelmed. I don't know where to
start. And it is a known rhetorical technique. And it's exactly what he did in 2020 when he
had COVID and tried to dominate that debate. And in that case, so he just never stopped.
So people were sympathetic to Biden. In this case, he would stop and Biden would look like
a deer in the headlights. How do you respond to somebody saying that he's the one who lowered the price of insulin, that Biden got nothing done, that immigrants are pouring over the border at a far higher rate than they are actually coming over? hose of disinformation. And there are ways to handle that. And Biden should have been prepared
to handle that. But that's a very different thing. So whether it was a rhetorical play or not,
there are immediately calls for Biden to step down, as you know, from the campaign, and they
have not let up. They're even increasing, I would say. What does history tell us about the likelihood
for another Democrat to step in and defeat Trump at this point in a contested convention?
And is there a reason not to do that now for those who are asking you that question?
Yes. Just to be clear, the campaign is not calling for Biden to step down.
Pundits, especially white male pundits, are calling for Biden to step down.
And that's an important distinction.
So people like me are looking at this.
And again, who runs for the Democrats doesn't really matter to me. I am interested in the long term survival of American democracy. And what we know is Hubert Humphrey in 68 is a great example, because that's a case where, in fact, the frontrunner LBJ dropped out and left his vice president, who, by the way, people had not voted for. This is the other piece, the idea that the voters who voted for Biden are going to say, oh, yeah, fine, replace him.
voted for Biden are going to say, oh, yeah, fine, replace him. So there's that issue that it doesn't work. But the other one is that the reason that Biden and Harris are at the top of that ticket
are because they are the people who can nail together the incredibly complicated coalition
that the Democrats must have to win this election. And if you start to mess with that, there is not
another combination that can hold that. Similarly, if you look at the extraordinary ground game that
the Biden-Harris campaign has put out there, what are you going to do? Throw that up in the air and
say, oh, never mind that we raised money for Biden and Harris. We've got you out there knocking on
doors for Biden and Harris. Okay, now switch to our generic candidate. The other piece to it is that everybody has this fantasy that whoever
would replace Biden at the top of the ticket would be perfect. And the bottom line is that
every politician, every human being has reams of baggage. And they've gone through Biden's so that at this point,
they're trying desperately to invent something.
Anybody else they put up there
is going to be a sitting duck.
And this, you know,
the armchair quarterbacking
is kind of making my head explode.
So what does Biden do to show
that he's not possibly too old?
I think that's really, it does stick to him harder than it sticks to Trump, whether you
like it or not.
It just simply does.
What advice would you give to Biden in that regard?
Well, I think he's doing it.
I mean, people say he ought to get out with the people.
It's like, have you been looking at his schedule?
You know, he's doing the rallies, he's being out there and so on.
But I would say, again, something different. You know, one, I was going to tell you what my reaction, my larger picture reaction to that debate was. And that is that I wonder, and I'm not saying this is the case, I'm saying I wonder if the reason people lost it over that debate was because people like me had been saying for a long time now that people have forgotten how bad Trump is,
that he's been kept very tightly under wraps.
When he has done rallies, they're the faithful.
When he puts any information out, it's been a video that's been heavily edited.
And I wonder if what people were reacting to was, oh, my God, this really could be the next president.
And they remembered all the extraordinary anxiety
they had in 2016 when he won and the years after that. So I think that's a different look than
people have had, but I think that's consistent with the fact-
Because they saw him again.
They saw him again. And those of us who've been in this game really seriously all along were like,
we get this. Why have you not had your hair on fire?
Right. So there's that. What can Biden do? One of the things that I think is important in this election is people keep asking
what Biden can do. And the whole point of the 2024 election is it's about democracy. And Biden
and Harris cannot do any more than they are already doing. They do, after all, have a country to run,
cannot do any more than they are already doing. They do, after all, have a country to run,
and they are not getting decent coverage by the media. And by decent, I don't mean favorable,
I mean fair. And one of the things that I think going forward we're going to have to do for the next five months is people like you and me and, you know, the lady down the street have got to
push back on the narratives that the media is constructing.
Constructing.
So media.
Interesting.
I thought she'd like that.
Yeah, I thought that.
It's fine.
You can blame the media.
It's fine.
But my last question is, in January, you said you were worried that Trump has sewn up the nose of democracy.
You also said, quote, I'm putting the chances of restoring American democracy with heteronormative white men at the center as excellent.
democracy with heteronormative white men at the center as excellent. Not to end on a downer,
but do you still see democracy awakening, or are we in danger of it dying at the ballot box?
Spin out two possible scenarios that you can see based on history.
You know, it's interesting that you put it that way, because many people think I am a Pollyanna,
and that I don't think democracy is in danger. And my answer to that is, do you think I am a Pollyanna and that I don't think democracy is in danger. And my answer to that is,
do you think I stay up until four o'clock in the morning almost every day of the week and have done so for almost five years because I think we're playing? You know, this is the most crucial moment
for American democracy in our history. It's going to be a very close thing.
We need all hands on deck.
And do I think we're going to win?
I am very concerned about the reactions
to what happened on that stage at the CNN,
in air quotes, debate, because that is the, here we go,
let me step back. I believe that ideas change society. I'm a historian who is an idealist.
That is, I think if you want to change society, you change ideas. And the way you change ideas
is you change the public conversation. And that, of course, is what I've been trying to do now for
almost five years. And before that, in a lot of ways as well. When I saw the most
powerful voices for shaping the debate in America come out after what happened on CNN and jump not
on the person who is destroying democracy, not on the person who was all over the map,
couldn't answer a question, just kept throwing out lies, and instead jump on the guy who is three years older, but who has had an extraordinarily
successful president, that's the first time I have really been scared. And am I scared now?
Absolutely. Absolutely. I mean, it was always going to be a close thing, but here is my hope, that I am not the only one that took one look at that and thought, man, I knew we were working against the courts, and I knew we were working against, you know, the right-wing media, and I knew we were working against gerrymandering, and I knew we were working against voter suppression, but by God, I believe in the American people.
by God, I believe in the American people. When I saw that, I thought, you know, we can fight foreign propaganda, and we can fight all those other things, but if our media is going to treat
this like a clickbait race, we sure as hell better get out there and counter it to the best of our
ability, because I promise you, Americans do not understand how bad it will be if Trump and his people take
over our American system. And if they wonder about it, they should just look to what's happening in
Russia, especially on the front lines, Hungary, or any authoritarian country where, you know,
you might think it'll be just fine, we'll put a straw man in there and he'll do what I want. That's not how it works. You lose democracy, everybody suffers. And by
suffering, I don't mean you pay slightly higher gas taxes. We are looking at in two years what
should be the 250th anniversary of American democracy. And I hope to hell we get there.
I think we're going to end on that note. Heather, thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
This episode of On with Kara Swisher was produced by Naeem Arraza, Christian Castro-Russell,
Kateri Yochum, Jolie Myers, Megan Cunane, and Megan Burney. Special thanks to Mary Mathis,
Kate Gallagher, and Andrea Lopez Cruzado.
Our engineers are Fernando Arruda and Rick Kwan. And our theme music is by Trackademics.
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