Piers Morgan Uncensored - What Went Wrong For The Democrats? With Kyle Kulinski, Cenk Uygur & Harry Sisson
Episode Date: November 19, 2024While Republicans are sunning themselves in the warm glow of their triumph, ushering in the comeback term of Donald Trump, Democratic politicians, activists and voters are currently stumbling around i...n the dark. Their post mortem of the Kamala Harris campaign hasn’t yielded any solid answers yet, and the disunity amongst them betrays a deeper problem. In this special Blue Vs Blue edition of Uncensored, Dems, liberals and progressives get their chance to discuss what went wrong, what they should do now, and evidently, get some things off their chests. Piers Morgan is joined on Uncensored today by host & founder of “The Young Turks” Cenk Uygur, presidential historian & pollster Allan Lichtman, TikTok Democrat influencer Harry Sisson, senior political analyst for FOX News Juan Williams, political commentator & host of The Kyle Kulinski Show Kyle Kulinski and former Ohio State Senator Nina Turner. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think Kamala ran basically the platonic ideal of a non-woke Democratic campaign.
What's the future of the Democrats?
Who would you like to see run the party now?
John Stewart.
Honestly, a controversial, charismatic celebrity might make all of the difference.
Possibly the loss would have been worse if Taylor Swift and folks like Oprah
weren't working with Kamala Harris.
Although Taylor Swift is popular, obviously she's not that popular because she did not move the needle.
Alan, you deserve a tall glass of shut up juice.
You live in a total world of denial.
I read your own followers' comments, and they all trashed you.
I mean, brother, I said what was going to go wrong.
It did go wrong.
I was right.
It's lovely to see a post-upon-harmonies.
You should not be taking cheap shots at me, and I won't stand for it.
Hey, Alan.
The inquest into the shock death of a Democratic Party is so far proved inconclusive.
But the only clear message emerging from the ruminations, as with the campaign itself,
is that the orange man is still back.
Just about nobody on the left can agree on why the orange man, therefore won by a landslide,
and what should happen next?
Here's just a snapshot of views from the masterminds who were wrong about, well, almost everything.
It is time for the Democrats to say, okay, and you and I have talked about this before,
a lot of Hispanic voters have problems with black candidates.
Right.
And with other Hispanics.
Have some that don't like each other.
The working class of this country is angry,
and they have a reason to be angry.
I don't respect him saying that the Democratic Party
has abandoned the working class families.
That's where we are.
Elon Musk is, I don't know, how many hundreds of billions he has,
he has been the director of misinformation.
And this idea that, like, oh, no, the economy is actually good
or crime is actually down,
this is all just Fox News.
Like, shut the fuck up with that.
Like, talk to some people who live near you.
I mean, this really was an historic,
flawlessly run campaign.
She had, Queen Latifah never endorses anyone.
She came out and endorsed it.
I got bad news for you.
They don't have a monopoly on stupid.
You wear queers for Palestine t-shirts
and masks two years after the pandemic ended.
And you can't define woman.
I mean, person who menstruates.
Exactly. Whatever the prescription should ultimately be, the diagnosis is surely crystal clear.
Trump has made commanding inroads with working-class voters, black voters, Latino voters, urban voters, and young voters.
It's a veritable rainbow coalition that disaffected people who are Democrats have traditionally relied upon and more recently taken for granted.
So what drove them away? Was it government-funded operations to transgender illegal aliens?
Was it prioritizing SNL and 60 Minutes over Joe Rogan and Theo Von?
was at the warm embrace of Liz Cheney
and a hawkish, even conservative stance
on the wars in Israel and Ukraine.
Was it gas-studying America
into believing Joe Biden was so sharp
he could slice concrete
and then ousting him for a simply dreadful candidate
in Kamala Harris? Maybe it was
all of the above, delivered with a customary,
liberal serving of supreme self-confidence
and the firm belief that everyone
who disagrees with them is a moron or a bigot.
But joining me for an unscensored battle
for the heart and soul of the Democratic Party,
the host and founder of the Young Turks,
Czech Yuga, presidential historian and pollster
Professor Alan Lickman,
Democrat influencer Harry Sissom,
an author of New Prize for these eyes,
a senior political analyst of Fox News 1.
Williams, well, welcome to all of you,
one in particular, long times as I've spoken to you.
Great to have you, I think,
making your debut on our census, so thank you very much.
This is blue-on-blue, chaps,
so you can rip into each other to your heart's content,
and hopefully out of it,
we may get some form of consensus
over certain ways that the Democrats could go.
One, let me start with you.
When you look at the election
and you look at the thumping win Trump got
and who he won it with,
do you think this whole campaign by the Democrats
to portray him as racist, sexist, transphobic,
Islamophobic, a Nazi, blah, blah, blah, blah,
did they just over-egg the devilment souffle
and just in the end play into his hands?
Well, I think they thought, based on the numbers, that this was going to be an effective form of attack.
And I think it was for the base of the party.
But I think that there were a lot of people who were attracted to other parts of Trump.
And I think the whole macho man thing, it worked.
You know, you were talking about a rainbow coalition.
No, it wasn't a rainbow coalition.
But I think that you saw white men still go big for Trump.
You saw the Latino men.
And I think that's the big story of the election.
Latino men suddenly went towards Trump, and there were some black men.
I think it was a male thing.
And I think, again, you know, the idea that he said offensive, vulgar things about women,
the fact that he is, and, you know, says he wants to be an authoritarian.
That's all true.
But I think a lot of the men said, you know what, we like it.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And, I mean, Professor Lickman, you correctly forecast the result of nine of the past 10 U.S.
presidential elections, but not this one.
Like most pollsters, after
a very, very few people predicted a big win.
Other than I might, if I may
be so modest, I did.
I went on Fox News 10 days before with Brian
Kilbin said, I think he's going to win big.
But actually, most people thought
we'd be incredibly tight and it could go either way
and so on, but it wasn't that at all.
Why do you think Trump
is so difficult to poll?
Which is clearly the conclusion I would draw
from this.
Well, you know,
I am forthright.
rightly willing to admit, I missed this election. I still think I actually had 10 out of 10 before.
I think I was right about 2000, but we're not here to litigate that. I still think it's a pretty
good record. Now, I think two things are operating here. Number one, I was incredibly critical
at the time of the spineless, cowardly Democrats openly and viciously trashing their elected president
and their elected nominee right out there in the open.
I have never seen that before, and I've studied American politics since the founding.
And that tainted any nominee.
And they're now taking no responsibility for that.
They're blaming everybody else.
Until they look in the mirror, the Democratic Party is going to be in trouble.
Secondly, why did my keys miss?
Because my keys are based upon the proposition that a pragmatic, rational,
electoral, decides whether or not the White House party has governed well enough to get four more years.
That was exploded this time by a new wave of disinformation that we've never seen before.
In addition to the usual sources of disinformation, we had a huge change this time, a 300 billionaire,
a guy who's richer than most countries of the world, who controls X spreading vast disinformation,
According to reports, billions upon billions of viewers saw his disinformation.
People have a completely distorted view of the economy.
What was the disinformation?
Let me pin you down on that, though.
You say Elon Musk was spreading disinformation, like what?
Yes, he is spreading vast disinformation that sunk in.
Even people who think their own financial situation is pretty good.
Think inflation is going up when it's been cut by 75%.
that unemployment is a near high when it's an year low.
On that point, see, it's interesting, you would say that's disinformation,
but the point is that inflation is still not zero,
therefore prices are still going up.
The only way you get inflation to zero is with a recession.
Yeah, but here's my point.
Obviously.
Here's my point, yeah, but here's my point.
Democrats kept telling the American people rather arrogantly, I thought,
you know, the economy's in really good shape.
Meanwhile, inflation still exists.
In other words, prices have continued to go.
up and up and up, albeit not at the same rate, they were going up. But if it wasn't zero,
and it wasn't, it was like two and a half percent or whatever by the end, that is still inflation.
So it's not disinformation to say Americans are still suffering inflation.
The only way you get it to zero is a recession, is deflation. That's ridiculous.
Inflation has been cut by 80 percent, but it's not just inflation that people are wrong about.
But do you accept inflation means prices are still going up?
Do you accept prices were still going up?
Of course.
Right. So that's the point.
unless you have a recession.
That's not disinformation, is it?
By Elon Musk, that isn't disinformation.
And it's disinformation about every other aspect of the economy as well.
Disinformation about undocumented immigrants, like they're their bloodthirsty killers.
They are the most law-abiding segment of our society.
According to numerous studies, including by the Libertarian Cato Institute,
they commit crimes, including violent crimes, less than half of that of Native Americans.
And they don't drain our economy.
They are the mainstay of the agricultural, construction, personal service, hospitality industries.
Studies show you will drive the economy into a recession if you go through large-scale deportation of immigrants,
and you will sweep huge numbers of U.S. citizens because all the databases used to identify undocumented immigrants are fundamentally flawed.
You can't have a pragmatic electorate under these conditions.
mainstream media is utterly feeble. It spends 20 times more time on meaningless polls within the
margin of era than it does telling truth to power and indicating the consequences of this election.
Okay, but it is, okay, I'm going to come to-
Cheng. I mean, Cheng, you know, the biggest deporter in American presidential history was
Barack Obama, who deported over three million people. This idea that Trump is going to become,
there's some outlier in terms of mass deportation,
the great mass deporter was actually a Democrat president, Obama,
by a long way, by the way.
So this idea of like disinformation,
I think some of it was disinformation,
but it's, you know, the idea that this election was only won
through right-wing disinformation, I think I'm afraid.
I view that as a total delusion by the Democrats, again.
Yeah.
Yeah, I totally agree with you.
I'm sorry, but I totally disagree with Juan and Professor Lickman.
Don't blame the voters.
I think, look, we could get into this discussion, but, Juan, I think you're blaming the voters.
I think that's a terrible idea.
And look, I debated Professor Lickman before.
I told him his theories about the keys were absurd.
I was right.
He was wrong.
I said he'd lose his keys.
No, you were not right, and I was not wrong.
And that's a cheap shot, and I won't stand for it.
Who won?
You should not be taking cheap shots at me.
Who want? You live in a total world of denial.
I read your own followers' comments, and they all trashed you, every one of them, and supported me.
So quiet with your personal attacks.
Come find out again.
Make whatever point you want.
You don't know anything.
You don't know anything.
You attacked me personally.
You're so deluded.
I've only been a professor of 51 years published 15 books.
I've never been able to finish a thought.
How many books have you published?
No, because you're perfect.
personally attacking me again.
Say whatever you want, but I'm not going to stand for personal attacks.
Okay, brother, you got it wrong.
Say whatever you want.
You were preposterously and stupidly wrong.
So, okay, all right, can I just finish a goddamn thought ever on this show?
No, not if you're personally, I admitted I was wrong.
I don't need you to call me stupid.
Okay.
Can I just say it's great to see you Democrats all getting along so well?
It's lovely to see a post-collegence in harmony is your point.
We're just one right now.
Hey, Alan, you deserve a tall glass of shut up juice, so can you just shut up for a second?
And let someone who knows what they're doing.
You're so right, you're so right.
So any point you want, I will not sit here and stand for personal attacks for blasphemy against me.
You don't need to do that.
You don't blast for me against you.
What the hell are you?
Are you Jesus Christ, you a loser?
Okay.
Can I just give the correct answer for once?
Okay, here we go.
So, guys, your bloodline.
blaming disinformation there was this information there was the cats and the dogs
nonsense at the points you're making about undocumented immigrants i agree with
alan okay
but that didn't cost the election the main disinformation
was about the how the election was going to be rigged and it wasn't rigged it was
dumb they won it easily there was no need for that disinformation
you guys are missing the whole point
the people who are at fault are not other people
it is the candidate camela harris the previous candidate joe by
Biden, Democratic Party, Democratic leadership.
You guys don't want to admit that they're the problem.
They're the cancer in the Democratic Party.
So you blindly lash out at the voters, that information, at social media, and you want
to shut down anyone who disagrees with you.
That's not the correct answer.
There are three wings of the Democratic Party.
There's the establishment wing that the great majority, almost everyone on television supports
and kisses the ass of and does part.
propaganda for that wing has led to disaster. They lost to Donald Trump twice, nearly lost
whom three times. And then the other wing is called a progressive wing, but those are two
different sets of people. And the progressive, so-called progressive wing, what you have is the
identitarian left, the people who do what the right wing would call woke politics and identity
politics. And that is disastrous. That's what the trans ad was at the end. And it cost us.
the most popular part of the Democratic Party is the populist left.
That is the Bernie Sanders 2016 campaign.
That part says, let's do super popular economic proposals like paid family leave, hire minimum wage,
universal health care, public option.
Let's do all of these things.
And the establishment goes, no, our corporate corporations don't want that, our donors don't want that.
So we'll just do identity politics.
And maybe identity politics will unite the left.
But it didn't. Identity politics led to disaster. It was a poison within the Democratic Party
used ironically by the establishment Democrats because they didn't want to talk about popular
proposals that we have because their donors hate those proposals.
Okay. Let me bring in Harry. Harry, you tweeted or posted on X on November the 6th.
Carmelah Harris's speech was amazing. Graceful, strong, hit the right tone. She's a fantastic
leader and a great raw model. No idea how she lost Trump. You're a bright young guy, Harry. I've
I interviewed you several times.
You know why she lost.
And that speech, in a way, to me,
was the perfect illustration.
She basically said nothing.
She talked about billions of stars in the moonlight
and shining lights and all of it.
There was nothing there.
There was no meat on the bone, no substance.
And that was her problem throughout the whole campaign.
She had 100 days to show America,
here's how I'm going to fix all your problems.
Instead, she did the Hillary Clinton playbook.
After promising us as joy and sunshine,
immediately pivoted to Trump's at a Nazi.
They're all fascists.
They're all disgusting.
And by the way, here are all my rich, famous entertainment friends
who are all going to surround themselves on me on stages.
Didn't work for Hillary, didn't work for Kamala.
And at some point, young guys like you who are the future of the Democrat Party,
you've got to wake up a spell of the cappuccino.
You need a candidate that can resonate.
I mean, Checks right.
The Democrat candidate who has most...
resonated with the public was Bernie Sanders.
Right?
You'd have done better with him running a mis-election.
But you guys don't see it that way, do you?
Well, I think that since the election happened
and sitting with it for a couple weeks,
I know why Kamala Harris lost.
You know, I think that what I said was premature.
And I think it's a combination of what all the gentlemen
around me are saying.
I think it's like a middle ground in life,
which I think is often the case,
which is I think Professor Lickman is right
that it was a lot of disinformation,
pushed by a lot of bad actors in the right wing.
But I think that chank in the gentleman beside you from fuck...
Hang on, Harry, Harry.
There was disinformation from the left as well.
When you keep calling him a Nazi...
But, Pierce, it's not to the same...
Hang on. It's not to the same level.
When you keep calling Donald Trump a Nazi and a fascist and all these things,
and his supporters, Nazi sympathizers...
It was his own supporters who called him a Nazi.
Because he hasn't murdered 12 million people, and he's not going to.
And you, by the way, you all know that.
So the disinformation is on both sides.
I disagree.
I disagree with calling Donald Trump a Nazi or calling him Hitler.
But I want to be clear that it was his own former advisors who called him that and likened him to Hitler.
Kamala Harris never got on his stage and said, oh, yeah, Trump's Hitler now.
She just alluded to the fact and brought up the fact that his own former advisor said that.
But I also want to make the point that I think that Chank and the gentleman from Fox News is right when it comes to the economy.
I think we were not great when it came to messaging on the economy.
that Trump had is that he could put his slogan on a yard sign. He could say, Kamala Harris,
Democrats, high prices, Trump and Vance, low prices. Kamala Harris, on the other hand, was tasked with
explaining, okay, here's why inflation went up. Obviously, it's not Joe Biden and me. It's because
of external factors. Here's why gas prices went up. Obviously, it's not me. It's external factors.
You know, if you're explaining, you're losing as the famous saying goes. So that was the uphill
battle that we had. And I think there was kind of a perfect storm that led to Donald Trump being
elected. And I think that I disagree with Chang. But you're missing something else.
You're missing something else, which is all the culture war stuff
that we kept being assured by the left nobody cared about.
No one cares about the trans debates, right?
Nobody cares that biological men are wrecking women's sport.
Nobody cares that they're invading women's personal spaces
and so on and so on.
No one cares that kids are being put through mutilating surgery before puberty.
And we kept being told nobody cares about this.
Leave them all alone.
It's transphobic.
I'm not transphobic.
I wanted trans people, as I still.
do to have fairness and equality in their lives exactly the same as all of us on this panel.
But when you keep telling people, it is fair. On the one hand, Democrats said, we protect women's
rights on abortion. On the other hand, we're absolutely fine for women's rights in sport to be
introduced at this ridiculous altar of biological men who are now trans women competing
against women and beating them. You can't be both. So the public went, and you're shaking,
your head, but look, the New York Times
did a report about that ad
which the Trump campaign did so
successfully and repeated. I saw it.
You know, Carmel is for they, then,
Trump's for you. They reckon it moved the needle
by two and a half points. It was the most
successful and effective
32nd ad in modern political
history. So people did care.
And the Democrats were just too
deluded, it seemed to me,
because most of them, you must realize
this issue of trans
athletes in women's sport is wrong.
You all know it's wrong.
For some reason, you wouldn't get off that train.
And that delusion was one of the reasons that you lost so badly, I believe.
But Pierce, to Professor Lickman's point, that ad in and of itself contained misinformation,
the ad was saying, oh, Kamala Harris wants to pay for prisoners' transgender surgeries.
All right, I said it a few years ago, but she said it.
But yeah, but wait, hold on.
In the New York Times also reported this, that this took place under Donald Trump's presidency as well,
because depriving a trans prisoner, the right to get gender affirming care,
is, yeah, Schenk, it's the law, it's the Constitution,
is against the Constitution of the United States
preventing cruel and unusual punishment
because if somebody is deemed medically necessary
to receive care, no matter what that care is
and you ban it or say, no, you can't get it,
that absolutely falls under cruel and unusual punishment.
So Donald Trump did the same thing,
and that's an example of the disinformation
or at least the lack of context
that Trump's campaign in-
Do you accept that this...
Yes, Jake, I'm sorry, yes.
But do you accept the so-called cultural stuff
that I would frame as a...
Very far left, progressive woke stuff.
I've seen a lot of Democrats in the more center part of the party.
Coming out now and publicly saying what I was saying for a long time,
apparently Bill Clinton get warning them internally.
David Axoraw has come out and said, we've got to stop this.
Joe Scarborough did a big monologue about it on Morning Joe.
At some point, you've got to recognize that most average Americans
just found all that stuff complete bullshit.
And that's one of the reasons you lost.
And you've got to move on from it.
If you've come back with another woke progressive platform in four years time,
you will be out of office potentially for four more, eight more, maybe 12 more years.
I promise you.
Take it to the back.
So, Pierce, I agree to a degree, but not in the way that you're framing it.
I think that we do have to move on from a lot of the culture war stuff, a lot.
I don't like the word woke, but I understand the context of you're using it.
I think that yes, and to some degree we have to move on.
But by moving on, we shouldn't throw people under the bus.
We shouldn't say, oh, you know, trans people are the reason why, or LGBTQ plus people are the reason why.
That's not the reason why.
It's just that the culture war stuff came off as very kind of gross to some Americans.
They really didn't like it.
So I agree to a degree, but not in the way that you're framing it.
Okay.
One, let's talk about race.
Can I get in here?
Well, one second, Jane.
One, because...
Hang on, hang on.
Hang on.
One thing, I'll come to you, Shane.
No way.
One, on the issue of race, many people found it extraordinary that a guy here.
a lot of people think he's racist, be a black woman.
And a lot of people that helped him win
turned out to be a lot more black men voting for him than first time
and a lot more Latinos voting for him than the previous times.
How important, if at all, was race in the end?
Or was it actually a case of a lot of black and Latino people
when we don't care about all that stuff?
What we care about is jobs, cost of living,
illegal immigration and so on.
Well, I think everybody cares about jobs, cost of living, inflation, and so on.
And by the way, I don't think you're right about those numbers.
I think there were more black men than black women who went towards Trump.
But remember, they're still a small segment of the overall electorate.
The big shift, actually, as I said, Latino men was a huge shift, and they're also not that
big a section of the electorate.
The big electorate in this country still is white people.
overwhelmingly white men went for Donald Trump and white women who I thought, and I think a lot
of posters thought, given the abortion issue and the success of abortion as an issue that favored
Democrats in 2020, but also after the Dobbs decision in 22 and all the referenda, white
women again voted for Trump. But so it, you know, you talk about is this a race issue?
the race issue may be that white Americans were overwhelmingly in support of Donald Trump.
And if you look at black America as overall, overall black America supported Kamala Harris.
Overall, Latino America supported Kamala Harris, even Latino men who had that big shift.
So to me, race is a part of the story because, you know, in America, the demographics are creating anxiety.
And I think the anxiety is most evident in terms of white America, seeing that there are more black,
people, but also Latinos as the second largest group in the country now and rising number of
Asians. It plays out in so many ways. And I think Donald Trump is just expert at exploiting, you know,
that racial anxiety to say to people, oh, you know, these Democrats are playing identity
politics or whatever. I think the identity politics, oh, one, we're played by Donald Trump
with white America. Chink, you wanted to jump in. Yeah. So look,
I'm going to address what Juan's saying to, but first, Harry, I know that the same policy was under Donald Trump, but that's not disinformation.
That's for our candidate to go out there and clarify that and to fight back and to make her case.
But she refused to make her case.
She barely did any interviews.
They were all incredibly structured to protect her fragile ego.
All she did was talking points.
Donald Trump's out there sometimes like a maniac, but a lot of times looking.
like a real person at McDonald's and with the garbage truck and our side goes,
oh, that's terrible. No, it's not terrible.
Those are great photos.
When our guy or a person is a corporate talking robot, that is not helpful.
We are misdiagnosing the case here.
So when on these identity issues, the Republicans said traps.
No, hold on.
The Republicans said traps for us.
So the great majority of the countries in favor of trans rights,
and I'm 100% in favor of trans rights.
And I bet you that the entire panel, including Pierce, says that as well.
But when you go beyond rights and you say, hey, they dug and dug, they tried to find,
hey, how about banning them from the military?
Trump tried them in the beginning.
It wasn't popular.
Banning them from bathrooms, not popular.
But they dug until they got to sports.
And that was winning ground for them.
And what I said is, guys, get out of there.
It's a trap.
You don't have to fight on that.
You're falling into their trap.
And what happened, as Pierce can attest to, is everyone else on the left scream, transphobe,
fascist, Nazi, let's dig in on our least popular position.
That was terrible politics.
Totally agree with that.
I love your brother, but it ain't about race.
It ain't about race.
You know what?
Latino men didn't vote for, hold on, hold on,
hold on. Latino men didn't vote for Donald Trump,
because all of a sudden they like white people or orange people.
They voted for them based on economic issues.
Democrats only think in terms of identity,
but that's not working anymore.
The one, number one identity people care.
about is not Latino black or white. It's class. Are you going to do something for the average
man or are you going to sit there and play identity politics so you avoid the more important
questions that your donors don't want to talk about that actually helps the average guy
like paid family leave and higher wages. Okay, Professor, I don't get it saying, I don't get it.
You know, the reality is like Bill Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Barack Obama, they stood up for
Obamacare. They stood up for fair pay.
These are populist issues at the heart of the Democratic Party.
You go after the Democratic Party donors on the establishment.
Democrats stood for those issues, brought them to the table and won.
And Democrats, if you look at what Joe Biden did in terms of bailing people out during the virus
and saying that we have to have infrastructure and building, that helped working people in this country.
But a lot of lies were told about that.
that history. Yeah, you can. Yeah, Professor, I know you've got to leave us, so just you wanted to jump in there.
Yeah. First of all, let me add a quick fact. There was no massive switch of black voters to Donald Trump.
Donald Trump got 13% of the black vote, 11% the last time. That's 2% of a very small segment of voters.
So that's one of the big myths of this election. Second big myth,
is that hindsight is 2020.
We have a lot of Monday morning quarterbacks
who, after the fact, are telling us
what Harris should and should not have done.
And you know, half of them are saying
she lost because she was too progressive.
She was too open to the charge of being a radicalist socialist.
The other half have said, of course,
she lost because she wasn't progressive enough.
We heard that from Schenck today.
It's all sports talk.
radio without the entertainment. There is no way to know after the fact what she should or should
not have done. If she had only done this or that, it would have made a difference. That's just
hot air with absolutely no proof. The difference that I bring to the table is a track record
of successful prediction based upon how American presidential elections have previously worked
as pragmatic decision-making on whether or not the White House party has governed well enough.
And then my analysis is based upon what's changed, what's shattered the pattern of 160 years of history.
So I have a base for my analysis. I'm not just doing Monday morning quarterbacking.
Jank, you need to learn some manners. Your act is getting really thin.
I mean, brother, I said what was going to go wrong. It did go wrong. I was right.
wrong in this election spectacularly solved with your so-called keys, and now you come and tell us
not the Monday morning quarterback. And unlike you, I'm willing to admit what I'm wrong. Are you ever
going to learn the lessons? Can I just ask, hang on, hang on, for those who have no idea what the
key thing is all about, why are you flashing keys? Okay, because this brother said that he had
these keys and they were going to determine the outcome of the election, and all the keys were rigged
in favor of incumbents. And I tried to explain to him, no, there are things outside of the
keys. We literally had a debate, and I asked him, what if Joe Biden?
This was back when he was defending Joe Biden, which now seems unconscionable.
What if Biden came and punched the baby every single day?
Would your keys still hold?
And he said, yes.
Okay, well, then you're an unreasonable person.
I was right about it's not the past.
Let me explain why.
I was right about Biden.
You have no idea how absurd you sound.
Okay, but guys, the most important thing is not between me and Professor Lickman.
God bless you, brother.
I know you did a lifetime's worth of work, and I feel a little bit bad about it.
The reason I'm saying it is not to rub it in now.
It's because I'm worried that in the next primary,
you're going to tell people to vote for the establishment Democrat,
that all of you on this panel are going to go,
oh, no, vote for the corporate robot, vote for the corporate robot.
And that's going to destroy this party.
That's why I'm fighting back so aggressively.
Give me a name.
Give me a name.
No, vote for the populist left.
Give me a name.
Well, in the old days, it easily would have been Bernie Sanders.
It was too old.
So, look, I'd start, I would start considering Sean Fane,
head of the UAW, Sean O'Brien, head of the Teamsters, John Stewart.
Go outside of politics.
Almost everyone in politics is already corrupted.
Find someone who is not corrupted and who's for the average man.
Harry, you're shaking your head.
But I mean, John Stewart, if he could be persuaded,
I would imagine it could be very good as a candidate, couldn't it?
No, I don't take objection to John Stewart.
I just think we have some people in the Democratic Party
who are very talented right now who could be the Democratic nominee.
Give me some names.
Governor Shapiro won Pennsylvania by like 20 points.
Governor Westmore in Maryland, how much more connected to people do you need other than, like, West Moore, who's great.
Raphael Warnock from Georgia won a swing state and is a senator from a swing state.
Gretchen Whitmer, who had a trifecta in Michigan for the first time in a long time.
There's really talented people in the Democratic Party who are elected officials right now, and Shank can shake his head all he'd like.
But these people are winning in swing states overwhelmingly.
Who would you like to see, Harry?
I think any of the people I just mentioned, I'd love to see.
I'd love, and there's plenty more, but I think we're going to have a great primary in 2020.
I'm pretty sure.
I would lay good money now that J.D. Vance will be the Republican nominee in 2020.
I'd say it's probably a good bet.
Because I think he's actually, he, in direct contrast to Mr. Walt, so I thought was a total disaster.
I thought J.D. Vance started with a lot of negativity, but became a real force for Trump,
particularly in getting young men to come out and vote for him.
So I suspect he'll be the nominee, but we'll see.
Professor Lippman, we're going to say goodbye to you.
Thank you very much for joining us. I appreciate it.
In a moment, though, we're not going to be joined by, to add to our panel,
the Ohio State Senator Nina Turner,
and first making his uncensored debut,
the host of the Carl Kalinsky show, Carl Kalinsky.
Well, Carl, welcome to our senator.
We're trying to get you for a long time.
Let's have a little chat with you before we get reaction from the panel.
But why did the Democrats blow it so badly,
and what do they do to avoid this happening again in four years?
I mean, the simple answer is,
is that Kamala Harris kind of codes as a technocratic status quo manager
and Trump codes as a change agent.
And so, I mean, to sum it up as simply as possible,
voters just thought he's going to deliver more change.
She's more of the same, and they broke for him.
Who would you like to see run the party now?
What's the future the Democrats looking like to you?
John Stewart.
I've been pushing that since the day Trump won this time around
because what we need is, honestly, a controversial, charismatic celebrity might make all of the difference,
but it's that mixed with Bernie Sanders' policies of actually delivering social democracy for people,
raising their pay, getting them health care. I think that's the magic stew. And honestly,
I think it's a shame that more people aren't talking about the controversial, charismatic
celebrity portion of Trump being so successful, is that you can't keep the cameras off him. He's entertaining.
Love him or hate him? You can't stop watching him.
And so we need to sort of mirror that on the left.
And I think the way of doing that is John Stewart.
But I would add to that what Bill Marseby warning for a long time to liberals,
speaking as a liberal himself.
And I'm pretty much where he is politically, I think.
I feel the same way.
And I know you've been keen to say, look, Carverner didn't mention any of these woke issues or whatever,
but she's very much associated with a lot of those woke issues.
She's certainly voted in line the lot of the more progressive stuff,
like allowing transgender athletes in women's sport
and so on. So she's seen to be a progressive who then moved rapidly to the centre when she got
the nomination and it was all too much of a screech for people, probably on both sides.
But this whole woke ideology, I don't mean the original woke ideology of raising awareness for
racial and social injustice. I mean, the way it's become a kind of new form of fascism,
where the far left just basically want to cancel shame and humiliate absolutely anybody who disagrees
with them about anything. Do you accept
that that has become a problem,
a stick to beat the party with,
which actually really damages
them electorally?
No, I think
Kamala ran basically the platonic
ideal of a non-woke
democratic campaign. She never mentioned
race. She never mentioned gender.
She never mentioned trans people. She never mentioned
pronouns or Latinx or cancel culture.
She repeatedly stressed that she was going to represent
all Americans. She ran to the right
on the issue of the border. She talked about owning
a gun. She ran on freedom and patriotism. And so when you put all that stuff together, I simply don't
know what people are talking about when they say she's doing about her record. Well, they're talking about her
record. Hang on, hang on. They're talking about her record as vice president of the Biden administration
where they never stopped talking about this stuff for nearly four years. So you can pretend when you get
the nomination. Whoa, I'm a centrist. And I'm a gun-toting Rambo, by the way, as well,
to all you Second Amendment people. But actually, if you judge her on what she said and did,
in four years, she was a progressive left person.
And to pretend otherwise is to just ignore what went on in that period.
What I'm much more concerned about is not Democrats being woke or Democrats censoring speech.
I'm much more concerned about Trump's record on those things.
So, for example, Trump said he wants to punish flag burning with a year in jail.
That's against the First Amendment.
He sued CNN for $475 million for calling election denialism the big lie.
Before he was president, he sued Bill Maher for $5 million over a joke.
He said he wants to open up the libel laws.
He called for jailing journalists who report on the Supreme Court abortion ruling early before the decision dropped.
How many of those things that he do in his first term?
How many of those things that he actually do in his first term?
Because it seems to me another problem, and he does this brilliantly, by the way, with the left.
He sucks you in because he just shoots him here, but he says stuff that crosses his mind or whatever.
And rather than pick him off on stuff he actually does,
you all go completely nuts every time he opens his mouth
and says something a bit crazy.
And if I was advising him with Democrats, I'd be like, stop, stop doing this.
You're literally playing into his trap every time you do this.
Just pick him off, pick him off on the stuff he actually does.
Then you've got a better chance.
All right, I'll do that.
Here, ready?
He gag ordered the EPA from telling the truth on climate change.
That's deeply anti-free speech.
He arrested and charged six journalists with felony rioting.
He did not pardon Assange.
He did not pardon Snowden.
He did not pardon Daniel Hale.
He wanted to invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy the U.S.
to deploy our own troops against George Floyd protesters.
These are all things that are actually on the record, things he actually did.
And the thing that I find incredibly frustrating is that nobody talks about it.
Trump magically gets a pass for things he actually did.
He doesn't get a pass.
Democrats get held to a super high standard.
Come on.
He doesn't get a pass.
Trump has had,
Trump has had...
Wait, wait, wait.
Wait, wait.
Hang on, let me ask you.
Let me ask you.
Trump has had the most unrelentingly hostile media
from a mainstream media
that is largely staffed by liberals.
We know this,
because the way they all go nuts
when their paper wouldn't come out
and endorse Kamala and they all resign,
so they reveal their true colors.
Cable news, the same.
MSNBC, CNN, you can fire a harpoon
around their newsrooms
and you wouldn't hit a conservative, right?
So let's just get real about the way mainstream media is made up.
I've worked in it.
And there are very few conservatives.
And that is part of the problem as well.
And I just think that ultimately, if the Democrats are going to try and make themselves electable,
they've got to move wholesale on now to a far more effective way of campaigning.
And it can't just be every time Donald Trump speaks, mass hysteria, shaving your head,
going on TikTok and posting videos of yourself screaming and saying you'll never have sex with a Trump supporter again.
All this stuff is insane.
How about just telling the truth?
Wait, wait, wait.
How about just telling the truth?
That's a radical idea, right?
When was the last time you heard
that Trump arrested and charged
six journalists with felony rioting?
Who talked about that?
Did CNN talk about that?
Did MSNBC talk about that?
Did you talk about that?
Nobody talks about it.
And the fact of the matter is Trump attacks Democrats
four times as hard as they attack him.
Yeah.
So if anything, the lesson to take away is the opposite.
Democrats should get more arrogant,
they should get more aggressive,
and they should tell the truth more.
Come on, Kyle.
You know that would be utter serious.
Oh, that's the truth.
You know what?
You wouldn't be as good at it as he is
because he does it with humor.
You lot all do these incredibly straight-faced
virtue signaling,
I'm outraged, by the everything, faces.
And it's like, if you all just chilled out a bit,
have a bit of cool, have a bit of a laugh.
That's why I said John Stewart.
Death by Mockrookre.
Well, actually, you're right.
John Stewart gets exactly the right tone.
On that, I agree with you.
That's right, yeah.
I agree.
I agree.
Let's bring in Nina Turner and the rest of the panel.
Nina, you've floated that Rahm Emanuel as a new DNC chair would be a good signal,
but a Democrat Party is only there for the donor class.
Many other people would say that Rahm Emanuel is a very effective political operator,
and actually the Democrats need a bit of that muscle now.
It appears very effective at a cover-up.
As we know, as mayor of the city of Chicago, he covered up the police murder of Laquan McDonald.
He closed many schools in...
in the black community.
Certain segments of the black community
are very outraged by him.
He is more of the same and should be as far away
from the DNC as possible.
Now, if the Democrats want to lose again
and get handed again like they just did in 2024,
then go ahead and have Rahm Emanuel there.
But if they wanna do a new thing and answer
to the working class people of this country
from all backgrounds, then they need to have somebody there,
primarily who's going to say,
no more dark money in Democratic primary.
Ram Emanuel is an absolute no.
We know that the Chicago Teachers Union feels the same way,
and many others will come out against him if he decides to run for that.
Okay. Juan, let me bring you back in,
because MSNBC is now at war, which is always entertaining to watch,
because Joe Amika from The Morning Show,
went off of the revealed this morning to go and see Trump in secret
at the end of last week after bombarding him with abuse for years and years and years,
having originally been great friends of him.
But another MSNBC presenter, Katie Fang, has now tweeted normalizing Trump is a bad idea,
period.
So clearly there is an internal fracturing going on, which I suspect is going on in the Democrat
Party at large, because I would urge them to be more collegiate with Trump.
I've always felt that he's one of those guys.
He's a natural pugilist.
If you read his book, The Art of a Deal, and he says, if you punch me, I'll punch you
ten times back.
Actually, if you go and hang out with Trump,
and I've criticized him as much as I've praised him,
he can take criticism if he feels like you're not just unrelentingly abusive.
So I actually thought that Joe and Meeke will play a clip from what they said this morning,
but I thought this was a good move on their part.
Let's take a look.
Joe and I went to Marilago to meet personally with President-elect Trump.
It was the first time we have seen him in seven years.
Now, we talked about a lot of issues, including abortion, mass deportation, threats of political
retribution against political opponents and media outlets.
We talked about that a good bit.
And it's going to come as no surprise to anybody who watches this show, has watched it
over the past year or over the past decade, that we didn't see eye to eye on a lot of issues,
and we told him so.
What we did agree on was to restart communications.
Well, what do you make of that?
I mean, you know, I actually feel America has been so toxic in the way it's become so tribal.
And they've been part of that, no question, on one side.
And Fox have done it, I guess, on the other and so on.
Is it, it should be encouraged both sides to come together a bit more, like they used to in the old days?
Sure.
I mean, look, I'm all for people working together, building bridges, kumbaya.
I'm all for it because I think, you know what, if you look at it, if you look at,
look at the Congress of the United States totally polarized, they're also totally paralyzed. They're not
getting anything done. We need to get things done. And on the world stage, I could go on and on.
But I think that with Joe and Mika, and I watch that show, so I'm no critic of it in that sense,
because I subscribe, if you will. But let me just tell you, it looked to me like their ratings have gone
through the floor. They have, yeah. And I think that when people talk about Trump, you talk about Trump,
he's a celebrity. People have said you can't take the cash.
camera off him. I think for them, it's like, you know what, this is a way to get back in the media
ratings game, you know, the idea that we're connected to Trump. People like to advertise on shows
they know the president might be watching. They would love to get Trump to instead of watching
Fox and Friends to watch some of Joe and Mika, Morning Joe. But, you know, to me, that's a,
you know, it really calls into question, have they been authentic when they were saying that this
guy is so harsh when it comes to women, so harsh and racist when it comes to blacks and Latinos,
and has an authoritarian even, as we were saying, fascist streak. So were they sincere about that,
or are they now falling in line with others who find, you know what, I want to get on the bandwagon
because Trump has just been reelected and won the popular vote? To my mind, you've got to be
straight about your authentic sense so that the audience can trust you.
And I think they put that at risk today.
Well, it's interesting, Chink,
because the journalism professor and author Jeff Jarvis
has accused them, Joe Amika,
of inflicting a quote's betrayal on their colleagues,
democracy, and as all.
He tweeted it's a disgusting show of obeisance in advance.
Yeah.
So I have a different opinion than everybody here.
My first question would be,
what are we agreeing on?
So if you want to go to Trump
to get him to agree on things that we agree with,
like an anti-war position.
Fantastic.
Of course we should be open-minded to that.
You'd be nuts not to be open-minded to that, right?
If he were to actually do anti-corruption,
which he always promises but never does, right?
And you can get him to be open to that.
Fantastic.
But why are Mika and Joe going there to push for, you know,
the public option?
No, they're going over there to get access.
And so they seem like utter frauds.
Like if they could show me policies
that they care about that Donald Trump agrees to, or they have a strategy to get Donald Trump
to do good and decent things. Great. I'm super open to it. Look, I would want to do that. I got no
problems with me meeting with Donald Trump, Elon Musk, or anything else along those lines.
But what I'm not going to do is compromise my principles and my ideas just to get access.
So like, for example, I mean, see, the Democratic Party instantly going in the wrong direction.
Ramanuel is the biggest dog for corporate donors.
Picking him could be the worst possible thing you could do.
Do you know that Rahm Emanuel lost a thousand seats on his watch when he was at the DNC nationwide for the Democrats?
There isn't a bigger loser in the Democratic Party.
So look, we need a populist like John Stewart, which I actually, if you remember, Pears, I try to get him into this race.
But John, call me.
This guy never wants to get...
He doesn't realize how intensely popular he could be.
popular he could be. By the way, another candidate for president could be Nina Turner,
a person who actually fights for the average person has always been right about the populist left
and going for class instead of always being worried about identity politics. So there's so many
options here. Yeah. Kyle, a lot of people now say, including John Federman, that Nancy Pelosi
should go. She's the godmother, the enforcer. Now she's blaming Biden. You can't have it both
ways. I think it's really ironic of a woman of age 84 and she's still hanging on. Why not give a
younger generation opportunity to occupy that seat? I mean, Nancy Pelosi, it does seem to me they've got
to move on. And they get somebody younger, fresher, new ideas? I mean, I'm totally in favor of
cleaning house, but at the same time, that 100 would include the genocidal maniac that is John
Fetterman. So he's part of the problem that he thinks he's calling out here. He's one of the worst
of the worst. But on the broader point of just bringing in new leadership, bringing in fresh
ideas, bringing in people who believe in social democracy and Bernie Sanders' agenda and they're
willing to fight, 100% on board for that. Harry, celebrities like Oprah Winfrey, where it's now
been revealed that she and her company got paid closer to $2.5 million, rather than the original
million dollars as thought for the event they put on with Kamala Harris. Every single time out
comes Oprah, putting her arm around whoever the Democrat candidate is. Then you see Beyonce, then you
see that they all come out. I feel that's over that Trump has barreled his way through that.
And his people like Joe Rogan, Elon Musk and others, they're not really conventional celebrities.
They're tech people in a tech world, really, or interviews or journalists. Do you think this
idea of the Democrats constantly being associated with super rich celebrities, singers, you know,
pop stars, actors and so on? Is that over now? Because it seems to have backfired this time.
No, I don't think so.
I think the people you're describing
like Joe Rogan are celebrities
in their own right.
Joe Rogan, his base of viewers
just happened to be the people
that Donald Trump wanted to get out to vote.
The people who watch Oprah,
the people that listen to Taylor Swift
happen to be the Kamala Harris's
But they didn't get their people out to vote.
Women did not go out in the numbers
that people expected when Taylor Swift.
Well, women still voted for Kamala Harris overwhelmingly.
Yeah, but I love Taylor Swift, for example,
but everyone thought that would really change the needle.
Half a million people
apparently registered to vote extra in 24 hours
when she made her endorsement.
But none of that was reflected in the polls.
Yeah, but that doesn't mean that it wasn't effective.
Who's to say that it didn't actually get out more people to vote?
And that possibly the loss would have been worse
if Taylor Swift and folks like Oprah weren't working with Kamala Harris.
These people have, you know, they're famous.
They have a lot of notoriety.
So when they're doing something with a candidate,
that speaks to people who are low propensity voters,
people who don't pay attention to politics like everybody else does here, right?
We want to get those people.
to vote and a lot of those people line with Kamala Harris and if they see Oprah standing next to
Kamala Harris, they're like, oh, yeah, that looks cool to me. So I don't think that was a mistake.
I don't think it like, quote unquote, backfired. Maybe there's a way to do it more strategically
in the future. But to say that, oh, yeah, no, we shouldn't work with Taylor Swift, the biggest pop star
on earth. I think that's foolish. You know, Harry, nobody cares, Harry. Nobody cares about
celebrity endorsements. I don't think they do. Nobody. Yeah, I agree. Nobody cares about celebrity
endorsements. Here, let me give you one example. If Democrats, for example, past, build back
better, the original buildback better that Biden and Bernie were trying to get through. That included
paid family leave, child care, universal pre-K, free community college, expanding Medicare, higher
minimum wage, lowering all prescription drug prices, expanded child tax credit. If you got that through,
I think this election very well may have been different and Democrats would have won. And I don't
think dragging out, you know, Taylor Swift or Beyonce or whoever else is going to make much of a
difference because people like them for what they like them for. They like them for the singing.
They like them for the dances.
They don't really want to hear their thoughts on the marginal tax rate.
Yeah, I mean, I definitely agree.
Let me bring.
I want to bring, I want to bring Dina back in.
I agree.
I agree with Kyle on that.
And I want to say, Jane, thank you for that presidential endorsement.
Who knows what 2028 will hold.
But they overplayed their hand with celebrities.
It's not that you don't want celebrities,
but celebrities motivate the base that you already have.
What this campaign did is they put too much stock in the,
those celebrities. Those celebrities, just like my colleagues on this panel, just like myself,
they only have one vote to give. Yes, they have influence, but you know who could have been a
better influence on that race is everyday working class people standing by her side,
everyday working class people talking about how under the Harris Walks of presidency, things would
be different for them, that the minimum wage would be increased, et cetera, et cetera. That did not
happen. So although Taylor Swift is popular, obviously she's not that.
popular because she did not, did not, absolutely did not move the needle. And this is no shade to
her. It is just celebrities are good for the base. They are not necessarily good to move those
undecided voters. And the other thing, Nina, the way they did it too. I mean, the other thing I would say,
it's the way they did it. Yeah, I agree with it. It was a very elitist way. You know, it was the way
they did it. No, I agree with you. I just, there's a different issue which Trump's picks, a nominee
picks for the cabinet. I think I see a consistent pattern here. The one running theme of all of them
is they're all good on television. Trump understands the power of television like no political
candidate I've ever seen. He absolutely gets it because he's a TV guy. I did his celebrity
apprentice show. I saw him at first time. He loves the camera. The camera loves him and he's great at
the power of television. If you look at RFK Jr., you look at Tulsi Gabbard, you look at Marco Rubio,
You look at even Matt Gates.
Look at all these people.
What's the common theme?
They're all good talkers.
Neil Carnes.
They're good on television.
Unqualified.
Whereas if I think, yeah, of course,
everyone can have their view about their politics,
but they are good performers on television.
Allegations.
If I try and think of a lot of Democrats in that camp
who are good at articulating policy on television,
I start to really struggle.
I do.
I think it's important.
But why are we giving Trump for optics right now, peers?
Pierce, the thing about all of his picks is that there,
virulent neocons.
He picked Mike Huckabee, who's an
end-times fundamentalist Christian
to be ambassador to Israel. This guy thinks the
rapture is going to happen and Jesus is going to come back
in his lifetime. You know what he picked
him? Brian Hook for the State Department.
He picked him because he's...
He picked him because he can
because he has such a thumping mandate
on November the 5th. But do you
criticize that? But wait a way, do you criticize that though?
Are you against the... I don't know. I don't think he's any
surprise. It does not have
a mandate. It may be a surprise. This is the craziest
talking point I've heard. Well, hang on. My point is that Democrats
had such a terrible campaign with a terrible candidate. You reap what you sow.
You've allowed Trump to do what he wants, right? So I'm afraid...
Do you criticize his neocomacom? Do you criticize it? Are you against the neo-cum?
It doesn't matter what I think, because the truth is... It does. Yes, it does. Trump was very
pro-Israel the first time round. He was always going to be very pro-Israel this time round,
and you guys have allowed him to win with a thumping mandate. So the real point of this
have a thumping mandate. The real point of this blue or blue panels
to show you to show some self-awareness that you've allowed
all this to happen. I mean, Nina, I want to come back to you just briefly.
What self-awareness? He's picking neo-cons. Are you going to
criticize for it? He's picking them because he's allowed to.
Or not? He can pick it. But are you against it? Are you against it? I'm against
some of it. Yeah. You have nothing but criticism for Democrats.
And you have no smoke for Trump apparently.
Listen, oh, I regularly have criticized Trump.
Do things.
Do you have a lot. Come on.
brother.
I would not
agree.
Okay,
let me answer the question.
I would personally
not have picked
Matt Gates to be
the attorney general pick.
I think it's ridiculous,
right?
I wouldn't.
You should come up
and tell me that.
I know you guys
talk on the phone.
He won.
I said,
so to the victor
to the spoils.
Yes.
We all can agree with that.
Yes.
Man won.
The Democrats left the door,
the windows open.
Everything open the door.
Come in, burglars.
How well?
There is a however to this.
Yes, he does get to nominate whoever he wants to nominate in his cabinet.
If the Senate is so upset with any of those nominees, then they can reject those nominees.
That is likely not going to happen.
The other side of this is true that some of the people that he is picking, and let's use Congressman Matt Gates for the prime example, he wants to, yes, man, in the Attorney General's office.
That is it, because Congressman Matt Gates has shown clearly that he's.
will do every single thing
that president-elect Donald J. Trump
tells him to do. Regardless,
regardless of whether it's right or wrong.
Here's my point about that.
Trump's being attacked for choosing loyalists
to which my response would be
should he have actively chosen disloyal
people? I mean, seriously.
No, I'm not, listen, I'm not attacking him
who wouldn't, if your president
people that might be loyal to.
I'm not attacking him.
We got to call this what it is.
Come on, Pierce.
I feel like I just lit a tender box.
Not attacking.
That's not why we're attacking.
I said he has every right to pick these people.
And we have every right to weigh in on his picks.
Yeah.
But the Senate has the final.
That is true.
That is true.
We've got to leave it there.
Brilliant panel.
Thank you all very much.
Blue on blue.
Blue on blue was good.
But I do feel like blue on blue after you've got to keep talking to each other.
Because out of this unholy mess, the reality is you've all allowed Donald Trump to get back in with even more power.
Even more power than he had the first time.
So you can all have a problem with it.
This is on you.
I actually agree about John Stewart.
I think you'd be great.
So get on the phone to John Stewart.
Thank you to my panel.
Appreciate it.
