Pod Save America - Trump Calls January 6th a "Day of Love"
Episode Date: October 18, 2024Donald Trump gives a stunning answer to a Republican voter upset about Trump's behavior on January 6: "That was a day of love." Kamala Harris braves Fox News for a combative interview with Bret Baier,... and JD Vance finally gives an answer on whether Trump lost the 2020 election. Then, Ben Wikler, chairman of the Wisconsin Democratic Party, stops by to talk about how things are looking in the Badger state, and what everyone can do to help.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, Donald Trump says that January 6th
was a quote, day of love,
and tells Latino voters that the jury's still out
on whether immigrants are eating pets in Springfield.
JD Vance finally gives an answer
on whether Trump lost in 2020, we won't spoil it for you.
And our good friend, Ben Wickler,
chairman of the Wisconsin Democratic Party,
stops by to talk about how things are going
in the Badger State and how you can help.
There and everywhere we need to win.
But first, Kamala Harris went on Fox News and lived to tell the tale.
The vice president sat down with Bret Baer for an interview Wednesday night that just
about everyone figured would be contentious, and boy did it deliver.
Here's some of what just over 7 million viewers
saw Wednesday night.
Brett, let's just get to the point.
Okay, the point is that we have a broken immigration system
that needs to be repaired.
So your Homeland Security Secretary said that 85%
of apprehensions. I'm not finished.
And let me just finish, I'll get to the question,
I promise you. I was beginning to answer.
And when you came into office...
The first bill, practically within hours of taking the oath, was a bill to fix our immigration
system.
Yes ma'am, it was called the U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021.
Exactly.
It was essentially a pathway to citizenship for the...
May I finish responding please?
But you have to let me finish.
You had the White House and the House and the Senate and they didn't bring up that bill.
I'm in the middle of responding to the point you're raising and I'd like to finish.
Yes ma'am.
Brad, I'm sorry and with all due respect, that clip was not what he has been saying
about the enemy within that he has repeated when he's speaking about the American people.
That's not what you just showed.
Well, he was asked about that specific.
No, no, no.
That's not what you just showed in all fairness and respect to you.
No, no, no.
I'm telling you that was the question that we asked him.
He didn't show that, and here's the bottom line.
He has repeated it many times, and you and I both know that.
And you and I both know that he has talked about turning the American military on the
American people.
He has talked about going after people who are engaged in peaceful protest.
He has talked about locking people up because they disagree with him.
This is a democracy and in a democracy,
the President of the United States in the United States of America should be willing to be able to handle
of America should be willing to be able to handle criticism
without saying he'd lock people up for doing it. And this is what is at stake.
Hell yes.
I fucking love it.
I want to go grab my ballot and just drop it off right now.
You can, you literally can do that right now.
I can't find it, that's the whole thing.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Emily got hers, I don't know where mine is.
Anyway, what did you think?
What did you think of the whole interview?
I loved it.
It was, I have to say, there was a bit of-
You a big proponent of Democrats going on Fox News.
Well, there is like a little PTSD for me here
because back in 2010, I pushed very hard
for Barack Obama to do an interview with Brett Bear
when we were trying to pass the Affordable Care Act
because we had all these members in Republican districts,
we were trying to get to the support of Obamacare,
and we did that interview.
Brett Baier interrupted Barack Obama.
Very similar to this, 16 times in 20 minutes.
And I would say the walk from the East Wing
where the interview was conducted back to the West Wing
was one of the longer walks of my life.
So.
Was he really mad at you?
No, he was more just, he, I'd say he was disappointed
was the word I was using.
He just said, well, that was fun.
And then we just walked in silence for a long time.
I don't remember that interview,
but was he as firm and still polite as Kamala Harris was?
Like I thought she really, she was great.
She handled that.
She could have gone back harder.
She was like, she was tough, but she didn't go,
it was perfect, I thought.
I thought her tone was perfect.
She was great.
She called out the bullshit,
which I think is one thing you have to do
when you go on Fox News as a Democrat,
is she, this is what Pete Buttigieg is great at, Kevin Newsom is great at, is you call out the bullshit, which I think is one thing you have to do when you go on Fox News as a Democrat, is she, it is what Pete Buttigieg is great at,
Gavin Newsom is great at, is you call out the game.
And when Brett Baier just fucking leading
with his large chin,
which is,
when I'm playing the wrong clip
to clean up Donald Trump's mess,
like the lackey that he is,
made it very easier for him to do that.
We should say for people at home, what happened was they were talking about Trump's comments
where he talked about the enemy within,
which he said on a Fox News program
to Maria Bartiromo on Sunday.
And Bayer didn't play that clip
of Trump talking to Maria Bartiromo,
but played the clip of Trump responding to that clip
when he was asked a question about it
at another Fox News town hall and gave a bullshitty reply the clip of Trump responding to that clip when he was asked a question about it
at another Fox News town hall
and gave a bullshitty reply that really was just
a bunch of lies and crazy news from Trump.
And so just never played the actual clip
because Fox had probably been trying to hide
the actual clip from their audience
ever since they originally aired it
when Trump was talking to Maria Bartiromo.
Absolutely, just mask off moment as someone wrote today.
So overall, you think it was worth doing, Fox News?
Net positive, net neutral, net negative.
I think we both know not net negative,
but what do you think?
Strong net positive.
And like, as you said, I generally counsel Democrats
to not go on Fox News.
Like you did to me.
Like I did to me.
Like I did to you.
And look, it worked great for you.
You have a new best friend at Jesse Waters.
But this was one of those times where it made sense.
And here's why it was worth it.
7.1 million people watched this interview.
That is more than three times
Brett Barrett's normal audience.
Do you know what the number one market in the country was
in terms of watching that interview? Ooh, what?
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, my friend.
Yeah, love that.
And it's clear, David Plouffe said this to me
on Pod Save America of the Weekend,
but one of their targets is Republican leaning
independents and soft Republicans.
It's a group she has made progress with.
She's up to 9% of Republicans in the latest Time Scenic poll.
And this is a great way to reach those voters.
Like it, the best media moments are ones
where the candidate performs well,
the platform is chosen because it speaks directly
to a voter target.
And you do so well that the clips will go viral
on TikTok and Instagram and will reach voters
who did not actually tune in.
On all three marks, she hit those here.
Yeah, and I just, it got outsized media coverage
because it was like, you know,
Kamala Harris goes into the lions down.
Ian Sams, who we know who's a Harris campaign spokesman,
told Brian Stelter on his podcast
that they did the interview for two reasons.
One, because they believe a considerable number
of undecided voters watch Fox,
and two, to knock down the lies they tell on Fox.
Do you think that's right?
Yeah, I think the more important and larger reason
was the meta message of she is strong enough
and tough enough to go into a network
that is actively working to elect her opponent.
Take the tough question,
is that Donald Trump is too scared
to do an interview with anyone serious?
Like that's what ultimately you're trying to achieve.
You're larger than who the individual people
were who watched the specific interview in that moment.
I checked out the latest New York Times CNN poll,
the national one where she's up three.
And I looked at the media consumption question
at the very end and 10% of voters
who aren't yet supporting Trump or Harris
get their news from Fox, which was like the third high 15 percent said social media 10 percent
said local news 10 percent said Fox and then every other news source was in the
low single digits so it is you know it's there is some I don't know how many but
there are some people watching Fox and also Fox is on especially if you get
out of blue cities Fox is on it's if you get out of Blue Cities, Fox is on, it's like the
the network that's on like a doctor's office or a store or an air, you know, and so there's some
people who aren't like Fox fans, but they just like have Fox on and they're not all MAGA people,
right? Like most of them are, but not all of them. It's the background music in a lot of communities,
right? Like if you go to get your oil changed, it's what's on there at the doctor's office. Now, the thing that's always hard
and one of the reasons why I often counsel Democrats
that to go on is that you can handle
your individual interview great,
but Fox will take whatever the worst clips are
and then they'll play those all day long.
But that-
But you know what?
They'll do that if they didn't have a clip
from Fox to do that with,
they do that about her on any other issue.
Right, and she reached 7 million people doing it, right?
Normally, if you're just a normal Democrat and you do it,
you just get the specific audience of that show midday
and then they can beat you up with it.
Here, she obviously brought in a whole bunch of people.
And the people who tuned in are people who are,
A, willing to turn on Fox and B,
interested enough to hear what she has to say.
So those are potential voters for her.
Other thing too is she, at one point in that exchange
about enemy from within, she talks about how general
Mark Milley who Donald Trump handpicked to be his chairman
of the joint chiefs and how he told Bob Woodward
that Donald Trump is fascist to the core.
And she brought that up.
And then, you know, Brett was like, oh yeah, yeah,
he did tell that to Bob Woodward.
And that was apparently, according to the bulwark,
only the third time Fox told its audience
that Mark Milley called Donald Trump fascist to its core.
That was the third time that happened.
One was from Kamala Harris,
one was from Jessica Tarlov on the five,
and one was, I forget when else it happened,
but that was it, three times since it's happened.
It's been like a couple of weeks.
Just real- Or a week.
How are we gonna- Fair and balanced journalist
over there at Fox News.
But that is another reason why you go on there,
is that you expose Fox viewers
to facts that they have not heard.
Not just like correcting lies,
but just things that they've never heard.
I thought the interview was also an opportunity
for Kamala to answer some of the trickier questions
she either hasn't answered or hasn't answered well.
She was asked about the Trump campaign's accusations,
which they have put $20 million of ads behind,
that she supported gender affirming care
for undocumented immigrants who are incarcerated.
She pointed out that it is the law,
these are court decisions that have required this in prisons.
It's not like just some policy she's been pushing.
She pointed out, this was reported in the New York Times this week,
that that kind of care was also offered under the woke administration of Donald Trump.
So I thought she handled that. was also offered under the woke administration of Donald Trump.
So I thought that was she handled that.
And then she was asked the question about, about Biden that tripped her up on the view.
Let's listen.
It's interesting you said turn the page, Madam Vice President, you were asked on two different
shows last week, what if anything you would do differently than President Biden?
Here's what you said.
You're not Joe Biden, you're not Donald Trump, but nothing comes to mind that you would do differently?
Let me be very clear.
My presidency will not be a continuation
of Joe Biden's presidency.
And like every new president that comes in to office,
I will bring my life experiences,
my professional experiences, and fresh and new ideas.
I represent a new generation of leadership.
I, for example, am someone who has not spent
the majority of my career in Washington, D.C.
I invite ideas, whether it be from the Republicans
who are supporting me, who were just on stage with me
minutes ago, and the business sector,
and others who can contribute.
How do you think she handled it this time?
I would say much better, much better.
I mean, her answer is interesting
because she obviously improves upon
the nothing comes to mind answer,
which is now starring in a pretty brutal ad
that the Trump campaign is pouring money
in the battleground states.
I said it too earlier, hope you didn't click.
No, I just saw Tommy respond, boy, that's brutal.
And I decided I was not gonna click.
I honestly debated whether to send that to you or not.
You can just let you, because we don't have an autocracy,
you can just live in blissful ignorance
for the next three weeks without knowing that was up there.
So she answered it much better.
And the other thing that I thought was interesting
about the answer is she spoke to two groups
of people, right?
And there's two interrelated groups, but one are people who are dissatisfied with the present
conditions of America under Joe Biden.
As unfair as that may be to all the many great things Joe Biden has accomplished, there's
a lot of people who think that he has a little approval ratings and you have wrong track
numbers that are above 60.
But she also, by simply saying, my presence is not a continuation of Joe Biden,
but then she pivots and says, but I have not spent my career in Washington.
And that is speaking to the people who are mad about politics generally, that she is an outsider.
In general, outsider candidates do quite well. And she can't be a true outsider
because she is literally the city
of the West President of the United States,
but she does have a unique biography
and a unique background.
And the person she's running against
is not necessarily an outsider
because he was the former president of the United States.
So I thought just that pivot
to I didn't spend my career in Washington
was notable and interesting.
If she gets it again,
I think there's a way for her to do this that is, it's not
even that critical of Joe Biden, right?
It's just like, you know, Joe Biden had to, when Joe Biden and I took office, had to deal
with an economic crisis caused by the pandemic.
And he did that, pulled the economy out of recession.
But now our problem, it's a new time, new problem, costs are too high.
So I'm gonna build 3 million affordable homes
and I'm gonna crack down on price gouging
and I'm gonna expand Medicare to cover her home care,
whatever her economic plan is.
And I actually saw that a blueprint polling tested these
and some of the answers that tested the best
on separating yourself from Biden.
It's not really saying like,
oh, Joe Biden did this wrong and I'm gonna do this.
It's just like, you know what?
New person, new time, new challenges,
and here's what I'm gonna focus on now, right?
Like Joe Biden's thing was get us out of the pandemic,
get the economy back on track,
and my thing is now costs are too high
and so I'm gonna bring them down.
Like I just think, I think a little granularity
on ideas and policies that she's gonna pursue
in connection to that answer
is gonna be helpful.
Yeah, it's just, it is just,
you have to think about it as an opportunity,
you make the initial statement that my presidency
will not be continuation of Joe Biden's,
and then it's just an opportunity
to restate your popular policy agenda.
Because I think you have to be careful
not to play the press's game here,
which they also read that and were like,
well, she didn't really distinguish herself,
what would you do differently?
What did he do wrong?
And I just think there's too much drama
that comes with that.
And it's too much of an inside baseball
for the actual voters.
Well, she's also, I mean, it just,
there's an honesty issue there too,
which is like, she was there, right?
So you can't, the next, if she says like,
oh, Joe Biden made this decision
and I wouldn't have made it, then you're gonna be like,
well, what, did you tell him at the time that it was wrong?
Yeah, it just, it opens up a can of worms.
You can't go down that, no.
So before she sat down with Brett Baer,
Harris appeared in Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania,
where George Washington famously crossed the Delaware, Dan.
And she was there with more than a hundred
Republican lawmakers and government officials
who she said put country first by endorsing her,
including former house members
Adam Kinzinger and Barbara Comstock.
What do you think of how she's using Republicans
to make the case?
And do you think that is gonna be effective
in reaching some of those voters we were talking about
who maybe tuned into the Brett Baier interview
who might be right leaning independents
or Republicans who are done with Trump.
We live in such highly polarized times
that if you're a Republican, you identify as a Republican,
that's probably been your party identity
most of your adult life, if not your entire life.
You voted for Mitt Romney, you voted for,
maybe you voted for some Bushes,
you voted for, maybe you voted for Donald Trump once.
And crossing that Rubicon to break with
how you see yourself. Because most people's and highly polarized times, people's political identity
is their primary identity. That's how they see themselves. That's how they sort themselves with
their friends. And so to break from that and to do something that runs counter to that identity
is hard. And the way you get people to do that is you show lots of other people doing the same
thing. This is why you bring a hundred Republicans on stage.
It's why Sarah Longwell's group is running videos,
running ads with videos of people speaking,
Republicans speaking directly to camera saying,
I voted for Trump, but this time I'm not for these reasons.
And so this is how you do it.
Trump is doing the opposite.
I just saw before we got on here,
Trump doing at a barber shop in the Bronx,
sitting with a bunch of black men talking,
just sort of shooting the shit with them,
just cause you, he's trying to do the same thing
with a different group of voters,
and to show that, you know, the water's warm,
there are other people like you here.
And so it's a smart, savvy understanding
of the way politics works these days.
Also, I think there's two target demos
they're trying to reach here.
There's people who don't always vote and
there's people who don't always vote for
Democrats.
And I think the Harris-Walls campaign is
obviously going after both groups, but it is
harder to reach the people who don't always
vote, right?
And they are, they are not as dependable and
they are low propensity voters and it's going
to take more resources to find them, to convince
them to come out to the polls.
And I'm sure they're doing that.
But the thing about the people who don't always vote for Democrats, whether they're independent
or Republicans who are open to voting for Democrats, is they are very reliable voters
and they show up in a lot of these elections.
And so I'm guessing the campaign's thinking, all right, it's probably a more bang for our
buck to like go after some of these soft Republicans, right-leaning independents who, and Donald Trump has made them available to the Harris
campaign because he's so extreme. That wouldn't usually happen in a campaign for a democratic
campaign, but Donald Trump has made it more possible this time. I can't remember if I use
these numbers on this podcast or one of these 700 other podcasts we've done recently, but
you know, blueprint also pulled Haley voters
and there's a large chunk of Haley voters
who are not with Trump yet
and are open to the idea of supporting Harris,
but she's got work to do.
But just to put that number in perspective,
76,000 people voted for Nikki Haley
in the Wisconsin primary in 2020.
Joe Biden won Wisconsin by 21,000 votes.
Yeah.
But you know what?
Obviously you're not gonna get all of them.
You probably aren't gonna get most of them,
but that's a big chunk of voters
who could decide the election.
And the numbers are similar in the other battleground states.
Right.
So we learned today about two other Republicans
who've decided to level their critiques of Trump in private,
like a couple of profiles in courage.
Mitch McConnell, who apparently participated
in an oral history project, oral history of a slowly degrading democracy, I don't know what the project was,
but he's on an audio recording calling Trump after January 6th, quote,
stupid, a narcissist, and a despicable human being. No word on when that recording will be available,
but it's a book that journalist Mike Tackett is writing.
And so the AP reported it today.
When asked by the Associated Press about these comments,
McConnell said, quote,
whatever I may have said about President Trump
pales in comparison to what JD Vance, Lindsay Graham,
and others have said about him,
but we're all on the same team now.
You know what?
I respect it.
I truly respect that response.
What a dick.
Yeah, he is one of history's great villains and cowards,
but I respect the response there.
Meanwhile, our pal Tim Miller broke some news
over at the Bulwark about former Trump Defense Secretary,
James Mattis on Tim's Bulwark podcast,
Bob Woodward revealed that Mattis emailed him
to say that he agrees with general Mark Milley's assessment
that Trump is quote, the most dangerous person ever.
So thanks to both Jim Mattis and Mitch McConnell
stepping up when it really matters, huh?
I mean, look.
What, like, come on people, say it out loud
in front of a camera.
It's pure cowardice to sit there and believe that a fascist, someone you believe is a fascist,
a dangerous fascist is on the cusp
of becoming president of the United States
and your response is to email Bob Woodward
after his book comes out.
Hey Bob, maybe you put this in your next one in 2026.
I don't know, man.
I don't know.
Are these revelations something that the Harris campaign
should be using down the home stretch?
She's already in her rallies all this week.
She's been talking about the Millie comments,
which I think is very smart.
I think when your opponent's former top general
that they hired is running around telling people I think when your opponent's former top general
that they hired is running around telling people that the opponent's a fascist
and the most dangerous person to ever exist
is like a four star general.
I think that's useful, the useful knowledge for people.
It is.
I mean, obviously it's useful
and it's a piece of information that every voter should have
before they make their decision.
Just seems like you should be in the voter guide, frankly.
We've talked about this before.
These are hard arguments to sell to a lot of voters,
particularly ones who are not super engaged
with the news on a daily basis,
because they were alive for the last Trump presidency
and they didn't see it as fascist.
And so that it's just, it'd be much more powerful on camera,
but it just is a, you should talk about it for sure.
It should be part of the argument as we raise the stakes but recognizing that it's hard to convince people
That trump will be a dictator or a fascist because they believe he was not now you can get some granularity to it
That is and you need this is the you see this in their ads a little bit where it's like trump has changed
He's less stable. You do that. You talk about this a lot. He's got different people around him
You got to do the whole story for people to understand
why this time would be different than last time.
Because last time is, we had a kind of embarrassing
president, didn't seem great at his job, eggs were cheap.
Then something really bad happened,
those beyond his control in America,
got fucked up, he fired him, now he's back, right?
Yeah, I mean, look, I think this is appealing to me,
not necessarily because we're trying to convince people
that Donald Trump is a fascist
who don't already think that he's a fascist or a dictator
or whatever you may wanna do.
I do agree that you have to frame it as the guy
since you last saw him is different.
He is older, crazier, more unhinged.
The guy has lost a step, clearly. he's swaying and dancing at his events.
He's, uh, you know, he's saying he's going to
use the military against people.
He's nuts.
He's lost it.
Right?
Like I think that is the argument you have to make,
but I think one of the most effective arguments
here is that so many people that have worked for
Donald Trump
at the most senior levels do not think he is fit for office.
So Blueprint also did a test of all closing arguments,
which was the most effective.
Number one most effective argument,
it boosted Kamala Harris 12 points with all voters
and 14 points with independents.
Nearly half of Trump's cabinet have refused to endorse him.
When Trump learned during the Capitol riot that his supporters were threatening to kill his own vice president, 14 points with independence. Nearly half of Trump's cabinet have refused to endorse him.
When Trump learned during the Capitol riot that his supporters were threatening to kill
his own vice president, he said, so what, and refused to do anything to ensure the vice
president was safe.
Republican governors, senators, and house members have all said the same thing.
We can't give Trump another four years of president.
So it was the number one most effective closing argument.
Number two was abortion.
Close behind it, that boosted her 10 and 12 with independence.
And then after that, an argument about social security
and what Trump would do on social security
and what Trump would do on ACA, that boosted her six points.
And then everything else was like in the single digits
or negative, but those were the best arguments,
closing arguments against Trump.
And I found that interesting.
The first number I read was all voters
and then the second one was independence, yeah.
So that's pretty, you know, I just think that people,
if you don't know much about whatever,
you don't have to make the argument that he's a fascist,
just like, hey, see these generals,
see these defense secretaries,
national security advisors, Mike Pence.
They're all like, no, no, don't do it, don't do it.
I would say that right now we are standing
at the crossroads of a very large debate
within the democratic political community right now
about how best to close this race.
That is one argument.
I'm sure the other one is like,
let's talk about price gouging.
No, no, no, it's not.
It's not.
Which I love.
You know how much I love talking about price gouging.
No one hates price gouging more than you.
And I'm still angry at the nerds, the liberal policy nerds that don't
think it's a good, uh, it's a good.
It's really, I think between the first argument on that list and the second one, which is
a more focused on abortion than anything else.
Abortion, the abortion economy and it's basically taking everything that has been every dollar
in sentence and ounce of blood, sweat and tears has been every dollar and cent that's an ounce of blood,
sweat and tears has been put in building up
where Kamala Harris is right now
and putting that into one argument as opposed to sort of
a shift at the end here,
which this is a shift from where she was.
Yeah, it is a shift.
I'm not saying, I'm not weighing in here.
I wanna see more data.
I don't know.
I could craft an argument that gets it all together.
I mean, it's like you start with Trump.
You start with the fact that he has lost a step,
he is unstable, he is unhinged,
and then you go through all the policies, right?
Like he was always anti-choice,
but now he wants to have a national abortion ban
and leave in place Trump bans that have led women to die.
He was always for tariffs.
Now he wants to slap 20% tariffs
on everything we buy that's imported,
iPhones, tequila, cars, everything else.
He was always sort of crazy,
but now he wants to turn the military on America.
You know, like, I think we go down the list that way.
Your fingers work.
You, here, I'll cut a deal with you.
You write that down.
I'll put it in a very popular political newsletter
called the Message Box.
Okay, cool. I can guest-write a message box.
Or you know what, I know you don't write anymore, so just send me a voice memo and I will dictate it.
Oh, that's talk about Donald Trump.
He did this Univision town hall this week.
It aired Wednesday night.
Surprise, surprise, it was a lot more challenging than his Fox News women's town hall, which
it turns out was actually stocked with Trump supporters.
Oh, what a surprise.
Couldn't tell that from the fucking town hall.
I watched five minutes of it
when I walked in the office yesterday.
And I was like, this is embarrassing.
I think Kamala Harris would have gotten
tougher questions from her own staff.
Oh yeah, I take that as a strong yes.
Yeah, then the questions that they got.
One woman literally stood up and she was just like,
I just want to thank you for everything you're doing to stop the woke military.
What? Is there a question here? But anyway, the Univision town hall, excellent questions.
And there were some people who had voted for Donald Trump and had been Republicans in the town
hall who asked him questions, including this man. Let's listen.
Okay.
I am a Republican no longer registered.
I want to give you the opportunity to try to win back my vote.
Okay.
Your, let's say, action and maybe inaction during your presidency and the last few years
sort of, you know, was a little
disturbing to me.
You know, what happened during January 6th and the fact that, you know, you waited so
long to take action while your supporters were attacking the Capitol.
I'm curious how people so close to you and your administration no longer want to support
you, so why would I want to
support you?
If you would answer these questions for me, I would really appreciate it and give you
the opportunity.
There's, you know, your own vice president doesn't want to support you now.
Thank you, Ramiro.
So the people that don't support, a very small portion, we have a tremendous, about 97 percent
of the people in the administration support me.
But because it's me, somebody doesn't support, they get a little publicity.
The Vice President, I disagree with him on what he did.
I totally disagreed with him on what he did.
Very importantly, you had hundreds of thousands of people come to Washington.
They didn't come because of me, they came because of the election.
They thought the election was a rigged election, and that's why they came. Some of those people went down
to the Capitol. I said, peacefully and patriotically, nothing done wrong at all, nothing done wrong.
And action was taken, strong action. Ashley Babbitt was killed. Nobody was killed. There
were no guns down there. We didn't have guns. The others had guns, but we didn't have guns. And when I say we, these are people that walked down. This was a tiny
percentage of the overall, which nobody sees and nobody, nobody shows. But that was a day
of love from the standpoint of the millions. It's like hundreds of thousands. It could
have been the largest group I've ever spoken before. They asked me to speak. I went and
I spoke.
Day of Love, Day of Love, Dan, they tried to,
they wanted to hang the vice president,
they were hunting Nancy Pelosi,
police officers were beaten within an inch of their lives.
Pipe bombs.
Pipe bombs, and by the way, they did have guns.
Maybe Trump didn't have a gun, because he did say we,
but they had guns
and Trump knew they had guns,
which we learned in the January 6th committee investigation
that he said, yeah, they have guns,
but they're not gonna hurt me.
So who cares?
Let them through the magnetometers.
That was the quote from Trump.
So Trump knew that they were armed with guns.
So he knew he was lying, but it was a day of love.
It was a day of love.
What'd you think of that exchange?
Honestly, holy fucking shit.
I know.
Like what are we doing?
I mean, it is truly an insane thing to say.
This is his biggest vulnerability in the election.
And frankly, that's also his biggest legal liability
is January 6th.
It is incredibly unpopular.
Even most Republicans don't support what happened on that day.
It was an act of absolute violence of domestic terrorism.
And Donald Trump calls it a day of love, like 20 days before the election.
We're just like, Oh, crazy Trump, just talking again.
Something is like, something is seriously broken in, it is the media environment.
It is our own attention span.
I saw you tweeting this today that like, how is this not the biggest story?
Like Jim Comey put out a letter saying, oh, there was a couple more emails from
Hillary we're looking into and it upended the entire fucking election
for the last couple of weeks.
And maybe civilization.
It upended civilization.
Donald Trump is, is waiting to possibly stand trial
because he has been indicted for trying
to overturn the last election and foment
a violent insurrection and then goes back to it
at a town hall and says it was the day of love.
It's insane.
We should not be talking about anything else
for the next two weeks.
Why is not every Republican being asked
of January 6th of the day of love?
All those ones who were on all the video,
the documentary video footage,
running for their fucking lives,
desperately calling the White House to try to get help.
It's just, it is a blip.
And it is, like, it's not anyone's fault.
It is a structural problem in our democracy right now
that is just, but it's that structural problem,
which is kind of why we're in this mess right now
is just highlighted by the fact that he can say that.
And it's just, we've just moved on
and it happened not 24 hours ago.
Yeah.
Well, fortunately Kamala Harris jumped on this today
in Wisconsin.
Let's listen to what she said.
Donald Trump was at a... you division town hall where a voter asked him
about january six
okay
we here no january six was a tragic day
it was a date of terrible violence and what
did donald trump
say last night about January 6th?
He called it a quote a day of love
But but it points out something that everyone here knows The American people are exhausted with his gaslighting.
Exhausted with his gaslighting.
Enough!
What'd you think of that?
Can I ask you a question as a once
and potentially a future wordsmith?
Yes.
Do you think people know what gaslighting means?
I did not enjoy gaslighting, the word gaslighting.
I think it is a resistance term from 2017
that has been overused and then now a bunch of people
use it all the time.
This is a correct usage of it.
She used it correctly.
Absolutely, but many people have used it
in such wrong ways that it's sort of,
I don't know if it's that he's,
I guess I don't know if the criticism is
that he's gaslighting necessarily.
The criticism is that like,
he thinks that attacking the seat of government,
a bunch of people violently attacking the seat of government
was a day of love that he was responsible for,
that he is currently under indictment for.
Like he is not fit to be president.
He is not fit to be president.
Yeah, I think there's just one more turn
of the argument there, right?
Where either it's a combination of he's dangerous and or delusional.
Right, yes.
Right, because we're, yes, exactly.
The frame that he has lost it, you know,
it's the same, he's dancing up on stage,
swaying back and forth, thinking about, he's mad king.
You know, it's just, I don't know, I don't know.
Did like, did they push this?
Do they keep pushing it? Like I can imagine they put, it's just, it's, I don't know. I don't know. Did like, did they push this?
Do they keep pushing it?
Like I can imagine they put, I was tweeting,
I was like, how long until someone has Donald Trump's answer
and side by side with the videos from January 6th
where cops are just getting assaulted
and people getting hurt.
And sure enough, the Harris campaign,
like in a couple hours put out that video.
Like, is it an ad?
Do you run an ad about it?
Does she bring it up in an interview?
Like, what do you think?
I don't know.
It's hard to do.
Yeah, I think she should bring it up all the time.
Just, I mean, part of this is,
not to harken back to the previous debate,
but there is your final closing message.
But there's also, you just have to be on offense
every day for the next 17 days
or whatever it is we have left.
And this is one way in which you do that.
And so every day you're doing all these rallies,
you're mixing new stuff in.
And I think it's just like sticking with making this part
of the pitch at the end here is good.
I mean, look, there's only so many ads
that can run between now and election day.
And so switching that out for something else,
you already, because there's already traffic on now
and it has to bleed through all of its points
to have been an effective use of money. And then they obviously have a closing argument ad that's coming
at some point for the final few days. So, I mean, you can do digital stuff with it for sure. Putting
on actual linear TV is probably tough and you just have no points to waste right now.
Yeah. One other thing that came up at the town hall, notable, Springfield, Springfield, Ohio.
Let's listen.
My question to you very respectfully is, do you really believe that these people are eating
the people's pets?
Thank you.
Well, thank you very much.
This was just reported.
I was just saying what was reported that's been reported and eating other things too
that they're not supposed to be.
But that's been in the newspapers
and reported pretty broadly.
No, no, it has not been reported at all.
It was not, it was reported by you and JD Vance
and a bunch of people who don't know
what the fuck they're talking about.
So I do give that guy credit
for asking the question respectfully.
Yes.
With all due respect, sir, were they eating the pets?
The sad part for me, as I was listening to that answer was I am so
online that I know exactly what Trump is talking about when he says other things.
Which is the geese.
It's the geese in the parks.
I know.
Oh, which also not true.
Not true.
No.
I don't know. You think you go to a town hall,
a Univision town hall, and you say that
you just spread a debunked conspiracy
that legal immigrants are eating people's pets.
What is he gonna do?
Is he gonna be better in the Latino vote than last time?
Is that where we're headed?
We'll find out.
It's just worth putting a button on the fact
that this is depraved sociopathic behavior
because there are innocent people,
not just the migrants in Springfield.
Everyone in Springfield's life
has been massively disrupted about this.
There are bomb threats in schools.
People are scared because he has this dumb fucking lie
that he can't admit was going to just move on from.
And he's done the same thing to folks in North Carolina
who are recovering from the hurricane.
They've had to deal with the conspiracies.
People in Aurora who now have to deal with the fact
that they think that other people think
Venezuelan gangs have taken over the whole city.
Everywhere he goes, he just spreads conspiracies
in order to try to win, then end up hurting people.
He's just like fucking chaos machine.
Just does not care.
Another thing, another part of the argument
that they should make.
It's gonna be a long message box you're writing.
I'm struggling with this because I get,
I am a data person, look at the polls, look at the stuff,
and I get that especially because she is
relatively new to the national scene
as a presidential candidate this time around,
that she needs to define herself
and people wanna know what she's gonna do for them
and what she's gonna do for the country and her vision.
And that's like incredibly important for her to talk about.
But at the same time,
she's not running against a typical Republican.
She's running against Donald Trump and Liz Cheney.
These are all these Republicans.
They're not like supporting her because they like her policies.
They're supporting her because they don't like her policies, but
Donald Trump is fucking nuts.
And like if, if, if I was going to make an argument to someone who's
going into the voting booth and wasn't sure what they were going to do,
I would probably be like, yeah,
maybe you agree with some of the stuff she says.
Maybe you don't agree with other stuff, but like this man is unfit to be president
because he has lost his fucking marbles and that's it.
Yeah.
I think the important part in that is, and I think it fits in any version of the
argument you want to do, but is that all the people who know him best and work
for him before don't think he should present him again.
Yeah, yeah, don't take my word for it.
I'm a crazy lib, right?
Like listen to General Mattis and the Joint Chiefs guy
and Mike Pence.
Dick Cheney.
Dick Cheney, you know, you gotta listen to Dick Cheney.
All right, before we get to Ben Wickler,
one last thing I wanted to mention,
JD Vance finally coughed up an answer
on whether he believes the big lie.
He was asked yet again at an event,
did Donald Trump lose the 2020 election?
And his response is,
I've answered this question directly a million times, no.
I think there are serious problems in 2020.
So did Donald Trump lose the election?
Not by the words I would use.
What the fuck does that mean?
I don't know.
I guess that's just,
that's one where I do think like going back to big lie,
what do they think?
I don't know how many people that moves
cause you've got to move the thread
of a Trump presidency forward
and you can't just be looking at the past,
but like it goes into the whole like JD Vance is full of shit
and will, you know, do
Donald Trump's bidding no matter what.
And is, you know, next in line for the presidency if he wins and
Donald Trump is fucking old.
So, and, and, and under many indictments.
So like, I think people assume it's kind of the way the press coverage is.
There's a natural assumption.
It's like, well, Democrats and independents know the truth,
all the Republicans believe it, the big lie.
That's actually not true.
In fact, only a third of voters believe the big lie
and less than two thirds of Republicans believe it.
And so it is a signifier that you're an extremist kook
when you talk about the big lie.
There is this Stanford Business School study from 2022
that showed that the big lie candidates did about,
did around two points worse
than the non big lie Republicans in that election.
And so I'm not saying this is gonna cost Donald Trump
and JD Vance two points, but it does matter
because it says something to voters about who you are,
which then it can be projected for about all the other
extreme crazy things you will do.
It's tied to your people believe if you're crazy enough to do that,
you're crazy enough to do all these other things like right to contraception,
gay marriage, book banning, cutting social security Medicare and all that stuff.
Yeah, no, that makes sense. All right, before we get to our interview with Ben,
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When we come back, Ben Wickler. ["The New York Times"]
Joining us now, he's the chair
of the Wisconsin Democratic Party and a friend of the pod.
Just looking great, that she said.
I'm guessing from you're in Green Bay right now, Ben Wickler.
Ben, Green Bay, Wisconsin, and hello, Pod Save America,
and John, it's good to be with you today.
So you're in Green Bay,
I know that Kamala Harris is gonna be there today as well.
Wisconsin was decided by 20,000 votes in 2020.
2022, the Senate race was decided
by just under 30,000 votes. So 50-50
state has been for a while. Polling in the spring and summer suggested Wisconsin was the blue wall
state where Democrats had the biggest lead. Now it's arguably the tightest state once again,
as it had been in 2020. What, if anything, do you think has changed in the race over the last month?
I'm removing my cheesehead because I'm nodding vigorously
and it is hard to nod in a cheese head.
So I'm replacing it with my camo hair
as well as the blaze orange.
Love that hat.
Wisconsin is being itself.
Wisconsin is the 50-50 state.
So the big question is whether there's polling error
and which direction it goes,
but the
polls getting super, super tight is kind of what we experience a lot here.
And right now the presidential race is a toss up.
The Senate race is now a toss up.
The Republicans have flooded the zone with attack ads against Tammy Baldwin.
So that race has gotten super tight.
The fight for the state assembly majority is a toss up.
We are trying to flip four state Senate seats to pave the way to a Senate majority in 2026. And then there's multiple house races that
are in the margin of error. So it is intense across the board. And the question is, you
know, were we ahead before and now it's just the partisans are kind of returning to their
camps or was there some kind of response bias that was kind of getting the polls a little
bit off and now it's actually a truer picture of what's been here all along.
But either way, our expectation in the final sprint is that this thing comes down to like
two or three votes per precinct across the state and it's in the margin of effort, as
we say, not the margin of error.
I promise I won't harp on the polling for too long, but I'm just wondering about the
polling error in Wisconsin or the potential polling error.
It was the biggest polling error of any state in 2020.
We all remember the Biden plus 17 poll.
Yeah.
But even the average was way off
and it was more often most other states
in most other cycles.
What's your take on whether the best pollsters,
especially private campaign pollsters,
have fixed the problem or like what have they said to you about trying to fix the problem? What's your take on whether the best pollsters, especially private campaign pollsters,
have fixed the problem or like,
what have they said to you about trying to fix the problem?
What are you most worried about in terms of like,
what the polls are telling you about where the electorate is,
not just in the like, what's the horse race,
cause who cares about that, but you know,
in terms of where the campaigns are putting time,
money, resources, et cetera.
Yeah, well, we've been just obsessed ever really since 2016, but especially after 2020,
because we had the biggest polling year in the country also 2016, seven points off in the real
clear politics average in 16 and 20. That was before the flood of red wave kind of skewed polling.
And the result of that has been a kind of flowering of a tons of different types of
ways to measure
what's happening with whom.
Tons of focus groups focus on particular subpopulations around the state across race and ethnicity,
gender, geography, generation.
It's lots of polls at different levels conducted with different methodologies that we can kind
of pile on top of each other.
It's tons of work to model who's going to say what when we knock on their door and then compare that
to what actually happens when we talk to them.
So you can get a sense of whether you're off one
where the other that was part of what happened in 2016.
We ignored the data from the field.
We don't do that anymore.
And all those signals are telling us
that this is likely to be super close.
Now that said, if we wake up the day after the election
and we've lost by several points or won by several points,
in a way I would not be shocked
because there are two big forces, one pushing one direction, the other and the
other. One is that there's a lot of Trump supporters that just do not trust polling
and won't answer pollster phone calls and every pollsters has to guess how big the partisan
non-response bias is. And then the other thing is that the Dobbs decision, especially, has
energized a ton of people, especially women, especially young women, but also older women in all parts of the state who are I think potentially going to vote
in a furious and intensive way that isn't necessarily reflected in public opinion polling.
Now, if I was a pollster, I'd tell you these two forces are probably going to basically cancel
each other out. We're trying to predict both and we think it's tied and
it will be tied or that's the most likely thing and that's what the margin of error
is for is to show you how far it could shift in either direction. But we won't really know
until the final ballots counted. And the only thing we can do in the meantime is assume
that it is literally coin flip and that if we throw everything we have against the wall,
if we organize with every second of daylight
and into the dark now that the sun is setting so early,
if we make every phone call,
if we raise every dollar to get it into, you know,
paid communication in every form,
all of that might be enough to win by a hair's breadth
and save democracy.
I've heard you say that another challenge
in figuring this out is same day registration in Wisconsin.
And so you can get a flood of people who show up on election day that were probably never
captured or thought about by not only pollsters, but I guess modeling.
How do you guys think of that?
I mean, it's a great thing, by the way, that people can register same day and vote.
We love that, but I'm sure it makes it trickier.
It does make it trickier, especially because nobody's polling unregistered voters.
That's just not, you know, every pollster.
They show you likely voters, which are a subset of registered voters, and then they show you
registered voters. But we always have wards where there's over 100% voter turnout of registered
voters, because there are more people who same day register and vote than there are people who
were registered and don't vote. So the electorate will grow. And if you look at Wisconsin voter
registration statistics, it looks like the electorate's shrinking until an election comes along and then it jumps up.
And that can go either way. In 2020, the same-day registration favored Trump heavily. Democrats
voted early by mail. They all registered beforehand so they could get their absentee ballots.
This time, there's a chance for Democrats to get the jump on this. But there's also lots of years
when it's been evenly split in same-day registration too.
But that's part of what uncertainty has built into the whole thing.
And it's also why the returns to effort in Wisconsin are so high.
Because if you're out at a bar talking to everyone there about the importance of voting,
even people who've never voted in this state before can wake up the next morning
and have a couple of cups of coffee
and then bring their proof of residence
and their photo ID and register and vote that very day.
I will also tell you,
I have this vivid memory from high school
when a friend of mine,
his older sister was a UW Madison student,
and it was a student running for, I think, county board. And the friend's older sister was a UW Madison student and it was a student running for I think County Board and
the friend's older sister had a party and a bunch of people stayed up really late drinking and they woke up and they're
song over and like they didn't vote and the the
candidate wound up losing by fewer votes than the number of people who had
Been too drunk to vote that day
So the lesson is no matter how you feel,
you will get yourself to the polls,
you might be the margin of victory right there.
So if you're gonna drink before election night,
just set that alarm really loud
and put it right next to your head.
Multiple, multiple alarms.
Yes, have a buddy who's responsible
for dragging you to the polls.
We're speaking on Thursday.
Kamala Harris has three events in Wisconsin today.
Tour with Mark Cuban.
Obviously she's gonna be in Green Bay, she's in La Crosse.
Also, I think Tim Walz and Barack Obama
are gonna be in Madison next week.
I've had some people ask me,
in this political and media environment
where everything is nationalized, everyone is polarized,
what is the value of campaign stops like these
to you guys in terms of moving voters?
They're so, so helpful.
I cannot say how helpful and how valuable they are.
And time is the one thing you can't buy
with money and campaign contributions.
So when a candidate comes,
a bunch of things happen at once.
The first thing is that there's a bunch of press
about the fact that they're coming.
So it gets in the news.
The key thing, right, is reaching people
who are not paying attention to politics already.
And when you are in the local radio news break
between the best hits of the 80s, 90s, and 2000s
that Kamala Harris is coming to town,
people are finding out about that.
Then you have the actual event.
You have thousands of people show up.
They can all be asked to volunteer.
They can all be asked to get on the Reach app. They can all be asked to go to wisdoms.org and donate and sign up as volunteers
to do door knocking shifts. So they then can multiply out and go talk to their friends.
Then you have the news coverage of the event itself, which again will reach a lot of people
who are generally avoiding political news, but it is the thing happening in town at that
moment and in the state at that moment. It's covered all over the state. And then there's clips from the rally
or the event that happened.
They go viral on the internet and that are used in ads.
So many of the ads you see in Wisconsin right now
use footage from events that happened in Wisconsin.
So there's this, like, if a campaign's doing it right,
a visit from the candidate to a community
has a multiplier effect before, during, and after,
both at the grassroots level
and in a kind of air war across the state. And I will tell you the Harris campaign is using these
visits in the right way. It is, you know, this is not Trump rambling for an hour and a half in
Madison Square Garden. This is showing up in Green Bay and La Crosse and actually connecting with
people, energizing them, and then sending them out as ground troops while also amplifying the most
critical moments. So this is gold for us. And I will say the fact that Harris and Walls are visiting lots
of different parts of the state, different places, they get different media markets with
different local TV signals, that they're coming back in different kinds of contexts and that
they're bringing along President Barack Obama to Madison on the first day of early vote,
all those things could give us that final extra edge that Elon Musk with his gigantic amounts of money
and his very weird online presence, he can't match that.
That is something that we have and could be our counter
to the flood of right-wing money
that is hitting the airways all over our state.
You were talking about the deluge of ads
with all the right-wing money.
What is the gist of these ads in terms of message
and what has been the most,
the best, most effective pushback
to some of these negative ads?
So all the Republican ads in our state, just about,
are hammering on fear.
And it's fear of immigrants and immigration,
tied to crime and trans stuff.
And sometimes they tie all three of those together,
sometimes it's pick two, it's like a right-wing rat bag
of trying to demonize a group of people and make everyone else afraid of those folks and create
an other that Strongman Trump says he'll protect you from. And it's an old, tired,
vicious playbook, but it can have an effect. And it's being used at lots of levels. It's being
used in the Senate race as well. And to counter it, you have to lay out who you
are and what you're for. You have to point out why they're making these attacks, which is that
they're trying to distract people from the fact that they're trying to rip you off and that they're
trying to divide people because they know that if we elect Harris and Walz and we elect
Tammy Baldwin, then we'll actually have a government that's on the side of the middle class standing
up to special interests and blocking extremists from banning abortion.
So you have to be on offense, but also explain why you're under attack and then shift to
the ground where you're going on offense and winning.
And the thing you don't want to do is kind of get stuck in repeating their lies while
you're debunking them.
So they're obviously wrong,
but getting on the stronger ground
and then pushing back and punching back
and explaining why they're doing these attacks
is a critical piece of this.
I think one of the striking things
is that Republicans are not even trying to defend
against the accusations of abortion bans.
They're just on the attack right now.
And what that means is that a lot of Republicans who are generally kind of partisan Republicans are coming into the fold.
That's why you see the Senate race tightening also is that there are a lot of the Trump voters
who were lukewarm on Eric Hovde when the ads were about Eric Hovde. They're getting on board for
kind of like the the mega attack game plan. But the Republicans are leaving themselves open for the kind of moderate Republicans
who have mixed feelings about the fact that their candidates want to ban abortion nationwide.
And a lot of the Democratic ads, we have especially kind of on offense ads about the economy and
the economic vision of Democratic candidates and about this issue of personal freedom,
reproductive freedom and abortion.
And the personal testimonials from people
who've been directly affected by abortion bans
or had complications in their pregnancy
and urgently needed care that Republicans would try to ban,
those things do move voters.
I think they affect every race on the ballot.
That's one reason why we're so focused
on supporting the down ballot candidates as well.
Cause I think that if you have an ad
from a state legislative candidate
that talks about the effect of the abortion ban
that Republicans put in or refuse to lift a finger
to remove after the Dobbs decision,
I think that affects every race on the ballot.
So two kinds of a persuadable voters,
one kind that is open to voting for Trump,
open to Hovde, open to some Republican candidates.
And then there's the person who's open to not voting at all.
What are you guys hearing on the doors, on the phones, over text about what issues are
driving the race for these persuadable voters and what is getting them off the fence?
So it's interesting.
The wall of right-wing fear of ongoing in the state means that if you're talking to someone
who's voted Republican in the past, they're often thinking about the kind of criminal
immigrant narrative that Republicans are pushing.
And you'll hear that from people.
And then they're also thinking about what it would mean in their families if abortion
was banned and they or someone that they loved needed access to abortion
care. And this is often, you know, it's not people who want a candidate who goes right
down the middle of these two issues. It's people who are conflicted across these two
things. I think the other piece that you often hear, especially from people who generally
are fed up with the system is frustration around the economy and the feeling of like,
who's actually fighting for me. Like I had a non-voting Uber driver who,
his line to me was like,
Republicans care about the rich,
Democrats care about the poor,
no one cares about the middle class.
And I was like, well, I want to ask you to
listen to Kamala Harris speech, my friend,
because you will hear someone
lay out a vision for the middle class.
The folks can buy houses and start businesses
and support childcare,
support their aging parents through Medicare.
But it's going to where the voter is
that actually makes the difference.
And the thing about the abortion bans
is that they've reached into people's personal lives.
They've reached outside of politics,
outside of what's on the news,
and into people's most intimate, urgent medical decisions
and the moments when they're most vulnerable.
And suddenly it's politicians calling the shots.
And that is horrifying for people.
It's a horrifying thing.
It's a horrifying prospect.
And it's something that a lot of people in Wisconsin
are one or two degrees of separation away
from someone who actually experienced it for 451 days.
We had an abortion ban here.
And that's affecting all these different races.
The economic argument and this question around freedom.
We have Democratic candidates
in every congressional district.
I'm in Kristen Lierle's district right now in Green Bay.
She is a pro-choice OBGYN who's running for Congress
and making this absolutely clear as a dividing line in this race
in a way that I think energizes voters.
You have Rebecca Cook in the third congressional district
running against Eric Hovde.
Eric Hovde, by the way, who was on Capitol grounds on January 6th and would be inside the congressional chamber in January 6th, 2025 if he were reelected. But that
guy supported total abortion bans. And Rebecca Cook is a young pro-choice woman candidate who grew
up on a dairy farm. She's nobody's idea. She's a very like kind of centrist Democratic candidate
in a purple district, but she is crystal clear that the government should not be overriding
people's personal decisions about this.
And that combination of economic populism, clarity about
about choice and reproductive freedom and the, you know,
the kind of common sense, rejecting extremes, it's a really good fit
for the district.
And then you have in the first Peter Barker, who is up against Brian Stiles,
supported all these abortion ban bills in Congress
in all these different races.
The arguments that the candidates are making
in the House races, they echo the candidates' arguments
for Tammy Baldwin's Senate race against Eric Huffty,
who said he's totally opposed to abortion.
And they echo the argument that Harrison Walls make
against JD Vance, who supported national abortion bans,
and Donald Trump who wants to punish women. And so there's a surround sound, an echo effect, and also with
the state legislative candidates. If that can be what is on voters' minds as they walk into the
polling place, someone who's on my side on the economy against special interests and somebody
who's on my side for freedom against meddling extremist politicians, Democrats win this election
even if it's close. If people walk into the polling place feeling afraid of a phantom crime wave that's whipping
through their communities, you know, driven by these kind of caricatured policies Republicans
are telling them Democrats are imposing, then it becomes really hard.
And the vote, the fight for what the election is about in a way is existential.
It's part of what volunteers can change when they're talking to people at the doors.
Speaking of the doors, you mentioned Elon Musk.
I've heard reports that even the Trump folks
who are quite confident about winning
are less confident in their ground game,
which has mostly been outsourced to Elon Musk.
I know that Democrats, including folks
in the Harris campaign, are quite confident
in the ground game.
I know you're confident in the ground game,
but what are you seeing in Wisconsin
in terms of both sides ground game?
I was in Platteville, Wisconsin yesterday.
In Western Wisconsin,
this is like the southwest corner of the state.
And like in every county that I visit,
I was asking the volunteers there
if they're seeing Republican canvassers
when they're out on doors. And the answer is a two letter word that
begins with N and ends with O. We're out in communities all
over the state in every single county, all across Wisconsin
every week. And every week we hear about maybe a couple of
places where where America PAC canvassers are showing up. And
often they're not even successfully hanging their door knockers,
their door knocking door hangers off the doorknobs in people's houses.
There's been like two instances where I've heard about actual conversations
people have had with them.
I know that this is shocking given his business record, but
it might be that he's not going to hit his deadlines for getting
those door knocks done. And I love this for the Republican Party. I think it's great.
I think it's a great example of outsourcing jobs that used to be done by Wisconsinites
for someone who doesn't believe in union labor and hard work. And this is their plan. Now,
does that guarantee that we're going to win? It absolutely does not.
But it means that we might be able to work our way through to the finish line in this thing. And
having a, you know, one sort of medium of the contest in which I think we have a serious
advantage means that we need to triple down on that. There's a, you know, in general,
your weaknesses are not actually your strengths. And so what you want to do is make the most of your strengths and then and then show up your weaknesses on the Republican
side they've let the bottom fall out of this thing and you know we just need to to run up the score
with everything we can do to organize and get our friends out to vote and again I'm just going to
hammer wisdoms.org volunteer or if you go to comliharris.com volunteer you can sign up wherever
you might be in the country I know I, Vote Save America, your volunteer links.
Folks, those phone calls, those door knocks,
the relational outreach that we're doing friend to friend,
these things do matter.
And this thing could come down to, you know,
fewer votes than the number of contacts in your phone
and your five best friends' phones.
Like that could be the margin of victory
in states like Wisconsin,
and there are not a lot of those states. That's a good place to leave it. Everyone, if you're nervous, volunteer and
Wisconsin's a great place to do it. You guys could use some help. I will let you go. I know you got a
Kamala Harris event to attend up in Green Bay and thanks as always for joining us and Ben
Wickler, good luck out there. Thank you so much, John. And folks, do not sleep on our Senate race, the House races,
the state legislative races.
We finally have FairMaps and the presidential.
This is every line of the ballot.
All systems go.
Let's go fight and win.
That's our show for today.
Dan will be back with a bonus episode on Sunday.
Dan, who are you talking to this week?
This week I talk to Amy Walter,
one of the smartest people in politics.
She's the- She is.
She is the editor in chief and publisher
of the Cook Political Report.
And we talked about the presidential race,
but also the house and Senate races
to understand if Democrats have a chance
to sweep all three in this election.
All right, everyone check it out Sunday.
Have a good weekend.
And we'll be back with another Pod Save America on Tuesday.
Bye everyone.
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