Pod Save America - Trump v. Musk: Choose Your Daddy
Episode Date: June 6, 2025Donald Trump and Elon Musk's romance comes to a fiery end as the two erupt into an explosive feud, attacking each other across social media. Jon and Dan comb through the insults, including Elon callin...g for Trump's impeachment, Trump threatening to end all of Elon's government contracts, and, our personal favorite, Elon tweeting that Donald Trump is in the Epstein files. Fun day! The guys also discuss Trump's recent slate of executive orders: another round of attacks on Harvard University, a 2025 version of Trump 1.0’s infamous Muslim ban, and an investigation into the alleged coverup of President Biden's mental and physical health. Then, Jon and Lovett sit down with Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson for an extended interview about their New York Times bestselling book, Original Sin, which reckons with Biden's decision to run for reelection.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
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["Pod Save America Theme Song"] Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
We've got a big show for you today.
Later in the episode, you will hear the interview Lovett and I did at an event with Jake Tapper
and Alex Thompson earlier this week about their book, Original Sin.
You might have heard of it.
But we have so much news to cover before that.
Trump signed a flurry of executive orders late Wednesday night, one that bans or restricts
the citizens of 19 countries from entering the United States, one that bans all international
students from attending Harvard, and one that orders an investigation into Joe Biden's
former aides over potential actions to hide information regarding the former president's
mental and physical health. to Joe Biden's former aides over potential actions to hide information regarding the former president's mental
and physical health.
We'll get to those executive orders,
but let's start with the news they seem designed
to distract from.
Donald Trump's third divorce.
This one from his campaign sugar daddy,
his doge bag in chief, his dark MAGA brother
from another mother, Elon Musk.
Great job. So, yeah, you know, in case, a lot has happened, Dan.
And we're recording this Thursday afternoon.
By the time you're all hearing this on Friday morning,
who knows what else will have happened.
But we'll just give you the quick rundown
of how we got here.
It all started a few days ago
when Elon called Trump's economic plan
a quote, massive, outrageous,
pork-filled Congress spending bill that's a, quote, disgusting abomination.
He then threatened to, quote, fire all the politicians who support the bill in the 26 midterms.
Trump was uncharacteristically quiet about this for about 48 hours until a reporter asked
him about it in the Oval Office Thursday morning, and his response was worth the wait.
Elon and I had a great relationship, but I'm very disappointed because Elon knew the inner
workings of this bill better than almost anybody sitting here, and he only developed the problem
when he found out that we're going to have to cut the EV mandate. And he never developed the problem when he found out that we're gonna have to cut the EV mandate.
And he never had a problem until right after he left.
And he hasn't said bad about me personally,
but I'm sure that'll be next.
You saw a man who was very happy
when he stood behind the oval desk,
and even with the black eye,
I said, you want a little makeup?
We'll get you a little makeup.
But he said, no, I don't think so, which is interesting.
People leave my administration and they love us.
And then at some point they miss it so badly
and some of them embrace it
and some of them actually become hostile.
I don't know what it is.
It's sort of Trump derangement syndrome,
I guess they call it.
But Elon endorsed me very strongly. He actually went up in campaign for me. I think I would have won. Susie would
say I would have won Pennsylvania easily anyway.
So Trump, Trump correctly predicted that personal attacks would follow as Elon has responded
by unleashing a flurry of tweets. I think it's still going. I don't know.
We had to record at some point, so who knows what's happening now. But so far, the tweets have
included, quote, without me, Trump would have lost the election. Quote, such ingratitude. And my
personal favorite, which he directed towards Republican politicians, Trump has three and a half years left as president,
but I will be around for 40 plus years.
In response, Trump posted on Truth Social that he
pushed Elon out of the White House because he was, quote,
wearing thin, and then threatened to terminate
all of Elon's government contracts and subsidies,
not to be outdone.
Elon then said, phew, I guess this is my new personal favorite.
I was gonna say it.
I clearly wrote that line before these tweets.
All right, and then Elon said that the reason
Trump hasn't released the Epstein files
is because Trump is in the Epstein files.
And then Elon called for his impeachment
and to be replaced with JD Vance.
Whew.
So Dan, it was just four months ago,
it was February when Elon tweeted,
I love Donald Trump as much as a straight man
can love another man.
Now they've broken up right in the middle of pride.
And I am just wondering if you have thoughts
on the state of male friendship in America.
Men today don't have any close friends,
this is the problem.
It's a classic story.
Two lonely love star people meet online.
They bond quickly over shared passions
like taking food and medicine away
from the world's poorest people.
They start spending every moment together.
They become inseparable.
Almost feels like their personalities merge.
But John, they move too fast too soon.
And before you know it, it blows up.
Maybe they moved in together too quickly.
Blows up.
Things fall apart.
Next thing you know, one of them's calling
the other one a pedophile.
And here we are.
A pedophile that he says, you wouldn't is calling the other one a pedophile. And here we are. A pedophile that he says,
you wouldn't have been president without me, pedophile.
I mean, by moving to impeachment,
Elon Musk has moved more aggressively
than 99% of house Democrats on Donald Trump.
I mean, it is, it's wonderful.
It is, Elon finally, after many years,
has found a way to make Twitter fun again.
Yeah, this was the best day on Twitter
since he took it over.
I think it's the best day in politics in 2025.
That's what I believe.
Oh, I mean, not even close. Easily.
Yeah.
I mean, there's not a lot of great ones to choose from,
but Elon also, let's say he proposed a new political party.
He said, why don't we have a new political party
for the 80% of people in the middle?
So I guess we're bringing back the innovation party.
I don't think he was-
That's a deep cut.
And for those that are close readers of Axios in 2017,
you would know what that was.
You know who you are.
And he also hit Trump on tariffs. He quote tweeted someone saying, oh, can we admit the tariffs are stupid now?
And Elon says, yeah, there'll be a, there'll be a recession.
They'll they're going to cause a recession by the second quarter
or by the second half of the year.
Elon is just going nuts.
He is just tweeting up a storm.
This is, this was always the risks for Trump with the Elon partnership.
And it's why Trump treads so carefully around Elon for so long. This was always the risk for Trump with the Elon partnership.
And it's why Trump treads so carefully around Elon for so long, because Elon has a megaphone
almost as large as Trump's and he is very good at getting attention.
And when he goes, he goes bananas.
And that's where we are right now.
He goes bananas.
He certainly is.
Today's pod save America brought to you by ketamine.
That's neither here nor there.
That's neither here nor there.
That refers to nothing.
That's just an ad break.
That's just an ad break.
If anyone was wondering,
that's in reference to a New York Times story.
That's for the lawyers out there.
I think we all know the New York Times story,
which I want to get to at some point,
because I have a question for you
before we get into the current implications of all of this.
Let's go back to Elon deciding to come out against the bill.
Why do you think he turned on the bill
and ultimately Trump?
Was it because as the White House and Mike Johnson
and other Republicans are suggesting that
the bill would eliminate tax credits
for electric vehicles like Tesla's.
Was it out of a genuine concern for the deficit and debt?
Like Elon says, was it something else?
Trying to make sense of Elon Musk's brain.
That's quite a challenging mission you've given me.
Please use the code've given me.
Please use the code crooked for me.
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What's the, what's the website?
X.com.
What I do not believe it was because of the electric vehicle tax credits.
He, Trump ran against the electric vehicle tax credits. Trump ran against electric vehicle tax credits
the entire campaign.
I know this because Elon Musk tweeted it out today,
but Elon Musk was standing next to Donald Trump
when Donald Trump was praising Elon Musk's integrity
by pointing out that he was supporting Trump
despite the fact that Trump opposed
the electric vehicle tax cuts,
and Elon had never asked him to
change his position on it. So that I do not think that's the reason I think the Republicans
probably made a mistake by suggesting that right off the bat that probably inflamed Elon more to
suggest that he could not, I don't not saying his concerns about the deficit are well-founded
or necessarily legitimate. I don't know what his real concerns are here. The Republicans made a mistake by trying to suggest
that pure picky and greed was what was driving
on its opposition.
As opposed to, you could have just said,
we disagree here and that's it.
And they did not do that.
And they made this situation much worse.
I think that, you know,
and Elon has been tweeting videos of himself
and retweeting other people tweeting videos of him
talking about the debt
and the deficit and what a problem was for a long time.
And I think that when Elon took over Doge,
he wanted to, he thought he was gonna cut all the spending,
thought he was gonna make government more efficient
or whatever, and he knows that Doge has been seen now as a, basically a
failure, that the cuts were far less than what he said he could cut.
And so I think it kind of built from sort of feeling embarrassed or
shamed about Doge to now being pissed about the bill.
And I also think it results from just Elon still to this day, having
served in government and supposedly being
a very smart person, has no fucking idea
what actually are the drivers of debt and deficit.
And he genuinely thought that fucking feeding USAID
into the wood chipper, which has killed a bunch of kids
in Africa, that somehow that's gonna bring down
the deficit and debt.
And he doesn't realize that the biggest driver
in our debt is the defense budget entitlements.
And the fact that at least in this bill,
Donald Trump and the Republicans want, you know,
a couple trillion dollars in tax cuts,
mostly for extremely rich people like Elon Musk.
Yeah, I don't see.
So I think there's like a basic lack of understanding
about what causes the debt and deficit,
but then also he seems to care about the debt and deficit.
Neither Trump nor Elon know what's in this bill
or what it does or how it works.
Nope.
That they're like talking past each other.
I mean, maybe he cares about the deficits,
maybe he doesn't,
but if he were to truly care about them
and truly understand how they worked,
he would probably suggest giving back his tax cut.
Right.
Right, or cutting the defense budget,
which funds most of his companies, right?
He's not doing that.
He calls it like a pork-filled bill.
There's no pork in the bill.
There's a lot of dumb shit in the bill,
but this is not, this is not the,
it's not because the Republicans did not put pork
in the bills, because you cannot put those sorts of things
in this type of budget reconciliation bill.
This is not the appropriations bills that have like
the bridge to nowhere to, you know,
another deep cut from a long time ago, or this sort of, the sort of classic pork
barrel projects that are used as earmarks to buy off members.
That's not what's in this bill.
That's not why this bill is as in this deficit, because it's a giant tax cut
and a huge boost in the budgets for the defense department and Homeland
Security to do mass deportation.
Elon is correct that the bill is a disgusting abomination,
as he said.
The reason it's a disgusting abomination
is because it spends a trillion dollars
to give tax cuts for people making over a million dollars
and then pays for that by kicking 15 million people
off their health insurance.
So that's why it's a disgusting abomination.
So he was half right on that one.
I also think there was like a slow build
in all of the stories that came out
as Musk was leaving the White House
after he left the White House
about the cabinet being pissed at Musk
and him not getting along with anyone in Trump world.
And I have to say, I went back,
this is total conspiracy theory for me, but.
Oh, okay.
This is where we air them out, right?
Just in public.
Yes, that's how it works these days.
That's how it works now?
We'll get to some of that later on, but yes.
When you go to that, when you re-read
the New York Times story about Elon's alleged drug use
while he was in the White House,
or while he was at least on the campaign,
traveling with Trump, early on, it talks about how he's campaigning with Trump
and the New York Times got a picture of his pill bottle
that has like 20 random pills in it
and Adderall and a bunch of other stuff.
And there's the Academy stuff.
And it's like sourced to people familiar,
but the way that it's written, I'm like,
who would have given that to the New York Times,
including a picture of the pill box that he travels with? And I'm like, who would have given that to the New York Times, including a picture of the pillbox that he travels with?
And I'm like, I don't know.
He was with all the Trump people during the campaign.
So maybe he suspects at least,
who knows if it was or not,
maybe he suspects that it was White House people
who fucked him on that story.
Can I try a different theory here?
Maybe that's right.
I appreciate you delving,
getting out the red string for this.
Thank you, thank you.
But do you think JD Vance is the one
who gave us the New York Times?
Oh, interesting.
Well, no, maybe not,
because he's trying to depose Trump for JD Vance.
Yeah.
So maybe Stephen Miller.
Maybe Stephen Miller.
Yeah, that's an interesting.
Awkward dinner conversation in Miller household.
Now that- Wow.
Yeah, for those who don't know,
when Elon left the White House,
reports are that Katie Miller,
Stephen Miller's wife, who was working for Elon
or working as part of the Doge effort,
was gonna leave also to work for Elon post-White House.
I wonder if she drafted some of these tweets.
And then someone noticed that Elon
unfollowed Stephen Miller after the fight broke out today.
He also unfollowed Charlie Kirk.
This is a, I know this is not really where you spend
your valuable time, but this is a classic reality star move.
So that happens in sports a lot too,
where there's like an entire beat of people who are like,
the receiver just unfollowed the quarterback.
What does that mean?
Here's my theory of what happened there.
I think Elon Musk has convinced himself
he is some sort of fiscal austerity guy.
Like he's come to it,
he's come to it self-identify himself because of Doge.
And he probably thinks his bill is stupid
because you know, it is, it's incredibly stupid.
So he calls it an abomination.
Just, first he expresses some concern with it
in an interview.
He gets some positive feedback for that.
Then he calls it an abomination.
He gets a lot of engagement over that.
Now all of a sudden he has attention again,
because Elon really had stepped,
he had been the, one of the main characters
in world drama for about a year straight.
Then he stepped back, he was getting less attention,
his tweets were getting less traction,
he was just kind of tweeting about like new Tesla features
and SpaceX launches and not in the set,
he wasn't the main character.
And now he, this was a chance to be the main character.
Trump's talking about the Oval Office and he's in
and he's like getting that dopamine rush of posting
that you know so well.
A lot of people are talking about the ketamine,
but really it's the dopamine. That's, people are talking about the ketamine, but really. It's the dopamine. It's the dopamine.
That's, people are just discounting all the dopamine
that's coming from Elon just firing off these tweets
and getting all the response and he's all juiced up.
I think that's probably right.
I think that's probably right.
How do you think, to get to something that really matters
as opposed to just the fun reality show drama,
how do you think this could impact
whether Trump's bill actually passes Congress?
I think it makes the difficult task of getting this bill
through the Senate and then back through the House
even more difficult because Musk is giving voice
to two groups of people who voted for it in the House
with deep reservations and some senators in these two groups of people who voted for it in the House with deep reservations and some senators
in these two groups who have reservations about voting for it now. Those groups are the far right,
drown the government in the bathtub, MAGA, Freedom Caucus types who thinks that it didn't go far
enough in terms of cuts to Medicaid, SNAP, et cetera. And then you have these sort of more traditional Republicans
who are kind of like Paul Ryan Republicans in the closet,
who have concerns substantively and politically
about voting for a bill that adds $2.5 trillion
to the debt at any time of high interest rates
where it becomes incredibly and prohibitively expensive
to pay down that debt.
And so there's a group with this,
a lot of people are in the Senate.
And so he just is giving them cover to oppose this bill
in some way, shape or form.
Does it mean it won't pass?
I don't know that yet, but again,
it's a lot harder than it was before this.
This is the first real obstacle that's been put in the way
other than just caucus dynamics, right?
This is someone who is driving,
sort of shining a spotlight on the rift within the party and forcing it further apart.
And how do you think the breakup could impact the future
of the MAGA coalition?
Because there's a lot of people trying to figure out
who's side they're on today.
In fact, we have the Five on in our office,
like we always do.
We love to watch the Five on Fox
and see what they're doing.
And here's how Jesse Waters tried to navigate this today.
But sometimes guys fight.
Guys sometimes will punch you in the face,
and the next night you're having a beer.
Sleep with your girlfriend, and you patch things up.
Really?
Whoa.
Not your wife, your girlfriend.
Who your girlfriend? No one slept with my girlfriend, let's put it that way.
Oh my God.
Lot to unpack there, Dan.
Yeah.
What's going on with Jesse?
What's going on with Jesse?
Is he?
That I'm not gonna touch that one.
I don't really wanna know how that all played itself out.
I think-
Is Jesse saying that you could punch him in the face
and then he'll have a beer with you the next night? Do you think that's what he's saying? I think in the end, he's suggesting he's the one who slept with someone's girlfriend.
And then they had a beer with the person the next day.
Yeah, and then Greg Gutfeld was kind of quiet after that.
But anyway.
Anyway, we're too deep into the five right now.
I think that where this creates tension
in the Republican party is in the always uncomfortable
marriage between the Maga right and the Republican left. And I think that where this creates tension in the Republican party is in the always uncomfortable
marriage between the MAGA right and the tech right, right?
The Peter Thiel, David Sacks, all in guys,
VC bros who came to support Trump in this election
for a whole host of reasons.
Some cultural, a lot economic,
and they bought a lot of Trump's bullshit
about there's what Trump went on the All In podcast
and he promised that we were gonna do these things
to keep the high skilled workers here in the country
and he just goes, we're gonna staple a visa to diplomas.
And that's not what this is, right?
And this tension has been manifest
in the Elon Musk, Steve Bannon feud
since the day after the election.
Steve Bannon, you say?
Yeah, what does Steve Bannon have anything
interesting to say today?
Well, yeah, so as this fight was escalating
very quickly over the course of Thursday,
and Trump said, I'm gonna terminate the contracts
and then we get the Epstein accusation,
then we get the call for Trump's impeachment,
the joke was, okay, the only thing left here
that hasn't happened yet is Trump trying
to deport Elon Musk.
And sure enough, Steve Bannon on his show calls
for Elon Musk's deportation, an investigation
into Elon Musk, how he became a citizen
of the United States, what his immigration process was,
suggests deporting him,
and then calls for Donald Trump
to nationalize Starlink and SpaceX.
So he just, he went, Steve Bannon fucking, that's it.
He went there.
In the course of three hours,
we went from a mild dispute
around the financial implications of a budget bill
to accusations of pedophilia, deportation, and impeachment.
To your point about the TechRight, Derek Thompson tweeted,
the TechRight got suckered by the most obvious con man
in political history, defended him while he raised tariffs,
slashed science, and scared away foreign talent,
and now the administration's gonna wreck SpaceX for spite
while Bannon calls for Musk's deportation. Well done.
I think Derek nailed it.
Great job, people.
That's it.
That is exactly what happened with the tech right.
They're total con men.
And I don't think Donald Trump got conned by them
because he got what he wanted.
Although I will say, so Trump had an event at the White House
after Elon called for his impeachment and said
that he was in the Epstein files and Trump
got a shouted question about Elon at the end
of the event and just did not take the bait,
but seemed angry the whole time he was at the event.
Let's, we'll revisit this tomorrow after Trump's
had 12 diet cokes and got in.
His ketamine.
And he's gotten his phone back
because one thing we know about Trump over the years
is he prefers his fights in the tweets, not in the streets.
And so I could see him launching tonight on true social.
Yeah, there's gonna be a,
there's gonna be a sea caught threat at some point.
There is, I mean, not to get into the weird,
like the nerdy communications to this,
but Elon Musk is tweeting his on a platform
where everyone is with millions of people
and his millions of followers.
And Trump is on his weird, picky-une platform
that has very, very small number of people actually on it.
And so he's only communicating
by posting on this weird platform
than other people screenshotting his truths and then putting them on Twitter. Like if he's only communicating by posting on this weird platform than other people screenshotting
his truths and then putting them on Twitter.
Like if he really wants to get this going, he's got to get back on Twitter.
That's what I would say.
Yeah, I will say that the part of the co the MAGA coalition this time around, which is,
you know, we shorthand it is that the tech, right?
The Silicon Valley folks, the all in types.
It's also, you know, when we looked at the catalyst data, Trump did gain ground
with college men, not just non-college men. And usually in the Trump era, college-educated voters
have not been moving towards Trump. In fact, they've been moving towards the Democrats.
And I do wonder, and I don't just think it's this fight at all, but I think as the Trump
administration goes on, some of these college men who voted for Trump in 2024
and maybe hadn't voted for him in 2020 or 2016,
maybe because they thought Elon Musk and other business types
put their stamp of approval on Donald Trump,
I could see them starting to peel away
from the MAGA coalition as time goes on.
Yeah, I mean, these are most likely
economically- centered voters.
And so it's less his fight with Trump.
Although I think increasing the deficit
by trillions of dollars does not help with these voters.
I think putting in place tariffs that lead to a recession
does not help with these voters.
And they are probably,
these are profiles more likely voters.
These are the sort of voters who sat out 2016
or voted third party in 2016,
or maybe voted for Trump,
who then voted for Democrat in 2018 and stuck with Biden.
And so they are target voters for 2026 for sure.
Yeah.
All that said, the bill's problems on the right
go way beyond Elon Musk.
And as you just pointed out
with some of the people pissed about the deficits
and the trillions that it's pissed about the deficits and the trillions
that it's adding to the deficits,
the Republicans who care about the deficit aren't happy.
Republicans who care that Medicaid cuts
could cost them their jobs in 2026, they aren't happy.
Even Marjorie Taylor Greene is unhappy,
saying she didn't know everything that was in the bill
when she voted for it.
She's very upset at a provision,
we talked about this on offline,
a provision that would prevent states
and local governments from regulating AI
on their own for the next, most of the next decade.
So she's pissed about that.
Here's a sampling of some of the Republican complaints.
But now they want me to vote for $5 trillion
worth of increase in a debt ceiling.
And I'm just not for that. That's not conservative.
Here's a lesson for us all. No matter what political party holds office and is in charge,
we should all watch carefully the bills that we pass.
The president and senate leadership has to understand that we're serious. They all say,
oh, we can pressure these guys. No,
you can't. This is immoral what us old farts are doing to our young people. This is grotesque what
we're doing. We need to own up to that. This is our moment. I can't accept this scenario. I can't
accept it. So I won't vote for it unless we are serious about fixing it. This is our moment, old
farts. What do you think about that messaging?
Slam dunk, we're getting Republicans?
I think this bill is just gonna be a huge political gift
to the Republicans.
I mean, I'm obviously kidding there,
but let me just put in perspective
how unpopular this bill is.
So Heart Research, a Democratic research firm,
did a poll for a bunch of groups, including Center for American Progress, Protect Our Care, Families Ever
Billionaires, and they tested the bill and less than a third of voters supported it.
And then they went through and they did a messaging exercise where they did a generic
description of the bill, Democratic arguments for the bill, back and forth between Democratic
arguments and Republican arguments for the bill. When they finished that,
the bill is nearly 30 points underwater.
To help you understand how unpopular that is,
the Trump tax cut in 2017,
which was thought to be one of the most
unpopular legislation in history,
was about 14 points underwater when it passed in 2017.
And the Affordable Care Act,
which is in the lore of this incredibly polarizing bill
that cost the Democrats 60 plus seats in 2010.
That bill in the Kaiser foundation tracking poll was six points above
water when it passed in March of 2010.
And so this is by far the least, no one is asking for this.
And there's no benefit coming because people aren't getting other than the
exceptions around overtime and, uh, tips.
No one's getting new tax cuts. They're just keeping the tax cuts they've had for four years.
And so you're not even gonna get this boost
of like all of a sudden you're gonna get your check
in the mail with your new tax cut
or your paycheck's gonna look larger.
That's not what's gonna happen.
It's just status quo for everyone
other than people are gonna lose their healthcare
and their food assistance.
And so far the biggest challenge for those of us
who oppose this bill has been that not enough people
have heard about it and people aren't paying attention.
Data for Progress did a poll also,
and also found that the bill is very, very unpopular,
but then found out that I think it was like 4% of people
had heard a lot about it.
It was like very, it was a very small number of people had heard a lot about it.
I think 14 total respondents in their open-ended thing
knew the bill had Medicaid cuts.
14.
Total respondents, yeah.
Oh my God, okay.
So that's the other consequence of this being the basis
for the biggest breakup of the decade.
Is that now people are gonna like,
well, how did this whole thing start?
And then maybe they'll look into the bill.
On that note, how do you think Democrats should take
advantage of all this to kill the bill?
It is to, like you've pointed out,
the fundamental issue with the bill is that it's incredibly
unpopular, but not enough people know about it
or are paying attention to it.
So everyone has to find the tallest mountain they can find, the biggest megaphone they can find,
text all the people they can, shout about it, yell about it, talk about it in simple to easy to understand terms that it's essentially a
tax cut for the very wealthy and corporations paid for by taking food and
healthcare away from millions and millions of Americans. And on top of that, still adds trillions of dollars to the deficit.
Like just everyone has to know about it.
When people know about it, they're going to be against it.
And I think there we have two tasks here.
If we can, there is a chance that we can create enough political pressure
that they have to change what this bill looks like to take some of those cuts away.
It's something we'll have to pass because if they don't pass something,
we will default on our debt and everyone's taxes will go up.
So they'll have to pass something. but we can't, the potential to change
the nature of what that is by making it as politically painful as possible.
Elon Musk is helping us do that.
He's not making the arguments that we would be making.
He's not out there defending Medicaid, but he, as you say, he's drawing
attention to it and putting a spotlight on it and we can then come in, follow
him in the breach and make our arguments.
Yeah.
And I says, you know, some people are concerned
because as you point out,
he's not making the same arguments that we are.
And obviously it is adding trillions to the deficit.
He's correct about that.
But the reason that I think we oppose the bill
and probably most, I think if you ask people to choose
between what they hate most, Medicaid cuts
and tax cuts for the rich, or adding to the deficit, I think they hate most, Medicaid cuts and tax cuts for the rich, or adding
to the deficit, I think they would choose the Medicaid cuts and the tax cuts for the
rich for sure.
But you know, Elon Musk called the bill a disgusting abomination.
We should call it a disgusting abomination too, and we can explain why we think it's
a disgusting abomination, which is maybe partly what Elon thinks, but also the fact that it's
going to kick 15 million people off their healthcare to pay for a trillion dollars in tax cuts
for millionaires and billionaires.
I know we, I agree with you that the Medicaid cuts are by, are much more effective.
All the testing shows that as an argument.
We have this hesitancy as Democrats because we've been burned by austerity politics in
the past to talk about the deficits.
Yeah.
But we should talk about the deficits. There are times when it makes sense to go into deficit,
like after a financial crisis to save the economy, to give people money to stay alive during COVID.
Those times make sense. To go into deficit, to give tax cuts to rich people at a time of incredibly
high interest rates where the debt you're ranking up a rate cost so much more is insane. And it's going to bother
a lot of people. And we should not shy away from that argument. I think we should make it.
And I just think you don't have to complicate the simple here. Everyone hates the bill, right?
Republicans hate it. Elon Musk hates it. This person hates it. You know, we have plenty of quotes now to play from all kinds of Republicans about how they hate
the bill. We can talk about the Medicaid cuts. We can talk about the ACA cuts. There's just
creating a lot of chaos around the bill about how it's intensely disliked. Because if the
casual news consumer, if all they hear, oh, this is a bill that most people don't like,
that's all. And then you'll get enough pressure on some of these Republicans to, you know,
like then they have a very thin margin that can lose three votes in the Senate
and a couple more votes in the house when it goes back to the house.
So it's, you know, like you said, they probably, they need to pass
something or else taxes go up.
Did you see Trump was on truth social Wednesday, I think, talking about,
we should eliminate the debt ceiling altogether.
You know that's a play that's coming.
He's going to try to figure out how to get rid of the debt ceiling.
That's a position that we've held personally over the course of time.
I know, I know.
Cause he was like, I agree with Elizabeth Warren on this.
So we'll have him mitten the coin, mitten the gold coin.
Well, I mean, there's a legislative abolition
of the debt ceiling and then there is simply minting
the gold coin or someone just not even enforcing it,
which is what Trump is obviously gonna try to do
if somehow we pass the, we run out of money
before they can get this disgusting abomination passed.
Yeah, well, kill the bill.
That's the rallying cry.
Elon started it, you know, people like him can get credit
for good ideas once in a while, kill the bill, kill the bill. That's the rallying cry. Elon started it, you know? People like him can get credit for good ideas
once in a while.
Kill the bill.
Kill the bill.
That's what we gotta do now.
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Okay, let's get to the executive orders Trump would rather be making headlines right now,
but are still quite awful.
The first one, titled, very understated, reviewing certain presidential actions, opens an investigation
to determine, quote, whether certain individuals conspired to deceive the public about Biden's
mental state and unconstitutionally exercise the authorities and responsibilities
of the president.
Essentially, the claim here is that Biden didn't have command of what was happening
in the White House and that his staffers basically ran the country via auto pen.
In a statement, Biden responded, let me be clear, I made the decisions during my presidency.
I made the decisions about the pardons, executive orders, legislation, and proclamations.
Any suggestion that I didn't is ridiculous and false.
That didn't stop Trump from elaborating
on the conspiracy theory in the Oval on Thursday.
Well, I don't think Biden would know
whether or not he signed it.
I'm asking if you've uncovered any of that information.
No, but I've uncovered, you know, the human mind.
I was in a debate with the human mind
and I didn't think he knew what the hell he was doing.
So, you know, it's just one of those things, one of those problems. We can't ever allow that to happen to our country. The danger
our country was in. But I know some of the people that use that auto pen, and those are not the
people that had the same ideology as Joe Biden. These were radical left lunatics that used that.
And they didn't get elected. He didn't get elected either actually.
Thank you very much everybody.
Speaking of mental decline,
Dan, what'd you think about this?
I mean, Trump sounds like an unhinged crackpot
talking about this.
Yeah, he does.
It makes no sense to most people.
This is like, you have to be deep into mega fanfic
to know what he's talking about.
I don't wanna gloss over the fact
that everyone's just treating it as normal
that the president of the United States
ordered a criminal investigation into his political opponent.
And I brought with a memo and directed the White House
council to work with the attorney general on it.
Not how things are supposed to work.
No, no, definitely not.
White House is not supposed to order the Justice
Department to conduct investigations.
No, that's not supposed to work.
I know the frog in the pot is a very tired metaphor
after 10 years of Trump.
But the way everyone just covered this
is if he was just signing executive order
to review procurement processes of the department of defense.
They're like Donald Trump signed an order today
as if like an unprecedented insane thing just happened.
Just like normal news.
What happens here?
And do you think this is a, who is this a problem for?
Huh, who is this a problem for?
Probably the people around Joe Biden, not because there is anything
real here. Like this is absurd. Even if you read all the reporting, you read Jake Tapper
and Alex Thompson's book, which you guys are gonna talk about later in this podcast. There
is no allegation that Joe Biden is like purely a puppet of a bunch of woke staffers, just
like auto penning whatever they want and why he doses. Like that's not, there are real legitimate.
Jake and Alex say that like in the first couple of pages,
they're like those who expect this reporting to reveal,
you know, someone who was like in serious, you know,
I forget the word they used,
just like a purely senile president who didn't know
and had any idea what he was doing,
you're gonna be disappointed.
So.
Like, so there's that, this is complete and total bullshit.
It is going to be, if this investigation actually moves
forward, if the FBI is going to start interviewing people,
the people around Joe Biden, some of whom
have already been called to Congress
to testify in the congressional version of this investigation,
will probably incur significant legal expenses
and be exposed to risk, not because of what of
this ridiculous conspiracy there just once you are being interviewed by law enforcement,
social law enforcement with a malicious political intent, any sort of thing can happen from that.
It was the investigation in Benghazi through the congressional investigations that led to
Hillary Clinton's emails. Once they start digging, they can make your life very challenging if that's what they want to do.
Even if you never did anything wrong.
Yeah. And let's be honest about what they're looking for here. If he doesn't like executive
orders that Joe Biden signed with an auto pen, Donald Trump can overturn those orders as he's
been doing for the last couple months that he's been president.
All that he cares about is the pardons.
So he cares that Joe Biden pardoned a bunch of people or gave preemptive pardons to a
bunch of people that Donald Trump would like to investigate and potentially jail.
That's what they really care about here.
There's also like the drama around it and they can take revenge on Biden and they can
have a bunch of headlines and give chum to the right wing media about about, oh, we're finally, you know, investigating the Bidens
and the coverup and all that.
But really he just wants the pardons to go away.
How you would ever possibly do that, the auto pen,
there's no, I don't know that Joe Biden,
there's no evidence that Joe Biden auto-penned those pardons.
I would be shocked if he did.
But even if he had, that has been,
the auto pen has been treated by the courts as a legally recognized way of executing laws and executive orders and things like that.
And so even though what it would mean.
The first time he threw out this allegation, you know, people dug up video after video, picture after picture of Joe Biden signing legislation himself.
I realized it was probably just the body double,
but you know, at least that's out there.
And that's gonna be tough for courts to figure out
if it was the body double or the real Joe Biden.
Did you see that Elon Musk also suggested
that there was a Trump body double?
Yes, yeah.
No, that's why someone should look into that too.
You know, maybe who was signing his legislation.
I want to hear from these 20, 28 Democratic candidates
about what their plan for that is if they win.
So Trump or the Trump body double or the auto pen
also signed two more orders, both touching on immigration.
One is a revival of his notorious first term travel ban.
This one's gonna take effect on June 9th
and ban citizens of 12 countries from entering the US,
supposedly in the name of fighting terrorism.
Those countries are Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea,
Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen.
It also partially restricts travel from seven other countries, including Cuba and Venezuela.
We knew at some point this would be coming because Trump signed an order on Inauguration
Day, directing relevant departments to identify countries where they could implement such a ban. So obviously there was a lot of other
news today to cover besides the travel ban, but I would say fairly muted response considering that
last time he tried a travel ban when he first came into office in 2017, people flooded the airports
and he had to pull back also because it was poorly written
from a legal perspective and the courts kind of threw it out and then eventually they got to the
point where it could pass muster at least with the Supreme Court. What do you think's going on
there with the response? I think it is a sort of a dark and deeply depressing statement about where we've gone after the last seven years now,
eight years now. I think about myself. I headed directly to the San Francisco airport after that
was signed and protested with thousands of other people there. And what has happened I think is
Trump's bigoted, jingoistic, nationalistic politics has become normalized in a way. In 2017,
it was possible to imagine that the president of the United States would ban travel to people
from Muslim countries because they were Muslim. That was the context for it. People reacted to
that with outrage and fervor. And just that sort of, that is,
it's not that it's acceptable.
I'm not saying people accept,
I'm not saying people like this,
but it is this, we are no longer shocked
by these sorts of things, right?
When you're living in a world where
the president is sending people without due process
to a torture prison in El Salvador,
these things do not seem as shocking as they were before.
And that is ultimately, that is Trump winning.
That's how authoritarians take power,
is that people lose the ability to be outraged
at things very worthy of that outrage.
Yeah, and substantively, you could argue
that the travel ban has been overtaken
by much more extreme immigration and deportation policies,
like you just mentioned with CICOT.
Also, like they suspended all refugees,
the refugee resettlement program in this country,
except for the Afrikaner
farmers, and a host of other immigration actions that seem far more extreme even than the travel
ban, even though the travel ban is horrific.
So the other order he signed is one that bans Harvard from being able to enroll new international
students.
Last month, Trump tried to revoke Harvard certification
in the government student and exchange visitor program,
which a judge blocked while the court case proceeds.
This time, Trump's arguing that he has
a national security justification
under the Immigration and Nationality Act.
So it was the State Department and DHS last time
that tried to block the international students
that's currently going through courts
that the judge temporarily blocked now
I think this is a legal sort of effort to say well, this is a presidential power now and
This is a national security thing and so courts should not intervene because it's the president's power. It's article 2
This is like their theory, you know, the unitary executive theory and so
It's obviously almost certainly going to court.
What do you think?
Is it just that they're just going to
keep fighting Harvard here?
Yeah, I think there's two things happening here.
The first is I think Trump just likes fighting with Harvard.
I think he thinks it's good politics to fight with the most elite of elite institutions.
It sort of, I think in his mind creates this anti-establishment, anti-elite populist persona.
Yeah, it's like elites and he gets to attack elites
and foreigners in one.
Yes, Harvard is the easiest one to pick on.
They're hard to pick on the sense that they have resources
and so they're not scared like some of the other universities
but they are the, I think the easiest to demonize.
It's the most famous schools, most elite school.
So I think that this is part
of that larger conservative project.
I don't know whether Trump thinks about it that way,
but the people behind him certainly do.
People writing these orders and finding these authorities do.
Yeah, certainly.
Yeah, for Trump, it's hard to tell.
There is some evidence that they at least feel the need to sort of paint this action
as not as extreme as it is.
And Trump's saying like, oh, you know, Chinese students are still welcome in our institutions.
It's just we're going to just look at their social media accounts and international students
can still come to these schools and to Harvard.
And we want to work with Harvard to fix this, but Harvard is not, you know, there's probably some bad ones
and Harvard's not giving us a list of the bad ones
or letting us check.
Otherwise we're happy to have international students.
And I can't tell why he's doing that,
but you know, it may suggest that they know
that it's not quite popular to just say,
we're going to have a ban on all international students
and a ban on all international students and a ban on all Chinese
students everywhere in America and we're gonna try
to destroy the nation's most elite institution,
one of the best universities in the world, right?
So maybe there's a hint that they know
that that's not super popular.
I think there's a tension at the heart of all Trump's things
which is that he likes to beat up on elite institutions,
but what he really wants more anything else
is to be accepted by those elite institutions.
Yeah, and if he can't be accepted by them,
then he at least wants to be feared, you know?
Yeah.
So, you know, obviously more bad news on immigration there,
but there's been some slivers of good news out there
on some of these deportations and immigration.
So, Judge James Boesberg, who Trump famously does not like,
he ruled that using the Alien Enemies Act
to deport over 100 Venezuelan men
to El Salvador's mega prison was unlawful
and that the administration has to provide
habeas relief to them.
Of course, the Supreme Court unanimously believes
that as well, so we'll see if he actually follows.
But then there's a couple of cases that we have talked about last episode.
And prior to that, that we should update you on the Missouri woman from Hong Kong
named Carol, who we spoke about last episode.
She's lived 20 years in a very rural Trumpy area of Missouri.
It was like 80% Trump And they, she was arrested.
She was, you know, she has three kids thrown in detention.
She has been released and this followed just an uproar from the town.
All these people who said they voted for Trump, they, they marched and they, and
they pushed their local officials on this.
And so they have, she's not completely out of the woods yet,
her lawyer says, but she is currently released.
And they think that they feel good about getting her
to stay in the United States.
The Massachusetts High School honor student
who came here from Brazil when he was five
and was detained on his way to volleyball practice,
thrown in detention center, shackled.
He has been released from ICE detention as well.
And, um, I can't remember if I talked about this in the show, but the, the
four-year-old girl from Bakersfield here in California, living in Bakersfield,
she's from Mexico.
Her parents brought her here.
It was legal.
She has legal status.
She, she was able to come here because she needed life-saving care, um, that
she couldn't get in Mexico.
And she got that care and it's keeping her alive.
And if they deported her back to Mexico, which is what they wanted to do,
doctors said that she very well probably would have died.
And she is now being allowed, she's getting an exception to stay here.
All three of those cases that I mentioned,
the decisions followed just a public outcry, both in the communities
where these people have lived for a long time, and also just nationally, people calling attention
to it. And so as bleak as things are, I do think raising awareness of these cases when we hear
about them, it's not just doing it to yell about it.
I think it really does have,
like political pressure does have an effect.
And, you know, we, so we should keep it up.
Yeah, our forces have power.
Yeah.
All right, when we come back, you're gonna hear
the conversation Lovett and I had with Jake Tapper
and Alex Thompson about original sin,
all the Biden discourse, two things before we do that.
In case you missed it, Love It sat down this week for a YouTube exclusive with New York
Attorney General Tish James, who the Trump administration is now going after because
she went after Trump.
They talked about weaponizing the justice system, the New York City mayor's race, and
a lot more.
You can check out the full conversation on our YouTube page, youtube.com slash at sign
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On the latest Inside 2025, Alyssa Mastromonico
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to unpack big topics like the national debt,
tariffs and the long-term impact
of today's economic policies.
And on a new polar coaster,
Dan broke down rising approval ratings for Trump
and surprising new polling that shows Pete Buttigieg,
ahead of Kamala Harris in an early look
at the 2028 Democratic field.
Dan, you also took questions, right?
I did, I took lots of questions, great questions
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All right.
Hey everybody.
Here we are, the first four names on the Biden family
Christmas card list.
How you guys doing?
Congrats on number one.
Thank you so much.
New York Times.
Look at that.
Pretty good.
All right, so the book has now been out long enough that we get to ask you about the reaction
to the book because I don't know if you've noticed, but it's been quite intense, including
from the subject of the book, former President Joe Biden.
Who just in case you didn't know, said that he could beat us up.
Well, that was my first question.
Because I looked at that clip, and he was like,
they didn't mention you guys?
The reporters did not.
They didn't mention us or the book.
They didn't mention you guys or the book.
They just asked about the discussion
about his mental capabilities, and Biden responded,
you can see that I'm mentally incompetent, I can't walk,
and I could beat the hell out of both of them. I saw that live and I immediately texted you and said,
I think Biden just said he could beat you up.
I first heard it from you.
I think you're the both of them because you're not referenced.
You're not referenced in any way.
It was unclear if it was simultaneously or one after the other.
I think it's like the one gorilla versus a hundred men kind of situation.
Did you guys take that to be you?
I don't know who else it could have been, but I took it to be us.
Yes, I took it to be us.
Other Bidens have also weighed in on the book, his children, Hunter and Ashley, one of his
granddaughters, Naomi.
But there's one official response from a Biden spokesperson that's in almost every single
story about the book.
They haven't changed it.
We continue to await anything that shows
where Joe Biden had to make a presidential decision or where national
security was threatened or where he was unable to do his job.
In fact, the evidence points to the opposite.
He was a very effective president.
What do you guys think of that response?
So that was the response that they gave before the book was released.
Yeah.
And I said at the time, OK, wait until you read it
and you'll get an answer.
You'll have to change that statement, but they have not.
And the truth of the matter is that the book has any number
of moments where one can wonder if whatever issues he was having
did actually affect his ability to do the presidency in the way that we would want and
there was actually
an essay about this in Slate today about one of the anecdotes that I found most disturbing which was
Senator Michael Bennett from Colorado goes to the White House in June 2024 before the debate and it's an immigration event and
June 2024 before the debate and it's an immigration event and
Biden has a very unsettling kind of moment where he seems to have some sort of neurological
Episode before in front of the cameras very quick, but he's like talking and nobody can understand what he's saying and it's not
That thing he does when he whispers to make a point
Do you know what I'm saying? Yeah, that's if you couldn't hear that that's that thing He does when he whispers to make a point. Do you know what I'm saying? Like that's, if you couldn't hear that, that's that thing he does when he whispers to make a point. Watch me, watch me, nobody sing.
Yes, anyway, it's not that these mics
aren't Biden level mics, but it's,
he's having some moment.
It's like some weird thing.
And Senator Bennett leaves the White House
and thinks to himself,
this is why our immigration policy is such a mess,
because the Commander-in-Chief can't manage the portfolio, he can't handle it.
He like, he can't tell people what to do, because he's not able to be engaged the way that,
whether or not you like his policies, and I imagine this crowd doesn't,
Trump or Obama or other presidents have been able to.
And in fact, the Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mallorca was waiting at
the very beginning of the Biden presidency for the order to do more border enforcement,
which would be a Biden-esque way to do the job or an Obama-esque way to do the job.
And the order never came. So there are, in the book, moments of people wondering
if he's not able to do the job.
I want to step back and talk about how you guys went
about writing this book.
Just for people who don't know how a book like this
comes together, could you talk a bit about
your reporting process, the sourcing,
verifying anecdotes and recollections, the
fact-checking and all that, Alex? Yeah, I mean if anyone's like, well now you tell
us, I don't blame them for feeling that way. But the truth is that this book
came about every, almost every single interview of the over 200 was done
after November 5th. The origins of it actually are, I was on Jake's show the
day before the election.
He said, I think Kamala Harris might lose.
And I've been thinking about this book where we examine how the Democratic Party allowed
Trump to come back.
Would you be interested?
And like Jake and I were friendly, but we weren't like, let's write a book friendly.
And so I was like-
Buy me dinner first, kind of.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so I was like, sure, sure, OK, whatever.
And then didn't think it was going to go anywhere.
And then, sure enough, Jake sends me
a draft of the book proposal the night of November 6.
And we turned in, and we did all those interviews.
Finally, people that we had been cold calling,
sliding into their DMs for like four years
that never wanted to talk, or if they did talk,
they weren't exactly candid,
because I think there was this,
and we can talk more about this,
this gripping fear that saying anything
would ultimately help Donald Trump
and not change Joe Biden's mind.
Now that was over and people were willing to finally confide,
you know, small episodes that they had seen
that troubled them, that they sort of dismissed
as perhaps one-offs and were willing to sort of take us
behind the scenes.
Now, many of those people are still anonymous.
Every single time we always try to get people on the record.
Sometimes people do, sometimes people don't, But that's why we interviewed over 200 people because
even when they're anonymous, you need more cooperation.
Yeah. And just because this is the writer's block and this is Los Angeles where even bus
drivers have screenplays. So I'll give you just the idea of some of the writer stuff
we did. For me, just as a writer, this is my seventh book and structure is like the most important thing for me. You know, I'm sure everybody
here knows that George R.R. Martin from the Game of Thrones books says that
there are gardeners and there are architects and I'm definitely an
architect that you need to build the house and then you fill in the rooms. And
so we started with the structure like here here are what I think the chapters should
be. Alex and I went back and forth and figured that out. Here are all the people we want to
interview. And then we would just write chapters. And you know, when they were done, they weren't
done. But we would just like fill in the rooms and then go back. And the biggest disagreement
we had, this is a very, very gratifying, pleasant professional relationship, but the biggest disagreement we had, this is a very gratifying, pleasant professional
relationship, but the biggest disagreement we had
was Google Docs versus Word.
Let me guess, you were the Word guy.
Yes, I'm the Word guy.
Absolutely.
Listen, we wrote the...
As a Word guy.
I'm a Google Doc guy.
Oh, thank God.
Listen, we had to write the entire book in one word
document that we emailed back and forth.
It wasn't even by chapters.
And then I'm like, you know.
Jake's doing smoke signals, sending his horse and buggy
out with the latest edition.
And as the millennial, I'm like, honestly, my Command S buttons
don't even work anymore.
So I was frantically trying to save the document,
because it doesn't autosave like Google Docs. So just just just we started we started with Google Docs okay
I'm like I'm not against Google Docs. Some people are saying that maybe you were
saying you were okay with Google Docs but maybe behind the scenes weren't as
capable with Google Docs. That there's some evidence that maybe you'd lost a step
with Google Docs. True. It's true.
You can't point to any evidence.
This is a cover-up.
But I will say this.
Once, so we had a list of 200 plus people that we wanted to interview and we interviewed
almost every single person.
Google Docs stops at 100, right?
So the next time, so we had two different lists of Google Docs stops at a hundred right so we had so at the next time we had so we had two different lists of Google
Docs, this is too much in the Google Docs weeds
But he couldn't handle the second Google Doc the fact that there was a second Google anyway
Yeah, the second Google Doc so the book
There's you were talking about this that before the election
Before Joe Biden steps
aside, there's this incredible fear, right?
And this is not a kind of mercenary or kind of political, it's a genuine concern for the
country.
That if you have concerns about Joe Biden's age and you go public with those concerns,
that might hurt him.
He's not stepping aside.
You've done nothing to make our situation better.
You've made Donald Trump's situation better. What is the logic after the election for people to still be afraid to speak honestly
about this, including in the book you make reference to people who were publicly defending
Biden, I believe to this day, while talking to you behind the scenes? Yeah. And you could tell us who
they are. Well, you definitely know who they are, but you don't know who they are.
So I think that there is still a tremendous amount of fear about the anger of the Biden
campaign.
I mean, it is odd to be attacked by Joe Biden, Hunter Biden, Ashley Biden, Naomi Biden.
I guess there's a wife and maybe like six grandkids
that we're waiting for before we get the whole set.
But I mean, it's not pleasant.
And then, you know, the Democratic Party is,
it's not like everybody, I mean, I think that the book
has changed the conversation where people just now accept that what we're saying is true.
I mean, you guys were there last year,
but a lot of people were very reluctant to acknowledge this.
I think the book has changed the conversation,
but it's not as though the 2028 candidates
are running out there, like holding the book up
and saying like, we need to deal with this as a party.
I mean, people are still in denial about it.
Yeah. I mean, you guys use, obviously, the word cover up in
the title, provocative, intentionally, I'm sure. What I
have always tried to figure out is, and I know you guys have
said that some of the people you talked to some of the people in
that inner circle, like genuinely believed he's fine or they or you at least you leave open the
fact that so is it is it a cover-up if they are genuinely thinking everyone else is crazy
we're around him all the time we think he's fine even if we all see something different
it's a great question and the reason why we use cover up is because, listen, everyone knew Joe Biden was old.
Everyone saw it.
The polling displayed it.
But even with people recognizing he was old, the Joe Biden we saw on the debate stage was
still very shocking to tens of millions of people.
And the reason it was shocking, and I think the book really shows this, is that debate
Biden, for lack of a
better term, that was not the first or even close to the first time he had acted that
way behind the scenes. And there were active, even if they would not acknowledge it to themselves,
by their very actions, they were trying to hide and conceal Joe Biden from acting like
that in public, from members of their own cabinet,
from members of the Democratic Party,
from members of Congress.
And those efforts became increasingly frantic
the six to eight months before the debate.
Now, your other question of,
well, if they don't know they're covering it up,
if they're not Congress, is it a coverup?
By very virtue, one quick, one like quick example,
if you saw Joe Biden and Jill Biden on The View,
just like two weeks ago, you know,
she's doing what she has been doing for the last year
and a half, which is she sort of helps him out
when he's like struggling.
She'll jump in and like sort of complete sentences.
I'm sure she'll say, he's fine, he's great.
But by her very actions, she is showing that she recognizes that he needs her to pick up the she is trying to pick up his slack
I I think actually that the statement that they've given
Suggests that they know
He couldn't do the job 24-7. They don't dispute. I mean we
What we have in the book, I don't know how many people have actually read the book But but what we have in the book, I don't know how many people
have actually read the book, but what we have in the book is these aren't like our conclusions
based on like what, you know, our view watching TV. This is based on, you know, more than
200 interviews with cabinet officials, members of Congress, fundraisers, donors, you know,
people who saw him up close, who told us their stories. So when cabinet secretaries tell us
that by the end of the Biden presidency,
he could not be relied upon for that proverbial
2 a.m. phone call in the middle of the night
with a national security emergency,
I mean, that's a big deal.
That means he can't do the job of president.
That's what it means.
I mean, that's what the job is.
I'm old enough to remember when Hillary was running ads against Obama in Texas saying that he
couldn't be relied upon to do that because he was so inexperienced. I'm sure
that's seared into your brain and John you probably wrote those.
There's a good ad, there's a good ad. Love it, love it. Mark and we're just writing it together.
Good ad, good ads don't always work. Every losing campaign isn't wrong about everything.
But he couldn't be counted on for that. They don't say in their statement, you know, it's
not true that he lost his train of thought in uncomfortable ways. It's not true that
he didn't recall the name of his national security advisor. It's not true that he couldn't
be relied upon
for the 2 a.m. phone call.
They say, and his decisions were fine
and you can't point to any evidence as to otherwise.
And I mean, yeah, I can, but that's not even the point.
You're kind of granting the whole premise of the book.
Yeah, it sort of, you, it does sort of raise the question,
well, what does it mean to be up to the job, right?
And what do we require of this person
in this sort of unique role that they play? Because I can see how
you could say both statements are true. You have this image of what a president does,
and it's in the room making a decision of seven people around a table. They're presenting
options. Maybe they disagree. Maybe they don't. And you say go or you say yes, you say no.
And even in the book, you acknowledge that when Joe Biden is in control of the schedule,
when it's at his time at his choosing, he is can do that task, right? But the Bennett example is
something else which is a harder to measure thing that part of the job of being president is over
time taking in information from a bunch of different people synthesizing it moving a debate forward
That's never a decision right that he can no longer have that capacity in part because of his declining ability to communicate while still
meeting that kind of decision making in a meeting threshold and by the way, I believe people in his
Maybe it's Jake Sullivan or Tony Blinken have said that they did have the 2 a.m.
Moment with him and they did feel like he Was up to doing that yeah, and I think I think your point of like what is the job of a president is a good one
and
So let's say we have senior officials that say that if the job is making decisions and communicating
He was clearly not able to do the latter for most of the four years and it got worse
But also, you know what's sort of striking about their argument is they are saying clearly not able to do the latter for most of the four years and it got worse.
But also, you know, what's sort of striking about their argument is they are saying, yes,
he was, he couldn't communicate.
Yes, he would ramble and stumble in meetings.
Yes, his schedule was often limited from 10 to four.
His energy would be bad when he got tired, he became unfocused.
But we swear that it never affected,
and all those things that are signs of like decline or aging never affected his decision making,
which I mean they don't know. Yeah so let me just point to some decisions that he made
that we wonder about. Okay first of all there's the immigration that Senator Bennett wonders about,
and I think that is a fair argument to make
because that is about managing, I mean,
Barack Obama was, you know, he pushed for immigration reform
but he also, you know, kept a strict border
and deported a lot of people.
He got a lot of flack for that, as you recall.
He also got reelected.
So I mean-
But I do think on that one, the part,
I mean, we could tell a whole conversation
about the immigration stance of the Democratic Party
and how it evolved over the years,
but I do think like the die was cast in the 2020 primary
when every candidate was like,
yeah, we'll decriminalize border crossings. Except for. But the state, well, look, how much was Biden
involved in? How much not? Like, where's the staff? Although that's the point.
That's what we're saying. But I'm saying is what's surprising about the
immigration thing is the the closest aides around him are like pretty
moderate Democrats, right? It's not like a bunch of Ron Klain, though, the
run is Ron Klain though.
Ron Klain, the White House Chief of Staff
for the first couple of years became this,
even though his roots were in like neo,
new conservative Democrats like Al Gore,
he became the hero to the progressives.
And I think there's an argument to be made
that he steered the ship of state to the left.
But beyond that, I don't know how aware President Biden was that there were
criticisms from people like Larry Summers or Jason Furman that they were
putting too much money into the economy and it was going to be inflationary.
I don't know.
And now that's necessary.
I'm not proving it, but I just don't know.
I don't know.
We have no reporting that suggests
that the decisions he made about Afghanistan in 2021
were rooted in anything other than
his fierce, determinative belief
that he was right about Afghanistan
and that Obama and the generals were wrong.
Yes.
Okay, but I don't know what information
he was capable of absorbing and synthesizing, as you say, and on and on.
Well, I also, part of this, though, is what I realized,
and I realized in Stark Relief
when reading the book as well, is, oh,
in the same way that I think people around Biden
who do not, to this day, believe they were part of a coverup,
one piece of evidence being,
they thought he was gonna win the debate.
They put him out there, but that over evidence being they thought he was going to win the debate. They put him out there.
But that over time being around someone, your baseline moves, my baseline moves, right?
Because let's say we disagree, and actually I do think Biden's decision making was up
to snuff, and I don't believe his actual capacity to make governing decisions was impacted.
Part of the job of a president is persuading people to come along.
If you are unable to persuade people to the correctness of your views,
to build a coalition, either in Congress
or amongst the public, you're weaker,
you can't get things done.
You can't achieve the goals you're trying to achieve.
And even Democrats who were making this argument,
that I was among them for a time,
that no, you can't, you may have questions
about his ability to communicate,
but he's right-wing, fear-mongering about dementia,
and that he's not doing the job, that's unfair.
He's able to do the job of president,
but I was accepting less from a president.
I didn't realize the cost of having the bully pulpit
basically empty.
Yeah, I mean, it was, I mean, ever since television was,
you know, was invented,
communication is just an essential part of the job.
And you could say like, that's not fair, or that doesn't
shouldn't matter. But it just does.
Yeah. And I, the bar was lowered, like gradually, because I
remember when he gave the State of the Union in February of 2023.
And I remember watching that State of the Union without
looking at Twitter and at the reaction, just like, how do I
think he's doing? And I was like, he got past,
he got through it. He's okay. And then I turned to the coverage or at least like social media and
everyone was like, that was amazing. He's great. And I'm like, he was good. Like he didn't have
any stumbles. And he was like quick on his feet to like joust with the Republicans, but it wasn't
like great. And then you think to yourself, and you guys talk about this in the book a lot,
that there's the Biden-ness, right?
Which is Joe Biden forever, when he was much younger,
was still long-winded, gives very long answers,
tell stories, very gaff prone.
And so as he gets older,
and especially as he gets into this term as president,
you're like, is that just Joe Biden
being the typical Joe Biden who tells really long stories, stumbles, gaffes that he's been doing forever? Or is it something else? And I do think that was it was legitimately difficult
to figure that out. So I'm from Philadelphia. So Joe Biden has been on my TV since I was three.
Because Delaware is such a small state,
they don't have a media market.
They rely on ours.
A lot of toll booths, but no media market.
Yeah.
And so the very first, I was a cartoonist in college,
and the very first cartoon I did for The Daily Dartmouth
was making fun of Joe Biden for his plagiarism scandal. So this is somebody...
So you've had it out for him forever.
No, it's just...
This is actually new information to me.
When I worked for salon.com, I interviewed, or I was part of a briefing that he did in 2001.
So I've been aware of this guy for a long, long time and the Biden-ness, and this is in the
book and it's an important part of, not to let anybody off the hook, but it's an important part
of why for some people it was difficult to understand what was going on with him, is that
he's always been long-winded, he's always told long pointless stories, he's always been a blowhard and he's
always been gaffe-prone and in fact it's really remarkable the degree to which
his vice presidential staff reinvented him as the cool avuncular uncle with
the aviators and the ice cream and the Camaro, this crowd looks like they're at least my age.
And so like, you know, like there was a time
when he was just kind of known as a blowhard Senator.
In fact, not to bring up another uncomfortable moment
from the Obama campaign, but here I go.
So-
Jake's memory, if only there was someone
who could harness it to generate some sort of
renewable energy.
Well, I was going to say, you can buy original sin.
Profile of Barack Obama in Rolling Stone magazine in 2007 or 2008, and there is a moment where
Barack Obama is sitting at a hearing and the chairman of the committee, unnamed, is speaking
and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, and Barack Obama writes on a piece of paper and hands
it to Gibbs, Robert Gibbs,
shoot me now.
I remember that.
I remember that.
Who's the chairman and what's the committee?
Yeah.
Joe Biden, Senate Foreign Relations.
Well, and look, that had been my impression of Joe Biden
until he was vice president
and we all worked in the White House.
He was a great vice president and the image was recreated.
I do think there was part of him that was like, he did want to show some discipline as vice president and we all work in the White House. He was a great vice president and the image was recreated. I do think there was part of him that was like,
he did want to show some discipline as vice president.
He had ascended to this role.
And he's just, I mean, for all the blowhard and the stories,
he was also like such a good human being
and he was like very grounded.
And I think the relationship,
and we can talk about where it ended up,
but the relationship between he and Obama,
which started as, okay, this is a partnership, it makes sense to you, they became really, really close by the end of
those four years. And then I think beyond that, we all know what happened. Yeah, no, but my point is
just that that Biden-ness in the book, we have aides who are like, well, is he just telling a
story like he always does? or is this something else?
Is he just being completely inappropriate
because he's 79 or has he always been
completely inappropriate?
We have a one European leader sitting down,
having a meeting with Biden during his presidency
and Biden just blah, blah, blah,
and like completely misses the brief,
does not talk about what he's supposed to.
And this leader says something,
but he's always been a bit like that, right?
I mean, you know, so it was not necessarily,
people didn't notice it at first.
Well, and this is, I mean, in some,
like this story is very familiar,
I think to basically everybody who has an aging relative,
right, and you know, is the relative doing X
because there's something off
or just because they're just being themselves
and they're just older, you know?
But in this case, it happened on the largest stage
with like potential consequences for all of us.
And that's also, I mean, too, you know,
we're poking fun at him a little bit,
but, you know, that's why we frame the book as a tragedy
because he is a good I mean by all
accounts like he is a good man and a well-intentioned one and he was undone by both power his own ego and
His own like, you know, I think in some ways a virtue of never giving up that became sort of a tragic vice I'm Patrick Weiss. Pods of America is brought to you by Wild Alaskan Company.
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Well, there's also, I think there's a more generous version of Biden-ness too, which
is something I felt even in the days after the debate, which is part of why I think we
would watch that State of the Union or other big Biden moments and feel like, am I misreading
this?
Is he doing better than I feel?
It's because even in in past debates
There was a sense that you know what the the people that are hyper engaged in politics people that have maybe been writers in their lives watch it in a different way in a more kind of
persnickety and
kind of like like the Russian judges kind of grading on points, watching for style, are more, they already
know what Biden thinks, they already know his policy views, so they're watching the
language, they're watching the stumbles, but people that are just trying to understand
what he stands for and what he believes in who he is as a person aren't feeling that.
And the other part of this too is he was underestimated.
That's a wrong claim point.
Throughout his life.
Throughout his life and as a candidate, you know that that he was underestimated in the 2020
Primaries he pulls it out. He in the first two years of his administration, I think
Governs in an extraordinary way has achievements through Congress that a lot of people thought were impossible
Place his hand as well as anybody could possibly play it
And I remember when Dean Phillips first jumps in one of the challenges he has is age was the critique right this is before
October 7th and a lot of the fallout that caused and and I think part of what you cover in the book does reveal why he
Had such trouble communicating and also adjusting
but it was hard to make an argument against Joe Biden especially in
the first two years of his term because
It was hard to point to moments
where age really had limited his ability to govern
when you look at the legislative achievements,
when you look at his response to the pandemic
and the economic crisis.
So I do think that was part of it too,
that a lot of people had felt uncertain
about their own judgment,
especially in a world where Donald Trump could win
and Joe Biden was the only person who could beat him, that who are we to question the people around Joe Biden when he'd
been so successful? Yeah, I mean, you remember during the 2019-2020 Democratic primary, when Joe
Biden was like, I'm going to be able to negotiate with Mitch McConnell, there were little guffaws
from the base of the party. And Joe Biden passed an infrastructure bill with I think 19 Senate Republicans
Yeah, don't quote me on that but like and then did an event in early
2023 with Mitch McConnell in Kentucky and Mitch McConnell called the infrastructure bill a legislative miracle
So you could also imagine how Joe Biden and the people, you know in his inner circle who had felt underestimated who had
Biden and the people, you know, in his inner circle who had felt underestimated, who had
listened to the people laughing at them, whereas saying, oh, you know, but that also created this insularity where eventually they would not listen to outside critics, even well-intentioned ones.
So America loves an underdog, and Joe Biden has been an underdog throughout his life,
been an underdog throughout his life and one of the qualities that the American people love about him, admire about him, is his ability to get up off the ground
after fate or God or whatever has thrown something horrible at him. Whether it's a
debilitating stutter or that horrible car accident that took the life of his
wife and daughter and
sent his two sons to the hospital in 1972 or his brain aneurysms in 1988 and
on and on and on and what is what makes this a tragedy is that it's that quality
that makes it so he can't see when it is actually time to give up
Because he has been so determined to fight
And achieve and do good things for the country. He's not
He's not I mean members of his family might be but he's not trying to enrich himself as president of the United States
and then the other tragedy about
this story is that he defined his presidency as a battle for the soul of
America to save America from Trump and Trumpism and because of those decisions
he made to run for re-election and to hide what was happening to him he
delivered the country back into the hands of Donald Trump. Yeah and look this
is why you know reading your book and just having
experienced the last couple years, you know, like I have anger towards Joe
Biden. I think I have more anger, especially after reading your book, at the,
towards the, like, close group of advisors that kept most of the other White House
staff, campaign staff, pollsters, everyone
else at bay, and no one thought to themselves, can this guy really do it? Is this a good
idea?
I thought one of the most shocking revelations in the book for me was you talk to some people
who worked for Biden back in 2020, and you write that ahead of the Democratic National
Convention in 2020, Biden did a series
of Zooms to produce a campaign video of him talking to voters.
And one Democrat you talked to said, who is working with the Biden campaign, it was like
a different person.
This was like watching grandpa who shouldn't be driving.
I didn't think he could be president.
This was when some top Democrats entered an angry phase.
I became disillusioned with the entire apparatus
because what I was seeing on this video in 2020, that means people working for him every
day see this.
Did anyone else tell you that they had concerns as far back as 2020?
A small handful of people who had known him for a long time.
One said that the first time that they noticed any sort of deterioration came after his son
Bo's tragic death of brain cancer in May 2015 and this person, this top aide said it was like
watching water poured on sand, what happened to Biden's psyche. And then there were people that popped in on him in 2017, 2018,
before he ran who said it seemed as though he'd aged 10 years in one or two. And then in the
HUR report, when Robert HUR does his special counsel report on Biden's mishandling of classified
information, one of the things that, one of the reasons they conclude that they can't prosecute
Biden successfully, even though they conclude he did break the law with the with the classified information was not just the interview they did of Biden talking to his ghostwriter in 2017
2018 where it sounds like
Debate Biden or for wanting of a want of a better term
Non-functioning Biden where he is not clear on dates where he's not clear on situations
and he loses his train of thought in a major way and
and he loses his train of thought in a major way. And Alex had great reporting in the book that suggested
that AIDS said, would privately acknowledge
that while COVID was one of the worst things to happen to the United States,
it was one of the best things to happen to Joe Biden's presidential campaign in
2020, because he could run from his basement.
I still, I also can't believe that there was no real
discussion or debate among Biden and even his broader circle of advisors,
senior staff about running for reelection in 2024, particularly because, you know,
he talks about himself in the 2020 campaign now famously as, you know, he talks about himself in the 2020 campaign,
now famously as, you know, I'm nothing more than a bridge to this generation of new leaders
behind me. He also says in 2020, I'm just a transitional candidate. So he doesn't take
a one term pledge, but makes it seem like he may only serve one term. And then I remember thinking to myself, like,
is he going to run for reelection?
Like, it doesn't seem like.
And then we did well in the midterms.
And I was like, oh, I wonder if they're going
to have a debate about this.
But it sounds like there was no real meeting, discussion,
anything?
Yeah.
And what's sort of shocking is one
of the most consequential political decisions, perhaps
in American history, is how little process there actually
was. And basically what happened was Joe Biden, who, you know, we were,
someone close to him said he is nothing if not for this.
And this is the guy that had been thinking about being president as soon as
he was constitutionally eligible to be president.
And that was in 1977.
constitutionally eligible to be president. And that was in 1977.
And he basically, he wanted to run for reelection.
The first lady wanted him to run for reelection.
Somebody equated Joe Biden like a long-term advisor.
There was this metaphor, he's like a shark.
He just has to keep swimming or he'll die.
And basically- basic need therapy
If you're a man here
You're not in therapy
Do a favor for your wife
Or husband, thanks Jake
Gay spleen to me during fucking pride
Jake gaysplain to me during fucking pride.
Somebody needed to gaysplain. I'm sorry. I was right here. Sorry, I interrupted you.
But yeah, I mean, basically, like just as he was going to run,
Jill and Hunter were completely on board.
And, you know, and we can get into the Hunter stuff later if you want to.
But, you know,, but Hunter obviously spiraled
and I think saw in his dad's presidency
and the fight against Trump,
sort of a chance to redeem himself and also a way,
if we're being honest, to stay out of prison.
And I think basically the family decided
and when anybody in the inner circle was like,
are we gonna talk about this?
Are we gonna have a real discussion, debate?
Word came down from Mike Donilon said,
presidents decided, it's over.
And in fairness, like even those that had concerns,
none of them ever got in Joe Biden's face.
You could say that's part because of their own cowardice
or also because of the culture that Biden and the family
in particular had created where dissent or questioning
was immediately suspected as this loyalty.
Barack Obama went by the White House
in spring, summer 2023 to kind of kick the tires
and see if this was a good idea.
And at that point, their relationship was strained enough
because as Obama would put it when people would say to him,
are you, is Biden really gonna run for reelection?
You should talk to him.
And he would say like, you know,
he's still pissed at me for backing Hillary in 2016.
So their relationship was at the point where he,
Obama didn't feel like he could say
Hey, you should you should think twice about this
the Hillary thing
It's not true
Well, the timeline on this is also I think it's confusing for people because the way the story is told
it's like the beginning of the 2016 race and it's Hillary and
Bernie and Joe Biden and Obama's like and I pick Hillary and that's not what happened at all
What happened was Joe Bo dies and Joe Biden is
mourning his son
Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton enter the race. They have six seven months of campaigning there
They have organizations in Iowa and months ten months. Okay Okay. 10 months of campaigning. They're getting the book just so you know, this is he, this is,
it's, it's, he's not lecturing us. He wants to make sure you know.
Well, cause it just gets confusing about like what.
And so Joe Biden contemplates in the fall,
a late entry into the race after Hillary and Bernie had already been campaigning
against each other forever and have these big organizations in Iowa.
And then goes to Obama and is like, can I jump into the race this late?
And Obama's like, well, if you jump into the race this late,
A, probably it's gonna help Bernie Sanders win
because Hillary and Biden would split the vote
of like non-progressives, and also was genuinely concerned,
you guys write this in the book,
genuinely concerned about him
because he's still grieving his son.
But that, you know,
it became in Biden's brain. And look, we,
we write about this in the book, this is the Biden mythology and all politicians
have their own mythology. But part of, by 2019,
2020, it had, it had changed into a theology,
where there was just this faith and it's a small cult of people
who believed in it but there was but like all religions skeptics were not allowed and this
belief and part of this mythology or theology is Barack didn't back me in 2016 which is also one
of the reasons why although Alex and I differ on why did Biden endorse Kamala so quickly, my version is the more charitable one, which
is he's proud of the fact that he picked Kamala Harris to be his vice president, not so much
for Kamala Harris, but because of what she represents, and he doesn't want to do to her
what he thinks Obama did to him, which as you note is not really accurate,
it's revisionist history, but that's how he thinks of it.
And I think that what Jake said is true.
I just also think that Biden as he is fuming is like,
oh, you're gonna kick me out, you get Kamala.
You're not gonna be able to get the open process
that you guys want, that Obama wants,
that Pelosi wants.
I get to choose who it is, and also I'm going to show what it means to really be loyal to
my vice president.
This is one of the few areas of disagreement.
There's Word versus Google Docs.
This is what motivates him.
And we've learned in our San Francisco leg of the tour, he thinks that
The Rock is a good movie.
That's another...
These are...
Oh, I'm with Alex on that.
What kind of...
Thank you.
What kind of a feet opinion is that The Rock is not a good movie?
What?
Man, the people are with me, Jake.
What a ridiculous statement.
But I will say, and you guys saw this, that resentment toward Obama and all
the reporting.
We got some of that too.
Well, this like you remember in 2019, Biden would not appear on Pod Save America.
I think every every Democrat running for president appeared on Pod Save America.
Every Democrat appeared on the Axe files with former Obama advisor David Axelrod.
Joe Biden didn't. And I mean, I think he did in the general election.
Yeah, we got him.
Well, whenever Joe Biden comes on Pod Save America, he does win.
One and one.
There is one Biden aide said to us that
when he's talking about the elites,
he's talking about Obama.
Yeah.
Which is, it's sad and I don't like,
Not just Obama, he's probably talking about us too,
but I'm just saying Obama is definitely in his brain
when he's thinking that.
So here's the other thing I've always wondered too,
so he decides he's gonna run again,
and I think a lot of people are like,
well why didn't the Democratic Party do something? Why didn't someone get
involved? Did you guys in your reporting hear anything about other potential
candidates in twenty twenty four like were some of them getting ready? Were
they thinking about it because honestly like they are as responsible like
someone would have had to run
against him and we would always because people like our our staff was like why
is Joe Biden the one and other people and I'd be like look someone's got to
run against him.
You know then do you guys interviewed Dean Phillips like MSNBC would not even
have Dean Phillips on you guys like did a tough like good interview with him.
Yeah and was not and look and we were I during that interview I was like well I get why
someone is running against Joe Biden it didn't seem like he had and he did it in
fairness to Dean Phillips he was like look no one else would do it. Yeah he
tried to get Whitmer Pritzker Newsome but she he tried to get them to run some
of them wouldn't even take his call.
Bill Daley, Obama's former chief of staff,
former Clinton Commerce Secretary,
he tried to get people to run.
Nobody would do it.
There isn't a very long, proud history
of people challenging incumbent presidents
and defeating them in primaries.
Usually what happens is, Ted Kennedy being the one exception,
usually you go off into disgrace.
People still, though, were mad at Ted Kennedy for decades.
Well, it felt like centuries.
Blaming him for weakening Jimmy Carter.
So I mean, it's stupid.
It's as revisionist.
But there were candidates
that were up until the end of 2023 watching to see
if Joe Biden was actually gonna go through with us.
And there were maybe five or six that could have
on a dime put a campaign together.
I think Newsome, Harris, Whitmer, Buttigieg,
maybe Pritzker, am I forgetting anything?
I mean, there was-
And Klobuchar.
They could have, but nobody was gonna do it against him.
Yeah, there was sort of a just in case primary going on.
I mean, you had Pritzker and Newsome cutting checks
for the Charleston, South Carolina mayoral race in 2023. like going on. I mean, you had Pritzker Newsome, like cutting checks for like the
the Charleston, South Carolina mayoral race in twenty twenty three.
I'm sure it was completely just good intention of the kindness of their hearts
to get involved in those races.
And yeah, they like there was quietly everyone's fishing.
And it got to the point, actually, in early twenty twenty four, where
Biden campaign chair, General MalleyDillon actually starts calling some of the governors
and be like, and feels like they're sort of subtly
trying to undermine Biden.
She hears that governor Healy of Massachusetts
is talking up Whitmer.
Yeah.
And she and O'Malley-Dillon gets mad about it.
I will say though, something that is very specific
to where we are as a country
right now is first of all there is very little incentive for courage built into our politics.
People are all about the base and all about not rocking the boat. Second of all parties are so
weak right now. This is a smart crowd so I'm not going to ask can you name who was DNC chair
This is a smart crowd, so I'm not gonna ask, can you name who was DNC chair
during the Biden presidency, Jamie Harrison.
But I had to beat you to it.
But this was not somebody who was brought in
because he was gonna be able to tell Joe Biden
some hard truths.
Well, there's a marheley, I think there's a way to get
from that to some of the larger lessons
that we should take forward from this other than to probably not nominate Joe Biden in 2028, which I think we're all
Settled pretty good on yes, he's gonna resent the positive America even more now
Yeah, but uh, you know you joke about that
They still to this day Biden and his top aides say that he could have won
this day, Biden and his top aides say that he could have won, could have beaten Trump, and he could serve as president until January 2029. I just think that's sad. They still argue that
point. But the, the, the, I think this gets at what I was going to point out from the book,
which is you have this, there's a moment with Maura Healey where she's walking out of the,
I guess the White House and she says to
Rashidi I'd love to see the polling and he's like I know polling and I believe it's directly to you as
As a quote where she says there's no chessboard
Some to paraphrase there's no one pulling those the strings behind the scenes
There was just one old man and his enablers who refused to do the
right thing.
That's basically what she says.
And that was sort of my, as I'm reading the book, I was like, oh my God, everyone was
feeling the same way.
Everyone had these questions.
If you saw Joe Biden once at his worst, you thought, is this a strange aberrance?
Am I seeing something that no one else is seeing?
I'm being reassured.
And it's not just people that are seeing him at town halls.
It's governors.
It's senators.
There was nobody making some grand decision being made.
There was no DNC making machinations.
It was just a bunch of people kind of fuddling along,
making the best decisions they thought they
needed to make each day leading us to this kind of
cataclysm.
And the reason why they began increasingly shielding him from
governors from is to make people say, Oh, it was just a one off
must just been sort of a bad day, bad hour. And they were gas
lighting, not just like the public and reporters, but they were gaslighting, not just like the public and reporters, but
they were gaslighting their own members and leaders of the Democratic Party, members of
their own cabinet.
Yeah, and one of the things we learned in this, we learned so much while researching
this book, but one of the things we learned is they weren't just hiding Biden from the
world, they were hiding the world from Biden. And when we talk to his pollsters,
they are, in my view, some of the most moving
and alarming sections of the book
have to do with these three pollsters.
Most pollsters don't work in the White House.
Pollsters always work outside of the White House.
And the campaign had somebody that did data,
but then there were also these three pollsters.
Three of the best in the business. Great pollsters. Yeah, Jeff Garan and Molly Murphy and Jeffrey Pollock and they
They had data and they couldn't ever bring it to the president, which is crazy
but they would bring it to Donnellan and Rashidi and then Donnellan and Rashidi would put it through the
Donnellan and Reschetti would put it through the Donnellan and Reschetti eiser and present it to Joe Biden. It's a landslide bus. They also, they told the
New Yorker that they genuinely believe that polling is broken now and so
polling doesn't matter even though they had polling that was telling them bad
things. And when David Plouffe came in after Biden had dropped out and he saw the actual polling and saw that not only were they
going to lose all of the battleground states and by a lot,
but they were on track to lose Minnesota and Colorado
and Virginia and New Mexico, I think,
was on the bubble and New Hampshire. And it would have been a bloodbath and
Whatever you think of Kamala Harris. She at least brought the party to treading water
And so it was it was a bad night
But it wasn't just a complete wipeout like yet
The Trump campaign believes like they would have a 57 potentially a 57 seat majority in the Senate
If it had not been for Kamala Harris.
It's 53 right now. Just for people who are normal.
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Since the book, you guys have taken a lot of shit from both the right and Democrats, Biden supporters
on the right.
Read the tweets, baby.
Well, I'm confused about this because they have accused
the Trump media folks have
accused you guys of being part of the cover up that you write actually it's
just me, but like most a most of the information in the book you found out
after the election be before the, like people who spent time around Biden either
wouldn't talk to reporters or wouldn't tell reporters the truth. So what is the
crit? What were you guys? What was the meat? Not just you two, but like the
media. I mean Alex, you won an award at the Correspondence Center and even you
said like this is a story we all missed.
And I thought that was, I was like,
I don't know that you guys necessarily missed the story
because there wasn't a story to get
if the people who could tell the story refused to tell it.
I think, so a few different points on that.
I think there is a difference between
while a lot of right-wing media was right to be skeptical of Biden's abilities,
there's a big difference between showing on a loop him stumbling up the stairs of Air Force One and doing behind-the-scenes reporting.
I also said I thought we missed a lot of the story, in part because Jake and I had just done this book and I was like, holy shit.
Uh, there was a lot that, that I didn't know.
Now that being said, I do think, um, in particular for reporting and reporters,
a hinge moment is after Robert Herr's report in early 2024 in which, you know,
he basically decides not to prosecute Joe Biden because he says the jury would not convict such an old man
with a bad memory.
And if you look at the coverage,
I think the White House comms team,
props to them, they did a very good job.
But I think if you look at the coverage,
it was not skeptical enough.
And I think the fairest critique
is really those like four or five months before the debate, when after the special counsel
report, I think that's that's what I think like, you can really I think objectively argue
the media did not do a good enough job. Yeah. I mean, I had to watch Megyn Kelly yell at you
for a while on that show.
I was like, what?
I think that.
You actually didn't have to.
I think that the conservative media we discovered
while we were reporting this was right
to be skeptical of his acuity from the beginning,
from 2019.
Because our reporting suggested that it was an issue
as far back as 2015.
And so, you know, when I get new information,
I change my mind, which is not, I think,
a difficult thing for mature adults to do.
So I have no problem acknowledging that the skepticism in 2019-2020 about his acuity was
correct.
I thought he was aging.
I didn't see acuity issues at that time.
I was mistaken.
The tone and tenor of some of the criticism I think is rooted in the fact that a lot
of these same people said that when Obama took office he was a secret Muslim
that the new black panthers were going to take over the country that
Hillary was going to die in 2016 that the election was stolen in 2020, and on and on and on.
I mean, the current president, just a couple days ago,
shared a post that said, actually,
Biden was executed in 2020, and it was a body double
the entire time.
And by the way, we should have paid more
for that body double.
Thank you.
Can we not get a, if we're going to replace the guy.
This guy, we got a used body double.
Do you have anything in a Ryan Reynolds? Yeah, something, something new off the lot here.
So I think that they are, and you know,
they were right about this.
And now, again, as Alex says,
there's a difference between.
Broken clock, you know?
There's a difference between calling him an applesauce head
and laughing at him and saying he needs a sippy cup
and showing these clips on a loop
and doing investigative reporting.
But that said, because of what you mentioned,
it took a lot to do investigative reporting on this.
And even if you go back and read some of the pieces that really were shocking at the time,
Peter Baker wrote one in 2023 about how much rest they built into his schedule in terms
of trips.
Alex's incredible scoops about Biden's schedule.
The Wall Street Journal reporters, Siobhan Hughes and Annie Linsky. Like even if you go back and read
those incredibly important stories
that were very difficult and brought a lot of criticism
to the reporters, they're nothing compared
to what we found out after the election was over
and people felt like, okay, I don't have to worry
about helping to elect Trump, he already won,
so now I can unburden myself.
I'd also just also add to that. The American people had made up their decision on Joe Biden's age.
They had decided he was too old to seek reelection. They decided that in 2022.
But so to the idea that this is something that wasn't in front of people that wasn't a big
subject of discussion, it was one of the most important debates. We were talking about it
on policy of America all the time. How does he address this liability? He's
failing to address it and the weeks after the debate it was shocking not just
the performance in the debate but that the obvious solution is him going out
there over and over again was not one they were taking advantage of and it's
it's really chilling to read in the book that that's not a demand being made just
from people on the outside. Chuck Schumer's asking that. Different senators are asking that.
And Schumer concludes that he's not doing it
because he can't.
Now, I'm sorry to do this,
and because I do think we have some audio
that I think is important to play,
and I think it is an indictment of you personally.
Oh, no.
Jake, speaking of.
I know what this is.
Speaking of Chuck Schumer, I did listen to part of the book in the car.
Oh, I did some on the text, but some I'm excited in the car.
Can we just play a little bit of the audio version of original sin?
I'm urging you not to run.
Do you think Kamala can win?
Biden asked. I don't know Kamala can win? Biden asked.
I don't know if she can win, Schumer said.
I just know that you cannot.
Biden said that he needed a week.
They stood on their way out.
Biden put his hands on Schumer's shoulders.
You have bigger balls than anyone I've ever met.
Biden told him.
You did a voice. What the fuck was that? Is is wow. I screwed up. I should have
listened to the audio. I don't even know how it's possible that your impression
of Chuck Schumer is anti-semitic.
You're Jewish man. You're from Philadelphia.
I will tell you
wherever I go on this book tour,
people come and they say, I'm listening to the book on tape
and I love your impression.
That is the God's honest truth.
This is actually the first time I have heard that.
Yeah, me too.
And I thought it was good.
Also you did a Biden too.
I didn't know.
The Biden one.
I was holding back cause I didn't want it
to be full anti-Semitic. Yeah, that's right. You went I didn't know. The Biden one. I was holding back because I didn't want it to be full anti-Semitic.
Yeah, that's right.
You went half.
Just slightly.
You went half.
Unbelievable.
I'm Jewish in case people don't know this.
She's Jewish.
And very proud of it.
And if you have a problem with that, you can leave.
OK.
Um.
I'll do a last question that's based on the criticism
that you guys have gotten from a lot of Democrats, this
criticism we get whenever we talk about it, which is why is this still relevant
now and leave the guy alone, you know, leave the past in the past and
let's focus on the current president who at least half the country would argue is
more unfit than Joe Biden, albeit for different reasons.
What do you guys say to that?
I mean, I would say this is part of the reason why the Democratic Party is in the situation it's in.
I mean, anytime there was any coverage about age, whether I brought it up or Jake brought it up,
it was what about Trump? And, you know, reporting is about holding up a mirror.
And the Democratic Party can either look in the mirror
and recognize this is part of the reason they lost,
that while they rightly mock Republicans
for trashing Trump in private and then going out there
and saying he is the most ethical, bestest president
in his American history,
they were doing the exact same thing
when they were trotting out being like,
Biden is sharp, he's running circles around us,
he is so engaged, you wouldn't even believe it,
all you had to do is be in the meetings.
And it just wasn't true.
So I guess, Democrats, if they want,
I have no idea if the Democratic Party,
if the voters are actually going to engage
with the content of this book, but
reporting is just about trying to hold up that mirror in front of people and whether or not they look in is up to them.
So I have two points on this. First of all, it just happened.
The debate wasn't even a year ago. It was June of last year. I mean it just happened. When are
we supposed to write books?
Yeah by the way also I learned here tonight that you did the book proposal
on November 6th. You are sick. Yeah. You're a sick man. I have problems. The
other the other point I would make, it's true I'm very driven. I agree. He cares too much. That's his biggest weakness.
That's my this. OK, quick Obama aside. Oh, no, this is my no, this is a good Obama story. This is one of my favorite Obama
stories. It's one of the first debates in 2020 in 27, 2007 or
2008. And it's like Hillary, Edward, John Edwards and Obama.
And they're asked, What is your biggest fault? And Obama goes
first. And he's like, Well, I'm're asked, what is your biggest fault? And Obama goes first, and he's like,
well, I'm really messy.
I have a messy desk.
It's a real problem.
And then John Edwards is like,
I care so much about people.
The voices, the voices.
I really, really, it's a problem.
I really care about the American,
and then Hillary's like, I work Hillary's like I work so hard I
Work so hard American people and they and then Obama's like wait a second
I didn't think we were giving answers like that. I thought I thought we were supposed to really answer the question
The best Obama moment ever and then he would he would tell that story on the stump for like the next couple weeks
It was like a great laugh line
The other thing I would say in response to the why aren't you covering Trump? I cover
Trump every day for two hours, still even on the road. But beyond that, so I don't know
how many of you have gone to New York to see Good Night and Good Luck. If you haven't yet,
it's great. If you haven't yet, CNN is actually going to show it on Saturday night on CNN.
And you should see it because it's really good it's a they're they're doing a live cast broadcast of
the play but at the very end of the whole play takes place in 1954 it's
Murrow and McCarthy and all that at the very end there is like the one thing
that's not set in 1954 is this is montage of video clips of the television
news and you know there's like the moon landing and JFK getting
assassinated and all these things.
And at the end of this montage, it's maybe,
I don't even know, five, 10 minutes, something like that.
It goes like that.
But at the end of it, you see Republicans lying
about the 2020 election on cable.
And then you see Democrats lying about
Biden's acuity on cable. And I asked Clooney for an interview I did
when we did the New Yorker excerpt of the of the book, just
to give like a little special something for the for the New
Yorker. I asked Clooney to weigh in why did you put that in
obviously George Clooney played a role in all of this
when he wrote his op-ed calling for Biden to drop out.
And he said, it's important that we call that out too,
the people vouching for Biden,
because we have to speak truth to power
no matter who's in power.
And I said, well, what do you tell people who say,
you know, what about Trump?
He said, how do you think we got Trump?
What about Trump? He said, how do you think we got Trump?
Yeah, I Mean, yeah, I mean look from a perspective of you know, a couple Democrats who want Democrats to win again
Like you can't you cannot tell people that what they are seeing and what they are hearing isn't true
And it wasn't just over the last four years. It was a Biden thing with the age
It wasn't just over the last four years. It was a Biden thing with the age
Look, it was also about inflation and costs and and you know, someone would say well gas prices are high and then suppose Oh, well, you just took that picture in front of a gas station that where the prices are always high
And it's like I get that that can be frustrating like I've been on the other side of it
I've you know worked in the White House and yelled at reporters. Maybe you guys
worked in the White House and yelled at reporters, maybe you guys.
But like at some point the voters get to decide and you have to listen to the voters because if you do not listen to the voters, you cannot get the
votes you need to take power. It seems very simple, but it is something that we,
we have at least some parts of the party have forgotten.
I mean, I think it's a lesson of this book that, you know,
there's an old expression that Washington is often the last to get the news and
the Democratic Party and
Very much including and especially this the Biden White House
did not want to
respect or listen to their own voters and
I think you could also argue that the Democratic Party has not listened or
totally respected their voters in the last three presidential primaries and some of the argument has been well
We don't want a divisive primary because Hillary was hurt by Bernie
you guys know the most the probably the most divisive Democratic primary in recent American history was your guys's and
Obama entered with 60 like Democratic Senate seats that like divisive primaries
Allow for debate and for voters to decide who the strongest candidate is. They're not inherently bad
I would argue that the last time the Democratic Party when on the presidential level listened to its voters was 2008
What about 2020? I don't know in 2020
the party
So just to remind folks, uh, Buddha judge, one Iowa, Bernie one, New Hampshire,
Bernie one, Nevada, Joe Biden, one South Carolina.
And then there was this uprising of Obama and the party influencers to get
everybody out of the race except for Joe Biden so that they could beat Bernie
because they were terrified
Bernie was going to be the nominee and they did that. I'm not here to advocate for Bernie Sanders
and obviously it worked out the way the Democrats wanted it to work out but the last time
Democrats actually in 2012 doesn't really count because it's an incumbent but the last time there
was an open process and the Democrats said okay go you go, you know, Obama, Hillary, Edwards, whoever Biden, Chris Dodd,
whatever, like, and the voters did a pretty good job.
Well, the voters also, I mean, look, yes, but voters chose Joe Biden in that
primary in 2020. I think, I like, I think there's some truth in what you're saying,
but I will also say there was another moment when I feel like what we saw was a
kind of, uh, uh, the voters having their say in like what we saw was a kind of the voters having
their say in a way and and a kind of moment where you saw how the Democratic Party is very
different than the Republican Party which is after that debate because I do think there's a
part of this story that is I think even though it did not end the way we had all hoped is inspiring
which is in the wake of that debate what you saw is people willing to tell the truth about what
they saw and the importance of making a change.
You have leading Democrats going to Joe Biden,
asking him to step aside.
You have these incredible moments,
which you report on in the book of Congress,
members of Congress trying to speak directly
to Joe Biden about this,
not liking what they're hearing,
not accepting no foreign answer.
You have people on the outside talking about this.
You have people, you have a real and genuine moment
of a group of people
Coming together and saying hey for the good of the country this guy has to step aside because Trump is an existential threat
And it may not have ended in Kamala being president, but it did I think speak to
Tim to me like the values you're trying to say we didn't evince before
When Joe but when people were getting behind Joe Biden we believe that not actually- We belatedly got there. I would say they get half credit.
I mean, I think your point is well taken
that if Donald Trump had had,
if Donald Trump had showed serious signs of decline
or whatever and had that similar debate,
I grant the point that a lot of Republican lawmakers
would not have the courage to finally speak out
and say something.
Yeah, I mean, he tried to steal an election
and stage an insurrection in the
Capitol and they're like all right.
They had 24 hours of courage in the wake of it. All I'm saying is I think what I take away from it is
there was a we were there was no one in charge there was no one making the
decision we were kind of sleepwalking towards disaster and then after that
debate we woke up and the question is now how do we make sure we stay awake
and are honest about challenges the Democratic Party faces?
Granted, I was just gonna add though,
I don't think you get like points for courage
when you only do it because you now believe you might lose.
Oh, Alex, I thought we were gonna lose for months.
I mean, we just knew it after the debate.
I think that Alex and I have a slightly less positive review
of Democrats.
And I'll just tell you why.
Can anybody here guess how many Democratic governors
called for Biden to drop out of the race after the debate?
One.
Governor Healey of Massachusetts.
How many Democratic senators? One
Senator Welsh of Vermont. I mean it wasn't an outpouring of courage
It was a lot of behind-the-scenes maneuvering because people didn't know I want to come across as jerks
There were the House members were braver. Yeah
And and they're you know, they're the lowest on the totem pole and we thought we were going insane
We're like what what is happening? What did they ever what did we miss something?
Well, the thing that was what was so surprised right because we're talking about it and we're getting a lot of blowback online
But privately hearing from a lot of people being like thank you guys for saying glad you guys are out there saying this we need
people out there saying this and then the other thing I would say is that
The art the argument is about whether or not he should be the nominee
But the truth of the matter is our reporting suggests that he he could not be an effective president 24 7
Which is what the job requires and there's only one member of there's only one elected democratic official that I know of
And that's congresswoman Marie glueson camp perez in washington state who actually said he shouldn't be the nominee and to be honest he probably shouldn't be president either.
And although you said to in the book this also shocked me that out of the 200 plus people
you guys talked to there were very few who actually thought he could serve out a second
term which that means that that would include senior White House staff campaign staff who
told you that they did not think almost serve.
Yeah they were like the plan was to get to November 5th
and figure it out later.
I mean, we had one long time Biden aide that,
I mean, like that was, I mean, if, you know,
the right wing sometimes refers to, you know,
the Trump derangement syndrome, mocking Democrats
that I think actually very sincerely
are opposed to Trump's agenda. But if you continue the metaphor, the biggest symptom is publicly telling everyone
that Joe Biden could be president for another four years. And it just, and the people knew that he
could not do the job he was running for, but there was such fear of Trump that they said, let's go.
And you know, members, members longtime Biden people basically felt that
Eventually if he had won there would have eventually been some sort of constitutional crisis because clearly the people around him
We're not willing to like cede power
But tell them so we always say that we almost all the interviews of the more than 200 we did for the book were after
The election we have to put in this stupid almost because of this one interview that Alex
did with somebody and tell them what they told you.
I mean, they were honest.
It was a long time Biden aid and they said all he had to do was win and then
only had to show proof of life every once in a while.
What?
Let's say I feel like we've, I want to end on a light moment from the book.
Let's let, which is, it's a small clip. No, this is a small moment, the book. Do we have another clip?
No, this is a small moment.
We didn't even play my Obama, which is really good.
That is true.
His Obama is good.
Not because I've listened, but because he does it all the time.
Save it for the sequel.
The return of Hunter.
You can do the voiceover for the second volume of promised land for Obama.
But, so the debate happens and how does it come to be that Doug Emhoff is watching the debate with Rob Reiner
and then the debate ends, Rob Reiner, furious, starts berating Doug Emhoff?
Poor Doug.
Well, I think it was more that he was, that Rob Reiner, who is a very excitable fella, was just screaming and he
seemed to be yelling at Amhoff and he said, we're going to lose our fucking democracy
because of you. And Amhoff thought, because of me?
Because of sweet Doug? We can all agree that Doug is not to blame.
Well. Okay, that has to be it. That's it, that's it. Doug Amhoff, no. Because of sweet Doug? We can all agree that Doug is not to blame.
Well...
Okay, that has to be it.
That's it, that's it.
Doug and I'm off now.
Jake, Alex, thank you so much.
You're a real go-buy original set.
That's our show for today.
Oof, long one.
Love it, and Tommy and I will be back with a new show on Monday.
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