Pod Save America - Trump's Indefensible Pardons
Episode Date: January 24, 2025Donald Trump makes good on his promise to free the January 6 rioters—including those convicted of savage violence against police officers—calling the attacks "very minor incidents" in a primetime ...interview with Sean Hannity, and saying it would be too "cumbersome" to review individual defendants' records. Jon and Dan react to the pardons, the expansive list of executive orders that Trump signed this week, the prospects for his cabinet picks, and how Democrats are doing in their efforts to push back. Then, Dan talks to progressive strategist Faiz Shakir about his bid for DNC Chair and where he wants to steer the party.
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That's simply safe comm slash crooked. There's no safe like simply safe Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, America's golden age has begun, Dan.
We'll talk about the first week of Donald Trump's second term and try to separate the
signal from the noise, though there was quite a bit of the latter during the president's
sit down in the Oval with his pal Sean Hannity on Wednesday night.
There was also a cat fight between two of Trump's billionaire friends that broke out
over which one of them gets to help control the artificial intelligence that could destroy
civilization.
So that's fun.
We'll also talk about what Democrats might learn about how
to fight back from an Episcopal bishop and a pod bro. And speaking of Democrats, DNC Chair Candidate
Fash Shakir, one of the smartest voices in progressive politics, stops by to talk to Dan
about why he's running and how he's different. But first, as of Wednesday evening, Donald Trump
had signed by our count 48 executive orders
and actions and generally spent the week
making drastic changes to the way our country is governed
and how our society views itself.
Some of this we previewed on the Tuesday show,
but here's a sample of the moves
that got the most attention.
Trump ordered a review of the Biden administration's
investigative actions, quote,
"'To correct past misconduct related to the weaponization of law enforcement
and the weaponization of the intelligence community.
He withdrew America from the World Health Organization and the Paris Climate Agreement.
He's also pausing all leases for offshore wind farms and incentives to buy electric vehicles.
He's sending U.S. troops to the southern border and building a mass deportation force of federal
agents to begin immigration raids.
He's also directed federal prosecutors to criminally investigate state and local officials
who resist the coming deportations.
But Trump's also going after legal immigration.
He signed an order trying to end birthright citizenship for the children of immigrants
who aren't yet citizens, even the ones who are here legally on visas.
He suspended our asylum and refugee programs.
He signed orders directing the federal government to dismantle all diversity, equity, and inclusion
programs and jobs, to no longer officially recognize transgender Americans, to freeze
all federal hiring and make it easier to replace non-political civil servants with Trump loyalists, which he is already doing.
He gave top secret clearances to White House staff without going through background checks.
And he also canceled the security clearances of 51 people who signed a letter casting doubt
on the Hunter Biden laptop thing.
He's renaming Denali over the objections of Alaska's Republican senators and the Gulf
of Mexico over the objections of anyone whose brain hasn't been broken. He signed
an order directing all executive departments and agencies to deliver
emergency price relief to Americans. Didn't realize the Commerce Department
was responsible for the price of eggs. And last but not least, he has issued
pardons and commutations for all of the January 6th
defendants, regardless of the severity of their crimes.
That's a lot.
We're going to spend some time on the pardons and immigration in a bit, but beyond those
two big issues, what from this list really matters the most, what matters less, and what
is just a bullshitty talking point.
I think other than the renaming various things
on various maps,
we should take all of it pretty seriously.
Even if the order seems more symbolic
or so legally dubious that even this Supreme Court
is likely to strike it down,
because it's all sends a message
to the Project 2025 goons
who will be running this government
about what they should do, right?
The order on investigating the investigations
to understand the web position of government,
that's kind of a fake thing,
but that is a signal to Cash Patel
and the people who work for the people in Pam Bondi's DOJ
that we want to investigate these people, right?
Even if the order doesn't mean that much,
it sends a dangerous signal to dangerous people.
And so we should take it quite seriously.
Having to choose amongst this list of terrible things
as the thing that's most terrible is pretty hard.
But for me, the stuff I'm most concerned about
is all the climate stuff.
It is pulling out of Paris.
It is getting rid of electric vehicle incentives.
In part because on climate, it's the one thing
we don't have time to waste.
We're already behind schedule in trying
to get where we need to get to keep the planet alive.
And wasting another four years on Donald Trump
is deeply dangerous.
And it's time we can't get back.
On some of these other things, if we
can survive these four years,
you can go back and you can undo the worst policy does.
You can issue new executive orders,
you can pass new laws.
On climate, we're never gonna get those years back
and I think that comes at a great cost.
Yeah, I think the climate stuff is pretty horrible.
I think probably the most bullshitty executive order
is the one on price release and bringing down inflation.
Because the idea that the Biden administration
had levers within the federal government to lower prices
and didn't pull them, even if you think that they don't really
care, at least they care about staying in power,
you think just would have been more popular
to have lower prices.
So you think they would have done that.
But that's probably because there are no levers
in the federal government to bring down prices
that Joe Biden hadn't already tried over the last four years.
So that is clearly window dressing and just sort of bullshit.
Let's talk about the January 6th pardons,
which while promised by Trump during the campaign,
I think it's fair to say we're not expected
to be this broad.
Pardons and commutations, even for people convicted of brutally assaulting police officers,
and for the leaders of the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers, which are two far-right
paramilitary groups, those two leaders had been found guilty of seditious conspiracy.
As recently as January 12th, Vice President, Vice President JD Vance said, while defending
potential pardons for nonviolent offenders, quote, if you committed violence on that day,
obviously you shouldn't be pardoned. JD Vance, if you committed violence on that day, obviously
you shouldn't be pardoned. Not so obvious to JD Vance's boss who according to reporting from
notice decided to extend the pardon to even the most violent criminals because of the blowback
to Vance's interview from Trump's base. According to Axios, Trump said, fuck it, release them all.
Trump did an interview with Sean Hannity on Wednesday night where he talked about his reasoning.
Number of reasons, number one, they were in there for three and a half years, a long time.
And in many solitary confinement,
treated like nobody's ever been treated so badly.
They knew the election was rigged
and they were protesting the vote.
And that should be allowed to protest a vote.
You should be allowed to, you know, the day,
when the day comes-
They shouldn't be able to invade the Capitol.
Ready? Most of the people were absolutely innocent. Okay, but forgetting all about that, But you should be allowed to. You know, the day, when the day comes... But you shouldn't be able to invade the Capitol. No.
Ready?
Most of the people were absolutely innocent.
Okay, but forgetting all about that, it would be very, very cumbersome to go and look, you
know how many people we're talking about?
1,500 people.
Almost all of them are, should not have been, this should not have happened.
They were very minor incidents, okay?
You know, they get built up by that, a couple of fake guys that are in CNN all the time.
Everybody watches them.
They were very minor incidents.
I'm so angry about this.
I want to talk about Michael Fanon for a minute.
He's a DC police officer.
He was beaten within an inch of his life on January 6th.
He wasn't even on duty that day, responded to radio calls for assistance. After he got there, the rioters dragged him down the steps,
sprayed chemicals in his face, beat him with pipes, tased him repeatedly in the back of the neck,
and said they were going to kill him with his own gun while he said, please, I have kids.
He suffered burns, a concussion, traumatic brain injury, and a
heart attack. He had to retire. He testified at the January 6 trial. He's gotten threats.
His family's gotten threats. He said that as recently as a month ago, his 76-year-old
mother was outside gardening and someone threw human feces on her, a Trump supporter, because of her son.
The man who tased Michael Fanon is Daniel Rodriguez from California.
He saw Trump call for protest on January 6th, got on a big group chat, told everyone to bring knives
and bear spray to Washington, where he said he would, quote, hang Congress. And after he tased
where he said he would quote hang Congress and after he tased Michael Fanon until he lost consciousness he wrote on the group chat quote tased the
fuck out of the blue and after he pleaded guilty to assaulting an officer
with a dangerous weapon he walked out of the courtroom he screamed Trump won. He
was sentenced just about a year ago and now he is free. No shorter sentence, free.
And now Michael Fanon is trying to get a protective order because the rioters who were pardoned
are now threatening to go after the people who sent them to prison.
I don't know what to do with that, Dan? I mean, it is so deeply dangerous.
And the way Trump talked about it is just,
it's pure gaslighting, right?
None of what he's saying is true.
None of, nothing that he describes
happened the way it happened.
These are not peaceful protesters.
It's an entirely made up reality to justify this pardon.
And what is, it's all belied by video evidence,
testimony from the people who were there,
testimony from some of his allies and former aides,
and he has created this false right reality.
And I think the scariest thing about it
is he clearly believes it.
So a lot of things Donald Trump says
that he obviously doesn't believe,
he has convinced himself about what happened on January 6th, that it is something that was not violent in the way
it was and that the violence that did happen was justified.
It was on his behalf.
And it is quite, quite scary.
And look for all the Republicans and other people who think, oh, we're going to relitigate
January 6th again and we're looking back.
This is actually about the future.
Why this is so dangerous because now Donald Trump has pardoned all of
these right-wing extremists who were armed, who committed violence, who are,
uh, not apologetic at all, uh, who are not, you know, maintaining their innocence either.
They know they're guilty, they've said they're guilty, they're not apologetic, and now they're
out of prison, and other right-wing extremists who might want to cause violence now know
that if you commit violence in Donald Trump's name, then he's got your back.
And so why wouldn't they commit violence again?
Now they're all talking about revenge.
Revenge against the people who testified, against the prosecutors, against the judges
who put them in prison.
And so like when the Proud Boys come to your community and start marching or menacing people
or whatever the hell they do, what are the police going to do?
Knowing that when last time a police officer
was beaten within an inch of his life,
that the perpetrator was just released.
Are the police gonna protect us?
Who's gonna protect people?
Because it's Donald Trump's,
whether or not Donald Trump thinks it's his private army,
they think they're Donald Trump's private army.
That's what they think.
What does it say about the politics of the Trump coalition
that they believed that it would be a huge political problem
to not pardon right-wing militia groups?
Right, I mean, that's where it is
that that would be a political problem.
And I think these pardons are the fullest expression
of that famous quote from Frank Wilhoyt
that went viral a few years ago.
Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition to win.
There must be in groups whom the law protects
but does not bind alongside out groups
who the law binds but does not protect.
Yes.
If you support Donald Trump,
you have the full protection of the law.
If you do not support Donald Trump,
if you oppose him, then the law will be turned against you.
That is the message of Donald Trump
on the first day of his presidency.
Meanwhile, even before he sits down with Hannity,
Trump allies were having trouble defending these pardons.
Let's listen to some Republicans.
What about those who assaulted police officers
and then were pardoned by the president?
I haven't seen any. I haven't gone into the detail.
What do you make of President Trump's pardons
for violent offenders? Grateful that President Trump is the President of the United States.
I certainly don't want to pardon any violent actors, but there's real miscarriage of justice here.
You haven't told him what those pardons were for violent offenders. Are you comfortable with that?
I haven't seen the details.
You're supposed to get 12 years, you got less than one. Are you okay with that?
It's not in my place. It's the president's
own decision and he made the decision. Again, it's not ideal but I'm not overly concerned about it
either. I think the gift is that it's all behind us now and it's not down to us. Pathetic. Pathetic.
I think those Republicans, I think every elected Republican should be asked that question,
who refused to answer it, should be asked that question every single day that any reporter can get in their face
and put a microphone there. The ones who are walking through Congress. I mean, I just,
at least answer the question, at least have the courage to say,
yeah, I support the pardons of the violent criminals who beat the shit out of police
officers and almost killed them. Yeah, I support it. Atons of the violent criminals who beat the shit out of police officers and almost killed them.
Yeah, I support it.
At least say that instead of just running away.
I mean, do you think that Republicans will pay a political price for defending this?
Is this something that like, you know, is going to haunt some of these members when
they're up for reelection in two years?
It will haunt them more if the reporters
and others in politics are aggressive
about continuing to ask the question
and we don't just give up after six days.
These reporters, these capital reporters,
many of whom also had their lives in danger on January 6th
are gonna see these members every single day.
Are they gonna keep asking about this
or are they gonna switch to their opinion
on whether it's one bill or two bills or whatever else?
Like if they drive this,
then it has a greater chance
of staying in the public consciousness.
The pardons are very unpopular.
Large majority oppose them.
Even the significant number of Trump's
most ardent supporters don't think they're a great idea.
And I think we should Democrats should scream
from the rooftops about this as much as we possibly can
because most voters are not gonna know this happened
or they're not gonna understand exactly who he pardoned
and what those people did
and what the consequences of that are.
But I do want to sort of level set expectations
on the politics of this in the short term at least,
and this gets to what I think is one of the analytical errors
that I made in 2024 when talking about this election,
is we have to sort of understand the difference
between what the popularity of an issue
and how big a priority is for voters.
These partners were always unpopular.
Every vote, people said they did not like them.
They do not like it when Donald Trump talks about January 6th.
But in the end, for most of the voters who were persuaded, well, this did not drive their
vote choice because they cared so much about costs and immigration to a slightly lesser
extent that they're willing to put up with a whole bunch of shit that Donald Trump was
willing to do that they did not like,
if he was going to lower their costs.
So the political price of this is gonna come,
if and when prices don't come down as Donald Trump says,
or the border has not become more secure,
or America continues to feel more chaotic.
In the short term, is this gonna move things a lot?
Probably not, but this doesn't mean we shouldn't keep
talking about it, because it's incredibly important.
Yeah, I just, I get why it didn't move vote.
Like, first of all, how many people knew
that he was promising pardons like this?
How many people knew exactly what these people did?
And it's a prospective promise during a campaign,
and it's not something that you're experiencing
while you're going to the voting booth.
Now he's done the pardons.
Now we should be telling the stories of what happened because I think this goes, like,
okay, what if prices do come down, but there's still paramilitary groups roaming our communities,
right?
Like, probably we should say something about that.
Probably we should let people know what's happening.
And, you know, I mean, we'll get into the democratic
the discussion about, you know, how Democrats are responding,
but I completely understand the driving force
behind Trump's victory and probably the central challenge
that has destabilized American politics
has to do with people's living standards and
yawning economic inequality in this country. And so I completely understand that. But
sometimes I think you just have to talk about one thing and then you have to talk about the other
thing. You have to be able to talk about both, especially this far out from an election,
you know, because I think this is the time, if any time, to seed the ground and make sure that people know
what has happened and what the stories are.
Yeah, I think maybe the way to think about this is,
and one of the strategic errors of the first Trump term
was there was like this belief,
this intuition among so many Democrats
that we were just like one thing away
from people abandoning Trump.
They could just learn this one singular piece of information about him, then they would walk away.
And we spent a lot of time screaming about all of those things. And the way to think about it now,
because he just did this on the furthest distance possible from the midterms,
when he will actually have to be held accountable
nationally for his political misdeeds.
Is we have to tell a story about Trump, right?
And not just about Trump,
about the Republican party in the Trump era,
is probably the way to think about it.
And this needs to be a piece of that story.
It's not just that we were just like,
he pardoned these people, they're bad.
Look at all the terrible things,
look what it means that that's gonna move things.
It's just like over time, right?
We're not trying to move his numbers today. We're not trying to move his numbers today.
We're not trying to move his numbers tomorrow.
We're trying to make a case against him
that is going to bear fruit for us
when voters actually vote in Virginia and New Jersey
in November and then nationally
in the House and Senate elections next year.
What I'm going to think about this
that I've been thinking about is,
our kids, you know, in a of years, your kids probably even sooner,
are gonna know the details of these stories, right?
Of what happened, or they're gonna learn about it
in school at some point.
God willing, who knows if the curriculum hasn't been changed
by Donald Trump's administration, by the regime.
They're gonna learn about this,
and they're gonna be like,
"'Okay, so these people beat up these cops, this cop had a heart
attack, he was threatened and then Donald Trump let them out of prison and then
they said that they wanted revenge and that they were going to go buy guns and
so what did everyone say? What did everyone do? And you know, they're gonna say, oh well the Republicans
pretended that it wasn't happening. The Republicans tried to avoid that.
What did the Democrats do? Well the Democrats complained about it but then
they said that's certainly not lowering the price of eggs. And like I'm not of
course, I'm only half joking because I will say a lot of statements from Democrats about the pardons
That included the price of eggs in the statement about the pardons
I'm like no. No guys. That's not that's not the time to do that now
I'd like and I feel bad because we have suggested that you know, and I'm like, no costs are it right?
Like standard of living that is the central challenge
That is the challenge that most voters are dealing with.
Democrats have to talk about it.
We have to reckon with it.
It's going to drive vote choice.
That doesn't mean combining it with everything awkwardly.
Yeah, I think there is a difference in it
between the story you're trying to tell
and the words you use every single day, right?
Like you don't, like the log line here is that
Donald Trump failed to lower prices because he,
in part because he did all of these other things
instead of that.
That's not what you say, right?
It is reading the stage directions out loud.
Well, you can scream about the pardons as we should,
understanding in the back of your head
that the longer game here is
going to be around prices. You don't have to jam it all into one tweet or one skeet or one statement.
It is you can just scream about this and then over the course of time, you are making a case
about all of the things he did that people don't like, which are going to have much more
political weight when he undoubtedly fails
on the promises he made that they care the most about.
You can even do a multi-part skeet.
You do not, do not thread this.
Does that have to be a thread?
It can just be, just make a point.
Reading the stage directions is just such a good description
of what so many Democrats have been doing this week
and maybe the last several years.
The last decade.
Like just stop reading the stage directions please. It does tell me something about how
Republicans view the politics of this. Mike Johnson gets asked about it and says we're
we're not looking back we're're looking forward. And then three hours later, Mike Johnson announces
that they're going to investigate
the January 6th investigation that Congress undertook.
And the reason why we now know,
because of reporting from CNN,
is that Donald Trump asked Mike Johnson
to go investigate the January 6th committee.
And Johnson was like,
it's a little looking backwards, I don't know.
But of course Johnson has to do whatever Donald Trump says
because they are all doing whatever Donald Trump says.
There's no Republican left
that is trying to actively oppose him.
We had a few Republicans
who said they don't agree with the pardons.
Good for them.
Lisa Murkowski, Tom Tillis, some others.
But no one is making it.
None of the Republicans are making a big deal out of it.
Yeah, I mean, there's in their minds and they're not incorrect on their short-term politics
is if you're on the wrong side of Trump, you're out of the Republican party.
Right.
What do you think about the one excuse you hear from some of them as well?
Joe Biden did all the pardons.
So Joe Biden pardoned his family and he did those prospective pardons for Fauci
and Cheney and so if he's doing pardons and Trump's doing pardons, all the pardons are bad.
I don't love Joe Biden's pardons, particularly the one,
well, I'm very sympathetic on the Hunter one,
the ones for the rest of his family,
six minutes before he left office,
I think are much harder to defend.
I think that's a good move, yeah.
But if you think that Donald Trump
did all of these pardons in this way,
because Joe Biden did some pardons
the day before, earlier that day,
then you were too fucking stupid to be in politics. April, that earlier that day, then you were too stupid to be in politics.
Like that.
And then you didn't, then you were like, uh, in a coma for the last year,
because he talked about it every day on the fucking campaign.
Of course he was going to do this.
Now Biden made probably slightly leavened the political pain that could come from
this because a lot of the coverage is the Biden pardons
and the Trump pardons.
Look at the how presidents are now breaking norms
left and right.
He gave the press an opportunity to do its favorite thing,
which is default to the pox on both your house's narrative
and that both sides are doing it.
Once again, Joe Biden and his last move in the White House
nailed the messaging and communication, you know? Because he excels at that.
There is a, there is a, but I don't love Joe Biden's
pardons, there is a fundamental difference,
morally, legally, in every other sense between
proactively pardoning your family and pardoning
1,600 people who assaulted the Capitol,
some of whom committed violence against police officers
or members of right-wing paramilitary organizations
because they were on your side.
Like those are not the same thing.
They can both not be awesome,
but one is a lot less awesome than the other.
Yeah, I mean, I could be wrong,
but I don't think Anthony Fauci tased anyone
until they had a heart attack.
Well, we'll find out soon.
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Let's talk about the immigration moves.
We could do a whole show about this.
I imagine we'll probably end up doing that at some point.
We'll talk about this a lot.
Just to start, what do you make of the move so far
in immigration?
And what did you make of that directive to prosecutors
to go after any official who tries to stop the deportations?
Well, let's start with the directive, which is,
could not be more ironic in the sense that it is exactly what
Donald Trump has been running against in his mind
for the last four years.
It is weaponization of law enforcement apparatus
of the government to scare people into adhering
to your policy agenda.
Right? That is, like if you are someone who in a,
in a city, in a blue city or somewhere else,
or law enforcement, local law enforcement,
and you have every reason to be afraid
that this Department of Justice will prosecute you.
And even if ultimately you will be found innocent
or you won't end up being indicted,
you're going to have to spend your own money
and your own resources
to defend yourself legally against this.
It's gonna upend your life,
it's gonna potentially ruin your reputation.
And so he is trying to remove all obstacles
to anyone who will stand up against him.
I think the other thing that has stood out to me about all of the immigration moves is Donald Trump's first term, he basically cut legal immigration, legal immigration by more
than he reduced illegal immigration.
So again, much like the cost of living and prices, a lot of people voted for Donald Trump
thinking there's a situation at the border, they need to control the border, you know,
there's been an influx of immigrants coming into our cities that we can't care for, this
is a problem, can we get this under control?
And what Donald Trump is saying is actually, I want to go after legal immigration, birthright
citizenship, not just for people who've just crossed the border and had a child here.
No, this is people who are here on student visas, H-1B visas, people who are here legally.
Now he's suspending the refugee program. Refugees who we take into this country are the most vetted people of any immigrant. When we take refugees in suspended the refugee program, suspended asylum, uh,
people like Steve Bannon and that wing of the party, they want to cut legal
immigration, Stephen Miller wants to cut legal immigration.
They don't want the H one B visas, that whole fight we talked about.
So it is hard to look at his immigration moves as moves that are about national
security, people's safety, anything like that, order
in the immigration system, and more about the Trump administration deciding that they
want to define who is an American and who is not.
The national security threat in the minds of Donald Trump and Steve Bannon and Stephen
Miller is a diverse pluralistic
society.
That's what they're trying to stop.
And that anyone who represents change or diversity is a threat.
And that applies to immigration, it applies to their policies on DEI programs and all
of it, and that is exactly what they're doing.
And I think the scary thing here is a lot of this
is warmed over policy from the last time,
but they are just implementing it faster,
more aggressively and seemingly with more precision
than before.
They now know how to pull the levers of government
in a way they absolutely did not.
It was just a cluster fuck the first time around.
They didn't even know what they were doing.
But if you remember the Muslim ban,
they had to rewrite it like five times to get it through.
They made huge errors that delayed implementation.
And now they're not, for what we can tell,
they're not gonna make as many of those errors, right?
They have real people in charge of things.
The entire government is on board
with Trump's immigration plans.
And before there was a wing of the government
that was for it and part of his White House staff
was resisting it, right?
Including his, including some of his closest aides.
And in this case, everyone is moving forward to do it.
And that's where it's the most scary.
All right, this is what counts as lighter fare.
I was saying, when I got to the card, how fun.
A mini drama erupted on Wednesday
when Elon Musk went on the attack
against a $500 billion AI initiative
that Trump had announced the day before in the Roosevelt Room with the SoftBank CEO, billionaire Trump
donor Larry Ellison, and Elon frenemy Sam Altman of OpenAI, Elon responded on X, quote,
they don't have the money.
And then Sam and Elon got in a bit of a slap fight online.
What's going on here?
Why is Elon Musk mad about the artificial
intelligence initiative announced by his pal Donald Trump and all
those other billionaires?
I thought he loves AI.
He does.
He, he, he does love AI, I think, but he hates Sam Altman more than he loves AI.
Right.
The Elon was on the floor.
He also loves his, he loves his.
Yes.
Yes.
We're, we're going to get to right this in the big tech world in this club of
billionaires, it is like, it's to get to, right? In the big tech world in this club of billionaires,
it's all about money.
But there is a high school cafeteria element to this.
And Sam.
It's a little dick swinging contest.
Yeah.
That's what it is.
All the people at the outcast table
in the high school cafeteria now are
fighting over being at the cool kids' table.
Yeah.
And just keep in mind, Donald Trump is the cool kid.
Yeah, what a fucking world, Moran.
But Sam, Elon and Sam Altman founded OpenAI together.
Elon left it in dispute about its direction.
Elon then started a competing AI model, GROK,
which is part of Twitter.
He does not like the people involved.
He did not, I imagine, did not like being on that stage
because Twitter does not have the money to be,
or X does not have the money to participate
in such an endeavor like OpenAI and the others do.
And so he just did what he always did,
which is say what was the top of his mind
without really thinking about it.
It's also watching Sam Altman who in 2021 was tweeting, thank you Reid Hoffman for everything
you've done to help defeat Donald Trump.
And we're so lucky he's not in the White House anymore.
We've defeated Donald Trump.
This is great.
He was like our, he was resistance-pilled at one point.
He was tweeting polls in 2017, like what should we call him? Dangerous Donald?
Like this is Sam Altman.
And then just yesterday or this week,
he posted on X, wow, you know,
I think I was wrong about Donald Trump.
And now that I met him in person,
I'm really excited about what he's gonna do for the country.
Give me a fucking break, man.
I mean, I met Sam Altman in 2017
at a series of meetings
trying to bring together political folks and tech
folks on how to defeat Donald Trump
and fight back against mag extremism.
And now he's on stage.
It's giving him billions of dollars.
Now that he's free of your brainwashing, Dan,
your liberal propaganda that you were spouting at him,
now thank god he got to meet Mr. Trump
so he could see firsthand how great he is. So is Elon like now the most
powerful person in government and I say in government because he's gonna get a
he's got a White House email and he's apparently getting a West Wing office
he was originally gonna be in the EEOB, old executive office building that's the
one next to the the West Wing because there's not a lot of not a ton of West
Wing offices but Elon was not gonna have that now he's to the West Wing, because there's not a ton of West Wing offices, but Elon was not going to have that.
Now he's in the West Wing with his buddies.
He pushed Vivek Ramaswamy out of Doge.
Vivek's now running for governor,
because apparently Elon didn't like his weird thread
about saved by the bell, and we need to have more,
more screeches and fewer zacks and all that kind of stuff,
which, point to Elon on that.
Yeah, just fundamental misunderstanding
of the plot of State of the Bell.
Correct, correct.
But so is Elon the most powerful person right now?
Steve Bannon was taking shots at him for this open AI thing,
the fight with Sam Altman.
He was like, Donald Trump needs to sit him down.
I can't believe that he's just out there
and he's been brought into government.
Now he's criticizing the president, you know,
cause Bannon hates him.
But what do you think of this whole thing?
Yeah, I think he's the most powerful person in government
by far and one of the most powerful people in the world
because Donald Trump has limited leverage over him
compared to everyone else, right?
Anyone else can kick out of government.
He can primary, he can support a primary challenge
against them.
He can use his Twitter account or his truth social
account to trash the reputation and send them all
the people after him.
Elon has more money than Trump.
He doesn't need Trump per se.
And he has also has a very vicious, aggressive,
very large online mob of people who support him.
And so you can see it.
Donald Trump treads lightly around Elon in a way he does not tread lightly around anyone else we've
ever seen. Yeah, wonder how long it'll last. So more from the Hannity interview,
they talked about a lot of other stuff besides January 6. I think it's safe to
say that both men were really feeling it. They were really happy to be together.
Let's listen. After four long years, President Donald Trump is back where he belongs. He is in the Oval Office.
Joe Biden has very bad advisors. Somebody advised Joe Biden to give pardons to everybody but him.
They wanted to take care of him. Yeah, but sure. They wanted to... I don't care.
This guy went around giving everybody pardons.
And you know the funny thing, maybe the sad thing,
is he didn't give himself a pardon.
And if you look at it, it all had to do with him.
And I heard Schiff went to him
and just begged him for a pardon,
because Schiff is a crook.
I will say that, so, I don't know if you watched
the whole interview, but that clip,
he has like a sort of menacing tone,
but is a little vague on investigating Biden or Schiff.
But at one point, you know,
Hannity asks him about just sort of, you know,
vengeance in general and retribution and all that.
And he gets really angry and really dark, and it's like, I went through hell these last four years, and you know, maybe people need to and all that. And he gets really angry and really dark
and it's like, I went through hell these last four years
and maybe people need to go through that.
Like it was, I, you know, we are on a watch what he does,
not just what he says kind of path here,
but I hear something like that.
I left that interview thinking, oh man,
he really wants to do these investigations.
Yeah, 100%.
I mean, implicit is doing a lot of work here,
but he threatened Biden repeatedly.
Yep, right.
See, you know, seems weird, seems unfortunate
he didn't pardon himself, like says it like six times.
Kind of funny, kind of sad.
Yeah, maybe it's sad, maybe it's funny.
And I mean, there is this, you know,
you and I by based on a series of misbegotten professional decisions,
are forced to watch all of the Trump Hannity interviews
over the last near decade.
And there was always this moment where he sees Trump
about to light himself on fire and he tries to use
like gentle parroting techniques to shift the interview
onto safer territory.
And so you hear him in that clip being like,
I wanna get to the economy, seriously, the economy,
high prices, and Trump's like, I don't care.
I wanna talk about prosecuting my opponents.
Yeah, yeah, that's what we got.
There was also, by the way, a very long discourse
about the fires in LA and smelt
and turning the valve on in Northern California
so that the water flows down to Los Angeles.
It is, that's like for the,
that's the old days we would have played that.
So, but if you want to laugh or maybe you'll cry,
you know, go take a listen to that.
And we'll probably hear it again
when he goes to Los Angeles on Friday.
I'll tell you when we cry,
which is when he conditions a fire aid to California
based on sending the water to LA
when the water doesn't go to LA.
Water doesn't go to LA.
Doesn't go to LA, doesn't know what he's talking about.
This might just, he sees that the fish,
they're trying to save the fish and the fish,
how are we even saving the fish
because don't fish need water?
I mean, it's obviously absurd,
but when you say something like that, like you see why people believe them. It's like well you
fish do need water. Yeah it does it does make sense that there would be a valve
in Northern California that you open the water. It's just a button. It's just
even just a push one button and the water goes all the way down. They won't push it because it might hurt the
smell. It might hurt the smelt. It might hurt the smelt. Pots of America is brought to you by Quince.
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Quince.com slash Crooked. Donald Trump has done a lot of public appearances
since the inauguration.
He's speaking all that we've heard.
We hear Donald Trump multiple times a day.
Is that strategy?
Is that just what he wants?
Cause he wants to be, you know,
the country's host for the next four years.
Like, whoa, or is it,
is there any risk to that for him?
I guess there's no risk to anything,
because he's fucking, he's president.
He's, that's it, he wins.
He's not running for, he doesn't have to run again,
and he's immune for prosecution.
So yeah, there's very little risk.
Yeah, tough to keep asking what the political damage
for Trump is, I guess, just so everyone knows.
You know, a weakened Trump, a trumpet back at lower 40%,
30%, whatever,
you know, that bodes poorly for the midterms for Republicans.
And I think probably if it keeps up for four years,
the same is true for 2028,
but long way to go till we get there.
So go ahead.
It's, is it a strategy?
No, in the sense that Donald Trump
has always wanted to be this way.
He wants to be the center of attention at all times, right?
In tabloids, putting his name on everything,
hosting a reality show, but it does also happen to be,
and this is why he's president for the second time
in three elections, is that sort of approach
is also the way you should communicate in this media age,
is you have to be omnipresent.
You have to be everywhere all at once.
You have to do everything. Never stop talking.
You can't abide by this philosophy that even some Democrats, a lot of Democrats will abide by,
which is the news of the day is the EOs. So once I've done the EOs, I should stop talking
until tomorrow and then we'll have another news day. That's not how the world works anymore. It's
just, it's nonstop, always talking, always be there, command as much attention as you possibly can.
And that means that the people who don't pay a lot
of attention have a greater chance of hearing you
if you're always talking.
But it also means, this is very key for Trump,
that if you're always talking, if you say something wrong,
if you make a mistake, it hurts a lot less.
And so this is the approach, right?
It is exhausting.
It hurts my brain.
It makes doing this podcast thoroughly
like being on a hamster wheel of terrible this at all times.
But that is how Democrats,
that's how everyone should communicate in this day and age.
They should over communicate,
should be out there all the time.
And that was not the approach that Joe Biden used for sure.
And certainly not the approach that Kamala Harris used, although she did exponentially more than Joe Biden used for sure. And certainly not the approach that Kamala Harris used,
although she did exponentially more than Joe Biden,
but you have to be, we have to sort of adopt
not the messaging, not the behavior,
but the conceptual understanding of messaging
that Trump is employing here.
Trump didn't said so much shit this week.
It was easy to forget that he also
is trying to get a cabinet confirmed. So far the only one who's gotten through the Senate who's officially confirmed is
Secretary of State Marco Rubio who by the way has planned a trip to Panama Dan.
So I guess that canal thing is no joke that's going to be his first trip as Secretary of State
Marco's going to Panama. I think he's excited about that?
You think there's gonna be a moment on that trip
where Marco Rubio thinks of himself like,
how the fuck did I get here?
On one hand, I'm Secretary of State,
on the other, it's for Donald Trump
and he sent me on a mission to take back the Panama Canal.
I mean, we are, the world is on fire
in multiple places right now.
And the top priority, the first thing
New Secretary of State is gonna do
is to go to try to take back a canal
for reasons that are entirely made up.
Made up.
As we went through all this podcast two days ago.
Cause he's, cause, cause Donald Trump is stuck in the 80s
and no one wants to tell him otherwise.
So that's Marco, DOD nominee Pete Hegzef
made it out of the Armed Services
Committee on a party line vote on Monday, but on Tuesday the committee got a sworn statement from
his former sister-in-law detailing abusive and scary behavior toward the woman's sister,
Hegseth's former wife, including that she once hid in a closet to get away from him and then she
had to develop an escape plan. Fox News reported that Mitch McConnell, Lisa Murkowski, and Susan
Collins may all
be planning to vote against Hegseth, in which case JD Vance would have to cast
the tie-breaking vote, possibly in a Friday evening vote. No word on whether
Pam Bondi or Cash Patel will have any trouble getting confirmed now that Trump
has basically shut down the Justice Department's largest ever investigation
into right-wing domestic terrorism. That's the January 6th rioters and also suggested that he wants the government
to investigate his opponents. RFK Jr. is apparently telling Republican
senators that he's changed his mind on the polio vaccine and others and that
he's not trying to limit access to inoculations.
So there's some good news for your day.
Some good news for your Friday.
Going to the weekend with that.
But apparently he'll continue to make money from his involvement in a lawsuit against
Merck over the HPV vaccine, which he would now be overseeing.
So that's lovely.
He's going to get a piece for him too, you know, everyone's got their piece.
Meanwhile, one nominee who may actually be in trouble, Tulsi Gabbard.
One Republican senator just told Semaphore, quote, there are very serious concerns by
enough members to put her nomination in jeopardy.
What do you think, Dan?
Is the Senate going to reject any of these yahoos?
Maybe Tulsi Gabbard, maybe.
I wouldn't bet on it.
But it does seem possible there was some reporting
she wouldn't get out of committee.
And they're most mad at her, as it turns out,
for suggesting a pardon for Edward Snowden,
which seems to be low on the list of reasons
why she should not have this job.
Wow.
I think they're also, she's not as right wing
on sort of surveillance issues.
And I think they're a little,
some of them are a little worried about that.
Worried that she's gonna over or under surveil?
Under surveil.
Oh.
You can't be under surveilling in the Trump administration.
You've got to be surveilling the right people.
Yeah, exactly.
Very against surveillance on their people,
very pro surveillance on everyone else.
And then, of course, she met with Assad a couple times,
and they're a little concerned about that.
So we'll see about Tulsi.
It is wild that Hegseth,
they can't get one more Republican to take,
because if they have three,
they can't get one more Republican to take down Hegseth.
But just-
The drama is whether he's gonna pass easily
or JD Vance is going to have to remind America he exists
and show up to break the tie.
Yeah, that's what we're going with.
So it looks like Trump's gonna get his cabinet.
And it seems like John Thune is gonna to keep the Senate in session basically until all
of the nominees are confirmed.
So that's what we're looking at there.
Unsurprisingly, Trump's opponents have not been getting a ton of airtime this week.
One moment that did break through though was this one from the prayer service at the National
Cathedral on Tuesday. In the name of our God, I ask you to have mercy upon the people in our country.
We're scared now.
There are gay, lesbian, and transgender children in democratic, republican, and independent families.
Some who fear for their lives. And the people. The people who pick our crops.
And clean our office buildings. Who labor in poultry farms and meat packing plants.
Who wash the dishes after we eat in restaurants.
And work the night shifts in hospitals they they may
not be citizens or have the proper documentation but the vast majority of
immigrants are not criminals they pay taxes and are good neighbors that of
course was Bishop Marion Buddy she is the head bishop in Washington DC of the Episcopal Church.
Trump and the rest of the Republicans spent the rest of the week attacking her for what she said,
not just disagreeing, saying that it was despicable. One Republican congressman,
I don't know if it was a joke or not, said that she should be on the deportation list.
said that she should be on the deportation list.
Trump has demanded an apology from her.
They've called her a liar. Mike Johnson, very religious man,
he posted about her that it was despicable.
White House called her despicable.
What did you make of that moment at the prayer service?
It was incredibly powerful.
Not just what she said,
but the fact that she said it to Trump's face,
particularly in an environment where so many of Trump's longtime opponents are bending over backwards to kiss his
ass in the most debasing way possible. And so to have someone who actually is not only just to say
it, but to say it to his face in a moment when people are listening was powerful and courageous. I also think it is a model for other leaders to talk about Trump because she, like they're all
saying, you know, she's so division and I've just looked at what Mike Johnson actually said,
her hateful radical ideology. That's what she uses an opportunity to push that. And then anyone who listens to the clip,
like go listen to the clip, go listen to the whole thing.
She could not have been more respectful
of Donald Trump and Republicans.
She could not have been more willing to extend a hand
and to try to just, she's just trying to lodge her complaint
in the most respectful way possible.
And I do think there is additional power
in criticizing Trump and criticizing what he's doing
in a way where she didn't really care in that moment
if Donald Trump was gonna get mad at her.
But what she was thinking about is how is this message,
how is what I'm saying in this criticism gonna land even with people who may not agree with me?
And that's not to say that she was being like super political and thinking of message strategy
like we do, but she's clergy and she thinks about it from a human perspective.
And she spoke in a way that normal humans would speak to each other when you're trying to convince someone who may not agree with you
in a respectful way in a way that shows grace and
I think it's something and even in her interviews afterwards
She had some you know all these reporters all these parties kept setting her up to like take another shot at Donald Trump or really attack
And she just she wouldn't do it. You know because she's like this is she said I think on a Rachel Maddow
interviewer and she said look I just I wanted to say it this way because I
think this is a moment to try to like bring the country together and I don't
think this is a moment to further inflame divisions but these voices weren't
being heard and I needed to say something.
And I just, I thought that was great.
It was very, you hit on that I think
is like the instructive part of this for Democrats
is the core of her remarks is that she believes
that despite this election, despite whom we just elected,
that this is a country of people who care about each other,
who want to come together and want to do the right thing, particularly for America's most
vulnerable people.
That we take care of each other.
We take care of each other, right?
We've all been strangers here at one point.
And we don't want to be, try to make ourselves be a lesser version of Trump, right?
Sort of a paler shade of orange, if you will.
What we wanna do is we wanna speak to what,
to the opposite of Trump, and that's what she did.
And I think, and I do,
it didn't come to fruition in this election,
but I have continued to believe ever since Trump
first came down that escalator and won that election
that the antidote to that in the longterm in politics
is to get back to speaking to hope and optimism in unity
and the idea that we care about each other.
Yeah, decency.
What else have you seen?
What are your overall thoughts on how Democrats
have responded to this week?
Man, that's a loaded question.
Hey man, I've been here trying to answer it all week here
and getting asked it all the time on all these
press interviews.
That is your personal choice, my friend.
I know.
You're wise to keep your head underwater there.
Look, I think to be fair to Democrats,
it is impossible to ask them in a moment in which we are
thoroughly leaderless to have the fully formed response
to Trump
in the first 72 hours of his presidency.
What I worry about in some of the responses to date
is that we are unwilling to truly reckon
with this election, right?
We can tell ourselves a story that the election
was closer than sort of the narrative.
And that is true in one sense,
but it's also true and more part of that we have bled
massively with the most core parts of our coalition, right?
Latino voters, black voters, young people.
And that that is an ongoing trend, right?
If you can look at the Latino numbers,
it's massive over the last four years.
And it just feels like we're doing,
the same people are doing the same things they were doing six months ago, as opposed to really, really rethinking how we communicate, how we how we speak, right, not our message, like how do we actually the what are the words that come out of our mouth?
How do we sound different? What are we going to do that's different than before? And it just, and I see that I see that a little bit in the way the DNC race
is playing out is that people really,
we want the easy way out.
What we want to do is kind of get lucky, right?
In that we're gonna survive this period
and then Trump's gonna be unpopular.
It's kind of an election, maybe we can win it.
Kind of like we won 2020.
But that doesn't solve our bigger problem.
And I don't even want to depress people.
But take a look at what the 2032 electoral map is
going to look like.
And once you do that, you're going
to realize that we have massive work to do
to reconfigure our coalition.
And we have to be willing to ask really hard questions.
And I'm not convinced that enough people in the party
want to ask those questions right now.
And when you say the 2032 electoral map,
you mean that some of the blue states
could lose electoral votes because of the new census
by then, because blue states are losing people to red states.
I'm still, like you, I'm still giving people time
to sort of get their sea legs in the new, in the end.
Look, we had to wait to see how extreme he would be in the first week, whether he'd actually
follow through.
I mean, you know, on this very podcast, on our Tuesday show, I think I was saying, oh,
we've tried resistance politics, we should try normal politics and here's the price of
a, like I did the whole thing.
And then, you know, he goes and pardons these violent
offenders and all the other shit. And you're like, you just, you know,
you've got to adapt to and react to him in some ways, right? Like that,
that is just part of dealing with Donald Trump. He does something and we often
have to react. We're trying not to overreact, but like that's, he's the president.
He commands a lot of power right now right and so I you know a
lot of Democrats are just finding their sea legs I get that but I have not seen anything this week
right like I don't you know I saw Chris Murphy on the floor talking about the pardons and I think
he was very passionate he's someone who who talks like a human AOC is out there she's talking like
a human I just don't see a lot else from Democrats right now,
with people who are just, you know,
putting all the polling down for a second,
put the stage directions down, just tell us how you feel.
You know, it's the first week, right?
You don't have to think about what polls well right now.
It's the first week.
Tell us how you feel about this.
I think there's obviously a messaging problem,
but even, take the Chris Murphy example, right?
Great speech, he lived on the floor of the Senate.
Yeah, right, yeah.
Like, you saw that.
Yeah, because I've now made a Twitter list
of Democratic politicians just so I could see
what they're all talking about.
And that was the only one that caught my eye
in that long list.
And part of it is hard.
Other than the example they were saying,
who did a lot of her stuff on Instagram Live,
which is the right place to do a lot of this,
is there's just not people who have the capacity to be heard.
Yeah.
That is a challenge.
But part of it is you, well, this is a, you know,
this is a bigger topic about attention
and how to command attention in this age.
But sometimes one way to get heard
and have the capacity to get heard
is to say something worth hearing, you know?
And I don't think that anyone said anything
worth hearing yet, or not a lot of people.
The bishop sure did.
Now look, she was in a, she's a bishop,
she's not political, Donald Trump was sitting right there.
So obviously that's why the whole thing went viral.
But like, I don't know.
I think we gotta start throwing some stuff against the wall.
See what sticks in terms of getting the message out, right?
Not in terms of message itself, but like people,
it's what you said about Trump.
You gotta over communicate, right?
There's the press release, the Senate floor speech,
the five minute cable hit, not sufficient.
Not sufficient right now. One last thing on Democratic strategy here. On Wednesday night,
someone we know, Tom Vitor, was a guest of my pal Jesse Waters on Fox News. Let's listen to how
he did. How many genders are there Tommy? How many genders are there Tommy? The honest answer is I don't care.
I'm a libertarian.
I don't care.
You can be what you want to be.
Well I'm not a Democrat and that we know.
I haven't seen this enemies list.
Can you show me this list?
Yeah read Cash Patel's book, the new FBI director.
You should check it out.
It's not a long book.
I haven't seen the list.
I know there was FBI agents on the ground on January 6,
and then they destroyed evidence in the committee,
and then everybody gets preemptive pardons?
What's that all about?
We're just doing kind of the greatest hits of conspiracy.
We can do lab leak now.
Where do we want to go next?
How'd our boy do?
He did great.
He did great.
He hung in there.
Our libertarian ghost.
I have a, I really appreciate from Tommy because I have a, one of my theories I'm noodling on
for the future of our party is we have
to become more libertarian.
Okay, yeah.
Free speech, legalized marijuana.
I thought Tommy did great.
He was very quick on the draw.
He was very quick on the draw.
It's also, it's also so, I mean, I did this,
I did Jesse Waters during the convention
when we were, I was in the height of Brad Summer.
We were riding high.
Much, much tougher.
Jesse Waters seemed a little scared
about his future when he saw you.
Now he is, he's running high.
He was like, well, no way.
Well, Tommy was like, why don't you just,
you just wanna let this go?
Donald Trump won.
He's like, I'm not letting it go, Tommy Vitor.
Tell me that, that question about how many genders,
that was the first question to Tommy.
Yes, no.
It wasn't like, hey, hello,
could you comment on the pardons or anything?
I was like, Tommy, tell us about the genders.
Still worth, and you know, I still think it's worth going on.
It was worth going on to hear Tommy
bring up the conspiracies, give Jesse some shit. Like, I think, I think it's worth going on. It was worth going on to hear Tommy bring up the conspiracies,
give Jesse some shit.
Like, I think it's good.
This is, I mean, I have been a long time
opponent of Democrats,
other than the most talented of Democrats,
which I would include Tommy and going on Fox News,
but now, like, this is the thing we have to do.
We have to be everywhere
and you have to be in uncomfortable spaces so you'll get more attention.
Like if Tommy had just gone on Pick Your MSNBC show,
it wouldn't have gotten any currency outside
of the people who happen to be watching at that moment.
And because he's just the waters.
For example, we're not talking about
Lovett's star turn on Chris Hayes last night.
He did Chris Hayes?
Which happened at the same time.
He did, I'm learning this right now.
I did the night before with Tim Miller, yeah.
You and Tim Miller were on Chris Hayes at the exact same time.
Yeah, it was basically just, yeah, we were just hanging out.
Oh, cool.
We had a good time yelling about everything.
If I didn't know that, then I got to tell you.
Same way if your wife finds out you did that.
She definitely doesn't know.
She texted me, she was like, are you coming home? I was like, no, I'm doing this pod.
And then I got the view.
No, I think you're right.
Like you gotta, it gets more attention that way.
And I think Tommy did great.
So let's keep it up.
All right, that's all we got for news.
When we come back, you'll all hear Dan's interview
with DNC chair candidate, Faz Shakir.
But one quick thing before we get to Faz,
Dan, I hear we have a special offer for our listeners
for Message Box, your substack newsletter.
Is that right?
Well, John, great toss.
I do have a special.
Speaking of reading the stage directions,
right here it says Dan Crosstalk.
So that's what we're doing now.
We're doing the Krosztock.
Sometimes it says banter TK.
Well, John, I do have a special offer,
but before I get to that, I just want to say,
I've been writing this newsletter
for four and a half years now, which is very alarming,
but almost all of that's been during the Biden administration.
So I spent a bunch of time over the holidays
trying to think about what I want to do differently
now that Donald Trump is back in our lives and what I want to think about with four years
of fighting Trump ahead of us.
And so kind of come up with like three things are going to be that I'm really going to try
to focus on.
The first is continuing to analyze what happened this election, exploring how we can rebuild
our coalition.
It's not pleasant to look back at that election, but we have to learn the lessons from it.
The second is strategizing about how we can continue
to combat the right-wing media machine.
We got our asses absolutely kicked in the last election.
We're at a huge media disadvantage.
So how do we fix that as Democrats?
How do we communicate better?
What platforms do we use?
What platforms do we need to build?
And the last thing is I wanna identify
from my readers specific ways we can all fight back
against what Trump and his minions are trying to do, right?
And that includes where to volunteer, where to donate,
which campaign matters most,
and how to talk to the persuadable voters in your life
about what's happening in politics, what Trump's doing,
how to do that the most effective way possible.
So this is of interest to you.
I have a special offer,
and it cringes me to say this in so many ways, but.
That's fun watching your face do this.
Right, I know, I know.
The special offer is if you go
to the most embarrassing website possible,
crooked.com slash yeswedan and sign up for Message Box,
you will get your first month free.
So that is crooked.com slash yeswedan.
End of pitch.
I have to go take a shower now.
Everyone when there is a Dan Pfeiffer message box, it is the first thing I read when I wake
up at the ungodly hour that I wake up because I'm like, I'm not going to start my day with
anything else, but I got to read the message box first.
I do it every single time it comes out.
It is a fantastic fit.
And I talked to Dan all the time. So you would think that there's not a ton I could learn from it, but
I always do. So everyone should go subscribe.
I want you to know, I started sending it earlier to try to abide by your sleep schedule. Because
if I could be my playbook, I'm fucked for the day.
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Joining me now is fashion here the founder of the progressive media site more perfect union former national political director for the ACLU
Longtime advisor to Senator Bernie Sanders and now candidate for DNC chair fast. Welcome to Pod save America Dan Thanks for having me. Okay, you've been in politics a long time.
You've worked on campaigns, you've worked on the Hill,
you've been in groups.
You know a lot about how the DNC works.
Why the hell do you want this job?
We've gotten a creeping sense that maybe you feel
the same way, Dan, that there's a powerlessness
about the DNC, oh, it's useless, especially in an age
in which you've seen a lot of the power drift over
to super PACs and outside
Actors who are a little more nimble and quick and I understand that but we get philosophical with you for a moment here
Sure, and we are dealing in a society where you've got great wealth and income inequality
Where power is residing with people who have a lot of money and when you think about like if you just pull back and say
Okay
Well, what do you do in a situation where hey lot of power has moved to the hands of a few?
What you need are people powered organizations led with integrity that say, hey, don't forget
about us here.
And those things have to exist as institutions.
So to all the people, and I understand them, there's a lot of working class people out
there who say, institutions are corrupt, they're broken, they don't work for me.
I'm making the argument, yeah, but institutions are,
you need to have solidarity within a structure
to have some power.
This is what unions are about, right?
This is why you and I have built up our own media
institutions is that people need voice.
And the DNC is one of two major political parties in America.
You've got the Republican Party, which we know what direction
is going on, and the Democratic Party.
I'm like, don't give up on a structure and an institution
that has to work for people.
We've had your two primary opponents
for this position on the show.
We've talked to Ken Martin and Ben Wickler.
What is something you disagree with them on?
Like, you got into this race after they've
been running for a long time.
So there must have been something
you saw that was not being addressed,
or something you would do differently.
So I'm curious what the contrast is.
Yeah, the shortcoming in my mind is
that I am very pleased and happy, no surprise to you,
that we're now talking about being a working class party.
I'm like, great.
I've been haunting this one for a while,
but I'm glad coming out of this, we're all talking about it.
And so then I'm sitting around saying, for a while, but I'm glad coming out of this, we're all talking about it.
And so then I'm sitting around saying, hey, okay, get me what is the ambitious new thing
that we are going to do out of the DNC that is going to turn the heads of working class
people to say, oh, that's different, that's interesting.
I didn't realize you guys are going to act that way.
And I quite frankly was feeling let down by the lack of ambition on that score.
And, you know, I'm jumping in to challenge the notions of our constraints of thinking
around what the DNC can do.
If you're an apparatus with a hundred million dollar plus and raise of a year and you've
got, you know, 50 plus state parties, can you think outside the box of how you let people
into this?
The big thing that I'm trying to force everyone to think about is a grassroots
DNC that says membership to our organization is not merely a contribution.
It is us being in community with you.
We have to be out there with striking workers, organizing workers, people
fighting, you know, utility rate hikes or evictions and foreclosures.
You have to be closer to grassroots people who are fighting economic justice
issues and using your media apparatus to highlight those
fights in which I think working class people turn to you and say, Whoa, that
that I've never seen from the DNC.
That's interesting.
That's different.
That's what I'm compelling and forcing us to think about.
So what, what is that?
Is community that big idea that you're talking, you talk a little more about that?
So I, I blended all together that the media infrastructure being on the front lines.
Let's take, I mean, you go case by case here, but let's say Amazon workers are going to
organize to fight for a union in a North Carolina warehouse, which by the way is going on.
And does the DNC play a role in this?
Right now, historically, you and I know we're a partisan organization.
We focus on elections.
What I'm arguing is that if you are a working class party, you associate with the working
class struggles in all different fronts and utilize some degree of your email list to
help build solidarity with them.
Use your media channels to advertise and explain what the hell it is that they're fighting
for at this Amazon warehouse, why they matter to us.
Ultimately, when we stick out our necks out for them in North Carolina and there's an election,
I believe you're more likely to get some of those people to stand with the Democratic Party up and down the ballot
when the time comes. So I'm seeing it more holistically that when we change the way we are
projected to working-class people, when we get closer to their fights rather than just our fights,
I think we got a
better chance to recruit them back in, particularly in this moment where people
feel like Donald Trump is leading us into a world where wealth and power dictate all.
You obviously, you work for Bernie Sanders.
You've talked a lot about the democratic party becoming more populist.
This is a fairly loaded question or one that could take this entire
interview and several podcasts to talk about.
So I'll try to get your short version of the answer is, you know, Joe Biden was the pro
on economics, the most progressive president in a very long time.
He did a lot of the things that Bernie Sanders and other populists and progressives wanted
him to do.
Yet we bled more with working class voters than in any election since the eighties.
What, why do you, what is your short diagnosis for why that happened?
I'll try to keep it short.
My diagnosis is that when Joe Biden was rightly doing
a lot of great populist policy,
it was not matched by the political apparatus
leaning into those same fights.
So you take a moment where Joe Biden makes history
by going to a picket line on behalf
of the UAW during the midst of their strike.
You do not see a UAW kind of solidarity effort and action from the DNC saying this is our
fight.
We together in this.
This was Joe Biden doing his thing, not the Democratic Party standing with you.
You take any of those big moments.
If you have a Biden administration going after Big Pharma launching a major case, going
after pharmacy benefit managers, going after Amazon, Kroger Albertson's merger, whatever
the case might be, some of these big bank junk fees that Roja Chopra and others were
fighting, you correct me if I'm wrong, Dan, it does not feel to me that the policy apparatus
that was taking on these major challenges was accompanied by a political apparatus telling you, here's
what we're doing and here's the friction that we are engaged in right now and why we're
asking you to be part of this Democratic party.
And when the political apparatus doesn't do its part, we can't blame voters for just being
like, I had no idea.
And I think to this day, if I went out and talked about, hey, did you know we were fighting
the Kroger Albertsons merger because we wanted to make sure grocery prices were low and you
had competition? What percentage,
Dan? What are we talking about? Five, five percent? Ten percent? One percent. One percent,
I feel lucky. Yeah. What a sad situation that these were the biggest things that Biden was
bringing about. And as you know, the business world, if I went into any K Street lobbying
operation or into a chamber meeting, and I mentioned any of these things that you and I are just talking about
Would they know?
90 98 percent awareness right they were very upset. Why is Mark Zuckerberg where he is?
He was upset that you know, they're taking on his Facebook monopoly. So he he's upset and he moves away Elon Musk
Oh, I didn't get invited to a White House meeting and Joe Biden was calling me a union buster.
Yeah, these rich and wealthy people
were very upset at this direction
and yet the political apparatus is not leaning in
to tell you this is the direction that we are choosing
to fight for working class people.
One of your sort of passions in politics
has been sort of the asymmetry in media, right?
Which is why you started More Perfect Union,
a progressive populist pro-union media apparatus.
What would you do with the DNC to address
the media asymmetry here?
Which gets to the core of like,
there was a political, missing political organizing piece
to what we're just talking about,
but a huge part of it is media, right?
We got outgunned in media. We were unable to communicate in the right way. Some of that's
specific to Biden. But how would you change the DNC to address our media problems?
Part of your job, I think, in this moment is to think of yourself as editor in chief of a
social media channel. Thankfully, we at More Perfect Union have about, I'd say 1.3 million YouTube subscribers.
Now, Dan, I want you to guess,
how many does the Democrats YouTube channel,
which started in 2006,
how many followers does it have of more perfect union?
What does POTS say?
Probably close to a million or maybe 750,000 or something.
Yeah, like 800,000, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so, you know, respectable numbers here.
What does the DNC have?
150, I'm guessing
76,000
So, you know, we are obviously under shooting on just utilizing the channels to do compelling and interesting content
Well, you and I know you don't just sprinkle fairy dust on a YouTube channel and suddenly it grows
No, you have to give some compelling content.
You don't ever work in the building.
I, you know, I work back.
It was back in the day.
I was a DNC opposition researcher.
What I do know is we're sitting on content.
If you want to know what Donald Trump ever said, you know, from his first
term, his campaigns video, it's there.
You know, they have been recording it.
It's wild that you can't come up with compelling and interesting pieces to just tell people
about here's what Donald Trump promised, here's what he said.
You could just, that alone could do a hell of a lot of service of content.
But then, as I was mentioning, when you're grassroots operation, you're getting out in
the country and you're trying to tell people we're a working class organization, we care and affiliate with your economic justice fights.
Why not use the channels, the videographers and our 50 plus state parties to say, hey,
we're going to get on the ground and tell this interesting and compelling economic justice
story just as a service to all of us to know what's going on in the housing market or how you're getting
screwed on your utility rate hike, whatever the case might be, I find that those types
of pieces of content right now would do a hell of a lot to attract new audiences and
that aren't just purely partisan in nature.
Everyone who has ever run for this job since about 2006 has talked about a 50 state strategy.
We're going to organize everywhere.
We're going to have red states, blue states, et cetera.
The challenge of that always is money, right?
Which is, there's not enough money to do everywhere.
And then you ultimately feel a need to prioritize
in the seven swing states or the Senate rate,
the states where they have the Senate rate, the states where they have
the Senate races, wherever that these days are offered
in the same states.
How do you plan to address that and what's your approach
to organizing all over the country?
So when I, you mentioned I was at the ACLU,
I faced the same thing.
We had 50 state affiliates all over the board.
We were fortunate that, you know, we had a great grassroots
fundraising operation.
I think we ended up raising 200 million plus.
I think the DNC can do that this year too.
So I would challenge the notion that, well,
we just don't have enough money.
I think it's a matter of conviction around that money.
It does mean if you take away from somewhere,
you have to add to somewhere.
But if you have a conviction of saying,
you know, a baseline of funding,
right now you may know this, Dan,
but you know, most state parties,
if you're out in Idaho or wherever,
you probably get $12,500 a month. That's a poverty budget. Think about
trying to run a state party in Idaho at $12,500 a month.
So one is just you have to increase the baseline of that. If you had a robust grassroots operation,
you're not only increasing their baseline, you're also saying that the data, the donor,
the lists that we're getting out of maybe even the last election cycle, we've raised
a billion dollars from small dollar funds, that that list goes back over to you as well.
You've now got to, but you got to know what to do with it.
This is a challenge I face at the ACLU.
So I give you the list.
Do you have the digital expertise?
Do you know how to do online to offline events with volunteers?
Probably it might be challenging for a lot of other states.
That's where DNC comes in to say,
hey, I gotta give you some baselines.
Not only am I increasing the amount to the state,
I also gotta give you technical expertise
from national of how to use it, the know-how.
And then I would just say, our job,
and I'll say this with all delicacy and respect to the DSC universe
Which I've been in and you know a little bit about lots of councils and lots of caucuses man one council and one caucus breeds
another council in the caucus what we really need is like program admission and so
This is by example. What I did ACLU is say hey, we got one program mission for us was expand voting rights in this country.
Here's a North Star.
Now states, pitch me on what you could do
to expand voting rights.
You got independent redistricting commissions,
you got expansion of early vote,
you're trying to get formerly incarcerated individuals
to vote, great, get me a pitch,
explain what's going on in your state
and what you need to help fund it.
See, so if you set like a goal and ambition,
a purpose at the top, and now you've got states saying,
I think here, even in Idaho,
I think we can do something about that.
We need that.
So goals and ambitions are like grassroots organizing
is one, in events and communities
that I was mentioning before.
Candidate recruitment across the board,
tell me what you're doing to expand
and do interesting candidate recruitment,
and we'll fund it.
And, you know, so I just feel a lack of ambition around
where's program and mission here.
Can you raise that money while still being less annoying in your
texts and emails than the democratic party has been in a long time?
I, you know, so this, you know, one of the learnings of Bernie's email
list, which still to this day is very vibrant and raises a fair amount and
probably outperforms the number of candidates still running for office. I'm sure it does.
I don't know if you're on the emails, he writes very substantive long emails and asks
people, often not even for a direct contribution, it's a petition action and a secondary asks
for money.
And I think I don't want to treat people like they're dumb.
I do think people, particularly in this age where the economy is complex, people know it's rigged,
they're seeking depth.
Get me an understanding.
Own your leader, your job.
Help unpack stuff for me.
And I believe the emails, lists, and texts
don't have to be superficial
and treat people like they're dumb.
I think you can raise the bar and you say,
hey, this is something interesting and compelling
that I want you to know about and I'm asking you to fund it.
I think we'd see an increase in funding, not a drop off.
Would the DNC under your leadership accept contributions from corporate PACs and lobbyists?
So what I'm most upset about there is that corporate power influence over the party.
So I wouldn't accept money from PACS
lobbyists who are trying to say, hey we want a seat at the table, we're gonna
influence this. And right now I think that that's what you got going Dan, is
you've got these folks who believe not that when I give you a contribution, I
expect that my finance committee will now not be run by you know finance
people that are the delegates or people who we've
brought into the DNC, but they're outsiders.
The people outside the organization, they come in,
they make determinations.
So I think if you're a working class party, in my view,
you do things that stand for working class people.
And I would, you know, I'll do a twist on you on this one.
If Amazon wanted to give me, I mean I was wrestling with this in real time, if Amazon
wanted to give me $50,000 for the DNC, promise you, you're marked to support Amazon workers
in this country.
So I'll take it and guess what?
Those Amazon workers who are organizing in North Carolina, they're going to get every
penny of it.
We're going to show you, if you're a working class party, this is what you are supporting. And in that way, yes, I will show my true colors because
corporate influence will not have driven the decision making. And I think that there my sense
is there's a lack of transparency and people feel like corporate influence is having a large role
of it because we don't even know where the hell the money is. Where does all the large numbers amounts?
Beyond the FEC filings, there's consultants who get money, but what I don't see anything.
Where is my value as a member of the Democratic Party?
What are you doing in community with me?
We can raise the bar on that one.
We can do compelling and interesting stuff in communities all over the country.
Well, Faz, thanks so much for joining us.
Good luck in your race.
It's always great to talk to you.
Thank you, Dan.
Appreciate it.
That's our show for today.
I'm going to be back in your feed on Sunday
for our very first Sunday show of 2025,
featuring an excellent in-depth conversation
with none other than Rachel Maddow
about Trump's first week back in office,
how we should cover his second term and how to stay sane.
It was a lot of fun as always.
I hope you'll check it out.
Thanks to Fash Shakir for coming on the show
and thanks to Jared O'Connell, Dio Gomez, Jake Getz,
Jesse Carson, Dave Seidel and everyone here at Sirius XM
in New York City for hosting us this week.
We loved being here.
We had wonderful hosts at Sirius.
So thank you everyone who helped us out.
And talk to you all on Sunday.
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