Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #476: Omarosa Manigault Newman, Steve Kornacki
Episode Date: October 13, 2018Bill’s guests are Omarosa Manigault Newman, Steve Kornacki, Eddie Glaude, Jr., Reihan Salam, Rebecca Traister. (Originally aired 10/12/18) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn ...more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series
Real Time with Bill Maugh.
So sweet of you, I love you too.
I love.
A lot of love in this country.
You've heard of a slow news week?
This was a stupid news week.
First of all, look, we feel bad for the people
who got hit by the hurricane.
Of course, we wish them the least pain possible.
But anytime there's a hurricane,
the news turns into a wet t-shirt contest.
Every FF...
It's out there with a rain slicker.
I don't know if I'm watching CNN
or an ad for Gorton's fish sticks.
And what...
What pisses me off is that
what's souping up the hurricanes
gets less coverage.
Hey, media, link those two.
As long as you're out there in the storm.
Link them.
Yeah, I mean, a report from the UN...
about the UN climate policy...
You see this this week says
this planet has like 20 good years left.
They say it could become unlivable.
And I don't mean Tarzana unlivable.
I mean unlivable, unlivable.
I kid Tarzan.
It's a great place.
But, I mean, can you imagine that?
A UN report warning about catastrophic damage from climate chain
drops just as such a hurricane hits.
Only a moron could not see the connection.
Or as Trump said, I don't see the connection.
No, the hurricane is very much on Trump's mind.
He had a whole roll of paper towel stuck to his shoe.
But, yeah, the midterms are less than a month away.
Closing arguments.
Trump is calling the Democrats an angry mob.
We're an angry mob.
And the party of crime.
We're the mob?
We're an angry mob.
Because the only liberals I ever see with the pitchfork are composting.
That's...
He says, we're too dangerous to government.
We're too dangerous. We're the mob. Too dangerous to govern it. And then he mentioned Diane Feinstein, and the crowd started to chant, lock her up.
That's the thing about a lynch mob. They don't get irony.
You know, they just...
Any woman, they don't like Hillary. Lock her up. Diane Feinstein, lock her up. Taylor Swift. What the hell? Lock her up.
Well, you saw that Taylor Swift came out for the Democrats of the Tennessee, and Trump...
Trump does not like that.
I think what Taylor Swift reminds him of Hillary.
A powerful blonde woman who has been rejected by millions of white men.
No.
There are reports now that Trump has finally agreed to talk to Robert Mueller.
We'll not talk but answer 15 questions in writing.
First questions, why did you let Kanye in the White House?
Two, what is boofing?
Three, when you do your hair and your makeup and you go outside,
you do realize we can see you.
But I don't know if you saw that this week,
but Donald Trump, our president,
held a meeting at the White House
to stress the importance of mental health.
He didn't mean to.
But that's the...
But come on.
Well, I mean, really.
I mean, Kanye West called for the abolishing the amendment
that freed the slaves.
He said it was a trap door for black people,
whatever that means.
And Trump was like, you had me at bringing back slavery.
But,
Tanre, I mean, some of the quotes are pretty amazing.
He said, this is our president.
He has to be the freshest, the flyest,
the flyest planes,
the best factories,
and we have to make our core be empowered.
And Trump said, I have no idea what you're saying.
And I can understand Melania.
You know, I mean, Trump and Kanye, one sang gold digger and one married one.
No, she's just back from Africa.
She said she's very happy to be home.
She said, there's no shit hole like home.
But, I mean, that meeting this week with Kanye, it was sad.
He said he was misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder, but it was really a matter of sleep deprivation.
And then Kanye said,
I have problems, too.
Kanye read it for 25 minutes,
and Trump just sat there and listened.
And I thought, finally, at least we found someone
who can make Trump shut the fuck up.
All right, we got a great show.
Rebecca Tristair, Raham Salon is here
and Eddie Glew Jr.
And here a little later, I'll be speaking
with political correspondent author,
Steve Kornacki, is backstage.
First up, she is the reality show star
turned White House.
whose new book is unhinged
an insider's account of the Trump White House
Amarosa Mangolt Newman.
Good to see you. How are you?
I'm thankful you're here
because I don't know whether you're a liberal
or conservative. I mean, you've worked...
A lot of people don't know this before, though.
That is not the first White House you worked in, right?
You worked under Al Gore in the Clinton administration.
So this is not new to you, right?
No, I've been in politics. For 20 years this year,
I went into the Clinton administration in 1998.
How would you compare the two?
Similar?
Well, in 1998, we were going through an investigation by a guy named Ken Starr.
We were faced with impeachment.
There was a lot of corruption.
Yeah, but it wasn't the same kind of corruption.
I don't think Clinton was colluding with Russia.
No.
People were sleeping in the Lincoln bedroom and they freaked out.
No, but, you know, as a young political, it was very interesting to watch how the investigation took a turn
because it started out investigating one area and in another.
So it was very different.
But also, Washington doesn't change very much.
The president changes, but the swamp doesn't change very much.
But, well, I don't know about that either.
I feel like the swamp has moved into the White House.
I mean, they couldn't get any swampier.
Come on.
You know that.
Okay, let's get right to it.
I saw you, I mean, I'm not, I'm sorry, a reality show fan,
but I know you did one after you left.
And I remember seeing the pro-
Okay, and I remember seeing the promo of you like this going,
it's so bad.
It was like an ad for a horror movie.
It was get out.
It's so bad.
And how bad is it?
Because I'm the one who's always arguing with people in this seat
who are saying, oh, come on, we've seen worse before.
And I'm like, I don't know about that.
I don't know if we've ever seen this.
I don't know if we ever had a traitor in the White House.
I don't know if a lot of things have ever been seen before.
What do you think?
What did you mean when you said, it's so bad?
Well, we were having conversations about immigration,
and this is before we knew that Donald,
Trump was separating children from their parents at the borders and putting them in cages.
And so I knew that a lot of that was coming down the pike.
And so when I was asked if it was going to get bad, it got pretty bad.
And those children are still separated from their parents.
Many of them have not been reunited.
And it's just really unacceptable.
And I believe that this president is causing so much damage to the institution.
So why did you work for them?
I mean, you said, you know, you're, I mean,
I mean, why'd you go to work for him?
You said, because he was your friend.
So if somebody's personal friendship,
but you don't believe in their politics,
you can overlook that?
Yeah, you know what?
Loyalty has kept me into situations
that logic would have gotten me out a lot sooner.
You were loyal to him.
I was very loyal to him.
I met Donald Trump in 2003.
We did three seasons of television.
And I did pretty good for him.
You're a one-name person.
Right.
You just need your one name, like, share.
Thank you, Bill.
I just got compared to Shire.
No, I just said you need one name.
I didn't
I didn't say you could do a residency at Caesars.
I don't think that would go well.
But, no.
But, I mean, you know, it kind of reminds me
I know people who used to say to me,
well, OJ was nice to me.
You know, I was like, yeah, but, you know.
Wait a minute, things just took a laugh.
No, I'm just...
I went from Cher to OJ.
Well, I know.
I'm just saying, just because somebody's nice to you,
I mean, you certainly must have known he was a giant liar.
I don't think his personality changed.
We know it didn't change when he got to the White House.
So you must have seen the racism and the hatred and the lying before.
You know, it's easy to say that hindsight is 2020.
I mean, 15 years ago, I didn't know that Donald Trump was going to be as insane and unhinged as he is.
So it's worse, then when you knew him on the apprentice?
Oh, greatly.
I mean, even just his vocabulary,
he has like six words that he says now.
Huge, very soon, great.
I mean, back in the boardroom...
Strongly.
Strongly.
Back in the boardroom...
Not a word, but okay.
So, okay, so...
So back in the day, how many did he know?
He knew a lot more than just...
He's like Cocoa the gorilla.
He knew 500.
But, you know, look, I'm not out to get you.
I never didn't like you. You're fine.
But the one thing I didn't like is when, after you
guys got elected and you said that thing
about everyone's now going to have to bow
down to Donald Trump. That's
not the way we talk in America.
You of all people
know about saying that like that one
dumb thing that everybody just
it was the stuff
I mean
you're not the first guest to try that exact
I could actually argue
the merits of it but we'll move on. No no no
but it was stupid it was dumb and it was
something that I said in the height
of campaign hyperbole.
Certainly, I don't believe
that everybody's going to bow down.
But at the time, I had an audience of one.
When you work for Trump,
you're not trying to entertain the audience.
You're trying to entertain him.
Okay, that's the honest answer.
The audience of one is what so much of this country
is off track about.
All of Fox News is for an audience of one.
Audience of one, that's right.
Okay, so tell me about some of the...
I'm very curious about that you write about
a lot about the Trump-Celly relationship, his chief of staff.
Right.
We've heard many times they hate each other.
He called him a moron.
He's a fucking idiot.
I can acquit.
You know, but they stay together.
There's something that bonds them.
What?
What is it?
They need each other in a weird way?
Well, they're both very old, cantankerous, insane guys that are serving, you know,
serving the purpose of kind of enabling each other.
Kelly was this war hero, and now he's reduced to getting Donald Trump diet coax and keeping people out of the Oval Office.
I mean, it's sad to see his reputation just reduced to what he's doing right now.
So, okay, all right, what about Ivanka and Jared?
We call them White House kin and White House Barbie.
Everybody does, or that's funny.
White House Ken and Barbie.
Are they smart?
I mean, Jared is the one that I, is the, is the, is the, is the, is the, the, is the, is the, is the,
most inscrutable to me. I can't get, because he doesn't speak.
He's the one I would be most curious to have dinner with because he might be smart.
No?
Okay.
I mean, his political career started when Donald Trump decided to announce.
Oh, I know that.
Right. And so he's that guy in the room that thinks he's the smartest guy in the room.
Right.
He has absolutely no idea.
No, we know he's not knowledgeable about the field.
No, but you ask, is he smart?
Yes.
He didn't even know basic political jargon.
And when you try to correct him, he gives you that kind of posture like,
are you a woman of color really trying to tell me something?
And so the sad thing about it, about Jared,
is that he doesn't know how stupid he sounds when he's talking in those things.
Right?
See, I'm learning. That's very interesting.
And Ivanka, is he, is Trump really hot for her?
Is that a thing?
You know, he said it himself.
I'm just going to say he's awkward.
He said it himself.
He wanted to sleep with his daughter.
It's pretty disgusting.
It's pretty disgusting.
Yeah, he would pat her on the behind.
He would kiss her on the lips.
He would rub her for very long periods of time.
I mean, it was...
Keep talking.
Awkward.
It's like one of those old 9-7-6 numbers, right?
In front of people?
Yeah, absolutely.
And what did she do?
Excuse me, I need a little drink.
What was her reaction to that?
She just loved it.
She loved being daddy's little girl.
She loved it. I see.
She loved being daddy's little girl.
Wow.
And she would always say, my daddy, and then she would correct her.
So my father thinks that, and I'm like, where'd this accent come?
I come from.
I met her, you know, 15 years ago.
She wasn't talking that way.
She had a very potty mouth.
Maybe she cleaned it up for the White House, but.
Okay.
Well, I thank you for putting up with my questions.
Are you ever going to do another reality show?
I'm doing a reality show right now.
This is as real as it gets.
Yeah, right.
And live, yeah.
No, I have a lot of projects going on.
I'm so excited.
You know, of course, the book did it well.
Thank you all for supporting it.
But it can all fit.
Thank you.
Really?
You all bought the book?
No, but, you know, that story was just one chapter.
And so I intend to tell the rest of the story in various formats.
Well, I'm glad you're on the scene.
Thank you for coming by our show.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I'm a Rosa, ladies and gentlemen.
Okay, let's meet our panel.
Thank you.
Okay, he is the National Review's executive editor
and author of Melting Pot or Civil War.
A son of immigrants makes the case against open borders.
Ryan Salam is back with us.
How ya?
How you doing?
Good to see you again.
He's a professor of religion
in African-American studies at Princeton University,
whose latest book is Democracy in Black,
how race still enslaves the American soul.
Eddie Glewold.
Jr.
Great to see you.
Hope you on TV, Eddie.
It's about time we shut up here.
She's a writer at large
for New York Magazine
and author of Good and Mad,
the Revolutionary Power of Women's Anger,
a returning champion, Rebecca Traster.
Thank you for coming home.
Don't forget to send us your questions
for nights over time.
It's answered me after the show on YouTube.
And also, for one more time,
I'm going to mention next week in this time slot
is our anniversary show.
I consider it a tribute to the people
who have worked on this show.
it's 25 years.
We're going back to the beginning of
politically incorrect in 1993.
And some of the people who have worked on this show
have worked on it for 25 years,
or 24 or 23.
So us show people have trouble saying,
I love you except on camera,
but I love you for all that.
And I want to start with political correctness
because a friend of mine recently said to me,
why are we losing?
I guess we're not losing officially yet,
but considering how awful Trump is
and everything else. It seems like the Democrats should be doing better.
And, you know, 25 years ago, politically incorrect, I said, like the godfather, political correctness.
I believed it would destroy us then, and I believe that now.
And I think people vote not so much on policy anymore. I don't think they follow it closely.
I think they vote on who's strong. They know Trump's an idiot, but he looks strong, and political correctness weak.
80% in this new Atlantic story that published this poll,
80% of Americans see political correctness as a problem.
And I think it's our problem.
And I don't know why more mainstream liberals don't denounce the political correctness
that they must know in private conversations is insane.
And I'm going to give you some examples, but I'll ask you to jump in first.
Well, you know, look, I think there is going to be a blue wave.
I think the Kavanaugh bump
has impacted the recent polls.
We probably overstated the possibility of turning the Senate.
But then that's not really a wave.
Oh, no, I think we're going to see a serious shift in the House, I think.
I hope that we do.
But I also want to go back to what you said about political correctness,
making the left look weak and that that's a bad thing.
Yes.
What have we been hearing from the right in its moment of a minority,
elected party in this country was just able to push through a Supreme Court nominee.
They won.
And what have they been clinging to?
A narrative about how they were attacked.
Poor Brett Kavanaugh's family, I feel so badly for what happened to him, says Donald Trump.
The mob is coming for us.
The angry mob is out there for us.
We've been attacked.
They're playing all those notes that you hear as weak when they come from the left.
The right is trying to get in on that.
But that's not what I'm talking about.
I'm sorry.
But Bill, I actually think Rebecca has a really good point.
Everyone in America feels like they're losing right now.
Democrats feel like they're losing.
Republicans feel like they're losing.
Democrats feel like they're locked out of power.
Republicans feel like they've lost the culture.
And it really is true.
Maybe you don't agree with that perception,
but there are people who really feel as though their values are being effaced.
They feel like a hounded minority.
And as crazy as that might sound to people who disagree with them,
I think that feeling is real.
I think they're performing loss in a moment of victory.
I think it's deeply genuine.
I think that people really do feel a genuine sense of loss
and a loss of cultural power,
and you're right to suggest that people think that political power
and the exercise of political power
is one way to push back against a culture that really does feel lost.
But what the hell do we mean when we use the phrase political correctness?
I'll give you an example.
There's like 10 stories a week.
Let me just give you.
Scott Kelly, you're familiar, the astronaut?
Okay.
He tweeted, one of the greatest leaders of my best,
modern time, Sir Winston Churchill
said, in victory, magnanimity,
I guess those days are over,
had to issue an apology
for that, for quoting Churchill.
Because Churchill, I guess,
lived by the standards of the 19th century.
But what happened? Okay. Let me
just finish, because
he said, I did not mean to offend by quoting
Churchill, my apologies. I will go and
educate myself further on his
atrocities. This is the guy who
saved us from the Nazis. And
And, you know, he was a fighter pilot, married to Gabby Gifford, who was shot and bravely continues on.
And somebody, and people on Twitter, and no one denounces this.
And he has to make an apology.
Hold up.
This is when the Trump people go, yes, you people are too fragile to being in control of the government.
No, no, no.
No?
What if it was the case that he realized that the invocation of Winston Churchill wasn't consistent with what he values, that he didn't know
everything about Churchill. And then he realized that Churchill, in 1943,
sanctioned the starving of Indians in Bengal.
He realized, in fact, that Churchill was, in fact, a vehemently committed racist to the imperial
project. He realized that Churchill did not represent his... So what I mean by this,
I want to say this really quickly. For those who have been caught under the foot of history,
you just can't simply invoke the mandate of history as a reason to accept certain figures.
Hold up.
You can't just simply mandate.
So Lincoln comes to me.
I can embrace Abraham Lincoln, right?
I can embrace his view of democracy.
But then I realized that Lincoln held a view
that white people matter more than black people.
Yes.
Now, once I understand Lincoln fully,
I can then embrace him on my own terms.
But I cannot accept Lincoln.
Just because the West declares him as great,
I have to accept him like I'm being stuck.
But every time I bring up Lincoln,
do I have to apologize?
first. No, that's not what he's saying in that moment.
Well, I think it is. Yeah, and in part, what we write
off as politically, political
correctness is correcting a record that has
been too simple, that we haven't
been taught the complexities that the power that
we so often are taught to celebrate or admire
purely is built on
inequity and bias that is not often
revealed to us. And it's a matter of
correction. And the other problem
is that when we focus on these things, like
the Twitter controversy around
hailing
Winston Churchill, we are
we are taking part in representing this as left activism,
that this is the left wing,
when in fact there are strikes going on,
there are strikes for higher wages,
strikes against sexual harassment by McDonald's,
but when we focus on the flare-ups, on Twitter,
and not on the record numbers of women and people of color
running for office for the first time is a Democratic Party.
We can do both.
We miss what liberalism is doing,
where the left is doing right now.
Okay.
I was asking the question, why do we lose?
No one's answering that.
Respectfully, I mean, I guess my thinking is that I think that both Rebecca and Eddie bring up really important points.
We are on a moment of incredible cultural flux.
And in a moment of cultural flux, people feel really insecure.
My own feeling is that that gentleman should have stuck to his guns.
But the thing is that he believes he does not know where things are going to go.
Three months from now, six months from now.
He does not know if he's going to be anathematized for this.
It induces this huge sense of panic.
And I do believe that, you know, when you're in this kind of moment of flux,
we're trying to figure out how to position themselves.
What is the high status thing to do?
And that's why I think that just everyone feels afraid
in this kind of a moment.
Okay, but if you don't think these purists are doing us harm,
I think you're missing a big point.
I think they wake up and say,
how can we make our club smaller?
And then they ask why they lose.
I think the purists are doing folks on the right
and the left harm.
There's conservative political correctness too, right?
Yes, there sure is.
The idea that you can't actually make a mistake,
the idea that you can't revise your view over time,
this kind of politics of negation,
is so incredibly extreme,
and I think that everyone feels hounded and wounded by it.
Not everyone, excuse me.
Not necessarily everyone on the panel right now,
but I do think there are a lot of people
who feel very tentative and insecure.
Can I go back to your question about why we lose?
Yes.
Because I think that the question about winning and losing
often leaves out the fact that there is one party in this country
that has enormous power.
And again, I mentioned they're not the popularly elected party, right?
The president is not elected by the majority of American people.
voters and they have a stranglehold
on the very mechanisms
that then they can use to suppress
the activism of the left.
Look at the voting headlines
from this week. Right? No, but this is really key
to why we win and lose.
And, you know, 53,000 voters being
suppressed by Brian Kemp in Georgia,
70% of them black.
470,000 voters purged in Indiana.
The Supreme Court this week
with its new member, Brett Kavanaugh,
upheld decision
that means that effectively disenfranchises Native Americans, right?
These are mechanisms that they can use
to make sure they win the Koch brothers' money
pouring in as of October 1st.
And part of their other mechanism
is to cast their opposition
as whiny snowflake purists.
And so they encourage this frame.
We support the powerful frame of dissent
when we focus on that.
But groups have to...
Groups are only successful
when they call out their crazies.
The Republican Party doesn't.
You could say that radical Islam has that problem,
people calling out the crazies,
and I think we have that problem too.
I mean, NPR will not use the term homeless,
people affected by homelessness.
I'm just saying Trump people, independent people,
just normal people, not here on the coasts,
hear stuff like that, and they go,
you know what, I don't know that much about policy,
but, you know, this is just too fragile.
I can't let these people in the Oval Office.
because they're just too weak.
I think that there are...
Forgive me, Eddie,
I think there are a lot of liberals
who feel exactly this way,
and I think that when we're looking
at the voices
that are most amplified in our politics,
these are voices that find themselves
in echo chambers,
and these are the places
where you look for status and prestige,
and you see this on the right
as well as the left,
but I think that the left,
given its outsized cultural voice
in our politics,
you see a lot of this.
Yes.
And I think that it really is alienating
from a lot of moderate
and liberal folks
who would otherwise,
I think just the way Trump is a bully, the PC police are bullies.
And being a bully is empowering. It's exciting.
People like it. It's very fun in a way, and that's why we see more of it.
Okay. Go ahead. No, no.
I just find this really odd. And I find it odd for a couple of reasons.
One, I think we take the exaggerated example to dismiss the principle.
So at the heart of political correctness, is this reality that this country is no longer a white
nation in the vein of old Europe.
And so that means white men, white straight men,
can't walk around saying whatever the hell is on their minds.
That's right. That's right.
Period.
Really?
So, and I'm not trying to make this.
You mean about Scott Kelly can't say?
No, no.
Part of what, I take, Scott Kelly, I take him to say that I don't,
I didn't know everything about Winston Churchill.
And Winston Churchill probably doesn't represent what I value.
But part of what I'm trying to get at is this, right?
The country is changing.
dramatic demographic shifts are happening.
People are insecure because the culture is shifting.
And one of the things that's shifting
is that certain folk can't go around saying
what they think they can say.
Without being held to account.
And I think it's really important to emphasize
that people who are most vulnerable to this
are people of color who hold dissenting opinions
in their communities.
These are people who really feel silenced.
Interesting immersion.
Look, that's an interesting move.
Look, it's actually also deeply true.
There are lots of folks who feel totally invisible
because the college-educated upper-middle income people
who serve as stand-ins for people who belong to category X, Y, or Z
are not necessarily representative of 100% of the people
who belong to these various categories.
When you look at liberal Muslims, for example,
when you look at Muslims who are looking at talking about,
let's have more freedom, let's have more secularism,
these are folks who oftentimes feel silenced and afraid.
You see this in many other groups, too.
I'm not saying that the people of these dissenting opinions are right.
Many times they might be totally wrong.
What I'm saying is that they exist and they are invisible in these spaces.
And this drive for status and prestige, I keep saying that,
but that drive silences a lot of folks.
Pursuant to this conversation, because if you criticize Islam at all,
the politically correct police will say you're a bigot.
Including if you're a Muslim and good family.
It all depends on how you criticize Islam.
Well, of course.
You have to mean to say this.
So part of what I'm trying to, we have the nuance.
It all depends on how you render your critique.
Great.
That was a nice move in the sense that part of what happens in this context...
It was pretty sincere, Eddie.
I've just got to say it.
I know I was sincere.
But part of what happens is the way in which a certain kind of victim discourse can then be appropriated.
So that you could...
Because I think Republicans have mastered this pencer move.
On the one hand, they revel in the spoils of victory, exercising Machiavellian power.
And then when they get called out for doing what they do, they clutch their pearls.
And then claim to be victim.
Which is what?
what's happening around Kavanaugh.
That is exactly the dynamic.
That is exactly the dynamic
that I described around Kavanaugh.
This is, we have been attacked
and they're using it as leverage
to suggest that they are the victimized.
Okay, Bill, I just want to say
there are two kinds of spirals we have right now.
You have rage spirals,
and you have self-satisfaction spirals.
And the self-satisfaction spirals
are really powerful and addictive.
You are in a space
where you're affirmed, people cheer for you
when you say certain things, and it's amazing
and it's addictive, and it's why Republicans
and Democrats both lose. Because you have
Republicans who find themselves solely
in their affirming space,
and you have lots of liberals who are
in the exact same space. That's what I
think of as political correctness, whether of the right or the left.
It's a self-satisfaction
spiral. Okay.
Let's bring out Steve Kornacki
to, as a pallet cleanser.
Steve, he runs the big board as national
political correspondent for NBC News.
and MSNBC.
His book is The Red and the Blue,
the 1990s, and the birth of political tribalism.
Steve Kornacki is over here.
What a pleasure to meet you.
I love watching you because, you know,
everyone has an opinion, as you can see.
And you're the guy who doesn't.
I love that.
You're Joe Friday, just the facts, ma'am.
Well, thank you.
And I really appreciate that.
And also your enthusiasm for the subject of politics
is so infectious and so real.
And I'm wondering, where do you get that?
My father was a news guy in radio.
That's where I got it.
Where did you get it?
You know, election nights, there's always something at a young age.
I kind of followed a governor's race when I was a kid in Massachusetts,
and the campaign was fascinating, but the election night,
just watching, it was the map of Massachusetts, it was 1990,
it was a very close race,
and watching the political character of each town and city get revealed,
almost like pieces in a puzzle.
And at the end of it, I felt like, I was in a sixth grade,
but I felt like I understood a little bit about the state I live,
and I try to take that to every election I cover.
Wow.
So this one, the cycles change so quickly that, you know,
between the time the show started and now,
maybe you have a whole bunch of different information.
But, like, I was feeling pretty good about the Senate
only like a week ago.
And now I feel like it was a waste of money, wasn't it?
I mean, yeah.
Look, if the election were held tomorrow,
everybody went out and voted tomorrow.
I don't think there's a scenario
where the Democrats get the Senate.
That's so disappointing.
So important, the Senate.
It's, I mean, now, this is the thing, though.
I think there could be two tracks
that are developing here.
Because think about it this way.
There are three races.
The Democrats have to win one of them
to get a shot at the Senate.
Those three races would be North Dakota,
Tennessee, or Texas.
Must win one if you're a Democrat.
To be in the game.
If you get shot out of all three, you're out.
Now, the reason the Senate seems to be fading
from the picture of a picture
Democrats is they've gotten bad to devastating news in all of those states this week. But think about
those states and the political character of them. North Dakota, Trump won it by 36 points, Tennessee,
by 26, Texas by nine. Control of the Senate is being decided in Trump country, in deep red pro-Trump
states. Now flip it over to the House, Democrats need a net gain of 23 seats to pick up the
House. How many districts are there in the House that our Republican held, but that voted for Hillary
Clinton in 2016?
So the math gets different in the House.
When you start talking about where we've seen
the Democratic energy, it could work in the House and be
useless in the Senate.
Useless in the Senate.
That's my takeaway there.
Maybe not. We still have time.
And it could be anything.
I mean, we really don't know.
And also, it's so, I mean, this is a lot about what your book is about,
where the tribalism started.
I feel like it's so tribal now that in years past,
you could go against someone in your own party if they did something
outrageous, and now everything is just
my party, my color.
It's almost like the Crips and the Bloods.
Same colors.
Listen, there was a poll taken
in 2016.
There was a poll taken in 2016 that
essentially asked people, you know, would you be
upset if your son or daughter
married somebody from the other political party?
Right. And for Democrats and Republicans,
both answered yes over 60%.
I mean, those are numbers you used
to get for interracial marriage. Right. And that
is how personal the definition of
parties become for people. This idea of red and blue, we think red and blue have been with us forever,
or at least all of modern political history. They really originated on election night 2000.
It was the first time we looked at an election map in a generation and saw a close race,
and we didn't just see a close race. We saw deep divisions that were regional, cultural,
demographic, and they've been with us since. You blame Newt Gingrich for a lot of this,
and that made me happy. I don't know. But, and that was right after the Clarence Thomas. I,
I always thought it was the Clarence Thomas
that really kicked,
bork and then into Clarence.
That really kicked off this new era
where the other party,
the other people are the other
to where we get to this point.
Now, where it's very, very frightening.
I'm frightened because Trump talks every day
about us in some way.
The enemy of the people is the press.
Talks about that we're an angry mob.
I mean, when you talk about angry mob,
that sounds like he's setting up at some point
you know, we're going to need martial law
until we find out what the hell is going on.
You see any way back from that?
Geez. Well, you mentioned Newt Gingrich,
where I think the origin of all of this comes from
is the thing that Gingrich got early on his career
ahead of almost anybody else in politics
was that the future of politics
was in nationalizing politics
and that media was evolving in a way
that was conducive to that.
And Gingrich was living in a world in the 70s and 80s
on his way up where Republicans were
dominating in presidential election. I mean, Reagan got 49 states and 84. Bush
scene got 40 and 88. So the Gingrich theory was simple. You nationalize politics.
You make every Democrat and everybody's backyard look just like this national party they've
been rejecting. You win everything. And the media, you know, the proliferation of cable news,
all of the other sources of information, Gingrich found a way to nationalize through this
expanding media. But what happened was, he gets to his highest moment in 1994, gets the Congress
for the first time in 40 years. And politics is nationalized. Now people start looking
the Republican Party differently. They start looking at it as the party of Newt Gingrich,
a party that now has a heavy Christian conservative influence in it and maybe didn't
before. And Gingrich was half right in his vision of politics, basically. Half the country
was, roughly, was going to respond to his version, but the other half was going to respond
against it. And I think that's where we are in politics now. It's as much about what you
and your party are for as who you are against and who is against you. So who's the key voting
block this time? I hear a lot about white women who went for Trump.
that maybe that's going to switch?
So, well, that's where the energy is.
I think there's, at least the potential energy
on the Democratic side.
Think of these suburban areas.
Think of metro areas around the country.
D.C., Chicago, Kansas City, Dallas, Southern California.
You can find those 25 districts,
a lot of them have the opportunity there,
if Democrats can harness it,
for female voters, women voters,
who are upset by Kavanaugh or upset by Trump,
to swing the balance in those districts,
where it gets more complicated.
Will they?
Well, historically...
Will they disappoint like they did?
We thought women would go against Trump
because we had a pussy-grabber in the last election.
Who thought women would go against Trump?
Why?
White women.
Because the history of white women in politics in this country
is since 1952 when they've been measuring it.
There are only two elections that white women haven't voted for Republicans.
They did a little better in 2016 than they did in 2012.
53% of them in 2016, 56% of them voted for Mitt Romney over Barack Obama.
There have always been incentives on the table for white women who benefit in a white patriarchy via white supremacy and their proximal power via white men in upholding a fundamentally conservative white patriarchal power structure.
White women have historically voted conservatively and on behalf of the white men to whom they are attached.
The question is, is a small percentage enough to change the game, persuadable?
We have seen some evidence.
There was a story in the Times this week about white evangelical women in Texas who,
are breaking with their husbands in their support for Beto O'Rourke over Ted Cruz.
There's also a question, not just about converting Republican women and Trump voters,
but some of the moderate white women who may have been apathetic, perhaps didn't vote,
and certainly weren't activists.
There has been a re-energizing of suburban white women who have previously sat out, not been
vocal, even if they pushed levers for Democrats, certainly didn't say anything about it.
And these are a lot of the women who are powering the resistance.
movements right now, involved
in the new activist groups going out,
knocking on doors, fundraising,
many of them, and lots of new candidates
are running for office. These are questions, but
history doesn't tell us to be hopeful
for the white women's women. We have to see it first.
Yeah. 63% of white women
voted for Roy Moore. What did you think when Kanye West
said that Trump gave him male energy,
that he
lives in the house with a lot of
women, and he grew up around women,
and he kind of, Trump helped him get
his balls back. Just as
Just as a white patriarchy offers white supremacy to white women,
it offers patriarchy to men across races.
And participation in patriarchal power as a way to get them to support the power structure.
And I think those are just some of the dynamics you're seeing around Kanye West.
Yeah, I think it's, we have first, my heart goes out to Kanye West.
Something is wrong.
And I don't want to, you know what, something is wrong.
And so I don't want to, I don't want to make fun of something that I take to be serious in terms of his mental health.
But I also want to make the claim that the way in which he wants to participate in a kind of toxic masculinity,
I'm using those leftist phrases now, a kind of toxic masculinity that Trump affords him, right?
And the fact that Trump, who plays custodial politics so badly, right?
You know, every politician thinks they need to just invite one black person into the room,
and then that black person can represent all of black people.
Tell me what black people think, right?
Trump just does it so badly.
He doesn't go get Al Sharpe, and he goes and gets kind of.
West.
And all of it to me reflects
a kind of disdain for black voters
because you think you could hurt us to the polls like
cows chew and cut by just
simply getting a celebrity out here. Just one thing I want
to throw out there. When you're talking about voters
of color, the Maris survey recently found that
41% of Hispanic voters
are supportive of Donald Trump.
12% of African-American voters? Not a
majority, a very small minority, but 12%
ain't nothing. And when Steve Kornacki's
brilliant book, one of the things he talks about
in the early 90s, it's really striking. You
had this group of voters, you might call, indeed him.
He's standing right there.
You might talk about radical senators.
It's right here.
Working class folks who were swing voters.
They were Reagan Democrats before.
They've never really cemented to the Republican Party.
Some of them did vote for Donald Trump.
This has been a big conversation about those Hillary Clinton voting Republicans.
But there are also those folks who voted for Obama and then voted for Donald Trump.
And they're sort of ambivalent right now.
and actually cementing that constituency
is something folks have been trying to do
since the early 90s on the Republican side.
And I do think some of them are women, some of there were men,
but that is a really important constituency
the Republican Party has really failed
to fully bring in the tent.
Okay. Before we run out of time,
I did want to bring up something, I think,
that's kind of important, this report I mentioned.
300 government officials, economists, scientists,
and industry executives gathered at this energy convention
symposium, and a leading
nuclear weapons
physicists said at the event, it has been
calculated that temperature rise
corresponding to a 10% increase
in carbon dioxide will be sufficient in melt
the ice caps and submerge
New York. All the coastal
cities would be covered, and since a
considerable percentage of the human race lives
in coastal regions, I think that this
chemical contamination is more serious
than most people tend to believe.
That was Edward Teller in
1959.
Rock-ribbed conservative, by the way.
It's just fascinating that, honestly, it's just a sign of how much the politics of these
issues has changed.
Everybody's got to apologize for something before you go on with it.
But the UN climate report that came out this week says basically 2040, we could see a world
that we just can't recognize.
And I don't know what people have to, what fire has to be lit under them, because we see
it happening right now. And I guess the problem is
we walk outside here in Los Angeles
and it was a beautiful day.
And when Kanye said,
I thought the funniest thing he said was
we can't think about tomorrow.
Yeah, but maybe we should
think about tomorrow. I seem to remember somebody
actually running on the slogan
don't stop thinking
about tomorrow.
No comments on that? Okay.
All right. And I have one more.
When you look at the areas where you actually are seeing some
progress, there are things that are actually not
terribly well known. So for example,
carbon capture and storage, the tax
credit for that has drastically increased.
That's legislation Donald Trump signed.
He signed legislation that's designed to boost
advanced nuclear. He is someone who has said
a lot of random things about climate change,
but there are things happening behind the
scenes in which Democrats and Republicans
are working together. And the problem is that there's
so much... Really? That must be very,
very, very far behind the scenes.
Yeah, it is. But that's kind of the point, Bill.
There's so much partisan enmity right now. Exactly what
Steve was talking about, that actually it's
only in those spaces where you haven't politicized something yet.
When it hasn't become a partisan issue, that's when you actually are making a partisan issue.
It shouldn't be.
I agree with you.
But you combine what you just said with the fact that he's rolling back emissions for cars and light trucks that he's...
He's trying to and failing.
Trying to roll back Obama era regulations on methane gas, coal power plants.
Says radiation is good for you.
Deregulation, the policy of deregulation, and what it means for our environment,
right cut I mean almost
I mean almost
absolutely trying and failing
he is trying and failing because frankly he's doing it in such
slap dash fashion that these things aren't making
it through the courts
last you know I mean
this is just a reality last question
Jamal Khashoggi if you don't know who he is
he is a Saudi national has been living in this
country Washington Post reporter
he went into the Turkish
the Saudi Sultan consulate
in Turkey October 1st
I think has not come out since
they believe a hit squad from
Saudi Arabia killed him
I feel like any other president would have protested.
But I guess that's my question.
Would it have happened anyway, or is it tied to a president who calls the press the enemy of the people?
Sorry, just to weigh in here.
I definitely want to hear from my fellow panelists.
Just I think that a lot of the information we have on this is coming from Turkey.
And Turkey is a country that arrests and imprisons journalists left and right.
I want us to not rush into anything
and really be thoughtful and careful about what's going on.
This guy's dead and the Saudis did it.
That's not, I don't think that's going to change.
The U.S. intelligence agencies have said
that they were attending to capture him
and bring him back to Saudi Arabia.
That is really, really bad,
but we really do not know what happened here, in my opinion,
just yet before we do anything really rash.
Hypothetically, if the Saudis killed him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And Trump says, you know,
because we have this arms deal
where he's selling, you know, that's the way Trump
rolls, you rub my orb, I rub yours.
Oh, there it is.
Look at that. Wow.
That's a good department. It gets that up quickly.
The expectation
that he would react to this with anything
different from who we know he is.
He loathes the press. He makes
enemies of the press. This man is not
a citizen. He doesn't, he doesn't
particularly care about citizens if they're not the right
kind of citizens, but he certainly doesn't care about
anybody who's not a citizen.
The idea that we have seen
anything in Donald Trump that suggests
that he values human life over
imaginary numbers that he spits out
about $110 billion in
arm sales, I don't see any
evidence in anything we've seen that he would react
to this any differently. No.
And what he's done, he's just thrown away
the illusion that the U.S. is the defender
of democracy and freedom. Right. We stand
for nothing. We stand for nothing but money.
That's it. Just pure unadulterated
green. And, you know, I keep
rooting for the recession, because I think it would be bad for Donald Trump.
But you know what's different about this one?
And I have the book here about red and blue and tribalism.
The overlap right now, at least in the initial reaction of this,
I am seeing Democrats, but I'm also hearing Republicans
who are condemning Saudi Arabia, Republicans who are stepping forward.
So you're actually right now in the early stages of this.
But you always have that.
Jeff Flake makes his sad face.
It doesn't.
They do a big, song, as you can get.
And then they support him.
Yeah, exactly.
But it does have the effect.
Doesn't it? Sometimes Trump, when he stepped...
During the campaign,
support...
Excuse me, I should say, opposition to the wall
actually went up as Trump campaigned on it.
So sometimes it has this reverse effect.
Politics is like a thermostat.
I think that to build on Steve's point,
one thing that is really scary to me about our politics
is that almost foreign policies become partisan.
Republicans don't like China.
Democrats hate Russia.
It's incredible.
Saudi Arabia, Turkey, all of these things.
They're partisan issues.
Politics isn't ending at the water's edge now.
Okay.
Thank you, Powell.
Time for New Rule.
New Rule, Gravity Industries, the company that makes this flying jet suit, has to lend me a bunch of them so I can convince Pat Robertson the rapture's here and he's being left behind.
New Rule, people in L.A. who are always saying, oh, I miss the seasons back home, have to do the traffic a favor and move back there.
Really? No one in Los Angeles is holding you prisoner.
I mean, unless you're in Scientology.
Plus, we do have four seasons here in L.A. and they're all great. There's fire.
Oscar, mudslide, and sex tape.
New Rule, as a compromise,
men who lost their careers
to debatable Me Too allegations
can make a comeback,
but they have to wear a dog cone for a while.
New Rule, if you take the time to write
a negative comment on YouTube,
you're not allowed to act like the video you watched
was a waste of your time.
That's two minutes of my life.
I'm never going to get back.
What exactly would you have done with those two minutes?
My guess, watch a YouTube video and then write,
That's two minutes of my life.
I'm never getting back.
New rule, rap mogul Shug Knight
has to explain how someone can already be in prison
and still keep getting sent to prison.
Oh, and if you think surfing time was stressful before,
where do you meet the new guy
who keeps telling you to pull your pants up?
And finally, new rule, let's hit pause
on this growing consensus among Democrats
that we can only beat Trump in 2020
by running a celebrity of our own.
How did we go in two years from, wow, it could be a celebrity, to it can only be a celebrity?
When I asked my Democratic friends about the plan for 2020, they say two things.
What's a plan?
And we need a star.
That's it.
The blueprint for saving us from fascism is rub a lamp and hope Tom Hanks pops out.
Or Oprah.
But if, if, if, okay.
But, but.
If Oprah is president, who will tell cat ladies what to read?
The Rocks, as he hasn't ruled out running in 2020,
but if The Rock is president, who's going to star in every movie ever made?
Especially movies with the premise, that movie, except with the Rock.
Like Towering Inferno with the Rock.
King Kong with the Rock.
Jumanji with the Rock.
Baywatch with the Rock. Walking Tall with the Rock.
Earthquake with...
How about the Rock?
if he did run his hat would say
remake America great again
many Democrats feel they found
star quality in Michael Levinetti
he's like if the hot felon had a law degree
and it's great the way he makes Trump so mad
he can't pronounce his name right
another woman just reported
by his sleeves bag lawyer named
Aviante
Aviante
are you always thinking about pasta
Look, I understand the temptation to pick a celebrity.
After all, Trump started with a big advantage
because he was a household name like spam or preparation age.
And in today's political atmosphere
where substance makes you an elitist
and experience means you're part of the swamp,
it's like the whole country just went,
fuck it, the government can't do anything,
which candidate will give us the most laughs?
And it wasn't even close.
Donald Trump has no friends.
no one will tell him when he has
fucking toilet paper on his shoe
I mean
look at him he will do anything for a laugh
I'm very presidential
but when the prime directive
for government goes from keep us safe
to keep us entertained
that's bread and circuses
end of the empire stuff
there are people who actually
excited about Kanye Weston politics
these people are called idiots
he's eccentric they say
no he's standing in the punch bowl
fucking the ice sculpture
the Democrats
the Democrats' message
in 2020
should be let's get back
to normal
and President
Ariana Grande does not send that message
of course celebrities in politics
isn't new but it was always something
mostly Republicans did
Reagan, Schwarzenegger, Sunny Bono, game show host Donald Trump.
The party that endlessly proclaims its disdain for Hollywood will literally run any celebrity who's a conservative.
And it wasn't that long ago they were using the word celebrity as a burn.
He's the biggest celebrity in the world.
Is he ready to lead?
Turns out he was ready to lead.
Because he wasn't black Paris Hilton.
he was a politician.
Government was his skill,
his life, his calling.
Like the Kennedys before him and FDR,
he was a star.
But a star because of what he accomplished in office.
Yes, Obama enjoyed his TV time,
but he did it to sell policy,
not to do robot voice.
Trump doesn't need to do Fallon because he is Fallon.
Republicans elect a celebrity
who becomes a politician.
Democrats, at their best,
elected politician who's so good at public service,
they become a celebrity.
Okay, that's our show.
Next week, right at this time slot,
is our anniversary show.
We'll be back on October 26th.
I'll be at the Mirage in Vegas,
October 26 and 27th.
I want to thank Rahan Salam, Eddie Glylew, Jr.,
Rebecca Traster, Steve Kornacki.
I'm Rosa, Magidot Newman.
Stay tuned for the premiere of Pod Save America
right after this.
And join us now for Overtape on YouTube.
Thank you, folks.
Catch all new episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher every Friday night at 10 or watch them anytime on HBO On Demand.
For more information, log on to HBO.com.
