The Bulwark Podcast - Osita Nwanevu: Democrats Need A Better Story
Episode Date: November 13, 2024Republicans have been good at telling a story about the economy and how people should feel about it, and Democrats haven't responded in a sufficiently compelling way. Meanwhile, plucking Pete Hegseth ...off the Fox & Friends couch to run one of the biggest organizations in the world is a sign of how dumb the next administration will be. Osita Nwanevu joins Tim Miller. show notes Osita's forthcoming book
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody. I'm up off the mat after a love it therapy session and the no choice but to laugh
appointment of Pete Hegseth as the Secretary of Defense. I got a real good chuckle out of that.
Seriousness to come, but chuckling first. As a result, kind of some scheduling notes.
During this period, you know, we're going to continue to do quick responses on YouTube when
there's breaking news, things that need reacting to.
It's going to be mostly me and Sam Stein, but we'll be bringing other people in as well.
We did a couple of those last night, Sam and I did.
Go ahead and check out the Bulwark YouTube feed if you wanted to see my initial reaction
to the Hague South news.
On Wednesdays, remember we've got the Next Level podcast with Sarah, JVL, and
me. We're going to continue this process. We do more political, campaign-y, in the weeds
stuff over there with the three of us. Then on Wednesdays over here, we're going to have
more bigger picture conversations.
For folks that are new, if you're looking for just straight into the veins, Hegseth,
Musk, Tulsi Gabbard coverage, go check out the Next Level feed, subscribe to that feed
as well.
And that's up later in the day on Wednesdays.
And right now, up next, we have a new guest to the Borg Podcast, someone I've been wanting
to get on.
I think you're going to enjoy the conversation. so stick around for Oceta Wenevu.
Hello and welcome to the BOLOG Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller, here in the American
Idiocracy. I'm delighted to have today as my guest,
a new guest to the Bullock podcast, Oceta Wanevu, contributing editor at The New Republic.
He's a columnist at The Guardian. He's authored the forthcoming book, The Right of the People,
Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding, which will be published in February.
What's up, man?
Hey, thanks for having me.
Thank you for doing this. We don't know each other, but I've been monitoring your takes
and my sense is if we designed the government from scratch,
we'd have very different visions.
But ever since summer, you've just been dropping bangers.
I'm like, I either 100% agree or I disagree.
And I'm like, that's an interesting point though.
That's making me think.
And so I've been excited to do this. So thanks for coming up. Yeah, it's an interesting point though. That's making me think. And so I've, uh, I've been excited to do this.
So thanks for coming up.
Yeah, it's a real pleasure.
I want to do backwards looking stuff with you about state of the
democratic party and the election, but our, you know, Mountain Dew overlords
have given us some more timely news that we have to deal with.
Last evening, uh, Donald Trump announced that Fox and Friends co-host
Pete Hegseth would be his nominee for Secretary of Defense, overseeing the American military.
It doesn't appear that he's ever run anything. I did get the joy of being able to break that
news to several people at a dinner last night in New Orleans. So I'm looking for small joys,
just like the reaction
on people's faces when I told them that a Fox and Friends co-host was-
You got to take them when you can, man.
You have to. You have to. So I did get a big laugh about that. So I mean, there's a bunch of
places we could go with it. I want to read for you a little bit from his book about the war on
warriors that he's concerned about, but I guess I'm curious, your top line views about Pete
Hegseth running the military.
Well, I think like most people, including most people in the Republican
party who are now going to have to have an opinion on this, I didn't really
know much more about Pete Hegseth, but the fact that he's a Fox News host,
does not come first to mind as far as a list of qualifications I'd want.
And the defense secretary is concerned. To the extent that I've heard about his positions
over the last day or so, somebody who also doesn't seem like he's going to satisfy or
really be part of what people who are hoping for an anti-war Trump doesn't seem like he's
going to be satisfying that aspiration.
He, you know, over the course of his time on Fox has talked about bombing Iran and seems
very much like a conventional neoconservative.
Now, I did see that there was a podcast interview he did recently where he disavowed all of
this and said the neoconservatism had been a mistake and he had seen the light and I
don't know if he'd been contacted to do interviews
for this position before he went on that podcast, but there's nothing in his in his record
public statements that i've seen that indicates to me that he is
Going to be you know part of this kind of dovish
uh moving away from the neocon right
Vision for conservative politics that people have seen
or wanted to see in Donald Trump.
Yeah, he had actually advocated for a preemptive strike on North Korea on the Fox Morning show.
He's sitting on the couch there with Steve Doocy and I don't know, they have kind of
like a rotating cast of bleach blonde women that sort of go there and that was one of
his points. And it's interesting
because it ties to the Mattis warnings a little bit that there was in one of, in Mattis's book,
he talked about how Trump was advocating for this. And Mattis was so concerned about it,
that's like he was sleeping in his clothes or something. And that he was working and they were
talking to the other military officials about making sure someone was always around in case Trump decided to do this.
And some watchers of the Trump administration, I have posited that it was actually maybe
future Secretary of Defense Hegseth's suggestion on Fox and Friends that triggered Trump's
interest in the preemptive strike in North Korea, of course, the love letters So I mean if that tells you anything about his instincts
It doesn't doesn't seem particularly dovish, but he could have I guess he could have evolved
Well, it tells us that Donald Trump likes watching television which is something we already knew but I think that the headset
idea combined with some of the other appointments we're seeing again doesn't really suggest to me that
Any of the hope that Donald Trump would be a fundamentally different
kind of foreign policy president
from convention or Republican,
in the sense that he's less willing to pursue intervention.
I don't see any real evidence of that.
And I didn't see any evidence of that during the campaign.
I mean, one of the most underrated proposals
that I think that he put forward
was this idea of sending the special forces into Mexico.
Actually, very little public attention for something that I think would be actually a
huge, huge deal for Americans and for this country as well.
So I don't know.
I don't really see it.
And there's some talking about that.
Yeah.
And he wasn't alone, by the way.
He was able to kind of get the best of all.
This is where one of the reasons I wanted to have you is sometimes I just, I don't trust my own visibility into very progressive spaces, right?
And that like, is what I'm seeing distorted through the internet, you know,
since it's not, it's not exactly, you know, my background, but it did seem at
least through the lens of Twitter that like, he got some purchase with that notion, maybe not as much as in 2016,
with some progressives and potentially helped him at least maybe to tamp down support for
Harris and certain demos. I don't know. What do you think about that? Is that fair?
Which notion? The Mexican notion?
Yeah, no, the notion that Trump would be dovish, that he was less war hungry than Harris.
I mean, I think that there are some people, I don't think this is like a large constituency
of people, but there are certainly some people who convinced themselves that there'd be no
fundamental difference between Biden and Trump, certainly on the Gaza issue. That was a big
topic of conversation on the left. I think that was not correct. I think that we're seeing already that that was not correct.
But yeah, there was a constituency of people
who have been really cynical
about American foreign policy in general,
who heard the kinds of things that Trump said.
And I don't even think he said them
that often this time around.
There was a bigger part, at least my reading is,
it was a bigger part of his first campaign.
But I think that Trump has said about wars and the Iraq war and how it was a
mistake and how we should be America first and so on.
There are people who really, really bought into that more so than they
should have on the kind of anti-establishment left.
That's one of the reasons why people were interested in Tulsi Gabbard
being part of his circle now.
None of that has been substantiated, I think, by not only these appointments, but the actual
course of the first Trump administration.
And now we're seeing the entry of people who are going to be hawks on China, on Israel,
people who, you know, Mike Huckabee being named the ambassador.
I mean, these are not signs that we are-
Another Fox host we should mention.
Exactly.
Exactly.
These are not signs to me that we are facing a presidency that's going to be more responsible
about the use of American power at all.
I'm really kind of disappointed in people who allowed themselves to believe that.
I was leafing through Hegsett's book before we got on this morning.
It's pitched as a, which is why I was interested in it, it's pitched as like a, you know, kind
of a rationale for him getting this appointment that, you know, kind of a rationale for him getting this appointment
that, you know, he wrote a book about the ways that the department of defense needs to be
restructured, et cetera. In candor, I'm only on like chapter four, but I did do some control at,
I guess I wasn't really leafing through it because it's on the internet these days, but I was
control. I was searching for some keywords as well and bouncing around the book. And a couple of things stand out.
One, Dylan Mulvaney, here I remember for being on the Bud Light can, she gets mentioned more
times than Donald Rumsfeld, which if you're really going to reassess kind of what is happening
at the Department of Defense, you think you might want to look at what Bush had done and
Ennobal, it doesn't seem like that.
He seems more focused on woke. And here
are a couple of passages I want to read you. At a basic level, do we really want only the
woke diverse recruits that the Biden administration is curating to be the ones with guns? We want
those diverse recruits pumped full of vaccines and even more poisonous ideologies to be sharing
a basic training bunk with the sane Americans.
We want the military to be a place where potential Antifa members learn what it really means to use
force for just and honorable reasons. We can de-radicalize, I guess, the Antifa left and the
people that got vaccinated. He goes on later, affirmative action promotions have skyrocketed with firsts being the
most important factor in filling new commanders. We will not stop until trans lesbian black females
run everything. Exclamation point, the dumbest phrase on planet earth in the military is our
diversity is our strength. I mean, there's much, much more where that comes from the word trans
genders in the book like 30 times. And so clearly like that is his view of what needs to be reoriented in the military is
a de-wokeification, a debathification for the woke would be his top priority.
Yeah.
I mean, maybe that's why we lost the rock.
There are too many blue haired Starbucks baristas in the raid on the attack on Fallujah.
I mean, this is not...
Were there a lot of black trans generals in Afghanistan or Iraq?
This is going to be a very dumb administration. I mean, you know, this is... I mean, I will say
that you do have these kinds of conversations about readiness. I remember in the Bush years,
where like certain cultural grievances were sort of repackaged
as things that we had to address for the purposes of military readiness.
So like obesity, for instance, became people who like didn't like obesity for like its
own reasons, made it a national security issue.
And American readiness was going to be fundamentally undermined by the fact that people were drinking
soda.
Back in the Vietnam War days, you know, people were talking about, you know, have the military full of long hairs, and that's why we got our asses kicked.
I mean, this kind of thing happens all the time. I do think it's become more a part of
conservative rhetoric in the last 10 years or so. This idea of being inundated by DEI objectives
in the Department of Defense and tolerance in the Department of Defense,
undermining our security, ignoring the fact that,
look, I mean, wars are fought
on different grounds these days.
We have people sit at computers and push buttons
and emulate neighborhoods on that basis.
I mean, I just think that there's like a very kind of
action movie based understanding of
what a military needs and what a military is about that seems to be shaping the way
a lot of conservatives think.
I don't really think that alienating potential members of our military probably serves our
interests.
I don't know.
I just, as somebody who is not fond of large amounts of military spending and thinks that we need
to shrink our military, I think that one of the silver linings of the Hexeth secretariat,
if it happens, probably furthers that end.
And I don't know, we'll see, we'll have to see what happens.
Pete Slauson In what way?
Just because he's going to fire the woke generals or because you think it will decrease trust
in the military?
David Sperling I think it's going to decrease trust and sort of confidence in military. I mean, look, I think,
you know, my understanding is that you need to have a steady stream of people who are interested
in permissing the American military in order for it to function as a volunteer army. If it becomes
a matter of, yeah, the only people we really want are the people who fit this kind of stereotypical
idea of what a soldier should be and who agree with all conservative cultural perspectives and
live conservative lifestyles. That's self undermining, you know. And honestly, I think
that if we come back into power as Democrats in the next 10, 15 years or so, I can only
assume that having seen Hegseth run the show and, you know, any kind of dysfunction and
misgovernment is going to happen there
is probably going to get further the end of asking real questions about how much we spend
on the military, whether we should rework certain things, et cetera.
But that's all speculative.
I don't know.
Maybe it'll work.
Maybe he'll strengthen the military.
We'll all be an army full of John Rambos and we'll beat the Chinese in Taiwan with the...
The Chinese will cow in the face of Heng Seth.
I don't know if you've seen the pictures of him.
I mean, he can throw an axe.
He likes to wear those bro sunglasses and the tank tops.
And he's got a We the People tattoo.
I mean, I just think that the Chinese are just gonna
be quaking in their boots.
So yeah, I mean, I guess I should say for full context,
because I think it's going to relate a little bit to the rest of the conversation about,
you know, about whether the Democrats were misguided in certain ways
and how they, you know, kind of advanced their political objectives.
I'm sure there's some really annoying like DEI pamphlets that some people have to read in the military. And so like, I'm happy to think that if Jim Mattis, you know, had gone into an
administration was like, you know, we need to, we should dial back a little bit here
and, and focus a little bit more on that.
I'm not in the military.
I'm open to this.
I think that the clownishness of choosing for secretary of defense, somebody that
wrote a book that's like the biggest problem facing our military right now is that we have too many aspiring
black trans generals. I think, I guess it speaks for itself, but I felt like it was worth mentioning.
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Going backwards.
You fired off this heater. On election night, this is 1 0 5 a.m. One skin. Going backwards.
You fired off this heater on election night. This is 1 0 5 a.m. on election night.
Maybe 2 0 5. I'm on Central Time.
So I don't know. You might have been a little later.
I don't know if you were sober or what your mental state was
watching Donald Trump regain power in the country.
But you wrote this.
Many Americans of all races do not believe our norms and institutions work
and a message about protecting them from a force promising to upend them will not be effective.
I think that's interesting. I just want to use that as a starting place for what you think were the
fundamental reasons for why we got here. Yeah. So I think the Democrats over the last,
well, really over the course of Biden's term
and really in the last election too, have advanced a very, very clear and consistent
message about Donald Trump. Donald Trump is somebody who is going to come into power as
a would-be authoritarian. He poses the threat to our norms of government, norms of governance.
He poses the threat to the values embedded in the constitution, he's
going to purge his political opponents from government, he's going to persecute his political
enemies, all of these Republicans who worked for him either don't work for him anymore
or they've said publicly that they think he's a fascist and so on and so on and so on.
So Donald Trump is going to come in, he's going to be a dictator. That's what he's about. That message has been hammered home
consistently for years now. Both Biden, before he dropped out, and Kamala Harris, when she came in,
made that central to their campaigns. And I think that substantively, I mean, Americans were
watching the last Trump administration. They saw the effort to try to overturn the 2020 election.
They saw January 6th.
So every American who voted, I think,
is going into the voting booth this year
with that image of Donald Trump at the front of their mind,
mission accomplished, and getting that in everyone's
heads.
And he won.
So I think to sort of be realistic and think critically about why he won, I think we have to sort of think critically about why that message didn't succeed.
Why, even if Americans, many Americans may even have believed in, they went ahead and decided to choose Donald Trump anyway.
I think that there is an economic story you can tell here. That's one thing that people have been focused on inflation other economic concerns
Ended up being the priorities for most Americans who went to the polls
Yeah, I think that polls bear that out by the even that requires an explanation
So what you're saying then if that's if that's what happened is
People can say themselves. Well, yeah, you know, Donald Trump is an authoritarian. He does all of these bad things
He tried to steal the election and so on. But I really think that groceries have gotten too
expensive. And so I'm going to vote for him anyway. That, I think, should tell us something
about the way people think about democracy and the amount of faith people have in it as a system
worth sustaining. And then I think, too, that there is a portion of the electorate who said,
okay, I think Donald Trump's an authority
and I think that he wants to do all these bad things.
But I think that he could do those things for me.
I think that we need somebody who's gonna go in there,
bust it up in Washington,
all these kinds of rich, corrupt people
who've dominated the show for years and years and years,
he's gonna go in there and he's going to go in there
and he's going to really tear things up.
And I think that that's good.
Even if I don't think that's going to be effective,
I think it's going to be entertaining
and I'd like to see it.
I think these are like two constituencies of voters
that seem to have mattered a lot.
And I've been thinking a lot,
especially about the second half.
People who I think have already been cynical
and we've seen this in polls for years now, not only in the United States,
but around the Western world.
People are losing faith in the extent to which democracy works, the extent to which they
have a democracy, the extent to which democracy reflects the values and the priorities of
ordinary people, the extent to which it works.
There's been a real, I think, erosion in faith in all of these things.
You know, the idea of both parties in Washington are clowns, clowns in Congress.
Like, that's been a part of American political life for a long time.
And so, you know, it seems like we've gotten to a point where there's a real amount of
nihilism about it, amongst a certain proportion of the elect.
I'm not saying this is all voters or even a huge proportion of voters. But certainly, voters who have taken an interest in Donald Trump are thinking differently about
democracy and his threat to it and what he means than Democrats do and than Democrats
hoped they would.
Yeah.
So I think that what is downstream from this is like if you accept that, right, that there
is a plurality or a huge percentage
of Americans that just don't believe that the institutions are working for them and
so they're, they want to blow it up, then obviously the Democrats need to figure out
how to speak to them. But first, I mean, are we babying these people? Is that, like, is
that legit? I mean, look, I know, like people, there are many people whose lives aren't perfect.
Many people have very challenging economic circumstances.
That's like true throughout all of history.
I just struggle with like why 2024 is the year where people decided that they needed a clown dictator,
like versus times where there was much more economic and cultural strife,
where there were many greater security threats than we have now.
Why? Well, the thing is, it's not just 2024, it's 2024 and 2016. And so I think we have to
derive some kind of explanation here. I don't think that American life
in 2024 is worse than American life in 1924 for anybody. I think that there have been times when American or 74 you know I think you
know I think that relative in relative historical terms we're doing pretty well on all friends and
I say that as a leftist somebody who really thinks that we need to definitely radically change some
things in the economy but that I think is not how maybe the bulk of the American people feel. I mean
the numbers on the extent to which Americans believe that the country is on the right track, the extent to which they
think that they're satisfied with the direction of the country, that has been going down,
I think, since 2004. I was looking at Gallup's numbers on this.
But I guess this is the vibe, this is the question, the vibe session. This is like,
is it going down because their real experience is getting worse every year since 2004 or
just because their information is worse?
Well, I mean, this is the other thing.
I don't think that...
This is something that I think has kind of frustrated me in democratic conversation.
I also don't think that Americans are more misinformed or dumber than they were in 1924
either.
I think that there have always been people who believe crazy things
and who have wild sources of information and sources of information that put them against
other Americans. I don't think these are novel features of American life. And frankly, you
know, back in what you want to say the 20s or the 70s, we also had more, you know, political
violence, political division. So I don't think that suffices an explanation. I think that the closest thing, the thing that seems most plausible
to me is that in the last 25 years of American life, we have seen a lot of high level institutional
failures, and we've seen a lot of government dysfunction and gridlock, right?
So the roll call from 2000 or so is 9-11, it's the war on terror in Iraq,
it's Katrina, it's the financial crisis, and more recently we have the COVID-19 pandemic.
I think these are very, very big negative things people have been
actually in the process in the last quarter century, since the turn of this century.
I don't think it's made up that we have a lot of gridlock
in Washington, DC, where it seems like the two parties
are not able to resolve what should be basic problems
or sort of do their basic jobs.
That's something a political scientist will tell you
we've gotten worse at the last couple of decades.
So I mean, I think that there are reasons why the idea of American institutional
failure looms large for us today that aren't bullshit. I don't think that
means that material conditions are worse than they've ever been by any stretch of
the imagination, but I do think that people who are thinking back on their
own political lives, their own own political experiences or what American politics has been like, you know for for quite some time now
Two two and a half decades. I think that there are reasons for people to believe that
Politicians don't know what they're doing that they've been lied to that we can't really solve certain basic problems
I think that there there are grounds for believing that
There are grounds for believing that. So this is where my small C conservatism comes in because I'm like, okay, yeah.
I mean, even if there's some legit complaints about the system, I feel like there's not
a lot of focus on what the downside risks of alternate systems are.
A new system isn't necessarily a better one.
But that said, let's just accept the premise, right?
Like there's something about the institutional failures
and the cultures and the culture and our phones
and the democratization of every, like that,
that some combination of all these factors
has led us to a place where like,
we might not wish it to be the case,
but there is a significant number of Americans that want to blow things
up, that want to, you know, kind of tear down institutions. And so the Democrats in that
environment are, cannot be the defenders of institutions party if they want to be successful.
So then the question is, okay, so then what? And like a lot of,
and as you mentioned earlier, you said you're a leftist. I'm curious what you think would be
a productive anti-establishment posture for the Democrats to take going forward.
Sure. So I mean, you know, everybody's going to be hawking their takes now and for the next year.
Yeah, exactly. Hawking their take.
I think that there's a lot of debates to be had here,
and I don't think that I have the answer.
But I do think that Democrats offer people
a very, very thin understanding
of what democracy is and means.
That as we talked about, was not compelling to voters.
But I also think has been kind of productive
in trying to understand what to do with this loss.
I've seen a shocking number of people, both in kind of the conventional liberal left and
leftist actually, who have sworn off the American people on the basis of this election, who
are just saying, well, you know, people are too stupid, people are too misinformed, they
deserve what they get.
I've seen people say, well, you know, if you're a Latino who voted for Trump,
what we're gonna do is we're gonna try
to get your relatives deported
so you see how bad of a thing that you just did was, you know.
People are losing the plot in ways that I think
demonstrate how shallow their conception of democracy was.
In a democracy, and you know, I think American,
I will go out and say, I don't think
the American political system is a democracy. And I think the American political, I will go out and say, I don't think the American political system is a democracy.
Nevertheless, Donald Trump legitimately won
most of the people in this election.
And if we're going to have a democracy,
if we tell ourselves we believe democracy,
we have to take that seriously.
We have to take that and understand that victory
as legitimate.
And we can't be in a mode where when people vote in ways
that we don't like, that means that we give up on the system.
That means that we denigrate people
as kind of hopelessly stupid.
That's not what it's about.
You have to have a real faith in our capacity to do better.
And a real faith in your capacity
to make better arguments that will win people over.
That's kind of the whole thing.
And so for me, I think that ground zero here and thinking more productively about
politics has to be returning to a sense of why democracy, that word that we've been
using so freely over the last couple of years, is so important in the first place.
Is it important? We should be open to arguments from conservatives.
Well, you know, what do we do about the fact that a lot of people are misinformed or who make rash decisions? How do we work
through that? What responses do we articulate to that? I think that we need to go to first
principles and really thinking through why this concept is so important and thinking
through what it can do for us. That is the pitch for my book.
My own process for going through this for the last couple of years, I've been working on it and asked myself those questions,
has led me to an understanding what democracy is about
that feels fuller.
And I think it would feel more compelling
to the American people if it was delivered
as a political message.
A democracy cannot just be about doing these things
that your civics teacher told you were important,
it was important in high school. You know, you go out, you vote, and you get the
little sticker, and you do this every two to four years, and that's a democratic
process, and the things that most important about democracy are protecting the right to vote,
and so on. I think those things are important. Democracy more
fundamentally though is about granting people agency over the conditions that
shape their lives, right? So not being subject to arbitrary authority,
not being subject to arbitrary hierarchies,
but really having the power to create the lives that we want
and the time that we have on this planet to ourselves.
Democracy, I think, has to be part of the picture
of how we self-actualize and define our own futures.
That, I think think is the fundamental
kernel. And when you take that value seriously you say we care about democracy
as difficult as it is and as rough it is to work through because we
fundamentally believe that this is a system that allows us to be the people
that we want to be and have control over conditions and control over our time. You
understand very quickly that is a system of values that normatively applies
not just to the political realm, but also to the economy.
I think we should take it seriously that Americans spend about a third of their lives at work
in institutions where even though they're deriving their livelihoods from their workplaces,
even though the decisions being made at the top of a corporation often affect them more
directly and intimately than the decisions being made in Washington, DC
or in their state house.
We should take seriously the fact that all of that is true
without any real kind of voice or agency
on the part of workers, especially now
that the labor movement in this country
has been decimated over the last 40 or so years.
If democracy becomes the way that we think
through economic issues and economic power
for working people becomes something
that people are materially tethered to.
It's not just an abstraction, but democracy,
so conceived can be thought of as the way
that you earned your last raise,
and the way that you address some working condition
that was bothering you at work.
It becomes something that you practice more often,
whether it's at a union
or other some kind of economic structure.
You learn how to engage with people
who are different than you, voice your disagreements, make arguments, collaborate on different projects.
All of these become ways that you practice democratic habits outside of just participating
elections that I think would redound to the benefit of our political democracy. And democracy,
so conceived, is also a vehicle for addressing income inequality, to the extent to which
our political system is dysfunctional because of the role of money in politics.
That also becomes a way of addressing that problem.
So I think that there's a lot of potential in thinking through democracy, not just as
a set of political values, as a set of values that should govern our political institutions,
but as a way we should think about a lot of the economic problems that we do face.
Again, I don't think that the American economy is in the worst place than it was 100 years
ago or 50 years ago.
I think that Americans' standards of living have improved and there are great things we
can talk about there.
But I think that the absence of labor power is something that contributed to income inequality.
I think it's something that
makes Americans' working lives a little worse than they could be. And so, in the spirit of wanting to improve things, I think that we should try in this way. Here's my problem with that. I mean,
that all seems fine. I don't look, I'm neutral on this. I have my own priors about what I think
I have my own priors about what I think good economic policy would be. But frankly, if some economic policy that if the Democrats could appeal more to the
working class voters that they lost by advancing economic policies, I don't like in order to
stop the authoritarian threat from the right, from the cultural right, like I would be fine
with that. I just am not sure that like we have evidence that that is the problem, like
actually, and that the gap for Democrats and reaching working people is
economic and not cultural.
And so I guess that's really where this stuff falls down for me sometimes with
the left, because I mean, Biden ran like a pretty populist economic,
like a pretty left populist economic administration.
Income inequality is down.
You know, there was big investments in red states,
you know, in plants.
There's no, I mean, we don't have all the data yet,
but there's no real evidence that like in communities
where there's, you know, new investment coming in. People were happier with the democratic
administration. Frankly, if you just do Springfield as an example, the opposite happens. Like there's
a backlash against new investment because that meant black people were coming into town, you know?
So I don't know. Like maybe there's just a way that it was the Democrats didn't message it right,
or maybe they weren't radical enough. I don't know.
So anyway, how do you respond to that?
Well, first of all, I don't think that there is any one the problem.
I think that there are many different problems facing Democrats right now.
I do think that some of this stuff is cultural, that there are people who are not going to
be in a democratic fold because the Democratic Party now adopts positions on whether it's
LGBT issues or immigration that they culturally are not gonna cotton with.
I think that's a real portion of the electorate.
I also think that there are people who are not Democrats
because, or moving away from the Democratic Party
because they don't see what the Democratic Party has done
to improve their lives in the last 20 to 30 years.
And yeah, they're on a better baseline
than workers would have been on 30, 40, 50 years ago,
but people expect to see
improvements from engagement in politics.
I think there are some people who don't necessarily see them.
I think that there are a lot of different competing impulses and ideas that are shaping
what's going on now.
I just think that this is a thing to try.
I don't think that the idea that selling people on an economic vision might solve some
of the cultural problems.
I think there might be something to that.
I don't think you win back everybody on those grounds, but it's a field of play.
As far as how to characterize and think about the Biden administration is concerned, I have
been very positive about the domestic record of this administration for I think the reasons
that you describe,
even on things like labor unions,
I think that this has been a very pro-labor NLRB
that Biden says has presided over.
There's a very important decision, the CEMEX decision
that could have really dramatically impacted
labor organizing in this country.
I think one of the challenges though,
in making that economic vision stick beyond just inflation was that
these were things that were done very technocratically.
Nobody was taken to the streets in this election to make sure that Lina Khan would return to
the FTC.
Right?
These are conversations that people in Washington, DC had about how great the FTC's new posture
was or how great this turn away from neoliberalism
was. It was this intellectual conversation. You could make arguments about how great things
are going to be, but all the changes also were long tailed. Trump seems like he's going to
preside over some of these written cuttings for these plans that of greenlit or sort of made happen, you know, economic progressivism, right.
That happened, I think, behind the scenes.
And that was not really paired, I think, in the mind of the American voter with
a kind of new normative way of thinking about the economy or a sort of sense that
that Biden was going to take on the people that they wanted to blame
for their economic distortions.
Or Biden was presenting a picture of people that you blame for economic distortions.
It was a vision without a story.
And I think the Democrats have needed a story for a long time.
And there's a reason why, beyond Donald Trump, voters trust Republicans more on the economy,
just in general. If you believe in opportunity and competition and going out there and on the basis of your
own work and merit, making it for yourself, maybe even becoming rich someday.
Yeah, you do eight years on the couch at Fox and Friends weekend and like all your merit,
you can be put in charge of the biggest organization in the world.
Exactly. But no, more seriously, on a level beyond economic policy, I think the Republican Party and the conservative movement have been very good at giving people, or telling people, a story about how they should feel about the economy and how the economy should work. work that Democrats I don't think have ever really responded to in a sufficiently compelling way.
There's a stuff about like the equality of opportunity and you know we feel sorry for
these people who aren't doing so well and so we're going to take money from here and give it there.
I feel like there's something you know I don't want to get I'm supposed to be left this is supposed
to be materialist I supposed to be like about like the hard whatever but I do think that there's
something elemental about the American experience and the American spirit that the democratic
economic message is never really tapped into. And Republicans have kind of won on the basis of.
You can't build a politics in America exclusively around feeling sorry for people who haven't made
it. You need to tell people my economic policies are going to help you live the life that you
want to live.
They're going to give you power, you agency, you the ability to construct your own reality
and you can construct your own vision of what you want to achieve.
And it's not just about opportunity in this way.
I think we should be talking about direct empowerment and giving people more agency than they are used to having
in ways that are not just about creating a kind of social welfare policy that's going
to redistribute wealth.
Word predistribution has gained a lot of attention and is sort of increasing in use, I think,
in progressive circles.
So this idea that beyond just rejiggering the economy
so that we're taking money from here
and the billionaires and putting it here,
there has to be a sense that we, at the outset,
are giving people what they deserve from work.
That, I think, may be a more fruitful thing to try.
Is there anybody you think does that well?
Gives that message well.
Or we're starting from scratch?
I think we're starting from scratch. I think that the left has not figured out how to talk about this
in ways they're sufficiently about. I'm not one of the people who says,
well, if it wasn't for the, you know, dastardly Democratic National Committee, Bernie Sanders
will be president of the United States right now. I think that there are people that that
message resonated with and his way of talking about the
economy resonated with, but if we were enough, you know, that would have, it would have succeeded.
I think we need to go back to the drawing board as leftist progressive, what you want to call us,
and thinking through how we talk about the economy, because I think the Republicans
have a story. They have a compelling story. They have a story that resonates with a lot of Americans,
and we haven't developed an alternative one. And I think that's part of the issue. That's not have a story they have a compelling story they have a story that resonates with a lot of Americans and
We haven't developed an alternative one and I think that's part of the issue That's not just a bad administration failed over the course of this term to tell that story Democratic Party
I think has failed to tell a good story for for many years now and we've seen an erosion
Than support for them amongst working-class people who used to be died in the world Democrats, you know
And I think that's that's something that deserves addressing economically.
That's a much more challenging solution and much more thought provoking than what I've
seen from some leftists who have settled on a very easy answer for why the Democrats lost
this election, which is that it was Liz Cheney's fault.
Obviously, that cuts the bone here. It's like it was Liz Cheney's fault. Obviously that cuts the bone here.
It's like it's Liz Cheney's fault.
Kamala had three events with Liz Cheney on one day.
And obviously she cared too much about that.
And like, you know, Liz Cheney wanted to show up and help.
And a lot of the leftists wanted to complain, but we're not going to talk about that.
We're just going to talk about how it was this major strategic
heir to have Liz Cheney.
So I wonder if we can, we can hash that out. Do you think that is, do you think that's right? We're not going to talk about that. We're just going to talk about how it was this major strategic error to have Liz Cheney.
So I wonder if we can hash that out.
Do you think that's right?
Do you think it's Liz Cheney just caring too much as the reason why Kamala Harris lost?
Or how do you adjudicate that?
I don't think Liz Cheney is the reason why Kamala lost.
I don't think that's a sufficient explanation.
I do think that we need to think about the broader, longer trends here.
Democrats have been doing poorly with working class people for quite some time now, increasingly
poorly from election to election to election.
And I think that there are deep questions we need to be asking about why that is beyond the kind of, you know, should come live done this or that micro analysis over the last several months.
And it'd be kind of macro analysis of why, you know, each successful election with few exceptions,
you know, Democrats have done worse and worse and worse with the white working class than in
the previous presidential election. Now, I don't think that that's because people were talking about defund the police in 2004, 2008,
2012.
That client precedes the cultural conversations in the last couple of years and has to be
explained in terms beyond that, even if you believe.
And again, I can see it.
Pete It doesn't precede the cultural changes though.
It doesn't precede gay rights and it doesn't precede the cultural changes though. It doesn't precede gay rights and
it doesn't precede, you know, increased visibility of people of color in cultural spaces and
leadership. So, it doesn't precede that.
David It doesn't precede that.
Pete It doesn't precede like the George Floyd stuff that people like to pin it on.
David I think since you can say the 1960s, right, the Democratic Party has been increasingly
associated with cultural positions that put them out of step with certain second-rate you can say the 1960s, right? Democrat parties increasingly associated
with cultural positions that put them out of step
with certain segments of the electorate that again,
used to be dyed in the wool Democrats.
And that's a long tailed kind of change.
And so the question we have to ask ourselves is this,
was it a mistake to pursue civil rights on that basis?
What is the mistake to pursue LGBT rights on that basis?
Was it a mistake to improve women's rights on that basis?
Are these things that we should be thinking critically
about pulling back on?
That's one response.
Or if we like those things,
how do you work through that problem?
Can I just offer, maybe it was right to pursue it
all the way up through 1998 when the Democrats were winning
and then stop and then stop at 1998.
We achieved the ideal amount of social progress in in 1998 1999 white before y2k and the American culture was
Exactly. I just I just think that like this is like a very deep question, you know, and and I don't think that people are
Addressing it with a sufficient amount to of seriousness how Democrats adopted
You know in the last couple of, positions that are outside the culture mainstream that have been particularly harmful in these recent
elections, I think that you can say yes, that's probably the case. On the other hand, I think
that people like Barack Obama, people like John Kerry, people like Bill Clinton, were
actually very disciplined about how they thought through and worked through cultural issues.
And you still saw over the course of their administration, over the course of their time
in American politics, these kinds of structural trends kind of continue.
I reminded people yesterday, 1994, the first midterm under Clinton, Republicans take Congress
for the first time in 40 years because they tell the American
people that Bill Clinton moved too far left on cultural issues and they keep Congress
for the next better part of the next 12 years.
Do we think that Bill Clinton was some kind of flaming-haired radical who was afraid to
take on the left wing of his party?
No.
I think Bill Clinton did what he could.
I think things Clinton should did what he could you know anything things are are complicated
You know, I think that we need to go back to the drawing board and thinking through
Politics and not just not to tell ourselves that we did everything right in the 2000 We did everything right in the 90s. We just have to go back and everything's gonna be fixed
I think the electoral record suggests otherwise and
we're the point when we need to think think more creatively about
new ideas and new visions for the the country that we can be selling and offering to people that break away from what
they're familiar with.
We had a heated agreement over the summer about Joe Biden, and we're not going to just
rehash that.
But there was one element of it that I think is relevant to your upcoming book.
It's kind of relevant to this whole discussion.
That was, there's a sense of the time you wrote a column about this,
I was talking about this, it's like if you really believed democracy was a threat,
like you wouldn't be taking this risk on somebody that was clearly diminishing,
like that was not capable of doing some of the basic elements of the campaign.
It's got been this interesting question,
like how much did people really believe
that threat?
Like how much of it is lip service?
And you wrote recently, I've been struck by the extent to which people
engage with politics seem to take it for granted that the American project
might end within the next few months.
I can't quite tell how serious people are about this, but it's
plain people are scared.
On the other hand, why would you expect America to buy that Trump is a dictator in the making
when you don't act like you believe that's the case?
So it's this tension that you're talking about, how people seem to say that they are very
concerned about the imminent end of the American project, like their actions don't match it.
And so anyway, I just was wanting you to kind of ruminate on that topic a little bit.
Yeah, I mean, this is something I've wrestled with, frankly, since Trump's first term.
I mean, in 2016, again, like you had similar kinds of messaging.
Well, this is somebody who demonstrates authoritarian impulses.
This is somebody who said terrible things about Latinos, terrible things about Muslims,
with the act is promising to do a Muslim ban and kick them out of the country and so on and so on.
Democrats said this all the time,
and as soon as Trump, you know, went,
it's as though like, you know, people are starting,
oh, you know, maybe we can negotiate on this,
and maybe, you know, we'll go to the inauguration,
maybe we'll do, you either believe
that Donald Trump is Adolf Hitler, or you don't? And I think the
Democrats don't. I don't think they ever really have. I think there are things
that Democrats are sincerely concerned about and rightfully concerned about. But
clearly this is somebody who exists within, you know, in their own minds. The
realm of politics where you can still work with this person or sort of like
accept this person or sort of deal with this person in normal political ways.
And I think the Americans see that.
I think that Americans perceive that in this election.
We're going to see in the next couple of months how good Trump is going to make on some of
his more extreme promises.
I am particularly concerned about the deportation campaign he has promised, not just to start
deporting Americans more aggressively, but Stephen Miller talks openly.
Yeah, you know, we'll construct some staging grounds along the border where people are
going to be held until we figure out what to do with them and we're going to deputize
local law enforcement and go into cities and start pulling people out of them.
We're going to see if that happens.
If that happens, I think that what we've done in these months immediately after the election
is going to be a lot of interest to historians.
What were you doing before all this happened?
What were you suggesting we should be doing?
I don't know. I mean, I do remember in 2016, basically, as soon as the results came in, I started getting mutations to
protests and marches and teachings and all of this kind of stuff. There was a lot of energy
in the early administration, the hashtag resistance, this whole kind of burgeoning,
you know, we've got to do something about this guy.
Things are very, very different now.
I think we can have like a critical conversation
about how much of the stuff that we saw
early in the Trump administration
ended up being productive and helpful.
But there was a kind of response that seemed,
at least amongst the American public,
and Democrats and liberals,
commensurate with the things that they had been saying about Donald Trump in the election.
Now I don't think we have that, even though I think substantively what Donald Trump is
promising in his term this time is actually worse than what he promised in 2016 in many
respects.
And I think that's something we have to think critically about.
So apart from this electoral question, how do we talk about transgender issues?
How do we talk about immigration?
How do we talk about this culture?
I think there's also like a very immediate conversation
we had about, given what Donald Trump has promised to do
as a matter of policy, what are our obligations
to these populations, to these constituencies
in the near term?
How do we address the things that he's saying
he's going to do?
That's what I'd like to see more of. The electoral question is the electoral
question, but if we, and I think we did have reason to be
concerned about Trump coming in again, if we believe that we should be not just
trying to rehash the election, but sort of thinking actively about what we can
look forward to in this next term on all fronts, whether it's the social
and cultural front, whether it's the military front with peak heads up.
I'm very concerned about the hawkishness of this new administration.
I will say, jokes aside.
I don't know.
I think that there's a lot of defeatism and nihilism in liberal politics, democratic politics,
and even on the left right now that,
I don't know, I don't think that that's the right response.
I understand the temptation towards it, but the reason to cut against it.
Okay, I was about to close, but it seemed like you had one more thought when I cut you
off.
Was there something else you were trying to say?
I have many thoughts, but we'd be here all day.
So.
All right, well, then we'll have to do it another time.
Thanks so much.
That's Oceta, Wenebu, his new book, The Right of the
People, Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding is out next year. You can pre-order it.
Thanks so much for coming on the Bullwork Podcast. Everybody else, we'll see you back here tomorrow.
Peace. This world going up in flames And nobody wanna take the blame
Don't tell me how to live my life When you never felt the pain Oh, oh, oh
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
Come on, baby
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
They don't hear me cry
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
They don't hear me try They don't hear me cry
So what I'm gonna do?
The Bulldog Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with Audio Engineering and Editing by Jason
Brown.