The Daily - 'The Interview': Gov. Maura Healey Wants Democrats to Put Up a Fight
Episode Date: March 1, 2025The Massachusetts leader, whose influence goes well beyond her state, discusses how the Democratic Party can pick its battles and rebuild its brand. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and e...xplore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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From the New York Times, this is the interview.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.
Last weekend, governors from both parties converged in Washington for their annual gathering.
As is traditional, they met with the president as a group.
As is not so traditional, President Trump took the opportunity to scold Maine's Democratic Governor Janet Mills
over her opposition to his executive order banning transgender women from women's sports.
Are you not going to comply with it?
I'm complying with state and federal law.
Well, we are the federal law. Well, you better do it. You better do it because you're not going to comply with it.
It was a pretty stunning exchange. You better comply it because you're not getting any federal funding. It was a pretty stunning exchange.
You better comply because otherwise you're not getting any federal funding.
Every state, good, I'll see you in court.
I look forward to that.
That should be a real easy one.
That interaction is one example of the increasingly antagonistic relationship between the president
and democratic governors. This time around, Trump is adopting a more punitive posture towards those he perceives as defying him.
And liberal governors now have to decide how to respond.
Among them, Maura Healy of Massachusetts.
Healy is a former civil rights lawyer who, in 2014, became the nation's first openly gay state attorney general.
In 2022, she won the governorship. And while she may not have the same national profile as some of
her colleagues, like JB Pritzker of Illinois or Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, she's known as being
deeply influential in the party behind closed doors. So as part of a series of conversations
I'm having with Democrats, I wanted to talk
to Healey about how she views her role as the governor of a blue state in this second
Trump term and how she thinks her party can wage an effective fight. Here's my conversation
with Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey, you just returned from DC for the annual National Governors Association
meeting.
And you attended an event with the president along with other governors.
What did you discuss with the other governors,
both Democratic and Republican, while you were there?
Well, you go to the White House.
I've been as governor with other presidents.
I've been as attorney general.
And you go with the expectation that you're going to hear
the president articulate some vision for the future.
It's supposed to be an opportunity to talk about
how governors and states can
work with a new administration. That wasn't what this was about. The meeting began with
an address by Stephen Miller for about 15, 20 minutes. And then later, the president
came out and began by recounting that he's got the highest approval rating of anybody this early in his tenure,
that he won the election not once, not twice, but three times,
and then continued with a litany of conspiracy theories and false information.
So it was unfortunate because I'm there as governor thinking,
let's have a conversation about maybe where we can work together, right?
How can we focus on the needs of everyday Americans? But unfortunately, we didn't see any of that. What was also upsetting
is that we saw him attack another governor. This is something that the governor of Maine,
the governor of Maine. Now this follows remember, a few weeks ago, he attacked Illinois and
Governor Pritzker. He attacked Governor Hokel in New York recently. He's now very
gratuitously, in a way it seemed very manufactured in the moment, attacked the governor of Maine.
And we should say this was about transgender rights and about his executive order to do
with transgender rights and then he called her out, right? And then she responded basically
that she would follow the laws of her state and the federal government and that she would see him
in court and that didn't seem to go down well.
No, and it was about transgender rights,
but it wasn't about transgender rights.
He is doing what he has done typically,
which is I am going to throw out some issue,
let that be the distraction, let that distract everyone
from the fact that my poll numbers are tanking.
People don't like what Elon Musk and Doge are doing.
And let's get everybody's eye off the ball.
So let me go pick on this particular governor about an action that she hasn't even taken.
She has not even taken an action around transgender issues.
And yet he manufactures something.
And she appropriately says, I'm going to follow
state and federal law, Mr. President, which I think is the right answer of you want your
electeds to follow state and federal law.
What I saw is so upsetting in that exchange was when he looked at her and I was sitting
at the table and he leered at her and he said, we are the federal law.
We are the federal law.
And what did you hear when he said that?
I heard somebody who thinks he's king.
Congress makes the laws.
I may not agree with everything Congress does,
but that's a democracy.
That's how our system works.
Congress makes the laws.
The judiciary enforces the laws
and determines the application of the laws. The judiciary enforces the laws and determines the application of the
law. And the executive, and I'm an executive, my job is to faithfully apply and execute
the law, right? And so that's a problem. He doesn't believe that Congress makes the law.
He believes that he makes the law. That's what he said. The other thing he said as you will see
no federal funding, which, you know, again, is counter to the way our system operates, which is,
you know, Congress appropriates funds. Congress debates and figures out, you know, where funding's
going to go. And the idea that he's going to withhold weaponized funding is terrible.
What was the feeling afterwards among the democratic governors
in particular after that exchange?
I feel a lot of anger.
I feel anger for the people I am elected to serve.
And I think a lot of us feel that.
And so as governor, I am focused on delivering for people here.
How do I lower their costs?
How do I build more homes? How do I lower
taxes? How do I make sure that kids are educated, that our communities are safe, right? That our
veterans are taken care of. And in the face of that, we have Donald Trump, who's teamed up with
his co-king, co-president, Elon Musk. That also became quite clear. And they are doing everything, it seems, to cut jobs,
look at all the layoffs. And remember, a third of the federal employee workforce are veterans,
and they've been laid off, let go, fired by the tens of thousands. They're also doing
everything they can to increase costs, it seems. Tariffs, which would be devastating, going to raise
the price of everything that we buy and rely on. So they are acting in ways that are diametrically
opposed to what we're trying to do as governors, causing a lot of hurt, a lot of chaos. I'll
give you an example, Lulu. Massachusetts, we're home to life sciences. There is a ton of research and innovation.
We're number one in healthcare.
And here within Massachusetts, we depend on funding from the National Institute of Health,
as do a lot of states, so-called red states and blue states.
He wants to cut all of that, which means that people who right now are researching the cure
for your child if they get cancer or researching the cure or the treatment for Alzheimer's
are no longer going to have access to that funding.
That's outrageous.
Governor, one of the reasons I wanted to talk to you is because I am interested to know
how democratic governors are seeing this moment and how to maneuver in the second Trump era.
Until now, you've been not as publicly combative as perhaps other governors have been.
And I'm wondering if that's because Donald Trump is seemingly more willing to be
punitive or is it because his policies have been popular?
I mean, what are you weighing when you're thinking about how to talk
about this administration?
Look, I was attorney general throughout the Trump won presidency and joined and
led many cases suing him.
So I'm not unfamiliar with the way he operates.
It's incredibly important for AGs to continue to be in the courts.
They, like we, uh, back during Trump won are having success.
Um, how I look at things as it's been consistent for me, if the president is
going to work and support the state of Massachusetts, I will work with the president and the federal
administration. When he is not, then I will be the first to stand up and fight
for the people of Massachusetts. I think that is probably the attitude of most
Democratic governors at least.
You of course were AG. You have direct experience with this. I am curious if
you really do think that how the AGs are operating, if it's the best way,
because, for example, you were accused of politicizing the AG's office by jumping into
national issues. It's something that is often said about AGs. And that was in the first Trump
administration. Then under Biden, you had Republican AGs adopting that model, going after things that
Biden did.
And now again, we have these group filings from multiple states targeting executive actions.
It's become this kind of pattern.
And I'm curious, do you think that AGs should be getting in these federal fights so consistently?
I think the premise of that question is totally off.
Tell me why.
And I think the notion that these are quote, political fights is totally off. Tell me why. And I think the notion that these are quote, political fights is totally off.
When I brought suits as an attorney general
and when other AGs I worked with brought suits,
because a lot of these were multi-state suits,
why were they multi-state suits?
Why were a bunch of AGs joining in the same lawsuit?
It's because there was some action taken by Trump during
Trump One that hurt people in our states.
As attorney general, you're there to represent the people of your state, to protect their
interests and to protect their rights.
So when somebody like Donald Trump illegally cuts off access to health care, violates the
law, of course, your AG can and should sue.
That's not a political issue.
That's an attorney general doing his or her job, vindicating the rights.
So Republicans do the same, obviously, during the Biden administration, and they would argue
that they were doing the same thing.
They can argue that. They can argue that.
They can argue that.
I will tell you, having worked with many Republican colleagues, I will tell you what those fights
were about.
They were fights to gum up the works, to slow things down.
They didn't like some of the policymaking that was going on.
They didn't like the fact that EPA was out there promoting and promulgating new regulations,
for example.
And so they try to find ways to slow that down.
I'm not saying in every instance it was frivolous,
but there's a reason why Democratic AGs won over 85%
of those cases during Trump won.
We were right.
And I think that's what you're going to see again now
with Trump too.
Now, the courts have changed some.
So how this ultimately plays out, we don't-
I was about to say, are you confident that the courts can actually constrain this administration?
Well, I have great hope in the courts. You know, they're an important institution. They're
one of our pillars of government. So I want to remain ever optimistic about the role of
and the responsibility of the judiciary. I can't predict how it's
going to go, but those lawsuits where there's a violation of the law, those AGs
need to continue to sue. And that's not political, it's about doing their job in
vindicating people's rights in their states. But it's not just up to the AGs.
I think about senators like Chris Murphy and Brian Schatz
out there just articulating just in very real terms
what the harm of Trump's actions are to everyday Americans.
You see more and more Americans speaking up too.
And that's really, really important
because I think it's been overwhelming for a lot of people.
I mean, it's only been a month, right?
And people have been hit with a lot.
We did seem to catch Democrats by surprise.
I mean, we have seen Democrats take a beat and have trouble coming to an agreement about what kind of resistance or opposition they're going to pose.
You've talked a little bit about what's happening publicly. I'm curious what has been happening privately because one of my colleagues reported that
you were part of a group of Democratic governors in January who privately urged Senator Chuck
Schumer to fight harder or at least differently against Trump. And I'm curious like what you
were wanting to see that you weren't seeing.
I thought at the outset, it was very important for leadership
in Congress, leadership in Congress,
to be out every day with members talking about the things
that Trump is doing.
Why?
Because what he's been doing from the beginning
is taking away Congress's power.
Like, all of his action has been him saying basically, Congress, I know,
maybe he doesn't know, Congress, you're supposed to make the law, but no, I'm making the law
now. I am usurping your authority. I am appropriating congressional authority, which is why I thought
at the outset, Congress and members of Congress each day have got to be out there explaining
to the American people and everyday Americans. This isn't right.
This isn't legal.
They need to be speaking up to that.
Do you think the leadership in Congress is the right leadership to enact what you're
envisioning?
Look, I'll leave that for members of Congress to decide, right?
I mean, I'm a governor.
That's not my call.
What I can tell you is we need leadership that is aggressive, that is proactive, and
that is speaking to everyday Americans.
I mean, I think part of the reason-
That sounds like you're eliding the question.
I don't mean to elide anything.
I'll say that, you know, I think part of what got the Democratic Party in trouble this last
election is the fact that there was a perception that leaders within the Democratic Party were
not actually seeing and feeling
people's pain. I think it's a perception that, and I think it lived out to a certain extent
among Democratic leadership that they just didn't have their finger on the pulse. They're
talking about issues that weren't bread and butter, core economic issues that resonate.
They allowed themselves in some ways to be caricatured as only caring about X, Y, and Z issue.
Which isn't true, by the way.
One of the reasons I wanted to talk to you is that I was told by quite a few Democrats
that you are very influential in the party, beyond your state. And so as you have been having these conversations
about moving the party forward,
I did want to get your temperature
on just the Democratic brand writ large
because polling is showing that the Democratic brand
is really underwater,
regardless of what's happening with Donald Trump
and what's happening in the White House.
The losses were steep in the last election.
You are the governor of a solidly blue state.
What was your big takeaway
about why the Democrats did so badly?
Well, there's definitely a brand problem.
There's a a brand problem.
There's a big brand problem.
And I don't pretend to speak for the party, but I can tell you as a democratic leader,
what I'm going to do, I'm going to focus on driving what I believe is a democratic message.
Let's take this moment and redefine the brand.
To me, the democratic brand should be about delivering for everyday Americans.
We have the chance to do that with the foil of Donald Trump, cutting all these
programs, cutting our military for God's sakes to free up funding that'll pay for
the tax cuts he wants to give to billionaires.
So what can we do as Democrats?
Where do I think we need to go
if I was gonna offer advice?
It's to every day tack towards and have your North Star be,
what am I doing for everyday Americans?
But I'm curious Governor, because I mean,
I think if you talk to any Democrat,
the Biden administration on down,
they would say that that was their focus. I mean administration on down, they would say that that was their focus.
I mean, they would say that that is precisely
what they did during the last four years.
They really tried to build up the economy
out of a massive recession.
They tried to tackle inflation, et cetera, et cetera.
I am curious how you see that being different
than what happened before.
I think there are differences.
I told President Biden directly a few years ago that he needed to be active on the border,
that he should take executive action on the border.
Okay?
I knew that as an attorney general and as a former prosecutor, there were things that
could have been done and I wish that he had done that.
So I also think it's important to fight back.
When there was all this talk and denigration of DEI, I don't know why the response wasn't,
you know what?
It's actually good to have women and people of color in the military.
It's good to have women and people of color in the workforce.
It's good to have women and people of color going to colleges and
universities. Like, what's wrong with that? And put it back on them instead of it being allowed
to be this attenuated caricatured conversation about quote DEI, you know, and some of it's about
how you match the mischaracterization and how you match really offensive but effective attempts
to strike down certain things
or to pit people against each other.
That's the thing.
If you're getting bullied and you don't respond with force,
the bully's gonna win, always. And we need people who
are able to do that and to do that effectively, and in a way that shows that we're actually
aligned with the majority of Americans on this. And that, I think, that's a work in
progress. Do you blame part of the failure to defend the Democratic brand,
to articulate the vision on the Biden administration?
Because you were the first Democratic governor to publicly
urge President Biden to exit the race in July of last year.
I mean, how much do you think it hurt the party in voters' eyes
that it seemed like Democrats were
sort of hiding President Biden's failing acuity? I mean, I think that President Biden, the Biden
administration did so much for this country and pulled us through a pandemic, pulled us out of
a really dark economic time, got us on really solid footing, did some incredible things.
on really solid footing, did some incredible things. I think the party was hampered by having President Biden as the communicator in chief, for being
honest.
Okay?
He wasn't the strongest communicator in chief.
And that hurt us because they weren't able to sell all of the important accomplishments
that were actually in fact happening effectively or as effectively.
And that definitely hurt.
Do you think the party is adequately reckoning now with the effects of what happened though?
Because I just saw one of Biden's senior advisors, Mike Donilon, say that the Democratic party
quote lost its mind after Biden's poor debate and basically through an incumbent
under the bus and that cost them the election.
I don't, I hadn't seen that comment. Are we grappling with what happened and having to deal
with it right now? You better believe it. We've got Donald Trump in the White House. But, you know,
I've talked before about this, you know, and my views about President Biden
and I think it was very hard for Kamala Harris, who I thought ran a fantastic campaign, to
be able to overcome the disadvantage at the time and within the time that she was allotted.
And I think it would have been a different story if the president had decided a few years
ago that he was going to do what he said he would do,
which is serve one term, and then we'd have the opportunity for, you know, full engagement in a
primary and the like. That didn't happen. I have no interest in further spending time on it,
revisiting history. I'm focused on the now. After the break, I asked Governor Healey about the migrant crisis that has played out during
her time in office.
And we talk more about the Trump administration's campaign against diversity, equity, and inclusion.
It's interesting at a time when the co-president, Elon Musk, is giving us Hitler salutes, right,
and espousing anti-Semitic things.
And I just find it ironic that we're going to have this debate over DEI,
and whether it's effective.
All the while, this is going on over here.
I mean, seriously? Governor Healey, the number two issue in your state according to polling is immigration,
which is something that has plagued Democrats in the last election. 2023 was the year where
states like yours saw a big surge. That's also when you became governor. Can you tell
me how you've seen this particular issue play out?
Yeah, you're right about the timing of it. I think that in the year before I took office,
we'd seen the first influx of migrants into certain states. We're home to a significant
Haitian diaspora here in Massachusetts. And so there are a number of Haitians coming into
Massachusetts. This was something that I inherited.
It was underway when I became governor.
And it only grew during the first year or so
of my administration.
It goes back to something fundamental.
We have not had comprehensive immigration reform
in this country.
We need it.
I was so upset when Donald Trump
killed that border bill, which would have provided a pathway for our dreamers,
would have provided a pathway for people who are living here, working here, raising
kids here, paying taxes here to become citizens. It also would have provided the
kinds of resources for more border agents, more immigration judges,
more resources at intercepting fentanyl and other drugs from coming into the country.
It's been a challenging situation to say the least, and my frustration has been, you know,
as a state governor, I am inheriting the problems caused by federal inaction and federal inaction specifically
on the border and on immigration.
One of the most visible strategies Republican governors adopted during the height of the
migrant crisis was sending buses and planes of migrants to blue states like yours.
Very memorably, Martha's Vineyard, it was a stunt.
But you could argue that it worked.
It made immigration enforcement into a blue state issue, which it had not been.
Shouldn't it always have been though?
I mean, is it not fair to say that Democrats really did not take this issue seriously?
I don't know.
I mean, I don't see it that way.
I think Democrats in Congress were the ones
who time after time were pushing for immigration reform.
And that's what I saw.
It was a stunt.
It was a stunt what happened.
I think it, you know, the buses,
the buses to New York, to Illinois, to Colorado,
I think the Republicans did a really effective job of making this
an issue and frankly of scaring a lot of people. Massachusetts ranked the safest state in the
country. Okay. It doesn't mean that we don't have ongoing law enforcement work. We do.
And that's the reason why it is so safe. We just had a takedown of a gang here a week or two ago, including a gang that has recently
been cited by the new ICE director.
So it's also the case like here, with the migrants who came in, and by the way, they
were fleeing the worst conditions imaginable, right?
I saw them, I met with many of them.
We got them work authorizations, they're working, they're paying taxes, these are all people
with lawful status now, their kids are going to school, they're contributing to our economy,
they're working in our hospitals and nursing homes.
That's what I chose to do.
Ron DeSantis chose to put people on a plane and use them.
Greg Abbott chose to put people on buses and use them to make a point.
I'll tell you the difference to being a democratic governor.
We actually found a way to take care of these people, get them jobs,
get them working, and get them contributing to our economies.
And yet a poll just came out from UMass and WCBV showing that immigration
is very important to people here and a majority of voters don't approve of the way that you've handled it.
Why do you think that is?
There's just a lack of trust generally.
There's a lack of trust and you know, it's hard to overcome the fear-mongering that's gone on.
The number of people in what are our emergency shelter system here in Massachusetts now, see to zoom out,
we're the only state in the country that has what's called a right to shelter law that houses women and children and families who are experiencing
homelessness. And as a result, the law has required us to take in numbers, including
migrants who've arrived here as homeless. I've recently made proposals to the legislature
to change that, but it's been a challenging situation. I'll say though, that even within that system, the majority of folks in that system are actually
Massachusetts families.
They're not new immigrant families, okay?
But it's about what the public perception is, and all I can do is try to manage my way
through it.
I mean, you've said before that the right to shelter law
wasn't actually made to help waves and waves of people
sort of settle here and you are now seeking to change it.
I am curious, why did you come to that decision?
Because I think what you're trying to do among other things
is require anyone seeking shelter to prove that they're in the country legally. Is that one of the changes that you're trying to do, among other things, is require anyone seeking shelter
to prove that they're in the country legally.
Is that one of the changes
that you're trying to make to the law?
I mean, I think that what we're focused on
is really about your, are you,
have you been living in Massachusetts
or did you just get evicted from your apartment
in Pennsylvania and you got on a bus and drove up here. Like, our law is meant to actually take a family who, for one reason or another,
in Massachusetts became homeless.
Not to be a refuge for people from other states who sadly, and with compassion,
I say this, became homeless and then come to Massachusetts to get housing.
That's not the point of the law.
As you know, Trump's borders are Tom Homan singled
Boston out at CPAC last week.
He called out Boston's police commissioner, who said,
because of state law, he won't be enforcing immigration
orders against migrants.
Homan then said, and I'm quoting here,
I'm coming to Boston and bringing hell with me.
And I'm wondering what your response to that is.
First of all, I don't really even know what he's talking about, to be honest.
Again, I'm somebody whose state police regularly work with Homeland Security, ATF, FBI, DEA,
on the investigation and prosecution of folks, including folks who are undocumented,
who have and are committing crimes,
drug trafficking, gun trafficking, human trafficking.
That was the way before Trump,
it will be the way after Trump.
So I don't really know what he's referring to
in terms of why he singled out Boston.
Again, Boston is-
I think your police commissioner said basically
that they weren't going to help ICE remove
people with orders of removal, as happens in many sanctuary cities.
We're not, Boston's, that's the thing.
I think there's a lot of talk and semantics out there and this guy Holman is just, you
know, as a lot in the Trump administration do, just
making up a bunch of stuff and trying to start something, trying to pick a fight. Okay? So
look, that's not productive. Okay? Because as a former law enforcement official, if you
care about law enforcement, the best way to secure the safety and wellbeing of community
states, our nation is for local,, and federal law enforcement to work together.
So it seems to me you shouldn't be threatening to bring, what was it?
Hell?
Yeah.
Okay, whatever.
No, you should come here with support and resources, right, to help us address any public
safety issues we're experiencing.
You should do that with other states.
And I can tell you that Massachusetts law enforcement, state and local, continue
to work with federal law enforcement when it comes to the investigation and the prosecution
and the apprehension of criminals.
The real thing that's going on at ICE is that the numbers have gone down at the border.
The number, the crossings at the border were going down during the end of the Biden administration,
in fact. And so I think they're scrambling, you know, to figure out how they can keep this
going. Don't, wasn't there reports just today of the number of National Guard
people on the border sitting around doing nothing?
I mean, let's put people to work.
You know, we've got governors who are dealing with severe floods, severe fires.
who are dealing with severe floods, severe fires. There's plenty of places that we need
federal resources and help as states. LESLIE KENDRICK Would you meet Tom Homan if he came?
KESHIA POLLIN Of course I would. Yeah, it sounds like I might need to explain a few things to him
as somebody who investigated and prosecuted crimes, including with federal authorities,
for a number of years here. Maybe he doesn't have the benefit of that knowledge.
Another place where the federal and state governments are linked is on education.
President Trump has made rolling back DEI, which is diversity, equity, and inclusion,
central to his political project.
He has said now that he's going to be cutting federal funding for schools that include it.
We don't know exactly what that means. It's sort of open to interpretation. You've said that Massachusetts schools are going to stay true to themselves.
What do you mean by that?
We're going to keep doing what we're doing.
Look, I am the first woman in Massachusetts history to be elected governor. I happened to be the first gay person
elected governor. I don't know where I would be if I didn't have support and legal protections
against discrimination my entire life. I was born in 1971, so just around the time of Title IX.
And I had a career as an athlete
and a professional athlete basketball player
before I went to law school.
I think about all that was made possible for me as a woman
because there were state and federal laws in place
that said, you know what?
We should treat everybody fairly.
Doesn't matter your said, you know what, we should treat everybody fairly. Doesn't matter your gender, you know, doesn't matter your the color of your skin, your religion. I think
that's an American principle. Not giving up on that. Even if it means pulling federal
funding. I just think enough people need to continue to speak out and speak to why that's such a bad thing.
Talk to any CEO, major, you know, Fortune 500 company. They'll tell you that their bottom line,
dollar-wise, does better when there's more diversity in the room. But many of these...
That's not a bad thing. It's a good thing. It's made us stronger.
Many of these companies, though, are ditching their DEI programs.
And I don't know why. I don't know why. I mean, I think I know why. I think that they
feel the threat of Elon Musk. They feel the threat of Donald Trump, which is sort of one
and the same. But I think that that's what they're responding to. It's not right.
It's not a winner for this country. It's not going to help us be more competitive around the world
by removing or doing things that hinder talent in this country and the success of individuals.
Why do you think we're seeing such a backlash to DEI though?
People have expressed that they do feel that sort of mandated
diversity, equity, and inclusion,
they feel that it hasn't been beneficial to relations
between races and ethnicities, and that there
is a feeling specifically on the right that
this has become a sort of left-wing orthodoxy.
You know, it's interesting at a time when the co-president, you know, Elon Musk is giving
us Hitler salutes, right, and espousing anti-Semitic things.
And I just find it ironic that it's like we're going to have this debate over DEI and whether it's
effective.
All the while, this is going on over here.
I mean, seriously?
So we can talk about DEI and whether there are some approaches or aspects that people
want to look at more, maybe need reform or there should be more flexibility in certain
things. But do not tell me that we are going to condone and go down a path in government or in corporate
America that says women and people of color are no longer at the table.
And not only no longer at the table, but will not be supported anywhere along the way.
I think unfortunately what's happened in the moment, we've seen a lot of capitulation,
we've seen a lot of people trying to hedge their bets. You mean to tell me that's good for America? Come on.
You were, as you mentioned, the country's first openly gay attorney general.
Prior to that you worked in the Civil Rights Division of the AG's office,
where you led the first successful challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act.
I sued President Obama.
You did.
There is some concern among Democrats that after Roe v. Wade, we are going to see Obergerfeld,
the Supreme Court's decision that made gay marriage legal at the federal level, overturned.
Next.
Do you worry about that?
I do. I mean, how can you not? The Supreme Court constituted as it is. I mean, how can you not?
It seems like anything is possible, is conceivable. Now, you know, it is again, up to everyone to be
able to speak out and articulate why it is so important to hold on to precedent. I thought we'd done
that with Roe, right? And look what happened there.
And there was a huge amount of fury after Roe fell, but that dissipated. A lot of Democrats
thought in this election that Roe was going to be something that was going to galvanize
people and it didn't enough. And so I guess when you look at, you know, marriage equality, does it
seem more imminent to you that perhaps people won't stand up for the things that seem to have
been settled? I guess I'd unpack that a little bit. I think if you look at Roe in the aftermath of
Roe, right, what did I do right away as governor? Stockpile Mifepristone, right? We passed a shield
law here to protect patients and providers. Other governors took similar actions. We saw
races in states over Roe, over the abortion issue, where abortion rights won time after time after
time. Where it didn't carry the day or carry the entirety of an election,
determinative of an election.
The only one was the presidential.
And I just think that abortion rights wasn't enough to overcome the perception of weak
leadership by the Biden administration on immigration, on the economy, and a poor job communicating what had actually been delivered
for American people.
And also it was in the context of increasing inflation
and high costs and perception that the Democratic candidate
wasn't empathizing enough and feeling the pain
and delivering up a solution saying,
X, Y, and Z, I'm gonna deliver for you.
Now, meanwhile, Donald Trump said all these things that he was going to do to
lower costs and prices and of course hasn't done a goddamn thing, nor is he going to.
But I don't blame, like, I don't think there was a dissipation in the effect, the after
effect of Roe. I think it's there, it's strong. I think it did contribute to more people coming out even in the
presidential and I think the results in other races have shown what's consistent
with the polling which is the vast majority of Americans Democrat and
Republican support abortion rights. As to marriage equality, we'll see you know
it's something that I think has been, at least in Massachusetts, I
mean, we've had marriage equality for 20 years now.
Many states have had it for some time as well.
And the idea that a court overnight would take away that right take away.
Um, remember these are state marriage licenses.
These aren't federal marriage licenses, which is why I wanted the case to begin with, the
DOMA case.
It shouldn't happen as a matter of law, but imagine the destruction to families, right?
So I hope that doesn't happen.
Were you surprised to see the level of importance that trans rights had in this election?
And do you think Democrats misread the electorate on the issue, as Seth Moulton, the representative
from your own state said?
You know, to me, it's just so sad that we are talking about such an infinitesimal portion
of the population.
But Trump and the Republicans intentionally made that into a mountain.
We're talking about such a small sliver of the population.
By the way, on athletics, it's even smaller as a percentage, but they did an incredibly
effective job of making that an issue.
That and immigration, I think think were two of the issues.
And DEI, what I keep on hearing you say
is that they've managed to-
Well, I think the other thing was the economy.
At the upper man.
At the end of the day, I think it's the economy
that ended up doing Biden and Kamala Harris in.
Last question.
Barring change to the constitution, President Trump can't be reelected.
But that's a real thing there, right?
Aren't people talking about it?
He's got a group talking about a third term.
Are you worried about that?
I am.
I am worried about that.
You have to think about it.
Yeah.
I mean, I have a pretty sober view of the situation. I mean, we live through Trump
one, we're onto Trump two. I was talking to a historian the other day who I called on
President's Day to ask for some guidance to help me provide a context for this moment
that we're in. And she said to me, I can't, we've never seen anything like this before in American
history. So you asked me that question and my legit genuine answer is, yeah, I'm worried
about that. I'm worried about what they're doing in terms of looking to undermine future
elections. Look at what Trump is proposing with the postal service and wanting to take
it over, wanting to privatize it, right? The other day in the governor's meeting, he told us all we should be working
by paper ballot. And, you know, there's a reason they are doing that.
You know, when I speak to Democratic voters, there is an enormous amount of anger towards
the Democratic Party that allowed this to happen. They look at this and they say it was the failure of the Democratic Party that opened
the door to Donald Trump coming in.
And I just wonder, as a sitting governor and a Democrat, how you respond to that.
I agree.
I empathize with that position. Now, is it all attributable to one president and
his team and his administration in the form of Joe Biden? No, I'm not suggesting that. Okay.
But there are things that happened that could have happened, that should have happened,
that didn't happen. And here we are. So I do this job. I became governor because I care
about people. I want to serve people. I want to see the people of Massachusetts served.
My colleagues I work with and have the privilege of working with, the democratic governors,
believe in America, believe in the needs, the wants of everyday Americans.
So it's, it's upsetting to be here, having this conversation with you in this moment.
And I too ask, how the hell did we get here?
Governor Healey, thank you very much.
That's great to be with you.
That's Governor Maura Healey.
This conversation was produced by Seth Kelly. It was edited by Annabel Bacon, mixing by Sophia Landman, original music by Rowan Nimisto,
Sophia Landman and Marian Lozano.
Photography by Philip Montgomery.
Our senior booker is Priya Matthew and Wyatt Orm is our producer.
Our executive producer is Alison Benedict.
Special thanks to Reid Epstein, Rory Walsh, Renan Borelli, Jeffrey Miranda, Maddie Masiello,
Jake Silverstein, Paula Schuman, and Sam Dolnick.
If you like what you're hearing, follow or subscribe to The Interview wherever you get
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Next week, David talks to Lady Gaga about her new album Mayhem and what she's learned
after almost 20 years in the music business.
Some of it is what you can, like how much you can stand.
It's like how much you are willing to give away of yourself.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro,
and this is the interview from the New York Times.