The Ezra Klein Show - In This House, We’re Angry When Government Fails
Episode Date: November 22, 2024The core conflict in our politics right now is over institutions. Democrats defend them, while Republicans distrust them, and seek, in some cases, to eliminate them.This is really bad. It’s bad for ...institutions when Republicans are elected, because of the damage they might inflict. And it’s bad for institutions when Democrats are elected, because when you’re so committed to protecting something, it’s hard to be clear-eyed or honest about all the ways it’s failing. And when Democrats won’t admit to the problems that so many Americans can see and feel, that creates a huge opening for the right. So, what are Democrats missing?Steven Teles is a political scientist and director of the Center for Economy and Society at Johns Hopkins, and a senior fellow at the Niskanen Center. Jennifer Pahlka is the founder of Code for America and the author of one of my favorite books on why government doesn’t deliver, “Recoding America: Why Government is Failing in the Digital Age and How We Can Do Better.” She’s also a senior fellow at Niskanen.In this conversation, we discuss how and why the country has become polarized over institutions; the ways this was supercharged during the pandemic; the reasons government agencies are so focused on process, often at the expense of outcomes; how a second Trump administration will probably distract from some much needed institutional reforms; and more.This episode contains strong language.Recommendations:“Voice and Inequality: The Transformation of American Civic Democracy” by Theda Skocpol“Infrastructure Costs” by Leah Brooks and Zachary D. LiscowWhy Nothing Works by Marc DunkelmanThe Unaccountability Machine by Dan DaviesThoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs.This episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Jack McCordick. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris, with Kate Sinclair. Mixing by Isaac Jones and Aman Sahota. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Rollin Hu, Elias Isquith, and Kristin Lin. Original music by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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From New York Times opinion, this is the Ezra Klein Show. In any political moment where the rage collects, where the opposition rallies tells you a lot,
behind Matt Gaetz, the liberals I know have been far angrier about the choice of RFK Jr.
to lead the Department of Health and Human Services
than any of Trump's other picks.
Which is strange because the distance between most Democrats and RFK Jr. is a lot smaller
than between them and most of the people Trump or the Republicans are naming.
RFK Jr. was a Democrat until, what, the end of 2023?
And yes, he is a vaccine skeptic, part of a broader set of beliefs that
corporations are poisoning our health to line their pockets.
But that used to be a recognizable wing of the democratic party.
I grew up around that democratic party.
And RFK Jr, he holds a lot of positions most Democrats do hold, like he's pro
choice, who'd have thought Trump would name a pro-choice HHS secretary.
Like he's pro-choice. Who'd have thought Trump would name a pro-choice HHS secretary?
My point is not to dismiss or downplay the danger RFK Jr. could cause.
My point is not that I want him at HHS.
I don't.
I want an Operation Warp Speed for everything.
Operation Warp Speed to me was the one policy you simply could not deny that Donald Trump
got right.
You had to hand it to him.
Saved a huge number of lives at a very low cost.
That is the one policy he is racing to the ground and disowning,
salting the earth over.
I think his choice is a disaster, but both the pick and the reaction are
revealing as to what the parties are really about now.
Democrats are angrier about RRK Jr.
than they would have been about a well credentialed pro-life anti-Medicaid
pick, a normal Republican, the kind of person Ron DeSantis would have named.
And they're angrier because Democrats right now prioritize respect for
institutions and expertise.
In this house, we believe science is real.
And under Trump, Republicans have become the opposite kind of party.
In this house, we believe science is woke and corrupted by DEI.
What we are polarized over has changed.
What our politics is about has changed.
The core conflict right now, the irresolvable one, the ones that two parties will not compromise
on, is
over institutions.
Democrats staff and defend them.
Republicans loathe and seek to raise them to the ground, seek to take them over and
turn them to their own ends.
That's how you got Kamala Harris campaigning with Liz Cheney and Donald Trump choosing
the kookiest Kennedy for one of the most important positions in government.
And I think this is really bad.
It's bad for the institutions, which are now under extraordinary danger when Republicans
get elected.
But it's also bad for the institutions because they face a different kind of danger when
Democrats are elected.
They face a danger that Democrats are too quick to defend and fortify them, even when
they don't work.
The Democrats are often committed to the institution in name, to the process as it exists, as opposed
to the outcomes the institution is supposed to deliver.
I am worried about the inability to affordably and quickly build homes, build trains, deliver
services, permit clean energy, fund science without
burying it in bureaucracy and process.
I am worried about how absent the huge accomplishments of the Biden administration, the Inflation
Reduction Act, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill, how absent they are in people's lives,
in part because of the way government works and spends and delivers under Democrats, is
very slow.
If you look at the election, Democrats lost the most support in blue states and blue cities.
They lost the most support in the places where people are most exposed
to democratic governance and yeah, democratic institutions.
I always find this amazing. The first contract to build the New York Subways was awarded in 1900.
Four years later, four years, the first 28 stations opened.
Compare that to now.
In 2009, Democrats passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, pumping billions into
high-speed rail.
15 years later, you cannot board a high-speed train funded by that bill anywhere in the
country.
So yeah, I'm worried about our institutions.
I'm angry at our institutions.
I don't want to defend them.
I want them to work.
In this house, on this podcast, we believe government should deliver fast, affordably,
reliably.
We believe institutions should deliver fast, affordably, reliably. We believe institutions should work.
They should build trust rather than spending it.
And so I don't want to see Democrats become a party of the institutional status quo.
And that is a political necessity too.
Democrats left a huge opening for the right by refusing to admit what so many Americans constantly see and feel.
The institutions that have power over them are often doing a really bad job.
And if you don't get good, well-grounded critics and reformers, what you'll get is bad ones.
If Democrats don't have an answer to at least some of what went wrong during the pandemic,
then you get someone like RFK Jr.
This is not one of those shows that can offer
a clean, easy answer to a hard problem. This is me doing some thinking aloud with some
people I respect. Stephen Telles is a political scientist at Johns Hopkins and a senior fellow
at the Niskanen Center. Jennifer Polka is the founder of Code for America and the author
of one of the very best books on why government doesn't deliver.
Recoding America. Why government is failing in the digital age and how we can do better. Highly
recommend reading it. She is also a senior fellow at NISCANON. As always, my email, Jen Palka, Steve Talis. Welcome to the show.
Great to be here.
Excited to be here.
So Steve, we talked for a column right before the election. And one of the things you said
to me was that American politics was polarizing around something different than
it usually does, something different than people are used to.
What is that?
Well, as I've been thinking about it, when people think about class, they usually think
about it in terms of who your employer is and who the employee is.
And class is really that difference between who owns capital and whose labor.
And I've increasingly been thinking about another dimension of class, which is about
who are the sort of objects and the subjects of professional authority.
Who are the people who are on the receiving end of our professions and who are the people
who actually run them?
And that does not entirely overlap with the classic ways we think about
class. So, if you think about going back to COVID, for example, there was a class divide between the people who were sending their kids to school who wanted to work and the people who were
closing down schools or the teachers who didn't want to go to school. That's a kind of cultural
class dimension that hasn't entirely taken over the more classic economic class
dimension, but I think as an increasingly big part of our politics is really about these
sort of professional elites, which are different than some of the more classic economic elites.
I keep thinking, Steve, about this Pew survey I saw.
And it was a survey of attitudes towards 16 federal agencies.
And I know the ones that you would expect, Democratic support was way higher than Republican
support, but it was higher for every single federal agency.
That included the Department of Homeland Security, the VA, the CIA, right?
These things that I think traditionally in American politics have been right-coded.
How do you think that happened?
Well, this is really a kind of longer-term story about how Americans think about institutions
and in particular where they think institutions fit in our larger party system.
And when I think about this historically, you can think about it going back all the way to the 60s,
that, you know, attacks on institutions used to be thought of as a left-coded sort of thing.
So, people who were attacking the university president, or who were attacking the CIA,
or who were associated with conspiracy theories were much more on the left.
And something really dramatic happened to America in that period that the elites, the
establishment, the people who ran universities and foundations and professions made a kind
of calculation that in order to protect those establishments, they really needed to bring
these sort of left energies into them.
And in the process, and I talk about this in my book, The Rise of the Conservative Legal
Movement, what happened is that the professions became liberalized, but liberalism also became
professionalized to the point where both all those institutions, including government institutions,
are now seen as kind of part of the Democratic Party extended network. And Republicans,
almost by default, have become the party of being opposed to
those institutions and suspicious of them and skeptical.
I'm thinking about that line you just said, that the
institutions became liberalized and liberalism became
professionalized.
And something I've heard you say elsewhere is that Democrats have become the party of
etiquette, the party of manners.
What do you mean by that and is that related?
Yeah.
So if you think about what do institutions do, institutions of all sorts, is that they
tell people what to do and how to behave and
to sit up straight.
And there's classic versions of that.
When I was a boy, I used to go to South Carolina and my grandparents, who were good Christian
folk, would, you know, tell me to sit up straight and use my knife and fork in the right way
and give a man a proper handshake. And one way to think about a lot of the new things that people associate with DEI and
race on campuses is they're a sort of new form of cultural class etiquette.
And Democrats and liberal professions are the ones that generally tell people what to
say and how to say it. And that's whether it's the media or universities or schools,
all the way through, all those institutions that are basically in charge of setting the rules
and setting the sort of standards of decorum are now closer to being on the liberal side.
And that's also the case that a lot of the regulatory institutions we have, the things that both
regulate us economically and regulate us culturally, are connected to that larger liberal governing
project.
And so you can think about populism in part as a reaction to that degree that the etiquette,
manners, setting parts of our institutions are on one side and that therefore the residual,
the people who are actually the subjects of that regulation have gradually moved into
the Republican Party.
And I think you can actually see some of that in the movement of young men into the Republican
Party who often tend to think of themselves as the subjects of regulation and discipline
rather than the people who imagine themselves actually
doling it out.
So, Jen, there are these two coalitions now, and you have the anti-institutional coalition
around Donald Trump, right?
This is a coalition so committed to the destruction or weaponization of these institutions that
it would try to name Matt Gaetz as attorney general.
And you have the pro-institutional coalition, right?
In this house, we believe in science, Kamala Harris campaigning with Liz Cheney, a coalition
that has broadly united to try to stop these institutions from being burnt down.
When we cut politics along that line, what positions or textures or realities about these
institutions does a pro-institutional coalition miss?
You said something in a column recently to that effect that you, with Kamala Harris standing
in front of the White House as her sort of closing remarks, she's absolutely signaling
that this party is for these institutions.
And then you've got the Republicans on the other side.
And it was like the first time I sort of wasn't happy with your framing because it's missing
those who want to defend the need for institutions, especially in the face of everything that
is coming at this country, but don't want to defend them, want to reform them.
And I think, you know, what Steve was just talking about with this etiquette, there's
an aspect of it that is not just etiquette, it's this sort of, you might refer to it like
Nick Bagley's procedure fetish, right?
This cramped professional thinking where you're sort of basking in the complexities that run these institutions
that I think has become part of that defense that's at this point less
defensible than it should be. It's different to say we need these
institutions to face the 21st century than it is to say the way they run
today is okay. There is a center of gravity, I think, starting to emerge that's neither the blow it all ups
nor that sort of cramped, professionalized liberal defense of the institutions.
You talk a lot about the way in which you see liberals being focused on process, not
outcomes.
Yeah.
Your related point that political elites celebrate policy and the public feels delivery.
Yes.
Tell me about those disconnects.
I think we saw it a lot, unfortunately, in the Biden administration.
And I think it was part of the backlash.
I mean, certainly not all of it.
But probably the biggest example of it would be the Biden administration's insistence on the success
of the big bills that were passed, CHIPS, IRA, infrastructure, where they are incredible
accomplishments legislatively.
And if you look at it from that perspective, he is absolutely a hero.
But if you look at from the perspective of people in states in the US whose economies
have been hollowed out, it took so long to get that money out the door.
In fact, most of it isn't out the door.
It hasn't started actually building much yet.
That of course, there's less excitement about those legislative wins because the delivery
just isn't there. And it's not there in part because the administration, I think, didn't pay equal attention to the
implementation.
They kind of take it for granted that it's going to take forever to get that out the
door because that's the way this institution is built, and we're going to have to live
with that.
So have the team run as fast as they can at the problem.
They'll work 20 hour days.
They'll heroically jump through these hoops, but no one's actually trying to remove those
hoops to get that out the door.
They're just counting on public servants working 20 hours a day.
Over the past year, I've noticed that you and I share a very uncomfortable opinion inside
liberalism, which is Donald Trump and his allies have been very
clear in their intention to use an authority called Schedule F, which can turn much of
the federal workforce into political appointees who could be fired at the will of the president.
And they want to use this to hollow out much of the so-called deep state and replace it
with their people. And because that is legitimately dangerous, if what you want to do is hollow out much of the so-called deep state and replace it with their people.
And because that is legitimately dangerous, if what you want to do is hollow out skilled
employees and replace them with people who will prosecute your political enemies, the
liberal response in many ways has been absolutely not no Schedule F. And your response, and
to some degree mine, has been, okay, but does the civil service actually work as it
is constructed, right?
I mean, putting aside the question of whether or not you want Donald Trump in control of
it, is hiring and firing authority, is management, is it working?
So tell me a bit about how you've thought about that.
You know, I don't think Schedule F is civil service reform of any kind.
My metaphor for it is the foundations of the building are fantastic.
Go read the merit system principles.
They're in the US code.
They're great.
We would all agree with them.
You know, they go back to the 1883 Pendleton Act that says, hey, let's stop doing this
based on favor.
Let's hire people based on merit.
Let's give them jobs that they can do with skill and integrity.
Let's hold them accountable to working in the public interest.
It's all great stuff.
What has been built on that foundation over the past many decades no longer actually gets
those outcomes, those principles direct. It's all the cruft that's been sort of layered on top isn't serving those principles.
And we have to admit that.
Now, if you're going to renovate a house, you're going to have to bring some sledgehammers
and you're going to have to take some stuff down to the studs and rebuild from those principles
up. That is something that the status quo, in which I do implicate the Democrats, hasn't
taken it as a core agenda.
It's just not been on the table.
The problem with Schedule F is it's not taking things down to the studs.
It's going at the foundation.
It's going at the independence and integrity of the civil service, which
I don't want at all. And I don't think does anything to help you with performance management
or hiring on the basis of skills and experience.
You wrote something that I've been thinking about and you said, quote, don't get rid of
all guard rails and let government run wild. But yes, pull back on processes that no longer
serve us. that turn what so
much of what civil servants must do and what taxpayers foot the bill for into bullshit
jobs, and stop pretending those mountains of procedures protect the vulnerable.
In practice, paperwork favors the powerful.
You're talking about bureaucratic process, and process always exists for a reason.
And oftentimes, the reason. And oftentimes the reason,
certainly the stated reason, are good reasons, right? We want to protect the powerless. We
want to protect against fraud. What for you are the most common places where process and
the values that led to those processes diverge?
Maybe it's helpful to give you a concrete example.
I mentioned civil service.
It's something that's on my mind a lot for obvious reasons, but you have a system that
is supposed to hire people on the basis of merit.
But when you interpret that very, very, very rigidly, what you do is say, okay, we don't
want to have people involved in selecting candidates
who aren't familiar with all the ways in which we try to reduce or eliminate really bias
in the process.
And so what we'll do to hire civil servants is we will have HR people screen their resumes
and look for, and I'm not kidding you, exact matches in
the language between the job description and what's on their resume.
Because that's, if you're taking things very literally, an indicator that they have the
exact right skills for the job.
And then once you've found all the people who were great at cutting and pasting, then
you send them all a self-assessment questionnaire.
Because it's safer to have them self-assess
than it is to have, say, if it's a programming job, have programmers interview them where
they might bring their own biases to the table.
And then you've down-selected twice on the basis of their ability to copy and paste and
then essentially lie about their skills, because if you don't put master on every single level of the self-assessment,
you don't make it to the next cut.
Then we apply veteran's preference and that's the cert that gets handed to the hiring managers.
That is not consistent with merit.
You really are then hiring people just who know how to work the system.
That process that I just described where we rely entirely on self-assessments,
is how 90% of competitive jobs are done in federal government.
90% we do not assess independently.
But presumably people come in and interview.
Yes, but the people who get interviewed
are the people on that cert list, sorry to use
a technical term, who have been selected on those three steps.
And what is your understanding of how this evolved?
I think evolution is the right word.
That did not follow directly from the Pendleton Act and the subsequent legislation on civil service. But over time,
people create regulations and rules and processes and forms that they think are the correct
interpretation of the law that came or the regulation that they're working off of. And they have this culture, I think, that supports that a very literal interpretation
is the safest one.
And you have a culture of fear in which, again, you're trying to defend essentially against
the use of judgment.
If you use judgment, somebody can criticize your judgment.
If your process has no judgment in it, what is there to criticize?
Steve, I'm going to ask you the same question.
How do you understand how not necessarily that specific process, but the culture that
leads to that process evolved?
Yeah.
So, lots of cases in American history, we've had agencies that had sufficiently strong leaders who had
what Dan Carpenter calls reputations and networks. They were able to get their agencies out of
the sort of pull down to the lowest common denominator and make them into really dynamic
organizations focused on achieving something. So, my dad entered into NASA in the 1960s, and this was an agency that actually had a
lot of what political scientists call bureaucratic autonomy.
It had a lot of ability to organize itself, to hire, to fire on the basis of very high
standards for performance.
And part of our story is just we're not creating new examples like NASA or the FBI in the 1930s or the Forest
Service in the progressive era.
And so part of the problem is simply that a lot of agencies that used to be really high-performing
because they were viewed as having critical national tasks have fallen back down.
And the other part of it is something I talked about in an essay I wrote a few years ago
called Clujocracy is, again, there's in an essay I wrote a few years ago called Clujocracy,
is, again, there's no necessary system principle here, right?
It's that, you know, things go wrong, there's a scandal, we add a new process, we add a
new procedure without really thinking about how it interacts with all the rest of it.
And so we shouldn't necessarily think that the problems that Jen is describing are a result of the fact that anybody designed this thing to operate this way.
It's really the result of just additional layers of accretion without
corresponding layers of destruction.
And that's where I think Jen's earlier point that we actually do need in some
cases a moment where we're clear cutting through a lot of this stuff
to go back and think about how would we design organizations if we really thought that their
missions were critical and urgent and needed to happen fast, whether it's climate or building
infrastructure or anything else, we would not design organizations that looked like
this.
But we're skipping over a really important point here
that Steve touched on when he mentioned scandal,
which is the adversarial nature of all this.
So when I said you have to be able to defend
the candidate you just chose or the regulation
that you just wrote because the process was right
and the less judgment was involved in it,
the easier it is to defend it.
The reason for that is that people attack you all the time.
It's a political world in which somebody is going to say,
I don't like that decision much more
than in the private sector.
And so we really shouldn't understate the degree
that the adversarial nature of this drives
that risk aversion.
And I think that's true earlier too, when we were talking about the Democrats being
the party of defending these institutions, there are those like Mark Dunkleman and out
there who has a book coming out on this, who'll say, I don't know, I actually see a lot in
the Democratic Party, which is about attacking the institutions.
And Steve was referring to that earlier, sort of the 60s and 70s.
That's still very much in our DNA as Democrats is to sue, sue, sue.
Well, if we sue, sue, sue all the time for all sorts of reasons.
Sueing the government here, you mean?
Exactly.
I'm sorry.
Sueing the government.
Then every time we sue, we make the government more risk averse.
There's a lot of adversarialism out there, and the natural result of that is going to
be a system in which you defend your judgments by using no judgment.
I think Jen's right that a lot of that suspicion of judgment really comes in two layers.
It comes in the one is the 60s and 70s layer when the left
and liberals were mostly on the outside attacking institutions. They were attacking government
institutions that they thought were building too many dams and not using public lands in
the right way and were too close and we were worried about capture. And so we built a lot
of these institutions and rules and procedures in order to stop that.
And then simultaneously, there was also a feeling on the right that these government institutions were
connected to professions that were viewed as being ideologically not sympathetic to them.
And so they wanted to govern them and get rid of the discretion of them for those ideological or cultural
reasons.
And so we have, in a way, a bunch of legacy institutions from an earlier era of liberal
distrust layered onto a bunch of institutions and rules and supervision of contemporary
right of center distrust of bureaucracy.
And the result is that it's really hard to create agencies that are focused on doing stuff and achieving
relatively consensual goals.
In the market, a company is vulnerable to profits and
losses.
If they're not selling the product, eventually they'll go
out of business.
And the government is vulnerable to political
critique.
And that critique can express itself in elections.
It can express itself through having the agency head
dragged before Congress.
But what the agencies, what the bureaucracy does
in response to critique, at least when critique gets
to a certain level, is adopt or have imposed upon it.
Some kind of process, at least facially,
answers the critique.
And so some of these critiques are on the left, right?
There's bias in your hiring.
Some of them are on the right.
You know, the NIH or the NSF are funding stupid studies, right?
Why are you studying the sex lives of beetles?
Something you've seen coming up right now with Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk getting ready
for their government efficiency commission.
But it's not really about the delivery of services.
And it doesn't get answered that way.
Yeah.
I mean, a thing you see a lot, and I've seen this particularly around things like the slowness
in permitting the new green infrastructure that's been enabled under the IRA and infrastructure
acts is staff saying, we have to do all this process because if we don't do all this process, we're
going to get stopped from getting the outcomes. And it's just weird because they really actually
do care about the outcomes, but they're defending the process, which is going to take so long that
the stuff doesn't get built in the time that we need it. And it's a little hard to argue because
they really are going to get sued.
And part of what we need to do in this next era, I think, is not just criticize them for
being obsessed with the process, but reduce the surface area for attack by adversarial
legalism.
And that is profoundly uncomfortable for the left.
I mean, go to lefty funders and say, hey, stop suing the government.
It's not good for it.
Well, this is particularly unwelcome message at this particular moment where they are gearing
up to sue the life out of the federal government under Trump and probably should be.
But it's a very difficult nuanced situation.
I mean, this is part of how we got here. Steve, one thing I've been thinking about is the actual election results.
I think after any campaign, we tend to think about the things that worked or didn't work
in the campaign. And so in testing Donald Trump's ad about Kamala Harris's support
for gender reassignment surgeries for undocumented immigrants in prison was a
very effective ad. So there's a lot of talk about trans issues and wokeness. And I'm
not saying all that is not politically worth talking about. But I was looking at some election results and it was weighting the shift in the vote
by the density of the place.
And what it shows is in the most dense places, which is to say the big cities, the vote turned
against Democrats the most.
That was really where Democrats lost huge amounts of support.
That's not necessarily where that ad was playing a lot because he's typically, we're not as
contested, right?
You know, Los Angeles and New York were not huge battlegrounds.
But there are places where people were very exposed to blue state governance, exposed
to the cost of living, exposed to housing crises, exposed to disorder on the streets,
homeless encampments.
I'm sort of curious what you make of the relationship between blue states and the shift against
Democrats, which was a lot bigger than in battleground states, and big cities and the
shift against Democrats, which I think speaks to something about living under current liberal
urban governance.
Yeah.
So I've thought a lot about this, and we do need to always remember that we're, all of
us are susceptible to believing that the reason that our candidate lost is that they didn't
come close enough to our own preferences.
But I actually think that that Harris lost because she wasn't close enough to my own
preferences.
But more particularly, I think that a lot of people, especially the people who are the closest to blue state, blue city governance in its purest form, have recognized a kind
of what I call party group thing.
That they've been through wave after wave of being asked to deny things that seem like
the evidence of their own eyes, right? They've been asked to deny that people doing fair jumping at subway stations is just bad
and is disorderly and that they have to put up with people stealing stuff from CVS in
a kind of environment of complete impunity.
And again, when you think about just the last five or six years, the number of things that arguably liberals just got wrong.
You mentioned the transgender ideology stuff.
I do think there's a good argument that the United States, that public health authorities
and medical authorities actually got away from the opinions of other medical authorities
in other countries.
So it wasn't just that the problem was that this is a reaction against expertise.
It's actually something ideological happened inside of these professions.
Do you think about the environment of the 2019 primary?
There was a kind of convergence all on a move to the left.
The summer 2020 freak out on race and crime. The COVID convergence on
school closures. I could go on and on, but I think at some point it wouldn't be surprising
if a lot of people who are the closest to blue state governance, who are not necessarily
conservatives just looked around themselves and said something's not right about these
people. These people actually seem, who claim to be the experts and to know what they're doing,
seem like they keep getting stuff wrong.
And it wouldn't be surprising at all if that ended up in the election results.
That wasn't just a shift right in who we voted for for the presidential.
You look at a city like San Francisco, where the mayor and the city council also shift or city supervisors shifted right or at least more moderate. And you look at
the dialogue, I think that has sparked that shift. And what Steve says I think is certainly
borne out. They're less worried now about the sort of performance of liberal values
or getting their elected leaders to say the
right things that sound liberal and more worried about real outcomes because it's in their
face and they're starting to build power around the idea that this institution actually has
to work no matter what we say our values are. They're looking at these issues that have been
really, I think, at the federal level until now. How do you have the capacity to actually do this?
How are we going to have the right people in place inside government in a city like San Francisco?
How are we going to reduce the burdens on those people so that actually could get the housing built, for instance?
And then how are we going to close the loop between the intentions of law and policy and
its implementation?
And you see groups like the Abundance Net were actually building power behind those
ideas, not just the, we're a liberal city, we're going to say nice things.
I think, Steve, there is a connection with some work I know that you're doing.
So after 2016, Democrats, I think, become rightly alarmed about minoritarianism in elections
and at the federal level.
You have Donald Trump winning with the Electoral College, but not the popular vote.
There's a very big red preference in the Senate for Republicans. And you sort of have years where one of the main things Democrats are talking
about, and again, I don't dismiss this. I think this is a real problem, but is the capacity
of the Republican Party to wield very large amounts of power without actually winning
a majority of the electorate. This time, it looks like Donald Trump did win at the very least a plurality of the electorate.
But something you've been writing about, Steve, is minoritarianism in the institutions of
American life and in the institutions that Democrats largely control and the ways that
has turned people off.
Tell me a bit about how your thinking on that has been shifting.
Yeah.
So, I've been thinking a lot about this argument that you see, especially among, first among
comparative politics scholars, but also American politics, the idea of democratic backsliding,
which comes out of a belief that demographic change is turning against right of center parties and movements,
and that predictably their response to that is not going to be to shift their appeal,
but to try to use electoral skullduggery or institutional hardball to avoid having to
adapt and being able to govern from a minority basis in the electorate.
Now that obviously is a little bit of a hard argument to hold onto given especially the
moves in the Hispanic vote in the election.
Actually turns out that populist parties have an appeal to at least parts of ethnic or racial
minorities.
But I've also always thought there's a little bit of a gaslighting quality to the argument
for monarchitarianism because it sort of presumes that the status quo, other than that, was
majoritarian.
But actually, liberal democratic governance, the kind you're talking about, has gotten
more and more monarchitarian over time.
And you can think of just a couple of examples. more and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more,
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more,
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more,
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more,
more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more, and more and that's caused prices to go up. Similar stories could be told in infrastructure where very small minorities have a lot of
blocking power and can use laws like NEPA or CEQA or other kind of laws like that in
order to stop things that actually large majorities want to build.
And the final example I would give is what I call regulatory professional monarcharianism. A lot of the regulation, especially social
regulation that comes out of agencies around things like
Title IX, which was all over the discussions of trans issues
in this, are really driven by small professional consensus
and that end up generating things that make entire sense
within those small
professional groups, but are often seem weird to people on the outside.
And so I think one of the challenges that we need as we're starting to think about
what a democratic party looks like going forward is actually to think about whether this party,
the party of FDR, the party of winning big majorities, has become
so captured by the various different forms of minoritarian governance that it's hard
for them to really think in encompassing ways about what building broad majorities would
look like.
It's sort of tragic in a sense, the way that the discussion about the threat to democracy
is entirely about Trump, completely understandably.
There is a threat to democracy here.
But it means that discussion of what democracy is and what we need to do to protect it has no room for the
minoritarianism
discussion that Steve brings up. And I think we have to make room for it even in this time of great threat.
up. And I think we have to make room for it even in this time of great threat. Well, I think one way to think about that is Steve mentioned a second ago, this sort
of era where people are thinking about the Democratic Party going forward. And I want
to do some of that in this conversation. But before that, I want to think about what the
Democratic Party looked like going backwards. I think that Bill Clinton has fallen very
far out of favor in Democratic Party circles party circles, not as a political talent,
but as a political thinker.
And people are mad, still mad that he said, you know, the era of big government is over.
And I've got my critiques of Bill Clinton.
But I was thinking as we've seen the sort of emergence of the Department of Governmental
Efficiency or DOJ, because we are run by meme lords now.
How there was something like that that was very high profile.
It was after Clinton won in 1992, Al Gore's very, very high profile role was to run this
reinventing government effort.
So have you fixed the government?
It certainly needs it.
And here he is on the David Letterman show trying to popularize what he's doing, but
also positioning him and his administration as critics of a government that doesn't work
that well.
All right.
What do we have here?
Okay.
The government spends $200 billion a year buying goods and services.
One of the things we found was ashtrays, which they call ash receivers tobacco desk type.
But this is a quality item. Yeah, but this is a designer ashtray because
the taxpayers have paid lots of people to specify everything about this, including the
testing procedure, which has
to be on a plank made out of maple for some reason.
Now, this is not one of your jobs.
This is, no.
I'm curious, Steve, when you look back at that era in the Democratic Party and the sort
of complicated relationship it had with the government, both the party of government and
really trying hard to be the party of government reform.
How is that possible then and what lessons are in it now?
Yeah.
I mean, I think we should go back to the point that Jen made, which is that there's a space
for what you might think of as internal institutional critique, where we do think that expertise and institutions of
various sorts are really critical,
but that you can love institutions to death.
You can love them enough to always defend them,
whereas actually being a good institutionalist often
means you have to be willing to reform
the thing you love in order to make it actually worthy of defense.
I actually think about this a lot in terms of universities.
So universities are about to be facing a lot of attacks.
And I think some of them are justifiable, that we've seen gradual increases in ideological
homogeneity.
And there's an attack from the outside that really wants to, in many cases, destroy these
universities, or at least bring them to heel, whereas I think there's a kind of internal
critique that we can have in these institutions that say, look, these places need to become more ideologically
heterogeneous.
They need to have more of a culture of free speech in order to preserve
themselves as institutions.
And I think you saw the same thing in Bill Clinton and Al Gore, that they
realized that if people are going to trust institutions and they're going to
trust them to do big important things, that people have to think that the people
who are running them are actually willing to grab them by the scruff of the neck and
actually reform them.
Now, I think a lot of the reforms that came out of the Reinventing Government Initiative,
especially the early outs for civil servants, when it's often led the best people to leave the government,
didn't exactly work out the way they should.
But I think Clinton definitely recognized
that for people to be willing to let government do big things,
they needed to trust that government was actually on their side
and wasn't entirely captured by their own employees and processes. I want to pick up on that word trust, Jen, because I've been thinking about what is my
relationship to these institutions.
And I've been working on a book called Abundance with Derek Thompson, sort of all about why it's become so hard to build,
why it has become hard to fund the kind of science that leads to new inventions.
And one thing I just keep coming back to is a question of trust. If you ask me
what is my single principle for forming the government, I would say it's to give the people running major parts of
the government and making decisions the trust, the
discretion, the freedom to act without so much process on
them, without so many audits being done to them.
And yes, some things will go wrong, but more things will
go right.
In the way I love government or love institutions, like what it means to me
to believe in something is to give it some trust. And my worry is that the culture of reform
is not a culture of trust, it's a culture of oversight. The culture of reform is not a culture
of giving discretion, it's a culture of taking it away. You failed.
Now we're watching you. Or we're going to break you, right? Which is like the right
wing version of this. We're going to take all your money. We're going to fire all your
people. I'm curious how you think about this. What are your principles?
I think you're exactly right. And trust goes both ways. We also don't trust people when they interact with government, right? We ask you
to verify everything 10 times before we give you a benefit. We talk to you often in really
insulting terms. So both sides are doing something uncomfortable and probably destructive of that
relationship right now. But I think one of the big things that we need to do if we're
serious about reform is recognize that the way we practice oversight today increases risk aversion.
So what is usually happening when oversight needs to occur is we've waited till something
went wrong. We are outraged and having hearings about it and the person who can shout at the
bureaucrat the loudest and say the meanest thing to them is the person who wins.
And what we're upset about is that they didn't use judgment, that they didn't go for the
outcome, that they followed the procedure and they're hiding behind that, but the outcome
didn't actually result.
Healthcare.gov is a pretty good example of that, but there are plenty of others.
And I'm seeing more recognition of that on the Hill than I ever thought I would.
I've gone to talk to staffers on the Hill after the book came out.
It was great.
People wanted to engage.
Obviously, what we're doing isn't working.
I can see that.
And I got in these discussions with these staffers who would be like, help us craft
the right mandates and constraints on this agency that we think is underperforming.
And I would say to them, look, you've been imposing mandates and constraints on this
agency for decades.
I mean, not you personally, you got here last year, but everybody before you has.
How is that working?
And they're going, yeah, it's really not.
But we don't have another model.
And like there is another model.
You work to remove constraints.
You work towards enablement and capacity building in that agency.
And there's more interest in those ideas now than there ever has been before.
And I think there's the glimmers of a new kind of relationship, not just between the
public and government, but I think it has to start with between the executive and legislative
branches so that they can start to build this feedback loop.
Is trust possible though, Steve, when the institutions are so lopsided in terms of who
is part of them?
I mean, you were talking a minute ago about the way minoritarianism and the sort of control of these
institutions and the staffing of them by a fairly
ideologically narrow slice of the country weakens them.
And I'm obviously not sympathetic to the Trumpist
desire to have a Sherman-esque march through the
administrative state and burn
it down and replace it with their own lackeys.
But I am sympathetic to a sort of underlying complaint here, which is that conservatives
are not represented in the government.
Even when they take power, they feel that they're at war with it, they're fighting
it.
Now, maybe that was less true when it was the party of George W. Bush or Mitt Romney. But I do think there as part of the sort of educational polarization we've
seen, the institutional polarization we've seen, the sense that these agencies are not
ideologically diverse, that they do not represent people is not wrong. And so, yes, on the one
hand, it has led to a really toxic reaction on the right, a belief that
these can never be fair, that they are not fair now, and that they just need to be made
unfair in the right's favor.
But on the other hand, it's like a little hard to imagine.
I mean, what are you going to do, an ideological affirmative action program for the Department
of Transportation?
Right? That doesn't exactly sound like a solution either.
Yeah. So I would say I think a lot of these parts of government could be better at admitting
when they mess up. One thing that's way back underneath the psychological substructure
of this election is COVID. This was an enormous, and I think people can underestimate or remember, just what an enormous exercise of the
government's coercive authority was involved in the COVID shutdowns,
right? The degree to which lots of people had their basic movements,
the degree to which they could send their kids to school, whether
they had to wear a mask, whether they had to put a needle in their
arm, all of these things are remarkably coercive, and people were mostly told that they had
to do it, and the experts had all made the right judgment, and they were stupid because
they didn't do it.
And lots of them, now we know the evidence is in, were just the wrong calls.
Closing down schools was an enormously bad call.
I think there's a good argument that,
at least in cost benefit terms,
closing down the economy was a bad call,
but there's really been no post hoc self-assessment
by all the people who made these decisions.
And that's a rational basis of distrust.
And that's one thing I wanna go back to,
is saying distrust is not irrational. Lots of people distrust. And that's one thing I want to go back to, is saying distrust is not irrational.
Lots of people distrust for rational reasons.
The other part of this is, again, the ways that these professions, and this is how we
govern ourselves, we govern ourselves through expert institutions, because they become more
ideologically homogenous, that leads to distrust in two ways. One, people think that their views are not represented inside these professions.
But also they're more likely to think, to go back to this group think point, that institutions
that don't have conflict and seem to be entirely averse to conflict and disagreement, they,
you know, again, reasonably, rationally suspect that somebody's hiding
something.
And I think if our institutions became more open, open to critique, open to disagreement,
that would actually increase trust.
And I think there's also one last part I was reading about the discussion of Kamala Harris
and her decision about whether to go on the Joe Rogan show.
And the account that was given of why she decided not to when they were apparently thinking
about it was because the staff decided they were uncomfortable with it.
And I think that shows something about this sort of substructure that's underneath the
governance of Democrats, that there's a kind of just buzz that's at a low level that influences
the vibes of decision-making.
And I think this is where the factional stuff I've written about is concerned.
I think a party, a Democratic party, that was more diverse at that staff level would
also be less likely to make what were in retrospect big mistakes, too.
I'm glad you brought up Rogan, who I think is interesting for a few dimensions of this.
I'm not known, to be honest, what to make of that reporting about why Harris didn't
end up going on it.
Because on the one hand, that is named, right?
That's not an anonymous campaign official.
That's Jen Palmieri, who's a very senior campaign official in the Democratic Party.
She was advising Doug Emhoff, and she put her name to that, right?
Which is, I think, an important thing for taking it seriously.
And on the other hand, the story as I understood it
was that they wanted Rogan to fly to them
and they were limiting it to an hour
and that they weren't, like, they had not made a decision
not to go on Rogan.
So it implies to me that even if there was staff dissent,
which I'm not shocked to hear there was,
it may not have been the only or the decisive factor. But Democrats lost Rogan long before October of 2024. And
the specific period in which they lost Rogan was COVID. And actually a lot of the people
were we might be sort of thinking about here, Elon Musk clearly turned much more hard right
wing in the pandemic period. And you were talking a second ago, Steve, about
how the pandemic was an extraordinary period of governmental coercion. And by the way,
not just from Democrats, right? You look at what Mike DeWine was doing in Ohio, right?
There are a lot of Republican governors who are also locking down economies and trying
to figure this out. It was a very hard time and people were making decisions under very
uncertain information.
But one other thing that was happening and you saw it applied to people like Rogan was
cultural coercion.
It wasn't the power of the government yelling at you.
It was the liberals online.
It was the public health authorities who were just tweeting, but who on the one hand were
saying everybody has to stay inside.
We're locking down the economy,
but definitely go protest for George Floyd
because racism is a public health issue as well.
I mean, for people who are already skeptical,
that was a real shattering of any trust left,
but the school lockdowns were another big piece of that.
I was just interviewing Jared Polis for a column,
the governor of Colorado, and one reason I think
he had such a huge resounding
reelection in 2022, he won by almost 20 points in a not easy year for Democrats. I mean, his win was
no less impressive than what Rhonda Santus did in Florida to me. But also, I think one reason Colorado
did not shift right very much this year, it was only a point or two, is Paulus among Democrats was
a very, you know, he was a sort of libertarian
adjacent democratic governor, right?
He wore a mask, he got vaccinated, he gave out good information, but he was much quicker
to reopen Colorado and he was much more respectful of the idea that individual liberty was one
of the equities that needed to be weighed here.
And he was telling me that, you know, people still come up to him on the streets and thank
him for the way that he managed the pandemic
in Colorado. So that's a bit of a long take, but I do think of the pandemic as a space
where there was a lot of repulsion of some of the people we now think of as representing
the sort of institutionally skeptic side of this Democrats lost. And then a lot of that
was cultural. It wasn't just the government. It was the sort of like allied network of institutions and then a lot of people from those institutions wielding
that authority online and in the public square.
I mean, I do think if I was thinking about people like Joe Rogan, and I can't admit that
I listened to all 4,000 hours of podcasts that he records every year, but one thing
I think both him and Musk clearly had in common was,
first of all, the COVID closures really did affect Musk's core business. So he was, in fact,
the subject of what he would reasonably think of as coercive authority. That also interacted with
the trans issue, which I think was very important for both Rogan and for
Musk.
So, it wasn't just the COVID part.
And I think the other part, the thing that, again, it's important to remember how many
of these things are all happening at the same time.
The response to George Floyd, the at least temporary spike in crime, that all happens
at the same time that we called the Great Awakening. One way to think of the Great Awakening is it was
also a moment of gigantic groupthink. There was enormous
social pressure against diverging from any of those
quite exotic elite consensus that had emerged in that
period. And I do think that that drove parts of the Democratic Party
into not all the way where activists were,
but too far toward them
for what a majoritarian political institution should be.
And again, that's another reason why I think this party
really needs more durable internal factional conflict
that can maintain a culture of disagreement,
in part in order to keep the Democratic Party from getting too close to the rocks,
which is part of what happened, I think, in 2020, 2021, 2022.
I was reminded yesterday that the other thing that pushed Musk right after the things that were just mentioned
was not being invited to the EV summit by Biden. And that was described to me as the
thing that pushed him over. And it's tied together, right? I have no idea why they didn't
invite him, but clearly he was no longer in the tribe.
Does that reflect, Jen, something broader though in the way democratic culture, including
policymaking culture operated in this period, which was on the one hand, it was very allergic,
has been extremely allergic to dissension within the coalition.
If you are inside the tent, they want you on board, right?
All the way, you know, Bernie Sanders all the way in a way to Liz Cheney.
But if you're not, if you're culturally outside the tent, then you're really gone.
Things operated not through disagreement and argument, but marginalization and ostracism.
You could feel this happening.
There was incredible management of the broad spectrum of liberals, right? And I think it's one reason Joe Biden in many ways was very popular president,
even very late in the game among sort of Washington Democratic types.
He never disappointed them until maybe Gaza.
He really worked very hard to keep every part of it on board.
But the going into spaces where you didn't like the people, that kind of fell
off in
part because there was this backlash, right?
There was backlash to Bernie Sanders going on Rogan years ago, right?
There was a view that you should gatekeep, that there were certain voices that should
not be elevated in the public discourse.
It was platforming them, right?
Every time I have people on the right on, I get emails that I'm platforming them.
I was going to say, there's nobody who comes on the show who doesn't have a platform.
And the idea that the question is whether or not you give people a stage to stand on
rather than whether or not you are talking to them, right?
It misses that there is an exchange happening here.
How do you think about the relationship to discriminant conflict among Democrats?
I'm not in democratic politics.
I am on the policy and implementation side of it.
So I see the tendencies that you're
talking about from the struggles of public servants
to implement things like the CHIPS Act, which famously,
and you've written about this, has a lot in there
for all the different groups.
And the ways in which they are working 20 hours a day and yet,
what was it, two years after those bills, we had 17% of the dollars out the door.
And I think what we miss is that there are already a bunch of requirements that
when we're throwing all that stuff in a bucket and calling it a bill, we're not
even thinking about.
So you have companies applying for grants for projects that are already in process,
which was smart.
You don't want them to just stop and wait for the money.
But then they have to go tell the companies, by the way, in addition to all the things
we needed you to talk about in your grant application to cover all these liberal check
boxes, you also need to comply with the Davis-Bacon Act, which is going to be thousands of hours
of work.
You've got them complaining about things that are still around, like the Paperwork Reduction
Act.
And I think it's not just that tendency to say yes to everybody, but also not to go clear
out some of the requirements that already exist and really interrogate the burden
of administering these programs, the full burden that has come from that sort of accretion
or barnacles on the ship.
Yeah, there were two things in what Ezra said earlier that I think are worth taking note
of.
One is this point about the groups, which Ezra discussed with my old friend Mike Lind
on a previous podcast, that part of the problem with the Democratic Party is that liberalism
has a lot of what in other work I've called advocacy organizations rather than representative
organizations.
That is, they're groups that claim to speak for
populations that they themselves have not mobilized or organized.
And that part of the coalitional etiquette of the Democratic Party is not really
questioning the basis of many groups to speak for the groups that they're claiming to speak for.
And I think that's one part of it.
And I also think that Ezra was talking
about how previous Democratic presidents had more
of an instinct to at least punch around
a bit of their own coalition.
The Sister Soldier thing is obvious with Bill Clinton,
but I think we forget how much Barack Obama was
an incredibly strong supporter of education reform.
And I think he believed in it.
The people he trusted believed in it.
But I think he was entirely aware that
the getting in fights with teachers unions was a good look for him.
Whereas Biden, especially because of the sort of treaty he had to do with Sanders and Warren,
was part of that treaty, effectively,
was not doing any of that,
even though the Democratic Party desperately needed to
send some signals that teachers unions
needed to go back to work right in the beginning of 2021,
which they weren't able to do.
And that crime in especially
democratic cities that they needed to do
something about it and pass a bill immediately.
It was criminal political malpractice not to push for a significant policing and other kind of reforms in the beginning of 2021
that would have given additional resources and that at least would have sent the signal that Democrats took these things seriously
and they weren't engaging in a kind of self-censorship
to not see what lots of ordinary voters saw.
One thing you've said, Jen, is that you think the Democrats need to be prioritizing what
you've called I-95-ness.
Yeah.
I think that might be a nice place to end here.
What is I-95-ness?
It's the ability to say, we've got to get this thing done as Josh Shapiro did when I-95 collapsed.
And he said, even though there are all sorts of barriers to getting this roadway open again,
we're going to suspend those barriers and make this happen.
And you can see in the election, you know, results are so much enthusiasm, I think, for
that kind of leadership.
Obviously, he's a democratic governor.
But yeah, it takes a lot of backbone.
A lot of people pointed out that he did not suspend every rule to make that happen.
He did it with union labor, but he chose which ones he would suspend.
And it only took them days to get I-95 back open.
A similar construction project could have taken five years, 10 years, I mean, to get
approvals.
So it was a really remarkable kind of show of leadership that we want to see more in
Democrats.
So then, always our final question, and this time to you both, because there are two of
you, what are two books you would recommend to the audience?
And Steve, I'll start with you.
So I'm going to do some articles instead to mix things up. The first is a classic by
Theida Scotchpull called Voice and Inequality, the Transformation of American Civic Democracy.
And Theida argued there that American democracy has experienced a remarkable decline in a
wide range of cross-class civic organizations that used to be the real
backbone of how America was organized for politics and society. And we've replaced
it with a bunch of organizations, think tanks like the one I'm in just to own it,
and public interest groups and litigation organizations that have no members but
have supporters in foundations.
And the consequence of that is we've replaced a kind of democratic form of organization
with an oligarchic form of organization in which professionals and those who can fund
them are the power.
And I think in a way, Democrats need to grapple with the fact that that is in fact how much
of the groups that we're talking about are organized.
And the second is a piece by Leah Brooks and Zach Liscow with the incredibly boring title,
Infrastructure Costs, that was in the American Economic Journal in 2023.
And they show in exhaustive detail just how much the cost of building infrastructure in
the U.S. have gone up, which Jen was talking about earlier.
And they demonstrate that the explanation for that increase, which I think is behind
a lot of Americans' sense that nothing works, is citizen voice, that there's so many opportunities
for often quite minoritarian intervention in building things that everything takes very
long, it takes a lot more.
And the other thing is government doesn't get big wins that translate into trust and
willingness to invest it with new resources.
And Jen?
Perfect transition to my first one, which is Why Nothing Works by Mark Dunkleman, a
cheater because it's not out yet.
It comes out in February, but you can pre-order it. And it's essentially a lecture from the left to the left about how we've gotten in our
way.
What I really appreciated about it was helping understand why we got in our way, the roots
of this in our culture and the ways we've sort of, we've swung wildly between two instincts
that we need to balance a lot and I highly recommend
it.
The second one is The Unaccountability Machine by Dan Davies, which is just a fantastic exploration
of why when things go very wrong in our society, at the end of the day, after all of the investigations,
there's sort of no one to blame and it's the structures of our institution that we've created to do that.
I think it's a fantastic pairing actually with the articles that Steve just mentioned
and with why nothing works.
But it'll really make you think about how we have structured our society to have no
one to blame.
Jen Parker, Steve Tellis.
Thank you very much. Great to be here, Ezra. Yeah,, Steve Tellis, thank you very much.
Great to be here, Ezra.
Yeah, I really enjoyed it. Thanks The Ezra Klanjo is produced by Jack McCordick, fact checking by Michelle
Harris with Kate Sinclair, mixing by Isaac Jones, Afim Shapiro, and Amin Sahota.
Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon.
The show's production team also includes Roland Hu, Elias Isquith, and Kristin Lin.
Original music by Pat McCusker, audience strategy by Christina Samuelski and Shannon Busta.
The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.