The Ezra Klein Show - Would Bernie Have Won?
Episode Date: November 26, 2024There are a lot of different opinions about how the Democratic Party should rebuild after the blow of Donald Trump’s victory. And for the next two episodes, we’re going to showcase two very differ...ent ones.Faiz Shakir was Bernie Sanders’s 2020 campaign manager, and he believes that Democrats need to embrace a Sanders-style class-first populism. This question of whether Sanders or a candidate like him could have beaten Trump loomed over Democratic post-mortems of the 2016 election, and they’ve reared up again this year, as Democrats have continued to lose working-class voters. As Sanders put it in a blistering statement: “It should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned working-class people would find that the working class has abandoned them.”But some Democrats have been frustrated with this criticism. President Biden has been arguably the most economically populist president of the modern era. And the Democrats who have been winning in redder parts of the country aren’t democratic socialists. So I wanted to have Shakir on for a lively debate. Shakir worked not just for Sanders; he was also a senior adviser to the Senate majority leader Harry Reid and to Nancy Pelosi. And he’s currently the founder and executive director of More Perfect Union, a media outlet focused on issues affecting America’s working class.This episode contains strong language.Book Recommendations:The Tyranny of Merit by Michael J. SandelLeaders Eat Last by Simon SinekDon’t Get above Your Raisin’ by Bill C. MaloneThoughts? 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 Rollin Hu. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris, with Kate Sinclair. Mixing by Isaac Jones, with Aman Sahota and Efim Shapiro. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Elias Isquith, Kristin Lin and Jack McCordick. 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. And special thanks to Switch and Board Podcast Studio. 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From New York Times opinion, this is the Ezra Klein show. As the Democratic Party debates where to go after its 2024 drubbing, we're going to spend
the next two episodes of the show featuring two very different perspectives on the way
forward.
After Trump won the election, Bernie Sanders released a blistering statement, saying that,
quote, it should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned
working class people would find that the working class has abandoned them.
And Bernie's advisors and allies have been making their own versions of this argument
and jockeying for the positions would help them rebuild the Democratic Party around this vision.
Some have floated Bernie's 2020 campaign manager, Faz Shakir, to be the next chair of the Democratic
National Committee.
And Faz sent me an email after the episode with Patrick Graffini, the Republican pollster
who's been tracking the movement of working class voters to the GOP, saying there was
a friendly debate he wanted to have here.
That Bernie, or at least Bernieism, is the obvious answer, and Democrats simply refuse
to see it.
And the fact that they refuse to see it says something very telling about the party.
At the same time, I've heard from a lot of Democrats who are annoyed, to say the least,
about this attack from Sanders' world.
Democrats abandoned the working class. Biden
has been the most economically populous president of the modern era. He has been the most pro-labor
president of the modern era. And what did it get him or Harris? And if democratic socialism,
if Bernieism is the answer to winning back these voters, why don't you see democratic
socialists winning in red districts? So this is a rich conversation, and it's a very real debate among Democrats right now.
And Fazz, who I've known for years, is a great person to have on to talk about it.
He has seen the Democratic Party from every vantage point.
Pininj has worked for Sanders, he's worked in senior positions for Nancy Pelosi, for
Harry Reid, for the ACLU.
He co-founded ThinkProgress, and he's currently the executive director of the pro-worker nonprofit media organization, More Perfect Union. As always,
my email, Ezra Klein show at ny times.com.
Faz Shakir, welcome to the show. Thank you, Azar.
Good to hear from you.
So you emailed me after the Patrick Ruffini episode saying that we should have a friendly
debate about why Bernie Sanders isn't mentioned more in these conversations and the discomfort
you feel that people, maybe me, maybe the Democratic parties you understand
it have with him and his politics.
So let's start there.
What's the shape of that debate?
Do you agree with that?
First of all, I think we should probably start with it.
My view, there are people who in the Democratic ranks as a constituency, I find and feel as
someone who's, as you know, worked for him for a long period of time, kind of a discomfort,
a spin, a shun.
You know, here's Bernie talking again about the Democratic parties banning the working class,
that kind of attitude that I roll and move on.
And I'm saying, don't I roll, let's talk about it.
And that's what I wanted to engage.
But you tell me that I'm off base on that.
— Well, I have multiple thoughts on it.
One is that if you ask me who has been the most prominent member of Congress being heard
in the media giving their postmortem on 2024, it is Bernie Sanders, right?
He's one of the most prominent members of the Democratic Senate caucus.
He was very close to the Biden administration.
He was very woven into the Biden administration.
Many of his people were an Elizabeth Warren's people from a similar wing of the party were to the Biden administration. He was very woven into the Biden administration. Many of his people were an Elizabeth Warren's people from a similar wing of the party were
in the Biden administration.
So sometimes it feels to me like the Bernie wing of the party still has this feeling of
exclusion that when I look around, I mean, I think most members of Congress would be
pretty excited to have the level of influence over Democrats that Bernie Sanders has.
Did you hear or see Kamala Harris stand with Bernie Sanders during the course of her campaign?
Did you hear or see any major Democratic candidates campaign with Bernie Sanders?
I don't know.
You tell me.
No.
The answer was no.
And that goes to the heart of an all in, all all-of-the-above strategy for the Democratic Party, I would argue
Joe Biden stood out from a crowd in which he always appreciated and respected that this
vision of a Democratic Party has a progressive economic populist element to it and has value to
the Democratic Party. And I, even to the end of the campaign, Joe Biden held an official side event with
Bernie Sanders in New Hampshire during that course, I think it was sometime in
October, to talk about prescription drug prices.
During that whole period of time, Harris campaign did not want to stand with
Bernie Sanders.
So I, and it wasn't just her, but there are other Democrats too.
And that's where I sense and feel to your point saying, oh, you know, you guys,
you know, you run the Senate Help Committee and you Committee and you're an important part of the Democratic Party.
I'm like, that doesn't always feel that way.
So are we talking here about Bernie Sanders? Are we talking about this thing one might
call Bernie Sanders-ism?
Yes.
Because I think I want to talk more about the latter.
I think he's a person who reflects.
Right, exactly. We're moving into now the conversation.
What is Bernie Sanders-ism that you think is being rejected by the Democratic Party?
Well, fundamentally, it's an economic first style of thinking that we speak to and appeal
to working class Americans.
We both do it in policy, but we also do it in politics. There are approaches in which you signal and send messages to working class people
that they are part of this coalition.
Not only part of it, but that we think of you first and foremost.
And I straddle these worlds, straddle a lot of different worlds,
and one of the things I often do is interview people who work for me,
people who are candidates, and I ask them this question. I'm interested in what
your response will be, which is I, blindfolded as recline, I drop you into a random city
in America for this, I'm going to say it's Atlanta or Las Vegas or Baraboo, Wisconsin,
Superior, Wisconsin, Marquette, Michigan. I'm going to drop you in. There's going to
be 100 people in a room. You're going to go in there not knowing anything about the people in this
room. And your job is to persuade them. You go in there, Ezra, what are you going to talk
about?
I'm not a politician. So what I'm going to talk about is not, I think, what people should
talk about to get elected. But I'm going to ask you what you are saying I should talk
about.
Great. So that's where I want to live. This is where I want to start. This is the birdie-isms
that I'm trying to drive at. So I'm going in there to talk about. Great. So that's where I want to live. This is where I want to start. This is the birdie-isms that I'm trying to drive at.
So I'm going in there to talk about economic populism in a certain way.
I am making certain assumptions that when I am talking about economic populism, it is
a super majority issue.
This is majoritarian stuff.
We're going to not only talk about policies, but we have to tell you a story about America's
economy. It starts with it being rigged against you.
It talks about how hard it is as a middle-class person right now to afford college, to pay
for childcare.
While you are struggling to make it on a middle-class life, there are people in this society who
are doing quite well with their passive income, making tons of money, finding ways to rig this economic system to benefit them.
And our job in life as public servants,
our job as candidates who wanna own some authority
within government is to fight for you.
And so now I'm walking you into,
here are some stories specifically
that I know are challenging in this modern economy,
but that I have constructive solutions to.
And I wanna offer them up and I want to pose them against you.
But I do think it starts with a theory of what am I seeing in this economy so
that you don't feel like you live in a different world than I do?
I live in the same world that you do.
I see what you're going through.
And now I'm going to connect it to why I want to serve.
And that just fundamental framework that we just talked about is not a principal
way in which I hear a lot of Democrats thinking about how to campaign, although I think some
of the better ones who are doing it and winning are doing that.
So I want to stress to us this, and I guess we should start with the Biden administration.
The Biden administration, in my view, I'd be curious to hear if you disagree with this,
is without doubt, the most economically
left, economically populist presidential administration of my lifetime, more so than Bill Clinton,
more so than Barack Obama.
He walks a picket line.
He's very, very explicitly pro-labor.
There is a focus on industrial policy, on manufacturing.
They come in with the intention to run the economy hot, to hit full employment, to make
sure the wage gains that full employment will bring are spreading to the more marginalized
groups of workers who often do not get wage gains during expansions.
They do all of that.
There's also a lot of other problems, foreign policy, crises, inflation, but they are without
doubt coming in with a blended view of the, you might say, Obama
and Sanders theories of the economy.
And through this administration, they're not popular.
Biden routinely struggles to crack 40% in favorability.
There is a working class loss that you're seeing all the way through.
Why didn't it work?
Because the politics didn't match the policy. All those things were correct, I think, in
what you diagnosed there. And when I tested this proposition ourselves, pulled it and
went out and talked in the country, and you ask people a basic question, what did Joe
Biden and the Democrats do on the economy? I would say that message of what you did on the economy is confusing and muddled
out there at best. And I ask a lot of people this, what did you think Joe Biden helped you?
What was his vision? What's his theory? And people struggle with that question. Like, well, in my
view, it was pretty basic that you wanted economic freedom, economic security for Americans. That
economic freedom, you get to call it economic democracy, had two major components to it, Ezra.
One was workplace democracy.
You mentioned it.
Here's the president goes to the picket line.
He fights to ban non-compete clauses.
He supports unionization.
He stood with the Amazon workers and they're organizing.
He saved the Teamsters pensions.
He wants a vision in which we believe in workplace democracy where workers have more power and
freedom.
Secondly, he believes in marketplace freedom, marketplace democracy.
He fights against big tech.
He fights against big monopolists.
He fights for a right to repair.
He fights for small businesses that have the ability to bring back to America supply chains
and with their entrepreneurial spirit grow their own market share in this modern economy.
That is what he's fighting for.
But the rigged economy is such that it isn't going to happen overnight,
and it's going to take some time,
but we're on the right track,
and let us keep going down this track
to continue to make progress for you.
Now, I'm telling you a story that I believe, in my view, Ezra,
most people don't know.
This is not the way in which people communicate
or think or talk about Joe Biden.
They'll hear IRA, Inflation Reduction Act,
they'll hear COVID economy. He said this thing or that thing about inflation, all missing the
point of what is your theory?
What do you want to do about this economy?
And that language in the modern Democratic Party is missing.
But not from everybody.
So let's talk about a particular election example, which is Sherrod Brown in Ohio.
Sherrod Brown is, alongside Sanders, one of the party's
longtime and highly skilled economic populists. His voters know him. He's a fixture in Ohio
politics, has been there for a long time. They know what he stands for. They know what
he fights for. He's fought NAFTA. He's fought for years in very much the terms that you're
talking about. And Sherrod Brown loses to a car dealer Republican candidate
in Ohio. It's a hard fought race, but he loses. Why does Sherrod Brown lose?
Well, I think there's a Democratic brand problem that I'm trying to push at. I think Sherrod
Brown, John Tester, Amy Klobuchar, they all outperform Kamala Harris. In fact, the person
who outperforms, if you look at the Senate map and you say,
okay, where was Kamala's baseline versus
where did other candidates do?
You know who's the most blue in this scenario.
It is Dan Osborne in Nebraska.
It shouldn't be this hard.
I'm running for US Senate
because people aren't getting a fair shake.
I'm running for every Nebraskan.
So we have enough at the end every week to buy groceries,
have a house, set money aside for Christmas and college.
And all we have left to worry about is fake sales and little league.
It kind of sounds a little bit like the American dream.
You know, if you looked at a map of where the baseline was, he turns Nebraska blue in many ways.
My argument of why Dan Osborne does well and loses is the story, because we get so stuck in win-loss.
Sherrod Brown outperforms, but what is the problem with a modern democratic brand that
isn't helping a Sherrod Brown, John Tester, Dan Osborne get over the top?
It's that people don't believe that whatever you might say here, John Tester or Sherrod
Brown, this democratic brand doesn't fight for me.
It is not affiliated with my economic thinking and the concerns that I have in the type of
governance I want to see that disrupts a system that works really well for the wealthy, doesn't
want to challenge powerful actors, and so therefore I am penalizing you even though
I might like you.
I think party brands are very complicated things to manage.
So Dan Osborne, for people who were not following that election, is an independent candidate,
runs an economically populous campaign, and does way better than anybody expects, right?
Surprises Republicans, becomes competitive, and doesn't win, but as you say, highly overperforms
what you might have imagined.
And why, just to put a point on the Cesar, why does he overperform?
Because his only brand, for a long period of time, he was only known as the guy who led his Kellogg's workers
on strike during the height of COVID.
We worked 100 days straight.
It was grueling.
We were told we're essential workers.
We weren't treated with any degree of respect.
And now I'm running for Congress to fight for working people.
That's all people knew for a long period of time
about Dan Osborne and it got through.
And I would argue that would restore a democratic
brand that kind of background and vision.
But I think this gets to this question of parties, which is what we're talking about
here.
I've seen you floated for DNC chair and you've had a lot to say about how the DNC should
actually act in this era.
And one of the problems with being a party, right, this is also true of the Republican
Party, which is a trashed brand as well, which Trump then was able to take over and hollow
out, is that you have to pull together groups that don't necessarily agree, not just on
everything, in some cases on anything.
So something Bernie Sanders often says is why aren't Democrats running in all these
popular policies?
And when he's in control of the interview, he'll say, you know, everybody else has healthcare
for all residents, but we don't.
And, you know, we could have free college
and we could, you know, raise the minimum wage much higher.
And it's completely true that if you pull those policies
in the way he talks about them, they're very popular.
Of course, when he ran in 2020
and he was a candidate who might actually win,
what you had was also a lot of discussion
of the parts of those policies that do not
poll highly, that you would be abolishing private health insurance under his single
payer plan, that you would be raising taxes on middle class Americans for giving student
loans, which people talked about as a very popular policy did not end up being a political
winner for Democrats.
And that reflects inside the Democratic Party, but also inside politics broadly, a mix of
people who would like to see the system upended and also people who don't want to pay higher
taxes, who don't want to lose their healthcare.
Maybe they want other people to have better healthcare than they do, but they like what
they have and they don't want someone coming in and taking it away.
So I do want to push this into relationship with the complexities of parties that don't
get to run one guy
unsullied by all the compromises that a large coalition actually has to make.
Yes, I agree with all that and I'm not here to litigate whether Bernie would have won
in 2020 general election, although he would have, but I think...
No litigation, just assertion.
To be fair, a lot of litigation is just said anyway.
What you and I know about Bernie, because you've known him for a while too and obviously
work with him and know a lot about how he actually thinks about managing politics.
One of the things that you know about him and I know is that there's a high degree of
pragmatism there.
So while he's pushing, let's take Medicare for all.
Then he gets into Congress and can we at least lower the age from 65 to 60?
Can we talk about Medicare expansion
so that it covers home care, dental, hearing, and vision,
even if you can't all move with me to Medicare for All?
That actually is how President Bernie Sanders
would have governed.
And what it would have done, of course,
is change how the Democratic Party is perceived
all across this country.
Because here comes the president.
First stop is, wait, expanding Medicare
is what we're going to be doing at the front end?
Oh, I love that.
That sounds phenomenal.
He's going to say, here's my North Star, here's my vision, and where can we get the votes
to get the best version of this outcome?
And he would have just set the agenda accordingly.
But that might be how he would govern.
And I have tremendous respect for Bernie Sanders.
And one question we will get to is I actually think one hard part about talking in this sort of wood Bernie of one
is it just some politicians are really goddamn good at what they do.
And Bernie Sanders is really damn good at what he does.
And Obamaism doesn't work that well without Obama and Donald Trumpism doesn't work that
well without Donald Trump.
And I'm not sure Bernie Sandersism works that well without Bernie Sanders.
But in terms of the things that are exportable, like the policies, I don't want to let you
move to this, well, in practice, he would be a pragmatist because we are talking about
how at least you run and win in elections.
And when you run and win elections and put out the big vision, and then the people who
don't like you, the people who are worried about you,
come and point out all the things that are going to scare people about your vision, which
is what, you know, Kamala Harris had to deal with and what Bernie Sanders had to deal with
in the 2020 primary and would have dealt with in the general election.
You don't get to then just say, oh, I didn't really mean that whole thing about abolishing
private insurance.
Don't worry, I'm a pragmatist when I govern.
No, no, it's when you get into presidency.
But hear me as saying the orientation of fighting for working class people is the thing, Ezra.
That is what we're after right now.
That Bernie Sanders, better than, more so and better than I would argue a lot of the
people with whom he ran against, would have put that question, that framework, that mentality
and still does at the front and center of how the Democratic brand is received.
And you're right that he has certain talents and abilities, but there are certain parts
of that that I allow, Marie-Gloucian-Camperes is a blue dog, or Jared Golden who's a blue
dog, or Pat Ryan running in New York, or Chris D'Aluzio in Pennsylvania, or a whole bunch
of other people who have similar frameworks of fighting for working class people, concerns
about corporate power that they can articulate in their own ways and when they do, they can win and the democratic brand
would be better restored in a stronger position if we put this first and foremost.
I think this is a place where what I would like to see is more broad based evidence.
And here's what I mean.
I would find no answer to the democratic party's problems more congenial than this one.
If the answer is simply that Democrats can embrace bigger social programs, a more economically
populist agenda, more pro-worker rhetoric, I think that would be great.
When I look at Democrats winning in red districts, I don't typically see it.
You've mentioned people like Jared Golden there.
I do not consider Jared Golden's politics a close match for Bernie Sanders.
You should talk to Jared Golden, see how he thinks about him.
That's where the, you know, I know Jared.
But this is where the actual policies that people are proposing matter.
Dan Osborne also had a much more trimmed sail in terms of what policies he was actually
proposing.
I agree with you that there's something to the orientation of being pro-worker.
But it matters what signals you're sending and what governing space you're in.
I look at Europe where there's been a real rise of other authoritarian right parties
that have symmetries of what we're seeing in America.
And you don't see left-wing populist parties winning in response.
In fact, in a bunch of the places you're seeing... France?
I mean, they've had to come into a weird coalition in France.
It has not been a consistent answer that has worked there.
We've watched a lot of those parties lose, which does not mean one shouldn't run on some
of those ideas.
But it does make me wonder if the actual appeal of right-wing authoritarianism, you know,
as practiced by people like Donald Trump,
you know, where you have like billionaires like Elon Musk becoming aspirational and essential
figures is really the who's on the side of workers question that people like you or Sanders
want to phrase it as.
And now you see where I am, my kind of own emotional slog is with how you framed all of that, which is I struggle with not seeing great models
of pro-labor, working class oriented progressivism, wherever it might be.
I mean, obviously there's evidence maybe in Mexico that counters some trends, but there
are not great models, and we're going to concede that.
And I'm pushing for a movement that more people push corporate power to the front of your
conversation, labor power at the front of your conversation, push on a different style
of working class orientation of progressivism.
And we need it.
We desperately need it right now to rebrand a Democratic party.
One person who's always been interesting in this conversation is Joe Manchin.
And if you were looking a couple years ago who was overperforming the most, who was holding
the seat that a Democrat really shouldn't be holding, it was Joe Manchin.
And his politics has long been about curbing the excesses of, or at least what he saw as
the excesses of the Democratic Party famously had this ad, you know, shooting a gun at the
cap and trade bill that the House was trying to pass.
He was somebody who cut how big the Inflation Reduction Act was.
He's sort of a thorn in the side of the Democratic Party and it allowed him to win elections
in a very, very red place for a very long time.
What do you make of Joe Manchin's success?
I associate more with a couple of things.
One is Joe Manchin is a terrific politician, if you've ever seen him.
He really engages with his community and is all over the place on the ground and for a
long period of time.
But the other point I'd say is the old school Democrat, right?
Like you look at Kentucky, why is Andy Beshear still the governor?
You look at North Carolina, you know, generally still have some Democrats still at high office
because there's still the ethic of people who generationally were Democrats affiliated with it
For whom it is getting harder and harder to continue to stay associated with that brand
Which obviously circles me back to the class-based populism that I'm arguing for but but West Virginia had become very red and very
Anti-democratic. Yeah, well matching was still and he's a good running you'd agree with me, right?
That's right. I agree that I agree. He's a good politician but the way in which I think he would say he's a good, you'd agree with me, right? That's right. He's a good politician, right? I agree that he's a good politician, but the way in which I think he would say he's a good
politician is that he understands that you have to not get out of step with your constituents.
And he believes the people you are talking about, right?
Not the people Bernie Sanders wins in Vermont, but the people he wins in West Virginia are
not that liberal.
That they think the government spends too much money, not too little money, that they feel that Democrats are way out of step on cultural
issues, right?
One of the challenges, look, Joe Manchin's politics are not my politics.
It's certainly not my politics at all.
Joe Manchin has personally killed a number of things I really cared about.
He killed childcare, he killed home care, he killed a whole bunch of things.
But I think it is worth really grappling when you're saying that the way Democrats will
perform in a way they haven't been among people who they're losing is to move into this much
more class-based, much more left space.
And then you see Joe Manchin is not the only person I could name like this, but a lot of
the people who perform in these places look sort of more like he did.
I think his success has to be grappled with a little bit more than he's good at retail
politics.
I don't mean to go on the whole screen of Joe Manchin here, but he's very good at making
him sound like, I'm fighting big pharma in Washington, D.C.
Was he? Sure.
I mean, Affiliation Reduction Act had pharma components in it.
They were very valuable.
But he goes home and he talks about it in a more compelling theatrical way, an effective way,
not saying, hey, I also helped kill, you know, tax cuts
on the rich that would have been effective in getting us more revenue.
That's not the way he's going and talking.
He can't pay.
We know a lot about that.
You and I know a lot about that.
But that's in terms of how he delivers.
I don't buy this because Manchin, here's what I understand Manchin's politics to be.
Manchin's politics are about demonstrating constant independence.
From the Democratic.
From the liberal wing. Not just the Democratic constant independence from the liberal wing,
not just the democratic brand, but the liberal wing of the democratic brand by publicly and
in a way that people keep hearing about and seeing him do standing in the way of things
Democrats, including Bernie Sanders, specifically things that Bernie Sanders wants to do.
So I, I get it.
I'm going to keep pushing this.
I think it's a good counter example.
He's not going home and running like a light socialist and hiding that he has been holding
up the IRA and cutting it in half.
I mean, moderation was his brand and he believed and proved out, at least among his constituents,
that moderation allowed him to stay afloat in a seat no Democrat should have been able
to hold for even a minute.
This gets at, to me, I know you don't love the answer, but why does Donald Trump sometimes
have great working class appeal is not always a policy discourse with them.
You can have working class appeal in the manner, in the performance art of how you go and talk
to them, how you're at, in the political industry we refer to this as a candidate affect.
How do you
come across to people?
And I do think he comes across and fights in interesting ways that have a working class
dimension to it.
You're right that the push off towards the left is one of them.
The fight is shooting the gun at the cabin trade bill is one of them.
These have affect, knowing your state, finding ways to campaign according to your constituency.
It's healthy in a political ecosystem.
When you're a populist, hopefully you're learning a little bit from how everybody
is finding their own interesting ways to campaign.
But I would disagree with the notions that what people want is corporate
friendliness, that they want to sit down with billionaires and negotiate tax bills.
That's how actually Joe Manchin has taught us the future of the Democratic
Party I would disagree with.
You'd emailed me after this interview I did with Patrick Rafini, who's a GOP pollster
who had written a book that was pretty prescient on the voting realignment we've seen.
I want to play you a clip of the interview that has been on my mind.
I did a poll in Texas of Hispanics in Texas where I asked them, what is the number one
problem that you see today with the Democratic Party?
The answer they gave wasn't that it was too woke or the buzzword of socialism.
The answer was very interesting and it's something you don't see come up with virtually any other
group you talk to.
And that is they perceive the Democratic Party as being the party of welfare benefits for
people who don't work.
And if you look at how the Democratic Party has been perceived in the last four years in particular,
in terms of, we're letting immigrants into the country, illegal migrants into the country,
you know, and there's a perception that they're getting government benefits and not working.
And all of this is coming at the expense of people who made their way in America
Started from the very bottom of the rung and work their way up the economic ladder
Through their own hard work and not necessarily through government policies
What do you think of them? Well as a campaign, we you know, you know this in the primary
We've overperformed with a lot of Latino people. We went to South Texas a number of times and I think Bernie has a unique appeal and people
often ask, why is it that Bernie Sanders among the Democratic primary candidates would attract
all these Latino working class people to him?
Part of it was that the immigrant mentality, I'm one of them, come to America with the
vision of what America is, a land of opportunity, great freedom.
Here's why I came here.
And slowly you learn, or maybe quickly you learn,
holy cow, this place is brutal, rough,
to try to make it as a working person.
The bosses don't care about the ethic
that I'm putting into it.
There's no protection around basic retirement security
or job security, there's nothing.
And you realize how brutal the economy is.
And I think the vision of Bernie Sanders, this is where you cross ideological spans,
the vision is there's somebody looking out for me.
He's got a vision for me.
It matters.
We could disagree whether does Social Security speak to them?
I think it does.
Expanding Social Security, does expanding Medicare speak to them?
I think it does.
But if Patrick's also saying, you know, does tariffs speak to them?
Yes, it does.
Does certain immigration policies speak to them? Yes, it does. Does certain immigration policies speak to them?
Yes, it does.
It's a lot of those things.
But fundamentally, it's that they see in someone who understands their life and has a vision
for society in which they're central to it, not backseating it.
How much is this built around policy vision and rhetoric?
And how much of it is the affect and signal, right?
Because I think people get a lot of signals from candidates that they can't quite articulate,
but we meet people and we know who they are and what they're like.
The Democratic Party is a much more educated party now.
If you look at the people who run at its top levels, they do not come from the working
class.
They've gone to college.
They have not this particular year, but in many years been to many elite colleges.
It's also true, by the way, on the Republican side where J.D. Vance went to Yale Law and
Donald Trump went to Wharton.
But nevertheless, how much is the problem that the Democratic Party is having trouble
connecting to working class voters because it's not running working class candidates?
I think working class candidates would help us.
But why would that help us?
Because we're fundamentally not a populist movement. And that matters. And when I say populism, it means something to me.
It means that you're very connected to the emotions of people that feeling that emotion
pain means being something of a populist. And then turning that into a majoritarian
sentiment. I don't mean to dispute how already academics out there would give me a different
definition of populism, but that's what it means to me, is finding that majoritarian
sentiment around that emotional pain, suffering, or happiness, or excitement of the communities
that you're fighting for. And we have become detached from that in the way in which we
both politic and do policy design. That you can't just spout rhetoric on a teleprompter,
put some thoughts on there about housing,
and here's a homebuyer tax credit,
and assume you've done the job.
You're not going to do the job without the affect, too,
the political affect that this is something that animates me.
This is something that I am concerned about.
This is something I can tell you a story about.
I can go on Joe Rogan for two hours or any other podcast
or Ezra Klein for two hours and talk at length about the housing market problems that I see.
I think that there's a hunger in America for understanding how the economy is rigged against
them and they expect government leaders when you enter into the forum to unpack that from
you're fighting from you better understand this than I do and you're going to tell me
that okay federal interest rates let's just do housing for very briefly and I promise
we'll move off from it.
Federal interest rates go up.
You don't have to promise you'll move off of housing
on this podcast of all,
like you can be on housing as long as you want, Fuzz.
Correct me if I'm wrong, Ezra.
Like a basic story, right?
People are hungry for it, and I think my assumption,
I'm speaking politically for a moment,
is that people will respect that I can disagree with Fuzz
about what he's saying, but I understand he cares about this
and he's fighting for it and he understands the theory
and maybe I'll put him into office
just because I know that this is his orientation
and as compared to the other person,
maybe he would care more about housing.
So my answer would be, you push me on housing,
okay, federal interest rates go up.
It locks the housing market as you know.
If I'm a homeowner, I'm not selling
because I can't afford to buy my next one.
So all prices now go up.
What happens in that market?
Well, unless you're a cash buyer,
no one can really buy a house.
Guess who comes in and buys houses at cash?
Well, there's a large institutional investor.
So we've got the growth of institutional investors
who are buying in the housing markets.
They are now raising rents, raising prices.
People like invitation homes who don't care.
You don't know your landlord.
There's an LLC.
You don't have a relationship with the people who are owning your homes increasingly.
That's one of the problems.
In the rental market, you've got whole problems of real page and other algorithms being stacked
against you, used by landlords to raise prices and keep lots empty just to maximize their
profits.
How am I going to deal with this, both going after price gouging by landlords and big institutional
investors, creating ordinances that stop institutional investors from coming into communities?
I'm not asking you to agree with the policy solution, right?
We can have a debate about policy.
But I'm not telling you a story about what I see and why I care about this that I think
would more resonate than telling you, hey, I want a $25,000 home buyer tax credit.
So I'll say a couple things, because I don't think here that policy and politics are as
separable as you're trying to make them there.
When you said a minute ago that populism means to you someone who has a majoritarian approach
to politics with an authentic connection to the ways in which the working class is struggling,
what seemed missing in that definition to me was I think what actually separates populism
in all of its forms from many other forms of politics, which is its cut of an us versus
a them.
Its decision to create enemies.
And if you're looking at Donald Trump, right, his enemies are immigrants, his enemies are
the left, his enemies are other countries that are ripping us off, his enemies are the
media, right?
That's the sort of standard right-wing populism.
And if you look at left populism, the enemies are billionaires, they're corporations.
And one difficulty with that is that it makes some kinds of solutions and problems easier
to point out than others.
I know housing policy quite well, and I just flatly do not agree that the problem is that
you have more corporate or private equity landlords that are pushing up prices.
The problem is that you cannot build homes.
And many of the people stopping you from building homes are not billionaires and they're not
private equity magnets.
They're people within the Bernie Sanders coalition or the Democratic Party coalition.
They are people who don't want an apartment building
with affordable housing going up nearby
to say nothing of a homeless shelter.
God forbid a homeless shelter is gonna go up nearby.
One problem is that if you can't identify them as a problem
because they're not your chosen enemies,
it becomes hard I think sometimes to tell people
the thing that they see in their own lived experience, which is that there's no building going on around in places Democrats
govern.
And is that really because of private equity corporations?
Maybe, but I'm not sure that works out as well in practice as people want it to.
Right.
And don't hear me to dismiss, I think I agree with what you're saying.
Now what you and I are trying to do is merge for many candidates how to go and talk about
housing and win elections off of it.
You moved us rightly into now you're in office governing, wreck some barriers, be somebody
and I have lots of thoughts about that, right?
Be someone with conviction who is willing to disrupt the status quo, win in government
to get the outcomes that you need.
If we need 3 million units or plus of housing units, probably affordable housing
units, what does that require such that you would be a bulldozer to wreck bureaucratic
log jams and all kinds of concerns?
There is that alpha quality that is still missing in a democratic party that says, not
only do I care about housing and tell you a story
and campaign about this,
but that if you put me in government,
you will see in my DNA and my character,
I am willing to take on people,
even with whom you mentioned,
who I generally would agree with.
Maybe there's labor unions here,
maybe there's environmental leaders here.
Part of my job is to come in and say,
we gotta get this done,
I'm gonna be a bulldozer for this.
So that, I think you're putting your finger on something,
but I would say if we're winning elections,
you're still, I think, motivated by a degree of populism
that can combine the story of how I also plan to govern.
But I don't want to leave people with the idea
that I think that you can have a good academic conversation
about the municipal zoning laws in a certain
community and that that's going to resonate in a town hall setting that I dropped you
into. I think if you followed the growing alienation between the Democratic Party and the working
class, one of the things you come to really fast here are cultural issues.
And I mean, famously, this was the subject of the most effective ad of the Trump campaign,
right?
Kamala Harris is for they them, Donald Trump is for you.
But you see this to some degree on abortion. You saw it around
a lot of questions that got called wokeness a couple of years ago. There is a way in which
one way in which the Democratic Party is trouble representing the working class isn't that
it won't talk about pharmaceutical prices. It's that it has just become culturally different,
religiously different, et cetera. How do you think about that?
While recognizing that is the case,
I start with a different assumption
and be humble about acknowledging maybe I'm wrong,
but I've been doing this a bit.
And I feel like I have a strong view on this,
which is people will respect your disagreement
as long as they think it is honest and sincere,
that you can explain it,
and that you are also simultaneously fighting
alongside and with them on something they care deeply about.
They'll give you allowance for disagreements in certain realms.
I think, you know, you take a lot of the social racial justice issues.
I mentioned to you at the beginning of doing a town hall and I drop you in and you go and
talk to people.
I intentionally started it on economic justice issues.
That is where I know I've got a super majority here.
I'm going to talk about how hard it is to be a middle-class, working-class person in
this economy and give you some prescriptions.
But then I'm also going to, I'm not going to leave you there.
We're going to walk through abortion and we're going to talk about immigration.
We're going to talk about some racial justice issues.
We're not going to just end the town all at that.
We're going to talk about some of those things, recognizing that when I get to some of these,
the orientation of my values, you're going to see're gonna talk about some of those things, recognizing that when I get to some of these, the orientation of my values,
you're gonna see why I care about some of those things.
And I'm going to give allowance as I talk about them
to say, you can disagree with me,
but I want you to know where I'm coming from.
In that language, that way of not telling them
that you're wrong, I'm right,
but rather that we're all on our journeys.
This is where I'm at.
This is where I believe.
This is why I fight for what I fight for.
That I think is what people really desperately want
is stand by your convictions.
Tell me what you really believe.
Maybe you'll persuade me, maybe not.
Yeah, but how much with Bernie Sanders specifically
is some of that allowance?
A, he is a cranky old white guy with a political profile
from a very different era in politics,
and also a political profile
that used to be different himself.
Something that the people in the party frustrated at Bernie Sanders are saying right now is
sure he used to outperform Democrats in Vermont, but he doesn't anymore.
He ran very, very slightly behind Kamala Harris in this election.
It's not quite.
I mean, if you dig in, so he outperforms her in all the Northern country, third party candidate
run who outflanked to the left on Gaza and got 7,000, 80,000 votes.
And that's the reason.
But to be clear, because she didn't have that.
So he...
But wait, I don't really buy this because you have third party candidates running.
Was Jill Stein not on the ballot in Vermont?
Yeah, no, no, no, no.
But the third party candidate was a well-known commodity or known commodity who advocated
had an actual campaign.
And the point I would make about this is that Bernie Sanders, like he used to be much more
pro-gun.
He used to be somebody who seemed to have very little patience for some of the cultural
or what gets called by the academics, post-materialist turn in the Democratic Party.
And over time, he's become more part of the much more coalitional left and the people
who followed him in politics, the squad, et cetera.
He's moved with the country on guns. You just take, I mean, you got to parse these out one by one,
but the country has moved on guns itself, right? But if you do talk about background checks right
now and universal, not only universal background checks, but also getting guns out of schools and
just safety measures, that is very strong majoritarian sentiment.
I'm not arguing about the politics of guns. What I am arguing about here a bit is that
one of the reasons for Sanders' success in politics, as I long understood it, is
that he just seemed like he was from a class first wing of the Democratic Party.
The people come up after him don't feel as much like that to me. Given that we see a lot of these
divergences happening in different
countries at the same time, I'm not sure like the reason it just keeps happening is nobody's
figured out how to show that they disagree with conviction. I think that there is a disagreement
here between a lot of working class voters and a lot of not just the center left, but
the actual left, which is in a very, you know, much further along with some of these questions
than much of the country is,
and I don't just mean here, by the way,
I'm not just talking about trans rights.
Bernie Sanders was out there calling to ban fracking, right?
His position on a lot of green energy things
is very, very strong.
I might agree on, you know, 80% of what he thinks there,
but there's no doubt that if he ran in a general election,
that would be things that he would get attacked on in Pennsylvania. There is a tendency for the left to not just
believe in a higher minimum wage, which is what he talks about in interviews, but to believe in a
huge basket of issues with very little compromise that a lot of people don't believe in and they're
not there on and they don't want to see their gas-powered car taken away and so on.
But you glossed over the class-based prism quickly, right?
That to me is the divergence and why I would argue Bernie Sanders could go into a fracking
community in Pennsylvania and still get respectful disagreements, see, oh yes, you support my
right to join a union, you support my right to adjust transition, I believe you're going
to give a damn about me if there is an opportunity to get either new jobs that come into these
communities.
You do want a better life for me.
I think that class-based orientation helps you in a lot of these issues.
Even immigration is the same base.
That class-based prism, I've heard Bernie Sanders talk about a bit, not many others.
That we have Hyundai or a lot of other companies in Alabama and Texas who exploit low-wage
workers and depress wages of workers, create an uneven playing field, and that should matter.
That should matter to all of us who care about rewarding work and dignity of work.
Where was Sanders in 2020 on the question of decriminalizing border crossing?
Well, you're putting me in the spot because I can't remember the question because we were
supposed to go, this tells you about our campaign.
You were saying, are we willing to say, no, I came as a ACLU national political director
to the campaign and we were asked to go to an ACLU forum at which to discuss this.
I think all the other candidates didn't.
We said, no, we went to a Philadelphia AFL-CIO event on the same day instead.
But just to be clear, I just asked my producer and Sandow supported it.
Okay, gotcha.
I trust you.
And the reason I ask this is, so there's a famous interview I did with Sandow's years
ago and I asked him what he thought of Open Borders and he says, go grab this plot.
If you believe in a nation state or in a country called the United States or UK or
Denmark or any other country, you have an obligation, in my view, to do everything we
can to help poor people.
What right-wing people in this country would love is an open border policy, bringing in
all kinds of people who work for two or three dollars an hour.
That would be great for them.
I don't believe in that.
And, Ma, it's funny because people always think that was me, like, demanding to support
open borders, but I'm always interested in what cuts people draw in their politics.
And Sanders had always been much more skeptical of various forms of immigration reform than
a lot of Democrats were.
Right?
He had a different profile on that than a lot of Democrats did in that era.
And he would come at it through this class-based prism.
But the reason I think the question about decriminalizing border crossing is interesting in 2020 is it as these broader trends took hold in the Democratic
Party and in the left, they took hold on him too.
Yeah. And it's fair that, and I think one of the things you saw happen during that period
of time is the family separation, the asylum seeking during the period of Trump in which
the really heinous, inhumane efforts by him to attack immigrants did have an effect on policy
on the entire field.
You're right, that people wanted to distinguish
in a bolder way from what Donald Trump was doing
on family separation.
And so I guess this brings me back to this question,
which is whether one of the dimensions of populism
has to be taken seriously.
One of the dimensions of representation
isn't just having honest disagreement, but actually representing in
a bunch of ways the people you are trying to win over.
Working class voters have-
Well, what point do you want to drive?
I wouldn't argue, I mean, it's fair to say we should reflect on policy choices.
I guess here is the point I'm trying to draw it on.
It's always very hard to work with the would Bernie have won and would Bernieism win question because in a way it's never truly been tested at the
general election level. Yes. So Bernie didn't win the primary in 2016. He didn't win it
in 2020. So he didn't have to run a general election campaign where he wasn't even just
talking to Democrats, but people are really coming at him on these questions of banning
fracking on these questions of undocumented migrant crossings and whether or not you're going to keep that criminalized.
And on one level, there's a version of this that is a very convenient answer for the Democratic
Party.
Disagree honestly and with conviction on everything where you disagree with more working class
voters, but be much more forthright and populist in your economics, and that'll win it for
you.
And the other argument is no, that wouldn't win it for you.
In some ways, that the downsides of that have not been tested.
And you have trouble with some of the voters you're saying you represent because you don't
actually represent them because culture is not something people downgrade.
They want candidates not who disagree with them honestly, they want candidates who represent them authentically and agree with them. And if you ended up having
a test set out, that's what you would find.
Hear me to say that I want class-based populism testing of different kinds. Yes, I love people
to be like Bernie Gray. That's fine. You can also not be like Bernie and do class-based
populism. To be very clear, let's put a point on this, right?
Could you argue against, you know, Ticketmaster is a giant monopoly and at Burdenbeet, that
Xi and with its importation of clothes from China has wrecked our American clothing industry,
that I could go down the line of prescription drugs and cancer drugs that cost a hell of
a lot of money, bank fees are gouging me, you know, non-compete bans are depriving, stopping liberty
in the workplace.
There are so many forms of populism, class-based populism that are available.
If you look at the political consulting industry of the Democratic Party, if I raised many
of these things, the IRS is now auditing the wealthy in private jet loopholes, it's not
even as, I would be like speaking a foreign language to them.
This is not the thing.
I feel like I hear the Biden administration say stuff like that all the time and they
actually passed a bunch of that.
What we're arguing here is going and campaigning before the American public to win elections
about a particular story that the democratic brand is affiliated and associated with.
Not that there's a nice technocratic point made by the National Economic Council on CNBC.
I'm saying go before a town hall, that hundred-person crowd.
What is that story that you want to tell them about, hi, I'm Democrat.
This is my orientation.
And these are the problems that I'm going to address and concrete solutions that I'm
going to be a wrecking ball in government to deliver for you.
In order to do this, does the Democratic Party need to unwind itself from what is now partially
its coalition?
So there's this quote from Chuck Schumer that's become kind of famous where he says,
for every blue collar Democrat we lose in Western Pennsylvania.
We will pick up two, three moderate Republicans in the suburbs of Philadelphia.
And you can repeat that in Ohio and Illinois and Wisconsin.
The voters who are most out there figuring out what to do are not the blue collar Democrats.
They are the college educated Republicans who lean Republican or independent and in
the suburbs.
And I'm not sure exactly even he believes that anymore.
I mean, this is from some election cycles ago.
But there is an element of reality in this, which is that the Democratic Party is now
a much more affluent party than it used to be.
It wins college educated voters by very significant margins.
And it has become a party that likes institutions. And I'm not
saying Bernie Sanders loses all those people, but there is presumably trade-offs among some
of them, right? If you want to send a signal clear enough that you really hate the way
things are in this country, and you are going to be much more class-based in your politics,
and you're running inside a party that many of its voters come from the more educated and affluent classes, that you would lose all
these suburbanites because they don't want to have their private health insurance abolished,
they don't want to pay higher income taxes.
Is there a period of losing?
Why is your realigning your coalition?
The assumption that I am making, again, I would love to test it and have Candace run
on it, is that you would maintain that a large part, the vast majority of that coalition,
you would keep Liz Cheney's in the tent.
Would it make some of them uncomfortable?
Sure.
But I think we are wrongly assuming that there's a trade-off.
We don't know because we haven't tried.
We aren't putting it first.
I would like to try.
That is the fight.
That is the tension that I am having with the Democrats who say they're almost prejudging the outcome and saying,
well, if you go and campaign against big banks and you rail against big pharma and you say
that there's big oil collusion on raising gas prices that somehow, oh man, you know,
we're not going to get Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger might run and all these other people.
I'm like, no, that's not the reason they were there to begin with. They would like to win.
They would like to prevent Donald Trump from winning and let's find the
best way to win. And we're talking, at the end of the day, I really firmly believe this, Ezra,
is that we're talking about three, four, five percent on the margins. And we're talking about
that's the difference between that gets us to majorities and the House and the Senate and the
presidency. I think it is this class-based populism that gets you to that three, four, five percent.
And if we don't do it, it is more likely that it continues to drift in the JD Vance direction
in 2028.
I guess putting aside the Adam Kinzinger and Liz Cheney's and putting aside the very specific
threat Donald Trump represents to institutions, can you really have a class-based politics
that doesn't...
If you're going to afflict the comfortable, aren't you
going to repel some of the comfortable?
Does that create a push around things like taxes and just more kind of old school issues
in American politics?
Maybe one you want to make, right?
I think in some ways the argument I would almost like to hear somebody say is yes, I
would like to trade out some of the coalition because there are trade-offs.
I just think this part of the coalition is bigger and more just.
Exactly.
Just to be on the math side of the equation, you are correct, just to make that point,
that if you're talking about the working class, that's two-thirds of the workforce without
a college degree.
And then now, as you rightly referenced, this other one is the one-third who are doing well.
And so when you start to leak from the two-thirds bucket, yeah, you have a math problem there.
And that's why the Schumer math doesn't add up is once
you start leaking, you don't know where the bottom is. And we find with Donald Trump,
you know, that enough leakage of votes in the working class will cause you to lose an
election. So you want to fight for that. You don't want leakage there. And you know, you're
right that it may come to a point where, you know, some of the movement and Google, Google's
a good example, right? Google donors, if you look at Google employees, I think they're one of the
highest among employers, donors to the Democratic Party.
Whereas on the other side of this, it's amazing if you like, I think Bloomberg
did the study, UPS workers were one of the biggest constituencies of small dollar
donors to Donald Trump.
I would like that to flip, right?
I don't, not like a wholesale flip, but I would like,
I don't mind losing a few more Google employees
to gain more UPS drivers and workers.
You gotta make that argument.
Yes, I'll tell you, I'll make that trade
and tell you clear and directly.
That's a direction I would go
because it would be good for the Democratic Party,
it'd be good for the path of our future sustainability
in politics, it would lead to good policy outcomes. So there's been a discourse that has emerged after the election, and I've been part of
it, where people are saying that one problem is that Democrats at many levels of government
have stopped saying no to the groups.
They have stopped saying no to the groups. They have stopped saying no. And the way this codes is that you're saying they don't say no to
the left. When I say they don't say no, I actually mean something much broader than
that. Many of the people they need to say no to, many of the people they need not to
demonstrate independence from, but be independent from, are actually what I would think of as
on the right of the party. Some of those are corporate interests, some of them are local interests, sometimes they're
unions, sometimes they're not unions.
But all sorts of things create problems in different areas of governing.
Something that I think connects candidates from very different directions who succeed
is that people believe they are independent.
People believe Bernie Sanders is independent and that to me is part of the work of him not running as a Democrat, right?
Running as a kind of independent democratic socialist candidate.
People believe Donald Trump because of his billions is independent.
When Barack Obama ran in 2008, people forget this, but he was a new face to politics and he ran very much against special interests,
who he said were the ones who were ruining our politics.
And one of the things that I think was difficult for Kamala Harris is that people didn't believe
she was independent.
Not that she was necessarily bought and paid for, just that she was a normal party politician.
And in many different ways, what connects populists to me is that they're able to send
some costly
signal, not joining their party, coming from the outside, et cetera, that signals to people
they're going to be somebody in there who says no in all kinds of different directions
in order to solve problems in the way they should be solved because people believe politics
is fundamentally corrupt and idiotic.
And if you're too much a creature of politics, then you're going to reflect that corruption
and idiocy too.
I'll flesh out deeper on the independence.
I think you're right to say the word, but I will say that independence comes from a
sense of a vision, a sense of conviction, and a sense that you mean what you say.
That this isn't a game, this isn't theater, somebody didn't just put some words in front
of me and I read them. I'm telling you something that I deeply and
honestly believe and when you see that I deeply and honestly believe it, that
that conviction resides in me, then when I go and advocate for it, it will
manifest itself. So often when I talk to candidates, we might have differences of
opinions and all kinds of different views. The first question is what do you
honestly believe? Give me a place of conviction.
My view on this kind of inside outside thing that you're raising of groups or whatever
the case might be, isn't it?
Groups have a player role to just advocate sincerely with conviction.
That's what you expect them to do.
If you believe deeply in Gaza, fight for Gaza, explain and advocate for it, build a political
movement.
But when you're a candidate in the arena, you make the judgments about what you
believe is majoritarian and what is consistent with your values. So for instance, Ezra, you
know, we went on the Joe Rogan show, as you remember, in the 2019 campaign.
I defended you in this. People got very mad at me.
Well, it'd be going bad to you.
Yeah, imagine how they felt about you.
I mean, I had literally, I think the human rights campaign launched a whole campaign against
us, move on, said, like, you know, Bernie Sanders is like disgraced to, you know, like the communities for which he fights.
And that's what we dealt with in real time.
And, but it didn't, we didn't back, we didn't say sorry, we apologize.
This is the vision that we thought we were going to go speak to a general election populist,
people with whom we disagree, have long defended it, continue to defend to this day,
the job of being in the political arena is to speak to people who people who aren't already on your side and to help make a case.
That's why we're even having this conversation.
But you're right that you need that conviction of being willing to say no.
Are we really so different, Vance?
See, I can persuade you.
If we are counting as people who disagree.
No.
But is this a cultural problem?
Well, let me ask you this differently, because I am going to say this is a cultural problem
in the Democratic Party.
I was just having this conversation the other day with somebody.
The disagreement feels harder and harder.
I don't know if you feel that way.
And that's why I kind of reached out to you.
It's like, can we have disagreement?
I don't say you're a terrible person for disagreeing with you.
Where do you think this culture that fears or avoids certain kinds of disagreement came from.
You and I are about the same age.
We came up in digital media around similar times.
People may not know this about you, but you were founder of ThinkProgress.
I don't feel like it felt like this then.
I agree. And we rose up at a time where it was actually disagreement that prospered.
I mean, we're just saying names. I'm going to say names now that most people don't remember.
But like, whether you're Josh Marshall or Glenn Greenwald or Kevin
Drum or Marcos or, you know, Matt Iglesias, whoever it might have been writing at the
time, there was a desire for disagreement. And it's particularly in the Iraq War era
and national security issues and tax cuts and Medicare Part D, you remember all
this stuff. There are all kinds of issues going on. And there's a desire to grapple with it.
Like in many of the sense at that time
was that we were in the wilderness
and like we need to have honest conversation.
I think right now we are lacking in that.
I refer to that word as populism
and you may have a different word for it.
But that populism reconnects you with actual sentiment
among regular people and that whatever that is is. I I don't see a lot of
organizations on the left as opposed to the right
Whose job and desire is to reach scale to to talk to as many people as possible
And when you're trying to reach scale you have to grapple with this disagreement different points of view
How much do you think this is a story of media forms changing that then change the cultures
of, at least in this case, the Democratic Party?
And what I mean by that is when we're talking about 2005 to 2010, let's call it, right,
that area, you have the mainstream media, right, these big platforms that are trying
to be quite mass in that era, particularly wherever they dominate, right, these big platforms that are trying to be quite mass in that era,
particularly wherever they dominate, right?
Newspapers, they want everybody in what was then their geographical area to read them,
and so they want to be broadly acceptable.
And then you had blogging, which was very fractious, but I would describe blogging as
you were in conversation with the people you were disagreeing with.
Blogging was a highly conversational form, and the people you were most angry at, you
were writing back and forth and the two of you were often linking back and forth.
And the movement to me, to social media, one of the things that it brought with it was
instead of talking to the people you were angry at, you talked about the people you
were angry at to the people you were angry at, you talked about the people you were angry at to the people
you disagreed with. And you got, you know, the likes and got retweeted. And this culture
emerged of you got engagement by drawing who was outside of your circle, who you didn't
have to talk to. And at the same time, at the mass level of culture, there was a fracturing.
And everybody was in competition with everybody, every newspaper against every other newspaper
and against every magazine and ThinkProgress and Breitbart and everything was playing and
it created a push to focus on your niche, right?
When there was that much competition, it created more push even among the mass players to define
who they were for. So was this simply the result of the internet making media more about talking to the people
who agreed with you and differentiating yourself in terms of who you were, targeting as your
audience, and that also became how politics worked?
I think the substacization, I love substac people, I read them, I'm sure you do too.
But what we've lost in a substacized world in the media environment in which everyone
has small islands in which they talk to is that we haven't found that super majoritarian
outlets of how we convey news.
On the right, I would argue it exists.
I watch them.
I not only watch Trump's speeches, like a lot of conservative media you'll see
on YouTube itself has millions and millions of subscribers
and millions and millions of views.
There aren't that many corollaries on the left.
Who are you thinking of on the right there?
So Prager, you, Daily Wire are certainly doing,
if you look at- You would describe
what they're trying to do as super majoritarian?
No, no, no, I'm saying that scale.
I'm just saying, when Trump is building a movement and he's trying to reach large
numbers of people, I would argue to you, Ezra, you have the ability to reach scale with their
vision and their arguments much better than right now we are prepared to do on a center
left to just reach millions and millions of people.
If tomorrow, Kamala Harris or Joe Biden or Bernie Sanders went out and had an important thing to say, we are still reliant largely on, you mentioned,
some traditional news outlets, or you put paid media. This is why paid media matters
so much to the Democratic side of the aisle, because that's a chief method of communication.
Whereas I would argue on the right, you look at avenues that they just have millions and
millions of people with whom they can start to just seed
arguments thoughts ideas and then they can grow from there and I do think it matters as right that that scale issue
Is this really such an advantage for the right? This is this huge blowout election for Donald Trump
The greatest win anybody could have imagined him having and he's win what, a point or two in the popular vote?
It's a win, right?
And when you win, you get the power in American government.
But I could imagine a much stronger Republican performance given international trends in
2024 and think that is a party and a side that is figuring out how to talk to the people
who don't find them appealing.
Respecting where you're coming from, I think I'm operating off a different baseline.
I think given what I believe of Donald Trump and both his record and who he was and the
types of things he wanted to campaign upon, I don't believe he could or should have gotten
to a majority in this country.
What I would say, I'm somebody who watches lots and lots of Donald Trump speeches.
I probably am well over 100.
I watch them.
I want to learn.
I feel like I want to learn what a populist candidate is trying to say
and do out there.
And I do tend to think on the left, the center left, we've stopped listening to them.
And so you'll get like versions of, well, Donald Trump, all he's doing is spouting this
anger and meanness of, and me from within and Arnold Palmer jokes.
To be fair, it's all there.
But the thrust, if you listen to a lot of
Donald Trump's speeches and where he's kind of galvanizing working class, if you listen to even just the Joe Rogan
conversation, it's around an economic vision that when you listen to it, here's no tax on tips, here's my
tariffs plan, I've got a plan, an idea to do something about it. And I would argue to you that those things that we're often less talking about in the
center left, he's able to actually reach regular people with his outlets more effectively,
get that message across.
And that when you go to a town hall in Wisconsin and you talk about social security, this came
up a lot.
I stress tested myself, go around and say, hey, what'd you hear about Donald Trump on Social Security?
Well, Democrats keep saying they're going to protect Social Security, but Donald Trump
says he says there's no taxes on Social Security.
What do you think about that?
And like, right, we haven't even engaged that conversation.
They hear no tax on Social Security.
It sounds good.
It sounds like an expanded benefit, right?
My point is that he's able to get a message out like that, that you and I may not even
be living or seeing
if we're not dialed in to what they're talking about.
I think in this way, I would make a cut between two things in the Donald Trump media strategy
or the Republican media strategy, which is on the one hand, I think that the balkanization
into outlets like PragerU and the Daily Wire has not been good for them.
It has not been good for them intellectually. It has not been good for them intellectually.
It has not been good for them politically.
This year, the Trump campaign concentrated much more on outlets that are fundamentally
non-political like Joe Rogan, but have become alienated from democratic politics.
Say that again.
Elon himself has a platform in his own right.
You're right, Aiden Ross, you
know, Jake Paul, Théovon, Lex Friedman.
I mean, there was a whole variety.
You're right.
This is the way Donald Trump does media is he's willing and wants to, you know, reach
out to a lot of people and have these conversations.
Yeah, I didn't mean to suggest that, you know, I didn't mean to take us down this road of
just prager you or whatever, right?
But I think they're part of an ecosystem in which the conservative arguments are dominating
a center-left style of arguments.
That may be a better way to put it.
Bernie Sanders was on The Daily recently talking to my colleague Michael Barbaro about some
of this and specifically about Rogan.
And here's what he said when he was asked whether Harris should have gone on Rogan.
Am I afraid of being on your show? I aman. Am I afraid of being on your show?
I am not.
Am I afraid of being on Joe Rogan's show?
No.
Bottom line is what every communications director knows is that there is a new world
of media out there.
And it's not just NBC, CBS, or the New York Times.
It is podcasts.
It is Joe Rogan.
It is Fox News.
It is young people who nobody in the democratic leadership
has ever heard of who have YouTube programs
that attract millions of people.
That is the reality.
Can you ignore that?
That is insane.
Any one of the things you could ignore that reality
is crazy.
In my experience, not that I've been on millions
of these shows, the people that I talk to
treat me with respect.
And I think you cannot be, you know, oh, Joe Rogan said this or he says that.
Yeah, so what?
You know, my wife disagrees with me on this or that issue, so what?
You can't run away from somebody because they may have said something stupid or something
that you disagree with.
That's life.
But most importantly, when you go on the show, what do you say?
So Joe Rogan asks you, what do you think about the fact that we have more income and
wealth inequality than ever before?
Oh, well, I can't answer that question.
What do you think about the fact that we're the only major country not to guarantee health
care?
Well, gee, I'd like to not talk about that, but I don't want to offend the insurance companies.
Why are we paying the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs?
Well, I can't talk about that because I you know, I get money from the farmer.
That's the problem.
So, yeah, you got to go on different outlets.
Of course you do.
But most importantly, you got to know what you believe and what you're prepared to fight
for and what your vision for the future of this country is.
As I was reminded of during that appearance when Bertie was out with Joe Rogan, not to
be a promo for that show, but there was a moment when Bertie was doing his conversation
that you've heard a number of times of the system is rigged and the tax rates for corporations
is lower than you and I or any working class person is paying.
And Joe Rogan just, as a regular person says, why is that?
Well, why?
That seems to be illegal.
And he goes, Joe, it's because they write the laws.
It was just so genuine and honest.
That's what you get out of people wanting this type of
conversation that Bernie Sanders is referencing in a
setting in which he is correct that people are so hungry for
education in these spheres.
Like they're hungry for knowledge.
That's what you see people, I think,
trying to gravitate to online is give me some honest discourse beyond what I hear as platitudes
from political actors.
I want to catch on that platitudes from political actors because on the one hand, I so agreed
with the first half of what Sandow said there. And on the other hand, sometimes he talks
about a Democratic party that I don't really recognize when he says, when he's implying
there that if you asked a Democrat, I guess in this case, Kamala Harris,
but you really pick any generic Democrat, what they thought about high income and wealth
inequality and they would say, I don't know, I can't answer that question.
I mean, that is not actually what generic Democrats say to that or, you know, that why
are we paying the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs?
Well, I can't talk about that because I get money from pharma.
I mean, Biden-Harris administration.
But you're taking him too literally, right? So what he is saying, I can't talk about that because I get money from pharma. I mean, Biden-Harris administration-
But you're taking him too literally, right?
So what he is saying, I'll unpack it for you, but-
This is what I'm pushing you on a little bit.
Yes.
Go ahead.
I mean, like what he's saying, obviously,
is that when we make choices to campaign,
it's fine to say, hey, you know,
put a line in prescription drugs into your rally address.
But the issue is so salient among so many people that they want to
hear you really talk about, especially if you've been governing for three and a half years, go and
tell me this story of what we have been doing and what is next that we haven't just came, we saw,
we conquered, insulin prices are now capped for people on Medicare and that's it. Bernie Sanders
was pushing, Kamala was behind the scene the whole campaign to say, you suggest, Biden did, in the
State of the Union, a cap for people who aren't on Medicare.
So basically the people on Medicare are going to get this great benefit this year, but what
about the people who aren't?
Why don't we continue to push that?
And if you do, that policy design that we're now talking about blends itself into a story.
That's the power of it not to stick it into the prompter and read it one time.
This goes to something you've said a couple of times in this conversation, which is that you have to mean it into the prompter and read it one time. This goes to something you've said a couple times in this conversation, which is that
you have to mean it.
And one of the reasons I think that Bernie Sanders is not scalable, you know, in the
way that Donald Trump is and in the way that some, a lot of great politicians aren't, is
that he means it.
Sanders is just genuinely appalled by the nature of American capitalism and the corruption
of the American political system. In a way,
other candidates who might actually support many of the
same ideas aren't.
And that, I keep referencing the word populism, that is
what I mean, right? It is come from a realness, not that
we fed it into a 30-second ad and we put it in front of
you. The 30-second ad works best when it works front of you, the 30-second ad works best when it works
off of the authenticity of candidates who people already believe to some degree what
you've been saying, what you've been doing, and now I connect it with the way in which
you advertise.
We've been talking about individuals here, Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden and this person
and that person.
What about the party itself?
You've talked about listening tours.
What do you understand the Democratic Party institutionally
to be now and what would you like it to be in?
And how would you like it to show up in people's lives?
When I talk to most people around the country,
they say, what is a Democrat?
What does it ask of you?
It asks nothing of you.
It says, give me $20, give me $35.
It is a fundraising vehicle.
And a Democratic Party, I think, has to be reconstituted to
be of service in communities. You know, when you're thinking about in a period of inflation,
when people are dealing with high utility rate hikes, I would love to see a Democratic
party that says, hey, on the ground here, we're fighting against an unjust rate hike
in your community. When Starbucks workers organize in their local community, that's an immense
act of courage to go up against an employer and say, hey, I would like to be recognized.
I want the Democratic Party to stand with them. When East Palestine happens, I want a Democratic
Party that says, hey, you know, we here rally in support of a community because fundamentally
our ethic is that we want people to be in service of one another, but also structurally, we need institutions
that represent us.
So it reconceives a bit of what our value is in society
beyond the tactics of door knocking, phone banking,
small dollar donation, all good, all fine.
But to reclaim what the Democratic Party brand is,
is inconsistency with our values and our aims of improving government has to make us much more involved in society.
And you see on the right, arguably, they have better civic organization, right?
Whether it's a homeschool association, gun club, you know, you name it, there's a lot
of churches.
It facilitates and aids them.
And when you look at rural America and what's going on, people desire to be part of something.
Right now, the Democratic Party and the left and the decline of unionization has meant
there aren't as many avenues for being part of something.
And how does the Democratic Party start on that?
How does it reconnect?
How does it begin to build muscle or civic infrastructure that doesn't currently have?
We got to open the doors.
I mean, it is a closed club right now.
And most people don't even know who the voting members are within the DNC.
It's fine.
But you do want to open the doors, particularly at a time when you feel like you're starting
to lose your currency with people in New Jersey, New York, California.
Look at the sways of this, right?
Large numbers of people in most populous areas moving away from the Democratic Party to the
Republican Party, it
should send an alarm bell, right?
And it's open the doors and get out into communities and
hold listening sessions.
That's why I love going to UAW town halls or Union town
halls because it brings people of different walks
together and just listen and ask questions, basic
questions.
What does being a Democrat mean to you?
What does the brand mean?
What do you like about it?
What do you not like about it?
Right? What do you want us to hear? What do you want us to hear?
What do you want us talking about?
What do you not like us talking about?
And just let that help inform this process.
Why do you think they haven't been doing that?
Why do you understand the Democratic Party has,
and parties in general, have deteriorated
from being as muscular in people's lives
as maybe they once were.
Yes, I like that word, Ezra. That's a good one. Muscular.
Because it requires that. And we've been comfortably winning to a degree without it.
Because of the Trump era and what it does, and you could say all kinds of effects that Trump era has had on the Democratic Party,
you're able to win in a lot of ways on the overreaction,
disapprovals of him.
And that false comfort of winning can pull you apart
from where actual community attitudes are
about an affirmative vision and brand of a Democratic Party.
You're just saying, hey, what the other side is offering up
is just so unacceptable.
And that can get you through.
That's where we're losing the quote unquote populism.
That's the word, and I welcome other people having different words, but that gets you
closer to and compels you to go into forums and have dialogue, have disagreement.
It just pulls you into these zones.
The best politicians we've got going on in the Democratic Party are just genuinely and
organically interested in doing that kind of thing.
I think that is a good place to end.
So also a final question, what are three books you'd recommend to the audience?
So first is Tyranny of Merit by Michael Sandel's Justice Philosopher at Harvard.
Leaders Eat Last by Simon Sinek, just an ethic of the way, at least, you know, helped inform me
in the way I think about leadership and pushing for, with conviction, outcomes that we care
about.
And, you know, I love the books that, like, bring culture and politics together.
So there's books like, you know, Chuck Klosserman's The Nineties, which I enjoyed a lot.
But the one that also just came to my mind was, I think it's called Don't Get Above
the Raisin, which is a story about country music and how it infused southern working-class politics by Bill Malone
Faz Shakir, thank you very much. Thank you The Ezra Klan Show is produced by Roland Hu, fact checking by Michelle Harris
with Kate Sinclair, mixing by Isaac Jones with Am Aman Sahota and Afim Shapiro. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon.
The show's production team also includes Elias Isquith, Kristin Lin, and Jack McCordick.
We have original music by Pat McCusker, audience strategy by Christina Samuelsky and Shannon
Busta.
The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser, and special
thanks to Switch and Bored Podcast Studio.