The NPR Politics Podcast - Ground Game, Mic Failures and Some Closing Arguments

Episode Date: October 21, 2024

Both candidates were together in Michigan this weekend started their weekends in Michigan, where Vice President Harris made use of Republican validators and Trump's own words to make her closing argum...ent: returning Trump to office would be calamitous for American values and institutions. And Donald Trump battled production issues that left him visibly angered on stage and doubled down on his closing message — immigration and Harris' fitness for office.This episode: national political correspondent Sarah McCammon, White House correspondent Asma Khalid, and national political correspondent Don Gonyea.The podcast is produced by Jeongyoon Han, Casey Morell and Kelli Wessinger. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Support for this podcast and the following message come from the NPR Wine Club, which has generated over $1.75 million to support NPR programming. Whether buying a few bottles or joining the club, you can learn more at nprwineclub.org slash podcast. Must be 21 or older to purchase. Hi, this is Grace, and I'm currently hiking through Machu Picchu with a two-year-old strapped to my back. This podcast was recorded at 1.06 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, October 21st, 2024.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Things may have changed by the time you hear this, but this wonder of the world will still be kicking the butts of tourists like me. Okay, here's the show. Say adios, Harris. Adios. Oh. I'm imagining a two-year-old kicking mom, because that's what mine would have done at that age.
Starting point is 00:00:49 I've heard Machu Picchu is hard enough to hike on your own. I can't imagine how it is with extra weight luggage on you. Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Sarah McCammon, I cover the campaign. I'm Les McCollid, I cover the White House. And I'm Don Gagnier, national political correspondent. Today on the show, the presidential race in Michigan in the final two weeks of campaigning.
Starting point is 00:01:09 Don, you are there in Michigan. You're based in Michigan. You've watched a lot of Donald Trump's campaigning over the weekend. And to sum it up, a lot of strange things happened. As much as you can make heads or tails of it, Don, what is Trump's strategy in these final weeks? Well, you know, the basic strategy or maybe the overriding thing is show up.
Starting point is 00:01:30 Show up a lot in Michigan. And it's him and it's his running mate, JD Vance. And when they are here, they hammer home the message that Trump will be good for the Michigan economy and that he'll protect the US car industry with tariffs on China specifically. He talks about China a lot. He rails against the push toward electric vehicles. But you mentioned the strange things that happened here over the week. And let me tell you about a couple of things that happened Friday.
Starting point is 00:02:05 Trump's last visit here, he did two big events and then there was a little side trip as well. He started out with a business round table in the far Detroit suburbs in a town called Auburn Hills. And it was just a really oddly low key event for a Friday. US Senate candidate Mike Rogers was there. He's a former congressman. He's been endorsed by Trump, but he wasn't really showcased or highlighted in any meaningful
Starting point is 00:02:35 way. There were some teamsters there. There were some representatives of local police associations there. There was a woman who's running for local school board there, all again kind of around this horseshoe table. But then came the big event, the really big event for the day, and that was a rally in downtown Detroit.
Starting point is 00:02:59 And 10 minutes into the event, Trump's mic just stopped working. Because to me, the most beautiful word in the dictionary, it's not love, it's not respect. And it was the second time in not too short of a period where he basically just kind of walked around the stage for 18 minutes to be exact while they fixed the mic and he wasn't really interacting with the audience. He wasn't doing anything except kind of walking around the stage and it really did kind of take a lot of the energy out of the evening event and he never really truly found his
Starting point is 00:03:42 rhythm after that and even 10 minutes after the microphone started working again, he would go off on a riff about how he's going to sue the guys who provided this mic. If it goes out again, I'll sue the ass of that company. We're going to sue him. Then they'll say, what a horrible guy Trump is. He's a terrible guy. Or how this mic is going to blow out his voice. And he just kind of kept complaining.
Starting point is 00:04:09 Then that was it for Friday night. It's hard to see the big takeaway for anybody at that rally being anything other than, oh, his mic stopped working. I mean, and yet, you know, Trump has always been sort of, to say the least, unconventional candidate. He's never really followed the typical rules. In fact, that's part of his brand. And if you're listening closely, it can be hard to follow his message at these
Starting point is 00:04:38 rallies. And yet, when you talk to voters, there are these key themes that seem to break through. What's getting across to the voters you talk to voters, there are these key themes that seem to break through. What's getting across to the voters you talk to, Don? There are themes that break through. And look, when I describe these kind of less than perfect events, I'm not necessarily saying that they were really bad for the campaign or that they were disastrous or anything, right? Or that there is sign of anything bigger, because his message is
Starting point is 00:05:06 simple. His message about an immigration invasion, his message about an economy that is not serving, especially working class people in a place like Michigan. His very simple billboards around town and elsewhere that basically, you know, have his photo and then say a very clear, simple message like no taxes on tips. Or he talks about how Kamala Harris is a lousy vice president, again using stronger language than that, or how she's not smart. Those are simple things that are breaking through with his supporters. Ultimately, he does, though, need more than just
Starting point is 00:05:45 his traditional supporters to win this state. Polls show it to be very, very, very close. The question is, does that break through beyond his regular support? Yeah, and Asma, you were just in Michigan. You spent time with Vice President Harris. She's been trying to hone in on just the strangeness of Trump's behavior by playing clips of Trump at her events. What's her message?
Starting point is 00:06:11 That's right. I mean, Harris has started playing clips of Trump so that folks in the audience can hear the former president in his own words. And he tells us what he would do if he was elected president. So here tonight, I will show you one example of Donald Trump's worldview and intentions. Please roll the clip. The worst people are the enemies from within. And I would say more than, you know, really focusing on the behavior She's really zeroing in on two big themes that Democrats have been trying to campaign on this cycle
Starting point is 00:06:50 One is their view that Trump is a threat to democracy. She plays clips of him Describing this sort of enemy from within all of that, you know She's also played clips of him on abortion and these are two big themes that played clips of him on abortion. And these are two big themes that translate well to voters in the suburbs. And that is essentially the central vision that I have seen from the Harris campaign in these closing weeks. They know that there are electoral challenges
Starting point is 00:07:17 in some of these key swing states. They also will consistently say it's going to be a tight race. The margins are everything. And they see advantages in the suburbs. I mean, and to a tight race, the margins are everything, and they see advantages in the suburbs. I mean, and to that point today, the vice president is out there campaigning with the former Republican congresswoman, Liz Cheney, in the suburbs of Detroit, in the suburbs of Milwaukee, and in the suburbs of Philly.
Starting point is 00:07:38 They believe that they can really sort of boost voter turnout in suburban communities, talking about white college-educated voters in a lot of these places, that's not the only part of their strategy, but they see it as a key part of their path. Seems like every four years we talk about the suburbs once again, a really big focus this year. You know, it's also striking once again how much this campaign seems to be, yet again, a referendum on Donald Trump. Is that Harris's closing pitch?
Starting point is 00:08:06 Is that the way the campaign wants to frame the decision that voters face? It is certainly a central message of what we are hearing from Harris. Just take a listen to what she had to say at a rally in Oakland County the other night. This was in the suburbs of Detroit. There is so much on the line in this election. And this is not 2016 or 2020. The stakes are even higher because remember a few months ago, the Supreme Court of the United States basically told the former president that he is effectively immune from doing whatever
Starting point is 00:08:37 he does in office. That is in essence Harris's closing argument. It is very much about the threat that she, that other Democrats see, that Trump poses to this country. It is a message that as you hear really, really rallies up voters in some of these key suburban parts of the state. It's not, again, the only issue. I mean, there was a woman I spotted there
Starting point is 00:09:01 wearing a sticker that said, "'Woman to woman, your vote is secret. Support reproductive rights this November.'" I mean, abortion remains a key issue for many Democratic voters. But the threat that Trump poses is something that I would say we saw President Biden really, really lean into. It is something that she is circling back to now in these final days. All right, we're going to take a quick break. We'll have more in just a moment. This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies.
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Starting point is 00:10:05 of over 30 hotel brands around the world. Find the unforgettable at autographcollection.com. This election season, you can expect to hear a lot of news, some of it meaningful, much of it not. Give the Up First podcast 15 minutes, sometimes little less, and we'll help you sort it out, what's going on around the world and at home. Three stories, 15 minutes, up first every day.
Starting point is 00:10:28 Listen every morning wherever you get your podcasts. This message comes from The Lever, producers of the chart-topping podcast Master Plan. Award-winning journalist and former Bernie Sanders speechwriter David Sirota exposes the 50-year plot to legalize corruption in America. Listen wherever you get podcasts. And we're back. One of the things we keep coming back to is how much gender has played
Starting point is 00:10:54 a role, how much sexism seems to be a barrier for Harris in a way that cuts across demographics. Asma and Don, what are you hearing from voters about this question of gender? Asma Zahidi Well, what I will say is that Harris is running a fundamentally different campaign. We talk about gender compared to how Hillary Clinton ran for the White House in 2016. Clinton really leaned into the symbolism of being the first woman, right? You'll probably remember she wore this white suit when she accepted the nomination. Harris doesn't do things like that. That all being said, though, it is an issue that I heard a couple of times on the campaign trail this past week. It was brought up unsolicited to me. There's a man I met at a UAW event
Starting point is 00:11:35 that Harris was doing in Lansing, Michigan. He himself said he's all on board for Harris. His name is Matthew Paris. He told me he's 37 years old. He has friends who have reservations about whether or not a woman can do the job. He wasn't the only person who's made comments like that to me. They'll say, I'm paraphrasing here, but they'll say, you know, I'm on board for Harris, but I know so-and-so who isn't. How widespread some of those concerns are, I don't know. I have also spoken with Ken Whitaker. He's with Michigan United Action. It's a group that fights for a lot of progressive issues, particularly around Detroit.
Starting point is 00:12:10 And their director told me that some of the feedback they've been hearing critical of Harris has been, well, she's been the VP for a number of years and they don't feel like their life has gotten necessarily better. But the other thing that he has been hearing are questions about whether or not Harris is actually black. To be clear, she is black. She's also of Indian heritage. But that is something that he says he's been hearing
Starting point is 00:12:32 from some black voters as they go out to try to canvas. It's so interesting that black voters seem to be imbibing that message that Trump himself first put out as far as we know at that conference a few months ago with black journalists in Atlanta. To be clear, I mean, he did say that their target group are sort of low-information voters, voters who might just stay home rather than show up on election day. There is definitely, and he mentioned this, a clear population of black voters who are extremely energized to vote for Kamala Harris.
Starting point is 00:13:04 But there is, you know, part of the population that he said they're apathetic, they have concerns, and he said that four years ago some of these voters showed up because the anti-Trump sentiment was really, really powerful. What gives him a bit of anxiety this time, he said, is that he doesn't hear among some of these kind of less frequent voters as much energy to show up because of Trump. Like that is not solely enough of a motivating factor, he says. And I don't hear these complaints about Harris's race
Starting point is 00:13:35 or the fact that she would be the first woman president broadly across the Michigan electorate. You do hear them in these very kind of small subsets, even within some groups that Democrats would traditionally count on and Trump is really leaning into that. He's leaning into it himself but also with surrogate. So we see him trying to pull away the votes, again, a traditionally Democratic constituency, young African-American male voters. He has kind of really been leaning into that. Again, if you look at exit polls, Joe Biden carried the African-American vote. Kamala Harris is polling below where Joe Biden was.
Starting point is 00:14:25 Again, we don't know where these votes are gonna turn out, but nobody is saying Harris will lose the African-American vote, but she needs that big traditional margin. And if she doesn't get that big traditional margin, she's gotta make it up somewhere else in the suburbs, where there are plenty of votes to make it up, we should say.
Starting point is 00:14:44 But that's what we see Trump leaning into we also see him making a very big play for the Arab American and the Muslim American vote again usually a very reliable group of voters for Democrats but because of the war in Gaza and because of the great, great anger over the Biden administration's handling of that situation, a lot of that is creating problems within that community for Kamala Harris. So all of these things are swirling around, but ultimately, as we sit here today,
Starting point is 00:15:23 we don't know how any of it ultimately shakes out. And of course, it all matters because as we know, in such a close race, even small shifts in small groups of voters can make a big difference. On that note, of course, it's all going to come down to turnout. And so before we go, we should talk about ground game and just the stark contrast between the organization and the ground game of these two parties, especially in Michigan. Don, what are you seeing? This is the wild card, right? The Democratic Party in Michigan has always had a pretty good
Starting point is 00:15:57 ground operation. It doesn't mean they feel like they've always had the candidates to support it, right? But this year, kind of at the, at least the symbolic head of that, is Michigan's very popular and very dynamic governor, Gretchen Whitmer. She's been working hard and there are a lot of pieces to that ground game that are already in place. Part of that is the unions. And famously, Sean Fain, the president of the United Auto Workers, has been among Trump's strongest critics and he has mobilized his union's political operation on behalf of the Harris campaign. On the Republican side, you have a Republican Party in Michigan that has
Starting point is 00:16:43 been in disarray for years now. There is some stabilization, but it's pretty recent, and there is just no sense that they are organized like they might have been when Mitt Romney was the nominee, for example, to turn out the vote in ways that they traditionally would. You layer in the fact that the Trump campaign, the Republicans are really relying on outside groups, like one funded by Elon Musk, like Turning Point USA, to outsource to them this traditional ground game operation. And that just raises a lot of questions. We can't say here that that's not going to work
Starting point is 00:17:28 or that's not the way to do it, but I can tell you they are not as visible on the ground as the Democrats already are. And you know, Dawn, it's worth mentioning, I mean, President Biden did win Michigan last time, but Trump has won Michigan before, back in 2016. That's right, he won it by just the narrowest of margins in 2016, something like 10,000 votes.
Starting point is 00:17:51 Biden won it by more than that four years later. Trump has a record of either winning here or running very close. So that's where we are with two weeks to go. All right, we'll leave it there for today. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover the campaign. I'm Asma Khalid. I cover the White House.
Starting point is 00:18:09 And I'm Don Gagne, national political correspondent. And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast. Who's claiming power at this election? What's happening in battleground states? And why do we still have the Electoral College? All this month, the Throughline Podcast is asking big questions about our democracy and going back in time to answer them. Listen now to the Throughline Podcast from NPR. This message comes from The Political Scene. Join the New Yorkers, writers and editors for reporting, insight and analysis
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