The NPR Politics Podcast - Will SCOTUS Remake The Web? And Dems' Tough 2024 Senate Map
Episode Date: February 24, 2023The Supreme Court heard two major cases that could ultimately make platforms like YouTube and Twitter liable for the content users share on their sites. And a lot of blue lawmakers in red states are u...p for reelection in the Senate in 2024 — here's what we're watching.This episode: White House correspondent Scott Detrow, legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg, political correspondent Susan Davis, and senior political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.This episode was produced by Elena Moore and Casey Morell. It was edited by Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi. Research and fact-checking by Devin Speak.Unlock access to this and other bonus content by supporting The NPR Politics Podcast+. Sign up via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Connect:Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.orgJoin the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hi, this is Alyssa and Ephraim from St. Paul, Minnesota.
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but it finally took the birth of my baby boy on New Year's Day to get me around to it.
This podcast was recorded at...
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Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Scott Detrow. I cover the White House.
I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.
I'm Nina Totenberg. I cover the Supreme Court.
Nina, glad to have you on the podcast.
Thank you. I love being here.
We love having you, and I think most listeners can guess the topic when you're here.
We're going to be talking about the Supreme Court today because a really interesting case.
Just heard arguments on a ruling that could completely change the internet as we know it.
Though, Nina, as you reported from how the judges behaved, that might not be the case.
We will get into all of the details. Let's start with what is being argued here and how broad the
stakes could be. Well, the issue basically is, does the internet have immunity from most civil
lawsuits? Congress basically granted that immunity to the industry in 1996
when the Internet was in its infancy
because Congress wanted this new animal to prosper and grow.
But these days, a lot of folks hate the Internet,
on the right, on the left, and in between.
And the question in this case involves one of the few exceptions
to the immunity that Congress wrote into the law.
And the new one is 2016, the exception. And it happened after a bunch of terrorist attacks.
And the exception says you can sue an internet provider for aiding and abetting a terrorist
action. So these cases before the court were brought by the American families of people killed in several terrorist attacks in Paris, Istanbul, etc.
Nina, the analogy I've heard that has helped me understand this is whether these platforms should be viewed as a bookstore, where bookstore owners are not liable for the content in the books that they sell, or like a newspaper that is liable for the content that it puts in its pages.
Well, that's exactly the content that it puts in its pages.
Well, that's exactly the analogy that the internet providers make. It's not quite the one the other guys make. The other guys say you have to have some responsibility for what you do.
And in the argument, Justice Thomas, for instance, asked whether the algorithms are the same across
the board for cooking videos or racing videos
or ISIS videos. And the answer was yes. And Justice Sotomayor asked, how do I draw a line
between an algorithm and active collusion? And Justice Barrett asked, what about a retweet of
a link to an ISIS video? Would Twitter be liable? And Justice Kagan said maybe Internet platforms should get a pass, maybe not.
But isn't that for Congress to decide? And then gesturing to her colleagues, she said this.
You know, these are not like the nine greatest experts on the Internet.
And I'm just going to I'm just going to put a pin in that right now, because, Sue, I want to come back to that particular point with you in a few minutes.
But so, Nina, that was the first day of arguments.
Was it the same feeling?
Was it the same vibe on day two?
No, actually not.
On the second day, the court was focusing more on a case in which the lower court had said one of these aiding and abetting cases against Twitter should go to trial.
And there seemed to be some sympathy for that.
Both liberal and conservative justices asked about what Justice Sotomayor called
a certain willful blindness by the Internet companies about the consequences of what they do.
So I don't think this is a slam dunk for the industry.
Sue, I have a question for you, and I also have some thoughts.
Lay it on me, Scott.
You have seen, you know, for a good chunk of the Roberts court, you have seen a situation where the court says, you know what, the best solution to this is for Congress to pass a new law.
And Congress more often than not does not feel inclined or able to pass a new law, right?
There are so many topics that that applies to. But going off of what Justice Kagan said, I feel like, you know,
even though I think a lot of experts did kind of end up feeling like the justices asked nuanced
questions and seemed to understand the basics of the internet, there have been so many flashpoint
moments where Congress basically makes it clear, we don't really understand the internet. And
people laugh, but also it is the central driver of our modern economy, and that's infuriating.
And the fact that a 1996 law still dictates so much of the internet, I'm not building GeoCity's websites.
I'm not using a dial-up modem.
I didn't have to tell somebody to get off the phone to connect to the internet to tape
this podcast with you.
How are we in a situation where that still sets the parameters for this?
You know, there is a macro problem here that is bigger than just this issue of Section 230, is that we now live in a world where technology
accelerates and happens at a pace that Congress simply can't keep up with. It is not designed
to be as nimble and fast moving as the tech industry. And you do have inherently, you know,
a group of people that are not experts in this field. If anything,
lawmakers across the spectrum will be very forthcoming about how little they understand
about how the internet works and the implications of this. Then you enter the political problem
of how divisive these issues have become between the two parties. As Nina noted, you know,
conservatives are mad at the internet because they feel like these platforms in many ways have
been weaponized against them and their political causes. And liberals in many
ways feel like these industries need to be regulated. They need to be broken up. They need
to have much more aggressive laws against them. And there is fundamentally very little common
ground and an issue that you would need broad bipartisan buy-in to affect something that also
overlaps with a lot of issues that overlap with the issue of free speech in the First Amendment in the eyes of many lawmakers. companies, and at the same time, allowing a regulatory regime to punish them for not
intervening when they clearly should have intervened in some way. And that is, you know,
you couldn't do that in this country. We have a First Amendment that wouldn't allow that kind
of regulation. But the Europeans treat this industry like we treat electric companies and the phone companies that have certain regulatory goals they have to meet.
And if it becomes economically unfeasible to have a different system in the United States, it's possible, it is possible that the EU will essentially dictate what's on the Internet.
Because it's easier for the companies to have one set of standards than to deal with two different. That makes sense. Nina, going back to the two days
of hearings and the different themes that emerged, is this one of those cases where you have a sense,
even if you don't have a sense of what the exact ruling would be, you have a sense this is going
to be pretty narrow or this could be pretty broad? or could you see it at this point going either direction? I'm really not sure. Although, in the last analysis, the path of least resistance is to
do less, not more. But this was not an ideological fight among the justices. They all were looking
for something. Maybe they were looking for different things, but that wasn't entirely discernible. I think they all reflect the views of the American public and of us talking about this,
which is there's a serious problem here and nobody seems able to do anything about it.
Should we step in and put some sort of a limit on some responsibility for the companies.
I'm just not sure they can find a line.
Is this a wait till June ruling or not sure?
This is definitely a wait till June.
Okay, so we'll talk about it in June.
You ain't going to get this before late June.
Great. Sounds great.
We'll continue the conversation in June.
Nina, thank you so much for coming on the show.
If it were noon, we'd get it.
They would be thrilled.
All right, Sue, stick around.
We're going to take a break and come back and you and I are going to talk about next year's Senate races. This message comes from Wise, the app for doing things in other currencies.
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We are back in Dominica, Montenaro. You're here now as well. How's it going?
Hey, Scott. Good.
So let's talk elections. We are going to do a quick update on the Senate map next year. A third
of the Senate is up for re-e map next year. A third of the Senate
is up for reelection next year, in addition to the presidency and the House and everything else
going on. Democrats are going to face a tough map. We talked about that before. Right now,
they've got a little more breathing room than they did last year, 51-49. But it is a tough map
if you are Democrats. The states they're trying to hold on to are states that are competitive
or increasingly Republican-leaning. We're talking about West Virginia, Montana, Ohio,
Michigan, among them. And Sue, the last time we discussed this, the big question
was, will the Democratic incumbents stick around? Or will they read the room, say,
you know what, I think it's time for me to go later and leave the party scrambling to defend empty seats?
What does the picture look like right now?
You know, Democrats right now must be breathing a bit of a sigh of relief because already Sherrod Brown of Ohio has announced that he is planning to run for reelection.
And this week, John Tester from Montana announced that he would also seek reelection.
And Tester was probably at the very top of the retirement watch list.
You know, he's older.
He maybe is a guy that's known
for not necessarily loving Washington.
He's been an active farmer his whole time in D.C.
He gets the vibe of a guy that might just want to go home.
But he announced he would seek another term.
And, you know, you can't be too predictive with this stuff.
But I think it is a relatively safe statement to say that there are probably few, if no other Democrats in the state of Montana
right now who could win a statewide race more easily than Jon Tester. And it's not even going
to be an easy race for Jon Tester. But he is he's popular. He's well known in the state. He has won
reelection in the past. And also, I think
what might have been a factor in his decision making is he is also a former chairman of the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. He's run the election efforts for Senate Democrats,
and he knows exactly how hard of a year 2024 is going to be for the party and how important
his own decision making was. So a big
win for Democrats this week in that he decided to give it another go. Yeah, I mean, the map is just
horrendous for Democrats. They're defending all of the seats that are in the toss-up or lead column,
which are eight states, Arizona, Ohio, and West Virginia, then Montana, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin.
I mean, it really reads like a who's who of presidential election swing states. So you can
see that not just the incumbency issue, which is probably even more important than the presidential,
how Joe Biden winds up doing in the presidential is also going to have a huge impact. And Democrats have almost no targets.
I mean, the stretch of a target is Florida with Rick Scott up for reelection.
Yeah. And the dynamic you're going to see in Montana, and this is similar in West Virginia,
where, you know, probably the other Democrat we're waiting to see what they do is Joe Manchin of West
Virginia, is these are states that whoever is the Republican nominee are almost certainly going to win in 2024. So for Democrats to hold these seats,
they're going to have to outperform the Republican top of the ticket. And that's
really hard to do unless you have your own brand, your own strength as a candidate that's
separate from national trends, which is hard to do in hyperpolarized climates.
Tester has a brand that's a bit different than the party, as does Joe Manchin. If Manchin decides not to run,
I'm not sure any reasonable person thinks that West Virginia as a state Democrats could hold
on to in 24. And frankly, they might still lose it even if Joe Manchin does decide to run.
Any updates from Manchin or just kind of cryptic Joe Manchinese Senate subway statements?
You know, I think Manchin loves being the center of the conversation.
He doesn't have to make up his mind really fast in the same kind of way that I think other states do in more competitive races.
He's got time. The filing deadline is a far way away. The big thing I think is worth watching in West Virginia is whether the Republican
Governor Jim Justice decides to run for the Senate. That could play a decision-making role
for Manchin. He'd probably be the toughest Republican to beat. You know, sometimes these
guys make calculations over who they think they'd be running against. But I don't think Manchin feels
like he needs to show his cards anytime soon. Last month, he said all options
are on the table when asked if he was going to run as a Democrat or Republican or if he'd run
for president. So he's really not given any clues about what he's going to do. I think he's got his
finger very much in the wind to see what his chances are with the people that voted for him
in the first place. Well, on that point, Sue, usually the broader themes of who runs for re-election or not gives
us a sense of how worried or confident the parties are about the next election. Of course,
you could go through an entire election cycle thinking the election is going to break one way
and be wildly wrong, as we remembered last year. As happens very frequently these days.
Do we have enough of a pattern yet
to get a clear sense of how Republicans and Democrats
are thinking, at the moment at least,
how 2024 is going to go for them?
You know, I think the baseline 2024 is that,
once again, it's Republicans' election year to lose.
But that being said, Republicans have proven to be a party
that's very good at losing in election years that they should be able to lose. But that being said, Republicans have proven to be a party that's very good at losing
in election years that they should be able to win. I mean, there's a lot of recriminations
within the Senate Republican conference about past elections. There's a feeling that they
should have been able to do better in 16 and 18 and 20 and in 2022. And it goes to the candidate
quality aspect of this. There's a lot of races on the table in 24 that Republicans start with the advantage. and whether they put up more sort of general election palatable candidates or if they put
more hard right Trumpian kind of candidates in states like Michigan or Pennsylvania that
just don't have broader electoral appeal.
Those Trumpy type candidates are the ones who gave Republicans problems this past election
in the midterms.
It's why Trump's brand has sort of some of the shine has come off with the base a bit
because, you know, when you put up those kinds of candidates in some of those swing states that you
mentioned and are going to be targeted with hundreds of millions of dollars from outside
PACs and for presidential candidates, you know, these have to be candidates who can win in the
suburbs and who can win swing voters.
But I mean, just a perfect example of this, Arizona, you have Kyrsten Sinema now running as an independent. I don't believe she said whether she's running for reelection or not.
But there's a scenario where she's running as an independent, you have a strong Democratic
nominee as well. And then you have a situation where even though Carrie Lake has not given up
her losing effort to run for governor, which she lost, but she will not concede that, she is now making signs that she might run for Senate.
And I have to imagine that Mitch McConnell somewhere is screaming into the void about that sort of development.
Is there anything he and other establishment Republicans can do about it at this point, though?
They've tried. You know, point, though? They've tried.
You know, I don't – they've tried.
I don't know about the future, but I can tell you in the past it hasn't worked.
You know, in some ways, the more the establishment tries to get into primary races, the more it can backfire.
I think the most recent example that highlights that is the Georgia Senate race in which Herschel Walker ended up the nominee.
And this is a candidate that McConnell and his allies tried early in the process to not have him be the nominee, and they failed in that effort.
And so he has probably a better political sense of the kind of candidates that can win competitive races. But he also is very at a weakened political power point
within the party to get to be the kingmaker in those races.
And that is a very unfavorable place to be for any party.
Has he considered endorsing the candidates
that he does not want to be the nominee?
Like, just stand there, hold her arm up,
like, Mitch McConnell here.
This is the one for
me uh you know he might you know it could be who knows what's to come in 24 that's like it's like
biden said you know i really like mitch mcconnell and i'll say i like him or don't like him depending
on which way it'll help him all right we're going to take one more quick break then come back with
can't let it go we are back.
It is time to end the show like we do every week with Can't Let It Go,
the part of the show where we talk about the things from the week
we cannot stop thinking about politics or otherwise.
Domenico, I have a very important update on last week's Can't Let It Go
where we talked about the balloon.
I did end up asking multiple questions about the balloon club's fate
at the briefing.
We put a little of that exchange at the end of the episode as an easter egg the search was called off
that day so we'll never know if fighter jets shot down a 12 balloon that an illinois club
we'll get them another one from party city you know what and i was going to talk about something
else but i think i'm just going to say that the balloon situation continues to be my can't let it go for this week.
I don't know if the producers will come and yell.
Still?
It was insane.
It was insane, and it will never not be insane.
That's all I got, guys.
So it's just the balloon.
You're just still obsessed with the balloon.
I went on a – we went and visited family, and I was flying in an airplane looking at the sky.
And I was like, oh, this plane is cruising at 40,000 feet.
That was the exact height of three of the balloons last week.
So truly I don't know when it's going to get out of my system.
Hopefully before the next time I do, I can't let it go.
The cost differential between the cost of a weather balloon going up and the cost of shooting one down is pretty funny into itself.
Especially since one of the balloons, they shot and missed the first missile and they had to shoot two missiles at it.
Okay.
I'm never going to talk about the balloon can go to the vault with Ted Lasso as repeated things that I keep bringing up week after week.
Yeah.
We'll bring it back up when the IG report comes out with what that cost.
Can't wait.
Can't wait.
We'll do special coverage.
Uh,
Domenico,
what about you?
I can't let go of,
uh,
Antoine Davis,
who's a college basketball player for Detroit mercy.
Um,
uh,
and I don't know if you guys know his story,
but,
he's a mid-major player.
He leads the country in scoring this year in,
uh,
men's college basketball in Division I
at about 28 points per game. But what's more interesting is that he's now within 100 points
of the all-time NCAA Division I men's scoring title that has stood for 53 years.
Records are falling left and right these days.
Yeah, I mean, we'll see if he gets it. He's only got two games left and he needs to get 98 points in that time. I mean, if they make a little
bit more of a deep run into the conference tournament, even just one more game, he might
be able to get it. But you know, it's really interesting. Pistol Pete Maravich was who
owns the record, played for LSU for three years Averaged more than 40 points a game.
Just ridiculous what he was able to do in the pre-three-point era, remember?
And this guy, Antoine Davis, man after my own heart, 85% of his shots are three-pointers.
He is the all-time leader in three-pointers, which he just set recently. He hit 11 three pointers in the game that he set the,
that he set the record for NCAA men's basketball. Um, and, uh, you know, he's a lot of fun to watch
they're even retiring his number, uh, this week, uh, number zero, um, uh, with Detroit mercy.
And we'll see if he winds up, I'll keep an eye on it and see if he winds up getting the record.
So you said he needs 98 points?
Yeah, he needs 98 points.
And he's got at least two games to go.
Is that like, give me some sense of how hard that is as someone who doesn't follow basketball
as closely.
Like, is that attainable?
I mean, it's almost 50 points on average for a game.
He has to score an average of 49 points in both games.
He's scored over 40 points
in a bunch of different games this
year. It's tough.
I mean, he shoots a lot, and
people know he's going to shoot, and they stick to him
really closely. He can hit some
crazy shots, but
getting that level,
I think they're probably going to need one more
game to get a little deeper
into the conference tournament, where I think if you're giving him 33 points a game, I think he could do that. I think they're probably going to need one more game to get in a little deeper into the conference tournament where, you know, I think if you're giving him 33 points a game, I think he could do that.
I think 49 is asking a lot, but we'll see if he goes off.
The tournament's a tough time to just feed him the ball to get the record, though, I imagine.
You know, if it was like a whatever game at the end of the season, just let him take every shot.
And their team doesn't have a great record.
They're below 500.
So, you know, they're not expected to make a deep run in the conference tournament.
So, you know, maybe if he plays really outstandingly, he'll get another chance.
All right.
We will bring an update.
Sue, what about you?
The thing I can't let go this week is Pedro Pascal, Internet Daddy.
Do you know who Pedro Pascal is?
Yes.
From The Last of Us.
Yes.
So I just started watching The Last of Us this week.
It is a post-apocalyptic show about a pandemic.
And I don't know why I started watching that, but it's a pretty good show.
But Pedro Pascal is the lead actor in it.
Scott, you probably know him from The Mandalorian.
I know that was a show that you were into,
even though you couldn't see his face in that show.
And Game of Thrones.
Big fan, though I've not gotten to this show yet
for obvious reasons that you just mentioned.
I can get why you might not want to watch the show.
But I have fallen down the internet rabbit hole
of Pedro Pascal internet daddy
in that he has enjoying this weird side moment of fame in which
he has sort of embraced this identity. And I didn't really understand, I have to admit,
what Internet Daddy meant. So I have gone down the rabbit hole this week. And it's actually
quite nice in that, yes, it is partly because he's a heartthrob.
There you go.
But also he has become sort of emblematic of a good guy that he
is like the the characters he plays and his sort of energy is he seems like the kind of person you
would actually want with you at the end of the world and he's like the culture was like hungry
for a new a new hero a new good guy and now he is the internet daddy. And I'm here for it. Is he the character wearing
the leather jacket that I feel
like everyone has opinions on, too?
Yes. He's got, like,
he's also, like, daddy style,
like, jeans and flannel shirts.
Like, I feel like you guys' daddies should be
doing it. You had a similar leather jacket
on this week, and I thought it looked good.
Hey, listen,
I was gonna say, good guy dads who aren't terrible looking having a moment.
I mean, I'm here for that.
We can support that.
I thought you could get behind that.
That's a wrap for this week.
Our executive producer is Mathani Mathuri.
Our editor is Eric McDaniel.
Producers are Elena Moore and Casey Murrell.
Research and fact-checking by our intern, Devin Speak.
Thank you to Krishna Dev Kalamore, Lexi Shabittle,
and our wonderful, amazing, cannot-be-replaced,
favorite person to talk about baseball and other nonsense within the office,
and also thoughtful, engaging, just great all-around all-star on social media and audience engagement, Brandon Carter.
I could keep going, but I'll stop.
He is sadly moving on to the Washington Post, and we Washington Post. Thank you, Brandon. You've been amazing. We're going to miss you.
That is it for this week, though. I'm Scott Detrow. I cover the White House.
I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.
And I'm Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent.
Thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.