The Rest Is Politics: Leading - 93. DNC Special: The Veteran Congresswoman (Rosa DeLauro)

Episode Date: August 24, 2024

What is the role of a member of Congress? How much do campaigns in the United States really cost? Is campaigning as a member of Congress wildly different to campaigning as an MP? Rory and Alastair ar...e joined by veteran Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro at the DNC in Chicago to answer all these questions and more. TRIP Plus: Become a member of The Rest Is Politics Plus to support the podcast, receive our exclusive newsletter, enjoy ad-free listening to both TRIP and Leading, benefit from discount book prices on titles mentioned on the pod, join our Discord chatroom, and receive early access to live show tickets and Question Time episodes. Just head to therestispolitics.com to sign up, or start a free trial today on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/therestispolitics. TRIP TOUR: To buy tickets for our October Tour, just head to www.therestispolitics.com Instagram: @restispolitics Twitter: @RestIsPolitics Email: restispolitics@gmail.com Podcast Editor: India Dunkley Video Editor: Teo Ayodeji-Ansell Social Producer: Jess Kidson Assistant Producer: Fiona Douglas Producer: Nicole Maslen Senior Producer: Dom Johnson Head of Content: Tom Whiter Exec Producers: Tony Pastor + Jack Davenport Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Thanks for listening to The Restis Politics. Sign up to the Restis Politics Plus. To enjoy ad-free listening, receive a weekly newsletter, join our members chat room and gain early access to live show tickets. Just go to therestispolities.com. That's the restispoletics.com. Welcome to The Restis Politics. We'll be Anastair Campbell. And with me, Rory Stewart. And we're very, very lucky to have somebody I admire Amensi, who's Congressman Rosa Deloro. And Congressman has had an extraordinary career, including chairing the vital committee in Congress on appropriations. and finance and introducing revolutionary policy on child tax credits, which was very important in terms of lifting people out of poverty. But we first got to know each other in relation to
Starting point is 00:00:47 Afghanistan and your support for women in Afghanistan and also as a very, very active Congresswoman for Connecticut, a New Haven, where my parents-in-law live and where I currently teach at Yale. So welcome and thank you. Well, thank you so much. It's such a delight to see both of you and be with you today in this really very exciting environment. It's going to be really an extraordinary and historic week in U.S. politics. Congressman, just as we were coming down the stairs, we're in this big hotel where a lot of delegates going to. You introduced me to the chief of staff of your congressional lead. Yes. Could we just for listeners explain a little bit about who he is and how this works and what's happening? Sure. Well, Gideon, who you met is a soon-to-be speaker of the
Starting point is 00:01:27 house. Hakeem Jeffries is his chief of staff and is with him on the floor of the house. And is with him on the floor of house all of the time. When I can't get to speak to Hakeem, I talk to or I call Gideon and tell him I want to talk to him or I pass messages through Gideon to Hakeem, who is very accessible, you know, as you might imagine. But Gideon is at the center of what's happening in the Congress, what's happening with our negotiations when we're dealing with appropriations, et cetera, you know, and everything that our leader Jeffries is involved in, Gideon is at the center of that. Now, you mentioned this week. Here we are in Chicago. and I was talking to Dan Bolts this morning from the Washington Post,
Starting point is 00:02:06 who said that he's never known a time when he went to two conventions where both the parties thought they were on their way to winning. He said the Republican Convention, the mood was like that, and now the mood has changed. Well, you know, I think that, first of all, this very, very big difference in conventions, the mood, as I say, also the environment and the direction. And one dark and gloomy, and this is really a triumph.
Starting point is 00:02:31 I think the Republicans did think that they were ahead. And, you know, we have an extraordinary individual who is our president of the United States, and that's Joe Biden. And he understood what was happening, as difficult as that might have been, for him to make the decision to leave. He did it with grace, with courage, and with dignity. And he's an extraordinary, extraordinary man. I know him a very long time. and he passed a torch to Kamala Harris.
Starting point is 00:03:03 Now, this is something that my Republican colleagues were not anticipating. So they are in a bit of a sweat. Do you think that's because they would never do it like that? You couldn't imagine Trump doing that, could you? Oh, my gosh, no, no. If you listen to him, he says, you know, after you vote for me, this time you won't have to vote again. God help us, you know, with what he means in that direction, and that he would be a dictator on the first day.
Starting point is 00:03:27 So, you know, it's a very, very different direction. And if you take a look at the kind of seamless transition that we have had from President Biden to Vice President Kamala Harris now is our nominee. And again, along with him and his help, she was able to take on the nomination, which she did in a very short order. It's 28 days. 28 days. They've raised over $300 million for the campaign. and she has unified the Democratic Party. She has really brought people together who were struggling.
Starting point is 00:04:06 They were struggling. You know, I think we have to be honest with ourselves about it. And so now the energy, the momentum, the enthusiasm is palpable. And if I can just go on for a moment more, it's not just here. Because here, you know, it's just every Democrat in the country is here and we're all talking the same language. I live in New Haven, Connecticut, the home of Yale University, and Rory's home for a while. But people who, you know, know me, they see me on the street, they'll say hello, Rosa. But the next thing out of their mouth is, we're going to win.
Starting point is 00:04:42 She's great. We've got to get people out to vote. That is palpable. I went to the dentist to get my teeth cleaned just before coming here. And the dental hygienist, you know, you can't talk when they're talking. But she is telling me about how excited. she is about Kamala Harris's run for president and what it means. So I think it's just, it is everywhere that sense of momentum, which continues. What more would you like to see in the
Starting point is 00:05:11 Democratic manifesto or ticket, which you think could really improve lives for Americans and guarantee this election? Well, what is really, I'm very, very excited about is what Kamala Harris's message is. Americans are struggling. The economic insecurity in this country is something as well that is palpable. It's not a campaign slogan to say that people are living paycheck to paycheck. They are. It's the cost of health care. It's the cost of food. It's housing. Big, big issues. And they haven't had a raise in their wages in years and years and years. So you have to start with them from where they are. I said over and over again to some of my colleagues at the White House, you can't start by telling them that we have the strongest economy in the world. You can't tell
Starting point is 00:06:03 that we've created 16 billion jobs. Even that's what we're moving in a direction. But their lives, they're not there. And I think if there were a criticism of President Biden, it's that sometimes he didn't fully acknowledge clearly the cost of living crisis. He seemed to want to talk about positive economic statistics, but wasn't as good as related. He wanted to start from saying what he had accomplished. And he accomplished an incredible amount. Took over the pandemic, turned the economy around. It's all of these things.
Starting point is 00:06:35 Biggest investment in climate, all over the above. And jobs, no question. But if you are someone in any city or town, you haven't seen your wages go up in years. You go to the grocery store. You're finding that you have to buy a jar of mayonnaise that costs $9. you know, this is where the struggle is. And what we need to do is to acknowledge that struggle right off the bat. And she is doing that.
Starting point is 00:07:04 She is talking about people need to have a job which pays a good wage and so that what they can do is to be able to meet their financial obligations. And she talks about it's opportunity, but look, I author the child tax credit and so I'm being very self-serving about that. But 20 years, I've worked on the child tax credit. President Biden put it into the American Rescue Plan. We had it for one year, and it expired. We had lowered the poverty rate to 5.4%. When we yanked the child tax credit, it went up to 12.2%. Hunger decreased by a quarter.
Starting point is 00:07:42 It now has gone up again. And what the child tax credit will do, and she has picked this up, it's become the flagship of the Democratic Party. $6,000 a year at $500 a month for every child. We have found the antidote to poverty here. It worked. Why did Joe Biden drop it? It was because in the time we could only get it for one year.
Starting point is 00:08:07 I started out wanting it to be permanent. I was told we couldn't do that. We couldn't afford it. Then I was told, okay, I said five years. No, five years. And I said, three, no, a year. And I wasn't going to let it go. I said, yes, we'll take it for one year.
Starting point is 00:08:22 And in one year, we reduced that poverty level. Half of our kids were out of poverty in the United States. But it must have been deeply frustrating for you when it was dropped, because not only was this your signature policy, but also, as you say, you saw a real negative impact on many low-income families. Yes, because, you know, I've rarely seen, and you are both students of government. I see federal programs come and go. I have never seen a federal program that worked as well and carried out the mission that it was intended to do.
Starting point is 00:08:59 And we get $10 for every dollar invested. People bought childcare so that they could go to work. They paid tuition for their kids. They bought school supplies. They bought food, et cetera. It was a new lease on life. And is this, Congressman, is this now guaranteed to be in the platform? And is it going to be central to the campaign?
Starting point is 00:09:19 It is now central to the campaign. She is going to expand and extend the child tax credit. She wants a $6,000 payment to families at $500 a month. And it includes a baby bonus, which we included, I included in my bill, because in the first year of life, it's very expensive. A rear child. It's diapers, everything that you have to get, the furniture, everything that you have to get. And she's committed to it.
Starting point is 00:09:48 As I say, it's the first thing on the list. And I think that resonates with people. That resonates with people. She's also very clear about the cost of food prices. You know, there's no food shortage in the United States. So why are the prices so high? Sure, the pandemic was supply chain. That's done.
Starting point is 00:10:10 Okay, let's take a quick break and we'll be back in a minute. Hi, everybody. It's Dominic Samerick here from The Rest is History. Now, some of you may have heard me on your show, The Restis Politics, when Rory was away and I was filling in and enjoying Alistair Campbell's tremendous banter. And I'm back to tell you about our new series on The Restis History, which is all about Britain in the 1970s, a period with a lot of uncanny resemblances to our own. So right now we're living through a moment when oil shocks generated by war in the Middle East are rippling through the world economy, when Britain feels, like it's sunk in a bit of a malaise. People are arguing about Europe. The government has got a few issues with the trade unions. And we have a kind of, I suppose you'd say governing elite,
Starting point is 00:11:00 a kind of political class that is really struggling to come to terms with all of these issues. And people are asking if Britain is governable at all. So there are a lot of parallels between that Britain that I'm describing, which is our Britain and the Britain of the mid-1970s. So in this series that's coming out on the rest is history, we're looking at these and other issues. We'll be talking about the rise of Margaret Thatcher, obviously a colossal figure in our political life even now, whether you love her or loathe her. We'll be talking about the very first Brexit referendum of 1975, a subject that I'm sure Rory and Alistaira will have strong opinions about. We'll be talking about the fall of the Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson, and we'll be
Starting point is 00:11:41 talking about one of the grimest moments in Britain's economic history, the moment in 1976 when we had to go cap in hand, as people said at the time, to the International Monetary Fund, the IMF for a then record bailout. Now, if that sounds good to you, how could it not sound good to you? Of course it sounds good to you. We have a clip for you to listen to at the end of this episode. And if you want to hear more, just search for The Rest is History wherever you get your podcasts. Now, I know you better through your husband, Stan Greenberg, because he is,
Starting point is 00:12:21 a well-known pollster and strategist who's worked for the Labor Party. And indeed, listeners won't be aware, but Stan is standing about 10 yards. Yeah, and so that's kind of how I know you. But looking through a lens of strategy, I was surprised at how slow the Democrats were to alight upon Project 2025. Really? Yeah. And even to this day, I don't think it's as well known by the public as it should be.
Starting point is 00:12:49 I think you're right about that. I think you're right about that. And I wonder why the Democrats haven't sort of got that right into people's heads. Well, it's very, very interesting that there seems to be a much more messaging about this. And I find the local people know pieces of it. I think it's really their blueprint for the future. You dismantle the Affordable Care Act, national ban on abortion, that you replace civil servants with the MAGA activists, of eliminate public education. You then overtime, no overtime. Well, they would say eliminate federal control of public education. Okay, yes. But let me just tell you. Now, if you think that this is a pipe dream, that this is a plan on paper, what I did,
Starting point is 00:13:32 what I asked my staff to do, I'm happy to get it to you. We put together a document. I said, find out for me in the appropriations bills that we're currently working on, track project 2025 and tell me where a 2025 is being enacted. I have a 20-page document, longer-page document. I can tell you that end the Department of Education. Eliminate Title I, which is the bulwark of public education in the United States over the next several years. In labor, you cut back.
Starting point is 00:14:13 No overtime, no project labor agreements, disastrous with regard to collective bargaining. And I'm witnessing all of this in the appropriations bills. And so I've gotten that out to all my colleagues. We've gotten it to the press so we can actually look at it's happening right now. But the public needs to know it is happening and they need to be wary of it. Just as we come towards the end, I love a little bit of a sense of one of the things that really moved and impressed me. is how committed you are to your local district. And I guess there are different types of Congress people.
Starting point is 00:14:50 Some of them seem to be spending their whole time to think about national security issues. Others seem to be focusing on local areas. You've done both. But I'd love, just for international lists, give us a sense of the life away from Washington. Give us the sense of the kind of stuff you do in New Haven. I've seen you working with refugees organizations,
Starting point is 00:15:10 with NGOs like IRS. I've seen you visiting. I mean, tell us about what the life of a congressperson is back in your district. Sure. You have to understand my own background. First of all, I'm the daughter of an immigrant family. Only dear dream, I would be in this position someday. But both of my parents served on the city council in New Haven.
Starting point is 00:15:29 They didn't write comprehensive legislation. Their brand of politics was, how do you make government work for people? Our kitchen table was a community room. People could come in about a job for their kid, an immigration problem, social security, wherever it was. So I grew up in that atmosphere of the role of advocacy, of how do you make government work for people. And my mother, when she ran for office, she could look at the voting list and identify everyone that she knew. And she knew when they came out to vote and what time they came out to vote. or she would go to pick them up to vote.
Starting point is 00:16:13 So it was really the connection with people. And that's who I am. And so I go back every weekend pretty much. I try to get to as many places. But the interaction is, it's exciting, you know, and it gives you energy. People find themselves in a position where they don't know where to turn to get something done. And we have the ability to help them to be able to do that. And so that's, you know, that's the way I perceive this job.
Starting point is 00:16:43 That's what I love about it. And I love the interaction with people. Now, my last question, we've just interviewed a guy called Peter Malinouskas, who is the Premier of South Australia. And he's trying to legislate to ban all political donations because he worries that money is too powerful in politics. And you mentioned there that as a great thing, Camilla, since Camer has become the candidate, $300 million.
Starting point is 00:17:09 That's right. Is there not part of you that wishes that politics wasn't like that? First of all, I wish we were a little bit like all of you that our election season were truncated. It was, you know, rather than a year, 18 months, et cetera. My God. So that's when you think about the amount of money that's involved, et cetera. But the issue here is the transparency in funding, where it's coming from, who is giving, etc., which we should have many, many more restrictions on and what's happening.
Starting point is 00:17:39 Money, unfortunately, does play a very, very big role. How much time do you have to spend fundraising? Not enough of my staff tells me. They really are always after me. You know, you got to. You know, when are you going to make the calls? When are you going to make the calls? I have to do it, though.
Starting point is 00:17:54 Am I right in saying that you're in a relatively safe seat? But if you were in a marginal district, people spend spending four hours a day doing this. Every day. Every day. I know some of my colleagues are down at the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. you know, every day at some period of time to make the calls. And the people who come from the coast are there because it's earlier. They're there in the evening and then they make calls in.
Starting point is 00:18:20 And we have to, you know, some of the legislation that's on the books now has to be reversed. That allows people to give untold amounts without you knowing where it's coming from and so forth. So we need to do that. But we do have a system now in which if you're going to run and, you have to put ads on the TV, you have to pay for those ads. If you want to hire volunteers, or you want to hire people, and you want to, you have to pay them. And that's just a fact of life for some of these. You know, my first campaign cost me under a million dollars. My God, that's a bargain. It's still a lot. It's still a lot. It's still a lot. And my campaign was 18 months long.
Starting point is 00:19:05 What do they cost now? So they've gone from a million up to? My God, it's, it's, it's, it's, It's so unseemly. Right. You know, $15, $20 million. Right. Some of them. For district. Or a state, you know.
Starting point is 00:19:16 My, you know, I had someone four years ago who ran against me. She was a multimillionaire, you know, spent maybe, you know, two million or more, you and so forth. And I had to, I had to scream about. I had to make those calls because I didn't have the money to try to keep up. So. Very fun one. I'm sorry I said final one. But one of the things that suddenly struck me listening to you, um, is that I,
Starting point is 00:19:39 I met you congressman once with Speaker-Omeritor Nancy Pelosi, and it struck me that some of your story about sitting with your parents is a little bit similar to the Speaker-R-R-R-R-A story. It really is. And in a different way, as I say, you know, the Speaker's parents served in the Congress. Her dad did. Her brother did. Her mom was the organizer in the family. So she grew up in a very political household in the same way I did.
Starting point is 00:20:07 It was more at the local level that. I did. But we do. We share the same background. You know, I'm often asked by the press, what motivates you, what makes you vote the way you do, what it would take up the issues that you take up. And it's not for the less time I've spent in the U.S. House of Representatives, but it was growing up in an Italian Catholic household in New Haven, Connecticut. And for Nancy Pelosi, it was an Italian Catholic household in Baltimore, Maryland. So we come from the same background, you know, a little bit different, but with that same set of values about what public service is all about. Well, thank you for your time. We really appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:20:49 Love it. Love you guys. Thank you so much. I'm delighted you're here.

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