The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Wanted: Democratic Leadership with DNC Chair Ken Martin
Episode Date: September 25, 2025As millions struggle to turn their political frustration into positive action, Jon is joined by Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin. Together, they explore the role of party leadership in r...ebuilding after electoral defeat, discuss the fundamental challenges and internal divisions facing Democrats, and consider how the DNC and the party can rise to meet this moment of political opportunity. This podcast episode is brought to you by: GROUND NEWS - Go to https://groundnews.com/stewart to see how any news story is being framed by news outlets around the world and across the political spectrum. Use the link to get 40% off unlimited access with the Vantage Subscription. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast> TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod > BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/theweeklyshowpodcast.com Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Producer – Gillian Spear Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Music by Hansdle Hsu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, everybody.
It is Wednesday, September 24 that we're taping the weekly show podcast.
My name is John Stewart.
We're doing this in the morning.
And I have to say that now because the cadence, the speed, the circadian rhythm by which news occurs.
Jimmy Kimmel came back on television last night, delivered, I thought, just a fan.
fantastic, heartfelt, but still funny and interesting, and just met the moment that he was given
in such a beautiful way. And I was so proud to be a practitioner in that same business.
And who knows? By today, he could have been taken off the air again.
We don't really know where this goes. And I think.
ultimately his point about this isn't about the dopey shows that we do and the things like
that it's about a principle of a government that has basically operated like a monarchy and
Trump has said it even explicitly which is I don't do business with people I don't like
as though government is purely a business we are not his business partners we are not his
associates we are the citizens of a sovereign nation and a constitutional republic that should have
representation whether he likey or no likey so it's just been and i don't even feel bad about it
because as shitty as he is to all of us he just walks into the u.n and goes i'm right about
everything and you live in hell holds. And the favorite part is the escalator, which has been so
pivotal in the rise. The escalator is his vehicle. It is his triumphant chariot as he comes down from
what appeared to be a Barnes & Noble down towards what was the food court where he delivered
his first message in in 2016, but to have that chariot fail him at the UN, and to have to go back
to use it at its most primitive form, which is, of course, the stair.
The stair is the way that it had to go, and to blame the UN for subterfuge.
And meanwhile, they're like, actually, I think you had like a camera dude who tripped up one
of the things, and that it was a safety alarm, and it tripped it up.
And that's why it stopped.
But either way, why get in the way of a perfectly good conspiracy about the United Nations
wanting to force a cankled man to scale the heights of Mount Escalator?
Find his way into the General Assembly.
But we're not talking about today.
Today is a whole different animal.
Today we're going to be discussing things about the Democratic Party, which you may or may not know,
still exists. I believe on paper. I don't know if it exists in the larger cultural sense
relevance-wise, but it is on paper, I believe, still there. And we're going to bring on our
guest. He is the chairman of said Democratic Party, National Committee, et cetera. So let's get
to our guest now and we'll move this thing forward. All right. So we're
We are joined right now by our guest, the head, the chairman.
Is it chairman, Ken?
Do they call it the chair?
I like to call it chair, but whatever the hell you want to call me.
The chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Mr. Ken Martin, thank you for joining us.
Oh, thanks for having me, John.
It's a crazy time.
It's a crazy time.
The first thing I want to do again, and this may seem a bit remedial, is just to get a sense of what is your job?
What is under the purview of the chairman of the Democratic National Committee?
Well, I appreciate you asking that because there's a lot of ideas what my job should be.
But let me tell you what it really is.
Yes.
At the core, the job of any political party chair of either party at any level, whether it's a national party, state party, local party, is to build infrastructure to actually help us win elections up and down the ballot, right?
And that is very encompassing, of course, what does infrastructure mean?
It means that we are, you know, of course, making sure that we're engaging volunteers in the work of talking to voters to, you know, developing our platform and our message, to make sure that we're out there recruiting candidates.
We're raising the resources to put organization in place to actually help, you know, ID, persuade, mobilize voters to actually show up on Election Day and win elections.
It's as simple as that, right?
It's much more complicated in terms of the actual pieces of it.
But at the core, I think there's a lot of things people think the Democratic Party is,
i.e., you know, that we control our elected officials, our candidates,
that we control what happens in the U.S. Congress or in state legislatures.
No, the party's role is really simply, what are we doing to actually help us win?
Right.
But certainly you're not, I mean, I wouldn't think agnostic on policy.
I think you're probably determining, you know, it's, you are the architects and builders to some extent.
And I would imagine right now, maybe even with an elevated role, because of the lack of an apparent leader of the party.
Well, look, I mean, I would say this, you know, obviously we're out of power and we have a lot of, that might be the nicest way I think I've ever heard that put.
Yeah, and, you know, the Republicans are sort of at an apex of their political power.
Yes.
But I will say this, that the role right now for me, and then frankly, you know, our leaders throughout the country, and we have many different leaders, is to make sure that we're presenting a coherent and concise message that connects with voters again.
And we have a role to play in that for sure.
But it's not our role alone.
We're not the sole deciders on what our message is, what our platform is, and what we're going to be talking about.
But we do work with all of our partners in that conversation, you know, from our governor.
smears. Yeah, I was going to say. So, you know, as you're putting that together, because, you know, one of the things I think you find right now is, you know, you talk about a coherent message. And that's a great phrase that I have not heard Democrats utter in quite some time. You sort of have this, you know, there's the Bernie wing that's got a more populist drive. And that's been very active for a couple of days.
decades you've got kind of this new maybe slotkin let's just talk normal uh you know let's say
michigander as much as we possibly can so that people go is that really what they call themselves
you know you've got sort of the competent governor archetype where they roll up the sleeves and
and they curse more and say we're going to get shit done right how does that come together logistically
You know, and then you've also got maybe on the other side, you've got kind of the Ezra Klein abundance messaging.
But if you think about it in Congress, Chuck Schumer is the leader.
Hakeem Jeffries is the leader in the House of Representatives.
I don't know any role that they have in the messaging.
They seem almost vestigial at this point.
Let me just say that.
I think what you point to is one of the challenges in the Democratic point.
party for sure is we're a big tent, right? You know, we're not that big. If you were a big tent,
we wouldn't be in this position, would we now? Well, let me say this. In terms of our representation
in this party, in terms of elected officials, we have conservative Democrats, we have centrist Democrats,
we have progressives like me, and then we have the leftists, right? This sort of new emerging
wing of our party. And I've always believed that you win elections through addition, not subtraction.
You win by growing your coalition and bringing new voices into the party.
What that means, of course, is sometimes that means it's messy.
There's debate.
There's dissent.
There's difference of opinion.
That's a good thing for our party, right?
But what it also sometimes means is you have some inconsistency in the message itself in terms of breaking through.
And I will say part of the challenge for a Democratic Party chair, again, is how do we get all of the various wings of our party?
and all of these various ideas into the same boat, rowing in the same direction towards the same goal.
And part of that is by creating a frame, a message frame that whether you're a leftist Democrat or a conservative Democrat, you can use, right?
And so that when we talk about messaging, we have to also recognize, I'll use Minnesota as an example.
I'm going to stop you for a second. Yeah, please.
Because you're, you will take the role of instructor laying out the steps by which you're,
to create a functioning party.
And I, I believe, will take the role of doubting Thomas.
Please.
Perhaps a skeptic.
There's plenty of those out there these days.
Understood.
What you are talking about and the way that you are talking about it strikes my ear as a kind of consultant-driven
as opposed to what I'm hearing from you is.
we have to have a big tent and draw different ideas and create a unified.
And what it says to me is, I didn't hear once like, what do you, what do you,
everybody believe in? What's the principle? What's the, what's the drive?
I'm happy to get into what I think the message should be. And let me say what I think it should be.
Thank you. It's very clear. And, you know, no more about boats. No more about rowing.
No, no, because I do think it's important to talk about the tactical.
challenges for the Democratic Party, which is what you were saying, right? We have all of these different
ideas. How do you actually come up with a message? I think the message is very clear, right? John,
we got away from this. In 92, James Carville said this, that it's the economy stupid, right? And
the reality is, is if you got 100 people in the room right now, 100 Democrats, and ask them
what the Democratic Party stood for, you'd get 150 different answers. And so I think it's very
simple. It's no matter where you're from, no matter where you live, no matter who you love or who
you are, you should have an opportunity in this country to get ahead, not just get by. You should have
an opportunity to achieve the American dream, to climb the economic ladder and achieve success
for your family, right? That at the core of it is fairly simple, right? That is who the Democratic
Party has been for years, in my opinion, but we've gotten away from that, right? And I would say
how have you gotten away from it? What's in your mind? Because one of the things, John, I think what
we do is we tend to message to smaller and smaller parts of our coalition. Some people call it
identity politics. I actually think it's broader than that. It's also geographic. We say one thing
to a rural community. We come into a suburban community and say something different. We come
into an urban corn. Well, the needs of a rural community are different from an urban community.
Sure, but there should be some core sort of thread that connects all of them, right? And I'll use
Minnesota as an example, John. What connects a corn farmer? Like,
my father-in-law, right, in southern Minnesota, with an iron ranger up on the iron range with
Ken, I'm not going to know the answer to this.
Well, of course you are, because...
I don't know what connects a corn farmer to an iron.
I don't even know what an iron ranger is.
Well, let me tell you what it is.
It's someone who's mining up on the iron range in Minnesota.
The largest deposit of iron ore in the country is in northern Minnesota.
By the way, with a refugee, a new refugee in the Twin Cities, what is the thing that
connects all of them?
Well, it's pretty simple.
They are very disparate groups, for sure.
But what connects them is economics.
Every one of them has a job.
Everyone's working their asses off.
All three of those groups are falling behind, feeling left behind, forgotten, dispossessed,
and they feel like the Democratic Party and the Republican Party could give a shit about their lives.
These are folks that are hardworking.
Most people, by the way, when we talk about the working class, but when we talk about the working class in this country,
which is about 70% of Americans
that do not have a college degree.
These are black, brown, and white people
who are busting their ass
who are working harder than ever have before.
And they feel like no one cares
that they're unseen and they're forgotten.
So I say this because that has to be
the core message, an economic message
that gives them a sense
that we're fighting for them and their families.
But that's, I mean,
isn't that Bernie Sanders?
Isn't that what he's been saying for...
I think it's Bernie Sanders.
I think it's Bernie Sanders.
I think it's, you know, a whole host of folks from Tim Walls to Josh Shapiro to Westmore to, you know, Joe Biden.
That's what I mean.
When we say, I guess my point is when you say something that broadly true, it almost becomes meaningless.
It becomes this idea of the difficulty I have connecting to that is just the very basicness of it, which is we've got to get back to those kitchen.
table issues. And again, it's a way of political speak that almost renders it devoid of any
connection and meaning because it feels so platitudinous. Yeah, I don't disagree with you. And I just
said this last night, John, which is to some folks I was visiting with, that's the frame for our
message. And then underneath of that, what we have to do is actually start presenting the
specific policy agenda. And one of the things that I think about a lot,
in 94, I worked on a congressional race.
And as you remember, John, what was remarkable about 94...
Contract with America.
Right.
New Gingrich.
That's right.
And what was also remarkable in that year is they flipped a 40-year House majority.
Neither party, Republicans or Democrats, have had long-term majorities since then.
But the important piece is what you just reflected on.
All right, guys.
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It is, it's honestly maddening.
Like, you can't even, you can't watch it, you can't read it, you can't deal with it.
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Well, so let's go back.
One of the reasons that people think the Democratic Party abandoned the working class was the kind of, I guess, what they would call, and I hate to use these terminologies, but neoliberalism or the idea of globalization and NAFTA and sending jobs overseas and inviting China into the WTO.
all these things that were kind of part of, you would think, the Clinton-era movement of neoliberal
economics, a kind of buying into, maybe not explicitly, but supply-side economics, right?
Yeah, I think you're right.
And all that.
From what I've seen, the people that are building this new Democratic Party, and for those
who this is a podcast, I'm making the air quote thing.
I'm doing the new Democratic Party.
They seem to be of a piece of that same cadre of.
In other words, the leadership that has been tasked with creating this new Democratic Party,
which understands the pain of it's the economy stupid and feels your pain is made up of the same DNA and atomic structure.
I think that's unfair.
I mean, look. Sure. That's what I'm here for. There are some, John, for sure, that represent that sort of old way of thinking. I'm the first card care and union member to be elected DNC chair. I come out of the building trades. My mom was 15 years old when she had me. She raised four kids by herself. And I say that to tell you that I am the working class. At the end of the day, you know, when I look at, and I agree with your assessment of where our party started to go wrong in the 90s with these trade deals, right? You know, as a union member, I will
tell you that at the core, we've seen union membership and union households declining. And of
course, as a result, we've seen the middle class shrinking and declining, right? The wealth
inequality in this country is greater than it's ever been. And so we have to get back to those
roots. And by that, I do not mean through a neoliberal lens, as some in our party approach
these policy conversations. But let me say this. We need a, back to this idea of a frame,
We need a frame that's large enough to bring in the leftist Democrats, the Progressive Democrats,
the centrist, and the conservative Democrats, because I think this is important.
I don't subscribe to the idea that there's just one way to be a Democrat.
It belies the point, which is for us to win, you can't run the same type of candidate everywhere.
You just can't.
I'll use Minnesota as an example.
The fifth congressional district, which is Minneapolis, Ilhan O'Me.
represents that district. She's a leftist, right? Right next to her, literally the next
district over is a third district, which was represented by Dean Phillips, who's a business
centrist. And then right next to him, for years, was a guy named Colin Peterson, who is a
House-Ague committee chair, a very conservative blue dog Democrat, all three of them Democrats,
all three of them important for us for the reasons that we're trying to get into power.
You can't get shit done.
Wait, you're not supposed to say.
You can't get shit done for people, John, if you actually are in second place.
You don't get brownie points for being in a minority.
I understand that very, very clearly.
Right.
But again, this all seems to be talking around the reality.
So it's we've got to find a way to appeal to Democrats of all different stripes so that we can get back into power and get shit done for people.
But at the end of the day, what it feels like to me is that the Democrats are in the position of defending a status quo in terms of everything that the government does that the people have decided is utterly broken and corrupt.
I agree with you on that.
I'm not doing that.
And I'll tell you what, I think earlier this year, as an example, John, we took the bait on this, right?
So Doge comes along and they start making cuts in government, right?
And their argument is very simple.
Government sucks. It's not working for you. We're going to blow it up and we're going to make it more efficient. There's massive fraud and abuse. And what is our response? Don't cut government. Government's good. It's working for you. Well, guess what? Most working people I know, most families like my family, they don't believe that government's working for them. Hasn't worked for them for years. So suddenly the Democratic Party becomes the defender of the status quo. Well, guess what? The status quo is not working for working people. So I think we made we, the collective we, as a Democratic Party,
Party made a mistake. Yeah, we believe in government, right, but we got to fix it. We got to
reform it. We got to make it work for people. So tell me about that. So those comes out and that's
happening. You've just jumped in at DNC at that point. So what is the discussion? Is the
problem here that the Democrats only have a way to steer away from the crash, but they don't
know what they're driving towards in this moment.
Yes.
Yes, I agree.
And I'll give you the example of, you know, because there is a thirst out there in the
country, like I've never seen it, and you see the energy with a guy like Mom
Donnie in New York City.
And you may not like everything that he's doing, but there's a guy who finally harnesses
the type of energy and drive that Democrats have been talking about wanting to harness.
And the first thing that happens is every person.
runs in the other direction.
Well, that's not true, but some people.
A lot of people in the Democratic Party.
I was a first person out of the gate to endorse him.
And, you know, and I will tell you, John, that I think you're absolutely right on Memdon.
But you've got Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries, both New York, supposedly the head of the
Senate and the head of congressional Democrats running in the other direction.
You know what, John, every morning I say the serenity prayer, which is important to me.
And I say that.
Let me tell you why, because there's things I can't control.
You asked this question at the very beginning, which I appreciated you asking, what is the Democratic Party do?
Because this is where people think that the chair of the party has control over their elected officials, as if somehow I could call Senator Schumer or Leader Jeffries or any governor and tell them what they should do.
It doesn't work that way.
So I want to be very clear.
That's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
The point I'm making about the serenity prayers, I can only control what I can control, which is myself.
And from my perspective, I've always said, and I've been very clear on this, it's up to the Democratic primary voters to decide who our nominee is.
And once they send us a nominee, we need to fight like hell for whoever they send us.
And that's important.
Again, for me, I've always, I was the first person after the 2016 election to put forward a superdelegate reform.
I authored a neutrality pledge to keep party bosses out of putting their thumb on the scale for
candidates because I believe as you do, right, again, that, you know, there are many different
voices in this party and we should not be pushing those voices out. We should be bringing them in.
But back to your...
Well, let's just to stay on that point for a minute, you know, it is difficult, I'm sure,
to, you know, make those calls, even though I would imagine that is kind of...
You may not have control over it, but it does seem like that would be the place to make your case, at least, or to advocate.
But the second part is even within the areas that are your purview, let's say the Democratic National Committee, you know, David Hogg is a young vocal, you know, may not like all he does, but he's pushed out.
Randy Weingarten, the AFSCME union chiefs are pushed out.
Like, there, it feels like the Democrats, rather than, you know, the tent got big enough for Liz Cheney,
but it doesn't seem big enough for more rebellious, difficult voices.
Here's what I would say before I get into the David and Randy stuff.
I started with Paul Wellstone in 1990.
I represent, as Paul used to say, the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party.
I am a progressive.
And like David and Randy, I've been fighting in this movement for a long time to change this.
party. You know, and when I started with Paul, I was a young radical, and like many, you know,
I wanted to burn the party down. And one thing he said to me, which is stuck with me, John,
is he said, look, no institution can solely change on the outside. Yes, we need to build a
grassroots movement of people who are going to push our party to be better. The only way an
institution will change is from the inside and get involved and make the party that, be the party
that you want it to be. I've spent 35 years trying to do that. So, you know, look, I will tell
you this. Let me talk about the David piece for a second, because I think it's important
to get into this. I really like David, and I support what he's trying to do. Primaries are
really important in our party. It's important in democracy. One, it holds elected officials
accountable. Two, it brings new ideas and perspectives into the conversation. And three, it's a pathway
for new leaders. It's a pathway for young leadership. It's a pathway for people of color that
could never run for office. It's a pathway for a whole group of folks that never would
would be given a shot, including my first boss, Paul Wellstone, right? So I say this truly because
I support primaries. But what that beef was between us, and this is critical. Beef. You don't hear
Minnesotans talk beef. Well, sure you do. We got a lot of beef farmers in Minnesota. Fair enough.
But truly, John, listen, in 2016, as I mentioned earlier, I saw the devastating results of party
leadership, putting their thumb on the scale, and basically telling all of those young supporters
of Bernie Sanders to go fuck themselves, right? And as a result, they left the party and they never
came back. Whether perceived or real, what ended up happening is we pushed people out of the
conversation. And I want to go back to what I said before. One of the reasons I was successful in
Minnesota is because we built the type of coalition that brought everyone into the conversation.
And so right after that election in 17, I was elected as a vice chair of the DNC to lead all of our state parties.
And I pushed the existing officers and our party to put a neutrality pledge in place to say that party leadership cannot get involved in primaries.
They have to stay out and let the primary voters make that decision.
When I campaigned for this position, I said I wanted to codify that into our charter.
And so the difference that both David and I supported each other's positions.
He supported neutrality.
I supported primaries.
But there is no way to reconcile them.
He couldn't be an officer while also then having his organization he leads be involved in primaries,
which is why he decided to step down.
No one pushed him out.
Just the opposite.
I wanted David to stay in.
He's an amazing young leader who has a lot of great ideas.
and we need his voice and energy in the party.
But how do you reconcile those two?
So you're saying that he had to go because if you are on the DNC,
you have to abide by a neutrality pledge.
And so if he is involved in an organization that is promoting primaries for people
that already have office, that violates the neutrality pledge.
The neutrality pledge of whoever wins the primary.
You can't get involved in that.
You can't get involved before a primary,
helping either in comment or a channel.
You can only get involved once the primary has.
That's correct.
And that's because we want the will of the voters to prevail,
not the will of a bunch of, you know,
you know, party leaders in a backroom making decisions
on which candidates they think the parties should support.
It shouldn't work that way.
And that is, for me, a direct result of my early days with Wellstone
when the whole establishment was against him, right?
and to 2016 watching what happened in that election,
I think it's imperative that the party stays out of primaries.
Not that primaries shouldn't happen.
Primaries should happen.
We want them to happen.
But people like me should not be involved in putting our thumb on the scale
and picking winners and losers.
Our job is to be the referee to make sure there's a level playing field,
to call balls and strikes, and to not actually be a player.
We can't be involved in primaries.
But that seems, you know, I understand it.
in theory.
Yep.
But in practice, the idea that the DNC is going to be agnostic when it comes to, you know, in
the same way that if you see a candidate that you feel like is going to have a better shot
at a primary, but is a crazy person that's not going to be able to survive in a, you know,
a regular election once the primary is over.
And we've seen that in the Republican Party a lot.
they pick kind of the most MAGA person to get in the primary and then they get in a state
election or a larger election and they fall apart. The idea that the DNC or any of those would
not take a position on that or would be agnostic based on that pledge doesn't seem realistic
or how it operates in practice. You are also part of recruiting. Of course. You guys go out and you
recruit candidates. And this gets to a larger point. And I don't mean to bring this up just from
the Democrats. But there is a trust issue that we have right now between the rhetoric of our
politics and the reality of our politics. And Kamala Harris's book, I think, has done a real,
I know everybody's shitting on it. I haven't read it yet. It does a real service. Maybe not in the
way that she had intended or that the political parties will be happy about. But it exposes
that the conversation that we all think is happening,
but we're told over and over again is not happening,
whether it be when you choose a running mate,
are you looking at whether or not they're gay or Jewish or black?
To the point of when you looked at President Biden,
did you think he was strong enough to go up against Donald Trump
in the national election again?
We were told over and over again how ridiculous those statements were, how crazy that is, that, no, I pick the most competent.
I look for the best person possible.
What Joe Biden behind the scenes is sometimes during meetings, he'll be solving quadratic equations while we're also doing Medicare.
It was all bullshit.
And Ken, that can't hold.
And so when we talk about like, we're nutrient, we stay out and here's the rules and
this is how we play.
Like, it's, it really strikes me as a fundamental foundational problem of erosion of trust.
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I don't disagree with you, but the way you build trust is by not thumbing your nose at voters
and telling them, guess what? We get to make these decisions and you don't. We as party leaders get to
decide who the best candidate is, and your voice doesn't matter. You and your... But you guys recruit
candidates. You funnel money. You do you have resources? Listen, I think the D-Trip, the D-S, other organizations
within the larger ecosystem, of course, are going to support their preferred candidates. What I'm
suggesting is party leaders. Our job is to build infrastructures to win the November election and ultimately
to make sure that we're growing our coalition, building our party, bringing voices in, and making sure
that we honor the will of those voices.
You can't be half-pregnant.
You can't say, oh, yeah, guess what?
We honor the will of the voters
when it benefits our candidates.
And then, of course, when they decide to send us Mamdani,
say, well, you know, we're not going to endorse him.
It's why I endorsed them right away.
You either believe that in this idea
that primary voters matter
and that their voices matter,
that they're the ones who select our nominee, or you don't.
You can't be half-pregnant.
It's either you do or you don't.
And I say this true.
It feels like building a house without a blueprint, if that makes sense.
Oh, I've got a blueprint.
And I understand your point you're making.
Yeah. But again...
You've got a logistical blueprint, but I meant a more fundamental sort of blueprint of principle.
Well, the question here again is, how do you grow your party?
How do you bring new voices?
Are you asking me?
Well, no, I'm just saying...
I have an idea, but I...
Well, I think it's more...
It's certainly rhetorical, but it's the larger, it's the larger question here, John, is that's the goal of the Democratic Party is to continue to grow and to continue to bring voices in.
Let me answer your rhetorical question.
Yeah, please.
You grow your party by inspiring people with a message that resonates with the reality of their lives.
And you grow your party by understanding the disconnect from the sclerotic.
dying infrastructure of the status quo of that party and their ideas and how far away it is
from the reality of those that would follow it.
And so that's the piece that's missing.
Well, but I'm with you on that.
And so imagine, by the way, you have a candidate who comes along who's inspiring all those
folks, right?
And the party leaders say, well, you know, that's not our candidate.
We want someone else.
He eats with his hand.
Right. But this is the point, which is primaries are meant to actually make sure that those candidates represent exactly what you're talking about. So, you know, when a mom-dani comes along, right? And then we decide, well, you know, it's not our type of candidate. We might not agree with him on all the issues. And, you know, he's not the type of candidate we want. We're essentially saying to all those primary voters who chose them, right? And
who are excited about him, we don't want you in the party.
That's my point here.
But in the primary, that is exactly what happened.
I mean, in the primary, for the most part, the status quo went with Cuomo.
I mean, they were saying that, and then won, and now they have to flip it back around.
In the primary.
Yeah, that's right.
And people will play in primaries, and candidates and elected officials and others are
allowed to do that.
But you're asking me, how do you grow the party?
and I'm saying is you grow the party by recognizing the reality of where your party is at.
Yes.
And even when you think about, you know, the Republican Party did an autopsy of their loss after Romney.
Right.
Right.
And, you know, I still remember Sean Hannity on television going, the big problem is we've got to be nicer to Hispanics.
You know, we've got to let them know they're welcome here.
and we've got to open up our country to Hispanic.
Right.
And nobody bought it because it was a calculation.
It was math.
It wasn't anything that resonated with the people that vote with that party.
And it left their party ripe for a hostile takeover, which occurred through Donald Trump.
That's right.
The Democratic Party finds itself in the very same place as the Republican Party.
I don't disagree. I don't disagree. And the question is, do you want energy in the party or do you want it on the outside, right? Do you want it, do you want to grow your party ranks? You know, again, I go back to what I said before. Yes, it means it's messy debate and dissent and, you know, a wide degree of opinions on any given issue. You know, the Republican Party benefits from the fact that they're very homogenous as it relates to ideology. And so it's easier for them to be more.
more disciplined, it's easy for them to be more nimble.
And so, but I don't know that that's necessarily the case, but I think it is.
I mean, you know, but let me say this.
In terms of ideal, explain that because I, I'm not so sure, especially now where Trump had
inroads into the black community and the Hispanic community.
And, you know, I would say the Democratic Party has plenty of litmus tests for their
candidates, you know, that, you know, does the Republican Party have some pro-choice members?
It does. Does the Democratic Party have pro-life candidate? It's probably not.
Yeah. Here's what I would say. You know, at the end of the day, there is a, Donald Trump has essentially stifled out any dissent within his party.
Well, certainly now. If a Republican elected official dare speak out and stand up for their position, they're drummed out of the party. And so I don't think they're.
But it's not ideological dissent.
It's basically, if you like me and you'll do what I say, you're in.
Because he's not ideologically consistent.
He's socialist at times.
He's corporateists.
I see that.
I see that.
He's all over the map.
But there's no, I guess a larger point I'm trying to make is there's no dissent allowed in that party.
There's no debate.
There's no difference of opinion.
The reality is, is they are a very, they are a very small tent as it relates to where they
stand on these issues.
And whether that's true, because, you know, I'm sure you have conversations with Republicans who will tell you things privately.
I do all the time.
And they will then publicly, you know, essentially kiss his ring to your point, right?
Because they don't want to be drummed out of the party.
I think that's what I'm suggesting right now is we are a big tent.
We do have different.
I mean, you can see it play out in front of your eyes with, you know, the debates between the different elected officials in our party on any given issue.
But I would say that, again, some people fear that.
That's not me.
It's a thing that helped our Democratic Party grow.
Let me share this.
It's a little bit of a long story, but 1948.
You and I would, I know.
Wait, what?
Okay.
Hear me out on this because it's going to take a little bit.
We're going Truman?
No, it's going to take a little bit of a meandering path.
No, no, no worries, no way out of this.
1948, a young mayor from Minneapolis.
He's 34 years old at the time, brings a civil rights plank to the National Party
Committee.
right, to the DNC to our platform committee.
The platform committee, surprisingly, votes down a civil rights plank, votes it down.
So there's young mayor.
By the way, not surprisingly.
Right, right.
Go ahead.
Yeah, this young mayor brings his minority report to the floor and he starts building support
for it.
Eventually it passes.
He gets up and gives that famous speech where he says, it's time for the Democratic Party
to come out of the shadows of states' rights and march forthrightly to the bright sunshine
of human rights civil rights.
That mayor, of course, was Hubert Humph.
But all the Dixiecrats got up from our party.
They walked out.
And as a result, our party became the party that was cemented with civil rights.
And that was a game changer for sure.
1962 in Miami, right, the convention there, it was women and feminists who stood up and pushed our party on an equal rights amendment and abortion rights.
2012, I was proud in Charlotte to be one of the authors of the marriage equality amendment, right?
I say this truly, John, nothing good in our party.
I'm not going to talk about the Republican Party.
Nothing good in our party happens without new voices
pushing our party to evolve on issues.
It doesn't just happen organically
through the goodness of elected officials
and party leaders come into their senses on any issue.
It takes people pushing.
So how short-sighted would it be to me for me
as the chair of the DNC
to say, you know what, I disagree with your position,
so you're out?
No, the only thing that helps our party
grow and evolve is to bring new voices in who will help push our party to be better. And I truly
believe that. And yes, it's caused a lot of consternation and pain and argument and all that over
the years, but we're better off for it. And back to your earlier point about having a vision,
I couldn't agree with you more. The reality is, is we got to take it from just the platitudes
and have a specific policy prescription to your point about 94, right? What New Kingrich
did, and I didn't agree with anything that he stood for, is this. He gave people a value proposition.
You vote for us. Gave an infrastructure. Here's what we're going to deliver. Here is a value proposition.
The Democrats aren't doing shit to help you. Here's what we're going to do. So what I have said to other
leaders in this party is this. We've got to move from just the frame, from just the sort of larger
vision we have to specific policy that gives people a sense of actually what we're. We've got to,
we would do if they put us back in power.
Do you have a sense that you know?
You know, it's interesting, Kamala Harris' book is called 107 days.
Yep.
And the premise of the book is, it's just not enough time.
Yeah.
People didn't know what I wanted to do.
I think that's right.
But let me give it the caveat.
In 100 days, Trump has completely transformed the entire nation.
of how our government operates.
Now, it's the culmination of a 50 to 60 year plan put in place by, you know, Republican
operatives, whether it be through their think tanks or, you know, the Federalist Society
or any of those other places, but there's an intentionality to it that it's creating it.
Democrats have been defending a broken status quo for 50 years.
107 days might not be enough time, but that ended in November.
Yes.
it's almost a year now i still don't know what that plan would be other than maybe you get
five thousand dollars for a new housing start to create a document like that to come up with
the ideas of that it the thinking to me feels too conventional and institutional and that
institutional thinking doesn't give me hope that there are those changes that are going to be
coming to the Democratic Party because, you know, I look at everything as process equals product.
If your process is flawed, your product is going to be, is going to be flawed.
And I'm a little concerned about process.
And back to our original point, which was that's kind of more.
the purview of where you guys are.
Yep.
How are you, you seem to understand where you want to go.
Do you understand the process by which you want to get there?
Yes, for sure.
I mean, look, I mean, we have a brand problem, a message problem, a messenger problem.
A policy and a policy problem.
Well, that's the message, right?
And so the message probably has not the message.
Well, here's it.
The message is how you sell the policy.
Of course.
Shitty policies, it doesn't matter how you message it.
Yeah, that's right. Brand message, messenger problem. And we also have a tactics problem in terms of message delivery, where we're getting our message out to, et cetera. You can have the best message with a shitty messenger, and it's not going to break through. You could have a great messenger with the right message. But if it's not delivered to where people are getting their information, it doesn't matter. And the last thing is, you know, if people are already preconditioned to believe something about the Democratic Party, i.e. a brand, right? It's, it's also.
a challenge. I mean, think about this, John. Last spring, and it should have been the biggest
canary in the coal mine for Democrats, and most people miss this research. There was research
that showed for the first time in modern history that the perceptions of the two political parties
has changed, that the majority of Americans now believe that the Republican Party best represents
the interest of the working class and the poor, and the Democratic Party is a party the wealthy
and the elites. That is a wholesale sea change of where people and what people believed the Democratic
party was fighting for. So they already have in their minds, many parts of our coalition,
working class people believe that the Republican Party best represents their economic future
and their chance for success. So if you're already, your mind's already in that space,
to Kamala's point, in 107 days, it's very hard to actually change that. Look, we spent many of us,
you know, in the years leading up to that election, spent time talking about Biden's excellent
economic record, right? High GDP, low unemployment, a boom in stock market, you know,
you know, real job growth and wage growth for the first time in 30 years we saw wages
increasing. And, you know, at a macro level is great. But when I was out there trying to sell that,
especially union members and working class people I know, they were like, what kind of plan,
what planet do you fucking live on? Because that's not happening in my life. I can barely put
groceries on the table. I can't afford my rent. You know, at the end of the day, I can
barely afford to take my kids on a vacation, right? This is not, this economy is not working for me.
It goes back to this doge thing. We become, but that's what I'm, I think what I'm saying is you're
saying, if we, you know, get better messengers and better messages, and I'm saying that is all
wrapping paper, you know, if you don't have policies that resonate with them. And that's where I
think what we're talking about. So my, my concern is that Donald Trump is a tremendous,
diagnostician. He is able to look into a place and go, here's the fault line of this issue.
Here's where people's complaints are. To say that the Biden administration thought their economy
was great. And when we went out to talk to people, it turned out it sucked is malpractice for the
political class of the Democratic Party. So I don't disagree with you. I worry that when I hear the
fix is we got to really think about messaging and messengers and all that without hearing a more
prescribed you know diagnostic right if you don't have the diagnosis about why that is absolutely
why is it that government uh policies are not connecting is it because the bureaucratic landmines
make it so that we can't build uh wi-fi in rural areas is it because our tax
tax dollars will reflexively defend, you know, foreign programs or things that are going to be cut
without realizing, you know, people are not feeling the effects of their tax dollars.
Yeah.
I mean, I think it's all of that.
And the reality is, look, John, I fired all those consultants.
I fired every single one of them.
So that's why unemployment is ticking out.
There you go.
Because it's a large group.
Yeah.
Let me tell you, I'm not interested.
I mean, let me give you an example.
Last year, we spent, the campaign spent a billion dollars on broadcast TV.
Overall, there was $10 billion.
How much?
One billion dollars, just the campaign.
In 107 days.
Well, you know, over that time, you know, Biden.
Right.
So, but let me just say this.
Well, Kamala's campaign and Biden's campaign combined a billion dollars on broadcast TV.
I'm sure.
Here's a reality on this.
I'm in my, you know, mid-50s.
I'm going to tell you, you look fantastic.
Thank you.
Here's the deal.
You know, I still read a hard copy of a newspaper.
My boys think I'm a nut because I can get it on my phone, right?
But the one thing my wife and I don't do, John, is I don't watch broadcast TV anymore.
In fact, I don't know many people my age that do.
I mean, maybe when I'm...
Does that include cable, basic cable?
No, I don't watch cable anymore.
I'm all on streaming.
I know.
I'm sorry, John.
But the point is this.
The reality is our tactics is a...
it's a huge problem as well. But underlying all of this is what you said. If people don't know what
the hell we're fighting for and what specifically we would do to improve their lives, it doesn't
matter. We can fix the tactics. We can find the best messengers. We could fix our brand. At the end of
the day, we have to give people something to vote for. And I will say this, what is the lesson from
Amdani? And it's not ideological. People seem to think, well, the big lesson here is you need to run
to the left. No, the lesson here, whether you're in a very conservative district or a, you know,
a very left-leaning district is very simple. One, authenticity matters. People have a bullshit meter.
People can tell, you know, my old boss, Paul Wellstone used to say, you should never separate the life
you lead from the words you speak. The reality is there's too many politicians who do that. And at the end
of the day, people can smell through it. When you're talking about just platitudes, right, to your point,
people can smell through it.
Don't just tell me what I want to hear.
I need to see you actually show me what you're going to do and then deliver on it.
And I want to come back on the delivering piece in a moment.
But I would say, can I just very quickly, you know, again, authenticity is the new buzzword.
The new strategy is authenticity, but it's still a strategy.
What I think connected with Mamdani is he diagnosed a frustration within the population of New York City.
he understood that the real tenuousness of New York City
is affordability that people that the city itself has become
and he it wasn't the authenticity of and I'll eat with my hands
and I'll do that and I'll go out to the San Giro
and act like a real dude it was how in God's name
is a plate of food from a cart $12 or $15 that's right and he deconstructed
that he was able to identify
identify the crux of the issue and very simply present some ideas that might be able to battle
that. It's simpler than authenticity and the messenger and the metrics.
Well, I do think it's simpler than that because at the end of the day, right,
we could have plenty of people who are saying the exact same thing who aren't believed by voters.
At the end of the day, this is where the authenticity matters.
If you, it's not just saying something.
Well, you have to believe it, certainly.
But that's the point.
The reason we've lost trust is because people don't believe that we actually believe the shit we're selling them.
That we're saying, we're telling them what they want to hear.
To my point in the book, when she says, I didn't go with Pete Buttigieg because he's gay.
And that'd be too far.
And you're like, oh my God, it's actually reverse affirmative action.
It's like, what?
Yeah, but I think the point here is that you have to be an authentic and credible messenger.
And it's not authenticity.
Yes, that's the new buzzword.
But now you've got people, you know, it's the same thing with, you know, people want to show strength, right?
And so now, you know.
Now, everybody curses now.
Well, right.
By the way, a trend that I was on for years now.
Everyone is.
To my own horn.
Right, right.
But everyone's cursing.
Everyone's like getting up, giving these fiery speeches.
You know, you've got male elected officials growing beards because they want to show strength and masculinity.
It's bullshit.
Strength, it's action.
It's action and it's authenticity.
Do you really, really believe the shit you're selling?
Because let me ask you a question.
And this is a question I posed to Democrats all over the-
Rhetorical one or can I answer?
No, no.
It's a question for your viewers.
If you're not willing to fight like hell in this moment for the things you believe in,
do you really believe in them at all?
because the greatest divide right now in our party, John, is not ideological.
The greatest divide in our parties between people who are using every lever of power they have
to actually fight back in this moment and stand up and fight for what they believe in
and those who are sitting down the sidelines.
But let me get back to the two other points that I think that were important.
I want to answer to that as well.
Okay, to Memdani, right?
It was not just authenticity.
He also campaigned for something to the point we were making earlier.
He didn't just run against the establishment, against his opponents.
He gave people a value proposition.
He said, here's my plan.
Here's what I would do if I was elected, right?
And it was focused on affordability.
And the last thing that I think is important is he was ubiquitous in this sense that
he campaigned everywhere in person throughout New York.
You couldn't walk throughout New York without running into his campaign in some way.
And that was true in terms of his online presence.
To your point about being on a halal food.
podcast. I watched that food podcast. They had like 25 to 50 people. If he had been listening
to his consultants, they would say, oh, don't go on that podcast. There's a far few people
listening. The point is, is be ubiquitous, be everywhere. Don't discriminate. Talk to every single
voter and give them a sense of what you're standing for and do it in a way that's real.
Just be yourself. Just be honest. Be transparent. Be vulnerable. Put yourself out there.
Don't try to wordsmith. Don't do one of these. A finger in the wind politician. You know,
long before there was a Bernie Sanders, there was a Paul Wellstone, who was an OG progressive voice
in the Senate. And the reason people liked Paul is not because they agreed with them 100% of the
time, but they knew that he had a core set of convictions that he was willing to stand up and
fight for come hell or high water. That's authenticity. That's what Mamdani had. You cannot fake
authenticity. It's either real or it's not. And people have a bullshit meter, and they can see that.
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I want to talk a little bit about this other thing that's sort of boiling up,
which is we've got to fight.
We've got to stand up and fight and people.
You've got to fight like hell.
And I believe this is a moment that's going to take effort and energy
and anything that I've ever seen done in Washington that I thought was of good value
was a protracted battle.
What I'm seeing a lot from the Democratic Party is you've got to stand up and fight.
But I'm not seeing.
a lot of directional energy to that regard.
I'm seeing some theater.
I'm seeing a variety of,
I'm not seeing a coherent effort.
The thing about the energy, right?
Right now out in the country is
maybe the most vast reserve of potential energy
that I can recall seeing maybe since,
and I was very young,
and so I probably don't have a great understanding of it,
but as the Vietnam War was winding down,
There was a feeling in the country, a vast potential energy of a new way to move forward.
And I'm seeing a lot of that now, and I'm seeing the urgings of a party.
The issue that I'm seeing is to convert that potential energy into kinetic energy
is going to dissipate out into the atmosphere if it doesn't have a focus.
If it doesn't have a parabolic way of creating heat and light,
because it's not enough to say you've got to go to these town halls and stand up and yell like
that's not where people's thirst is that's right they want to convert that potential energy
to kinetic energy to start they want to start understanding that the politician that wants to lead
them knows what's wrong with the system that they're seeking to fix yes
And I have not seen a great deal of that.
And isn't that job one that will help be the stepping stone for all those other things
that you talk about that are so necessary, right?
Everything you're talking about is necessary to create a sustained movement of change
in that direction.
Yes.
But it is, have we missed that, oh, you know what we forgot to do?
do is build the front steps. No, I don't think so. I mean, look, this is a rebuilding process right now. And
part of the reason I ran is not just as a result of the last election cycle, John. I have seen over
20 some odd years negligence on the part of the Democratic Party. But let's just take how we campaign as
an example, right, to put the messaging stuff aside for a second. We show up three months before an election
and have the first conversation with voters, right? And usually that first conversation is, hey, we need you
to do something for our party. We need you to vote for us, right? So it's a very transactional relationship.
Then, again, they don't see us for two more years. Same time we come around. We have the same
conversation. Repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat. And suddenly people start saying, well, holy shit,
the only time I see that Ken guy is when he needs something for me, right? He doesn't really
seem to be invested in me, my community, my life. And so you start to lose trust, right?
The second piece of this, by the way, is delivering, which is we get into power.
We make these promises.
Hey, vote for Democrats.
We're going to actually make a difference in your community.
We get into power and then we don't deliver on those promises, right?
In a real way that actually moves forward.
So the idea of actually presenting a vision of going back, again, no one believes the status quo is working for them right now.
We have to present a new vision of government that works for working.
people again, a new vision of where this Democratic Party is going because that old vision,
people don't buy it. Clearly the brand is broken, but also that old sort of platform and
approach to policy is not working, which again requires us to move from the platitudes to the
specifics so people know, how is what you sell me any different from what you told me for
the last 30 years? And my life is still the fucking same, right? Who's involved in that process?
Because when you talk about, I'm going to relate this to the only thing I know
related to which is the New York football giants they are also rebuilding it's been about 10 years now
and they keep talking about we just got to fix the offensive line but they keep going with the
you know sort of the status quo of people that that goes back a little bit to what we talked
about earlier is the process by which you are doing that flexible enough open enough
visionary enough yes that you're not just bringing in uh you know near a tandon and j
and going like so have at it you know are you is the is the institutional thinking being challenged
enough to create that step that needs to be created yeah I mean look we're certainly pushing
here I mean we started right when I came in with a whole branding and narrative project that's
outside of what our policy makers and others are doing up in Congress and throughout the
country to really, and this, again, is very technical, but I think it's important.
You know, technical in the sense of like digital or computer?
No, here's where it's technical, which is I think the research that we've used to sort of
understand public sentiment is really flawed. Quantitative and qualitative research is only
as good as the inputs in.
And so we're only...
Come to the deli I go to.
You will get...
The feedback is very clear.
This is the point I'm making, actually, John.
Thank you for sharing this.
Because actually, Bill Clinton said this in 92, which, you know, again, hasn't changed,
which is we really want to know how the American people are, go and sit in a cafe
or go to a Friday night football game and listen to parents around you, right?
We don't do that anymore.
And by the way, because we're only connecting with voters three months before an election,
we're just getting a sliver of the actual public.
sentiment. And this is why we have a brand problem. At the end of the day, we're not listening
anymore. And so much of this is listening. So we are from a technical standpoint. We're using
AI and social listening tools to actually get on a daily basis what's happening out there
on social media. But we're also getting out. We're also getting out to the cafes and to the
football games. We're doing ethnographic research. For AI listening tools. It's so fucking simple.
it is simple people have kids and then they have kids and the kids get older and they got to save
money for college and just in the moment where they're spending a shit ton of money on college
their parents get older that's right they got to spend money on doing their parents and there's
nothing that the government is really providing for them or helping them out with and the cost of
their housing and the education and the elder care and the child care like do we really need
AI tools to understand that it's about that. No, we don't, but I think you're, I think you're right.
It's the trap that people find themselves. You're absolutely right, John, and this is the issue.
You don't need any of that, right? But the question is, without any of that, you're just sitting in a
back room with a bunch of policymakers deciding on things that have no connection to the American
people in their lives. So you have to have a sense of- They're doing that anyway.
Washington, D.C. is the most insulated, isolated, lobby surrounded.
I agree.
It's agree.
That's why I don't spend much time here.
I've been on, I unfortunately live in this Godforsaken town now, and my family's all back in
Minnesota, but I would tell you in the eight months.
I've heard it's very safe now.
Yeah, thank you, federal troops.
But let me just say this, eight months on the job, I've been in 32 states.
You know, elections aren't won in D.C.
They're one in the states, and they're won by connecting the people.
And they're one by connecting to exactly what you're talking about, the struggles of everyday life.
And I will tell you, as much as you talked about having a very prescriptive policy point, I think that's right.
We do have to have a policy agenda.
But we also have to zoom out because it's very simple.
It's what you said.
And I'll share the story of my father-in-law for a moment because he's a beef cattle farmer in southern Minnesota and 85 years old.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, he voted.
And he's still out there doing it?
He's still out there.
Oh, that's not easy, boy.
But I would tell you, he has this, he's voted Democrat as whole.
life. And in 16, 20 and 24, he voted for Trump. And in 16, I said, Dave, you know, why did
you vote for Trump thinking he'd give me some sort of policy answer on egg policy or, you know,
what he told me. And this goes to your point. He said, look, the high school that I went to
has closed down and consolidated with another high school. So I no longer have a Friday night
football game to go to the grocery store on Main Street is closed. So I got to drive, you know, a lot
further to just get my groceries. The clinic that was in town has closed, and now my wife
who has Parkinson's disease, I have to drive 100 miles to get her health care, right?
You know, the farm that my family's farmed for 135 years, none of my kids, including
your wife, want to come home and farm it. And so it's truly, I mean, what you're not hearing
there is policy. I want you to, and what you're hearing is, here's a guy, 85 years old, he shouldn't
have a knot of anxiety in the world about his future because his future is not that long, right,
in the sense that he's on the tail end of his life. He should be living carefree at this moment,
but he does have a nod of anxiety in his future because his whole identity is being taken away
from him. The world around him is changing and what he feels is no one sees him. No one cares about
what's happening in his community. So along comes the biggest con man and snake oil salesman in the world
saying, make America great again, and there's people like Dave O'Rourke saying, well, you know what,
I do want things to be the way they were. I do want my community be vibrant and robust.
Now, of course, there's nothing that Donald Trump would do or has done that would actually
improve Dave O'Rourke's life, just the opposite. But the point is, at the end of the day,
one thing you said that really resonates with me is it's really simple, what people want in life.
It's very simple. They just want to be able to,
get ahead. They want to be able to build a better life for their families. They want to be able to
maybe just maybe, you know, take a vacation, to retire with dignity, to give their kids a shot
and an opportunity. It's as simple as that. Yes, there's policies underneath we need to talk about,
but when we lose that piece and the policies are disconnected from the struggle, then what the
fuck are we doing? That's what I'm talking about. And I also think, and all the craziness that
goes along i almost think that the next great successful politician i think their their slogan for
the election will be it's enough already uh because that's what it that's what it feels like and it's
and i do think sometimes the spiral feels inevitable but i don't think it is and oddly enough
uh i remain steadfastly optimistic that's good uh within that and is that do you continue to
feel that way as well. I'm very optimistic about our chances to win. And I will tell you,
I'm very up. We were this close, buddy. No, no, I'm going to switch to the other piece.
Just winning without. No, no, this is my point. I'm not optimistic that winning in 26 and 28 helps us
win. And what do I mean by that? Yeah. If we do it the wrong way again, we're not building trust
with voters. If we do it the wrong way, again, without a very specific policy agenda, we're
not building something that transforms people's lives. If we build it in a way that actually
doesn't reflect where the American people are at, it's just not going to work. And so I am
optimistic that will win. I'm not as optimistic as much as I'm trying to change the way we do this,
that we can change, to your point, this whole ecosystem in, you know, this short time. Here's what
I'm pessimistic about. And I want to be really clear. I think in this moment right now,
there's something bigger at stake here that we didn't even talk about. And I don't want to focus
on Trump. But when I was growing up, there were values that united us in this country, that were not
partisan values, that united Democrats and Republicans. And you and I could say, well, at least they
agree on this, right? Now those values, like, you know, the idea of due process.
in this country, the rule of law, you know, separation of power, belief in a free and independent
press, an idea that we would stand with our allies around the world and protect emerging
democracies.
Those are things that we could always count on Democrats and Republicans agreeing upon,
by and large, right?
By and large, I would say that's a slightly nostalgic view, but.
Well, listen, do you, in this moment right now, those values,
even the freedom of speech, right?
I mean, shit.
Listen, I will not in any way argue that we are not under a pressurized crucible of unitary executive like I haven't seen.
It is, it's the type of governance from a really vindictive and small person creating emergencies that don't exist.
I just want to make sure that, like, there was no past of all Americans could at least,
least agree that there were three separate branches of government and they all had an equal say and
like that's never been the real case. And we've always argued back and forth from the expansion of
rights for different groups. Of course. The suppression of rights for different groups. Like we cannot
say in a country that had Jim Crow from, you know, the decades that we had it that somehow we all
agreed on certain values because we didn't. No, but I think I think at the
core, there may have been differences of opinion about what those values are. Now you have a party
who basically could give a shit about due process and says as much. They could give a shit about
the rule of law and separation of power. Right. Their principle is power. So I mean, I think that's
the challenge right now is, you know, we both have to fight for something, right? And at the same time,
we have to acknowledge that, you know, when people say to me, right, you know, well, I don't
know if there's going to be elections in 26, you know, who knows if this democracy survives
that long. I think if people had said that to me four years ago, I would have thought maybe
they should be institutionalized, right? It's not out of the realm of possibility. And I understand
people's nervousness and anxiousness because so many of those sort of core values, yes, there were
differences, but they seem to be fundamental to who we are. I mean, think about just the attack in
the last week on the freedom of speech. There's a reason it's the First Amendment, right?
Right. It's the most important right in our Constitution, our bill of rights, is the ability for people to stand up, to speak out, to share their opinions. And that's now under attack.
So I say all of this because I think where people's angst and anxiety comes from is not just the fact that the Democratic Party has a piss poor message and isn't necessarily presenting an alternative to what the Republicans are doing. It's also what the Republicans are doing.
And their anxiety that, holy shit, we may not have our democracy anymore.
Yeah.
There is definitely a tenuousness to a lot of the things that we thought were, you know, kind of.
It feels a little bit like the hot air balloon where it's just like there's just now the two ropes that are holding it together.
And you're like, I don't know about those two.
But we really appreciate taking the time.
I know you're busy.
I know you want to get out of D.C. chair, Ken Martin, thanks for joining us today.
I really appreciate the conversation.
Thank you, John.
Appreciate it.
Thanks, man.
I'm going to tell you guys something.
I don't know how to feel.
I felt like every time I brought up something, he was like, yeah, that's right.
Just go back of the, you know.
Yeah, but you don't want to do like these consultant-driven.
I've gotten rid of all the consultants.
So here's what we're doing.
We're going out with the AI and we're looking into the thing.
I'm like, but I think we just, didn't we just say, no, it's about authenticity.
But it's not authenticity.
He diagnosed a problem.
He went, no, no, no, not authenticity.
What you just said.
I felt like I was talking.
It was like an improv exercise where I would say something and he would go, yes, and.
No, and then yes, and.
No and and yes, and.
How were you experienced?
I felt for a second like, am I being gas?
Like, I wasn't sure what was happening.
No, there was a lot of contradiction just from past statements and by past, I mean a month ago.
to today, and even within this conversation. So I can totally see why there's no message.
Not only can I see why there's no message, I can see why there's no method. I'm not even sure
we settled on that. I mean, I've been told that the Republican Party is this existential threat
to democracy, and I happen to agree with that. But whether or not Democratic politicians
act on that seems to only come into play
when it aligns with their political ambitions
and I'm exhausted by that right now
I would love if we could come up with something
to rally around and not just wait it out.
I understand that Ken Martin can't control the candidates
even though he's recruiting people and putting...
No, no, no, neutrality. They have a declaration of neutrality.
I know. But something that did stand out to me is
that we didn't discuss the fact that Mamdani partially was so successful because the other Democrats like Brad Lander rallied around and made it more about the Democrats than about individual power.
And something that stood out to me in our Pritzker conversation two weeks ago is that when you specifically asked that question of is individual ambition getting in the way of Democrats working together and his answer was about how people get elected.
That was the wildest part to me.
By the way, thank you for sort of bringing all that together with past conversations
because, you know, I don't listen to this podcast.
I don't care for it.
But I have to say, I think that's what struck me is you would say,
isn't there a principled, inspiring message of change that is step one to building the thing?
Absolutely. And that's why we changed our branding. Just none of the statements felt, it all felt discordant to me. And I, boy, do I have sympathy for the difficulty of what it is and how exhausting it must be. But wow, is that hard to listen to eight months into? And the strategy still seems to be historically the party not in power gains seats in the midterm.
Yeah. And when you look at, I mean, the 20s.
2012 autopsy, they came out of that with the same diagnosis I think that Democrats are having
now, which is we have these amazing ideas and it's all really good.
We're kind of awesome.
We can't communicate it to the people and we just have to get better at that.
And like, and the Republicans were successful in the 2014 midterms.
Maybe that's, you know, just the way that it goes, but they lost their party.
Right.
And they kind of lost the country.
Yeah.
I'd say the only thing really that's changed in the messaging from like eight months ago to now is just the passage of the so-called big beautiful bill.
Like they're saying we need to highlight how it's going wrong, what's bad with it.
That's really the only change I've seen.
But still defending the status quo of programs that most people think are broken.
Yeah.
They somehow devalue even the struggles of their own actual constituents in an effort to appease people that.
to his point, maybe unwinnable.
But maybe they're unwinnable, but boy, it would be helpful if you had something that
you thought was affirmative and not just strategic.
But fuck, man.
But we are back anyway.
Brittany, what are the questions they want from us this week?
They're writing in.
First up, since Trump renamed the Department of Defense to the Department of War,
what would you rename the Department of Justice under Trump?
oh wow uh i would say the law firm of trump juliani and associates i would i would rename it as
as that uh yeah no it is when the department of justice becomes just a a department in the trump
organization so however he would i would say he'd probably call it like the eighth floor
you know oh you you got to run to the eighth floor they'll take care of that stuff for you and
you'll be able to sue whoever it is that you need to sue.
So, yeah, there is no Department of Justice.
There is merely the legal wing of the Trump organization.
And that's how it will remain.
Wonderful.
Wonderful.
I wish I had a better moniker for it.
It could be actually, no, I was going to make a joke about Jewish lawyers, but I do it.
On Russia, Shana.
On Russia, Sean.
I forgot.
Go ahead.
What's the next one.
John, is it time for another rally to restore sanity and or fear?
No, last one didn't take.
Take either.
And I don't think I can have another day where I fuck up without even realizing that I'm fucking.
You know, we had this whole, I've told you guys, we had that whole thing planned, you know, Kat Stevens, Yosef Islam's going to come out and sing peace train.
Steven's going to cut him off.
Ozzy Osbourne's going to jump in and sing crazy train.
And then we're going to end it with the OJ singing love train.
and the whole thing goes off.
I mean, we rehearsed in a trailer that morning.
Ozzy Osbourne, literally right before the entire performance started
after we had done all this rehearsing in the trailer,
I go up to Ozzie right before and I go,
Yusuf is going to do Peace Train, just eight states.
Stephen's going to cut off and then you jump in with Crazy Train, right?
And he's like, oh, yeah, it's going to go to go to the train.
As I'm walking away, he goes, huh, who's Stephen?
so that was and then literally like the next day salman rushdie's on the phone with me going
how can a rally to restore sanity have a singer that wants me dead and i'm like wait what what the
fuck so there was a whole hullabaloo so yeah not only did i we not restore sanity anywhere but i lost
mine but but it's a delight how can people keep these these questions coming our twitter we are
weekly show pod, Instagram threads, TikTok, Blue Sky, We Are Weekly Show podcast, and you can like,
subscribe and comment on our YouTube channel, The Weekly Show with John Stewart.
Respect.
Guys, as always, fabulous, fabulous job.
Lead producer Lauren Walker, producer, Brittany Mehmedevick, producer Jillian Spear.
Video editor and engineer, Rob Vitolo, audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce, executive producers.
Chris McShane, Katie Gray, guys, fantastic job.
And we will see you all next week.
Bye, bye.
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