Today, Explained - Joe Almighty

Episode Date: July 8, 2024

President Biden says only the “Lord Almighty” can get him to end his re-election campaign, though more and more Democrats are trying to sway him themselves. This episode was produced by Hady Mawaj...deh and Denise Guerra, edited by Matt Collette, fact-checked by Laura Bullard and Amanda Lewellyn, engineered by Patrick Boyd and Andrea Kristinsdotter, and hosted by Sean Rameswaram. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast Support Today, Explained by becoming a Vox Member today: http://www.vox.com/members Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 President Biden was working all through the holiday weekend. On a call with Democratic governors, he apparently said his health was fine, it's just my brain. And at a rally, he said he'd beat Donald Trump, but in the past. I'll beat Donald Trump. I will beat him again in 2020. By the way, we're going to do it again in 2024. Nevertheless, in an interview with George Stephanopoulos, he said it would take divine intervention to get him to step down. With the fans, and when the Lord Almighty comes out and tells me that, I might do that.
Starting point is 00:00:41 He also said his terrible debate performance was his fault. Nobody's fault, mine. Nobody's fault, mine. Nobody's fault but mine. Everyone agrees, sir. Not my fault. Nobody else's fault. Joe versus himself, coming up on Today Explained. Bet MGM, authorized gaming partner of the NBA, has your back all season long.
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Starting point is 00:01:43 or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. 2020, 2020. Four! 2020, 2020. Four. Today Explained, Sean Ramos from here with Vox's senior politics reporter, Christian Paz. Christian, the last time we had you on the show, it was after Joe Biden's disastrous debate performance. What has the president been up to since?
Starting point is 00:02:18 Since the debate, we've kind of seen the president both retreat into an inner sanctum to talk to family, close advisors about the proper way to go about the campaign now, how to respond to some of those calls for him to step down, and what he has to do to convince the American people and more specifically Democrats that he's up for this job. Every one of them, they all said I should stay in the race. Stay in the race. And then at the same time, we've also seen him out in public a little bit more. We've seen him do interviews. We've seen him do rallies. I don't walk as easy as I used to. I don't speak as smoothly as I used to.
Starting point is 00:02:53 I don't debate as well as I used to. But I know what I do know. I know how to tell the truth. He did have some moments of slippage when he was talking, moments when it seemed like he was confusing some thoughts and stumbling over his words a bit. I'll beat Donald Trump. I will beat him again in 2020. And by the way, we're going to do it again in 2024. And we've kind of seen a mix of reporting and Democratic officials talking about, well, this is more frequently occurring, especially over the last few months, where it seems like the president is not necessarily at full capacity. And then we've also seen moments of Democratic allies coming out and saying, well, he's the nominee. He's the person who we should be rallying behind. And every time that we're talking about whether or not he should be the nominee, we're giving
Starting point is 00:03:48 Donald Trump a pass to continue kind of cruising to victory at the moment. Joe Biden sort of had to shift his central argument from Donald Trump bad to like Joe Biden good. How is he making Joe Biden good? How is he making that argument? It's really interesting because we see the same lines come up when he's making that argument now. It's don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative. I convinced myself of two things. I'm the most qualified person to beat him and I know how to get things done. There's also another line about, you know, we've done good work already. Look at everything that we've accomplished over the last three and a half years.
Starting point is 00:04:29 Why not continue on this path? I am promising that we will continue to do more on a range of, you know, social and economic programs and initiatives that we have as Democrats that we kind of got started during this first term. I want to finish that. And so he's essentially making a pitch to the past. Similarly to how he kind of framed things in 2020. In that case, it was about restoring decency and normalcy. In 2024, now his argument is, I beat Trump once and I can do it again and look at all the work that we've done. Why don't you give me another chance to do some more? What do we know about what's going on with the president, with the White House behind the scenes? Why is he staying in this race?
Starting point is 00:05:05 We kind of have a mixed picture here. Part of it is personal. Part of it is that Joe Biden really does see himself as the only person who can beat Donald Trump. I'm the nominee of this party because millions of Democrats like you just voted for me in primaries all across America. You voted for me to be your nominee. No one else. He's also apparently, the picture we're getting out of the White House
Starting point is 00:05:24 is a little more stubborn now and kind of closed off a bit from criticism or from any possible kind of negative, essentially, feedback. And despite, despite that some folks don't seem to care who you voted for, well, guess what? They're trying to push me out of the race. Well, let me say this as clear as I can. I'm staying in the race. One other aspect to this is also just that we haven't heard a lot from Donald Trump at the same time. So we're getting a lot of focus on what is the president thinking? How are people around him, you know, feeding him information? Is he really that closed off in the White House? And it all kind of feels a bit muddy now. And while Americans were enjoying their Fourth of July,
Starting point is 00:06:09 the president went and did something he rarely does. He gave a TV interview over the weekend to George Stephanopoulos. Mr. President, thank you for doing this. Thank you for having me. Let's start with the debate. How'd it go? It was an interesting experience. You know, the heart of your case against Donald Trump is that he's only out for himself,
Starting point is 00:06:31 putting his personal interests ahead of the national interests. How do you respond to critics who say that by staying in the race, you're doing the same thing? Oh, come on. Well, I don't think those critics know what they're talking about. Going into the specifics of the interview, he seemed to have a few moments of essentially having two trains of thought kind of clash into each other and kind of derail the answer that he was giving. So one of the clear examples of that in that interview
Starting point is 00:07:01 was when he was essentially talking about what was happening on the debate stage. When did he realize that maybe he wasn't giving his best performance since he kept saying that it was just a bad night, it was just a bad night. I prepared what I usually would do sitting down as I did come back with foreign leaders or the National Security Council for explicit detail. And I realized partway through that, all I could quote as the New York Times had me down at ten points before the debate, nine now or whatever the hell it is. The fact of the matter is that when I looked at is that he also lied 28 times.
Starting point is 00:07:41 I couldn't, I mean, the way the debate ran, not my fault. Nobody else's fault. No one else's fault. But then at the same time, he had other lines, other moments when he was pretty clear talking about why he's in the race, even though that also inspired some concerns and some worrying from other Democrats over the weekend when he says that what would it take for him to drop out of the race? It depends. And if the Lord Almighty comes out and tells me that, I might do that. And I think that was a little bit worrisome, especially as there's so much talk behind the scenes to try to figure out how you do convince a sitting president to back out at this stage in the race. And one of the things that he said toward the end of it was, you know, he gets asked what would happen if the worst comes to happen, where he loses the election.
Starting point is 00:08:29 Donald Trump wins. Now, Donald Trump, if you buy the arguments the Democrats are making, has all this authority and power. And as Biden has argued, he would become a dictator on day one. How would you feel if you do lose and didn't drop out? And he says something along the lines of. I feel as long as I gave it my all and I did the goodest job as I know I can do. That's what this is about.
Starting point is 00:08:51 And the response from Democrats around the country over the weekend was, well, that's not what this is about. This is about winning the election. In this interview, it feels like Joe Biden is making this all about Joe Biden. You know, I'm going to try my hardest. Only the Lord can stop me. And that feels, for this anti-Trump candidate, he did some appearances in rallies in Pennsylvania and in Wisconsin Friday. And even in those speeches, it felt like there was a bit of a tonal shift in how
Starting point is 00:09:31 he was talking. He would talk about, you know, his now other go-to line is, when you get knocked down, you get back up. Talking about himself. It's funny because nobody knocked him down. He knocked himself down. He was on stage and did a really bad job. And even the responses that he gets from the audience now, it's so much more Joe-centric in a way that maybe we expected a Democratic politician to campaign earlier on. to restore Roe v. Wade to law of the land? No! You think I'm too old to ban assault weapons again? No! To protect Social Security and Medicare? No! To get child care, elder care for working families who need it in the nation?
Starting point is 00:10:13 And when you are making it all about yourself again, then there is, again, no one else to blame. And he admits this in the ABC News interview, too. He kind of falls back on this defense that it was a bad night. Nobody's fault of mine. Nobody's fault but mine. And it just seems like when he gives those answers, he's maybe not in the same ecosystem or environment that the rest of us are in, where we're all looking at this. We're all
Starting point is 00:10:39 watching this campaign play out and are thinking, yeah, it is about you. And maybe there is somebody else who could do a better job at this than you. And that is one of the questions that a lot of Democrats have been asking over the last few days in public. It's about five people who've said this in public, congressional Democrats. In private, we have a few more folks who've said maybe that it's time for him to drop out. We have one governor, Maura Healey out of Massachusetts, who said that Biden should reconsider whether he is the strongest candidate. And then we have a bunch of reporting about congressional, both House and Senate Democrats going into this week now that they're back from their recess, having these conversations, talking about whether or not to be more forceful in public, because what we have right now is a bit of a slow-boil revolt, not necessarily like a full-blown party coup.
Starting point is 00:11:33 And as long as he can get closer and closer to the nomination itself, to the convention, you kind of are running out the clock on alternatives, being able to step up or to push him out. Christian Paz, Vox.com. The coup, when we return on Today Explained. to help you save time and put money back in your pocket. Ramp says they give finance teams unprecedented control and insight into company spend. With Ramp, you're able to issue cards to every employee with limits and restrictions and automate expense reporting so you can stop wasting time at the end of every month. And now you can get $250 when you join Ramp. You can go to ramp.com slash explained, ramp.com slash explained, r-a-m-p.com slash explained. Cards issued by Sutton Bank. member FDIC, terms and conditions apply. Support for today Explained comes from Ramp. If you're a finance manager, you're probably
Starting point is 00:13:18 used to having to toggle between multiple disjointed tools just to keep track of everything. And sometimes that means there's limited visibility on business spend. I don't know what any of that means, but Ramp might be able to help. Ramp is a corporate card and spend management software designed to help you save time and put money back in your back pocket. Ramp's accounting software automatically collects receipts, categorizes your expenses in real time. You can say goodbye to manual expense reports. You will never have to chase down a receipt again. You can customize spending limits and restrictions
Starting point is 00:13:50 so your employees are empowered to purchase what your business needs. And you can have peace of mind. And now you can get $250 when you join Ramp. You go to ramp.com slash explained, ramp.com slash explained, ramp.com slash explained. Ramp.com slash explained. Ramp.com slash explained. Cards are issued by Sutton Bank, a member of the FDIC, and terms and conditions do apply. Come on, Matt. What are we talking about? Today Explained. My name's Amy Walter, and I am the publisher and editor of the Koch Political Report. And I imagine you spent your holiday weekend thinking a lot about what's going on in the Democratic Party right now.
Starting point is 00:14:36 I did spend a lot of my time thinking about that and talking to folks and reading stuff and looking at polls. And thankfully, it was so super hot here in D.C. It was OK being stuck inside. From all of your thinking and talking and avoiding the heat, what have you gleaned? Where do we stand? What is the status of this race right now, at least on the Democratic side? You have polling that's come out that has shown, you know, a slight drop for Biden. I mean, in some places, you know, I looked at all the different polls and the change that they've had since their last poll. So, you know, CNN, Biden's down by six, but he was down by six before debate. Wall Street Journal, Biden's also down by six. But again, they hadn't polled since February. So we don't have like an apples to apples, like what did he look like the week before? What does he look like now?
Starting point is 00:15:45 The New York Times, he dropped about a couple of points since their earlier June primary. So I think it's fair to say he's lost some ground. Maybe the best way to think about this is he went into that debate trailing. He's come out of the debate, still trailing with a harder path now to get ahead. This election, of course, isn't just about President Biden and former President Trump. What do we know about how this limbo situation on the Democratic ticket is affecting down ballot races or even the perception of down-ballot races. And I think that is something that does need a little bit of time to shake out. But if you're a down-ballot Democrat in a swing state or a swing district, what you know is what's happening at the top of the ticket has a tremendous impact on you.
Starting point is 00:16:42 If Democratic voters are less enthusiastic about showing up to vote because they feel pretty down in the dumps about Biden, then they're probably not going to show up for you either. Voters do have questions. And personally, I love Joe Biden. I don't know that the interview on Friday night did enough to answer those questions. You know, one way to think about it is you've got a bunch of members who sit in districts that Biden carried, but by a narrow margin in 2020. If that margin is erased, that puts them in a really precarious position. I think this week is going to be really critically important because members have been out on 4th of July recess. They've been texting and calling each other, of course.
Starting point is 00:17:31 But it's really different when you're sitting in the room with everybody. is, unless Joe Biden decides that he's dropping out of this race, I don't know how individual members of Congress are not going to be enough, right? A member of Congress saying, I want you to drop out. There's no legal or political reason why he has to do that. The question going forward is, you know, how much weight does he put on the fact that some of the most vulnerable members of his party are asking him to step aside if that is weighing on him at all? We've discussed on the show several times now that the only path here, if there is to be some replacement candidate, is for Joe Biden to step aside. But we haven't actually gone much further than that in the thought
Starting point is 00:18:26 experiment. So what would happen, let's say, if that were to happen, I don't know, before the convention? What happens to all the delegates who have pledged their support to Joe Biden already? So if this were to work out in the ideal fashion for Democrats. Biden would say, hey, delegates who are pledged to me, it's all cool. You don't have to stick with me anymore. You can vote for whomever you'd like. Or he says, it's all cool. I'm releasing you. I also want to let you know I'm endorsing my vice president. Those are the options. We don't really know how delegates are feeling, right? No one has gone out and actually polled all of those many, many, many delegates about what they would like to see and how concerned they are about this and how they think it would work.
Starting point is 00:19:26 We really are in uncharted territory. And all the sort of Aaron Sorkin-esque theories of how this would work. Well, that's it then. We've saved people the trouble of voting. What's next? Again, they sound great if you're making this a screenplay. Well, that's it then. We've saved people the trouble of times. And it certainly wasn't a factor back in the days when conventions really were conventions, right? Where people actually came in uncommitted and you spent hours and hours and hours and sometimes days until you got to consensus on a nominee.
Starting point is 00:20:20 This is brand new for all of us. You know, you brought up Aaron Sorkin. I saw Benji Sarlin from Sem4 writing that there's a plan circulating among Democratic donors for something called a blitz primary that would involve weekly forums with each candidate moderated by cultural icons like Michelle Obama, Oprah, and Taylor Swift, maybe. Who knows?
Starting point is 00:20:42 Yeah. I mean, Taylor Swift, you know, I'd go to that. I would totally go to that. And someone wrote, not even Aaron Sorkin could have dreamed this up. Is this stuff all just theory? Is there any sense of what a Biden replacement primary could actually look like at this point in the race? At this point? I mean, Sean, that's the key. There was an opportunity to have a blitz primary. It was called the primary, right? It was called January, February, March of 2024, right? That was an actual primary on the books where those very people who are being mentioned as potential candidates could have actually come out and said,
Starting point is 00:21:25 hey, my name is Governor fill in the blank, and I would like to run for president. Okay, great. But nobody did that. Everyone fell in line in this party. Everybody fell in line. You don't see Gretchen Whitmer saying, yeah, I'm thinking about it. You saw the governor of Pennsylvania, Josh Shapiro, campaigning with Biden in Pennsylvania. So the very people who are mentioned as the most likely replacement to him are also the people who are least likely to run. So it seems to me Democrats have a choice. You stick with Biden or you go with the vice president. There are risks in both. I've read many times now, it feels like, that, you know, Democratic operatives think that a Kamala Harris ticket is doomed. There's no way. It's an impossibility. Joe Biden's the only person who can beat Donald
Starting point is 00:22:22 Trump. I'm just confused, Amy. Why do people think they know what will happen in November if there's someone else running against Donald Trump? Exactly. I think, you know, for a lot of people, this is just about, you know, who's the best candidate? Who's going to beat X? You know, can X beat Y? But a lot of the behind the scenes talk seems to be about fundraising. Does a Kamala Harris ticket help with the fundraising question? I'm of the belief that, you know, money and politics is very, very important. The lifeblood to a campaign in politics, the lifeblood is money. I talked to a bunch of big donors and they're moving all their money to Congress and the Senate. I mean, I cannot believe we're in this situation.
Starting point is 00:23:13 But I do think that donors, as you said, just want to win. The folks who want to beat Donald Trump want to beat Donald Trump. And whatever money, wherever they have to give their money, they will give their money. So I don't know that money is going to be the bigger problem. To me, the bigger challenge is, you know, if you are not the vice president, where does your campaign staff come from? I mean, I guess you assume that all those Biden staffers are like, OK, cool. Sure, I'll come work for you. Also, what's your campaign message?
Starting point is 00:23:53 What's your plan? A presidential campaign is like putting together a Fortune 500 company. You have thousands of employees. You literally have, you know, a billion dollars or more. You have so many moving parts. And it takes a while to build that up. You can't just do it overnight. Now, again, theoretically, if I'm working for the Biden campaign, I'm working for the Biden campaign because I want to beat Donald Trump. And whether that's Joe Biden or whether that is somebody else, I'm on board. But also, you know, you may decide, well, wait a minute. I didn't sign up for this person. I didn't sign up for this to be the focus of the campaign.
Starting point is 00:24:46 I don't want this person to be the face of the Democratic Party. So, you know, that is a little complicated. What makes this different to me from previous politicians is that they had a political problem they had to fix. This is a physical problem they had to fix. This is a physical problem. And that cannot be fixed, which is, you can fix your political challenges, you can't get younger. Amy Walter is the publisher and editor-in-chief of the Cook Political Report, cookpolitical.com. This one was produced by Hari Mawagdi and Denise Guerra. We were edited by Matthew Collette, fact-checked by Laura Bullard with help from Amanda Llewellyn,
Starting point is 00:25:37 and mixed by Patrick Boyd and Andrea Christen's daughter. It's Today Explained. Kristen's Daughter, it's today explained.

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