What Now? with Trevor Noah - The Kamala Question with Tressie McMillan Cottom
Episode Date: July 25, 2024Sociologist and NYT columnist Tressie McMillan Cottom joins Trevor, Christiana, and Josh as they unpack Biden dropping out, Kamala’s nomination, and where we’re at in this ever evolving (some migh...t say devolving) political landscape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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He stepped away from running from president but he is still president.
You find out who somebody is when they put their two weeks in.
I knew Josh was coming with a quick take.
Josh loves, let me tell you Josh, before you say it, there are few human beings whose eyes
light up more than yours when somebody has quit their job.
Your eyes light up Josh like someone has just been handed the keys to the kingdom.
You have, there's a joy in you that cannot be surpassed by anything when it comes to quitting your job.
You're listening to What Now?
The podcast where I chat to interesting people about the conversations taking over our world.
And the conversation that's taking over the world this week,
Joe Biden stepping down from the race
and Kamala Harris stepping up.
This has never happened in the history of the United States.
Yes, another first.
And to help us navigate this first
and make sense of this moment,
I invited writer, sociologist, and all-around amazing person, oh, and also MacArthur genius,
Tressie Macmillan Cotton, to join us on the podcast. The day the news broke, Tressie published an
opinion article in the New York Times called, Kamala or Bust, and it has totally reframed the way people are thinking
about this election and what happens next. Now of course along with Tressie
I'm joined by two of my closest friends writer and journalist and professional
hater Christiane Mbaka Medina and comedian and human chill pill Josh Johnson.
Hey Josh how are you? I've missed your face. I'm good, man. How are you?
I am blessed, my friend.
Looks like we're recording.
Okay.
This is What Now with Trevor Noah.
At Radiolab, we love nothing more than nerding out about science, neuroscience, chemistry. But but we do also like to get into other kinds of stories. Stories about policing or
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Happy podcast day, everybody.
Happy podcast day, man.
Happy podcast day, everybody. Happy podcast day, man. Happy podcast day.
Just a week ago, we were talking about a former president of the United States essentially
being asked to drop out in a very violent way, terrible way, not good at all.
And then we were like, I wonder which way the race is going to go.
I wonder what's going gonna happen in America.
No, things have to get even crazier.
And so now as I sit before you, my friends, and everyone who's listening as well, Joe
Biden, the President of the United States, has announced that he is 100% not running
to be President of the United States again.
Which by the way is what he promised.
I don't know if everybody remembers this,
but when Joe Biden originally ran against Donald Trump,
he was like, President, that's not for me.
I'm just sleepy old Joe.
I'm just trying to help the Republic
and I'm just here, you know, one white man against the other.
I'm gonna fight this guy for you and then I'm gone.
I'm gone.
And then he got into the White House
and he got a little bit of that White House chef and a little bit of that White House masseuse and he was like,
mmm. And in a way that was reminiscent for most Africans, he was like, I know I said I was going
to leave, but what if I stay a little bit longer? When he was running again, I was like, uh-uh, wait,
When he was running again, I was like, uh-uh, wait, you said, and you said to me, that's, did he lie?
Did Joe lie to me?
He didn't lie.
He was telling the truth.
He told the truth eventually.
He got there in the end.
Yes.
It was a very delayed telling of the truth.
But you know how they say that if a mother is in distress and her baby is in distress,
she can summon the strength to lift a car to get the car off her baby, right?
Yeah.
I've heard this.
They never say that about fathers.
And so I think that that's exactly what happened.
I think that Joe saw the country in distress. He saw this like imminent threat, you know,
to overall democracy at our institutions.
And then he ran up to the car and was like,
huh, and then he was like,
we gonna need the jaws of life.
We gonna need some firefighters, please.
I mean, it's once again, America is in
just uncharted territory. Like once again, everything around Donald Trump is not boring.
Whatever it is, it is not boring.
Let's just say that.
Like if Donald Trump is in your life, like if Donald Trump came from an African family,
they would pray for him because they'd say they are demons in his life.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, yeah.
Seems pretty reasonable. You actually believe that they are demons in his life. Yeah, for sure. I mean, yeah.
You actually believe that they are demons in his life.
That was completely spiritual, but we're not going to go down that road.
No, really. People would be praying for him. They'd be like,
you have to pray for Donald Trump. You have to pray. Please, every time something in his life,
if you know him, if you are next to him, something bad can happen. Something crazy can happen.
Oh, Lord Jesus, we must pray for Donald Trump.
Pray for Donald Trump!
Something is … That's what they would say about you, because this is crazy.
And today, I want us to try to get to a bunch of things.
One, I want us to talk about the Joe Biden of it all,
like a president who was convinced literally like a week or so ago
that he was definitely going to run for reelection,
and then told us, no no he's not, tweeted that
he's not, and then I guess you know the the Kamala Harris of it all. And we're going to
be speaking about it with one of my favorite human beings in the entire world. In the entire
world. I mean she's truly one of the smartest people I know. Half of everything she's written
has informed how I see the world. Her name is Tressie McMillan Cotton. First of all, welcome to the podcast.
Second of all, Tressie, I know you don't live in the news, but when you heard the news,
Biden out, what was the first thing you thought?
Well, first of all, hello, my darling, darling Trevor.
So happy to always see you.
So listen, no, I try not to live in the news.
I want to be a real human being.
That matters a lot to me.
But I also have this job, right?
And I have to know, and I feel like I take one for the team.
So what I tell my friends is you don't have to watch it.
I'll watch it and I'll filter it back to you.
I'm like, just watch the Housewives
and I'll tell you if we have a country tomorrow.
So same, I get the text message like everyone else.
I mean, I think maybe I get it like 60 seconds early, only because of my colleagues at The
New York Times.
And I think I knew by like the week before it wasn't looking good, not because I thought Biden was necessarily on death's door,
but because he had lost donors.
And politics is money,
and when you start losing the donors,
I thought the message was on the wall.
I was stunned how they did it on a Sunday
with a tweet and a sort of like generally worded
sort of statements,
I thought that was kind of strange.
It sounded like someone who still wasn't quite at terms with his decision.
And then my next thought was, oh my God, just, oh my God, here we go.
Right? It's one thing to have to look at Donald Trump for the next election season.
It's another thing to listen to Donald at Donald Trump for the next election season. It's another
thing to listen to Donald Trump run against a woman of color.
Oh, damn. I didn't even think of it like that.
Yeah, I don't know if I can be drunk enough for what's about to happen.
First of all, before we get into like the nitty gritty, wait, you get news 60 seconds
before the rest of us?
No, no, that's, I've never said any such thing.
I said...
You said, you said, I got it like 60 seconds early.
You're on a delay over there.
You don't know what you heard.
I simply said, I got a text message in a group chat.
Okay?
I'm pretty certain.
I've never gone on the record about 60 seconds and I'm not changing that now.
I'm pretty certain.
That's what I...
Can I tell you that you are the most responsible?
I would be using that to no end. And if I got the news 60 seconds before the general
public because I worked at a newspaper, I would just be like, I just got a bad feeling,
man. I feel like Trump shouldn't be standing on that podium. I don't know, man. I would
just be texting people the entire time just so I become like the sa't be standing on that podium. I don't know, man. I would just be texting people the entire time
just so I become like the savant of the group.
But, okay, you know, can we all admit or do,
am I the only one who feels like this was handled
in a really weird way?
Because I understand a presidential candidate pulling out.
I understand somebody saying
that they're not gonna run again.
I don't know about you.
I'm not even a conspiracy theorist,
but it was weird that the president of the United States,
who has been very publicly running on every platform,
the guy was now doing like TikToks with people,
turns around and sends a tweet out that's like,
yo, peace out, I'm not doing this anymore.
And that's it.
Not a video.
Yo, even like, even athletes will make a video.
You know, they'll come up to be like for 15 years,
you've supported me as I've played the beautiful game.
And now it is time for me to hang up my boots
and spend time with my family.
Thank you so much.
Nothing.
Guys, we got a tweet.
That to me was bizarre, but also the fact he was announcing his retirement from
politics effectively. I felt for him because I'm like, oh, you're actually not getting
the retirement party, which I think everyone deserves. Everyone deserves like a nice little
farewell retirement party. But I was like, it was so much to process. And it felt like
he, Tressie, to your point, that he hadn't quite metabolized the fact that I'm not just dropping out the race. I don't have a job.
Yeah. Yeah. I think it's a couple of things. One, they're trying to stay ahead of the gossip,
right? And so you just go to like the quickest medium. But I also suspect that no one wanted
to see Joe Biden on camera in that moment. And I think his team knew it. Because you'd
need to not only do the statement, right?
He'd have to embody it.
He would have to look confident
and presidential in his choice.
And I wonder if you couldn't quite pull that off.
By all accounts, he had only made the decision
shortly before the news was announced.
I think maybe seeing it on film
might have jeopardized the message.
And you know, would you want somebody recording you
when you get fired?
I mean, to your point, and also for Christiana and Trevor,
I think that one of the things that may feel weird to you
is culturally you come from a different background.
In the US, in the America that we live in, what you do is when you send somebody off to the
nurse at home, don't act like those grandparents didn't have plans that week. They had told people
what they were going to do. I'll see you at lunch tomorrow, girl. And then out of nowhere, they just
miss it. Oh, you see, now you're getting into conspiracy land.
Yeah.
You know, going to your analogy, Josh,
it is weird for grandpa to send a tweet
to the family saying that grandpa's not coming
to the cookout when grandpa was like,
this is my cookout.
Yeah.
You're all invited to the cookout.
Yeah. Yeah.
And we're doing this thing and I'm gonna be there
and I'm bringing my world famous
potato salad and everybody's gotta come and it's like,
but grandpa, mom says you're too old to be,
he's like, I'm never too old to run a cookout.
I'll always be at the cookout.
And then the next message you get from your grandfather is,
due to unforeseen circumstances,
I will no longer be at the cookout.
I wish you well and your mother will be creating the,
it doesn't help create stability in a country where people already feel like everything they hear and understand about politics is a lie.
That's what I feel. It doesn't help.
I mean, it kind of lended credence to that kind of Trumpy message of the deep state.
And there's talk of donations and the billionaire class and the...
You know, we had the George Clooney donations and the billionaire class and the, you know, we had
the George Clooney's and the entertainment class saying, saying, saying, hey, that was
unfortunate.
So calls are being made and all the way, by the way, Obama's medium posts were so long,
you could tell he had that in the drafts for at least a week.
Right?
Because it's like, this is not something that you, you're incredibly loquacious and intelligent.
You didn't write this. I'm with Christiana on this. You know, you didn't write this in an hour. It was like, this is not something that you, you're incredibly loquacious and intelligent. You didn't write this.
I'm with Christiana on this.
You know, you didn't write this in an hour.
It was like so thoughtful.
I'm like, oh, this was in your drafts
and you had done multiple edits.
So it kind of lent credence to this idea
that there are these forces that operate
within American politics on a subterranean level.
And in the right, they're very explicit about it.
We think about the Heritage Foundation. We think about the Koch brothers, etc.
But you're like, oh the progressives have that thing too.
They just look a bit different and that was a thing that I think has
made people feel like going to conspiracy land because it feels strange.
Mm-hmm. I agree. There's this sense that somebody took Biden's keys away, you know.
Said no, this is it. this is your last day driving.
And he didn't know until the keys were gone. And that absolutely does give this sense that
someone's in control, but it wasn't necessarily Biden. And then the inevitable questions are,
well, then who? Who gets to make that call, right? Who is the person who gets to push it?
And I agree that there is a, you
know, there is a billionaire political class on both sides. On the right, we are able to
name it a little more easily. I suspect on the left is because there's like an inter-party
battle between multiple people trying to be in charge. Whereas on the right, they tend
to agree who's in charge. To your point then, if the keys could be taken away
from the commander in chief, doesn't it sort of mean
then the keys shouldn't be with the commander in chief?
Do you know what I mean?
I know it's circular logic, but in a way I go,
do you want somebody to run for president
for another four years if somebody can take the keys away
from them and send that message.
I think it's a really good point.
And I think it's a point that had really already settled with a lot of voters.
So you see the polling, really saw the polling in 2020, people were already concerned about
his age.
The polling was already still there ahead of this election.
But then there's the debate performance. And I just don't think we can overlook that.
The debate felt like the last time that Biden made a call, because he chose to have that
debate.
He pushed for it.
And that decision, I think, called into question his ability to make precisely those types of decisions.
Did you want someone who hadn't quite accurately parsed where the electorate was?
And everybody goes into panic mode, which again suggests that there were people prepared
to do exactly that, which I do think lends some credibility to the idea that there were
already concerns within the inner circle.
Yeah.
And I also think as painful as it is, I feel like that debate for Biden was when
your mom looks at you and she's like, grandpa got one more time to put that
remote in the fridge.
If you put the remote in the fridge again, he can't be on his own.
Yeah.
Like, I don't know if I can trust grandpa with you, if I can't trust him with the remote.
Essentially, that's how America felt in that moment.
But before we move on to Kamala and the, I mean, the new direction conversation and
everything that's happening now in the country, I just want to spend a second
talking about what you brought up, Tressie.
The donor class.
It is pretty wild that arguably the most powerful nation in the world, a nation that proudly,
proudly touts its democracy and its democratic values as liberal and progressive as you wanna say
the democratic party is, the money spoke.
The people didn't speak in this instance,
or the people that spoke as a collective
weren't heard as much as the people
who spoke with their wallets.
Like, what does that say about America's democracy
and where it stands?
Even if this outcome may be what people wanted,
what does this say about America
and the way the system actually works?
The American political process,
especially running for president,
is one of the most circumscribed,
contrived maybe, things that we do
that gives you the sense that every individual voter
is casting a ballot for freedom.
But in fact, very few people go into the ballot box
really deciding who they want to vote for.
You go into the ballot boxes either a Democrat
or a Republican, but really where voters have the most
sort of leverage is in the moment when the donor class
hasn't consolidated around a candidate,
right? They're sort of looking at the tea leaves, trying to see who people will support.
After that point, money weighs in on that. Kind of the individual voter's power really is
significantly diminished. We have got this scenario which Donald Trump has been able to blow through. It's why his takeover of the Republican Party has been both stunning and almost absolute.
He bucked money and won.
And in politics, the idea has been for at least 40, 50 years, you don't win without
the money, right?
And so that's how he was able to bring quote unquote moderate Republicans to heel.
He was able to show that he could control the donor class.
On our side, I think, and I say our let's be, you know, my politics are probably clear
here.
I don't want to live under Donald Trump.
So I don't think I'm giving anything away.
I think we're clear there.
But you know, on our side, I think one, we're always so self-conscious that we don't have enough billionaires.
Right?
Like, oh, the rights got taxed, they've got oil,
they've got, and we only have George Soros.
And so we're so panicked about not having enough billionaires
that I think we're also more susceptible
to falling in line.
But the reality is, yeah, money matters.
It definitely feels, this is maybe a bit contrived
of an analogy, but it does feel a lot like wrestling now,
and it's just more out in the open.
Because wrestling, a very specific type, is fake.
And the thing that happens though,
is that those narratives are written.
It's written who's gonna be the champ.
It's written who's all that stuff. But what people don't though is that those narratives are written. It's written who's going to be the champ. It's written who's all that stuff.
But what people don't realize is that those narratives are written off of crowd reaction.
So the crowd literally does control for a little while. They control everything.
Because then they see where the crowd is cheering and they're like,
okay, let's write it for this guy to win his next couple matches.
But if the crowd says, oh, this is all pre-written
and no one cares what we think,
now the writers don't know what to do.
And that feels like where we're at right now,
where it's like, I think some people have already
have this like foregone conclusion to hopelessness
because Kamala is a black woman
and because Donald Trump's a white guy.
And I think that that is also lending itself
a little bit to like the counterintuitive thing
with wrestling, where it's like,
if you just show up and you don't even clap,
you just stare and watch and you're like, this is fake.
Now the thing isn't a tales fake.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We'll be right back after this.
Christiana, what you and I spoke about the other day was how there was the initial shock that Joe Biden's instantly out.
There was an overwhelming feeling of despair.
And then Joe Biden endorses Kamala Harris and people go, but what does that even mean?
Does it count? Does it not count?
But I don't know who phoned whom.
And I don't know-
The Black Girl Zoom?
Can we talk about-
I was about to say it was the Black Girls.
Can we talk about the Black Girl Zoom?
Tressie, I'm sure you were on there on Sunday.
I was on there.
The Black Girl Magic.
Yeah.
Tell me a little bit about the call.
Cause I can't say too much.
Can we?
It was officially, it was off the record.
Yeah. Yeah.
But it's everywhere.
It's everywhere.
Social media is talking about everywhere.
Everyone is talking not about the contents of the call,
but people are talking about the sentiment
and how many people joined in
and the fact that a million dollars was raised
on a Zoom call. Normally people dollars was raised on a Zoom call.
Normally people pay to go off a Zoom call.
I do want to say that Zoom has a cap to how many people are allowed on a call. I think it's like 10,000.
The COO of Zoom is a South Asian woman and she made some calls so the cap was raised.
And that was why 44,000 black women and some allies were able to be on that call.
So that tells you there's something happening, there's something in the air.
I'll let Tracy talk about the organizing aspects of the call,
but what I will say is that Joe Biden backed out and
black women said you're not going to step over Kamala.
That's what happened. Everyone else was hopeless and confused and we were like,
oh no, there's an option and you're not going to do
that thing that happens in offices all the time.
When a white man leaves a job,
we know who's the most qualified,
we know who's been doing the work,
we know who's been overlooked,
everyone knows the hyper competent black woman in the office,
who never really gets to be COO, makes a C-suite.
I think there was just something in our consciousness that said,
you're not going to step over her.
That's for people that don't,
I don't particularly like her that much.
You know, honestly, she's not my,
I'm with you, Christian. Yeah, we would never be homegirls.
My hair is too natural, I'm too loud.
Yeah, hello. I'm not polishing off her.
I'm not cursing too much.
Yeah, yeah, I'm like, I don't have the silk press.
However, I said, we are behind her.
And I think that's the important thing to realize
that all black women don't see themselves in her,
don't necessarily agree with her past,
but we're like, you're not about to get him out the way
and step over her.
That's right.
But Tressie, let me let you go ahead.
No, I could not agree with any of that more.
What they did was they activated Voltron
when they started floating any other name, right?
It became impossible for any black woman. I know again including myself. I'm like Christiana. I
Am NOT a silk press girl, right? So I'm not invited to the cattilions and that's okay
I'm not you know, I don't spend my summers at the vineyard and all that kind of stuff
But every black woman who has ever worked and and every black woman has worked, has been
in a room where she has the answers, the experience, and is expected to train her replacement,
to support the people who have less education than her, and to earn less while she's doing
it.
And so when you saw this calling up of people who have been trying to be in that inner circle
for years and haven't made it, a Gavin Newsom, are you kidding me?
Big Gretch, lover if you like in Michigan, but she's brand new.
And everybody going, no, every black woman felt that moment.
And the call that goes out is sort of like, you know, a cross between word of mouth and
tapping into black organizations,
sororities and church groups and et cetera.
So the infrastructure was there.
But what really happened, I think, was this, you know,
this collective recognition among black women that,
oh, we know how this story goes.
And listen, Kamala win or lose has earned her shot to run. If Kamala is good
enough to be vice president, she's good enough to be president. And if you have an argument
against that, you have to make it explicitly. And you don't just get to slide in the guy
with the white guy with the good hair.
Yeah.
That would be Gavin.
I also think that, yeah, it's like if she's good enough to be vice president, she's
good enough to be president, and she was one more COVID away anyway.
Wow.
That is the thing.
One more COVID away.
Okay, I'll say this though.
I've had conversations with like, every time I would meet a CEO, like a really, you know,
a CEO of a huge company, I would always ask them the same question.
How did you get here?
Why did you get here?
What were the things that got you here, et cetera, et cetera?
And can I tell you, if I was to distill it down in my little amateur, you know, anecdotal
experiment that I've run with CEOs of major, major corporations around the world.
The number one thing that has come across from all of them is that somebody gave them a shot
and just said, you know what kid, why don't you come work for me because I see myself in you.
That phrase, I see myself in you has made me realize that the real privilege or disadvantage in this world
to being a black woman, particularly by the way, versus a white man, is that
people think it's worth taking a shot on you and your success or failure doesn't
determine the perception of everybody else in that space.
We see that with CEOs all the time.
You know how many CEOs, Josh and I talk about this all the time, you know how many CEOs take over a company, lose hundreds and millions if not billions of dollars
in value for the company, leave the company with a massive severance, and then go on to another
company to become CEO where they might repeat the same thing. And nobody goes, oh these white men,
you just got hired because they're just like, yeah, no, that sucks.
And here's their severance.
And to what you're saying, Tressie and Christiana,
I go, if anything, Kamala Harris has shown
that she's as qualified as, if not more qualified,
by the way, than many of the people
who have been assumed qualified for the job.
She has shown that she's definitely,
she has a right to at least get in the driver's seat
because if it was only about being qualified,
half of these people wouldn't have even been allowed
in the White House.
Does that make sense?
Yeah. Absolutely.
It's interesting how, it's interesting how like
black women in particular have to justify like
the nitty gritties of their qualifications
to be considered for the conversation
when most people do not.
If you're too old, they're like,
no, this person is seasoned.
If you're too young, they're like, this person is fresh.
But when you're a black woman, those are all black marks.
And excuse the pun on your resume where they go,
ah, but I don't know, could you be the first black woman?
You've never been a black woman president.
So I don't know if you could do it.
I don't know if you could do it. Yeah. I don't know if you could do it.
I also think that very few people have a level of emotional intelligence to
see themselves in another person.
I think what's actually happening is I see myself on you and that's why it's so
hard to transfer that to anyone who's not like you.
Does that make sense?
Oh, damn.
Explain more, Josh.
So like that's, that's, I think I know what you mean, yeah.
Like, let's say I roll with a bunch of comedians
all the time, and they're all different colors,
different backgrounds, but the ones I gravitate towards
the most and the ones that I sort of usher in
and try to help the most just happen to be the black men.
Because I don't see myself in them, I see myself on them.
I see myself as like, oh yeah, I know how to fix that struggle because that's the exact struggle. I want
Meanwhile, yes, meanwhile even not meaning to whether it's a white woman or a white guy what I'm like
Oh, yeah
I don't know what to do when people are mad at you for showing up because that that version of that hasn't happened to me when really
an emotionally intelligent person would be able to transfer the fact that
anybody happen to me. When really an emotionally intelligent person would be able to transfer the fact that anybody, anybody who has your hustle has your hustle, no matter what they look like, or no
matter what background they are. But we tend to, that's why people, you know, oh, I see myself in
this young kid caddying at the country club. It's like, yeah, but this kid already has ties to the
country club. Like, do you know what I mean? You somehow see yourself in the caddy.
You don't see yourself in this kid
that's hustling on a street corner in the inner city
who's really doing the same hustle
that you did back in the day.
For me, I think that's why she's actually,
I'm excited about her because for a lot of white people,
she's very familiar.
You know, she's very palatable.
Like we can't get beyond the beauty politics.
She's an attractive light-skinned woman
who wears her hair straight.
She is culturally familiar.
They all know, every one of them has someone
in their family who's biracial.
Like most of these people have just one,
and that's what Barack had.
He was just like, oh, so and so's grandson is like him,
you know, his dad is black.
But, you know, she's incredibly palatable
that there's enough familiarity
that perhaps if it was someone like myself or Tressie,
they'd be like alarm bells,
because they're like, well, that is unambiguous blackness,
and we can't deal with that. That's natural hair.
But Kamala in many ways fits a role,
and she has a white husband.
So they're like, okay, well, she goes home to us.
She is the person that you'd invite to your wedding
or you would socialize with.
And for me, that's why I'm like,
we gotta get behind this one,
because it's more likely her to me than anyone else.
Yeah, it's not a Stacey Abrams, to Christiana's point, right?
Where people look at that figure and that unambiguous blackness is terrifying.
I think the intersection here of what Josh has said and what Christiana is
explicating is like the sweet spot for me, which is we like to think that we can identify talent
and grit or whatever in other people. It's almost always a projection of our ego, right?
and other people, it's almost always a projection of our ego. Right?
I remember someone telling me once that she had to stop going to her gym class because
they had switched out the class leader.
And the one before used to be a light skinned Dominican like her, but the new one was darker
skinned in Puerto Rican, and so she couldn't identify anymore.
And I remember thinking, what the world?
So the moves didn't hit the same?
The moves don't hit the same when you go from the DR to the PR.
I don't know how it works, but she was just like so like, oh, this person used to look
exactly like me.
And so I could project my ego.
But you know, it doesn't take much, I think, for people to see someone as
distinctly other than them, right? What
Kamala still has in this moment is enough malleability where people can project their
ego, especially non-black people, hello, can project their ego onto her without a lot of
fear about her difference. And I think to Christiana's point,
there are not gonna be a lot of black women politicians
at that level of competitiveness
that are going to have that.
And if part of what we have to do in this country
is break this nation's mental image
of what a president looks like,
what competence looks like,
then you've got to do it with your best shot.
I do wonder though, how being a woman will affect her. I feel like a lot of people are
talking about black woman. And I think not enough people are talking about woman.
Again, this is just my perception of America. Blackness is tied to so many cool things these days,
and it's become so ubiquitous in so many areas
of American life that subconsciously,
some people, like they're fine with black,
even if they may be racist on certain occasions.
And they, do you get what I'm saying?
It's no longer as, excuse the pun, black and white as it used to be.
It's no longer just people who are like, I don't like black people.
No, it's like someone who goes like, I don't like these N words, but as Lil Wayne, my favorite
rapper says, there's nothing I can do.
So I've had conversations with groups of people and I would say to them, I'd be like, hey, do you think a woman could do it?
And the amount of times women have said to me,
half joking, but then sometimes very serious,
like, I'll be honest, I like the idea,
but I don't think a woman could be president.
I just don't think a woman could be president.
How much do you think that that'll actually play
into them in the booth?
You know, like Josh, you've said many times,
like I'll never vote for a woman.
And I was going like, why not, Josh?
Why would you do this to me in this moment?
Oh, sure.
I was actually in my own business.
You said wrestling was fake!
You said wrestling was fake!
I was listening.
No, you come in here and say wrestling is fake!
I was being a good listener.
Can't happen.
I actually have a counter to that, though.
I think we should not forget.
I hope so.
We should not forget, Hillary won the popular vote.
In terms of raw numbers, she got more votes than Donald Trump.
Because of the nature of the American electoral system that weights more votes than others,
she didn't win the votes that matter.
The greatest goddamn system in the world.
Yeah, she just didn't win the votes that win elections. was this goddamn system in the world. Yes, you just didn't win the votes that win elections.
But she got more votes purely, right?
And to me, my experience as a black woman,
it may be different for Kamala Tressy,
I'd love to hear you weigh in.
I think people see my blackness more than they see my womanhood.
I've always felt like defeminize or
desexualize or over-sexualize depending on the context.
So when I deal with men in professional spaces,
they don't see woman,
because what they associate with women
are their wives and their daughters, they see black.
And what is great for me is that they're scared of me.
So I think that when Kamala debates Trump,
he's gonna be scared.
Now, what a white man is gonna do to me
is much more subterranean, it's psychological,
it's about my pay.
It's about my treatment.
It's about, can I be promoted?
But I've seen white men treat white women in a way because of the intimacy and familiarity
that they do not.
Black women, we don't experience that.
And I've always said, the best thing about me is that people think I'm angry.
And because people think I'm angry, they're scared of me.
And that fear is actually very useful politically and if you watch Kamala in debates, she dogwalked
Biden. You have to remember that moment when she had the t-shirts ready and it's just like,
she's a prosecutor, she's a lawyer. She's actually used to dealing with the psychology of a certain
type of very powerful white man, whereas he just doesn't know what to do. Um, so for me, I think that, like,
actually her Blackness neutering her womanhood
is gonna be the thing that she's able to maneuver
this election in a way that actually Hillary never could.
Because Hillary, they're like,
you remind us of our nagging wife.
That was it. That's why those men in there were like,
whereas Kamala, they're like, I kind of find you hot.
I kind of find you hot. I kind of find you hot.
You're attractive, but you're also smarmy.
But then you wear these suits.
And I think that the mindfuckness of it all is going to be the thing that actually is
the beneficial, the beneficial element of what intersectionality does to you that makes
your life hard in the right occasion.
Can also be positive.
That's right.
That's right. That's right. In some contexts, you have intersecting
oppressions, right, that limit your life. And then in this other, maybe more narrow context,
it can benefit you. We always forget the benefit part. And I'm always pushing people on that,
precisely for the reasons Christiana says. I have been the black woman. I'm still that black woman in the room. I know that
the fact that people do not see me as a full woman also conditions them to be, to acquiesce to me in
some circumstances of leadership, right? Oh, this is interesting.
The same way they would to a man, especially if I may be dealing with like
people who have some professional exposure to black women, but not intimate exposure to black women.
Let me tell you, one of the things that terrifies me is how
TikTok is ruining that for black women.
They have made us so accessible to white men,
they are messing with my superpower.
I don't need them knowing how I wrap up my hair.
I don't need them understanding all of this process.
So now I'm out there in the world and sometimes white men are like, I don't need them understanding all of this process.
So now I'm out there in the world and sometimes white men are like, oh, I know about you.
And I'm like, no, no, I did not want, I get over on the fear.
That works for me.
Yeah.
But there is a latent sort of fear about not being able to anticipate black women that especially a very
insular, wealthy white man from the Northeast would feel is just an unknown quantity, right?
And I think that one of the things that Trump is going to have a problem with, which I think
his team is already demonstrating, they don't know how to prep for her, he doesn't deal
with any black women in his life.
And Kamala's not afraid of him, can confuse him,
can manipulate the line between, you know,
womanness and blackness in a way
that gives her the upper hands.
And I think Kamala is very comfortable with that.
We'll be right back after the short break. They are fun. I think every time you predict the future, you create like an alternate universe. So Josh, you looked at me like I'm both crazy
and genius at the same time.
I have $10 million.
Yeah, but you see, you don't.
You don't.
Now Josh in another universe does.
He also just got a call from the IRS
wanting to know how he just got $10 million and his
life was turned upside down.
How dare you?
I'd love to know this.
Who do you think is the perfect running mate?
Because I feel like every single combination comes with another combination.
It's like if she gets another woman and if it's a white woman, then it's like, what does
this mean or what does this say? Is this like, is this like Andrew Tate's wet dream?
And then if it's like her and a white man,
what does it say?
And if it's a black man, is it older white man?
Is it a younger white man?
Is it a, like, what do you think she looks for
as a running mate to go up against Donald Trump
and the man with the beard, the beautiful beard,
JD Vance?
Oh, JD Vance.
What a beard. Oh, JD Vance.
What a beard.
Okay.
Oh, what a beard.
As they say on the internet, if you're going to game theory this thing, yeah.
Yeah, fully game.
I think that you already have a disruptive ticket if Kamala's at the head.
I would hope, I'm actually kind of hoping, a small part of me, that they will lean into being disruptive.
I think that if you get a white man,
a more palatable white man as vice president,
the constant optics of that will be
the black woman being a white man's boss.
You see what I'm saying? I think that that is a fear that can
prime some sort of anger and anxiety that will actually be greater than they have,
the fear they have of Kamala being president.
I don't think you, I wouldn't set up those optics.
Like if I was in charge, I think you lean into being
the most radical ticket that there has ever been.
I'm putting the woman on there.
I'm actually gonna put like Gretchen on there
if it's me.
I'm not kidding.
I'm a double, I'm going to double down on it and say you've got a future here
where it is a Trump and a JD Vance who have a vision of America that's absolutely about patriarchy
or you can do this thing and you can feel cool. That's so interesting Trezzi. I never thought of
it that way but your conceptualization is brilliant as always. And yeah, the most...
Or I'm crazy and that's fine too.
No, no, it sounds a lot like, yeah.
It's crazy, but America is a crazy, very young country that sometimes will buy into something
that is unexpected. Like they made Schwarzenegger the governor of California.
We're not serious.
We're not serious people.
Christiana, come on.
It's a very unserious...
Right? So why not?
You might as well go for it.
And I mean, my instinct, and I said this on Instagram,
and maybe this is the part of me that's very British
and like a boring political scientist,
I felt the VP should be like the most precedented thing.
White man, 2.5 kids, very attractive and quiet wife,
goes to church, drinks once every six months,
like as boring as possible.
And only drinks the blood of Jesus.
And only drinks the blood of Jesus, the blood of the lamb during communion.
That's right.
That was my instinct.
And I guess this is the fear in me as a black woman in this country is that I feel that what Biden was able to do for Obama,
because I think Biden was critical to getting Obama elected, you need those kind of undecided
voters who are going to go into the, you know, those couple hundred thousand who decide in
the morning what they're going to do. They'll be like, oh, well, at least my buddy will
be there. So you just may need to just capture, just boost turnout in Georgia.
And people in Georgia are gonna be like,
okay, black woman, white man, I can go for this.
No, I think that's the straight political read.
And I suspect exactly the conversation that's happening,
because you are a political scientist
and that is, I think, how they think about it.
The vice president historically is supposed to deliver votes
that the president can't deliver.
The only thing that's questionable here
is that we don't know if people will vote
for a black woman at all.
So you don't quite know what vote she can bring.
And so that complicates choosing, I think,
a vice presidential candidate.
And I think that yours is the sober path to take.
Mine is absolutely drunk, right?
And I just think, however,
that because we are so deeply unserious,
one of the things this country does is that,
do we progress?
Yes, but we don't do it slowly.
We have these long periods of almost regressive politics.
And then we'll make these huge leaps in like two weeks.
Everything changes in two weeks.
I want them to campaign on, here's, you know, let's capture lightning in a bottle.
But the more sober, I think, assessment is to
play it with more familiarity.
I think that, I very much wish that Tressie had gone last,
because I feel like yours was so good
that now mine is gonna sound, okay.
I'm gonna try it anyway.
I think you could go Mark Kelly,
because Mark Kelly is like a former astronaut, current, you know, Senator. He could call JD and
Trump dumb to their face and mean it. Right? Then you also have Andy Beshear, who's like
Kentucky governor, who doesn't have enough. He's interesting. He doesn't have enough
name recognition, but you can see how what I like about him is that
he is the most southern version.
And honestly, like identity politics wise,
the most white man version of someone's heart
being in the right place.
Like he represents this sort of like white base
who's like who means well and doesn't always get it right,
but is like fully on board.
I think that's actually a really interesting choice Andy Bashir.
I'm gonna go okay I think Kamala Harris should pick a Latino running mate and go balls to the
wall just basically go like this is going to be like the ticket of firsts. First, everything is being done here.
It's like a fire sale.
One time only, one time only.
November 9th.
This is the first of first.
You get it here.
And go there.
They're like the Latino caucus has been doing an amazing job.
They've been mobilizing people.
They've been overlooked for a long time.
They're one of the biggest populations in America.
I just think this is the time to think out of the box and be like, you know,
what, go and get these people who have been like, you know, sort of overlooked
and then only spoken about when it comes to the border and all of that, get a
Latino person on the ticket and be like, yeah, let's, let's swing.
If you swing and miss with that ticket, I mean, what a miss that was, that
was, that was monumental.
And I think if America shipped it all in on that,
if Kamala shipped it all in on that,
I think that would be the greatest story, win or lose,
that America's ever told.
That's my pitch.
Final thoughts for everyone.
Is Biden just like gone now?
Is this, because Biden stepped away from the campaign.
But it sort of feels like, you know, to you, to what you said earlier,
Christiana, it sort of, sort of feels like Biden has stepped away from everything.
It's a, it's a strange feeling to have, but does this make him the ultimate lame duck?
I think unfortunately, you know, Biden's whole life has been marred by tragedy in some ways,
like losing his wife and his daughter, losing his son, having another son with addiction
challenges, and he's been done a great job of like overcoming those things and embracing it and
making it part of his political rhetoric. I think there was so much foreshadowing that now we're
seeing that his political career has ended in a tragedy. This kind of like an older man battling health issues,
battling issues in his family,
kind of just being pushed to the side and also not having a voice that matters.
I think this is just an end to a very tragic political career in ways.
I think he just kind of goes down in history as this tragic figure. And it's really, the final image is a tweet, you know?
And there's no overcoming that.
But Tressie, I'd be really curious
about how you feel about it.
I strongly agree.
The one thing that we, the one narrative we tend to share
in this country across political divide,
across class, across race,
tend to share in this country across political divide, across class, across race is that age equals being feeble.
And unfortunately for Biden, he didn't age after the office, he aged while in office.
So we saw him in the White House, elderly, in a way that I think resonates with everyone, no matter
who they are. And unfortunately, we don't have a redemption narrative for a person who
ages, right? The only narrative we have for being elderly is that we sort of coddle you
into the next stage of your life. And that coddling is antithetical to gravitas, to Christiana's point, right? He's
now seen as an elderly figure. I think we are a media-driven culture, and I think the image of him
will supersede, unfortunately, his record for the short term or near term.
Here's my thing. I disagree slightly only because of the opportunity
that I think he has.
He has the opportunity that everyone wishes that they had
when they run for office the first time.
Because anytime somebody runs for office the first time,
they're talking all that good stuff.
I'm gonna do this, I'm gonna do this.
This guy is like, hey, look, I'm never coming back.
I'm almost gone.
Free school lunch, and y'all can come get me.
Come get me.
Free school lunch for everybody, right?
I'm telling you, all he has to do is just 18,
20 executive orders, just like, you know what?
Maternal leave for everybody.
Come get me in court.
I won't be here, but you could argue with yourself.
You can argue with my ghost.
Yeah.
Oh man, well, I will say that Josh, you know what?
If that man, it might not happen for us, but in the alternate universe you just created,
those people are having a really, really good time, my friend.
Oh, I want Biden to be a fool.
Those people are having a really, really good...
Oh man, I just, hold on, hold on. I'm just checking the...
I've got an app that shows me, In the executive order world that you created,
Biden has just taxed everyone who got $10 million or more.
Oh.
So Josh Johnson has the exact same amount of money that he has in this reality.
But he gets a free school lunch.
He gets a free school lunch.
What Now with Trevor Noah is produced by Spotify Studios in partnership with Day Zero Productions and Fullwell 73.
The show is executive produced by Trevor Noah, Ben Winston, Sanaz Yamin and Jodie Avigan.
Our senior producer is Jess Hackl, Claire Slaughter is our producer.
Music, mixing and mastering by Hannes Brown.
Thank you so much for listening. Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now?