The Bulwark Podcast XX
[0] Hey there, happy Friday.
[1] I am pumped to have Ron Brownstein on today.
[2] This guy does, I think, the best work and analysis about the realignment happening in our politics.
[3] He's been doing it for years.
[4] He is must read material in the Atlantic.
[5] So I want you to enjoy this conversation.
[6] On the back end of it, we'll have a mailbag.
[7] We really dorked out on politics.
[8] I've got to tell you, it's like almost a political science class.
[9] So if you want some bonus content for your weekend with a little more laughs, I stepped in for J. VL on the secret podcast with Sarah Longwell today.
[10] We talked a bunch about women's basketball.
[11] We danced on the grave of no labels.
[12] We joked about RFK Jr.'s steroid use.
[13] There's a little saved by the bell talk.
[14] I mean, you get it all.
[15] That is for Bullwork Plus subscribers only.
[16] So we'll put in the show notes a link to the secret podcast.
[17] Or you can go to the bulwark .com slash free trial to get a free trial for Bullwark Plus, get access to the secret podcast for 30 days.
[18] I hope you'll enjoy me and Sarah over there.
[19] Next, Ron Brownstein, and I take your questions with a mailback.
[20] Hello and welcome to the Bullard podcast.
[21] I'm your host, Tim Miller.
[22] It's the Friday.
[23] It's the weekend show.
[24] I'm delighted to have Ron Brownstein, senior editor of the Atlantic, senior political analyst for CNN, his most recent book, Rock Me on the Water, 1974, the Year L .A. transformed music, movies, television, and politics.
[25] Hey, Ron.
[26] How's it going, man?
[27] Thanks for doing this.
[28] Tim, good to be here.
[29] Last time I saw you was at the Austin Tribune Fest, you know, and you guys, you guys I said like a turnaway crowd.
[30] You had like, you know, practically you had groupies in Austin.
[31] We do have Bullwark Groupies.
[32] We do have Bullard Groupies.
[33] You know, it's not really the demo, you know, in my mind.
[34] When I think about, you know, rock me on the water and like having groupies, there would be like, you know, early 20 something gay men, you know, kind of throwing their shirts at me. That wasn't exactly the vibe.
[35] But I, we appreciate all of our supporters, no matter the demo.
[36] It may have been literally the same people, though, who were like the early 70s groupies in their 20s, actually.
[37] It may have been the same people.
[38] That's a good point.
[39] They have been the same people, you know, but again, Austin had kind of a music scene, obviously, going at that point, too.
[40] So, you know, it could have been.
[41] It definitely could have been.
[42] I will say, you know, obviously our core base is the never trumpers, but we definitely have a lot of Democrats, center -left Democrats who are kind of warily eyeing their younger, their younger brethren that are like, I don't know, I like these former Republican guys.
[43] Anyway, Ron, the other side of the realignment is where I want to start.
[44] And we have a ton of news.
[45] We'll get into no labels.
[46] We get into the actual news of the day.
[47] But I was teaching a study group at USC about realignment and about what's happened with the Republican Party.
[48] And I was going through, you know, the source doc supporting documents and going through articles to give to the students to read.
[49] And I basically came down to the conclusion that really they could just read Ron Brownstein.
[50] They didn't have to read anybody like all the ones that I wanted to send them were from you, basically.
[51] So just did the biggest picture, you know, before we get to the news.
[52] Like, is that realignment still happening?
[53] Is it over?
[54] Where do you think we are?
[55] And I think 24 is going to give us a really good sense of where we are and what is legit and grounded and what may be kind of froth in people's reaction.
[56] We know that, you know, the basic lines of division in American politics are geographic and demographic.
[57] Democrats, you know, you could draw an imaginary beltway.
[58] I'm sure you, you know, you looked at this before around every major metro area in the country.
[59] And generally, Democrats are doing better in.
[60] that imaginary beltway and Republicans are doing better outside of it.
[61] And Democrats, you know, still win the vast majority of minority voters and they are winning an increasing share of college -educated white voters.
[62] They're running better among those voters than they ever have.
[63] And I'm not sure, by the way, that Biden has tapped out on those voters for reasons we can discuss.
[64] I think it's likely he's going to run even better with them in 24 than he did in 20.
[65] And, you know, Republicans, the Republican coalition in the 21st century has been centered on the voters who feel most disconnected, most alienated from the ways the country is changing non -urban voters, non -college white voters, evangelical Christians and other really religiously devout voters.
[66] The twist that has emerged really under Trump, not so much in 2016, but in 2020 and to some extent in 2022, is, that the educational and gender divisions that have long been familiar among whites are increasingly visible among non -whites.
[67] And that is a critical change.
[68] And it is probably the change that has propelled Trump into the lead that he has in most polls, not all polls, at this point.
[69] So basically, you know, the story among whites is that if you drew quadrants, you know, on education and gender.
[70] And you divided the whites into four groups, white voters into four groups by education and gender.
[71] College educated men, college educated women, non -college men, and non -college women.
[72] The most Republican group are those without a degree who are men, non -college men.
[73] The most democratic group are the college educated women.
[74] Non -college women, very importantly, lean toward Republicans.
[75] The college men have grown more democratic.
[76] This has been the basic structure of politics among whites for really since the 90s, late 80s.
[77] You know, Tim, in the 90s, pollsters used to call that quadrant the Brownstein cross tabs because I would always demand it before it was so common.
[78] And what's really happening in this election is that the same kind of quadrant -like behavior is showing up among non -white voters.
[79] And Trump is making a lot of gains among non -college, non -white men.
[80] The college non -white women are growing and democratic.
[81] but the other groups are kind of in the mix.
[82] So basically we've had this, you know, restructuring, reconfiguring of the coalitions that goes back.
[83] I would say our modern era began in the 92 election since then, although some of this behaviors obviously goes back to the 70s.
[84] And the new twist we are seeing is the potential for Trump.
[85] Why 92 Buchanan?
[86] No, really Clinton's victory.
[87] I mean, like the suburban places that we think of now as kind of core democratic places, Oakland County, Michigan, Montgomery and Delaware and Pennsylvania, even Bergen in New Jersey, Santa Clara, which is Silicon Valley.
[88] All of those places voted six for six Republican from 68 to 88.
[89] It's really hard to imagine that world, you know, where the Republican presidential candidate was winning Bergen County, New Jersey, and Fairfield County, Connecticut, and the suburbs of Philly and Oakland County, which is the white collar suburb of Detroit, suburbs of Minneapolis.
[90] But in 92, is when they flipped, you know.
[91] So, like, if we take the long arc, maybe we'll go back one step.
[92] From the 30s through the 60s, Democrats ran, even into the 70s, Democrats ran better among voters without a college education than voters with a college education.
[93] That was the New Deal political alignment.
[94] Every Democratic nominee from Stevenson through Carter ran better among white voters without a degree than white voters with a degree.
[95] The Democrats were the party, people who work with their hands, Republicans were the party, people who were a tie to the office.
[96] And that world began breaking down in the 60s, obviously with the Civil Rights Act, and then really in the 70s with all of the kind of follow -on issues of busing and affirmative action and later guns and same -sex rights and abortion.
[97] And you got to a world where those non -college whites famously described as Reagan Democrats in 84 became the backbone of the Republican Party.
[98] It took about 20 months.
[99] years for the reverse to really kick in, which was the college -educated whites leaning toward Democrats.
[100] And Clinton, as I said in 92, winning a lot of these white -collar places that previously had been Republican.
[101] And basically, what we are seeing in the Trump era is this same pattern, somewhat surprisingly, applying to minority voters, where non -college men in particular are showing a lot of disaffection with Biden, showing more willingness to vote for Trump, and Biden depending on college -educated voters in the non -white community in much the same way that he is among white.
[102] So that's what we've got.
[103] We've got kind of this educational realignment with gender tremendously important within it, and race still important.
[104] I mean, let's not, you know, the non -college, non -white men are not the non -college white men in any way, like in any of their attitudes or voting preferences, but they are showing a lot of receptivity to Trump.
[105] And his breakthroughs in that community is probably the most important change for him from 20 to 24.
[106] And for Biden, the question will be whether he can offset it with even further gains in those white -collar places, Democrats first kind of playing at the flag in under Clinton.
[107] Okay.
[108] So a lot to chew on there.
[109] But just speaking on the non -college voters of color, non -college black voters in particular, or, I guess, Latinos are different than black voters.
[110] Maybe we should just focus on non -college black voters.
[111] But is your sense that Trump has some unique appeal there just because of his kind of celebrity and that he doesn't come off as a Christian conservative?
[112] It's kind of hard to imagine Ted Cruz, you know, having the same ability to kind of move that realignment.
[113] So do we think that's a one -off or do you think that this is part of this long history that you're talking about of a 70 -year history where just in actual, Excerably, working class people are moving more towards the Republican Party.
[114] Right.
[115] It's a really good and important question.
[116] And the honest answer is that we can't entirely know until Trump leaves the scene.
[117] First of all, a big part of it this year is not candidate specific or ideology.
[118] It's just discontent over the economy.
[119] These are voters, both black and Hispanic working class voters, you know, like any voter living at or below the median income, is really feeling the pressure of inflation to a greater extent than white upper middle class Americans are, you know, for whom it's an inconvenience.
[120] This is more of an existential challenge.
[121] I think there are a lot of pollsters who think that Trump has kind of an outlaw persona, you know, like I don't give a hoot, you know.
[122] And there is a certain segment of particularly younger non -white men who find that kind of I think the evidence is much more mixed on there being a fundamental ideological realignment among these voters.
[123] I go through some of those numbers in my Atlantic story today.
[124] You know, and pretty much broadly across the non -white community, you know, voters agree with the statement, for example, that the Republican Party has been taking over by racist.
[125] They support gun control.
[126] They support legal abortion.
[127] They are taking harder positions on immigration, you know, maybe somewhat surprisingly.
[128] they do show some ambivalence about the transgender rights issues, but there is not like a big cultural disaffection from the Democrats.
[129] I think it's more economic discontent.
[130] In the story today, I talked to a guy.
[131] I don't know if you ever talked to him named Matt Morrison, who runs this thing called Working America, which is the group that tries to organize blue -collar workers who are not in a union.
[132] Okay.
[133] And they do a tremendous amount of door -to -door canvassing.
[134] in communities of color, working class communities of color, exactly what we're talking about.
[135] You know, and he said to me, you know, the voters moving toward Trump are not MAGA Republicans.
[136] They are voters who don't see a reason to vote for President Biden, right?
[137] They're very different still than the non -college whites in their views about most things.
[138] But there is a real risk this year.
[139] And I do think, I mean, if I had to bet, the floor has been raised for Republicans, with non -college men of color, you know, partially just, just like a cultural thing.
[140] The share of non -white men of color who identified as conservative was always higher than the share who voted for Republicans.
[141] There was kind of a cultural barrier there.
[142] And I think now the evidence is that more of those working class conservative minorities are willing to vote Republican.
[143] That will probably outlast Trump, but I do think it's being inflated or enlarged this year, both by inflation and by his personal appeal.
[144] Yeah, the article, by the way, the Atlantic saw today how Trump is fracturing minority communities.
[145] The other factor in that group, I think is interesting to monitor is RFK.
[146] Yeah.
[147] You know, I think that there's mixed feelings about RFK, you know, about who he hurts.
[148] Unlike some of these other third party options out there, it's a little bit more opaque with him.
[149] RFK obviously has some core anti -VACs.
[150] anti -establishment types that would maybe hue more towards Trumpiness in a way.
[151] But this demo that you're talking about, non -college, non -Maga, black men, Hispanic men that are unhappy with the economy, he might be an off -ramp for them.
[152] And maybe, who knows, you know, but you would assume just based on the numbers that on balance come November, at least a greater proportion of that share, if it's a two -way, you know, head back to Biden just because of the trends.
[153] RFK gives some of them an option in a way that might hurt Biden.
[154] What do you think about that theory?
[155] Yeah, I completely agree.
[156] I mean, I think, like, first of all, I think our mutual friend, Bill Crystal, tweeted that today was RFK's speech in, you know, the real, the original.
[157] RFK senior.
[158] Yeah.
[159] The non -juiced RFK.
[160] Exactly.
[161] In Indianapolis that he gave that beautiful speech, you know, quoting Escalis off the top of his head, which probably neither of us would be doing in the same circumstances.
[162] Maybe Crystal.
[163] Crystal could maybe do that.
[164] Maybe do that.
[165] Yeah, on the back of a truck, I think David Broder was there.
[166] Pretty sure David Broder was physically there when RFK gave that speech in the Indiana primary in 1968.
[167] But yeah, I agree.
[168] I think anything, anything that lowers the number that you need to win benefits Trump.
[169] I mean, I can't get too deeply myself into these analyses of, like, you know, who these candidates draw more from.
[170] Because I think it varies so much from poll to poll.
[171] We're talking about a small number of people.
[172] It's hard to get a handle on.
[173] What I think is likely is that, although I know there are some polls with the exception to find the opposite, I still think it's hard for Donald Trump to reach 50 % of the vote.
[174] And whatever makes it more possible to win without 50 % of the vote, I think in the end, benefits him.
[175] And I think RFK is a very logical landing point for some of these voters.
[176] We're talking about particularly younger, black, and Hispanic men who've never, you know, warm to Biden.
[177] Let's go back to 2020.
[178] I mean, he was not exactly quickening the pulse of a lot of these.
[179] voters.
[180] It's unclear to me how many will vote.
[181] I mean, their turnout, as I point out in the story today, their turnout is much lower than any other group.
[182] If you think of my four quadrants, the other three quadrants of non -white voters turn out at much higher levels.
[183] And then the white quadrants turn out at higher levels.
[184] So I'm not sure.
[185] And, you know, if they're not usually enthusiastic about Trump and they dislike Biden, some of them won't turn out.
[186] And some of them will vote for RFK Jr. I think it is a problem for Biden, where he gets on the ballot.
[187] Like, I think Nevada is a state where he's on the ballot.
[188] And given what we are seeing with Hispanic voters, you know, that could be a challenge for Biden.
[189] Now, you know, in a place like Nevada, you have a structure.
[190] You have the culinary workers union.
[191] You have the remnants of the Reed machine that can kind of educate people.
[192] But yeah, I agree with you.
[193] I think it is a risk for Biden.
[194] Do you share my just looking at the demos.
[195] I'm sure you've looked at this more closely than me. Of the six main swing states, Nevada and Georgia, do you think, are the ones that are the most worrisome for Biden based on demos?
[196] I will give you a preview of when I'm writing for Monday.
[197] I mean, you know, the paradox here is that Biden is doing better in the states that are less diverse.
[198] You know, essentially, if you look at the swing states, you've got Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, which were famously part of what I called in 2009, the blue wall, right?
[199] So the blue wall, go back to the January 2009 National Journal, which is where the concept was introduced.
[200] It was 18 states.
[201] It wasn't just the Midwest.
[202] It was 18 states that had voted Democratic in every election since 1992.
[203] And ultimately, all 18 of them voted Democratic in six straight elections, which is 92 to 2012, which is the most states, Democrats had ever won in that many consecutive elections.
[204] But in 2016, famously Trump dislodge Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin from the blue wall.
[205] And that was why he won.
[206] And then in 2020, Biden won them all back, as well as breaking through in Arizona and Georgia and winning Nevada for the fourth consecutive time, I think, since 2008.
[207] Well, if you look at the polling now, as I said before, Biden, in a way that we have not focused on, is essentially holding his white vote from 2020.
[208] He's doing slightly better in many polls among college whites, not that much better, but like slightly better.
[209] And he's surprisingly sort of where he was among non -college whites from 2020.
[210] You would think, you know, given the inroads Trump is making among non -college non -whites, that Biden might be slipping back down to the Hillary Clinton level among the non -college whites.
[211] It's not happening.
[212] And as a result, you know, given that Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are overwhelmingly white states, where, you know, minorities are less than 20 percent of the vote, I believe, in all three of them, he's kind of, you know, standing his ground there with the exception of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, definitely.
[213] But if you look at Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, North Carolina, those are places where the decline among minority voters really bites him, you know, and if it lasts all the way to, you know, the finish line, these are states where he's polling in the mid -40s among Hispanics in Arizona and Nevada, and he's only getting 70, 75 percent, maybe on a good day, 78, 79 among the black voters in Georgia and North Carolina, and he can't survive that in those places.
[214] The Rust Belt path, you know, somewhat surprisingly, actually looks better right now for Biden than the Sun Belt path.
[215] The problem is he's got kind of unique problems in Michigan, and he's got to figure out a way around them because replacing Michigan is not easy for a Democrat.
[216] I want to get to the unique problems in Michigan, but I want to go back to Arizona first, because a group that is kind of implicit in what you're talking about, something that I obsess over because it's just, it's not really in vogue to be like, you know, who we really should care about, college -educated white men, the forgotten group, college -educated white men.
[217] But as you said that Biden still is room to gain, this does seem to be the spot, right?
[218] In Phoenix suburbs, and maybe it is also relevant in Michigan, frankly, and certainly it is in Pennsylvania.
[219] Yes, everywhere.
[220] It's relevant everywhere.
[221] Yeah, but especially if you look at Arizona, it's like, okay, well, how is he going to do it?
[222] Well, he's going to do it winning over.
[223] They already made some progress, but there is more meat on the bone, I think, of the Flake McCain -Ducy, college -educated men.
[224] A lot of their wives are already voting Democrat, but these college -educated men, some of them moved to Biden in 2020.
[225] I think he can gain even more in that group, and that is where he offset some of these losses.
[226] Right.
[227] So, well, first of all, I think, you know, we forget that Dobbs and January 6th both happened.
[228] It's easy to forget.
[229] They both happened after the 2020 election.
[230] Like, Dobbs had not happened at that point.
[231] And if you look at 2020, I point this out on the story today.
[232] If you look at the governor's races in the key swing states of 2022, the first election that was held after Dobbs, the Democrat did even better among college white women than Biden did in 2020.
[233] And that suggests there is, in fact, room to grow.
[234] I mean, there is room for him to grow.
[235] And the Democratic gubernatorial candidates in 22 did better than Biden did in 20, also among college white men.
[236] Like, you know, Whitmer ran six points better than he did among college white men.
[237] Josh Shapiro, seven points better.
[238] Evers, four points better.
[239] Even Katie Hobbs, three points better, to your point.
[240] I was going to ask you about Hobbs.
[241] I was like, those other ones are good candidates.
[242] But even if even Katie Hobbs is running better than you, that is a good sign.
[243] That's a room to grow.
[244] So I think the likelihood is that he will run better among college white women.
[245] The men are a little harder to parse because they are pretty down on Biden's performance, particularly about inflation.
[246] But, you know, college white men are not exactly, you know, they are essentially the most privileged group in the economy, right?
[247] And, you know, they are the most likely to have a 401k.
[248] I mean, you know, so there is good stuff that is happening in the economy.
[249] They don't like Trump.
[250] They don't like the idea of a national abortion ban.
[251] I think, Tim, Democrats would be happy to hold their service.
[252] serve with not decline with college white men and try to gain a few more points out of the college white women.
[253] Improving among them would be usually Kelly did.
[254] Kelly also in Arizona ran better among them than Biden did.
[255] So there is an opportunity there, but I do think they are pretty down on Biden's performance.
[256] So that might limit the upside, even though they don't like Trump.
[257] I think there's room to grow because I think about the cafeteria room of politics.
[258] And it's like, yeah, they might be texting with their other dad buddies about how they're annoyed about the economy, but they don't want to have to listen to their spouses and their other friends and the other people in their lives talk about Donald Trump anymore.
[259] They're done.
[260] They don't want the pressure.
[261] They don't want to be called racist.
[262] They don't want.
[263] They're just some of them are like, okay, I'll vote for the Republicans down ballot, but I'm not going to vote for this guy.
[264] And I think that there's some room to grow with that type of Wall Street Journal man. The barometer of that question is to increase the improvement in Trump's retrospective job approval.
[265] in a variety of polls like the Wall Street Journal thing that came out last week where they did all these swing states, or is that this week?
[266] I mean, the weeks are blurring.
[267] You know, Trump's retrospective job approval was it like 50 percent?
[268] He never got to 50 percent as president.
[269] And it really is going to be in these white -collar communities, I think above all, it is going to be critical to remind the men what they didn't like about Trump the first time.
[270] Because right now, what's improving Trump's retrospective job approval is, the comparison with Biden on the economy and the border.
[271] And so they're thinking, like, you know, stopping in January of 2020 in terms of their assessment of his presidency.
[272] But like basically, I had more money in my pocket.
[273] You know, things didn't cost as much.
[274] The border wasn't out of control.
[275] Trump did a better job.
[276] I think what you are describing is very possible that it can again be culturally unacceptable to vote for Trump, especially given the things he's saying and doing in this campaign, which are pretty consistently radical and extreme.
[277] But those, elements of the package that you get with Trump have to become more central to the discussion than they are right now.
[278] We're running out of times.
[279] We're rapid fire through a couple of days.
[280] Michigan, I've noticing you've been, you've been, whatever we're calling it, tweeting concerns about Biden's about the Israel issue and now it's hurting them among core demographic groups.
[281] Obviously, Michigan is where this most acute.
[282] What's your sense for the impact potentially of Gaza on Biden's coalition?
[283] Yeah, it's like a, it's like a convergence of a lot of bad things.
[284] First of all, the important point.
[285] Wisconsin was literally the tipping point state in both 2016 and 2020.
[286] If you rank the states from most Democratic to most Republican, it was the 270th electoral college vote for Trump in 16 and then the 270th for Biden in 20.
[287] And I at least, I don't know about you, but I think a lot of people began this year thinking Wisconsin is again the tipping point state.
[288] But it doesn't seem to be like Pennsylvania and Wisconsin have moved slightly on the blue side of the line, I think, largely because of the suburban realignment that we're talking about and the unbelievable vote margins the Democrats are getting out of Dane County, which is Madison.
[289] And Michigan now looks like the tipping point state to me, where Biden has a better chance than he does in Arizona or Georgia, but not as good a chance as he has in Wisconsin or Pennsylvania.
[290] And in Michigan, you've got multiple vectors kind of squeezing him, the potential for less enthusiasm, less turnout, lower margins in Detroit, the problem, which is real among Arab American voters outside of Detroit.
[291] And because of all the activism there, Tim, around the issue, it's more in the news.
[292] It's more in people's face than it is in most places.
[293] Which could impact Ann Arbor and, yeah, younger voters.
[294] You took the words right out of my mouth.
[295] That's what I was going to say next.
[296] It could impact Ann Arbor and younger voters.
[297] And then finally, Trump's campaign that, you know, EVs are going to to destroy the auto industry, right, which has a threat to blue -collar white workers.
[298] Now, you know, Biden didn't win that many of them to begin with last time.
[299] You know, it's not like he won half of non -college whites in Michigan.
[300] But you add all of this up, and Michigan looks really tough.
[301] It looks like Heartbreak Hill, if he loses.
[302] If he loses Michigan, by the way, what replaces it?
[303] Georgia would replace it.
[304] That's tough.
[305] North Carolina would replace it.
[306] That's tough, but intriguing for Democrats, given.
[307] the very extreme gubernatorial candidates, or he would have to win both Arizona and Nevada.
[308] Your neighbor, James Carville, said to me for this story that's coming out in a couple days, you know, if you win Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, it's pretty safe.
[309] You're going to win.
[310] If you don't win any of them, especially Michigan, you're kind of looking at an insight straight at that point.
[311] I mean, that's how important these states are for Democrats.
[312] Yeah, the Arizona thing, I just spent so much time there during the midterms.
[313] I know that the border has gotten worse since then, but, man, Katie Hobbs, God -lover.
[314] She seems like a fine person, but she ran a disastrous campaign.
[315] And for her to win and the way that Kelly won, I don't know, I feel a little better about Arizona.
[316] The challenge is, though, if he loses Michigan, he has to win both Arizona and Nevada to make up for it.
[317] Arizona alone doesn't.
[318] That's where it gets a little daunting for him.
[319] Indeed.
[320] And Nevada worries me. Okay.
[321] The no labels thing, though, just really quick, is objectively good news, a little dance on that grave.
[322] I mean, that was all, all of the people that are interested in no labels are part of this.
[323] alignment conversation, right?
[324] There were people that were going to be moving to Biden anyway.
[325] Yeah, I mean, right.
[326] I think no labels clearly would have heard Biden.
[327] And the whole thing was kind of ridiculous.
[328] I mean, their means, you know, were not only not productive for what they said they were trying to do.
[329] It was counterproductive.
[330] The whole thing was really absurd at some level, but dangerous in the sense of for Democrats.
[331] You know, I agree with you.
[332] I think unlike some of these other like Cornell West or especially RFK Jr., no labels, I think, would have been some of these traditionally Republican, Haley voters, basically, you know, who can't abide Trump.
[333] All right.
[334] So finally, starting back to the first question, because this is our shared obsession.
[335] So we, let's just say we get the hamburger from heaven, okay, and Donald Trump disappears from our lives, hypothetically speaking, this realignment, in my view, is done.
[336] It has already continued and that what happens after that will be some form of MAGA.
[337] Maybe we won't have all of Trump's crazy, you know, personal issues, but like the directionally, the way that he's moved the party, that is something that's not reverting to.
[338] what extent do you agree with that thesis?
[339] Yeah, I agree.
[340] I agree.
[341] I think, at least for any foreseeable future.
[342] Trumpism is self -reinforcing.
[343] As you see in their coalition, the voters who are most uneasy with it are leaving the party, you know, and are less likely to participate in primaries.
[344] And if you look at the behavior of younger Republican politicians, they are mostly, almost entirely recasting themselves in this mold.
[345] And I do think it becomes a critical issue for 24.
[346] and beyond.
[347] Because if you are a Republican -leaning voter, a white -collar voter who prefers Republican policies on the economy, probably prefers Republican policies on the border and crime, and think Democrats are a little too liberal, you also tend to support, you know, a robust role for America in international affairs.
[348] You're not as wild about mass deportation as about stiffening the border.
[349] You don't like the open racism and, you know, appeals to racial resentments that Trump puts out.
[350] And what you are being shown very, very unequivocally this year is that you are the subordinate minority in this party.
[351] You do not have control about where it's going.
[352] You know, a majority of House Republicans and a majority of Senate Republicans have now voted against A to Ukraine.
[353] You know, they are almost universally forgiving January 6th and so on.
[354] And so those voters, they face a critical choice.
[355] I mean, do they give their votes?
[356] out of kind of a either ancestral loyalty or a belief that Democrats are, in fact, you know, these crazy loons are going to destroy the country to a party that is unequivocally moving in a direction that sublimates everything they prioritize, except for maybe tax cuts.
[357] You know, they might come together on tax cuts.
[358] So, yeah, do they stay part of that party?
[359] Do the Haley voters vote for Trump after the case that she made against him?
[360] and she didn't even go to some of the things that, you know, some of those voters believe about his behavior.
[361] There are about a quarter of Republicans who think that he tried to subvert democracy, that what he did on January 6 was wrong.
[362] And these may be Republican -leaning independents, but they have a choice.
[363] I mean, they have a real choice.
[364] You know, they are Biden's best hope, I think, of offsetting what is likely to be some of these blue -collar non -white erosion.
[365] That is a key question.
[366] That's a great tease, because that's what we're going to be talking about on the Bullwark podcast all year.
[367] So thank you so much, Ron Brownstein for, you know, pulling it together after Bruce Springsteen last night.
[368] Yeah.
[369] Thanks for being on the Bullerk podcast.
[370] And we will be having you back, I hope, later this summer.
[371] We'll be back on the other side with your mailbag questions.
[372] All right.
[373] We are back Friday mailbag.
[374] We've got some fun ones.
[375] I'll start with Mike.
[376] Why do third party efforts always seem to focus on the presidency where they have no realistic electoral prospects except spoiler what an a congress focused effort make more sense thought with the no labels news this week this would be a good place to start and yeah mike you were singing for my hymn book i've been telling rich people and moderates that call me and ask me for advice about this stuff a similar thing for years now i think that the third party effort at the presidential level is mostly about narcissism and attention it is a hopeless effort and i think that that there is actually a lot of room in the country to do two things.
[377] One is to look at particularly deep red and deep blue states and figure out how to work as a third party, you know, maybe with kind of an allied party in order to try to create a coalition that could stop the dominant party in the state.
[378] So, for example, we saw this with Evan McMullen in Utah.
[379] He's former Republican, never Trumper, ran as an independent.
[380] The Democrats, you know, sort of, blessed that and did not put up a challenge of their own.
[381] Evan ran against Mike Lee.
[382] Obviously, that wasn't successful, but I think that had some hope of success.
[383] I think a big part of the reason why that didn't work was less that the idea was bad, but that Evan, you know, had gone pretty resistancy during the Trump years.
[384] Hey, welcome to the club.
[385] Me too.
[386] But I think that kind of put a cap on his appeal to some Republicans in the state.
[387] And Mike Lee, as much as I find Mike Lee totally insane.
[388] He didn't seem unacceptable enough for Republicans to peel off of him for Evan McMullen.
[389] But I think that that concept could really work in other states.
[390] I think it could have worked here in Louisiana.
[391] I said this when I moved here to Democrats.
[392] I didn't understand why they weren't looking to a more moderate Republican or a more conservative Democrat to run in the jungle primary here rather than they ran a guy Sean Wilson, good guy, but just a mainstream Democrat didn't have much hope against Jeff Landry, who I wrote about in yesterday's triad.
[393] You should go check out my Jeff Landry dunking in yesterday's triad if you haven't at the bulwark .com.
[394] But that, I think, is the right path forward.
[395] I think that that is also potentially workable at even lower levels.
[396] And I think that then you can build a group that goes from there.
[397] I'd love to see a coalition of kind of like a party that runs in red states, conservative Democrats and blue states runs kind of more moderate Republicans and tries to figure out how they can put together a coalition.
[398] that breaks up the polarization, I think that's a long run deal, but at least there's a hope of success.
[399] That might not succeed, by the way.
[400] We might just be so polarized that there's no hope for an alternative at this point because of the nature of our system.
[401] But I think that proposal at least has potential for success, whereas these quixotic presidential campaigns that are all about ego and, you know, getting to go to fancy parties with Nancy Jacobson and our friends in New York City that have no chance of succeeding, at least you're trying.
[402] Try to try.
[403] something that I've always, I've always believed.
[404] Okay, Christina, she asks, what was the context of you saying blowjob on MSNBC?
[405] I watched it live, but I can't find it anywhere online.
[406] This is a serious question.
[407] I know it's serious.
[408] That's why I'm answering.
[409] I couldn't remember myself, actually.
[410] So I went and search for it.
[411] I can't find the video either.
[412] Maybe somebody else can find it and put it in the comment section on Substack and I can re -up it on social media.
[413] But I found the day that it happened, people tweeting, laughing at me. So I was able to figure out what day it was.
[414] January 8th, 2021.
[415] So needless to say, I was running hot two days after the insurrection.
[416] And I said it in the context of our friend Lindsey Graham.
[417] Lindsay Graham had said that day after saying he was done with Trump on January 6th, he had said two days later that he was not going to go along with an impeachment of him or a conviction.
[418] And I went off on him on, I believe, Nicole Wallace's show, and started talking about how for Lindsay Graham, it was okay to impeach Bill Clinton over a blowjob, but it was not okay to impeach and convict Donald Trump over a coup.
[419] Obviously, that is preposterous on its face.
[420] And Lindsey Graham is a shameless partisan.
[421] And he, you know, should have trouble sleeping at night, given such a grotesque contrast between having voted to impeach.
[422] It's okay, whatever.
[423] If you wanted to vote Bill Clinton because he lied about the blowjob, okay.
[424] But then it seems incumbent upon me to then impeach also the president that attempted the coup.
[425] So Lindsey Graham stick it.
[426] The MSNBC producers weren't really thrilled with me saying blowjob.
[427] But I didn't, you know, they also kind of let it go.
[428] You know, tempers were flaring, all right?
[429] Two days after the Capitol storms, tempers were flaring.
[430] People could have one blowjob reference on TV.
[431] Okay, last question comes from Anthony in Tennessee.
[432] Anthony says, my husband and I are expecting a baby this year.
[433] Congrats, brother.
[434] We live in Nashville, and we're both from Alabama.
[435] Do you have any advice for soon -to -be -gay parents living in the deep south?
[436] Our families are very supportive of us, but we worry about the broader community as our child grows up.
[437] I'm sure this is a near universal anxiety, but I imagine even more so in the area we live.
[438] I do have thoughts for you, and A, I think it's awesome.
[439] I'm so happy for you.
[440] It's been the best thing in my life, having a kid.
[441] And I think you guys are going to just be overjoyed, maybe a little tired, but overjoyed.
[442] Detroit.
[443] It's great.
[444] Don't let any of the negative Nellies get you down.
[445] People that are like, oh, it's so it can be harder.
[446] Yeah, sure.
[447] But all of the good stuff outweighs the bad stuff by Miles.
[448] So, congrats to you and your husband.
[449] I'll tell you this.
[450] I think in some ways, I've found this.
[451] I don't know if this experience is universal.
[452] I found in New Orleans, we have actually more support than we did living in the Bay.
[453] In some ways, being a gay parents in the bay was like, okay, whatever, you know, sunrises in the east.
[454] Okay, dog bites man. Not really not news.
[455] You know, it was only going to be news where it's like a modern family bit where, you know, the gay couple thought they were to get into the fancy school in California and then come behind there as like a disabled, lesbian, coupled, mixed race, Native American.
[456] It's like, all right, now you're talking.
[457] And it was great.
[458] Being in the Bay was fine.
[459] It was great.
[460] But there wasn't really like a community of people that were in our boat that were, you know, finding each other and looking at each other for support just because it was so.
[461] common, frankly.
[462] And in New Orleans, that is not really, it's not been the case for us.
[463] You know, there are only so many gay parents in New Orleans, right?
[464] And so in that sense, you know, we have developed some relationships, made some new friends.
[465] We had some old friends that were parents here also, so that has helped.
[466] And, you know, people, particularly in these blue bubbles in the red states, it's not every day, right?
[467] It's exciting, right?
[468] Like, they're excited.
[469] They, you know, so straight couples, straight singles, everybody, really, frankly.
[470] in the community.
[471] It's like excited that we're here and wants to be supportive and wants to be helpful.
[472] And so, you know, really, we're just kind of drowning in love here.
[473] And I expect that would be pretty similar in Nashville.
[474] I think it'd be probably pretty similar in Birmingham, Alabama.
[475] I don't know.
[476] If you're saying to me, you're going to move to Shreveport, maybe I'd say, let's think about that.
[477] I don't know kind of how far, how far down on the city size that this concept that I'm putting forth would hold.
[478] But I think in big cities or relatively big cities in the South, particularly, you know, tying to the Brownstein conversation where you got a lot of college educated, you know, folks that are more liberally inclined.
[479] It's really been kind of positive and special and awesome to be here and to have people see us and want to support us and want to kind of be in community with us.
[480] So to me, it's been great.
[481] You should let your concerns go.
[482] maybe don't move to rural Alabama or I don't know maybe somebody in rural Alabama could tell me I'm wrong about that but I think that in Nashville or here in Nola we'd love to have you anywhere else I think that you guys will be good big congrats keep me posted on the progress everybody else I hope you have a wonderful weekend go check out the secret podcast with me and Sarah we'd really appreciate you to be members of Bullwork Plus we've got a great lineup of guests coming next week enjoy the women's and men's college basketball final four this weekend should be some good stuff and we will see you on Monday and do this all over again peace the bulwark podcast is produced by katie cooper with audio engineering and editing by jason brown