The Bulwark Podcast XX
[0] Hey, y 'all.
[1] Late yesterday, I recorded a conversation with Ezra Klein that was, I think, very important.
[2] It was enraging at times.
[3] I have to admit, my blood pressure skyrocketed despite his dulcet tones and calm voice.
[4] So prepare yourself for that.
[5] But a few things that happened in the news since then, I just want to mention on the Democratic side of the aisle, Mikey Cheryl, a congresswoman out of New Jersey.
[6] I'm a big fan of, came out and said that she knows, President.
[7] President Biden cares deeply about the future of the country.
[8] That's why she's asking that he declares that he won't run for re -election.
[9] Very explicit about that.
[10] Richie Torres, who we had on the pot a couple weeks ago, offered maybe a less direct statement than Cheryl's, but one that strongly implied the same.
[11] Nancy Pelosi on Morning Joe this morning was super interesting.
[12] She said, it's up to the president to decide if he's going to run.
[13] We're all encouraging him to make that decision because time is running short.
[14] She has then asked, do you want him to run?
[15] And then she said, I wanted to do whatever he decides to do.
[16] And that's the way it is, whatever he decides we go with.
[17] And then she follows up, let's just hold off whatever you're thinking, either tell somebody privately, but you don't have to put that out on the table until we see how we go this week.
[18] Not exactly a ringing endorsement there from the Speaker of Meritus.
[19] Both Biden and Trump spoke last night.
[20] Watch both Biden at the NATO summit.
[21] He was pretty good.
[22] I like the substance of the remarks are good.
[23] I encourage you to listen to them.
[24] He's on the right side of this argument, of course, on NATO.
[25] It doesn't assuage the concerns we have, right, because they're not related to his ability to give a teleprompter speech or his support for NATO.
[26] I want to see a more proactive message and a clearer message in contrast to Trump.
[27] That's the thing that has been missing for the last two weeks, you know, in addition to, you know, more freewheeling environments, which we're going to see on Thursday in a press conference so I think that will be interesting to monitor.
[28] And lastly, I watched Trump last night in Dural.
[29] And here's the thing.
[30] There's a lot of deranged stuff in there.
[31] He's repeating a lot of his lives about, you know, migrant crime and the economy.
[32] And he does these goofy things like Hannibal Lecter and calling Chris Christie Fat.
[33] But if you just see those clips going around on the Internet, I do think you miss something from watching the whole 90 minutes, which is that Trump is offering a clear message against Joe Biden, what I'm asking Joe Biden to do to Trump, right?
[34] Migrants are coming.
[35] They're committing these crimes.
[36] They're taking American jobs.
[37] Joe Biden doesn't care.
[38] It's clear the message.
[39] His trolling of Joe Biden for being old is very clear.
[40] And you can see the crowd is into it.
[41] You can see his attitude is more to call Trump convivial is the word that came to mind.
[42] You hate to associate that with Trump, but he's lighter.
[43] He was lighter in mood.
[44] I'm going to do a bit on this for YouTube.
[45] So if you guys want to go over to YouTube, you can watch it.
[46] I think it's important to understand the two parts of Trump as we look to this challenge this year, both the lying and the insanity and the crazy along with, this lighter side and you know with a clear message dotted with jokes that is resonating with a certain type of voter and so that is what has to be combated and kind of pretending like he doesn't have that that other speed JVL wrote a newsletter about this you know how about Trump has two speeds totally crazy and then slightly you know more sane and he gets graded on that curve if you don't recognize that second speed then you can't beat an enemy without understanding in the enemy.
[47] So anyway, with that, this conversation with Ezra is super important.
[48] Make sure you're buckled up.
[49] You're sitting down.
[50] Have a glass of rosé if you want.
[51] And we'll see you on the other side with Ezra Klein.
[52] Hello and welcome to the Lowry Klein family podcast.
[53] I'm your host Tim Miller on today's pod.
[54] Somebody who's getting recognized more and more recently.
[55] New York Times columnist, Juice Box Mafia Don, fellow savage love cast guest, author of Why We're Polarized, host of the Ezra Klein show.
[56] Ezra Klein.
[57] What's happening, man?
[58] Good to be here, just, you know, just orbiting you for years and months now.
[59] Seriously, we lived across town from each other.
[60] Never quite made it happen back in the Bay Area days.
[61] You were spotted, though.
[62] I've got spies, and you were spotted at a WNBA game with Commissioner Adam Silver.
[63] I was hoping you could pass along to him a couple of notes from me. I would like a truncated season with no back -to -backs.
[64] Keep the in -season tournament.
[65] I've got some concerns about the second apron, and I've got some complaints about the Nuggets ownership squad.
[66] If you could just kind of pass a little note to them next time you guys are hanging out.
[67] I have to assume that it is refreshing for the commissioner to go to a basketball game with somebody who knows as little about basketball as I do.
[68] So I've got to be annoying to go with all these people who have a lot of opinions about basketball.
[69] Imagine how nice it is when someone has no opinions about basketball.
[70] Just like a – I bet that was very nice for him.
[71] Yeah, like sitting next to a clear, a clear lake – a clear blue lake.
[72] He could just kind of space out.
[73] No second -upry discussion.
[74] Okay.
[75] Well, next time you go to a game, I've got some notes for you.
[76] You can just take those or leave them.
[77] We are obviously going to spend most of the time talking about what's happening in the Democratic Party that you a little bit more acquainted with than I am.
[78] So I want to lean in on your expertise here and talk about some fanciful thoughts I have that the Democrats in good standing are telling me are fanciful, including yesterday's guest.
[79] But first, I think it would be just valuable to just kind of talk about why we're so concerned about this and the threat.
[80] And so I'm wondering, What worries you most as you think about a Trump's second term, Project 2025, et cetera?
[81] I think the way to think about Donald Trump, and this is going to be very much playing to type for me, is as a...
[82] I wish we could have an AI, Ezra.
[83] Yeah, well, you basically might, right?
[84] Sam Altman once said to me, you know, what are human beings except for reinforcement learning mechanisms with energy running through them?
[85] He's like, hey, I'd like to think I'm a little bit more than that, but maybe not that much.
[86] There's something there, souls.
[87] I think the way to think about Donald Trump, if it is, like, more compelling to me is, like, to think of him as, like, a probability distribution.
[88] We don't know how a second Donald Trump term would play out.
[89] The first Trump term, some of the things that we feared were going to happen in the first couple of years did not happen.
[90] And then the last year between the run around with COVID and the way his administration responded to that.
[91] between January 6 and the much broader.
[92] I think it's actually a problem that we always talked about January 6.
[93] The effort to subvert the election was much broader than January 6 and in some ways much more nearly consequential, the things that Trump and others were doing behind the scenes.
[94] And so with Trump, you're always looking at this question of are you going to end in these like tail probabilities, which, you know, are they 20 %?
[95] Are they 30 %?
[96] Are they 40 %?
[97] I'm just speaking in my language right now, as I'm thinking about getting a tail risk tattoo putting it on my neck because that's what I've been talking about so much.
[98] continue.
[99] So you might get Trump, you know, success is going to be my revenge.
[100] And you might get Trump, revenge is going to be my revenge.
[101] And you might get a Trump who is not tested by severe international crises.
[102] You might get a Trump who is tested by severe international crises, China invading Taiwan, further instability in the Middle East.
[103] What happens if Hezbollah and Israel go to war in a much more full -on way, right?
[104] Million terrible things can happen.
[105] One of the things I always say about Donald Trump right now is that in his first term, Donald Trump governed in an uneasy coalition government with the Republican Party.
[106] The House Speaker was Paul Ryan, at least at the outset.
[107] The Senate leader of the Republicans was Mitch McConnell.
[108] They were traditional Republicans from another age with a different set of commitments.
[109] And I would not say what they did primarily was restrain Donald Trump.
[110] But they had their own agenda and they often drove Donald Trump towards their agenda, even as Donald Trump is doing.
[111] own things too.
[112] And people forget there were big areas in like 17, like, where there's disagreement and like they were free to disagree, like not on core Trump issues.
[113] Right.
[114] Now there is no coalition government.
[115] I mean, there are differences between Donald Trump and other members of the party.
[116] I mean, even the Project 2025 dimension, you see some of this, right?
[117] Project 2025 is written by people who with good reason believe they might serve in a second Trump term.
[118] They are people who I think believe in Donald Trump in a very real way and believe that what they are doing is fashioning an agenda that turns his intuitions into frameworks, into policies, et cetera.
[119] Donald Trump is, in many cases, not where they are on things.
[120] And whether or not he engages enough for that to matter is a completely unknowable thing.
[121] But nevertheless, the difference between Project 2025 and the pre -Trump Republican agenda that he went in and ended up in, you know, working towards like repealing Obamacare is that the Project 2025 people see themselves fundamentally serving Donald Trump.
[122] Trump.
[123] They're not trying to make Donald Trump serve them.
[124] And that's a very different situation.
[125] Parties, even when they're united, have internal discreements, fractiousness, tensions.
[126] But this is a party that understands Donald Trump to be truly and thoroughly its leader.
[127] You see Lara Trump now as co -chair at the RNC.
[128] You see a Supreme Court that just gave Trump immunity from virtually any kind of presidential action.
[129] And so you're really dealing with a truly unrestrained Donald Trump.
[130] Yeah, this democracy is a threat.
[131] It's an existential threat.
[132] All these, you know, kind of phrases that are thrown about, I've thrown them about, thrown about on the op -ed pages, the New York Times and on MSNBC where I frequent.
[133] What is your sense for like how real that threat is?
[134] Like, do you think that like Trump might try to stay in 2028?
[135] Like how likely do you think that is?
[136] Like, where on the autocracy spectrum from, you know, urbanism or something even less?
[137] Autocratic than that to Mussolini, where are you seeing Trump in that tale?
[138] I think that the question of the threat Trump poses to democracy, I always found this hard to talk about.
[139] You're dealing with somebody with fundamentally anti -democratic instincts.
[140] So then you have a couple of questions falling from that.
[141] What could he do with those instincts under normal conditions, right?
[142] The federal government, for instance, will be full of people who share Donald Trump's about democracy, right?
[143] If you aren't where Trump is on a bunch of these things, you're not going to get a high up job.
[144] In the Trump administration, you're not giving any name to the Supreme Court, probably, right?
[145] There's all kinds of things where Trump is just going to stock the high levels of American politics and American governance with people who seem malleable to him, with people who maybe actually have a more ideologically, like what Trump's instincts are is not anti -democratic in like a substantive ideological way.
[146] It's if he doesn't like the democracy stands in his way personally, right?
[147] Trump is narcissistically anti -democratic.
[148] But there are people behind him.
[149] He just kind of likes the vibe of like Mussolini and, you know, Gaddafi and Kim Jong -un better.
[150] Like, that feels stronger.
[151] Yeah, they got the good costumes.
[152] He likes the outfits.
[153] People parade.
[154] But then they're the people who are substantively more anti -democratic.
[155] I mean, when you think about things that Peter Thiel, you know, the sort of tech billionaire, who's funded a lot of Trump and Trump -associated people like J .D. Vance is written when you think about the things that the Claremont Institute people, right, right?
[156] There's a crew behind him who can come very near power or actually be in power, who have more substantive news about whether or not we should be a democracy.
[157] Then you get into these questions of crises, right?
[158] I mean, one of the scariest scenarios to me has always been like, what if you have a Florida in 2000 style outcome in 2020, now in 2024, right?
[159] Like, what will Trump do during something like that.
[160] What if the Supreme Court does try to check Trump?
[161] And he's just like, no, right?
[162] Like, how many, how many battalions do you actually control?
[163] When Trump is talking about mass deportation, right?
[164] And he is talking about pulling in a series of internal security forces like the National Guard that do not currently roam around going house to house, trying to pull people out and then, I guess, extrajudicially deport them?
[165] If Trump manages under conditions of deporting immigrants to create a larger internal security force, right, that is much more significantly under his control, what might he do with that under a position of stress like we saw after the George Floyd protests?
[166] What might he do with that in a situation where even if he did not try to stay for third term.
[167] Maybe he wanted, you know, vice president, whomever, to win in 2028, but they did not.
[168] And Trump doesn't agree that they did not.
[169] And in fact, it's very important that the enemies in his enemies in the press and Democratic Party are not able to steal the election from his hand chosen successor, whoever that might be.
[170] What might that mean?
[171] So you're dealing with this sort of mixture of the rise of a political faction that has, let's call it, complicated relationships to democracy, and the grip of control of a leader who has no particular record of respecting democratic outcomes and who has an articulate agenda of developing a security force that he has much more fundamental control over.
[172] And then you're saying to yourself, well, I hope all this works out.
[173] And that seems like a hell of a thing to think right now.
[174] It seems like a hell of a thing to believe is going to work out.
[175] All right.
[176] Right.
[177] It doesn't seem to me like it'll work out either.
[178] So that's alarming when you consider the political opposition in our democracy that is currently charged with preventing him from entering the White House again.
[179] I want to play for you something that you said back in February about Joe Biden and his fitness for running for re -election.
[180] Since the beginning of Biden's administration, I've been asking people who work with him.
[181] How does he seem?
[182] How red in is he?
[183] What's he like in the meetings?
[184] Maybe not a great sign that I felt the need to do that, that a lot of reporters have been doing that, but still.
[185] And I am convinced watching him, listening to the testimony of those who meet with him, not all people who like him, I'm convinced he's able to do the job of the presidency, that he has sharpened meetings, that he has sound in his judgments.
[186] I cannot point you, even now, to a moment where Biden faltered in the presidency because his age had slowed him.
[187] But here's the thing.
[188] I can point you to moments where he is faltering in his campaign for the presidency because his age is slowing him.
[189] This distinction between the job of the presidency and the job of running for the presidency keeps getting muddied, including by Biden himself.
[190] Let's just take that first part first really quick.
[191] Do you still feel that way that there's not anything that you could point to that would demonstrate that it has limited his ability to do the job of the president outside of the public speaking side of it?
[192] I think there are two ways of thinking about this.
[193] But as I've said on my show, I think that first, there's reason to believe his capacities have deteriorated further.
[194] I mean, I really do talk to a lot of people in the Biden administration who have known a long time.
[195] And I really would ask them consistently how he is in meetings.
[196] Same.
[197] When you said that, this is why I wanted to play that clip, exactly because I also have a couple friends in the Biden administration, not as many as you, having come from the other side.
[198] But like, when we have drinks, I always do the thing that's like, so he's really okay, right?
[199] Yeah, it's really good, right?
[200] And it's that instinct to ask.
[201] And it's that instinct to ask that question that in retrospect is pretty concerning.
[202] Look, I'm not in meetings with Joe Biden.
[203] He does not have me in for the columnist roundtable things that he doesn't seem to really actually do.
[204] I've heard of like one of those happening, right?
[205] You're not on the Scarborough call sheet?
[206] Yeah, I'm not on the Scarborough call sheet.
[207] What I was told repeatedly was that he was making a decision since the people who were sitting with him felt fairly confident in him, felt confident in him.
[208] And I did not certainly at that time have reason to believe.
[209] that they were lying to me, and I don't believe they were lying to me, which I think is important.
[210] I think now there's this sort of thing happening where people are looking backwards and saying, oh, this guy has been completely out of it for years now, and there's some cabal around him that has totally hid this from you.
[211] That isn't, I even think what the reporting is really suggesting.
[212] Age deterioration in your 80s can happen fairly quickly.
[213] And most of the reporting seems to suggest that people who, you know, were seeing him in 2022 and then some again late in 2023, that there's a lot of, oh my God, something has changed here, right?
[214] I'm, that there's a lot of like, you know, he is getting worse, right?
[215] That the, that he used to basically have good days and occasionally it'd be a moment, but like, that's a little weird.
[216] He seems to have trailed off in a sentence there.
[217] That doesn't look great to me. Like, you know, he's, you know, naming people from the past, that kind of thing.
[218] But it's quite rare, right?
[219] And, you know, could just be verbal miscues.
[220] The mind mixes things up.
[221] I get my words wrong sometimes.
[222] You know, if you listen to Kamala Harris' defense of Biden right after the debate, she says very confidently that we're three years after the two -year anniversary of Dobbs when she meant three days, right?
[223] That's stuff the mind does all the time, right?
[224] It seems like there's been a fair amount of deterioration.
[225] The way in which, though, I do look back on that line and feel like I was, like, fuzzing up the boundary I was drawing to be a little, like, friendlier, to Biden than maybe I should have been was that obviously communication is part of the job of the presidency.
[226] And the argument I made in that piece was that Biden was that Biden was proving himself deteriorated as a communicator and not just deteriorated as a communicator.
[227] Because remember, I do that piece sort of right after the, he skips a Super Bowl interview and then gives that press conference in response to the special counsel report where he mixes up Mexico and Egypt.
[228] He's not doing interviews fundamentally.
[229] Like compared to other presidents, he's sitting for very few interviews.
[230] And when he does sit for them, he's going a very friendly outlets.
[231] We now know he's been going to this like radio outlets where, you know, we at least know in some cases that are hand -feeding the questions beforehand.
[232] So if you're tracking how interviews the president does, when he does these weird radio outlets, right, where they're like giving them the questions, that counts as an interview.
[233] But that's not really what we're looking for here.
[234] He's going on things like Jay Shetty's, you know, mind of a monk or whatever that podcast is called, going on smart lists, like going on Conan, like doing things that are easy, that are safe, but mainly not doing things at all, right?
[235] Not doing the Super Bowl interview.
[236] Then he has his press conference where he's got literally one job, right?
[237] Reassure people about his member, you can't do it.
[238] So my argument there was this guy has deteriorated and substantially as a communicator.
[239] And communication is also part of the job of the presidency, being able to show people that you should be in the chair as part of the job of the presidency, sitting with a foreign leader and persuading them of your position is part of the job of the presidency, sitting with members of the Senate from either party and making good case to them that what you're doing is a right thing to do and they should support you as part of the job of the presidency.
[240] And nothing we are seeing and nothing I am hearing is suggesting that Biden is strong in any of those conditions.
[241] You know, and there are obviously days, right?
[242] Like you hear something like AOC comes out, which I found very, I would like to know a lot about the strength of AOC's current support for Joe Biden.
[243] Actually, I was going to get to AOC, but let's listen to AOC.
[244] Spoken to the president over the weekend.
[245] I have spoken with him extensively.
[246] He made clear then, and he has made clear.
[247] that he is in this race.
[248] The matter is closed.
[249] He had reiterated that this morning.
[250] He has reiterated that to the public.
[251] Joe Biden is our nominee.
[252] He is not leaving this race.
[253] He is in this race.
[254] And I support him.
[255] Now, what I think is critically important right now is that we focus on what it takes to win in November because he is running against Donald Trump, who is a man with 34 felony convictions that has committed 30, 44 felony crimes and not a single Republican has asked for Donald Trump to not be the nominee.
[256] I'm here to win on this democracy.
[257] I'm here to win in November.
[258] And what's critically important is what the president, I believe that the president needs to do, and I have communicated this, what the president and the White House should do in order to make sure that we win in November.
[259] And that is making sure that we pivot and working and increasingly commit to the issues that are critically important to working people across this country.
[260] How are we going to expand Medicare?
[261] and expand Social Security?
[262] How are we going to provide relief to people's rent and mortgages?
[263] And if we can do that and continue our work on student loans, secure a ceasefire and bring those dollars back into investing in public policy, then that's how we win in November.
[264] That's what I'm committed to.
[265] And that's what I want to make sure that we secure.
[266] If you told me everything that would happen and then told me, like, had me guess, like, who's going to be strongly in support of Biden, chair of the Appropriations Committee in the Senate, Patty Murray or AOC.
[267] I would say Patty Murray will be out there for Biden and AOC will be like calling for his head.
[268] And instead AOC is out there saying, listen, I spoke to him.
[269] He told me he's not stepping down.
[270] This matter is closed.
[271] We're not talking about it anymore.
[272] And Patty Murray's out there like, ah, this doesn't seem like a good idea.
[273] Like maybe the president who I've known forever.
[274] What's happening there?
[275] I literally have no idea.
[276] I cannot psychoanalyze this.
[277] I don't, I don't get it.
[278] I'm not going to pretend I know why any politician does what they do.
[279] One of the arguments I've heard because a squad has stood in real support of Biden is that some other squad members are facing primary challenges.
[280] The fact that Bowman was considered insufficiently supportive of Biden was one reason he lost, so that there's a kind of squad solidarity to try to not have a wedge driven between them and the Democratic Party at a time when their seats are potentially in peril.
[281] That's not true for AOC, but she maybe stands in solidarity with the others.
[282] Beyond that, I don't know.
[283] But what I will say is clearly Biden talked to AOC, and to give her credit here, presumably seemed convincing in that conversation with her.
[284] But what we also know is that the variance of Biden, conversation to conversation is very concerning.
[285] So he's got, again, like, good, good ones.
[286] And then as we're hearing from European diplomats who have sat with him, as we're hearing from staffers, as I'm hearing from staffers, we're hearing from members of Congress, like they're not always good.
[287] One of the suggestions is that one reason Patty Murray has come out in a, you know, in the way that Democrats who are worried about Biden are, like, we should have a serious conversation about the best path forward, or not he should not run again.
[288] But there's been reporting that in meetings with her, he's been in very rough shape.
[289] And so it's possible that some of the variants is simply what people have seen from him personally and what they have not.
[290] But my belief that he can do the job now on a communications level, that I'm totally comfortable with a guy whose argument for why he was barely coherent at the debate or for much of it is that he shouldn't schedule events after 8 p .m. when the presidency is not a job that necessarily stops at 8 p .m. And a guy who there's clear deterioration in, we want him in charge for four more years of aging.
[291] Just briefly to add to everything you just said, we also know they're protecting him from calls.
[292] And like there was a lot of conversation and kind of our world, this is a little bit of the behind the curtain thing where it's like, Joey Biden is a gladhander.
[293] He loves calling people and chewing the fat.
[294] Like, why isn't he called X?
[295] Why isn't he called Y?
[296] Why isn't he called Z?
[297] I had several of those conversations in the last few months.
[298] The Squampton is curious.
[299] The Ilhan Omar position that Joe Biden is actively complicit in genocide.
[300] And we also need to stand with him completely.
[301] This is where I know that I'm new to the coalition.
[302] I struggle to square the circle on those things.
[303] But if we begin this conversation and we're deeply concerned about democracy, it does feel like a weakness of the political argument to say, hey, we're going to put this guy through that nobody really thinks is going to be able to do the presidency well at age 86.
[304] And you can just trust that he's going to have some good unelected people around him and that if he gets really bad, he'll do the right thing.
[305] And then Kamala will be that.
[306] It's just, it's not a strong pro -democracy argument, I wouldn't say.
[307] I'm writing about this right now.
[308] I think one lesson of this period.
[309] And I am having the same experience at every congressional report, know is having, which is no one who I speak to off the record, believes Biden will win.
[310] And virtually no one will say that on the record.
[311] And, you know, maybe the people I talk to are a kind of selected group.
[312] But John Heiliman, the chief political correspondent puck is said the same, more or less.
[313] Throw me up the pile.
[314] Jonathan Martin, the incredibly well -sourced chief political columnist of Politico has said basically the same.
[315] The crew at Punchball News used to write Politico's playbook.
[316] they have said basically the same thing.
[317] We're all kind of having the same experience here.
[318] So how might you kind of square the circle?
[319] A Democratic Party where top Democrats believe that if Joe Biden is on top of the ticket, he will lose, but also are not coming out and calling him on him to resign.
[320] I think there are a lot of ways to say it.
[321] But I think one thing that is being revealed is it on whatever they believe intellectually, necessarily they do not believe Donald Trump is an existential threat to American democracy.
[322] In some ways, one of the views on this that I found, both strangest, but in a weird way, I respected it, was it's Jared Golden, right, the congressman from Nebraska, I'm sorry, of Maine, published an op -ed in a Maine newspaper saying, look, Joe Biden is obviously going to lose to Donald Trump, but he shouldn't be replaced on the ticket because it's completely fine that he's going to lose to Donald Trump.
[323] And Donald Trump would be president, and he's not an existential threat to democracy.
[324] He's just a Republican, who I don't agree with on all issues, but who I'm going to try to work with where I do agree with him and try to constrain him where I don't.
[325] And that is not my view of Donald Trump.
[326] But that is at least a consistent view, right?
[327] Like, I think, like, if somebody wants to say, like, my view of Donald Trump is that it would be bad if he wins, but it's not, you know, any different than any other election.
[328] And as such a Democratic party, should it pull some, you know, big switcheroo and, you know, pull out all the stops to beat him.
[329] Like, fine.
[330] Golden was unusual in saying that, but I think if you look at how a lot of these Democrats for acting, that is sort of what they believe.
[331] That if you stack up the list of possible consequences of coming out against Joe Biden, right, that like Joe Biden in the Democratic Party or parts of it are mad at you, that it puts you in this kind of uncomfortable place with your colleagues or with your voters or with certain, you know, constituent groups that support you, whatever.
[332] It's just a problem.
[333] Like, you don't want to be out there out front.
[334] Like, you don't know how the party can replace him.
[335] You don't want to be blamed for, any of this.
[336] You just stay quiet and walk the calm path to defeat.
[337] I think it is clear, like, people are like weighing this set of things.
[338] Like, it would be quite unpleasant for me personally to come out against the president as a elected official and everboretic party and weighing what will happen if Donald Trump wins and saying in a revealed preference way, I can live with Donald Trump winning.
[339] And I've had people say that to me off the record, to be fair.
[340] I've had really, I have had top Democrats say to me basically something like, I don't know why all these Democrats who think Donald Trump is an existential threat to democracy or acting the way they are.
[341] But the reason I'm acting the way I am is because I don't think that.
[342] Who the fuck is this?
[343] Who about to be in your sources as well?
[344] I'm about to be in leaking text mode over here myself.
[345] Like that is crazy.
[346] That's great.
[347] I guess it's consistent, but it's maddening.
[348] No?
[349] I find it maddening.
[350] But I do find it consistent.
[351] Look, you can say this is true in a lot of things, right?
[352] It's a charge Republicans always grow at liberals, which is it if they really believe climate a change for such a problem, they wouldn't fly on planes.
[353] And I think that people's means, ends are less connected than this.
[354] We really, we've only had one coup attempt recently and it was the person that is on the ballot right now.
[355] So I mean, there's something to be said for that.
[356] If I were hearing from top Democrats saying, listen, I think our best path to winning is still Joe Biden.
[357] I think that unfortunately Harris is a weaker candidate and I think that an open convention process or a blitz primary would leave us in a worse place.
[358] And these are all bad options, but Joe Biden is at least bad option.
[359] Fine.
[360] I just want to say this because it is, I don't think you can understand what I'm saying if I don't.
[361] That is not what I am hearing from anybody.
[362] Like nobody says that.
[363] Nobody says Joe Biden's best chance of winning.
[364] Nobody even says they think Joe Biden can win.
[365] I have not had one top Democrats say that to me, nor has Joe Biden come to any of them with a plan for how to win.
[366] Right.
[367] Like think of the bind Joe Biden is in right now or Joe Biden's team is in right now.
[368] In order to make up a gap with Trump.
[369] which he has shown no ability to make up so far.
[370] And he's now gotten quite a bit worse.
[371] He has to campaign aggressively in places where, that are fundamentally unfriendly to him because those are the voters he needs and the kinds of media he needs in which to reach them.
[372] And he needs to campaign in ways to convince voters are something they have not believed for quite some time going well before the debate, which is that he is fit for the presidency.
[373] So he needs to campaign aggressively.
[374] But to campaign aggressively is to put himself in a position where he might fail or falter against.
[375] in public, and his campaign might entirely collapse.
[376] So you can campaign aggressively and maybe make up the gap, or you can campaign cautiously, but that's a walking of calm path to defeat.
[377] And right now, I would say they're more on the walking the calm path to defeat, but nobody is suggesting they have a way out of the spine.
[378] And nobody believes they do have a way out of the spine, and not that many people are calling for them to do something else.
[379] And so I think you have to at some point say, whatever these Democrats are saying in public, they're more resigned and more willing to just be the resistance to a Trump presidency than a lot of their public -facing rhetoric would suggest.
[380] You have a calm voice, but you're skyrocketing my fucking blood pressure right now, Ezra.
[381] I'm just like so fucking mad.
[382] This is a similar point that was made.
[383] I want to shout out of CETA Buon Nevo over at the New Republic.
[384] This is very simple.
[385] If you genuinely believe Biden can't win this election and you're not doing anything to push a replacement, you are choosing to hand the country over to Donald Trump because you're afraid of professional fault.
[386] out, period, full stop.
[387] Like, that's what it comes down to, right?
[388] I am a calm person.
[389] I'm personally very frustrated, right?
[390] When I wrote this piece in February, like, I'm a person who covers the White House, right?
[391] I'm a person who Joe Biden might have given an interview to.
[392] Like, I was torching all of that, right?
[393] I understood that.
[394] And it's not like a brave thing.
[395] It's totally fine.
[396] I have my job.
[397] It's not a big deal.
[398] Like, I still talk to people, like, in the White House.
[399] But it is maddening to have so many people telling me privately that what I am seeing is true and they agree and then watch them publicly say nothing or even say the opposite in some cases because to me the whole point of this was yes Donald Trump is very dangerous like if you come to the view that Joe Biden cannot beat him which is if I came to again back in February where my whole argument there was simply like the risk of running him is too great now he can't perform at this level right and he's already behind he's not going to be able to make it up I think what I said proved basically true so far and like it was exactly the kind of thing I was worried about You did get weak need and write a comeback article right after that.
[400] No, I'm super pissed about this thing that people think I recanted because...
[401] I don't think you're recanted, to be clear.
[402] I'm just teasing you.
[403] But go ahead.
[404] Defend yourself.
[405] Oh, I'm going to say it.
[406] I'm going to defend myself because I said if the Joe Biden who showed up at the state of the union is a Joe Biden we see from here until the election, the punits like me are going to look pretty bad, basically.
[407] But that wasn't what we were going to see.
[408] As I said on my podcast that very same week, but like the problem is he's got these good and bad days and I don't know why he is which ones.
[409] Anyway, look, I think that a lot of Democrats are not acting like beating Trump is worth risking very much at all for.
[410] And if they're not acting like it is worth risking much to be Trump, then on some level, you either have to believe they have a complete collapse in like the internal consistency of their beliefs and behavior.
[411] Or you have to believe, like, on some level that maybe it's even hard of them to admit to themselves, they don't think that beating Trump is such an important thing that it is worth risking very much to do.
[412] I'm going to become a high school social studies teacher.
[413] This has been raged me so much.
[414] My next topic was going to be, like, what is even the bull case for Joe Biden?
[415] Like, he doesn't have a message that I can tell.
[416] Like, he doesn't have any strategy, any stated strategy or path.
[417] But it seems like we've covered this and you concur.
[418] He has no message or no strategy.
[419] Let me run through the theories of victory for him, right?
[420] Because I think I've talked to people about what they are.
[421] For a very long time, their theory of victory, and this is why they scheduled the early June debate, was that the thing they need to have happened was for Donald Trump and a Donald Trump presidency to come to feel real to people.
[422] And that the moment that happened, there would be a kind of sharpening of the electorate sense of consequence here and a rallying around Joe Biden, right?
[423] The return of the anti -Maga coalition.
[424] I think that theory at this point has been decisively disproven.
[425] We're not that far from an election now.
[426] We're like right on, we've hit the conventions more or less.
[427] And people have now seen a presidential debate.
[428] And how is Donald Trump doing?
[429] He is doing better.
[430] Like, he's doing better than he was before.
[431] So this idea that the American people, he said his high watermarked, that he's ever done, we have never seen this before.
[432] So the idea that the American people faced with the prospect of Donald Trump are going to blanche from Trumpism is wrong, right?
[433] There is a portion, a significant portion of the electorate that will not vote for him under any circumstances, right?
[434] I am one of those people.
[435] But it is not enough to win.
[436] So there's another view, which is that Joe Biden has actually a quite good record.
[437] You always hear Democrats say this, or you hear him say it, right?
[438] Like, you know, look at the records.
[439] Look at the records.
[440] And I am a big defender of Joe Biden's record.
[441] Same.
[442] But come on.
[443] The problem is that it is an unpopular record.
[444] And they have not been able to make it popular, right?
[445] And Ezra Klein columns in The New York Times about how good the IRA is and how good the chips in science sector haven't done it.
[446] And the bigger problem.
[447] Jonathan last triads, newsletters and the niche never Trump bullwork website also haven't done it.
[448] And the economy, which by traditional measures is quite good, is extraordinarily unpopular.
[449] And the view that people are going to come back and get used to the high prices and say, well, unemployment's very low and net net, you know, while inflation is eaten 85 % of my wage gains, I saw the 15 % of wage gains.
[450] So in a real sense, I'm a little bit up from where I was.
[451] It hasn't happened.
[452] I've done a lot of journalism on this.
[453] It's a little bit frustrating to me because I think the economy is underrated.
[454] But people hate the economy, and it is a very weak point for Joe Biden, not a strong point.
[455] They trust Trump way above Biden on the economy.
[456] So the idea that the Biden record and presidency are going to become popular.
[457] They've been trying to do that, and it again has failed.
[458] I think those were the two big theories.
[459] So now the theory is like they're going to spend the next however many months attacking Donald Trump.
[460] They've been spending money in swing states, and Donald Trump is doing just fine, right?
[461] So you have to assume they're going to find some new line of attack and fund it in some new way at the very same moment that the Trump forces who have erased Joe Biden's money advantage and are now starting to hit the airwaves, there were like some theories here.
[462] And the thing is the theories haven't worked out.
[463] And I guess you could have had a fourth theory, which is that Joe Biden was going to enter campaign mode.
[464] And in campaign mode, people would see a version of him they hadn't really seen.
[465] And they would just come to like him more again.
[466] And we're seeing that in campaign mode, he can't do that, right?
[467] he's not able to perform at that level.
[468] So there were theories here.
[469] I would like to hear what their next theory is.
[470] I would be very interested to hear the theory now that the Biden campaign has of how they beat Trump.
[471] But even before the debate, their theories were not working.
[472] Now their theories are in really bad shape, and I've not heard anybody articulate an alternative case.
[473] So it'd be nice for somebody to do so.
[474] I would love to hear a strategy or plan besides attacking David Axelrod and podcast tests.
[475] It would be nice.
[476] A clear attack line against Donald Trump would be a good first start.
[477] My theory about why I could be wrong, like challenging my own priors on this, is a depressed election, like a turnout, a very depressed turnout for this election because people are so negative on the two candidates so that the forecasters are wrong.
[478] The electorate looks more like an electorate that we've seen.
[479] And it wouldn't look completely like a midterm, but closer to a midterm than a 2020.
[480] and the kind of low info voters that Trump is overperforming with don't actually turn out and the high info, Asra Klein podcast listening, you know, Trump, college educated, former Republicans that do vote in every election do turn out and he squeaks out narrow 271 through either the Blue Wall or Arizona.
[481] That's possible.
[482] It doesn't have a zero percent chance of happening, I don't think.
[483] But that would be based on like essentially total luck and just low.
[484] loathing of Donald Trump and apathy and mass voter apathy.
[485] Yeah, I mean, maybe I should add another theory here, right, which is that the polls are wrong and Democrats keep outperforming in elections.
[486] And the problem is that theory is based on a lie.
[487] Well, dang, I was excited for a second.
[488] Yeah, right.
[489] You know, call this like the Simon Rosenberg theory, right?
[490] Who's sort of the hopium guy.
[491] Postreball.
[492] Yeah, we've had them on.
[493] And so have I. And, you know, but the thing that Rosenberg, I think, does not admit about 2022 is that the polls were right.
[494] The thing that was unusual about the polling in 2022 was that it should not have been possible for Democrats to have the midterm they did with Biden's approval ratings where they were.
[495] And so there was a lot of expectation that like Biden's approval ratings would sink the Democrats.
[496] That didn't happen.
[497] But that is not the same thing as the polling being wrong.
[498] The polling was actually quite accurate in 2022.
[499] It was unusually accurate.
[500] It was one of the most accurate elections we have polled in a long time.
[501] That doesn't mean, there was no error, but the error was very small.
[502] And by the way, to the extent there's been significant polling error in 2016 and in 2020, it has been to underestimate Donald Trump's support.
[503] And so what you have is a theory that percolates among, I think specifically Joe Biden, that the polls have been wrong all along.
[504] And so, look, if you believe the polls are wrong, and maybe you're actually ahead, not behind, and Democrats keep outperforming in elections, fine, you kind of make that work, but if you don't believe the polls are wrong, then you've a real problem.
[505] And the other reason to not believe the polls are wrong is it every other Democratic candidate in a significant election is polling ahead of Joe Biden.
[506] So these polls are not picking up electorates that are not willing to vote for Democrats.
[507] The Democratic Senate candidates are ahead.
[508] I'm told that Joe Biden is running well behind Democrats in House districts from people who do that kind of polling.
[509] So we are not finding an electorate that is.
[510] is unwilling to vote for Democrats, even though we know Democrats have been doing pretty well in 2018 and 2020 and 2022.
[511] We're finally elected that does not want to vote for Joe Biden.
[512] And virtually every piece of data we have is consistent on that.
[513] Presidential approval ratings, head -to -head matchups.
[514] And the Democratic elites, which contrary to Joe Biden, the president of the United States, telling the co -hosts of Morning Joe on MSNBC that he's getting real tired of all these elites, present company accepted.
[515] The actual elites who run things in the Democratic Party have just been refusing to listen to the voters on this.
[516] Like, the voters are saying they think Joe Biden is too old.
[517] They don't want him to run again.
[518] The Democratic Party has kind of been like sit down and shut up.
[519] And yeah, maybe as you say, like all the errors in Democrats' direction this year, but there's no, there is no reason.
[520] There's no information we have currently that points in that direction.
[521] So, you know, it's a hell of a thing to go to war.
[522] The elites are the most sanguine about Joe Biden.
[523] Yeah.
[524] When I did my February piece, it was so fascinating because I just, I was absolutely flooded with like extraordinarily positive.
[525] Everybody's like, I'm so sorry, you got hammered so much.
[526] But my subjective experience of that piece was that I was so flooded with positive reaction from Normie Democrats.
[527] Like, how can we make this happen?
[528] Who do I call?
[529] And then it was like top Democratic aligned commentators were mad at me, right?
[530] Like Joan Walsh was mad at me. Josh Marshall, like talking about its memo was.
[531] Matt was mad at me, right?
[532] Yeah, like people I would call Democratic elites were mad at me, right?
[533] This is unhelpful, right?
[534] As Gavin Newsom said after the debate, right?
[535] The panic, it may not be unwarranted, but it is unhelpful.
[536] And Democratic elites were completely refusing to listen to what Democratic voters are saying in polls, completely refusing to listen to what just like any Democrat you might meet in your life has been saying, you know, that like, you know, there's a problem here.
[537] This guy does not inspire confidence.
[538] So, yeah, the sort of run against elite strategy, while I'm not saying it can't work, operates at a kind of like a level of Orwellian irony that is, from a literary perspective, it's all very heavy -handed a satire.
[539] It is.
[540] Okay.
[541] So I want to talk about the vice president in particular, but just at the biggest level, I'm told, again, this is.
[542] I'm an immigrant to the democratic process here.
[543] I've never worked on a democratic campaign.
[544] I'm told by people who have worked on democratic campaigns that I don't appreciate the level of shit show that it would be in the factionalization and the fighting and the identitarian arguments if Joe Biden were to step aside and there were to be an open process at this late of date.
[545] I'm skeptical that it could be any worse than the current path myself.
[546] itself and I think potentially could be even good and vibrant.
[547] I know that you've been talking about this a lot.
[548] What's your view on?
[549] I don't, I don't buy it at all.
[550] And it's based sort of on nothing.
[551] Angry people on Twitter.
[552] It's based on.
[553] It's based on people's Twitter mentions that they're like, oh, if I did this, if we did this, I would have a lot of people yelling at me. Yeah, it's first.
[554] We are watching emerging in real time, a profound schism in the Democratic Party first, right?
[555] Like, this is not a Democratic Party doing well, right?
[556] This is a party where people are furious at each other, where there's a huge amount, a huge amount, a huge of people, including, by the way, a plurality of Democrats in polls I'm seeing, who want Joe Biden to step aside, he's not going to, ordinary voters who are feeling gaslit, members of Congress yelling at each other.
[557] So you're watching a party at almost a maximum level of schism at this very moment.
[558] So this idea that you're going to have factionalism, it's like, yeah, like, yeah, you might.
[559] I mean, everything I can tell is that Democrats would be sort of excited by a sort of open convention, but's primary.
[560] The Democratic Party has been a fairly mature institution up until like kind of this moment that has been making good strategic decisions across primary campaigns, including, by the way, in 2020, when the Democratic primary electorate was not excited about Joe Biden, but voted for him anyway because it very much wanted to beat Donald Trump.
[561] And he seemed to offer the best chance to do that.
[562] But if he just look at what has been happening in Democratic primaries, in Democratic succession campaigns, like over on the Republican side, they're like deposing speakers, you know, like House speakers, like it's a hobby.
[563] And, you know, everybody's terrified of a primary election.
[564] On the Democratic side, they have completely unremarkable succession of the leadership of the House Democrats.
[565] You've had, like, strong unity between the moderates and sort of leftists, right, that kind of squad, squad factionalism that seemed like such a big deal in 2020 has abated.
[566] You're not saying these Justice Democrats' primary succeeding anymore.
[567] the Democratic Party has been a quite united vehicle during this period.
[568] It is, of course, true that picking a candidate is tricky, but they have the uniting force of Donald Trump to help them do it, that when you are losing, you want to increase the range of outcomes.
[569] And yes, you might, like, bad outcomes are possible to, but if your current outcome is very bad, and I actually think there's a good reason to believe Joe Biden is polling functionally near the floor for a Democrat at the moment, that the reason things haven't moved that much is he's already polling terribly, right?
[570] Before the debate, he was polling way beneath the Democratic Senate candidates.
[571] Before the debate, around 70 percent of voters said he was too old to be an effective president.
[572] Before the debate, he was trailing Donald Trump, who we have never seen leading the Democrat in head -dead polls, like in 2020 and 2016.
[573] So before all of this, like he might have been actually quite near as bad as a Democrat can functionally get in a very polarized era.
[574] So he's fallen a little bit.
[575] That little bit is like really near how bad a Democrat can get.
[576] And there's a lot of room, it seems to me, for Democrats to rise with a different candidate.
[577] I mean, there's a lot of like, I'm worried about potential bad things that might happen.
[578] And it's like, well, what about these actual terrible things that are happening?
[579] We're living bad things.
[580] And I did the thing.
[581] So it was like, what's your plan for getting rid of Biden?
[582] I'm like, I don't know.
[583] What's your plan for Biden doing better?
[584] It's like we were just screaming each other and throwing chairs back and forth.
[585] Okay, let's talk about the vice president.
[586] I admit it on yesterday's podcast.
[587] I'm getting coconut pilled a little bit.
[588] I'm very calm little curious.
[589] She can at least talk, which is a good step in the right direction.
[590] I'm open note to the idea that as a white guy, former Republican, my judgment is off on this and that maybe there is a deep well of misogyny and racism that puts a cap on her potential efforts and that there's some wise Democrats that are thinking we can't take a risk on her.
[591] I mean, we do focus groups at the bulwark, and you do hear some pretty astonishing things from people when they talk about the possibility of a woman president that really, like, would shakes you to your core when you hear people saying that and when they're like in the safe space of a focus group.
[592] So I don't know.
[593] I'm of mixed views on it.
[594] I think that clearly should be better than the current path, but obviously there are risks.
[595] What say you about the vice president?
[596] Look, my view, and I just did a big show on this with Elena Plavro, who did a great Atlantic piece on her.
[597] My view is Harris is underrated, but I don't know how underrated.
[598] And there's no way to find out outside of some kind of contest, which is why I'm a very big proponent of, you know, Jim Clyburn called it a mini primary.
[599] People have called it a Blitz primary.
[600] I've talked about opening conventions, you know, that have a process like this.
[601] But James Carverville plan to have a traveling road show with Bill Clinton and Barack Obama?
[602] Traveling Road Show.
[603] Yeah, I thought the Bill Clinton and Barack Obama part of that was weird, but otherwise a traveling road show is fine with me. You know, have debates, have town halls, have them in interviews, see what happens.
[604] You know, if you say that conventional wisdom on Harris is that her political skills are a five, and I'm just saying this completely for the sake of argument.
[605] I'm not saying that's what it is.
[606] You know, if they're really a six, she's underrated.
[607] If they're really a nine, she is underrated.
[608] But those are two very different forms of being underrated.
[609] And so we need to.
[610] see.
[611] You know, my view of what has happened with Harris is that Harris comes into politics, into national politics, with a very clear profile.
[612] She's a smart on crime, moderate black Democrat.
[613] That is her profile in California.
[614] She runs in 2020 at a time when a smart on crime moderate black Democrat with a record as a prosecutor is like not what anybody is looking for.
[615] And the mood in the party is swung, not towards Democrats who can prove that they are, you know, tough but thoughtful about crime to criminal justice reform outright.
[616] And I think there were good substantive reasons that people are upset about the criminal justice system.
[617] I am one of those people.
[618] Basically, Harris, who isn't quite cautious politician, abandons her old, not just her political identity, but the identity that has been her only political identity.
[619] And I would say the sort of underperformance of a 2020 campaign reflects a number of things, but mainly reflects that she wasn't able to figure out something else, right?
[620] There wasn't a new Kamala Harris, like, idea for her to step into.
[621] They never figured out who should she be if she wasn't the person she had always been.
[622] People wanted her to succeed.
[623] They wanted the Kamala Harris thing to work.
[624] But Kamala Harris wasn't just like a like a bundle of like black, Indian American, what like identities and policies.
[625] Kamala Harris meant something.
[626] And when she was emptied of that meaning or ran away from that meaning, she wasn't able to find another meaning.
[627] But she still performed on a communications level fairly well during the campaign, which I think people have sort of forgotten.
[628] She's a good debate or et cetera.
[629] And she gets picked as Biden's VP.
[630] I mean, people can talk about why he picked her, but it's a post -George Floyd moment.
[631] She was strong in different ways.
[632] And I think the political theory of the Democratic Party, when he would talk about being a bridge, was that the future of the Democratic Party is very multi -ethnic, right?
[633] Like, I think in 2020, the view is Democrats are not going to have a white guy nominee again for a long time.
[634] And then there is it sort of backlash to this political theory.
[635] And I think part of why opinions swing on Harris so much is it, you know, people actually come to see Biden as a stronger candidate than her, right?
[636] And think this sort of, you know, politics, democratic party became too focused on this sort of multi -ethnic identity politics coalition idea.
[637] And meanwhile, here's Donald Trump running in a way that is often like blatantly racist, blatantly xenophobic and he's picking up black and Hispanic voters.
[638] So like, how come, it?
[639] if this was such a good theory, Democrats are actually losing the very voters that this theory was supposed to pick up.
[640] So the sort of theory behind Harris begins to crumble.
[641] And it's just very hard to have your own political identity as a VP, right?
[642] So she's lost to political identity as she runs in 2020 and it becomes VP where she has to have, you know, Joe Biden's political identity, even though she's a quite different politician.
[643] So we don't know who the Harris of a 2024 campaign would be.
[644] And so we would need to see and find that out.
[645] I think it could be strong.
[646] I think she's a good communicator.
[647] I think she's like a smart person.
[648] I've been around her.
[649] She's much more magnetic and charismatic in person than I think people realize.
[650] But the thing that Democratic Party has been denying itself with Joe Biden and his like campaign from a bubble is information.
[651] It didn't have enough information on how he would perform in a campaign.
[652] And so the first time it got real information, which is the debate, it was like, oh no. It can't make that mistake twice.
[653] It needs to find things out about the people it might nominate before it nominates them.
[654] This Cook Political Report has a private set of surveys where Trump expanded his lead in Pennsylvania over Biden from four points to 10.
[655] It would be landslide Trump territory.
[656] So with that, a couple little parlor games for you.
[657] So let's say that Ezra Klein is incorrect and that the logistical challenge or the will to actually have an open process and a blitz primary just is not there, and you have to put all your chips on the vice president or the president.
[658] Who would you rather ride with right now?
[659] Harris.
[660] Not even close.
[661] You know, the misogyny element doesn't worry about you, the woman.
[662] Put aside the sort of slight unknowability of the election itself, right?
[663] Harris polls almost exactly like Joe Biden lately has been polling a little bit ahead.
[664] Harris could pick a vice president who could allay some weaknesses.
[665] I believe that the responsible thing is to nominate someone.
[666] who you think is a capacity to serve for another four years.
[667] And I don't think, given the reporting we're seeing of deterioration in Biden, I just feel comfortable with that.
[668] And it's not a knock on Biden.
[669] It's not his fault that he is aging.
[670] It might be a knock on him if he stubbornly refuses to accept it.
[671] Yes, I mean, that is true.
[672] The knock on him is that he refuses to accept it.
[673] But people keep being mad at people like me, you know, for this position we're putting everybody in, like, talking about Biden's faculties.
[674] But Biden's putting us in this position.
[675] Like, I didn't choose for him to run again.
[676] at 81.
[677] And to the extent he is, like, that was a high -risk gamble.
[678] The gamble isn't paying off.
[679] He's got to recognize that and step.
[680] I would like to see him set up aside.
[681] Anyway, Harris, I think, just from a fundamental level of fitness, I just feel more comfortable with.
[682] And I think it is a job of political parties to nominate people who are widely believed to be fit, like physically fit for the presidency.
[683] One more parlor game.
[684] My colleague, Sarah Long will put it this way on our podcast this week.
[685] And she said to me, if you were going to die.
[686] Like, if you're literally going to die if Donald Trump won't, who would you want to ride with?
[687] And shouldn't the Democrats be thinking about this like that?
[688] I know.
[689] Let's put aside all those annoying Democrats you talked about from earlier in the podcast.
[690] You think Donald Trump's just some normal Republican like Mitt Romney.
[691] It's no big deal.
[692] Like, let's say we really take seriously that it is life or death from the Republic.
[693] What would you do if you're the Democrats in that case, open process?
[694] I would have a blitz primary.
[695] I mean, I don't think this is a hard call.
[696] I've been talking to pollsters about it, too.
[697] Like, I just, I'm sorry.
[698] In February, I think there are a lot of good reasons I could have been wrong.
[699] At this point, to run Joe Biden is to accept such an unacceptable level of risk in the capacity of the guy running for president, the capacity of the guy being president.
[700] There's just not a close call.
[701] Like, we've nominated, I mean, nominating candidates through conventions is how we did it for most of American history.
[702] It's some version of that is how most countries.
[703] that our democracies do it.
[704] This is not an unknown thing.
[705] Like, the Democratic Party to me has a lot of talent in it.
[706] I just, I don't think we are now at a point where this is like a hard call.
[707] Now, obviously the problem is like if you can't get him to step aside, there's not a lot that can be done.
[708] But in terms of what the party should do, it should do everything it can to try to make him step aside, to convince him to step aside.
[709] And then it should run a truncated process, but there's not nevertheless highly visible in public to figure out who it's strongest.
[710] ticket would be.
[711] And by the way, to squeeze Donald Trump the fuck out of the news cycle for a couple months.
[712] Can you imagine the fury of Donald Trump if he is sitting there unable to break into a news cycle through July and August because all the attention is on this completely unknown political thing happening where the Democrats have like sent their eight top next generation people into the field to give constant town halls and interviews and be on shows and podcasts and you know, newspaper columns and like, you know, YouTube things, all the things you can't have by to do right now.
[713] All of them very diligently out with alacrity, making the case against Project 2025 and all of Trump's vulnerabilities and how those clips are out everywhere.
[714] Anyway, it's kind of related to the top of your book while we're polarized.
[715] People have been joking about like the blue anon, the blue MAGA element online.
[716] But I think there's been an interesting little sociological study over the past few weeks.
[717] And I'm thinking in particular about threads.
[718] Did you join threads?
[719] I did join threats, yeah.
[720] I had to delete threats.
[721] So in my view, anything that is an epistemically closed system where people are only getting information from people that agree with them is eventually corrupting and radicalizing no matter how well -intentioned all the people are.
[722] And I have seen just kind of insane behavior from people that I think are well -intentioned people and good people at heart on the left, particularly on threads.
[723] And you've seen all these other things sprouting out.
[724] up.
[725] There's been this mini like Fox to Newsmax thing where people are like, I'm turning off MSNBC and Ezra Klein and I'm only going to watch.
[726] I don't want to make fun of anybody, but I'm only going to watch this one YouTube show where they tell me what I want to hear.
[727] So anyway, I just thought given that you'd written the book on that, you might have some interesting thoughts on the topic of information siloing.
[728] Yeah, I do think the threads observation is real.
[729] Look, like I have been off most social media for years now.
[730] And, you know, my observation about most of it, even though, like, I do have to read stuff on it to keep up with my job, is it makes people into worse and dumb reversions of themselves.
[731] And that particularly if you're in my job or your job, that actually maintaining some independence of thought is just, it's so fucking crucial.
[732] And it is so hard if you're absorbing that much input and that much input that is deeply non -representative.
[733] I mean, again, for all that, like, a lot of people on, you know, I guess we're on threads are finding, you know, know, this like, furious, like, how dare the New York Times report on the biggest story in American politics in years?
[734] There is nevertheless, you look at the polls and, like, again, like a plurality of Democrats do not want this got to run.
[735] Like, you know, in 2023, and I was writing about this, like, a majority of Democrats often didn't want you a Biden to run again.
[736] So it's not even like this is somehow representing Democrats.
[737] Like, but yes, the sort of epistemic narrowness of these high engagement silos, like Blue Sky, like I'm not on.
[738] but, like, my understanding is it's, like, even worse in this way.
[739] It's a real problem, and it affects the behavior of people with power in politics.
[740] And because it affects their behavior, because it affects, like, what they see in the world and, like, their sense of feedback and consequences, I think that the way social media polarizes politics is, like, by polarizing political elites.
[741] And, you know, I think you're probably seeing some of that happen right now, too.
[742] As we're calling, I'm getting what the hype is all about, about you.
[743] Interesting.
[744] I hear you ask people for book recommendations at the end of your podcast.
[745] So my final question for you is, I want you to distract me. I want my brain to go far away from here.
[746] I want to go to the beach.
[747] Health and wellness by Emily Witt.
[748] Health and wellness by Emily Witt.
[749] It is the most astonishing memoir about raving and drug culture.
[750] I did not know anybody could write about this this way, ever.
[751] Now there's a darker turn it takes at some point.
[752] Don't ruin it for me. This is my escape.
[753] I'm not going to ruin anything.
[754] Friends sent it to me in galleys.
[755] And I just could not stop reading it.
[756] And so, yeah, if you want to end up somewhere completely different, health and wellness, a breakdown, I think it's called, by Emily Witt.
[757] Wonderful.
[758] I look forward to reading that.
[759] Thank you so much for coming on the Borg podcast tomorrow.
[760] Your colleague, David French, all New York Times all the time here.
[761] And we'll see you all then.
[762] Peace.