Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
You're listening to Comedy Central.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
From the most trusted journalists at Comedy Central, It's America's
only sorts for new.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
Is the Daily Show with your host John do It.
Speaker 4 (00:36):
Hah, Welcome to the TWA Show. My name is John Short.
Look at that, Oh b les a shot. We've been gone.
H we just got back and we've been gone like
(00:57):
a like a week. It's been a week or a
decade or.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
What the fuck?
Speaker 5 (01:04):
Like?
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Oh my god, so much, so much.
Speaker 1 (01:08):
Has happened in that week.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
In fact, I believe perhaps it's best to describe what's
happened through a short, one man black box play, one
that I truly hope will be Tony eligible.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Can I get a little? Give me a little like
stetto music.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
I am a democrash, so sad, so cold. The world
is dube, the world and the future she's bleaker.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
The President's ditch has gotten even deeper.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
There's no path to victory. The worst nightmare kind of scenario.
It's a doom loop.
Speaker 3 (02:16):
We're trapped in a doom loop.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
That's the worst kind of loop. Why couldn't it have
been one of those loops made of fruit? But alas,
my ball is empty condemned to a life of misery
and minority status in key sub committees. Oh, nothing will
(02:46):
ever change our sad fate.
Speaker 6 (02:49):
Breaking news, President Biden dropping out of the twenty twenty
four race.
Speaker 4 (03:07):
Say that again, But who would guide us out of
the darkness?
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Who would take us there to the promised that.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
I'm coming home?
Speaker 5 (03:23):
Walk the lot.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
Lead?
Speaker 2 (03:27):
I feel alive tonight.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
Breaking news.
Speaker 7 (03:30):
Vice President Kamala Harris now the presumptive Democratic nominee.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
Political earthquake.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
There is a new pep in everybody's step.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
In the span of week, Democrats have gone from the
despair of a certain Trump presidency to the joy of
a statistical tie.
Speaker 8 (03:54):
Which.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
Right now that feels like victory. Already.
Speaker 8 (04:06):
The prospect of her candidacy has injected enthusiasm and energy.
Speaker 5 (04:10):
She's received a tsunami of grassroots support and cash.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
She's raised staggering two hundred million dollars since President Biden
dropped out.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
It's a zoom world record.
Speaker 5 (04:21):
More than one hundred thousand white women mobilized for Vice
President Kamala Harris.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
One hundred thousand white women.
Speaker 4 (04:34):
That is a giant group white women. I believe the
scientific term is actually a group of women.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
That is called a group of women. Two hundred million dollars.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
They've raised a united enthusiastic Democratic Party, a huge reversal
in one week.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
And they said it couldn't be done.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
Joe Biden is going to be the nominee.
Speaker 9 (05:02):
This fantasy stuff, this is good for TV, but Biden's
not going anywhere.
Speaker 8 (05:06):
This is not an Aaron Sorkin West Wing episode here,
this is real life.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
Joe Biden is a nominee, and he will be nominee.
We literally have three choices as Democrats.
Speaker 8 (05:17):
Either you vote for Donald Trump, you vote for Joe Biden,
or you stay on the couch.
Speaker 4 (05:27):
I think we know which one of those options. Jd
Vance would operate. Even I don't feel good about that joke.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
What do I know? A simple pink pony. Grandpapa's John
brake Y. That's a.
Speaker 4 (05:55):
Farley, A reference to being a Chapel Roone fan, which
I totally am. Now, somebody in the audience, there'd never
people come there, but.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
Listen, man. The pundits all said it couldn't happen, but
it did.
Speaker 4 (06:09):
Happen, and the Republicans are not very happy about it.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
They just steamrolled democracy.
Speaker 9 (06:14):
The Democrats are trying to hijack democracy.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
The ultimate election interference. This was a coup inside the
Democratic Party.
Speaker 3 (06:23):
A coup de talk, a bloodless coup.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
But I get it.
Speaker 4 (06:31):
If I thought I had this thing in the bag,
you were going to be going up against old Joe
Biden and then they pulled this, I'd be like, rough Raf,
open your eyes.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
How can you not say? They're cooing? They're cooing?
Speaker 4 (06:46):
And by the way, I love that guy's disappointment in
the phrase bloodless coup. This is a This is a
bloodless coup. What kind of fun is that? At least
we brought bare spray and nunchucks.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
But you know what I do. You understand that they're upset.
It makes sense. So how about we do this out
of fairness. I'm a fair person. You can replace your
old guy too.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
That's why.
Speaker 4 (07:23):
Even Stephen, by the way, speaking of your old guy,
he responded to the change to Harris in the Trumpiest
way possible.
Speaker 6 (07:33):
Donald Trump posted this on his true social account quote,
so we are forced to spend time and money on
fighting crooked Joe Biden. Now we have to start all
over again. Shouldn't the Republican Party be reimbursed for who.
Speaker 4 (07:49):
Do you have any idea how much money and let's
go brandon your bandages expense.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Made in America via bank the My Trump is too
Jerry Lewis, Well, what's done is done.
Speaker 4 (08:10):
You're gonna have to shift years, we calibrate. You've got
Cookie Joe and Sleepy Joe on speed dial. You're going
to need a new line of attack.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Chas are like Jewish people join the club. We're getting
crushed out there right now. I'm not even sure how
much we like ourselves.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
It's not like the old Seinfeld days when we were
riding high.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
You know, don't don't don't, don't du.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
You can get a bagel in Iowa.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
Yeah, give me a shweeer in ames Iowa. Boom boom
boom boom boo.
Speaker 4 (08:51):
Of course, that attack may ring hollow, seeing as Kamala
Harris's husband is let me check my notes, Jewish, anything
else that could denigrate all of Kamala Arris's accomplishments by
suggesting it's merely the power of the Jezebel.
Speaker 5 (09:08):
It is relevant when a young candidate tries to sleep
her way into politics and into power, and that is
what it appears Kamala Harris did.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
She's never earned or won anything.
Speaker 7 (09:20):
She was legitimately handed her original post in California state
government because she was sleeping.
Speaker 9 (09:24):
With Willie Brown, and then he backed her in her
race for San Francisco DA.
Speaker 4 (09:29):
Okay, squeaks, listen, I don't know, guys, you're being awfully
subtle here.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
Isn't there a grosser way you can say.
Speaker 8 (09:39):
That Kamala Harris she's the original Hawktua girl.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
That's the way she got where she is.
Speaker 4 (09:44):
That's what I'm talking about. That's the kind of substantive
and elevated take from a guy who looks like he's
won Mike's hard lemonade away from getting in a fight
at his sister's wedding. You little tough to hair, and
(10:06):
you're not fooling anybody, Baldy so Sex is saying, Kamala
Harris slept her way to the top. Joe Biden and
Donald Trump literally slept her way to the top, and
we never heard of the.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
Pink about it.
Speaker 4 (10:23):
Does anybody have a substantive critique.
Speaker 7 (10:27):
Her record is extraordinarily radical. Let me say at the outset,
Kamala can't have my guns, she can't have my gasoline engine,
and she's sure as hell. Can't have my steaks and cheeseburgers, sir.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
I don't want to be rude.
Speaker 4 (10:47):
Does appear that you could at least share some of
your cheeseburgers.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
Looks like you'll still be okay? Is that right? Tubs?
Speaker 4 (11:08):
Did you see you have mutton chops in case you
get hungry?
Speaker 1 (11:15):
But is Harris really that radical?
Speaker 10 (11:17):
If you combine Bernie, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, you
get Kamala Harris.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
If you combine Bernie Sanders and Elizabethoarne, you get Kamala Harris.
I can't be you know what? There is an app
that actually does that community Leobada Garris.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
Oh my god, it's me Opata Gars. I love that guy.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
He's the best. Come on guys.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
Nobody believes Kamala Harris is the second coming of Karl Marx.
And even when they get substantive policy critiques, they undercut
them immediately.
Speaker 5 (11:57):
Even when she was in California, she was very soft
on crime, the same Kamala Harris who as a California
prosecutor and attorney general put people in prison to use
them as cheap labor.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
She's too soft on crime. She's too tough on crin people.
We opened it three months you're flailing dig deep.
Speaker 6 (12:20):
That's one final thing that nobody talks about.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
She's hated by people who worked for it.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
Oh my god, are you kidding me?
Speaker 7 (12:32):
Everybody that worked for Kamala quit a very aggressive, angry,
bullying boss.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
She's not a nice person to work with. She's a
terrible boss. Your candidate's Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (12:44):
His catchphrase is literally you syd He's the Anna Wintur
of authoritarian wannabes. Donald Trump hired forty four cabinet members.
Seventy five percent of them want nothing to do with
the guy. His second Darry of State, called him a
fing moron. His chief of staff said he's the most
(13:06):
flawed person I've ever met.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
You know why he needs a new vice president of
running mate, I'll tell you you're tried to get the
last one killed. That's right now, terrible they're failing.
Speaker 4 (13:19):
You know what, if you want something done to yourself, Donald,
you're gonna have to hit Kamala with one of your
magic nicknames, laughing.
Speaker 2 (13:26):
Kamala l A F F I an apostrophe, laughing.
Speaker 6 (13:44):
So now we have a new victim to defeat Lion
Kamala Harris, Lion l Yi an Apostophe.
Speaker 4 (13:59):
Okay, you know what I hate to say. It can
be you tried, you give your best. I kind of
think you're going to have to go back to your classics.
It's worked for you in the past. It's your comfort zone.
I think you're gonna have to play the hits.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
I think she was a DEI hired, she was a DEI.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
She would be the Queen of DEI if she were elected.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
She is DEI.
Speaker 10 (14:20):
I think that this whole d E and I token higher.
Speaker 5 (14:22):
Kamala Harris has already been exposed.
Speaker 6 (14:25):
This woman, this disaster whose only qualification was having a
vagina and the right skin color.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
So I guess she's black or is she?
Speaker 10 (14:36):
She's not African American. Her mother's from India, her father's
from Jamaica. She grew up in Canada, and she married
a white Jewish guy. So she has no common experiences
with Black Americans.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
She's not one of you. She's not even married to
one of you. She's also about as black as Rachel Dozel.
Speaker 3 (14:53):
This is how desperate they are.
Speaker 1 (14:55):
Is she black? Is she Indian?
Speaker 3 (14:57):
Nobody knows to ra.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
In one person.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
Now I've seen everything. I heard.
Speaker 4 (15:11):
She sent a DNA to twenty three and me and
it broke the computa.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
I don't know what to do. Good, it's greatious.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
These people ever saw a pizza hat slash taco bell,
They'd lose their fucking minds.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
What is this a di restaurant?
Speaker 4 (15:36):
For more on the Republican response to Kamala Harris, we
go live to Washington, DC with senior political correspondent Josh Johnson.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
Josh, thank you so much. Thanks for driving off, Josh,
You've been down in DC.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
Everything is flying around. What is the latest, Josh?
Speaker 8 (15:54):
There's a tough one for them, John. Kamala Harris is
a confusing candidate for Republicans. They feel she's too young
to be president but too old to be a woman.
But they do have some very promising areas of attack.
She's too short, She's bad at video games, all of them,
(16:17):
all right, Grand Theft Auto Mario Kart, Mario Party, Super
Mario Party, Mario Party, Superstars, Grand Theft Mario Party.
Speaker 3 (16:30):
Oh and she.
Speaker 8 (16:32):
Laughs funny, you know, the laugh of a drunk girl
who lost her person then realized she actually was wearing
her purse the whole time. America hates that kind of laugh.
It's not that funny, Stacy.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Where do you think the attacks are going to land?
Speaker 8 (16:50):
Well, as you mentioned earlier, I really think the winner
is going to.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
Be she's blind.
Speaker 8 (16:57):
Okay, sorry for yelling. That's how it was said to me.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Just yelled she's black.
Speaker 8 (17:06):
No, No, they have all kinds of attacks. Ready, all right,
I'm seeing uh black black black woman. I got this
one American African, which sounds scary when you flip it
like that.
Speaker 4 (17:24):
Yeah, yeah, you see that.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
Let you see that. That's the one. Oh.
Speaker 8 (17:36):
They were looking at me when they said this one
like you, But lady also got some more black black
and he black urban doesn't crack at least they know.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Oh.
Speaker 8 (17:56):
I can't even say this one. Oh my lord, I'm Kenya.
I think that one is left over from the last
time someone was you know, black, you said it, not me.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
It's black on every page.
Speaker 8 (18:14):
It's most of the words.
Speaker 1 (18:16):
It's tough. Yeah, black to you, John, Thanks John, John Johnson.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Everybody hear week, come back, Buddha, Josh, don't go away.
We're about the Dalla show.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
My guest tonight.
Speaker 4 (18:43):
He is the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, ran
for president of twenty twenty Foe's welcome to the program,
Pete Boodha.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
Judge, h, I'm gonna turn about this. So all right,
(19:17):
we're a little crazy.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
Uh let me let me.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Kind of story.
Speaker 9 (19:24):
H h.
Speaker 2 (19:31):
M hm hm.
Speaker 4 (19:44):
H. That uh is all the time we have. I
gotta tell you. So I was coming out.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
I come out earlier just to talk to the audience,
have some words. There was a lovely woman in the audience.
She said.
Speaker 4 (20:08):
She stood up and she said, is the future Madam
president here tonight? And I said, I'm not sure what
you're saying. She said, Kamala Harris. And I said, oh,
you thought Kamala Harris is here tonight and she's not.
And there was a sadness that crept over the heat.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
But you just healed it. You. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (20:35):
I just swear to God though, because you are for
liberals watching you go on Fox News and discuss things
in a rational manner. It is for liberals. It's like
when when Gossling hosts SNL. It's just that it's just like, oh,
he's so good at this. Is that an uncomfortable thing
to do? Is it something you enjoy?
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (20:56):
Lotal, I mean I never thought that Fox News would
be like a specialty of mine. Yes, it's not something
I watched a ton of before I found myself going
on it off.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Ain't you know?
Speaker 3 (21:11):
What I found is it's it is important to reach
people where they are. And even if I'm skeptical sometimes
that the network is covering things in good faith, I
know lots of people who are tuning in faith and
so in the same way that you know, back when
I was running for president, I kind of specialized in
counties that had voted for Obama and then for Trump.
That that's how I want Iowa. Really it was partly
(21:32):
through that kind of outreach and finding people who are
not hardcore partisans but do usually get their information in
a very certain and and I would argue very narrow way.
I have a chance to as long as they'll have
me on, I have a chance to pop that you know, puncture,
that that bubble.
Speaker 4 (21:49):
Do you find anecdotal feedback that it's heard other than uh,
you know, a clip going viral or something like that.
Will you be at home in Michigan? Will you be somewhere?
And soone that you know is more red partisan will
say to you, hey, I caught you.
Speaker 3 (22:04):
On Yeah, I mean literally happened to me today. And
to be clear, it's not like somebody says, you know,
I was a rock rib Republican and I saw your
four minute Fox News segment and I've seen the light
and now I'm a Democrat. But you know, I do
hear from people I know who are more conservative or
probably don't usually vote the way I do. But they'll say,
you know, I saw the way you laid things out.
I think I think, you know, I understand where you're
(22:24):
coming from, or I think the way you laid out
could make sense and right. You know, I'm under no
illusion that you can just you know, on the strength
of a witty argument.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
Or a you know, man, are you preaching to him? Yep,
you're right, but doesn't dude jank. But I get it.
I get I get the conversation asiety.
Speaker 3 (22:43):
What is the point of having a conversation if you're
not speaking to people who don't already agree with you?
Speaker 1 (22:48):
Son of a bitch. That's so smart and it's exactly
the way. It's a b are you by the way,
uh unbelievably tumultuous.
Speaker 4 (22:58):
I mean, week like eight days has it felt that
way inside the administration? How did you find out about it?
Is it in that situation? Does the president call everybody
together and go, hey, everybody, uh got some news?
Speaker 1 (23:14):
Like how does that? How does it work?
Speaker 4 (23:15):
No?
Speaker 3 (23:15):
I mean that would be a very long list of
everybody to you know, to talk to. So I found
out the way everybody did. I was I was actually
on a plane fittingly enough, taxiing in and Jason was
sitting next to me and checking Twitter and and and
saw the post and uh so we found out that
the same way everybody else did. And yeah, ever since,
I think a lot of us, you know, our heads
are spinning. So much has changed. But part of what's
(23:36):
changed is this incredible energy that we have. Now. You know,
I was home over the weekend stop by the field
office for the now Harris campaign next where we live in.
Speaker 4 (23:46):
Did they literally just take the poster down and slap
another one up?
Speaker 1 (23:48):
There? Is that?
Speaker 4 (23:49):
Like it's the same office with the same people pretty much.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
And that's okay because it's it's it's because it's it's
the same values and it's the same effort, right, It's
just yeah, now, I.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
Mean they're literally right, like.
Speaker 3 (24:03):
I will say that they got those yard signs already
really quick.
Speaker 4 (24:06):
Yeah, but but more's got to be a kin goes
almost everywhere.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
You know, she obviously, you know, she represents a lot
of continuity with the values of the Biden Harris campaign
and the Biden Harris administration, but also a different messenger,
a different style, of different approach, and people are clearly
really fired up and excited about it.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
I know, I do you think is it? This is
such a strange question.
Speaker 4 (24:28):
And I don't know if you've spoken to him or not,
but like, do you think President Biden sees that and
is like, oh, fine, like or is he like does that?
I would imagine it would hurt your feelings. If that
were me, it would it would hurt my feelings.
Speaker 3 (24:40):
I don't know. I think I think part of what
he achieved with what's a really extraordinary thing. I think
even now we might be under selling how world historically
rare it is to be literally the most powerful person,
and it's lay power aside, right, just because it's the
right thing to do, right. But in so I also
(25:00):
think he's consolidated his own standing as one of America's
great presidents, right, And I also think he's very conscious
that that that means spreading through the tape and continuing
to deliver for the next six What are the.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Narrative about, Like they bullied him, he was bullied? Is
that even can you do that to a president?
Speaker 4 (25:15):
Can you be like, get out and then the president
will be like stop yetting it me?
Speaker 1 (25:19):
No?
Speaker 3 (25:19):
I mean, that's the thing, right. It was his call,
and he made that call, and people made say those
delegates were his right, yeah, I mean, and people may
second guess, you know that the manner of it or
the timing of it. But at the end of the day,
it was his choice. He made that choice, and that
must have been an extraordinarily difficult choice, but also the
right choice.
Speaker 4 (25:37):
Now are you being so now it's she is on
a vice presidential search? Are you being vetted right now?
Would you know if you're being vetted right now? When
they vet you, did you feel it?
Speaker 1 (25:48):
Is it a physical sensation you're being vetted?
Speaker 3 (25:53):
You know? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (25:54):
You know, you know when you're being vetted?
Speaker 2 (25:56):
Yeah, I may vet you.
Speaker 1 (25:56):
I'm gonna vet you right now. Colease no?
Speaker 3 (26:00):
Please don't.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
Pretty pretty pretty good? All right? What does it require?
Is there like, is there literally a physical exam that goes.
Speaker 3 (26:13):
Along with being vetted, not that I'm aware of, but
I mean, look, all I should say about is that
that you know she is going to make this decision.
She's got a process.
Speaker 4 (26:20):
Oh god, she I mean everything you say, even that
is being vetted. Probably it's so uncomfortable because don't aren't
you Do you think the vetting process is different.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
To be in the administration, you probably have to go
through a process.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
Yeah. In fact, I was thinking about it because I
was vetted to be part of the cabinet, and then
pretty soon after that, Tasseen and I were going through
the process of adoption and you know, kind of the
same thing, but with a social worker instead of a
white shoe law firm. Really, I mean there's a lot
of you know that the law firm is like, okay, now,
you know, tell me about your finances, and you know,
a year or two later is a social worker. He's like,
(26:59):
tell me about your finances, and you go through a
step by step. And one of the things you think
about is the journey that an adoptive that adoptive parents
go through, right, does it involve that kind of.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
You It's that the bar of adoption is that high.
Speaker 4 (27:11):
It's similar to like getting a high level security clearance
position in government.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
Yeah, I mean not the exact same obviously, but but
you know, like they overlap, right.
Speaker 4 (27:23):
Were there questions was there certain parts of the vetting
process for government where you were like, you're gonna let
me get away with that, Like was there anything like.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (27:35):
If there was not? But if there was, would I
describe it on television?
Speaker 1 (27:40):
This is this is cable's see. That's my my problem is.
Speaker 4 (27:50):
The vetting process because being vetted to be a road
comic is the bar is don't die. But like for
public service, if I've got pictures in a shoe box,
that would disqualify me if you're working for the post office,
like it's it's bad, but you you know, you were
in the military, did things like pretty clean?
Speaker 1 (28:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (28:13):
I think so.
Speaker 9 (28:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (28:15):
I don't want to say anything, but it sounded to
me right there like you're hiding something thanks a lot.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
Uh when will they tell you?
Speaker 4 (28:22):
Do they come to you afterwards and say, hey, we're
about to announce it and you made it to the
quarterfinals and you were great, But do they like will
they announce that or do you find out like on Twitter?
Speaker 3 (28:35):
Like everybody else, I don't know. What I know is
that there's a flying form me.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
You're going to talk values again, aren't you?
Speaker 3 (28:43):
Yeah? Probably, I probably think. No, it's good.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
Look she did.
Speaker 3 (28:46):
What I say is no matter what the flying formation
is going to be, I'm really excited to be part
of this. I'm excited to be part of this campaign
because I really believe in it and and I feel
that energy. I felt it on the ground.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
Over that You've been back out on the on the
road since happened. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (29:00):
Yeah, kicked off a canvass in the Traverse City Field
office and it felt amazing. Just it was an energy
I hadn't felt since I was campaigning in Michigan in
twenty twenty two for the midterms, which went really well. So,
you know, but as you memorably pointed out, you know,
three or four months is forever, So a lot of
things are gonna happen. There's gonna be a lot of
ups and downs. It's gonna be a roller coaster. But
(29:22):
I think we're ready for that, largely because we're I
think now we're kind of we have a renewed awareness
not just of what we're against but what we're for,
right And I think that's really important.
Speaker 4 (29:32):
Well, the message before was literally it doesn't matter what
you see that's worse, which is not.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
You know, it's not so compelling, you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (29:43):
And people were those and I don't say that I
don't see that to be disrespectful.
Speaker 4 (29:49):
It's just like it seems like, you know what people
were experiencing.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
Yeah, and I think, look, there is a temptation to
have our message be entirely about Donald Trump because we're
so disturbed by what his return would mean, and maybe
a little more also about Jade Vance because of how odd.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
Boyd he's turned out to me. I gotta tell you, boy,
did that dude drop a turd on launch? Right?
Speaker 4 (30:11):
I've never seen anything like that where they were like
one day they were like the heir to the Maga
fortune and the Maga the.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Prince j D shouton Martin. He comes out and he's like,
I hate cat ladies.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
You know, it's rough.
Speaker 3 (30:23):
And you know it's just like systematically insulted so many people.
It's not just the kind of things he said, but
the policy ideas behind them, Like he has this idea
that you should get extra votes if you have.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
Kids, extra votes.
Speaker 3 (30:38):
Yeah, he suggested that that you should have extra votes
if you're a parent. Really, I think there's lots of.
Speaker 1 (30:44):
You don't even get that in your own house.
Speaker 2 (30:47):
I'm a parent, you don't get anything true.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
I'm trying to find that. I mean, ours are not
yet three. But and it's rooted in this strange idea
that it's not just he doesn't just say that being
a parent to you, you know, an important role as citizen,
which I agree with, that it gives you unique perspective
on the future. It's that not being a parent makes
you less.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
Like I think that's absolutely how I feel, he said.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
He said, people who don't have children, this is a quote,
have no physical commitment to the future of this country.
Speaker 1 (31:22):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (31:22):
And I just think about how like, no physical commitment
to the future. Like when I was deployed to Afghanistan.
I didn't have kids back then, but I will tell you,
especially when there was a rocket attack going on, my
commitment to this country felt pretty pretty physical.
Speaker 1 (31:44):
They tell us.
Speaker 3 (31:49):
This is why.
Speaker 4 (31:52):
This is why people love seeing you go on through shows,
because that framing is perfect because it does it points
to that idea that who are you to tell what's
in someone else's heart? About what they feel about the
future or what they feel about this country. And the
sacrifices that you made, as you said, without having had children,
were tremendous.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
So it's shocking, and I also have.
Speaker 4 (32:13):
To address this sort of strange I think false populism
on the right, economic populism. The Roberts Court has been
the least worker friendly court and god knows how long
their policies. You know, they complain about globalization hurting workers,
and I do think that's a correct formulation. I think
(32:34):
we didn't do enough in that moment, But I don't
think they realize.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
What right to work states.
Speaker 4 (32:40):
You know, what they think Mexico is to the United States,
Texas is to New York like it's a race to
the bottom. And there's all kinds of studies that show
right to work states depress wages, they depress worker safety,
they do all kinds of terrible So what is this
economic populism based on.
Speaker 3 (32:58):
Well, it's not based on policy, it's just language. It's
this idea that if you just act like you are populists,
that that counts as if. Look, I'm under no illusions
that elections are just a policy exercise. A lot of
it is vibes. A lot of it is style. But
if your party has been systematically against unions, against a
(33:18):
higher minimum wage, against things like paid family leave, against overtime,
then just because you found Hulk Hogan and kid Rock
and put him on stage, doesn't make you a friend
of the working man, right like the substance after anat.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
Well, I would.
Speaker 4 (33:37):
Only say it does make you a friend of the
workingman in the eighties, So I think I think that
was helpful, do you in terms of that? I wonder
you know, ever since Reagan, and I think democratic administrations
have gone along with it too much as well, the
shift from a labor economy to an investment economy and
the penalties that labor faces versus you know, there's no
(34:00):
question that equities and the investment market have done unbelievably
well since you know, the eighties, right, and that labor has,
you know, whilew much further behind.
Speaker 1 (34:12):
It's a shareholder economy.
Speaker 4 (34:14):
Why is it so difficult to get workers, forget about
even unions, a place at the table at the companies.
If these companies have done so well for their shareholders,
why why can't the workers share in that prosperity In
the same way as why can't they be shareholders?
Speaker 3 (34:32):
I think that's right, although I will say one thing
that unions are increasingly doing is getting employees a chance
to participate in that profit sharing for exactly that reason, right,
and getting that seat at the table. But that's exactly
why it matters, not just kind of what your style
or your affect is, but what you're actually proposing to do.
And I would say, you know, part of what we
can be really proud of from the Biden Harris ears
(34:54):
and I think in future a future Harris administration too,
is a real focus on return a little more to
a worker led economy or worker oriented economy that building
things like yes, you know, the financialization, A lot of
those trends have been very powerful in the role of
the information economy, which has merged in some ways with manufacturing,
because you know, even a car is increasingly you know,
(35:17):
part car, part computer. But it's still really important that
we make the cars here, and that's part of what
we've been working to make happen. There was a manufacturing
recession during Trump. Even before covid R, there was a
manufacturing boom. Now you have to go back decades to
find anything like this much investment in terms of the
amount of places around the country right now where factories
are being built.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
There was just a guy, it was I think it
was the mayor.
Speaker 4 (35:40):
It was a city in Arizona, it might have been
Mesa wrote an op ed almost saying exactly that he's
a Republican and he's in a border town, and he
was saying, I'm supporting Harris because of the investment active infrastructure,
because of the JFZAC, because of what they tried to do,
and maybe that is the key, is to get that
out in those sorts of places where people might not
(36:02):
normally hear.
Speaker 3 (36:02):
Yeah, because I remember being a mayor in the industrial Midwest.
And actually, the one time that Trump fooled me, I'll
admit it, something he said he would do that I
believed him, was when he said he was going to
pass this big infrastructure law. I thought he would do
it because it's good politically and why not. And of
course he failed to do it. Joe Biden did, by
the way, with a lot of involvement from Kamala Harris.
And now it's something that I wish back when I
(36:24):
was mayor that we had that kind of wind at
our back. In the city.
Speaker 1 (36:27):
But it's terribly hard.
Speaker 5 (36:28):
You know.
Speaker 4 (36:28):
It's funny. I went to his college. I thought for sure,
I saw the ad and I went to it, and
it turned out. I'm not a doctor, but I'll say this.
Speaker 3 (36:43):
I think the really important thing to watch with him
isn't the promises that he broke, Like, yeah, he broke
the promise about infrastructure, he broke the promise about six
percent growth. He even broke the promise he made to
that January sixth mob when he said he was going
to be right there with him when they marched on
the catre. But actually the promises he kept are the
really interesting ones, because I think they tell you what
the next Trump administration, if he got one, would be like.
And he really kept too. One was the promise he
(37:05):
made to the Christian Right to eliminate the right to choose,
and the other was the promise he made to Corporate
America to cut taxes for corporations in the wealthy. Those
are the promises he followed through on. That's what he's about,
Hulk Hogan or not.
Speaker 4 (37:21):
I think every that's great pe body tags. From now on,
every political conversation in this country has to end with
Hulk Hogan or not.
Speaker 1 (37:32):
We're gonna take a quick break. We'll be right back
after that.
Speaker 2 (37:49):
Everybody, go talk talk for tonight.
Speaker 1 (37:51):
We've only got tonight.
Speaker 4 (37:52):
We're gonna check in with your host for the rest
of the week, mister Ronnie Chang, Ronnie Chang, everybody, so much,
so much is going on, the speed of everything, Ronnie.
Speaker 1 (38:02):
What's coming up this week?
Speaker 9 (38:03):
Well, I'll be talking about the accusation that Trump's VP
pig JD.
Speaker 1 (38:07):
Vans had sex with a couch.
Speaker 3 (38:09):
And let me just.
Speaker 9 (38:10):
Say, from my own personal investigation, it proves that it's
really difficult, Ronnie.
Speaker 1 (38:25):
That's been debunked.
Speaker 4 (38:27):
It was just it was a dumb tweet somebody made
up to make fun of Jdvans.
Speaker 1 (38:31):
It wasn't.
Speaker 9 (38:32):
Oh, okay, Well, do you know what a kios return policy.
Speaker 1 (38:39):
Ronnie Chang?
Speaker 4 (38:39):
Everybody, I, as an American, find it offensive that a
nominee is being coronated like Kamala.
Speaker 1 (38:48):
What makes Kamala Harris a remarkable figure?
Speaker 7 (38:50):
We all oh Carmela a little bit of respect.
Speaker 2 (38:55):
Kamala, Kamala, Kamala, Mama, Mama.
Speaker 1 (38:57):
I don't know Kamala Harris. You can say, you can
say Tamala.
Speaker 2 (39:02):
I couldn't care less if I mispronounced it or not.
Speaker 1 (39:04):
I couldn't care less.
Speaker 2 (39:06):
Explore more shows from the Daily Show podcast universe by searching.
Speaker 4 (39:10):
The Daily Show wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (39:13):
Watch The Daily Show weeknights at eleven ten Central on
Comedy Central, and stream full episodes anytime on Paramount plus
Speaker 1 (39:26):
Paramount Podcasts