Noelle, you were in Chicago all week for the DNC. How did what you saw outside compare to what we all saw going on inside? People outside the DNC did not care about the DNC. Really? But certainly you found some people who were thrilled about this. Yeah. How about this from a Tim Walls watch party? Yes, I'm very excited about the ticket. It is
world-changing, but it is something that is going to move this country forward. And it just feels like super authentic, which I think really resonates with folks. Like, I feel like everyone knows that Tim Walls is their life or something. I also saw some people protesting. Shut up, Blue Nose!
And then yesterday, we talked to people who are really mad about how Kamala Harris and Joe Biden have managed the border. Today is getting more benefit in the people who here are hungry and been on the streets all their life. But on Today Explained, there's one last thing you and I have to talk about, Noelle. We got to talk about the speech.
They're not writers, but they help their clients shape their businesses' financial stories. They're not an airline, but their network connects global businesses in nearly 180 local markets. They're not detectives, but they work across businesses to uncover new financial opportunities for their clients. They're not just any bank. They are Citi. Learn more at citi.com slash weareciti. That's C-I-T-I dot com slash weareciti.
Hey, everybody. I'm Ashley C. Ford, and I'm the host of Into the Mix, a Ben & Jerry's podcast about joy and justice produced with Vox Creative. And in our new miniseries, we're talking about voter fraud. For years now, former President Donald Trump has made it a key talking point despite there being no evidence of widespread fraud. But what impact do claims like these have on ordinary voters?
People like Olivia Coley Pearson, a civil servant in Douglas, Georgia, who was arrested for voter fraud because she showed a first-time voter how the voting machines worked. Hear how she fought back on the latest episode of Into the Mix. Subscribe now, wherever you listen.
2020, 2020, 4! Today Explained, Sean Ramos-Furham. Today Explained, Noelle King. Noelle King, I was just listening to you on Yesterday Explained and you were saying, tonight Kamala Harris will give the biggest speech of her life. How was it?
It was not a flashy speech. It was a short speech. It was a fairly to-the-point speech. It was an introductory speech. It was a bunch of different things all at once, and she pulled it off in 35 minutes. It did feel like the biggest speech of her life. Did you hear nerves? I didn't hear nerves. You didn't hear nerves. I thought I heard nerves. I heard, like...
Someone who felt like it was her race to lose and all she had to do was come out and look competent. And that's kind of what she went for. And normal, right? So there was a lot last night in the speech that was about I am a normal, responsible, practical American. I'm like you. There was one moment where she addressed the screen and she said... And let me say, I know there are people of various political views watching tonight. And I'm not...
And I want you to know, I promise to be a president for all Americans. And I feel like 10 years ago, that would not have been a big deal. But for the past few years, that's just not a vibe that we get very often in these. I noticed that she didn't say they a lot to refer to her opponents. She only said like three or four times. Donald Trump in his convention speech, there were
220 mentions of they, and a lot of it was... They've taken advantage of us for years. We lose jobs, we lose revenue, and they gain everything and wipe out our businesses, wipe out our people. So I thought it read as very normie, and I thought there was another thing she was trying to do last night, which is...
Get out in front of and deal with and simultaneously deal with these attacks coming from Donald Trump that will continue to come, that she is a communist, that she is a radical, that she is crazy, that she has a bizarre laugh. She she was none of those things last night. She didn't appear to be any of those things last night.
Another thing Donald Trump did in his nomination acceptance speech at the RNC was, of course, as covered on this show, talk about the late, great Hannibal Lecter. Now, I've read some takes this morning, some reflections on Kamala's speech that say, you know, it was it was the pantsuit was empty. I saw there wasn't enough substance. There wasn't enough policy. It was a lot of fluff. Is that even a fair thing to say about a speech that was
Very much about at least...
you know, her background and her vision for the country when the other guy just ranted and talked about a fictional character from a 90s suspense thriller. You know what I was thinking this morning? Because I read that op-ed and I was thinking that these speeches are in the eye of the beholder. If you don't like Kamala Harris, if you don't want her to be president, you are hearing nothingness. You are hearing emptiness. If you don't like Donald Trump, you're hearing a person who sounds really unhinged, right?
If you like them, if you're there for them, it doesn't really matter what they say. You're going to find parts of it that you like.
I did not think that it was a substanceless speech. I think you got to think about what was she there to do last night. And she was there to introduce herself to the American people and tell 300 odd million Americans things about her that we didn't already know. So she gave us her bio, right? She grew up middle class. At the park, my mother would say, stay close.
But my father would say, as he smiled, run, Kamala, run. Don't be afraid. Don't let anything stop you. She talked a lot about family values. She talked about being raised by a lot of people after her parents got divorced, a thing I had not known about her. So again, she kind of landed that, right? There was a bit in the speech last night of kind of, it takes a village, right? So after her parents divorced, she's raised by many different people in Oakland. She lives in the flats in the city, not up in the mountains.
Now, from there, she pivots to her career as a prosecutor. And there was a moment in this that I actually thought was genuinely interesting. There's a meme that has haunted Kamala Harris since 2020, and it's the idea that she is a cop and therefore she can't be trusted. 2024 is obviously a very different election cycle. But what she did last night was she said, when I charged a case, I charged it not in the name of the victim, but in the name of the people. For a simple reason.
In our system of justice, a harm against any one of us is a harm against all of us. And I just thought that was such an interesting moment. She's kind of saying, this is not personal. I have a career in service and that career in service is for you.
Both of them have been critiqued for not telling us a lot about what they plan to do. And at this point, in what will probably be, in a lot of ways, a vibes election, does it matter how much we know about what they plan to do or don't plan to do? One thing we didn't hear a lot of all week at the DNC was the war in Gaza. Probably intentional. I think there were like next to no Muslim American speakers on stage either somehow. Yeah.
But Kamala Harris did go there. She did talk about the war and she did sort of lay out her policy in at least that case. What did she say? She struck a balance last night. She started by saying what Hamas did on October 7th was horrific. And then she described the horrific action, right? She didn't shy away from that. At the same time, what has happened in Gaza over the past 10 months is devastating.
innocent lives lost desperate hungry people fleeing for safety over and over again the scale of
of suffering is heartbreaking. So I think there was a real effort last night to balance both points of view and to suggest that she'll be a president who understands that she's got to balance multiple points of view. She did talk about it. And I think all week, you know, what I heard in Chicago was speculation. Will she talk about it? How much will she talk about it? She shouldn't talk about it, right? And I think last night when she talked about it, she was possibly trying to telegraph that
Not being scared of talking about it means not being scared to deal with it. On the other hand, the Democrats seem like they're chomping at the bit to deal with abortion. They couldn't talk enough about Project 2025. If Donald Trump has his way, he's going to push through their extreme agenda. Project 1825. I mean, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I rolled that back. I got that wrong.
Project 1925. Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Project 2025. They even had like a failed, I thought, comedic bit about Project 2025. You thought it failed? I thought it was cute, the big book. The book was cute. But when Kenan came out to talk about it, I was like, this is getting lost in the sauce a little bit. You ever seen a document that could kill a small animal and democracy at the same time?
Here it is. But what were the biggest issues that they were leaning into? So we talk about four days of a convention. There were, and I shudder to use this word, but there were a host of issues. But here's what I think. Here's what I think. I think in general, you could file most of those issues under the big umbrella of freedom. Freedom!
This year, freedom is a word that the Democrats have reappropriated, taken it back from the Republicans and said, we are the party of freedom and they are the party that wants to do strange things to you and make you behave as if it's 1920 again. So we did hear a lot about abortion. The Democrats brought women up on stage to testify about their abortion experiences. I was raped by my stepfather after years of sexual abuse. At age 12, I took my first pregnancy test.
And it was positive. And one thing that Kamala Harris really hit hard last night was Donald Trump is very proud of what he did with the Dobbs decision, and he wants to go farther. And that leads us directly into Project 2025, right? Because there are lots of things in Project 2025 that are pretty strange and unseemly with respect to fertility and tracking women's fertility. And get this.
Get this. He plans to create a national anti-abortion coordinator and force states to report on women's miscarriages and abortions. Simply put, they are out of their minds. But I do think the seizing of the word freedom was big for the Democrats this year. And I think, you know, as an analyst, I think they exploited it pretty well.
You know, Noel, you and I are old enough to remember when Kamala Harris was like a non-entity. She polls poorly against Trump. She gives terrible interviews. And now you've got Michelle Obama saying... Wonderfully magical is in the air, isn't it? You know, we're feeling it here in this arena, but it's spreading all across this country we love. A familiar feeling that's been buried too deep for far too long.
You know what I'm talking about. The contagious power of hope.
R.I.P. Joe Biden. Looks like no one at the DNC even had like a hint, an iota of buyer's remorse. Today Explained initially was going to go to the convention with the assumption that it would be very boring and but an interesting chance to report on the city of Chicago because there would be these big protests. There would be a lot of just disappointment and exhaustion. And that is not at all what happened. What has happened with Kamala Harris over the past couple of weeks? Well, she's been in the
Turns out that she's very telegenic and engaging, that she has a very extroverted presence, that it's nice, if you like her, again, that it's nice to watch her, and that...
And that enthusiasm creates more enthusiasm. This is all, we talk about this all the time, right? Like so much of this is vibes. And the vibes around Kamala are very, very, very good in part because everybody said we have united around her and she's now our messenger. She's now our figurehead. And I think the convention was about reminding people in some ways that Democrats can be very likable. ♪♪
And Kamala Harris, although no one predicted it a couple months ago, came out the gate and appears to be that candidate. Noelle King, have a great weekend. Big fan of the show. Thank you for having me on. Noelle's got to go, but we got more show for you. How Kamala takes this whole week celebrating Kamala and turns it into a W when we return on Today Explained.
Thank you.
It's time to cut through the noise and make a real impact. So tune into the future of marketing, a special series from the property podcast sponsored by Canva. You can find it on the property feed wherever you get your podcasts.
Creativity is one of the core traits that makes us human. It allows us to tell stories, to create, and to solve problems in new and exciting ways. So why does it feel so threatened? With new technological advances that can create art in milliseconds, where does that leave us? In this special three-part series, we wanted to ask...
How can we save and celebrate creativity? Tune into Saving Creativity, a special series from The Gray Area sponsored by Canva. You can find it on The Gray Area feed wherever you get your podcasts.
Canva presents a work love story like no other. Meet Productivity. She's all business. The Canva doc is done. Creativity is more of a free thinker. Whiteboard brainstorm. They're worlds apart, but sometimes opposites attract. Thanks to Canva.
The data is in the deck. And now it's an animated graph. Canva, where productivity meets creativity. Now showing on computer screens everywhere. Love your work at Canva.com. How do you pronounce it? First you say comma like a comma in a sentence. Then you say la like la la la la la. Put it together and it's one, two, three.
Today Explained is back with a political strategist named Mike Podhorzer. As former political director of the AFL-CIO, senior fellow at CAP now, and I publish weekend reading, Substack. Mike was in Chicago this week, just like all the other political strategists and political writers. But while everyone was writing about vibes and speeches, he was writing about polls. Because I think that the horse race polling, to be clear, undermines politics.
The idea of democratic elections, it positions all of us as spectators. It puts us in a sense of, is our team winning or losing? And we are not spectators. We are the owners, right? What matters the day after the election is not whether or how early we knew what the outcome was going to be.
but whether we knew what the consequences of that outcome would be when we cast our ballots. And in November 2016, we knew that the six states that matter today were going to matter and decide our political direction until the Trump dynamic ended. If you obsess on the daily politics
um, you know, noise from this, from polling, you miss that we are in this trench warfare and it hasn't changed, right? That there are these six states, they have only been decided by narrow margins, margins too small for any survey to get right. You're saying, you know,
We don't want to over-focus on polls. What really matters is these six states. Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Nevada, Arizona, I assume, are the six? Right. What should they be doing in those six states? Two things have to happen.
The first thing is voters understand how dangerous it would be to the things they value most if Trump is elected and you get Project 2025-like agenda. It's all laid out in Project 2025, written by his closest advisors, and its sum total is to pull our country back to the past. Right. The second thing they have to do is
is assure people that Kamala Harris will be a good president, someone that they will feel good about waking up knowing that she's the person who will ultimately deal with the emergencies and the important things that are going to happen in this country. And I think that Harris is
to her credit, did something that the Democrats have had a hard time doing or even recognizing the importance of till this point, which is when...
She said that this is the most important election in our lives, that Donald Trump was an unserious person. But the consequences of putting Donald Trump back in the White House are extremely serious. And when you look at other countries in the world that have managed to defeat people like Donald Trump in elections...
In a shock result for all and a huge relief for many here, the left-far-left coalition has unexpectedly become the biggest party in the French parliament, beating the far right. It is really making clear that the only power he has is any we give him. That he himself is not scary, but that he's just kind of a clown or weird, as they say, right?
But that if you put that person in office, the power you're giving him will do a great deal of harm to you. And that is like the sweet spot for defeating that kind of autocratic wannabe. And you think that message plays in these six pertinent states? Absolutely. I mean, you look what we saw in the midterms two years ago.
was literally unprecedented in, like, our election history, where the governors of Michigan, Wisconsin, the states that are most important for this election, right? Those governors won by more in an election where their president was the party than they had won by four years ago in the blue wave election.
The people of Wisconsin came out and said, who do we want to govern this state? And by two points, the people of Wisconsin said, we would like the Democrat to govern our state. Because that dynamic was at play. Their opponents were MAGA acolytes who were not seen as serious, and they had demonstrated themselves
as being consistent with what people wanted in their governors, right? That's the race that needs to be run in those states. We saw it happen two years ago. That's what she seems headed towards doing. And if that's replicated, I think that's going to be the result. But the other part of what has to happen, and I don't want this to really not be underscored enough, is
is that you have one set of voters who vote every election no matter what. It's just every other November, they're going to be there voting, right? And for them, the discussion we've been having really captures what they need to hear because they are going to vote for Harris or Trump. But then there's an even larger number of Americans who have voted but don't vote in every election, right?
And for them, the question is what is going to get them, I hate to say it, but off the couch this time. And we know that what mobilizes those kind of voters is
is loss aversion, the sense that if they don't go out and vote, they have something to lose. You're saying these voters aren't motivated by civic duty, but instead maybe they're worried that they might have a paycheck with less buying power.
Not only do I think they're not motivated by civic duty, but I think the reason one of the big contributors to why politics is the way it is, is because there is such a substantial portion of American voters
are alienated from the whole thing. Because people, and I should be even more specific than people, especially younger people, millennials and Gen Z, really feel like this is a difficult country to get ahead in. And they're right. And the job market since 2008 for most younger people has
is completely different than it was before. It's much harder. It's much more precarious. An enormous number of them got fired during COVID, right? Their experience was, yes, they may have gotten a check, but it certainly gave them a sense that the rug could be pulled out from under them. And other than a check, no one really cared. Right.
That and in a country where what you do for work is really wrapped up in your identity, they're saying you're not needed. That's why I'm saying it's not civic duty. It's loss aversion. This these are generations of people who have not experienced politicians doing something that's helped their lives, but they sure feel like they've experienced politicians hurting their lives. Can I ask you, Mike, do people do people ask you a lot who you think is going to win the election?
Yeah, of course. And that's why polling is so, you know, so like crack, right? It's like from the Oracle of Delphi on, when we're nervous, we all want to know how it's all going to come out, right? But when you think there's a way it can come out, you forget that it will come out the way that you put your effort into, right?
Aha. Right. And one of the expressions I use is like, stop thinking about these elections, whether they're within the margin of error or not. We know they're all within the margin of our effort, right? That in 2016 in Wisconsin, Trump won by 20,000 votes. In 2020, Biden won by 20,000 votes, right? No survey, even the day before, is going to tell you who's going to win. Right.
But I can tell you today that who wins depends on how much both sides put into the race.
Mike Podhorzer, his sub stack is called Weekend Reading, but you can read it whenever you want. WeekendReading.net. Our show was produced by Miles Bryan and Halima Shah. We were edited by Amin Al-Assadi, fact-checked by Laura Bullard and Matthew Collette, and mixed by Rob Byers and Andrea Christen's daughter. The rest of the party includes Patrick Boyd, Hadi Mawaddi, Amanda Llewellyn, Avi Shai Artsy, Victoria Chamberlain, Peter Balanon-Rosen, and our EEP...
Miranda Kennedy. We use music by Breakmaster Cylinder and so can you. Today Explained is distributed by WNYC. If you're new to the show, FYI, we're a part of Vox. You can support our journalism by joining our membership program today. Go to vox.com slash members to sign up. You can also support us by giving us a favorable review, telling a friend to check us out, getting a tattoo of our logo. You've got options. Thank you.
Support for this show comes from Amazon Business. We could all use more time. Amazon Business offers smart business buying solutions so you can spend more time growing your business and less time doing the admin. I can see why they call it smart. Learn more about smart business buying at amazonbusiness.com.
Canva presents the killer of productivity. It was an ordinary work day until... Oh no, this meeting. It could have been an email. Run. Canva had a creative soul. Get email. I'll just put the info the team needs in a Canva doc. And I'll make it visual with images, charts, and graphics. Bring productivity killers to justice with creativity. Love your work at Canva.com.