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Wednesday, November 27, 2024

On Politics: John Fetterman wants Democrats to stop freaking out

'Buckle up and pack a lunch, because it's going to be four years of this.'
On Politics

November 27, 2024

John Fetterman in a plum-colored short-sleeved shirt and standing in a hallway. A gold-plated elevator is visible behind him.
Senator John Fetterman, Democrat of Pennsylvania, in Washington this year. Eric Lee/The New York Times

Fetterman to Democrats: You need to calm down

The latest

Senator John Fetterman wasn't in Washington for the first Trump administration. But he has a few ideas about how Democrats should handle the second.

He wants his party to accept its losses. He wants his party to chill out a little. And he wants his party to please stop with all the hot takes about what went wrong in November, since Democrats have four long years to figure it out.

Fetterman has some experience taking on President-elect Donald Trump's G.O.P. He won his seat in 2022 after overcoming a near-fatal stroke and beating the Trump-endorsed Dr. Mehmet Oz, who has since become the president-elect's pick to run Medicare. As the Democratic Party reckons with its losses in places like Pennsylvania — where Trump beat Vice President Kamala Harris by 1.7 percentage points and Bob Casey, a third-term Democratic senator, lost his seat — I called Fetterman.

Our conversation was the first in a series of interviews I'll do in this newsletter about the path forward for the Democratic Party. Drop me a line and tell me about others you want to hear from.

This interview was edited for length and clarity.

Incumbent parties struggled or lost elections around the world this year, particularly in Western democracies. Do you think the Democrats' losses in November were inevitable?

That's a question worth asking. I had a lot of concern — there was a couple of one-offs. One of them was the assassination in Pennsylvania. I think some people seem to forget that, or how incredibly dangerous that was for a nation, God forbid, if he would have been mortally wounded. But the kind of imagery and the kinds of energy that emerged from that, absolutely, I witnessed that on the ground in Pennsylvania. I thought, well, that might be ballgame.

Then, Musk was involved. He was described as moving to Pennsylvania. And sometimes that doesn't really mean much, but he was an active surrogate — and I mean, his checkbook was helpful. That wasn't really the defining facet for me. I was concerned that he's going to have a lot of sway with a part of the demographic that the Democrats have to win, and we've struggled with.

You're talking about the tech billionaire Elon Musk, but what's the demographic in question?

Whether it's the "bros," that negative term that perhaps even your publication uses, as a negative — it's the bros, or, you know, males, blue-collar guys, just people. It's very rare, in my opinion, that surrogates have "fanboys." Making fun of him or make light of it, you do that at your peril, because it is going to matter.

How do you think Democrats should be talking to bros, and should be talking to men, and should be talking to working-class voters?

Have a conversation. Have a conversation with anyone that's willing to have an honest conversation. That's always been the rule, and that's what I'm going to continue. I've had conversations on Fox News, and they've played me straight. I've shown up on Newsmax, and they've played it straight. And Rogan. Rogan was great. He was cordial and open and warm.

Why was it important to you to go on Joe Rogan?

I'm a fan. I'm a huge fan of Bill Maher, a huge fan of Colbert.

Why do you think Democrats have struggled with men?

It's already migrated. In 2016, I was doing an event with the steel workers, across the street where I live, and I was noticing different kind of energy with this, with Trump. It was clear at that time that people were voting for Trump. And the Democrats' response was, "Aren't they smart enough to realize they're voting against their interests?" And that's insulting, and that's, I mean, that's, that's just not helpful. It's condescending. And if anything, that reinforces that kind of stereotype.

Telling them that "I know better than you do," that's not helpful.

In 2022, you won your Senate race by almost five points. It wasn't particularly close. Why do you think you did so much better in 2022 than Democrats in Pennsylvania did in statewide races in 2024?

A lot of different kinds of things converged in this cycle. So, in some sense, it's not perfectly analogous to compare '22 to '24. Trump absolutely is a much more compelling top of the ticket than Dr. Oz, or, you know, the ultimate Democratic candidate dream of Doug Mastriano.

Is there something that you think you understand, though, about the recipe for success in Pennsylvania or the voters you need to talk to, that other Democrats don't?

I don't have "You should, you should, you should." This is "I do, I do, I do."

The opinions and the hot takes from the safety of, like, a deep blue seat or state, that doesn't really count for much.

The things that they say, and those kinds of positions, are filling the clips that the Republicans unload on us in states like Pennsylvania.

How do you think the Democratic Party needs to change right now?

I don't give advice except on fashion. Again, I want to thank your publication for putting me on the best-dressed list, so you understand why I am a fashion plate.

Do Democrats need to do an analysis of what went wrong? And, if so, who should do it?

We're not even at Thanksgiving, and Democrats just can't stop losing our minds every fifteen minutes. We really need to pace ourselves, or, you know, for FFS, just grab a grip. Realize that this is how elections go. At least for the next two years, they're going to have the opportunity to write the narrative and to drive the narrative.

Trump is assembling a cabinet of people many Democrats find deeply objectionable. How do you think Democrats should respond?

I'm just saying, buckle up and pack a lunch, because it's going to be four years of this. And if you have a choice to freak out, you know, on the hour, then that's your right. But I will not. I'm not that dude, and I'm not that Democrat. I'm going to pick my fights. If you freak out on everything, you lose any kind of relevance.

Do you think Democrats have done too much freaking out when it comes to Trump?

It's symbiotic. One feeds off the other. The Democrats can't resist a freakout, and that must be the wind under the wings for Trump.

I saw a quote from you where you referred to, the Matt Gaetz pick, as "God-tier-level trolling."

Obviously! The response or the opinions on the Democratic side aren't interesting. They're not. They're not surprising. The real interesting ones are going to come from my colleagues on the Republican side.

It sounds like you want Democrats to be quiet and let Republicans have their own fight.

All I'm saying is, the freakout and all the anxiety and all that should have been before Nov. 5.

Does clutching the pearls so hard — does that change anything? Did it work? Did it change the election? Was it productive? And, like, I can't believe the outrage. That has to be candy for Trump.

You said Democrats needed to pick their battles. What's one you'd choose?

I'm not going to pick one before Thanksgiving.

One analysis of the election that we've heard from your colleague Senator Bernie Sanders is that Democrats failed to recognize how bad people were feeling about the economy, about the country generally, and failed to name a villain. Do you agree with that analysis?

I do not.

Why?

I think there was a lot of other issues. I would even describe them as cultural. Walk around in Scranton, tell me what an oligarch is. I think it's like, "Whose argument is the closest match to the kinds of things that are important to me?" And I think some of them are rooted in gender and worldviews, and even backlash of things like cancel culture.

I witness people, now there's specific kinds of clothing. They call it Blue Collar Patriots. I'm willing to bet you know who they're voting for.

And why is that? I don't think it's because we haven't talked enough about oligarchs, and how it's rigged.

What do you think Democrats need to do to bring about the kind of cultural shift you're talking about?

For a party that's had way too many bad takes, we should take our time.

Two white turkeys stand on a lawn in front of the White House.
The turkeys pardoned by President Biden on Monday are set for retirement in Minnesota. Eric Lee/The New York Times

The luxe life of a pardoned turkey

One minute, you're staying at a lush hotel in Washington and strutting on the White House lawn. And then, before you know it, you're in the back of an S.U.V. for an 18-hour drive, dreaming about your custom retirement cottage.

Such is the life of a pardoned turkey.

This week, President Biden pardoned Peach and Blossom, making them briefly the most famous birds in America as he marked a holiday ritual in the waning days of his presidency.

It's not yet clear what Biden will do next, but Peach and Blossom headed straight to Farmamerica, an agricultural educational center in Waseca, Minn., where they will live out their retirement in a specially built coop.

They'll have 24-hour access to fresh water and feed. And a livestock nutritionist has been consulted about "a well-balanced diet for the turkeys, so they can maintain a healthy weight," said Jessica Rollins, the center's executive director.

The turkeys will greet their public on Friday, when the farm will host a turkey trot. Peach and Blossom themselves will not be trotting in the freezing weather. They'll be nice and warm inside the visitor center.

"I have anxiety because we have nice carpet down," she said, "but we have plastic that we will put over that."

Happy Thanksgiving, all! I'll be off until Monday, eating a turkey that was not spared. In the spirit of the holiday, thank you, dear reader, for making time for this newsletter in your own busy schedule. See you next week!

MORE POLITICS NEWS AND ANALYSIS

Roy Cooper giving a speech at a lectern and gesturing with his right hand.

Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

North Carolina's Democratic Governor Vetoes a G.O.P. Power Grab

Republicans have a supermajority in the state's legislature and may move to override Gov. Roy Cooper's veto, which would set off a new fight over state power and hurricane aid.

By Nick Corasaniti

A wide side exterior of the White House at dusk.

Tierney L. Cross for The New York Times

White House Memo

Two Presidents, Two Policies, One Superpower: America in Transition

Even as President Biden brokers a cease-fire in Lebanon, President-elect Donald J. Trump is running his own foreign policy without waiting to be sworn in.

By Peter Baker

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. smiles while in the midst of a densely packed crowd with President-elect Donald Trump, House Speaker Mike Johnson and others at a UFC event at Madison Square Garden.

Al Drago for The New York Times

On Big Pharma, Food and Agriculture, These Are Kennedy's Unexpected Bedfellows

When it comes to weeding out corporate influence, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s ideas often align best with some of Trump's loudest critics.

By Emily Baumgaertner

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Doug Mills/The New York Times

Trump Team Signs Transition Agreement but Shuns F.B.I. Clearances

President-elect Donald J. Trump's team will have some formal briefings with outgoing staff members, but it has so far refused to allow the F.B.I. to do security clearances for transition members.

By Michael D. Shear

Boris Epshteyn walking inside of a courthouse, wearing a pink tie and a dark three-piece suit.

Doug Mills/The New York Times

Top Trump Aide Accused of Asking for Money to 'Promote' Potential Appointees

President-elect Donald J. Trump ordered the investigation by his legal team into Boris Epshteyn, a powerful figure in the transition. Mr. Epshteyn denies the allegations.

By Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan

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Have feedback? Ideas for coverage? We'd love to hear from you. Email us at onpolitics@nytimes.com.

Nate Cohn, The Times's chief political analyst, makes sense of the latest political data.

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The Evening: A truce in Lebanon

Also, Trump picked an envoy for Russia and Ukraine.
The Evening

November 27, 2024

Good evening. Here's the latest at the end of Wednesday.

  • A cease-fire in Lebanon
  • Trump's Russia-Ukraine envoy
  • Plus, your Thanksgiving menu
Packed cars on a road.
The roads out of Beirut, today.  Daniel Berehulak/The New York Times

Thousands of Lebanese head south as a fragile peace begins

Roads heading south of Beirut were packed with bumper-to-bumper traffic today as thousands of people returned to war-ravaged towns. The movement came as a cease-fire began to take effect between Israel and Hezbollah after more than 13 months of bloodshed.

Under the agreement — mediated in part by the U.S. and approved by Israel and Lebanon — Israeli forces will withdraw from Lebanon over the next 60 days. Hezbollah, which had been weakened, isolated and desperate for the war to end, will move its fighters north. And the Lebanese Army announced today that it had dispatched some of its forces to the country's south.

Still, questions remain about the durability of the truce. The Israeli military declared a curfew tonight in southern Lebanon and shelled two villages there, saying that it had identified a vehicle in "a zone prohibited for movement."

In northern Israel, where tens of thousands of people fled to escape barrages of Hezbollah rockets and drones, there was no apparent rush back to the evacuated towns.

President Biden said he hoped the cease-fire could pave the way to an end to the war in Gaza, but experts doubt it. Palestinians there said that they had lost hope that the war would ever end.

Keith Kellogg is shown wearing glasses and a blue suit.
Keith Kellogg in 2020 Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times

Trump picked an envoy for Russia and Ukraine

Donald Trump announced today that Keith Kellogg, a retired lieutenant general who worked in the White House during Trump's first term, would be his envoy to Russia and Ukraine. In the newly created position, Kellogg is likely to play a crucial role in Trump's effort to bring a swift end to the war in Ukraine.

The president-elect has nearly finished his cabinet picks. He announced his top trade negotiator and the head of the National Economic Council, roles that will be crucial to his plans of imposing heavy tariffs on products from Canada, Mexico and China. He also selected Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, a Stanford physician who opposed pandemic-related lockdowns, to be the director of the National Institutes of Health.

In other politics news:

Gisèle Pelicot arriving at the courthouse in Avignon, France, today. Alexandre Dimou/Reuters

France's mass rape trial nears its end

France has been shaken by the trial of Dominique Pelicot, who pleaded guilty to drugging his then-wife and inviting men to rape her. Prosecutors this week requested the maximum sentence for him: 20 years in prison.

The French news media has called the 50 other men on trial "Monsieur Tout-le-monde" — Mr. Every Man — because of how varied the men are, and how ordinary. They appeared in court over 10 weeks, offering small glimpses into their lives. The court is expected to deliver its verdicts next month.

A bin with plastic bottles.
Nathalia Angarita for The New York Times

The plastic industry is trying to win over hearts and minds

Documents leaked from an industry group show how some of the world's largest petrochemical and plastics companies have been waging a campaign to push back against a "tide of anti-plastic sentiment." The industry group worked with social media influencers to promote plastic bottles and deliberately obscured its connection to the campaign.

This week, nations are gathering in South Korea to hammer out details of a global plastic treaty that would tackle pollution; the industry opposes the deal.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

Four images of roast turkey, cranberry saude, spinach and stuffing.
Bobbi Lin for The New York Times; Christopher Testani for The New York Times; Craig Lee for The New York Times; Bobbi Lin for The New York Times

It's time to cook

The countdown to your Thanksgiving meal has begun and the more dishes you can cook ahead of time, the smoother the holiday will go. Many of our Cooking staff's favorite recipes can be prepared tonight.

If something goes wrong, you can always replace or redo it. Our fastest roasted turkey can be ready to serve in 45 minutes.

If you're looking for last-minute inspiration, we have dozens of great recipes. We also gathered some of the biggest names in cooking and culture to share their tips. Stephen Colbert urges you to skip the turkey, Dolly Parton shares her cranberry mold recipe and Padma Lakshmi likes mixing global flavors into Thanksgiving staples.

If you make too much, don't worry. Stuff your leftovers into a tortilla.

A parade float of a large turkey.
Amir Hamja/The New York Times

Turkey isn't the only Thanksgiving tradition

Tomorrow morning, tens of millions of Americans will tune in to watch the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade — likely more viewers than for the Oscars, the World Series or any live TV show. While the parade has been an annual staple since the 1950s, it only became the most-watched entertainment show in the U.S. the past three years.

This year, forecasters are predicting rain. Here's how to watch.

When the parade's over: We have some ideas for what to watch with your family and friends, depending on whether you want to laugh or delve into an adventure.

An area on an unfinished cruise ship has a vast open space between several decks of cabins. Above, the sky can be glimpsed, as it can be through an opening at one end of the space where a giant slide is being constructed.
An 11-deck-high slide was installed on the stern of the World America. Ceylan Yeginsu/The New York Times

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

A plate of French toast with bananas, syrup and nuts.
Linda Xiao for The New York Times

Cook: Ipo Pain Perdu is French toast with a Polynesian twist.

Watch: "The Seed of the Sacred Fig" is a powerful drama about Iran's government.

Read: These are nine of the most anticipated books of December.

Wear: Teeny, tiny T-shirts are back.

Prepare: Discussing your advance care directive can make life, and death, a bit easier.

Gift: Wirecutter recommends these delightful stocking stuffers.

Play: Here are today's Spelling Bee, Wordle and Mini Crossword. Find all our games here.

ONE LAST THING

A rotation of four images of a brown and white dog in different men's wear outfits. Two are suits and ties, one is a suit and a polo shirt and one is a suit and a striped shirt.
Yena Kim & David Fung for The New York Times

Remembering a men's wear influencer

For more than a decade, the fashion world has been enchanted by a Shiba Inu named Bodhi. He modeled for Coach and Salvatore Ferragamo, wore smartly tailored sport coats and buttery cashmere and even had his own fashion lookbook.

Bodhi, who became better known as the Menswear Dog, died this month at 15. His images will long be remembered. "I can only imagine that wherever he is, he's still getting 'fits off," one admirer said.

Have a distinctive holiday.

Thanks for reading. We'll be off tomorrow for Thanksgiving. My colleague Justin Porter will write this newsletter on Friday. — Matthew

Emree Weaver was our photo editor today.

We welcome your feedback. Write to us at evening@nytimes.com.

Evening Briefing Newsletter Logo

Writer: Matthew Cullen

Editors: Carole Landry, Whet Moser, Justin Porter, Jonathan Wolfe

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

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