to get on the ballot in many battleground states. that effort is underway he s not been certified in several of them, but the signatures are in so that is something to watch for this summer to see what ballots he actually gets on. but long before that the white house, the biden campaign and the kennedy family, the vast majority of them wanted to show that they are supportive of the biden reelection efforts. so we re going to see today in philadelphia on the third day of president biden wing here through battleground, pennsylvania, the strong show of support from many, many, many kennedy s. let s talk about pennsylvania because biden s been there according unions, according to still work hur s this week, one type of voter, if you will, that he is still struggling with is young voters and you spoke to some young voters about younger voters about this. what are they telling you? okay, this has been really interesting watching the president s reelection campaign schedule. he s been cam
so it s not that voters don t support her. but when put up against brown, i think brown just resonated more for that part of cleveland. do you think it s that district or broader? i think it s a broader trend. because in the democratic party you at least have a battle going on about how who s going to control it, and it s about ideology. you ve got the sanders wing, which turner represented versus the biden wing, shall we say, the moderates, jim clyburn very unfluently here. and the moddats have been winning. in the republican party you don t have any battle at all about ideology. it s all about whether you are beholden to the orange god king or not. and which is ideological. and there aren t many who are nontrump. there s a guy craig schneider who just announced in pennsylvania for the senate race who s explicitly nontrump. but those candidates are hard to find. the republican who won in
the good fight but to no affect? they can t get it through their own side. my former party, for all the reasons we talked about. i think it s really important that democrats understand that this isn t a normal time. i think they are looking at this and thinking it s back when the governor was in congress and getting things done. you have a party you can t negotiate with a party ta doesn t believe you are a legally elected president. that s the reality here. to me, when people talk about three parties, there are three parties now. there s a party of no, which are republicans. then there s two parties inside the democratic party. which ultimately can be a strength and reflects more of the diversity in the country. but it s a great challenge. you have to come to grips between the biden wing and the bernie sanders wing. that battle is going to decide, i think, the future of major policy issues. they have to conduct this with the appreciation that what this is really about is preservi
democrats understand this is not a normal time. you have a party you can t negotiate with a party that doesn t believe you re a legally elected president. that s the reality. so there are three parties now. there is the party of no, which is are republicans. and two parties inside the democratic party, which can be a strength and it reflects the diversity of the country. but it s a great challenge, and you have to come to zbgrips, ca it the biden wing and the bernie sanders wing. and that battle will decide the future of major decisions. but they have to conduct this with the appreciation of what this is about is preserving democracy. because if they huz thlose the jim jordan will be the speaker. they will put kevin mccarthy s head on a spike. and they ll move into 24 and
that republicans are comforted by that. i think republicans think the democrats are locked in a duel for the soul of the democratic party between the aoc wing and between maybe the biden wing. right. that they don t even know the answer to the question should we try to get back the two-time obama voter who flipped for trump in erie, pa, in bay city, michigan. some in the media don t know the answer to or don t know if the democrats have consensus. there is two things here. people have substantive commitments. that s the other part of it. there are people right now who feel like we re sitting in 1940, and we have a rendezvous the with destiny and the nazis are sweeping across europe and the attack is going to come and we re going to be engaged in a generational fight with climate change. and those people, i m one of those people, but there are many of those people, millions of those people. that s what they think the stakes are. they re not thinking about, like, what is the right