JUDY WOODRUFF: And now for their take on this
week in politics, we turn to Brooks and Capehart.
That's New York Times columnist David Brooks
and Washington Post columnist Jonathan Capehart.
Mark Shields is away..
So, hello to both of you.
Let's start with the coronavirus, David.
As we just heard in Amna's conversation with
the head nurse there in Houston, these cases
are surging. Hospitals -- some hospitals are
having difficulty. We are seeing cities set
new records across the South and the West.
But President Trump says things are going
well, that he expects things to get better
in just a couple of weeks. He's now insisting
the schools open in the fall.
What do you make of the president's approach?
DAVID BROOKS: Well, this is a -- just a tough
disease.
Why is it rising in California and Florida,
with totally different lockdown rules? It's
rising in countries that seem to have been
doing well. I think epidemiologists are now
humbled by what a complicated and tough disease
this is.
It's just not a help that Donald Trump is
detached from all that, detached from the
reality of the disease, detached from Anthony
Fauci. He hasn't spoken to really the best
person in America to talk about this. He hasn't
spoken to that guy for two months, it turns
out.
And so he's living in a different world, which
would be bad enough, but he's polarized the
country, successfully polarized the country.
A few weeks ago, I was on the program, maybe
a couple months ago, talking about all the
bipartisanship there was. There was a lot
of -- back in March and April, people were
reacting, not as Republicans and Democrats,
but as one.
You got these 77 percent majorities. That's
really not the case as much anymore. We have
the president and FOX and the polarization
industry has successfully turned this into
a left-right thing, which is just crazy. It's
a disease.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And, Jonathan, I mean, it is
the case the president is now criticizing
Dr. Fauci. And he's insisting the schools
open. He's threatening to withhold federal
money from the schools.
JONATHAN CAPEHART: Yes, which, when you have
a global pandemic that is spiking all over
the country in most of the states, and then
you have the president of the United States,
who, as David was saying, is not following
his own guidelines for helping to keep the
pandemic in check, the idea that we are talking
about opening schools and forcing schools
to open, when there's no national strategy,
no vaccine, and 50 different ways of going
about trying to tamp down the pandemic, strikes
me -- and I'm not a parent.
And I understand that parents are concerned
about their children's education. But sending
children to schools in the middle of a pandemic
with no national strategy, I think, is worrisome.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And, David, it -- I mean, there
are arguments to be made. Surely, children
need to be in school. The American Academy
of Pediatrics made that case this week.
But you combine that with what you mentioned
a minute ago, the president now criticizing
the man who's arguably the most trusted person
in the country when it comes to this disease,
to COVID, Dr. Fauci, what -- I mean, is there
a strategy there that you see that in some
way is going to benefit the president?
DAVID BROOKS: Well, I don't think it's going
to benefit.
If you look at his polling, back in the -- when
this started, at least the lockdown started
in March, he at one point reached a spot where
he -- 55 percent of Americans approved of
his COVID handling. Now it's down to 33 percent.
And those numbers have really plummeted in
the last two weeks or so, as reality has dawned
on Americans that we're losing to this virus.
And America is not fooled by what's going
on. Donald Trump -- and they know Donald Trump
is out of touch. Opening the schools strikes
me as a classic problem that should, A, be
settled into some sort of subtle way by people
who know what they're talking about.
And maybe, in some places, you can open the
schools, and maybe you can't. Politics is
about competing goods. And competing goods
are getting kids educated, getting parents
some relief, and keeping them safe.
And so it should be possible in local areas,
in New York, maybe, where the disease is not
so good -- or is not so high, to strike some
sort of workable way to do this.
But having an all-or-nothing and forcing schools
to do stuff strikes me as insane.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And, Jonathan, what we're both
-- what you're both getting at, I mean, this
idea of rejecting the CDC guidance on schools,
of -- again, of criticism of Dr. Fauci, rejecting
science, is the president taking a risk by
doing that?
JONATHAN CAPEHART: Oh, absolutely.
The president going up against Dr. Fauci is
a -- that's a fool's errand. Dr. Fauci is
a world-renowned, world-respected scientist.
He has been in that job for multiple decades.
He knows what he's talking about.
And if the president were cognizant and capable
of ceding authority to someone, he would allow
Dr. Fauci to go out there, tell the American
people on a daily basis, here's where we are
with the pandemic, here's what we need to
do, here's what you can do to protect yourself,
your neighbors and your families, and, if
we do this together, we can overcome this.
It's going to take some sacrifice, but it's
worth it in the short term for the long-term
benefits.
We don't have that. What we have is a president,
as David said, is living in his own -- in
his own reality when it comes to the pandemic,
trying to wish it away, happy-talk it away.
But as we see with the rising cases of coronavirus
and the rising death rates in a whole lot
of states around the country, the American
people on the ground in those states are bumping
up against the reality, a reality that the
president of the United States refuses to
see.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Separately, David, the president
got bad news and good news, I guess you could
say, in split decisions by the Supreme Court
this week, cases wherein there was an effort
to gain access to the president's personal
financial records, the court ruling the president
has no absolute immunity from prosecution,
as his lawyers had argued.
Does the president -- does the office of the
presidency come away changed? And what about
the effect on this president himself by these
rulings?
DAVID BROOKS: Well, there won't be much effect
on President Trump, because he will litigate
this at lower courts, and we will not see
tax records before the election.
The -- I think it's important to establish
that the president does have to reveal tax
records. And whether that's done that the
Supreme Court or through legislation which
is being talked about, that's a good precedent.
It does strike me that, for a conservative
court, this has been a pretty bad month for
the president. John Roberts again and again
has said, this is -- it's not a -- this is
an administration that doesn't do things correctly.
And he slapped them down repeatedly for not
doing things correctly on abortion, on a whole
series of rulings, religious liberty.
Conservatives have no reason to be happy with
the last month of the court. It's striking
to me that this is the case.
JUDY WOODRUFF: What do you make of it, Jonathan?
I mean, it was John Roberts who wrote these
decisions, and it was -- it was the two justices
President Trump appointed, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh,
who voted against the president on this case
involving the Manhattan DA.
JONATHAN CAPEHART: Well, what this tells me
is that those justices sided with the rule
of law and sided with the Constitution.
The president, when he talks about -- about
the Supreme Court, and particularly his two
appointees to the court, he talks about them
as if he owns them, that, because he put them
on the court, that they will side with him
no matter what the case is. As long as he's
for it, they're going to be for it.
And what we saw with all of these decisions
-- I'm glad that David brought that up -- the
president's been smacked around by the Supreme
Court in their rulings.
And what -- especially with the cases, the
rulings that were handed down yesterday, the
court is saying, our fealty is not to the
president. Our fealty is to the Constitution.
And the Constitution says that the laws apply
to every man, and that man also includes the
president of the United States.
And so, for a president who thinks that the
world revolves around him, that people work
for him, literally work for him, the ruling
says, no, we don't work for you. We are here.
We have taken an oath to the Constitution,
not to you.
JUDY WOODRUFF: I want to bring both of you
back to the other fellow who's running for
president this November, Joe Biden.
This week, David, he -- and I guess they were
calling it a task force. The Biden camp and
Bernie Sanders were looking at ways they could
put together an agenda that would be acceptable
to the folks who support Bernie Sanders.
What do you make of this? It's a look at some
of the things that Joe Biden says he wants
to do if he's elected president. I mean, is
-- is this the kind of progressive agenda
that's going to appeal to those fervent Bernie
Sanders supporters?
DAVID BROOKS: Yes, I would say this.
The Sanders-Biden reconciliation has been
made easier by the fact that we're in a depression
or a severe economic recession. And so there's
a lot of room for government action.
And I would say, Biden has made some concessions
to the left, I guess, you want to call it
that. But he hasn't done anything that would
scare away voters, like Medicare for all or
anything like that.
What's really striking to me is -- in his
economic announcements this week, is that
he's talking like Donald Trump. He's got a
populist rhetoric of America first. And it's
a different version of America first, but
this is not Bill Clinton, or, frankly, Barack
Obama's Democratic Party anymore, which was
a free trade party and a more open party.
This is, we have to secure our own supply
chain. We have to move away from China. We
have to close in and serve America first.
And so this is -- looks like Dick Gephardt,
if people remembered Dick Gephardt. This was
the Democratic Party he tried to lead us toward
decades ago. And economic populism is here.
JUDY WOODRUFF: I remember him well.
And, Jonathan Capehart, in rolling this out
yesterday, Joe Biden is talking about buy
American first, support American workers.
President Trump reacted and said: He's plagiarized.
He's taking my ideas away from me. He's copying
me.
JONATHAN CAPEHART: Which is rather interesting,
because I didn't think that the -- that President
Trump was a progressive, that President Trump
was someone who was looking at getting his
ideas from the -- from the left.
The idea that President Trump and Bernie Sanders
have something in common is actually kind
of kind of laughable.
But what's interesting -- what's interesting
here is -- and I agree with David that, sure,
both Vice President Biden and President Trump
have -- both have an America first agenda,
but they're coming at it from different ways.
And I think that President Trump comes at
his America first agenda from a very dark
place, from a place where it's America turning
its back, not only on the world, but, in a
lot of ways, on its ideals, whereas I think
President -- Vice President Biden and, in
his plan, what he is trying to say is, we
are in a mess. We are in a global pandemic.
Our economy has imploded.
The pandemic has shown that there are issues
with our supply chain that also have an impact
on how health care is delivered, which you
could also make an argument is a national
security issue.
But the overall thing that I take away from
what Vice President Biden put out yesterday
and that he will be putting out over the days
and weeks ahead is, he has an agenda for where
he wants to lead the country. He is giving
a rationale to voters for why they should
vote for him and have him lead the country
for the next -- over the next four years.
When President Trump was asked that same question
in an interview a few days ago, he could not
give a forward-looking answer.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, it's a reminder there
is an election under way. It's easy to forget
sometimes, because there's a whole lot else
going on. But it's a reminder.
And we want to thank both of you, David Brooks,
Jonathan Capehart. We appreciate it.
DAVID BROOKS: Thank you.
