Plus: Oasis returns, hackers, and a new view into immigration.
August 28, 2024 [View in browser]( [Lavanya Ramanathan]( is a senior editor at Vox and editor of the Today, Explained newsletter. [Christian Paz]( is a senior politics reporter at Vox, where he covers the Democratic Party and the 2024 elections. [Lavanya Ramanathan]( is a senior editor at Vox and editor of the Today, Explained newsletter. And [Christian Paz]( is a senior politics reporter at Vox, where he covers the Democratic Party and the 2024 elections. The Democratic Party's vibe shift, explained [A group of Black delegates, and rapper lil Jon, represent Georgia at the Chicago DNC] Bloomberg Good morning! I'm Lavanya Ramanathan, and Iâm the editor of Today, Explained. Like [20 million others]( each night last week, I watched this yearâs high-energy, [celeb-packed]( Democratic National Convention with plenty of interest. While true policy proposals came at a trickle over the course of four nights, what flowed plentifully were vibes â a palpable exhilaration about the Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, that had largely evaded the party and voters in the months (and maybe years) before President Biden [dropped out of the race](. Michelle Obama [described the Democratsâ vibe shift best]( when she noted at the convention: âSomething wonderfully magical is in the air, isnât it? ⦠Weâre feeling it here in this arena, but itâs spreading all across this country we love. A familiar feeling thatâs been buried too deep for far too long.â But what role does this kind of magic have to play in a highly consequential US election? Vibes, after all, are not votes. Can Harris turn the current burst of excitement into a persuasive argument for undecided and swing-state voters to cast their ballots for her? Today, Voxâs senior political reporter Christian Paz, who covers the Democratic Party, joins us to help make sense of the vibes candidacy, how it could translate at the polls, and what we might be missing in the haze of the excitement. Our interview has been condensed and lightly edited. Lavanya Ramanathan: So, is there really a vibe shift happening among Democrats right now? It sure seems like it. Christian Paz: Yeah, and there are a few ways to quantify that. The first is approval ratings or [favorability ratings]( for Kamala Harris. One of the key things weâve seen is a pretty sharp reversal in her favorability ratings. Theyâve pretty much shot up as people have gotten to know her, as they figure out who she is and what she did as vice president, and just see more of her, because we really did not see a lot of her through her vice presidency. In Gallupâs [most recent polling](, she has a 93 percent favorable opinion rating from Democrats [up from 77 percent in June]. Thatâs a pretty definable vibe shift in her favor. The other way to measure vibe is [motivation to vote](, and that has also changed. Now itâs Democrats who are outpacing Republicans in terms of motivation to vote. In the past, Republicans had a pretty significant lead. Another factor is anecdotal evidence, the fact that thereâs such a saturation of coverage of her, whether thatâs a lot of positive coverage in media, the [memes](, the jokes about brat summer, coconut trees, or coconut-pilling, all of which has generated excitement among younger people. [a shirt that reads ''Childless cat guys for Kamala!''] Bloomberg Why are people feeling this in such a pronounced way now? We had Michelle Obama hinting that the last time we saw this energy was for Barack Obama. Part of the reason people are so optimistic about Harris is that they see her as a change candidate, even though sheâs technically an incumbent. Sheâs part of the administration. People are willing to forgive some of her association with Biden and look past some of the more unpopular parts of the Biden presidency and not blame her for that and give her credit for the more popular aspects. People do want to feel that thereâs a difference in the air, and thatâs why theyâre harking back to the closest thing to that: 2008. There are similarities there: Itâs another Black candidate; itâs a female presidential candidate, which reminds us of 2016. So what weâve got brewing together, I think of it almost like a tea, with notes you remember from the past, repackaged for the post-Trump era. Even if youâre looking beyond the vibes, Harris is up in a few polls in North Carolina, looking to expand the map to Florida, being serious about Arizona, which are some of the same things we were hearing during the Obama campaign, so itâs a fair comparison to make. One comparison we cannot make to Obama is that he had months longer to campaign. People quit their jobs to join the campaign and knock on doors. There werenât just vibes, there was on-the-ground work. I donât know that Harris has that time to reach out to voters on that level. What should people understand about whether vibes will be enough to translate to votes? Yeah, just like weâre cautious of polls, we should be cautious of vibes. Theyâre vibes. Theyâre amorphous, theyâre temporary. I think thatâs why itâs important to remember we are in a bit of a bubble. Itâs an excellent point how compacted and compressed this timeline is. We havenât had a negative Harris news cycle. The last month has been nonstop positive coverage of Harris and we should be ready to see a change in that. Thereâs also been a lot of noise from [the polls](, but Iâve heard from a lot of pollsters that there is now a reversal of what we saw with Trump voters. They call it a response bias, where you have a specific kind of voter who wants to be heard and is more likely to be represented in the polling and paint a misleading picture. That used to boost Trump. As far as how this translates into votes and reality, after we have those caveats, itâs important to remember that Harris is inheriting a lot of the Biden campaign infrastructure. They have [a bunch of money](. And honestly, thereâs been some political science research that shows that the most effective way to reach out to a traditional voter is TV advertising and online advertising, which is why itâs so important that they have so much money to spend. The next best way is to get out and talk to people, and luckily, again, the Biden team has a pretty good infrastructure in place already. They have a bunch more campaign offices than the Trump campaign does, they have them set up in various states, and they have been hiring. Weâll see how much door-knocking we see. In the past, there were some questions about whether there would be enough Biden volunteers who wanted to campaign for him. In that sense, the vibes do matter: Weâve seen a [rush]( of [volunteers]( sign up to help Democrats recently. Thatâs another way to measure vibe shift: In a qualitative sense, [Harris] is making it easier for your volunteers to make the pitch for the candidate. [People wearing shirts that say ''Volunteer, Chicago, DNC 2024'' stand waiting outside.] Bloomberg Iâm really curious. What does all this discussion of positive energy and vibes obscure about this election? There was a lot of behind-the-scenes tension and dissension over the uncommitted delegates, over protests regarding Gaza. We didnât see a lot of that being discussed at the convention. [Harris ultimately addressed some of this in [her closing remarks](.] The other thing is thereâs still a lot of dissatisfaction on the economy and inflation. We didnât hear a lot about that at the DNC. Harris is trying to be proactive on these issues but doesnât necessarily know the best way to speak about them. How much do you want to speak about inflation and remind people youâre part of this administration? Iâm seeing people say Harris didnât talk about interest rates, she didnât talk about the job market. Thereâs also still a chance for the economy to take a negative turn in the coming months, and that would be bad for Harris. The third thing the vibes are obscuring right now is, yes, itâs still a really close race. People are pointing out that Trump is still an average polling error away from winning, and winning pretty big. Thereâs a lot that can still affect how the partyâs liberals are thinking and turning out, a lot that can affect how more moderate and swing-state voters are really thinking. Itâs still really, really close, and thatâs something folks have to remember. If you're interested in more election news â and more than just vibes â check out guides to the actual policy positions held by [Donald Trump]( and [Kamala Harris](. Weâll be updating them as the election continues. And sign up for The election, explained, a pop-up newsletter tracking this unpredictable election season for the next three months. You can see the first edition [here]( and sign up to get it in your inbox [here](. [Listen]( Hackers probably stole your Social Security number Voxâs Adam Clark Estes explains why that might be a good thing. [Listen now]( [Pavel Durov, clean shaven, sits in a black leather chair, smiling, wearing a black Nehru collar jacket and black slacks.] Steve Jennings/Getty Images for Tech Crunch - Telegram in hot water: On Saturday, Telegram CEO and founder Pavel Durov was detained in France as part of an investigation into financial and cyber crimes. 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