Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, everyone, it's Sophia. Welcome to work in progress.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Friends.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
I don't often get to record episodes in person anymore
because once the pandemic began, we all started doing this
on zoom. But today I am coming to you all
from my favorite place in the United States of America,
the White House, And we have so many exciting things
to talk about. Why we're here. No, for everyone who's
(00:38):
going to ask on social like aren't you used to it?
Buy now?
Speaker 2 (00:40):
I will never get used to this. This is the
coolest thing ever.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
But I'm sitting down with our incredible Press Secretary Koreane
Jean Pierre, and there's plenty for us to discuss about
what you do here. But what I really want to
tell the people at home is that, like me, you
are a wildly huge fan of the Olympics.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
I loved the Olympics so much since I was a little, little,
little little Track and field is my thing, gymnastics, ice
skating in the winter Olympics, and I was a track
and field runner in high school, so I did the
fourger intimeter hurdle. So watching the Olympics was like my deal,
the ideal. I loved it, loved it so much.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
I really, I really went into a depression when when
it ended.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
I think everybody is. I think the whole world did. Yeah,
And it was a connector. It like connected. It was
like humanity sportsmanship. It was just beautiful to watch and
we needed it, Yeah, we did. It's a really nice
reminder that we all live in a global community and
we all actually can both compete within reason and root.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
For each other.
Speaker 4 (01:51):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
That's a nice person kind of ethos.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
That's what's so special.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Every four years and I think I think the Winter
Olympics is every two years. I forget now and you
have an opportunity the best of the best just come
together in this amazing sportsmanship and they compete and I
don't know, it's just and everyone gets to root for
whoever they love, what country they represent, and it's a
(02:16):
beautiful thing. It's a there's something about it that's honorable.
It makes you feel very patriotic. Yeah, And it is
not about Republican Democrat if you're looking at the USA
piece of this, it's not about the party you belong to.
It's lifting up these incredible young people who have trained
(02:39):
all of their lives to be exactly where they are.
The best of the best, and then when they embody
that themselves and they are embodying this amazing person that
they all are, and you see that and it shine
and what they have to give up to get there. Oh,
the stories, the stories get me, the stories get made.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
Well, it's hitting me in real time that you you're
talking about Olympians, but you could also be talking about
what you do. You could be talking about advocacy, being
a public servant at this kind of level.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
You know, you.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
Essentially have won the Gold Medal of journalists when you
become the White House Press Secretary, don't you.
Speaker 3 (03:16):
Think, I mean, it is an honor and a privilege
to be the White House pre secretary and to speak
on behalf of this president and the behalf of this country.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
In many ways, when you think.
Speaker 3 (03:26):
About how what we do in that briefing room every
day when we have a briefing, is that we are
exercising democracy, not just here in this country but globally.
It is being televised, right that briefing is being televised
around the world, and everyone wants to hear what the
(03:47):
White House, what the President of the United States is
thinking about X issue? Why issue, How we're responding to
whatever issue is happening, not just domestically but globally, and
it matters, and so it is true, truly tremendous. It
is amazing being at that brief room. Can we can
you can? I nerd out first? I guess because we
are in this room right now.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
Can we just talk about that?
Speaker 3 (04:09):
Well?
Speaker 1 (04:09):
I've taken all the photos of everything in this room so.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
That your listeners watchers know we are in room one eighty.
Room one eighty is literally one of my favorite rooms
on this campus. I'm so glad we're doing this interview
here because it's connected to the question that you asked me.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
So, the White House campus.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
Is on eighteen acres of property, and there's the Eysenower
Executive Office Building, which is a building that we're in.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
The White House is literally right there.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
And Room one eighty used to be right now. White
House staff can book this room, but room one eighty
used to be the Vice President's office.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
Presidents have used this room.
Speaker 3 (04:46):
And we are sitting in the room where doctor Martin
Luther King sat in Martin Luther King Junior sat in
this room back in February ninth, nineteen sixty five, ahead
of the Voting Rights Act, and he had worked very
closely at the time in nineteen sixty five Humphrey was
Vice president, but when Humphrey was Senator, worked really closely
(05:08):
with Humphrey on the Civil Rights Act of nineteen sixty four.
And obviously Black Americans, African Americans in the South could
not vote, and they would do these voting registration events
and it would become bloody, they would get attacked. And
in February, in February of nineteen sixty five, doctor Martin
Luther King came here. He met with Vice President Humphrey
(05:30):
and then had the opportunity in promptum meeting with President LBJ. Johnson,
and the Voting Rights Act passed in August. But in
between there you had bloody Sunday on March seventh of
nineteen sixty five.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
And obviously we all know our history here.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
That's where John Lewis was a young twenty three year
old and who became an icon of the civil rights movement.
Led helped to lead a march across the past this bridge,
and if you look around this room, all of that
is depicted in photos. In pictures, you have the bust
of doctor Martin Luther King. You have these amazing quotes.
(06:11):
Our lives begin to end the day we begin, we
become silent about things that matter, Doctor Martin Luther King.
You have Lyndon B. Johnson a quote I can't see
it from here. And then you have there are those
who say to you, we are rushing this issue of
civil rights. I say, we are one hundred and seventeen
years late.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
That's Vice President Humphree. I mean this is this room. Yeah,
this is this room.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
So I'm glad that we're in here because it speaks
to the greatness of this country when we all come
together for the better good. And I think if you
fast forward to what this president has been able to
do this byan Harrison administration.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
Me being in the role that I'm in, which.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
Is a historic as a historic first people are able
to see a black woman at that podium, standing behind
that lectern, and it changes what.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
A White House Press secretary is supposed to be. Right.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
You think about the Vice president, Vice President Kamala Harris,
the President picking her as her running mate, and she
is a first in her role. You think about Kataji
Brown Jackson. You look across the cabinet secretaries and how
diverse that is. This is the most diverse administration ever ever,
And I think this speaks to who we are. This
(07:25):
speaks to who we are as a country, and this
speaks to where the future and where we can be.
And that has been just going back to your question,
that is what's been so honorable and a privilege to
be part of this administration. When we started this conversation,
you said, you know it's your favorite place. The White
(07:46):
House is your favorite place, and how it never gets
boring or you're never tired of it. And I've always said,
if I ever get tired of coming through those gates
and walking through the West Wing lobby, then I should
not be here. It is always a joy and a privilege.
And I always pinch myself when I am sitting in
my office in the West waiting, thinking, oh my gosh,
(08:08):
I'm here and daughter of immigrants and who never thought
I would be where I am today.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
I'm sorry, that was a very love it. I want
to solve I love it. But that's that's the story.
It's all connected. It is all who we are, it's
our history.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
There are people who will rightfully criticize things about this
country and what I always want to say in response
is yes, and we have work to do, certainly. But
the magic of the American experiment, American democracy founded on
these ideals of equity, equality, that this was a place
(08:49):
where anyone could come and build a dream. They are
perfect ideals, and we have imperfectly stumbled ever closer to
them because we're people. And what excites me about the
way you tell a story like that is it's a
reminder of what we're all working for and tying it
(09:11):
into our beginning talking about loving the Olympics. It really
is a reminder that if you zoom out, if you
get outside of the party argument and you look at
the country, the health of the country, we know that
the more of us that get represented, the better everybody does. Exactly,
And I don't think it's an accident that you and
(09:31):
I get to sit here. You know, you talk about
being the daughter of immigrants. My dad came to this
country in the nineteen seventies, didn't become a citizen until
I was thirteen. My mother's mother came to this country
on a boat through Ellis Island. And to you serve
at the pleasure of the president, I answer any call
that comes from this complex, from any office in it,
(09:54):
as an advocate, as someone who tries to translate policy
into the personal for folks out there, because calms turns.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
Out or my job.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
And we are sitting in this room, and I am
looking at you, sitting under this Humphrey quote. I say,
we're one hundred and seventy two years late. And behind you,
for our friends at home who can't see us, is
the window that overlooks the entrance to the west wings.
It is fifty feet from us. I am looking at
(10:23):
you sitting in front of the view of the door
you walk into your office every day. And it's profound.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
Because it gives you chills. Yes, it is profound. It
is profound.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
We just looked at, you know, the anniversary of suffrage,
which benefited women who look like me, but not women
who look like you. And when we when we see
the way. I've been thinking about this a lot lately,
thinking about you know how some of the suffragettes that
I was raised to think of as my heroes also
were traders to other women in my life and my generation,
(10:56):
friends like you, women like my best friend Nia, and
I have to hold the both and and it isn't
lost on me that any time we fall for the
illusion of making partial progress or thinking will be protected
by proximity to power. Harm is done in the wake.
(11:17):
So white women got the right to vote, but look
at how long it took us to get Roe v. Wade,
to get to nineteen seventy three to have autonomy over
our bodies. People of color didn't get the right to vote.
What we got instead were Jim Crow laws. In the South.
We see the modern day version of those laws being
enacted right now and literally right now. Yes, now, it's
(11:39):
unbelievable to me, you know, learning from Stacy Abrams and
Mark Elias about states that are requiring you to have
an original birth certificate to register to vote. When there
are lots of folks our parents or our grandparents' agent.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Which we have, that they don't have it. It doesn't exist.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
And it sounds familiar, right I started off talking about
this room, what was going on in nineteen sixty four,
voting registration events. It's happening again, and some of it
it's more blatant, right, not as.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
In your face, but in many ways it is in
your face, yes, and.
Speaker 3 (12:15):
So it is, and we have to educate ourselves and
understand what's happening, and we have to protect the people
around us. We have to protect all of us, and
you know.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
We are in a there's a lot at stake right now.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
There continues to be a lot at stake, and we
have to make sure that we're paying attention to what
is happening, not just around the country but in your
own community, in your own community.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
And that is part of why I think I want
to repeat how important it is that you do what
you do every day, because, as you said, for the
White House Press Secretary to get up in front of
the world and talk about democracy and answer questions that
are important, that are difficult or timely, that are local,
(13:01):
that are global, it is an exercising of democratic power.
Is an example setting on repeat, and I think when
you put it in the context of what we see
in the history of this room from the nineteen sixties,
in these modern fights we're having to have about you know,
equity and democracy, you realize why democracy really has to
(13:26):
be a verb.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
You have to act it every day to kick action.
Going yeah, yeah, it's so true.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
Yeah, And it's so interesting too, because so thinking about LBJ,
thinking about the fact this is president Johnson obviously signed
the Civil Rights Act of nineteen sixty four, the Voting
Rights Act of nineteen sixty five, and very recently the
President went to the LBJ Library. We got to see
(13:54):
those very original legislation that was you get to touch them.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Are they are they're just protect Yeah, they're definitely.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
I wasn't sure for the president he could put on
like white gloves and touch up.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
I can't even speak for the president if you got
to see it, but we got to see it as staff,
and we walked around the museum and the library and
it was pretty amazing. And it's all connected, right, we're
all circling here and connecting. And that that day he
went there to speak about reforming of the ways to
reform SCOTUS because of what's been going on there. And
(14:29):
nobody is above the law, right, you got the rule
of law, and this is something that continues. Right, how
do we continue to protect our democracy? How do we
continue to respect the rule of law? And this is
something that we have been doing in this administration obviously
this president for some time for years now, and you're right,
we have to continue to protect that at every level,
(14:51):
at every level, and because if we don't we lose
that thing that you were talking about when you think
about this country and possible abilities, you lose that you
lose what that means that what you can accomplish.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
There and now for our sponsors, and I think it
isn't lost on anyone particularly, you know, when you come
from these great immigrant stories in their individual ways, but
that sort of universal experience of wanting to come to
this country because of what it means. You know, we
(15:26):
have so many people who come here to get away
from autocrats, to get away from dictators, to get away
from court systems that are legal only in terminology but
not in practice. And so to feel our democracy slide
in that direction is very scary.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
And I am.
Speaker 1 (15:46):
I am bolstered by how many people are paying attention
now in ways that perhaps I don't think we were
eight years ago when we were so shocked to lose
to you know, an authoritarian candidate, which I will move
on from. Because you are friends at home.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
I want to read you something.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
This is very important. We're having a history lesson on
work in progress today. So as you know, my friend
Krein is the White House Press secretary. What that means
is that she is an official federal employee.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
She is a federal employee.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
She is not here on behalf of you know, a
president or a campaign. She is limited under the Hatch
Act and cannot discuss the election or the campaign. But
something I find interesting as a civilian. You don't have
to respond to those, but it does feel very important
to atiscate for listeners.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
You just go ahead and sit back.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
If any of you have studied what happened under the
administration of the former guy, I don't like to utter
his name.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
It feels like bad luck to me.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
The US Office of the Special Council did release a
report that over a dozen top administration officials who worked
for I'll say it, President Trump violated said Hatch Act.
There were more than one hundred legal complaints filed. This
creates danger to our institutions because what is means is
it creates a taxpayer funded campaign apparatus within the upper
(17:03):
echelons of our executive branch. This is a huge.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
Breach of conduct.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
So when we talk about the fact that unlike that
Press secretary, this lovely Press secretary will not commit quote
repeated and egregious hatch.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
ACKed violations, this is why it matters so.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Friends, if you did, oh, I would love it.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
Put me up on that podium.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
I will school some people. So if you didn't understand
just just what a legal violation, what happened in that
you know, former admin, looks like now you do read
up on it some more. You're welcome. We're going to
leave that there, but you will all understand at home
why there are certain conversations even though we are leading
into an election, that I can't have with my friend
(17:43):
here because she's not a violator of the law. I
actually want to zoom out from the election, the White House,
your job, which you know I'm obsessed with, but I
actually want to go into the direction of that story
of your parents, because you mentioned how wild it is
for your immigrant parents to watch television and see their
(18:06):
daughter the first black woman to be a press secretary
at the White House, the first black gay woman to
be a press person of white color, that you are
so many first and by the way, may also say, like,
you know, the first black woman to stand up there
with her beautiful natural hair. Because we're out here still
having conversations about the Crown Act.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
Also look that up. Yes, friends at home, please.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
Please, it is so monumental. And it's interesting, right because
folks that have traditionally held power will often say to
women or women of color or people of color, well,
why does your identity have to be everything you talk about?
It's like, well, you won't let me forget what my
gender or race is because y'all are trying to legislate
(18:49):
against my equity all the time, So perhaps you should
focus on it less.
Speaker 3 (18:52):
And they're trying to gaslight at the time about that too,
now all the time.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
But still again, the both and it's not perfect, but
there's possibility. It's why your family came here. Can you
share a little bit of what your parents have told
you about their American dream and paint a picture for
our audience about when they came here and what your
(19:17):
young childhood life was.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
So I love that question because the American dream looks.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
Different for everybody, and some people never obtained the American dream.
And I also want to put that out there because
it is very tough. I mean, while people, many people,
immigrants come here for a better life. We are a
country of immigrants, an opportunity to give our children, our
families a better way of life. You dream about opportunities
(19:45):
that you certainly didn't have where you came from. And
so there is that American dream, but it can be elusive.
And I am my parents' American dream, and they very
much still live check to check, I want to be
very honest about that. But watching me be where I
am today in the White House is a dream come
(20:05):
true for them because one of the reasons they came
to this country is to make sure that their kids
had a better education, and that happened, and it is
it is. You know, my mom gets emotional every time
she watches me on TV. I remember bringing her to
the White House state dinner, the very first one that
(20:27):
we had with France, which was December, which was in
December of twenty twenty one, I believe, or I can't
remember twenty one, twenty twenty two, sorry, twenty twenty two,
and she met the President for the first time. She
cried and he was so phenomenal. President Biden opened up
his arms and she put her head in this chance
and she was just weeping, and she thanked him. And
(20:50):
it was after that night, either that night or the
next morning, she said to me, that was the best
night of my life because it all came together for her.
You know, my parents are from Haiti. When they left Haiti,
it was a dictatorship and they wanted better. They wanted
better for themselves, better for their children. So they came
to the States. We went to France first, so actually
(21:13):
lived right outside of Paris for a little bit. Then
came to the US and my dad became a New
York City cab driver.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
I mean, it's that story that you hear over and over.
Speaker 3 (21:24):
My mom was a home health care aid and they still,
you know, did those jobs for a very long time
and very much still live.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
Check to check.
Speaker 3 (21:34):
You know, my mom looks for her pension and you know,
her Social Security check every month. We try to help
her navigate through the medical system, right, We tried to
help her navigate through through now that she is a
senior citizen, helped her navigate through that and make sure
she's being taken care of. Same with my dad, and
(21:55):
you know, now we're taking care of them.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
But it is I think of them and.
Speaker 3 (22:01):
What they told me I was a kid that I
would come home crying because I was made fun of,
teased for you know, the way I looked or you know,
the way I dressed, whatever it was because we didn't
have much growing up, and my parents would say, don't
listen to them, and they would tell me how special
I was. They would tell me I can do anything
(22:21):
it is that I wanted to do.
Speaker 2 (22:23):
And they were my biggest.
Speaker 3 (22:25):
Cheerleaders, obviously, my biggest supporters, and I would not be
here without them. And it was tough growing up. It
was really really tough and having my parents there and
they would never it's so it was very interesting. I'd
come home and I would be crying and I would
be really upset or I would tell them what happened
(22:46):
once they got home, and they never went into the
issue or the problem, right, They never like dived into it,
and they were just kind of they just like brush
it off. It's okay, we know how special you are.
It doesn't matter what they say. You are the best
of the best, you know. And they made me feel
(23:07):
really proud of who I am and who I became
to be obviously as an adult. And my mom, I
talk about her a lot because I watched her be
a fighter through every job that she had, everything that
she did for her kids, everything that she did for
her family, and she had such strength and grace and
(23:30):
that's hopefully what I embody, you know, strength, grace, and
appreciation for people, respect for people, respect for myself, and
just continuing just working hard until you get to the
yes or until you get to the accomplishment that that
goal that you set for yourself. And she was one
(23:51):
of the most impressive people that I've ever met. And
the first hero hero that I ever had was my
mom and that continues even now. I watch her sometimes
and I'm like, how do you continue to fight?
Speaker 2 (24:04):
You're always fighting? Uh. And it is the most the.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
Most the most honorable thing, the most beautiful thing that
I've ever witnessed. And so that's it's very much it's
like a third of who I am, Right, there are
many reasons not who I am, but a third of
how I got here, Yeah, right, which is that foundation,
how I grew up, what I saw as a kid,
my experiences. It's very much a big part of who
(24:29):
I am today. And I never forget that. I never
forget that, and I try to, you know, empower that
into my daughter and uh, and it's important for me
to do that too.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Yeah. I read you know, your your memoir is so beautiful.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
At Home.
Speaker 1 (24:50):
Green's book Moving Forward is amazing, and you you talk
so much about your journey and that book, and one
of the things that really stuck out to me, you said,
you've felt like a third parent, oh your household, which
I think is a very common experience for daughters of
immigrants and oldest daughters certainly. And I wonder how some
(25:13):
of those things that can certainly shape us in tough ways,
how do you see that sort of third parent role
now as the accomplished woman that you are. How do
you make space for the ways that it was difficult
but also likely made you this powerhouse of an adult.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
So, yeah, I had to become an adult at a
very young age. Because my parents were working six seven
days a week. I barely saw them, you know. I
remember there would be a time where I would go
to bed and I would try to wake up early
to see them, but they were already gone. And because
they were working twelve fifteen hour days, and I had
a younger brother, a younger sister, and I took care
(25:54):
of them.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
You know, we had babysitters and neighbors.
Speaker 3 (25:57):
Who watched watched over my siblings, but you know, I
played a role in making sure that they were okay.
They were being fed, they got ready and to go
to school, and I became an adult. You don't even
realize it at the time. At the time, you're just
doing your part for the family. You don't realize that
you're growing up very fast and you're missing out on
(26:21):
a lot of the fun, a lot of the kids
stuff that kids do, And so.
Speaker 2 (26:25):
I didn't have that.
Speaker 3 (26:26):
I think now that I have a kid, that part
of my childhood informs me as a mom. And what
I mean about that, mean about that is oh mean
by that is you know, I try to I'm very
very mindful and my kid having a childhood, I'm very
very mindful in what I share with her and what
(26:48):
she experiences. I'm very very mindful of how important it
is for her to hang out with her girlfriends or
hang out with her buddies and have those structures, time structure,
And it might sound minor, but because of my experience,
it plays a role into her experience and how I
mother her, would be a parent to her because just
(27:09):
obviously luckily for her two moms, but it is really
important to me and how I my part of the
co parenting, how I make sure that she has a
fulfilling childhood because I want her to have that.
Speaker 1 (27:25):
Do you feel like in certain ways because you missed
round one childhood play?
Speaker 2 (27:31):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (27:32):
That Now raising a daughter on your own, yeah, you
get to almost relive your childhood as her friends.
Speaker 4 (27:41):
It's like, oh, yeah, now I get to do Oh
this is what this was like I was a kid, right,
I do get to have some fun and ride around,
like bike.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
Riding and doing fun things and I don't know.
Speaker 3 (27:55):
You know, you know, double dutch or whatever it is
doing the things that I wasn't able to do as
a kid, and you know, hide and go seek all
the fun things.
Speaker 2 (28:06):
And like you become like.
Speaker 3 (28:07):
This adult child with your kid rightly because you're having
fun with them and you're experiencing things that you wanted them,
you would have wanted to experience yourself for them.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
Yes, And it's so interesting to me thinking about it
being in this stage. You know, we're so many of
the people in our lives, you know, have kids of
their own yea, or in relationships with people with kids.
We are also the generation that has the most access
to information that's right, mental health research. Yeah, you know,
(28:35):
I don't think our parents knew about reparenting your inner child.
But we do, and we I think it's so cool
that we get to be conscious of it when it's happening.
Speaker 2 (28:46):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (28:46):
And you just said something mental health. That is something
as a kid I couldn't when I was you know,
when I was sixteen years old coming out to my mom.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
It was you know, it.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
Didn't go well, right, and then you deal with all
the emotional baggage from that, and you don't talk about
going to therapy or we didn't talk talk about going
to therapy or dealing with your.
Speaker 2 (29:06):
Own mental health.
Speaker 3 (29:07):
And now today it is something that is so important,
that is so key and people just functioning and.
Speaker 2 (29:15):
Dealing with loss.
Speaker 3 (29:17):
You think about coming out of COVID and the pandemic
and what these kids had to deal with, and that
is one of the things that I'm you know, one
of the platforms that both the First Lady and the
President talk about is mental health. And when you hear
it at the top, right, when you hear it from
an administration, a White House administration, then.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
It feels safe for all of us to talk about.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
And yeah, it's it's so important because we didn't talk
about that growing up.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
I didn't talk about that growing up, especially in immigrant household.
You don't talk about.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
That stuff well because you're working so hard to assimilate
and be good exactly, and you know, not have a problem.
Don't look over here.
Speaker 2 (29:56):
Yeah, yeah, and you don't want to stick out. I
don't want to stick out.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Back in just a minute after a few words from
our favorite sponsors, do you think hearing it from the
top down in the way that you're discussing, because I
feel very similarly, you know, in whether it's entertainment, you know,
my day job world, or my partner doing this advocacy
(30:22):
in sport. I believe, I know we all do. We
believe that vulnerability can really be a key to new
and healthier community.
Speaker 4 (30:32):
Do you.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
Think it was what you learned in those vulnerable spaces
or perhaps examples set by people you know like President
and doctor Biden? What inspired you to be so vulnerable
in your book? Because I'm asking this, you know, a
as an interviewer, but also as a person who is
considering how much I want to share of my own life,
(30:57):
because when you do these jobs and you are a
public figure, to be reduced to a fraction of yourself
is painful. But to share your deepest secrets with everyone
is so exposing, and you took my breath away in
(31:17):
really special ways because in the book you shared about
really difficult experiences, but they're common for a lot of women,
from you know, suicidal ideation or attempting to sexual abuse.
You you just put it out there. I am so
in awe and also wondering how you decided and knew
it was the right choice.
Speaker 3 (31:39):
So I think for me, and it's a good question
because sometimes I'm like, wow, I really put it.
Speaker 2 (31:43):
All out there the bookshelves.
Speaker 3 (31:48):
So I believe it was a way of owning my story, right,
And I think of power, I think that's exactly right,
and it's too it's reclamation of power a thousand percent,
but also being a leader and leading and showing that
it's okay to be vulnerable, and also telling people I
(32:13):
see you too. If people see me, then I hopefully
they also feel like they're being seen, if that makes
sense at all. And so there were a couple of things.
It was certainly reclaiming myself my life by telling my truth,
but also sharing because I felt like at the time
(32:36):
I had a leadership role. People were looking towards me
and I was, you know, a leader for so many
people that I felt like it is important to put
that out there and I want people to heal, and
maybe by sharing my story, hopefully others will heal or
get on the path of healing.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
And I think it matters for people.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
Know, it goes back to what you were saying about
being the first and being the first of so many.
Representation matters, It really matters. And I think it's connected
to the book as well. It's like representation is so important.
And when people see you and you break that visual
whatever mindset of what a particular role is supposed to
(33:22):
look like, and you break that and you're and it
opens up to you and you're saying to yourself, oh, yeah,
you know what, I can do that role because look
at her, look at him, look at them, look at
that person, and you can break how that's visualized for people.
And I think if you tell your story, it also
you don't know what people are suffering from or dealing with.
(33:46):
And so if you're a public figure and you're out
there and people see you, because we were not all perfect,
people look at you and they're like, and you're a gorgeous,
beautiful woman, and people say, oh, she's so much perfect.
Speaker 2 (33:58):
But you've had your trials relationship.
Speaker 3 (34:00):
O kay, right, And I think if people know that,
then they're like, holy cow.
Speaker 2 (34:05):
Yeah right.
Speaker 3 (34:06):
It's like, you know, Sophia has made it and she's
wonderful and she's a wonderful person, but she has a
story to tell and we all that helps me.
Speaker 1 (34:14):
Yeah, And I find to your point, the willingness to
share in that way when you said someone might see
that and begin to heal. I think so often, whether
you've been through trauma or abuse or whatever it might be,
you get convinced by the lie that something happened to you,
(34:35):
that maybe you deserved it. And when you realize how
universal these experiences are, we can start doing some of
what happens in an incredible building like this, and we
can look at the root causes of these systemic problems
and say, Okay, if we have a mental health crisis,
if we have a problem with violence against women, how
(34:55):
are we going to solve those problems? How can we all?
And to your point about representation, we've got to have
diversity of thought and experience in the room, because that's
how none of the problems get left in the corner
where someone didn't see them because someone didn't have them.
You know, a lot of people bark about the way
(35:16):
we talk about diversity and representation, and what I always
want to encourage them to realize is that the more
of us there are in a room, the better the
outcomes for everyone, including the people who used to be
the only ones in rooms.
Speaker 3 (35:30):
Life exactly exactly. And it's very interesting too. I mean, look,
I talked about how diverse this administration is. I talked
about my role here. Obviously we've gone back and forth
about being the White House pre Secretary, but I honestly
don't think that I would be the White House pre
Secretary if it wasn't for President Biden, Doctor Biden. And
(35:53):
I say this because you have to have people who
believe in you as.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
Well, who see you in the way that they see you.
Speaker 3 (36:02):
And I think that matters. Representation matters, but you also
have to have those allies, those mentors, people who look
up and say, no, you should be exactly where you are,
or you should be even elevated even more. And I
don't think I would be in this position if it
wasn't for them. They wanted to make sure that their
(36:26):
White House pres secretary represented yes, and their voice.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
But also you know, you know.
Speaker 3 (36:32):
The country and meet the moment that we are in,
and I think that matters too, Right, It matters that
Lyndon Johnson LBJ signed the Voting Rights Act, signed the
Civil Rights Act. Right, it matters that, you know, doctor Martin,
Luther King and so many other civil rights icon they
came together to get that done. And it takes that,
(36:53):
It takes that effort to get that done. And so
you fast forward to today and all of the work
that where we still need to get done in the
historic work that we have gotten done, and it takes
all of us, all of us to come together and
make that happen.
Speaker 1 (37:08):
So when you talk about the President and the First
Lady having that kind of faith in you, you know,
I want to give some of the folks at home
a little bit of the background of how this happens
because prior, you know, to being in the administration, you
were a senior advisor, You were a national spokeswoman for
move on dot org, which is an incredible, incredible advocacy group,
(37:32):
and then you became a senior advisor to the president's
campaign in twenty twenty.
Speaker 2 (37:37):
Yeah, how and then I was I don't think many
people knew this.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
I became for the last three months of the twenty
twenty campaign, I was the chief of staff to the
running mate, which was oh wow.
Speaker 2 (37:48):
Then Senator at Kamala Harris. So it's like full circling
in many ways.
Speaker 3 (37:53):
And then when I came into the White House, I
went into the press shop.
Speaker 1 (37:57):
Yeah, well, so you have this wonderful history of advocacy.
Speaker 2 (38:01):
Yeah, you know that.
Speaker 1 (38:02):
I think we'll get into a bit about what you
learned at home and what you learned in your early career.
Can you tell folks at home how does one become
a press secretary?
Speaker 2 (38:13):
What is your job?
Speaker 1 (38:15):
We see you in the briefing but what happens here
all day? For the people that say, I think I
want to do that, but like they don't.
Speaker 3 (38:21):
Really know what happens outside of the daily brief Oh
there's so much more that happens outside of the briefing room.
Speaker 2 (38:29):
But I see the hum.
Speaker 1 (38:30):
Around your office at the times.
Speaker 2 (38:33):
I know, but I a lot that happens.
Speaker 3 (38:36):
So in a regular day, I wake up pretty early
in the morning and I start taking in the news,
whether it is you know, the print, online, TV. I
just start kind of consuming what's out there, what's the
news of the day, What's happened, what are what are
the things that reporters care about, in particular, the White
(38:57):
House Press Corps cares about, because those are the reporters
that we deal with. I have twelve amazing people on
my team who are part of the White House Press Office,
and they all have their own kind of issues that
they manage that they're working on. They're constantly working on stories.
And I come into the office, I have meetings. I
(39:17):
have meetings all throughout the morning, and the first meeting
that I have starts at seven thirty am in the morning,
and so we do that, and then I spent about
four or five hours prepping for the briefing, and I
have people to your point, you know, zipping in and
out of my office coming through prepping me and getting
(39:38):
me ready for whatever news of the day issues that
reporters care about. And then I do a briefing that's
up to between thirty minutes to an hour. Sometimes I
have a guest, sometimes I don't, and so that takes
a big chunk of my day. But I also have
to prep the president sometimes, travel with the president, work
through work with other departments, across the admitting on particular
(40:01):
issues that they're dealing with U and so, and I'm
in a lot of meetings that I have to, senior level,
senior level meetings that I'm in because we have to
it's not just about the day, but it's about what
are we doing three months from now, two weeks from now,
next week, And so there's a lot of planning, a
lot of prepping, a lot of you know, there are
(40:22):
fires that you have to just get rid of takeout.
And so I always tell my team they are on
the front lines.
Speaker 2 (40:29):
They are on the front lines of what.
Speaker 3 (40:30):
Is happening in the world literally in the country and
certainly in the world with the incoming of questions and
things coming from.
Speaker 2 (40:38):
Reporters, and so we are on the front lines.
Speaker 3 (40:41):
I call them superheroes because they're pretty amazing and what
they're able to do. But also, you know, the person
that I that I have to that I have to
report to as the president directly, you know what's in
the news, what's going on, what's happening, and so it
is a it is a twenty four to seven job,
(41:01):
of course, and it is an I always say this
because it's very true. It is an honor and a
privilege to be in this job because I would never
thought that I would be doing this when I was
growing up.
Speaker 2 (41:11):
Is going to your question here. I thought I was
going to be a doctor.
Speaker 3 (41:15):
My parents, being immigrants, they wanted me to be a doctor,
a lawyer, engineer, those are the things, right that they thought.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
I relate the joke in the heavy Italian needs. There
you go.
Speaker 1 (41:26):
I would get that you can be a doctor or
a lawyer, or a lawyer or a doctor.
Speaker 2 (41:30):
Love it, I love it.
Speaker 1 (41:31):
I was like the grandparents.
Speaker 2 (41:33):
I love it, I love.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
It, and for them that was success. And I thought
that's what I was going to do.
Speaker 2 (41:38):
And then I.
Speaker 3 (41:38):
Decided coming out of college that I didn't want to
be a doctor.
Speaker 2 (41:42):
That that wasn't my passion.
Speaker 3 (41:43):
So what I tell young people that come up to
me and asked me about how I got to where
I got to the secret to my success? Whatever question
did I get? I always say to them, follow your passion,
Follow what you're passionate about. And sometimes you'll be in
a place where you're.
Speaker 2 (41:58):
Like, well, am I going to pay my bill? How
am I going to get to New York?
Speaker 3 (42:01):
How I'm going to get to LA How I'm going
to get to wherever you want to get to to
live those dreams or dc in this instance, and I
say to them, worry about it, obviously, but don't worry
about it at the same time.
Speaker 2 (42:13):
Right, if you're passionate, you'll find a way.
Speaker 3 (42:15):
You'll find a way to get through that and really
continue to build on that dream that you have for yourself.
Speaker 1 (42:21):
Yeah, we'll be back in just a minute. But here's
a word from our sponsors. Well, and something I think
is really amazing. And again I want to be very
respectful of what you're allowed to be not allowed to
say as a federal employee. But it is not lost
on me that you grew up in a home with
(42:43):
a mother who was a care worker. Yeah, and that
you currently work for a presidential administration that has done
more for care workers, the care economy, and people in
need of care than any administration in history. I mean
a couple of things I'll.
Speaker 5 (43:02):
Just say because I don't know if you again, I
don't know if you're allowed to, but that would be
your miss go for it as a citizen journalist not
to But you know, our current administration, President Biden and
Vice President Harris have put these issues squarely into not.
Speaker 1 (43:18):
Just an agenda on healthcare, but the economic agenda. They
have invested in the dignity of care workers, which includes
affordable childcare, paid family leave, paid medical leave, elder and
disability care, living wage jobs for care workers, which you
know to be so important for our friends at home.
In April of twenty twenty three, they signed one of
(43:40):
the most sweeping executive orders, actually the most in history,
over fifty directives made to make care more accessible and affordable,
which meant that another one hundred thousand American families have
more affordable childcare and more of the issues I listed
a moment ago. And I don't know if in your
(44:01):
conversations in this complex the care economy and care workers
come up a lot, or if it happens to be
a coincidental confluence of who you are and who they are.
But I guess I wonder again, not to get into
the politics of it, as we have an impending election,
but I wonder how your mom's caregiving experience, how it
(44:24):
shaped your relationship to your public service, but what it
feels like to work in an administration On a day
when those executive orders get signed.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
It's mind blowing.
Speaker 3 (44:34):
Truly, It truly is mind blowing because to your point,
I think many of us come into this life of
public service for many reasons and my guesses, and I
can only speak for myself, my experience as growing up
as a kid, as a young adult has certainly led
me to this space because I wanted to make people's
lives better because I saw what my parents were going through,
(44:57):
whether it was healthcare, whether it's just a minimum wage
that they could afford, buying a home, you know, buying
a car, paying student loans, helping us pay our student loans,
going through school, and I watched them really suffer. I
watched them go through a lot of heartache, and you know,
trying to just put us in the best schools that
(45:18):
they can. And I think I talk about this, I've
talked about this. I remember they sent us to Catholic
school and the reason we went to Catholic schools because
the public school system was not great where I grew up.
I went to public school for one year, and my
parents worked really hard to get me into public school.
And I remember there'd be times where I would be
(45:39):
sitting in the in the principal's office because they didn't.
Speaker 2 (45:44):
Pay they couldn't pay that month, and I had to.
Speaker 3 (45:47):
But they understood that I couldn't stay home because there
would be nobody home and my parents had to work.
So they allowed me to come to school, but I
had to sit in the principal's office until my parents
could pay the tuition. I mean, those are the story
is that not just my parents have, but many others have. Yeah,
And so working in this administration, you think about elder care, childcare,
(46:08):
paid leave, the cancer moonshot. We just went to New
Orleans to announce a major initiative coming out of that.
Speaker 2 (46:16):
You think about all.
Speaker 3 (46:17):
Of these initiative that matter personally to me and to
so many others. But this is why I came into
this space. This is why I'm working for this administration.
I told the President recently he would be the only
person that I would ever do this job for because
I believe in the work that he wanted to get done.
Speaker 2 (46:37):
And you think about.
Speaker 3 (46:39):
The first four months, for example, of this administration. We
got something called the American Rescue Plan.
Speaker 2 (46:45):
Ye got that done.
Speaker 3 (46:46):
Only Democrats in Congress signed, voted for that. The President
was able to sign. No Republicans signed onto that. And
what that did was. You think about the economy. It
turned the economy back on its feet. Are the strongest
economy in the world, leading economy in the world. And
you think about that moment what was happening. There was COVID,
(47:08):
There was a pandemic, a once in a century pandemic
that was devastating the economy.
Speaker 2 (47:13):
Schools were closed, businesses were closed.
Speaker 3 (47:16):
And we needed to get things back up. That American
Rescue Plan put a few hundred bucks in people's pockets.
There was a child tax credit which helped, you know,
eliminate some of the poverty that we were seeing communities
like mine.
Speaker 1 (47:32):
I mean in poverty reduction, a reduction in childhood poverty
of overs.
Speaker 3 (47:38):
A couple of hundred bucks in people's pockets that matter.
Shoot everything right, so that you think about communities that
are overlooked, black and brown communities, poor communities. This is
a president that made sure that there was equity at
the center of that so that they were able to
get that vaccination, that they were able to.
Speaker 2 (47:57):
Get what was needed to get them back on their feet.
Speaker 3 (48:00):
Nineteen Now there's more than nineteen million applications for small
businesses because of the American Rescue Plan, because of the
president's economic policies and putting equity at the center of it. Yes,
so we turned that around, and that's why many of us.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
I could speak speak for many of my colleagues.
Speaker 3 (48:17):
That's why we're here because of that public service and
what we get to do, whether it's the economy, whether
it's these different policies that deal with childcare, elder care,
paid leave as you just mentioned. I mean we just
recently the President made a huge announcement with the Vice
President and the first ten drugs that Medicare is now
able to negotiate so that big farmer doesn't cheat us.
Speaker 2 (48:40):
Yes, billions of dogs, six billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (48:44):
That matters to cap insulin for people at thirty five dollars.
Speaker 2 (48:48):
That matters, matters to people.
Speaker 1 (48:50):
I read the testimony of a young delegate who went
to the convention for the first time this year, and
you know, he's a college kid and applied and he
was taught talking about how he and his mother both
have Type one diabetes and how what the Biden Harris
administration has done to ensure their access to the medicine
they need to stay alive. Is the reason he's gotten
(49:12):
politically active as a young person, and I just thought
that's it.
Speaker 3 (49:16):
You know, polics is personal, right, Politics is politics personal?
Speaker 1 (49:20):
Yes, And you know, when you talk about the economy,
one of the things that was so inspiring to me
to see the domino effect of the American rescue plan,
you know again, COVID global crisis, once in one hundred
years pandemic, the world shut down, and to see some
of our pure nations experiencing inflation at eighteen twenty one percent,
(49:42):
and President Biden and Vice President Harris brought ours down
so quickly that we actually began to stabilize the entire
global economy. We not only got our inflation to a
historic low without causing a recession, which again, for my
friends at home, google it, this is a real thing.
Speaker 2 (49:58):
This is math.
Speaker 1 (50:00):
It's the first time we've been able to do that
without causing a recession in history, and other countries' inflation
rates are coming down because of our economy.
Speaker 2 (50:10):
Leadership matters, It matters so so much. Leadership, and it's the.
Speaker 1 (50:15):
Sort of thing that excites me because now to see
that they've stabilized the economy in this once in a
hundred year crisis, and now they're going after the price
gouging of the big corporations. They're going after, you know,
creating fair prices for pharmaceutical companies. And the DOJ is
suing this crazy housing software that's been jacking up everybody's rent.
(50:36):
I am like, go off, mister president, Madam Vice President.
Speaker 2 (50:40):
I love y'all. Like I can't speak to what the
DOJ does. Wow, you can.
Speaker 6 (50:45):
But I am the civilian on this podcast and I
read about it yesterday and I'm very thrilled and like,
it is such an incredible thing to see action being
taken on behalf of people.
Speaker 2 (50:56):
And again we need to talk about the student own.
Speaker 1 (51:01):
I forgive this predatory, predatory death. It doesn't it doesn't
actually have to exist.
Speaker 2 (51:07):
It doesn't have to exist, and it thrills me.
Speaker 1 (51:09):
To see all of this, and I, I guess I
just wonder, you know again, you represent so many intersections, yea,
as I know I do in my own right, and
I just I know how meaningful it is for me
as an advocate, you know, as a surrogate for this
campaign and others, as someone who comes here on my
(51:31):
free time, you know, spends my own money to be
here to speak, to show up and testify in front
of Congress because I believe in my duty as an
American to my fellow Americans. For you to be inside
of this administration like you actually work here. I'm clearly
the biggest fan of.
Speaker 2 (51:51):
This place, but you and we appreciate you.
Speaker 1 (51:54):
Is it the wildest thing to see this much sweeping,
incredible historic policy for the people while you work here.
Speaker 3 (52:03):
So two things I want to say. Two things I
want to say. First of all, thank you for your
leadership and your advocacy. And it is amazing what you
do on your own time on the issues that you
believe in, and you use your voice, you use your platform.
Speaker 2 (52:16):
It is not easy to do and I understand that.
Speaker 1 (52:18):
I know I'm a pain in the ass, but I
can't know.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
But it matters, like we need more Sophias, like we
really do. We need more people like you to be
out there using their platform to lift up.
Speaker 2 (52:30):
The people who can't right, the people.
Speaker 3 (52:32):
Who don't have the ability to lift themselves up on
issues that matter. And you know, I talk about equity.
I talk about making sure we don't leave different communities
that are historically left behind behind And this is I mean, look,
I start off saying why I decided to work for
the Biden Harris administration. Why I decided to work for
(52:53):
this particular president is because I believed in his leadership
and believed in what he wanted to do and knew
because of his experience because he was senator, because he
was Vice president, that he knew how to get this done.
Speaker 2 (53:05):
And you're right.
Speaker 3 (53:06):
There has been a sweeping amount of legislation that people
had told us that we could not get done. Yeah,
from the American Rescue Plan to the bipartisan infrastructure legislation.
And the last administration, infrastructure was a joke. Every two
weeks it was infrastructure.
Speaker 2 (53:21):
It was a joke. And now we got it done
any bipartisan way. Because of who.
Speaker 3 (53:27):
He is, he was able to reach across the aisle
and get this done and it's no longer a joke.
We got the Packed Act, which helps our veterans right
and their families, Yes, and got that in a bipartisan way.
We got the chips and science that we're talking about
bringing manufacturers, manufacturer manufacturing back here to this country, which creates.
Speaker 2 (53:47):
Good paying job.
Speaker 3 (53:48):
I mean that matters things made in America. I mean,
this is about investing in America, and it's so important
We already talked about the health the health care side
of things with the Inflation Reduction Act. Also the biggest,
biggest climate climate change kind of legislation investment into beating
climate change, dealing with climate what we're seeing right now.
Speaker 2 (54:10):
He got that done.
Speaker 3 (54:11):
And so you know it is you started off saying this,
that this he's going to go down as one of
the greatest presidents of our lifetime because of what he's
been able to do in four years. Yes, in four years,
and it's because of his experience. It's because he's been
here in Washington, d C. For a long time, but
also understood relationships and understood what mattered to people and
(54:35):
who he is fundamentally at his core, how he grew
up in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and in Delaware and knowing what
it's like to sit around a kitchen table and having
to make those difficult decisions. I know as a kid,
you know who was as adults had to become adult
as a young kid. You sit around the kitchen table
(54:56):
and you're looking at the expenses, You're looking at your
opening up that says past you on the envelope, and
you're trying.
Speaker 2 (55:03):
To figure out Holy cow, how we're.
Speaker 3 (55:05):
Going to pay to make sure the lights stay on,
you know, how to make sure that we have enough
clothing or enough enough to make sure that my brother
and my sister are able to You know, it's winter
this year.
Speaker 2 (55:18):
You know we're going to get a big storm, right,
winter is coming.
Speaker 3 (55:20):
How do make sure that they have a coat and
boots so that they can go to school? I mean,
this is the things food around the table, and so
these are the hard, difficult decisions. So I get it,
and I think that's why for me, just talking for
myself personally, how I'm able to talk about these issues
in a real way because I've experienced it, and I
(55:40):
know this president has experienced it, and I know it's
all coming from this administration. The Bien Harris administration is
coming from a place where we understand what it is
like when you don't have when you don't have the
medication that you need, the life saving medication that you
need to survive to just survive.
Speaker 2 (56:00):
And so it is.
Speaker 3 (56:02):
It's it has been quite remarkable being able to be
at the front lines of what we've done at this
administration and to be able to to lift up what
we've been able to do it is.
Speaker 2 (56:19):
It has been quite remarkable.
Speaker 1 (56:20):
I mean, I just imagine you almost feel so incredibly proud.
Speaker 2 (56:24):
And yeah, I'm so proud.
Speaker 1 (56:26):
You have such incredible you have an incredible ability to
reflect on how change happens the nation. And you know,
we are on the precipice of change with our president
saying I've done my duty here and it's time to
pass the torch. You know, we we are in this
(56:47):
incredible season of you know, transformation and leadership. And to
see him do that, not only for such a wonderful
and tremendous vice president, but for a black woman, Yeah,
a black South Asian woman. It's it's monumental to me
as a woman.
Speaker 3 (57:01):
And it is, yeah, it is. It's emotional, it's incredible.
But it's not surprising.
Speaker 2 (57:09):
Yeah, right. If you think about.
Speaker 3 (57:10):
The last three and a half almost four years, if
you think about his commitment, if you think about him
saying he was going to be a transition type of president,
if you think about him picking then Senator Kamala Harris
to be his vice president, it is not surprising.
Speaker 2 (57:27):
It is not, and you know.
Speaker 4 (57:32):
It is.
Speaker 2 (57:33):
It is.
Speaker 3 (57:34):
It is rare that you meet someone who meets the
moment and understand their place in this moment and is
the embodiment of patriotism. Yeah, it's the definition of what
patriotism is.
Speaker 2 (57:53):
And that is Joe Biden.
Speaker 1 (57:56):
I love that when you think about it, big moment
for years, thanks for it, big all it's big. Yeah,
and you think about the country and you think about
the world. How do you come back into your own
body in a moment like this and think from here
out as you look at the next few months, in
the next few years, what feels like you're work in progress?
Speaker 3 (58:18):
Wow, it's this is gonna probably sounds weird, But I
think the next four or five months now wherever we are,
it's probably gonna be the most important couple of months
that we have experienced, only because there is so much
more to get done. Only because now we know, right,
(58:39):
we have four months to get this done, four months
to get that done, and so we want to and
I believe, and I'm speaking for him here a little bit.
I think he wants to continue to keep that commitment.
So there's still, to your point, a lot of work
in progress. We still have to figure out how do
we lower costs for Americans. Sure, we still have to
figure out how do we beat these cooperations who are
(59:01):
trying to take advantage of of everyday people and there
are ways that we can do that. Right, there's still
a global leadership that we have work to be done there,
and I know that's something that is something that the
President has led on. So I think there's like a
anxiety and eagerness, you know, to be like, oh my gosh,
we still have a lot.
Speaker 2 (59:21):
More to get done.
Speaker 3 (59:24):
And for me, yeah, just for you, oh my gosh,
for Green like working Pross, like what else in the
next couple of months.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
It doesn't have to be about work, could just be lfel.
I mean, listening to you rattle all this off, I'm like,
you're working. Progress needs to be a vacation at a cocktail.
Speaker 2 (59:42):
But I don't know what you feeling.
Speaker 3 (59:45):
And man, you know, look, I have this amazing little
human that I get to co parent with co parent,
and I want to do right by her, and that
is a major work in progress for me is how
do I continue to do that work? And so that
is big and that is something that I certainly will
(01:00:06):
I will be doing for the rest of my life.
Because you're a parent throughout your life obviously doesn't stop
at eighteen it continues I have I have a long
way to go before eighteen hits anyway, So that's really
important my family. More broadly, I think I'm still growing
and learning about myself and want to contell I feel
(01:00:27):
like I'm still very much a work in progress and
will continue to be in things that I want to
learn and grow into and be And it's to be
it's going to be exciting. You know.
Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
I've been in the space for three and a.
Speaker 3 (01:00:44):
Half years right, very much focused on the work. And
I always tell people in you're a White House pre secretary,
there's no prime there's no personal life, right that you
I go to the grocery store and people see me
as the last pre secretary. You don't see me as
career Jean Pierre. So it is going to be a
transition of Okay, how am I no longer the Whitales
(01:01:04):
pre secretary and now I'm Krue Jean Pierre again?
Speaker 2 (01:01:07):
And what does that look like for me? And so
I think it's something that I have to think about.
I can't wait to find out. Oh gosh, thank you,
thank you,