Intro - A longtime
colleague and friend of Vice President Kamala Harris this week on "Firing Line." - My question for all
of you tonight is this. This November, who's
ready to defend the dream? (audience cheers) (speaks foreign language) (audience cheers) Kamala Harris will
defend the dream. And between now
and election day, each of us must
defend the dream, too. - [Margaret] He
holds the Senate seat that belonged to Vice
President Kamala Harris. - Congratulations,
Senator Padilla. - [Margaret] Senator Alex
Padilla is the first Latino elected to the United States
Senate from California. The son of Mexican immigrants, he went on to attend MIT and planned to become
an aerospace engineer. But he was inspired
to enter politics amid the immigration
debates of the mid-1990s. - It was a wake-up call. We can either put our
head in the ground, wait for political
times to shift, or we can get engaged. - [Margaret] He has known Vice
President Harris for decades. - She's smart, she's
strategic, she's tough. And she's got a big, big heart. - [Margaret] With less
than 11 weeks to go until Election Day, what does Senator
Alex Padilla say now? - [Narrator] "Firing Line
with Margaret Hoover" is made possible in part
by: Robert Granieri, Vanessa and Henry Cornell, The Fairweather Foundation, and by the following. Corporate funding is
provided by Stephens Inc. Alex Padilla - Senator Alex Padilla,
welcome to "Firing Line." - Thank you so
much for having me. - You are the son of
Mexican immigrants who met in Los Angeles
where you were raised. - Yes. - You worked as a janitor to
help support your education at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, MIT. And you are now here in Chicago as the senior senator of
the state of California, introducing another Californian, Vice President Kamala Harris, to the United States as
the first woman of color to be nominated by a major party as President of
the United States. Is this an only-in-America
moment for you? - Only in America. Still kind of sinking in. And to look at Vice
President Kamala Harris, I mean, that in and of itself, but the Democratic nominee for president of
the United States, from one child of
immigrants to another. It's pretty special. It's pretty amazing, and pretty meaningful
for the country. It's one of the main
reasons my wife, Angela, and my boys are with me
here at the convention, because this is literally
history in the making. - What do you hope
America learns from you about Kamala Harris? - The country is getting
to know the Kamala Harris that we've known for
many, many years. When she was attorney general, I was serving in the
California State Senate. We worked together when she was taking
on the big banks during the Great Recession. I was secretary of state when she was serving in
the United States Senate. Fearless, right? Trump and his cronies were quaking in their
boots way back then, watching her lead from that
dais in Judiciary Committee. She's amazing. She's smart, she's
strategic, she's tough, and she's got a big, big heart as you get to know
her as a person. Whether it's... She loves to laugh, she loves
to joke, she loves to cook, just all the human elements you would want in
a great leader. And our country is gonna
be better off for it. - You and she are part of a new generation of
California Democrats who are both more diverse
and more progressive than your previous
generation of Democrats. What did it take
for you to get here? - Yeah, it wasn't
easy. (chuckles) But it's a great thing
about California. Not just the United States,
but especially California. We're home to more immigrants than any state in the nation. And guess what else? We're the strongest
economy by far of any state in the nation, and those two things
are not a coincidence. You know, the economic
strength of California is not despite our diversity
and our immigrant population, it's because of it. And that is really a foundation
for policy leadership for the rest of the country. But to your point, it has not come easy. You know, I was fresh
home from college. I graduated with my
mechanical engineering degree from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology at a time when politics in
California was very different. I mean, I literally came
home to ads on television, the governor of
California at the time saying the economy
is going downhill and it's the fault of
families like yours and communities like yours,
immigrant communities. - Well, I wanna ask you
about that specifically. - Yeah, please. - Because you talk about
how Prop 187 in California really ignited your
passion for politics and got you involved. In 1994, California voters
voted by a wide margin in favor of proposition 187. This is a bill that would
have denied basic services to undocumented immigrants, like education and health care. Listen to this debate
on immigration in 1995 from the original "Firing Line," in which proposition
187 came up. Take a look. - Every poll, every poll taken shows 2/3 of the American people in favor of reducing
illegal immigration and, indeed, legal immigration. Look at the results
of Proposition 187-- - Let me tell you something
about the American people-- - 4 million people and
a half voted in favor. - Since you're an
immigrant yourself. Let me tell you something about the American
people in polls. In 1950, all the polls showed that they were in favor
of segregation, too. Didn't they? The American people, in
terms of what the polls show, is not the way we do
business in this country. Proposition 187 - So Prop 187 was
declared unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment, which guarantees
equal protection regardless of
citizenship status. But why did this awaken, and how did this change the
trajectory of your life? - Yeah, Proposition 187
wasn't a matter of policy. As you said, it was deemed
unconstitutional by the courts. Never went into effect. But what it did for
immigrant communities, not just the Latino
community, but the more broad, diverse immigrant
community in California, it was a wake-up call. We can either put our
head in the ground, wait for political
times to shift, or we can get engaged. We can become involved
in the process. And that's what happened. A lot of people like my parents, who had been living and
working in California for years, if not decades with no real desire or
urgency to become citizens, finally changed their mind. Not just, you know, for fear
of potential deportation. My parents were legal
residents at the time. But they knew that they
had no political voice if they weren't citizens and couldn't register
and couldn't vote. - So that encouraged them to actually begin the
process for citizenship? - Absolutely. And my generation of young
people seeing our parents and our communities
being political targets. If we wanted to change that, we had to get involved
in the political process. So if you look at the
electorate of California today, much more diverse, yes, much more progressive
in our thinking, but a far cry from
the politics of then, which sadly became a precursor for a lot of the politics we see in other parts of
the country today. When Donald Trump
demonizes immigrants, his rhetoric of "poisoning
the blood of our country," that's not unfamiliar for us. But you're seeing these
diverse communities throughout the country now also awakening, engaging, and will have a
political influence. Not just this November, but for cycles and decades
to come, I believe. So that was my
introduction to politics. And very similarly, I think, because of the
politics of the time, a young Kamala Harris
pursuing political involvement and activism and
running for office. And she's had a
tremendous trajectory. - So immigration and the
border are top issues Immigration in this campaign. You were one of a
handful of senators that voted against a
bipartisan border bill. And it's reported that you also successfully
encouraged other senators to go against leadership and not support this
bipartisan border bill. - I urge you to join me
today in doing what's right for dreamers, farmworkers, and other long-term
undocumented members-- - You gave an impassioned
speech on the Senate floor, saying that history would judge
senators who voted for it. How will history judge those
senators who voted for it? - Well, the good news is, I think we've come back
into a better direction since that debate
and those votes. You know, my issues
with the package, even though it was negotiated
on a bipartisan basis, were twofold. Number one, it was
proposing to make what I believed were
unconstitutional changes to our asylum system. Right? It's part of our
international obligation that people who are fleeing
persecution, et cetera, have the opportunity to seek
asylum in another country, including the United States. But second, if the true concern or challenge that people
are trying to solve is the number of people coming to the southern border
of the United States, you know, you can make
the asylum process as hard as you want, it's not gonna stem the flow unless you identify and
address root causes. And so that's what I've seen from the White House since then, and what I've heard from
Vice President Harris even more so since then. Let's talk about the border. We all agree we need a
secure, orderly, safe border. But we will not stem the tide unless we work with our partners
throughout the hemisphere to address the
migration challenge. And we cannot, in this broader conversation
about immigration, forget about the millions of
people in the United States who have been here for
years, if not decades. Dreamers, farmworkers, others, so many who are working
in essential jobs for our nation's
security and our economy. They deserve better than
to live in the shadows in fear of deportation. So we need to be more
holistic in our thinking and in our approaches. - So was your contention or
your bone to pick with the bill that it was too narrow
and only about the border, that it didn't take
a holistic approach? - Yeah, my issue was
it was very narrow. It was enforcement only, replicating some policies
that were proven to fail during the Trump administration. - Which ones? - But thankfully, since... You know, just arbitrary
closures of the border is not gonna stem the tide. When people are
fleeing abject poverty, authoritarian regimes,
violence, et cetera, that's gonna be the case anyway, regardless of our changes
to the asylum system. Bidens Executive Order - In June, President Biden
issued an executive order that suspended the entry of
most migrants across the border. And you said at the time, quote, that you are "beyond
disappointed" at the policy and that it was, quote,
"unconscionable." Is it your view or hope that a President Kamala Harris will change that
executive order? - There's certainly
some refinements that will probably be in order. But again, the additional news since President Biden signed
that executive order is, he followed that up just
a couple weeks later with relief and protections for long-term residents
of the United States who happen to be undocumented but who have a United
States citizen as a spouse. You know, a simple change, like being able to apply
for a change in status without having to leave
the country first. That leaving the country
provides a lot of uncertainty. So that's now different. President Biden has restored
some of that balanced approach of enforcement with
relief as necessary. And the other thing
that's happened, since the first executive order, is additional engagement
between not just President Biden and Vice President Harris, but other administration
officials with their partners, with their colleagues in Mexico, in Central and South America. And the result that we've seen, the lowest numbers of people
coming to the southern border than at any point during
the Biden administration, and even lower than it was at the end of the
Trump administration. So, again, a more thoughtful,
more comprehensive approach is what's effective
and sustainable. - What do you make, then,
of Julia Chavez Rodriguez, Kamala Harris's
campaign manager, suggesting that Biden's
border policy will continue? She said, quote, "I
think at this point, "the policies that
are having real impact "on ensuring that
we have security and
order at the border, "they will continue." - Yeah, they're gonna continue. They'll continue to be
refined and improved, and they're gonna
continue to be built upon. Like I said, it's not just
an enforcement only strategy. - Have your views on that
executive order from June changed fundamentally? - Well, again, there's
the executive order, and then there's the context. There's the more
comprehensive policy. So when it's part of
a more comprehensive, more thoughtful, more
balanced approach, then yes-- - You're for it. And when it's not,
you're not for it. - Well, when it as a
standalone, in isolation, I didn't believe it was
going to be effective. But it's no longer in isolation. It's married with the
engagement efforts, which have proven
to be fruitful. And now the proposals to provide the protections and the relief for people who have been
in the United States for years, if not decades. Harris Border Bill - How do you understand now
Vice President Harris's touting and running on her support for
that bipartisan border bill? A campaign ad says
that she, quote, "backed the toughest border
control bill in decades." - [Narrator] Fixing
the border is tough. So is Kamala Harris. - How do you view that message? - Look, I think it's
honest, I think it's clear. Most importantly, because
of the campaign itself, it's drawing the contrast. Because you have Democrats
putting forward good ideas. But we have to ask ourselves, what is Donald Trump doing? What is Donald Trump promising? What would we expect from
the Republican Party? That's absolutely clear. Let's go back to the four years
of the Trump administration. You know, mass detention, separation of children
from their families. You're gonna get nothing
but cruelty and chaos under Donald Trump. Invasion - So, Roger Marshall,
a senator from Kansas, has called on Congress to say that migration
across the southern border constitutes a,
quote, "invasion." - That the governors of
the individual states have a constitutional right to repel the dangerous
and ongoing invasion across the United
States southern border. - The language of invasion is also something former
President Trump uses. By formally declaring an
invasion of border states, could that have major
constitutional implications, and why do you think they're
using the language of war to describe what's happening
at the southern border? - So I can't help but take
this a little personally. Do I think there's
constitutional implications, the use and application
of that language? Possibly. And I would imagine it's very
intentional on their part-- - Some say that it's
to lay the groundwork to use the Insurrection
Act to deploy the military to deport migrants
in the United States. - Exactly.
- Do you think that's true? - I wouldn't put
anything past Trump and the MAGA Republican
Party these days. But even more so,
maybe more urgently, it's that type of rhetoric
that incites violence. And it wasn't that
long ago that, because of Donald Trump's
rhetoric when he was in office, that there was
someone radicalized that lived outside
the area of Dallas that brought his assault
weapons to El Paso and shot up a Walmart parking
lot, a Latino community, as families were going
back to school shopping. I'm proud of my Latino heritage. I'm the first Latino
to represent California in the United States Senate. My parents are
immigrants from Mexico. We're living the American dream. But my kids look like me, and it could easily
have been my family. And so there's no
place in this country or anywhere for
political violence. And the rhetoric that
breeds that violence has to be condemned. Democrats condemn it. Republicans don't. And let's be mindful of it when we hear that
type of language. Latino Vote - Analysts say that
Vice President Harris needs to win 64%
of the Latino vote in order to win the presidency. But when you look at states
like Arizona and Nevada, and when you look at some
softening in the numbers, at least previously on
the Democratic side, and this indication
that perhaps Trump was running stronger
with Latino men in some of these border states, what do you think
she needs to do in order to ensure that she
wins a sufficient number of Latino men and women
in Arizona and Nevada? _ So, well, it starts with
just her being herself. Because, again, I've known her. I've seen her reach out,
build relationships, build coalitions. And so that's why it's
not a surprise to me that, when we shifted from President
Biden seeking reelection to now Vice President
Harris being the nominee, that her first investments
were in the Latino community. Digital advertising,
broadcast advertising, but then also physically
campaigning in
Nevada, in Arizona, deploying her campaign manager,
Julie Chavez Rodriguez, granddaughter of Cesar Chavez, to the Southwest to
shore up the support in those Latino communities. Now, the chatter about Latinos
leaving the Democratic Party, migrating to Trump
and Republicans, was a concern in 2020, did not really materialize, was a concern in 2022--
- But it did a little-- - Did not really materialize--
- On the margins it did. But on the margins it did. I mean, Trump did better than
most Republicans prior to him with Hispanic men. Why? - Maybe a little, but here's the great
thing about this November: a record 17 1/2 million Latinos are expected to
vote this November. At least one in
five, maybe more, will be voting for
the first time. We skew younger. And so that's really
where the game is. And so those on-the-ground
outreach efforts, the digital strategies,
the advertising strategies, all taken together with the
solid encouraging message, I believe is gonna
be successful. Because at the end of the day, if you wanna talk
about just Latino men, we wanna take care
of our families. And we know what the path is. Under Trump, risk, danger. Under Vice President Harris,
hope, optimism and opportunity. - So that's a great message, but how do you
actually understand the substance of that
softening for Trump? - Look, I think for us, it's just to continue to build on what the last four
years have been like. Under the Biden-Harris
administration,
what have we seen? More Latino families'
access to health care. Latinos who are
disproportionately
impacted by diabetes, at least seniors, now only paying $35 for insulin
as opposed to a lot more. Record number of Latino small
businesses being established. I mean, the record
goes on and on and on-- - But then why was Trump
picking them up in the numbers? - I just didn't
see it translate, as people feared
in 2020 and 2022. But that being said,
like any voter, nobody should be
taken for granted. And the Latino electorate as a
whole is also not a monolith. All politics is local. And the Harris-Walz campaign
is campaigning accordingly. Economy - Let me ask you
about the economy. Vice President Harris's
signature economic proposal, based on her recent speech, talked about a proposal
for a federal ban on price gouging
in supermarkets. We all know grocery
prices have gone up. - As a father of three,
I know it very well. (chuckles) - They rose 21% in
the last few years under the Biden-Harris
administration. Explain how the plan
that she proposed would actually lower prices
at the grocery store. - I love the question,
because when she announced it, you immediately saw Donald
Trump and Republicans thrashing, you know, and coming up
with false accusations. Price gouging is wrong. And there's state after
state after state law against price gouging. And both Democratic and
Republican attorney generals cracked down on price gouging to the extent of their ability, given those state powers. What she's called
for is the ability to use the weight of federal law to crack down on price gouging. Because as there has
been a rise in prices, it is a legitimate question, particularly in industries,
whether it's a consolidation, maybe not a monopoly, but too few companies
in those spaces. Are the prices that we're
paying at the grocery store the fair price for consumers? Maybe, maybe not. Kamala Harris is looking
out for working families. That's what she's
proposing to do. Climate Change - How is she gonna
do that, though? Because economists from
across the political spectrum have criticized the proposal as an attempt at price
controls that rarely work. They lead to shortages,
black markets, higher prices. This is why top
economist Jason Furman said there's no upside. He said that he
hopes that, quote, "winds up being a lot of
rhetoric and not a reality." - I just fundamentally disagree. It may be a new idea to some
of them at the federal level. We're not talking
about price controls, we're talking about cracking
down on price gouging. I think working men and women, especially those of us who
go to the grocery store on a very regular basis, can appreciate that
and will feel that. - You also are an
advocate for climate. When Kamala Harris ran
as a progressive in 2020, she backed Medicare for all,
she backed the Green New Deal, but her campaign seems
to be pivoting away from that past support. How do you understand
her shift to the center in the context of
the general election? - Well, I don't
think she's shifted as much as you might think. First of all, clear contrast
between the two campaigns. Kamala Harris believes
climate change is real. California, in many ways, is an exhibit A that climate
change is not an idea, a risk in the future. It's happening now. Donald Trump Republicans deny
climate change is happening, despite record hurricanes, record tornadoes ravaging states
represented by Republicans. So one of the things
I'm looking forward to in a Harris administration is bringing our
collective experience dealing with wildfires, dealing with floods and
atmospheric rivers in California to better inform federal policy, not just in terms of
preparedness and response, but to reverse climate change. You know, California's
been a leader, for example, on the growth of
renewable energy. In addition to energy
efficiency and conservation, we're tackling emissions in
the transportation sector. You know, not just
electric vehicles, but electrifying the
public transit system. And now we're looking
at locomotives and
heavy-duty trucks. We have one planet. We gotta protect it. California's leading the way, and it's a foundation
for successful policy at the federal level and beyond. - One year ago, in 2023, Kamala Harris said, on the
risk of climate change, quote, "It's clear that the
clock is not only ticking, "it's banging. "We must act." She has a strong
environmental record from her years as attorney
general in California, and yet she has not
addressed climate change yet on the trail. And many voters who
say climate change is their number-one priority
are also young voters. Isn't it gonna be important
for the Harris-Walz ticket to discuss it? - They are. I mean, they were talking
about a lot of issues. Reproductive rights
is first and foremost on some people's minds-- - They haven't done climate yet. - Let me get to that. Talking about voting rights, talking about a
number of issues. Look, when it comes to climate, let's be real on how
we're tackling it. The Inflation Reduction Act, the biggest investment
to tackle climate in not just our
nation's history, but anywhere in the world. - Shouldn't she be
running on that? - She cast the deciding vote. Would not have happened without
her vote as vice president. So she is taking
ownership of that. And we'll be
campaigning on that. And I hope we'll continue
what President Biden has done and call out Republicans
who voted against it, but are trying to show up at all these ribbon
cuttings and groundbreakings for all these projects
across the country. - There are 70-some days
left in this campaign. The country's divided. I know you like baseball. - (chuckles) That's
an understatement. - Can baseball bring
the country together? - Well, I think
sports in general, and baseball in particular, can. Because, look, the annual
congressional baseball game is one that brings Republicans
and Democrats together, raises money for charities. You know, I wouldn't suggest
it's a highlight reel, it's more of a blooper reel. But we come together in
good fun for a good cause. So, yes, I think there's
a lot of potential for baseball diplomacy. - Last question, how
are you gonna spend the next 70-plus days? - I'm gonna be making
a lot of phone calls and be knocking
at a lot of doors. The stakes are just too high. I mean, the future of our... I thought the 2020
election was high stakes. It was at the time, the most consequential
election of our lifetime. But think about
what's happened since. January 6th happened since. 34 not indictments, but convictions of Donald
Trump have happened since. The Dobbs decision, undoing the protections of Roe
v. Wade have happened since. The Supreme Court granting
immunity to the president for whatever he or she may
want to do has happened since. The stakes continue
to get higher. It's important for anybody
who's eligible to register, make sure they cast their
ballot this November. - Senator Padilla, I
really appreciate your time here on "Firing Line." - Thank you. - [Narrator] "Firing Line
with Margaret Hoover" is made possible in part
by: Robert Granieri, Vanessa and Henry Cornell, The Fairweather Foundation, and by the following. Corporate funding is
provided by Stephens Inc. (upbeat music) (bright music) (gentle music) - [Announcer]
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