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Transcript: Rep. Maxwell Frost on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Oct. 13, 2024

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The following is a transcript of an interview with Rep. Maxwell Frost, Democrat of Florida, on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” that aired on Oct. 13, 2024.


MARGARET BRENNAN: We turn now to Florida Democratic Congressman Maxwell Frost. He joins us from Orlando. Welcome to Face the Nation.

REP. MAXWELL ALEJANDRO FROST: Thanks for having me on.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Congressman, President Biden is in Florida today to assess damage from Hurricane Milton. At least 60 Democratic lawmakers, some from Florida, have called for Congress to immediately return to Washington to vote for aid. You haven’t joined that call. Why?

REP. FROST: I believe I have joined that call. But- but if not, I do believe that Congress needs to return to make sure that we pass money for more aid.

MARGARET BRENNAN: But how immediately do you need that to happen? How in need is your community?

REP. FROST: Our community’s very much in need across Florida. But the thing we have to understand is, yes, FEMA has the resources necessary to deal with the current situation, but like was mentioned in the previous segment, NOAA is predicting, and we’ve seen, that this is one of the worst hurricane seasons we’ve seen, and we’re not done with this hurricane season, it doesn’t end, really, till the end of November. And so I think it is important. Why leave up to chance when we can ensure that FEMA has the resources it needs. And not just FEMA, SBA also has a program, and different agencies have programs that help us to respond to these hurricanes. Why would we leave it up to chance and wait till something happens, when we can make sure that we do that work now. Especially when a lot of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle are working at politicizing these storms when we can actually do something about it.

MARGARET BRENNAN: So you need this vote to happen before Congress is set to return November 12th. Or you can wait until November 12th?

REP. FROST: I think we should do it as soon as possible. Why wait until November 12th? We don’t know what’s going to be happening in terms of natural disasters or storms. I think it’s important that a agency like FEMA have even- not just what they need, but even more than what they need to ensure that they have, the resources necessary, of course, to help with the current operation–

MARGARET BRENNAN: I’ve gotta–

REP. FROST: — which they have but also–

MARGARET BRENNAN: — take a break here, Congressman, and continue our conversation on the other side of the commercial. Stay with us.

[COMMERCIAL BREAK]

MARGARET BRENNAN: Welcome back to Face the Nation. We return to our conversation with Florida Congressman Maxwell Frost. Congressman, you are the youngest member of Congress, it looks like, and you’ve been on college campuses trying to shore up support for Vice President Harris. In our CBS polling from earlier this summer, before Harris entered the race, we did see among 40% of young people who responded, they said politics over the last few years makes them feel like there’s nothing else they can do. Another 40% said they want to tune out and watch something else. Young people may not be apathetic, but they certainly don’t seem to be excited about the political system as a way to affect change. How do you change that?

REP. FROST: Well, I appreciate the question. And it’s not just up to me, right? It’s up to all of our leaders, all of our organizers, people on the ground, to make sure that young people understand that if they step away from their civic power that they have, there’s people who don’t have their best interests at heart that are more than happy to step into that power for them. I mean, you mentioned, you know, a number that comes before Kamala Harris being the top of our ticket. I’ve seen, as I’ve traveled this country, I did a back to school tour just a few weeks ago, a lot of enthusiasm and excitement around this election, especially with young voters wanting to vote for Kamala Harris. And, you know, there’s this notion that young people are not being involved in the political system, and we can do better, but people should know that young people are voting at the highest numbers in our country’s history. 2020 was the highest youth voter turnout in the history of our country. 2018 and 20- 2022 are the highest youth voter turnout in a midterm in the history of our country, too. So we’re really- we’re trending in the right direction. We just need to continue to reach out to young people, not take those votes for granted.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. And there’s that question of enthusiasm actually translating to votes. You’ve said vibes don’t mean votes. I saw you say. On another issue that we know is of concern to the Harris campaign, I want to ask you about remarks that Former President Barack Obama made earlier this week. He was speaking to campaign volunteers in Pittsburgh and he raised the concern about low enthusiasm and turnout, specifically among black men. He said, quote, “part of it makes me think that, well, you just aren’t feeling the idea of having a woman as president.” Do you share the former president’s concern that this is a dynamic impacting the race? How much of an issue is it for Vice President Harris?

REP. FROST: I think it is an issue with a lot of different voters across this country, and it’s something that our country, you know, we’ve come a long way, as in terms of women’s suffrage, we’ve come a long way in terms of making sure of equity in this country. But there’s still a lot of this bigotry in this country in terms of sexism, in terms of racism. And we still have to work at getting over that. Those things are still here. They still exist in a lot of communities. And we still have a lot of work to do here. And so I think President Obama was just having some very serious, tough talk, right, tough love, with a lot of- especially he was speaking directly to young black voters, young black men specifically and making sure that they understand. Look, sometimes you have to take a step back and look at your own bias. What’s the bias you have? What are the real reasons you’re voting against someone or for someone? Is it a legitimate policy thing, or does it have to do more with the vibe of something and then look more into that as well. I think it’s really important. This, like, politics of vibes. We see it a lot here in Florida with someone like Ron DeSantis, who claims to be someone who’s for the people and for democracy. Yet every chance he gets, he acts like an authoritarian. Then I go to voters who have family members, who have escaped countries with authoritarian leaders, and I ask them, why are you voting for someone who’s emulating what your parents escaped? And they can’t quite explain it. It has to do with the vibes, with the atmosphere the politician has created. And I think we still have to contend with that as a country. And that’s what the president was talking about.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Congressman, thank you for sharing your insights. We’re going to have to leave it there for today. We’ll be right back.



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LA Clippers owner Steve Ballmer’s $2-billion-plus bet on Intuit Dome | 60 Minutes

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Billionaire Steve Ballmer asked if he could show off the toilets when 60 Minutes visited the Clippers’ new Intuit Dome.

There are more than 1,000 toilets in the Clippers’ new arena, and they’re all part of Ballmer’s plan to change the way fans experience basketball. He doesn’t want people waiting in line for a bathroom when they should be watching the game. It’s one of the many details he considered while spending more than $2 billion building a venue for the Clippers, which did not have a home of its own when Ballmer bought the team in 2014. 

More energy, more points

Ballmer is famous for his wild enthusiasm courtside. 

“[It] tells [the players] , ‘Hey, he will support us. When it’s show time, he’ll be there to help support us.’ And I think that is important,” Ballmer said. “I’m sure players have that like, ‘God, this guy seems a little bit nuts.’ That’s OK.”

He wants fans to be loud too and has designed his arena to encourage Ballmer-level enthusiasm. He’s convinced that the more energy the crowd can create, the more points the Clippers will put up.

“We have sensors around the building that can tell, down to the individual-seat level, how loud you are,” Ballmer said. “Now, we’re not listening to your conversation. But let’s say we say, ‘OK, for this game, the person who produces the most decibels the most consistently will get a free hamburger the next game.'”

Jon Wertheim and Steve Ballmer
Jon Wertheim and Steve Ballmer

60 Minutes


There are no cash registers at Intuit Dome. Everything is contactless. Even the suites are barebones. Ballmer comes to watch basketball, not to schmooze (or wait in long lines), and he believes fans should, too.

How a former Microsoft CEO runs the Clippers

Ballmer, who has loved basketball since childhood, entered the NBA in 2014 after a run as Microsoft’s CEO. He bought the struggling Clippers for a whopping $2 billion after the previous owner, Donald Sterling, was caught on tape in a racist tirade. 

Ballmer has pumped money into upgrading the Clippers’ roster, signing stars like James Harden and Kawhi Leonard. Since Ballmer took over, the LA franchise’s value has more than doubled and the Clippers haven’t had a losing season. 



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Steve Ballmer on becoming one of the world’s richest billionaires | 60 Minutes

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Former Microsoft CEO and LA Clippers owner Steve Ballmer has consistently ranked among the world’s wealthiest billionaires. 

Despite his vast fortune, friends say Ballmer is still the kind of guy who complains about the cost of a hotel minibar. The billionaire has no superyacht, no fancy wardrobe and still lives in the four-bedroom house where he and his wife raised their three sons. Still, there’s no doubt that having a net worth north of $120 billion-plus has impacted Ballmer. 

“I am fundamentally changed. I know I am,” Ballmer said. 

Ballmer’s beginnings 

Growing up in suburban Detroit, Ballmer was a shy, anxious kid. His father, a Swiss immigrant, worked a mid-level job at Ford. Ballmer went to Harvard, where he managed the football team and struck up a close friendship with another Harvard student: Bill Gates

Gates dropped out to start a software company, while Ballmer went in a different direction: sales and marketing at Procter & Gamble, selling Duncan Hines brownie mix, blueberry muffin mix and Moist ‘n’ Easy snack cake mix. But baked goods, he found, were not his calling, so Ballmer went to Stanford Business School. He was midway through his first year when he got a call from Gates, who wanted to recruit Ballmer for his chaotic software startup. 

Steve Ballmer
Steve Ballmer

60 Minutes


“But software for microcomputers, it was not a thing at the time in any way, shape or form,” Ballmer said. 

Nevertheless, Gates was convincing, and Ballmer left school to join his friend.

Ballmer’s salary? $40,000 plus a 9% stake in Gate’s company. 

Ballmer’s legacy at Microsoft 

Together, Gates and Ballmer came to personify Microsoft. Enthusiasm became Ballmer’s trademark, and a meme after a video of a sweat-soaked Ballmer chanting “developers, developers, developers” went viral. 

“That’s a guy who really wanted to fire people up. To say, ‘Hey, we love you. We want you to write software for Windows,'” Ballmer said.

Looking back on it now, Ballmer admits he feels a little embarrassed about it.

But “I personally feed off energy,” he said. “And it’s not everybody’s cup of tea, by the way. I mean, you know, some people are quieter. But it’s me.” 

Steve Ballmer and Jon Wertheim
Steve Ballmer and Jon Wertheim

60 Minutes


Ballmer took over as Microsoft CEO in 2000 and his tenure was marked by wins and losses. He famously failed to take the challenge of Apple’s iPhone seriously when it launched, laughing at the idea in 2007. 

“Gosh darn it. You know, the phone. Man, the phone. We should’ve been in the phone. We should’ve been the leader,” he said. 

And yet during Ballmer’s tenure as CEO, Microsoft’s revenue more than tripled. He hung on to most of his stock and has seen his personal fortune soar. 

From computers to basketball

Ballmer left Microsoft in 2014, the same year he bought the LA Clippers. People have asked if he always wanted to own a basketball team.

“Of course not,” Ballmer said. “Who the heck ever thinks you’re going to get enough money to own a basketball team?”

It’s different from running Microsoft, a company with revenues that are 20 times higher than those of the NBA. But Ballmer says he’s having more fun in this job, in part because it’s much easier to measure performance.

“People ask me ‘What’s the difference between business and basketball?’-  Well, if you have a bad quarter you can say, ‘I’ll get him next time’ or ‘You don’t know what we got going on in the labs but it’s going to be great,'” Ballmer said. “Here, every 24 seconds you get a scorecard. ‘Did we score? Did we stop them from scoring?’ Every 24 seconds. At the end of the game if you lose it, you can never change it.”



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How Steve and Connie Ballmer are giving away billions

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This week on 60 Minutes, correspondent Jon Wertheim profiled Steve Ballmer, the former Microsoft CEO and current owner of the Los Angeles Clippers.

Ballmer is consistently ranked among the world’s top billionaires but doesn’t lead the high-flying life of some of his peers. 

He bought a basketball team, which he admits is an extravagance, but he has no superyacht, no new wardrobe, and no new spouse. And Ballmer is giving away billions of dollars through a philanthropy he runs with his wife, Connie, called the Ballmer Group.

In an interview at their home in Washington, Steve and Connie Ballmer shared their vision for that philanthropy.

Steve Ballmer, who held on to most of his Microsoft stock after stepping down as CEO in 2014, has seen his net worth soar past $120 billion. 

Connie Ballmer felt strongly that responsibility came with all that good fortune. 

She first pitched the idea of a philanthropy to her husband 10 years ago, but Steve, by his own admission, was skeptical. 

In essence, he felt that the government could handle the distribution of resources in the U.S. He felt the private sector couldn’t match the effectiveness of government and could not change people’s lives on a national scale. He said that, over time, Connie changed his thinking. 

“Government does supply almost all the money to help people. [But] philanthropy has a role in helping to do proof points, prove where things are going, and step in where government won’t go,” Steve told Wertheim. 

In 2015, the couple co-founded the Ballmer Group after Steve retired from Microsoft. 

The Group’s mission is to improve economic mobility, particularly for kids and families in disadvantaged communities. 

“We were both incredibly fortunate to be born in this country at this time and have so much privilege,” Connie told Wertheim. “Children have no voice. And they don’t get to vote on where they’re born and where they live.” 

Her husband agrees. “Every kid deserves a shot,” said Steve. “Not every kid’s going to be successful. But if you’re born with parents who are less affluent, you should still have an opportunity to pursue your dreams.”

So far, the Ballmers have given away about $7.4 billion in grants.

They’ve taken a “cradle-to-career” approach, investing in a wide variety of causes: from early childhood and K-12 education to college access and readiness, career, workforce, and housing initiatives.

In 2022, the Ballmer Group gave $175 million to a nonprofit called StriveTogether that connects local communities to a nationwide network. The two organizations can share data and find resources to improve education and career outcomes for young people. 

The Ballmers say they’re especially connected to the communities that they have personal links to, like Los Angeles County, home of the Clippers; Washington state, where they live; southeast Michigan, where Steve was born and raised; and Oregon, where Connie went to college. 

Through the philanthropy, the couple has pumped $15 million into Partnership for Los Angeles Schools, and they’ve made a $24m investment in the Boys and Girls Club of America.

In 2022, Connie’s alma mater, University of Oregon, was given a $400 million grant to create the Ballmer Institute of Children’s Behavioral Health.

Wertheim asked the Ballmers what a “win” looks like and how they measure success. 

“Each area is different,” Connie said. “[But] if we have less community violence. If we have more teachers of color in schools that need them. If we have more high school graduation rates. If we have better kindergarten readiness.” 

At the end of the interview, Wertheim changed topics. Steve already owns one pro sports franchise. Could another be on the horizon? 

“I told him that he and his next wife would have a good time with that,” Connie said with a laugh. 

Steve Ballmer, in a fit of laughter, shot the idea down: “No, sir.”

“We’ve got enough sports…I can give my passion to this. I can work on the philanthropy.”

The video above was produced by Will Croxton. It was edited by Sarah Shafer Prediger. 



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