The NPR Politics Podcast - FBI Searches Biden's Home; Harris Speaks Out For Abortion Rights
Episode Date: January 23, 2023The White House said FBI agents searched President Biden's Delaware home on Friday, finding more items with classified markings. The search took place voluntarily, and without a search warrant.Vice Pr...esident Kamala Harris traveled to Florida on Sunday to mark the 50th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. Her speech came alongside new announcements in White House policy concerning reproductive rights.This episode: White House correspondent Scott Detrow, politics reporter Deepa Shivaram, and national political correspondent Mara Liasson.This episode was produced by Elena Moore and Casey Morell. It was edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi. Research and fact-checking by Devin Speak.Unlock access to this and other bonus content by supporting The NPR Politics Podcast+. Sign up via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Connect:Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.orgJoin the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hi, this is Julio in St. Paul, Minnesota.
I am cross-country skiing on Pike Island, where the Minnesota and Mississippi rivers meet,
with gorgeous woods, tame deer, and breathtaking views.
It's just me, my skis, and, of course, your podcast.
This episode was recorded at...
I feel like our podcast is intruding on that tranquil scene.
It's 1158 Eastern on Monday, January 23rd.
Things may have changed by the time you hear this,
but NPR will always be with me on the trails
during the Twin Cities' fabulous winters.
The deer say hi and good job, by the way.
Okay, here's the show.
Pretty nice.
That's a really good timestamp.
Hi to the deer.
I feel like you shouldn't listen to a podcast in that nice, quiet setting. I don't know.
Yeah, it would wreck the vibe.
And we care about the vibe, don't we?
That's right. We do.
We love the vibes.
Hey there. It's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Scott Detrow. I cover the White House.
I'm Deepa Shivaram. I cover politics.
I'm Mara Liason, national political
correspondent. It's good to be back on the podcast after parental leave. First podcast in six months.
Welcome back. Yeah, glad to have you back. I'm happy to be here. I don't know if President Biden
is that happy this morning because his document dilemma took another major turn this weekend.
The FBI searched President Joe Biden's home in Delaware on Friday and discovered six more documents that contain classified markings.
Some of those documents dated back to Biden's time in the Senate.
Agents also took some of Biden's handwritten notes from his years as vice president.
A few things to note before we talk about it.
The search was, as you heard, voluntary.
Biden's lawyers said they cooperated.
So this was not the FBI showing up with his opinion, you know, as happened in Mar-a-Lago
this summer. President Biden does say that there's no there there. He said that late last week. But
Mara, the FBI searching the home of a sitting president for 13 hours, whether or not it was
coordinated beforehand, that sure feels pretty substantial to me.
Yes. And it's why Democrats are exasperated with Joe Biden and
worried about this story. This is a classic Washington tick, tick, tick story. Ah, FBI
searches his house. We don't know what's there. We don't know what these documents are. And of
course, since something similar, but not exactly the same, happened with former President Trump,
he resisted a subpoena, didn't want to turn over documents. There's going to be a lot of political equivalence drawn, and it's just bad politics.
And speaking of the vibe, Deepa, you were traveling with the vice president this weekend.
We're going to talk more about that in the second half of this podcast. But you were with a lot of
people in the Biden administration the day after this major development broke. What was the mood
and feeling there? Yeah, the vibe from the Harris side of things is almost like the opposite in a way.
And as this story was kind of developing and unfolding and we were finding out, you know,
what information we have so far, Harris was outside of the Washington bubble entirely. She
was traveling all over the West Coast. She was in Arizona, California, and then obviously in
Tallahassee for this major speech on Roe that we'll talk about later.
But it was almost like this two parallel things, right, where she's out there talking about drought and climate change and abortion rights.
And meanwhile, this is all unfolding with these documents with the president back in D.C. while he spent the weekend in Rehoboth.
And so it was kind of interesting to see that they were kind of on two very separate planes here, if that makes sense. And she hasn't commented at all.
You know, she didn't stop for questions with reporters on this trip. And this is not something
I think they're eager to have her dive into by any means. But I'm positive that this is something
that she'll be having to answer for in the coming days as well. So there's the investigation front
here, whatever the Department of Justice. So there's the investigation front here,
whatever the Department of Justice, and it's worth pointing out again that a special prosecutor is
taking charge of this investigation. Whatever the Department of Justice finds, we know that
there have been documents at the Penn Biden Center in D.C., documents in Biden's house in Wilmington,
these additional documents that were turned up on Friday during the search in Wilmington.
There's also the
political aspect, the public relations aspect, how this is or isn't hurting the president
politically. Mara, I thought it was pretty notable that you had a lot of Democratic allies of Joe
Biden criticizing him in interviews this weekend, not rallying around him saying this is nothing at
all, but saying, yeah, this isn't great. Yeah, that's serious. They're worried. They're exasperated that this happened to Biden.
They're worried that it has political impact. At the very least, it makes it impossible for them
to criticize former President Trump for mishandling classified documents.
And they're worried because Biden doesn't have a lot of margin for error. He's about to
announce his reelection campaign. And this kind of story goes on and on and on.
Yeah. And the White House criticizes reporters for going back to this criticism and pointing
this out. But it is relevant when it comes to the politics of this. And that is the defensive
and at times pretty evasive messaging we've gotten from the White House throughout this
entire investigation. It's just one example. Here's Ian Sams from the White House throughout this entire investigation. It's just
one example. Here's Ian Sams, the White House spokesperson who's taking the lead on this issue,
speaking this morning to MSNBC's Morning Joe. I'm going to stress this again. And I understand
that there's a desire for public disclosure of information, that there's a desire for facts to
come out. But it's important that the full set of facts be gathered by the Justice Department
and then presented publicly so that people can understand all of these details.
That is the job of the Justice Department, an independent, strong Justice Department to do.
And so we're going to be fully cooperative with that process to ensure that they have all the information they need to define the full set of facts.
And then we'll be able to talk publicly more about the conclusion of that investigation and what it uncovered.
And one other thing along these lines, on Friday, Karine Jean-Pierre, the press secretary, was asked directly, you know, the president's going to his Rehoboth Beach house this weekend.
It's mid-January. That seems unusual. Does this have anything to do with the investigation?
And she said, well, the president often travels to Delaware. I don't have anything else to add.
That's almost a direct quote, a little bit of a paraphrase. But Deepa, one more time to the vibes. The vibes in the press room are pretty hostile right now. And I have to the council's office has been doing a number of press appearances
and hits and sort of trying to get ahead on this, but they're not exactly answering our questions.
And there's still a lot of questions that remain. And so, yeah, you're sort of seeing this merry
go round, if you will. But that's a conscious strategy. You know, Corrine Jean-Pierre has been
told we can't answer these questions right now. And you heard Ian Sam say that at some point in the future, the Department of Justice will lay everything out and explain everything at once. Well, they have to hope that that moment comes as soon as possible because basically every day is torture until that happens.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right. Let's take a quick break. When we're back, what the White House did to mark the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. And we're back. Sunday was the 50th anniversary of
the Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion in the United States. Of course, that decision
was overturned last summer in another landmark Supreme Court case. Democrats are now on the
offensive to try to use this as a political
issue. Vice President Kamala Harris spoke at an event in Tallahassee, Florida this weekend to
mark the occasion. And can we truly be free if so-called leaders claim to be, quote, I quote,
on the vanguard of freedom while they dare to restrict the rights of the American people and attack the very foundations of freedom.
Deepa, as we mentioned, you were there. Let's start with this. Tallahassee, so-called leaders. Not that subtle to me, is it?
No, it's really not that subtle. And she pretty much took Ron DeSantis' words there and threw it back at him in Tallahassee,
the city where the governor's mansion is.
He used that phrase, freedom's vanguard in an address.
And she sort of took that and kind of her whole speech yesterday was kind of taking
this idea of freedom that Ron DeSantis talks about often and using it to her benefit and to say,
you know, that how can we have all of these freedoms in, you know, the land of the free,
the home of the brave is the phrase that she kind of used. And she said, you know,
how can we be free if women don't have control of their own bodies? And so I think her role in
this moment was to be a morale booster. People
were saying that the morale amongst people who are, you know, fighting for abortion access is
really low, especially in a place like Florida, where the state legislature is meeting in the
next couple weeks to try and pass even more abortion restrictions. They wanted someone to
kind of come in from the White House who they see as an ally to sort of be someone who they can get
excited about and remind them that, you know, one person I talked to said that it feels like
Florida is a lost cause on reproductive rights. And so having someone like Harris there was really
energizing for them. But I think that gets to the question. And, you know, Rhonda Sannis,
the governor of Florida, is considering a run for president.
Democrats right now do see abortion access as a powerful political issue.
They feel like that played a big role in how the midterms turned out.
But at the same time, the Biden administration can't change the Supreme Court right now.
Republicans control the House.
So codifying Roe v. Wade feels like a political nonstarter.
So what was the message in terms of substantive action over the next two years from Harris? The only new thing that Harris
announced yesterday was this memorandum that the president signed, which essentially urges,
nudges departments in this administration like HHS and the Department of Justice to make sure
that medicated abortions are accessible. And that's kind of the thing that you have to keep in mind
in the big picture of all of this
is as all of these Republican legislatures around the country
are trying to limit abortion access,
they're doing it in different ways now that Roe was overturned.
And medicated abortions are kind of the next topic
that people are coming to.
And so that was something that Harris talked about yesterday
in her speech and what the memorandum that Biden signed was about. But like you said, it's not like there
are big sweeping actions coming from the White House. Mara, for years, the Roe anniversary was
a big rallying point for people who oppose abortion rights. I guess it makes political
sense that the momentum here would shift and that it would be the side that lost the big ruling that's the one with the motivation to show up and hold big rallies and big political messages on these anniversaries.
That's how it works. The anti-abortion movement began when Roe was decided way back in the 1970s.
But the interesting thing about the politics of this issue is that the anti-abortion forces won the legal battle before they won the battle for public opinion. They didn't win the battle for hearts and
minds. The majority of Americans still believe that abortion should be, in the old phrase that
Bill Clinton used, safe, legal, and rare. That was Roe. Roe was the consensus. Legal abortion
up to the point of viability, which they defined at around 23 weeks. Now, they're kind of like the dog that caught the car.
The anti-abortion forces have to reconsider their strategy.
Where are they going to draw the line?
How are they going to define pro-life?
When Ron DeSantis signs a law that makes abortion legal up to 15 weeks,
do they want to pressure Republicans for a more complete ban on abortion?
Do they want to pressure Congress for a
national ban? These are questions that they haven't answered yet. And what kind of dynamic will that
create inside the Republican presidential primary? That's what Ron DeSantis is thinking about right
now. He's not thinking about majority public opinion. And for Democrats, it's an opportunity.
They've been on the defensive for many, many years. But Dobbs helped them keep their losses to a minimum in the midterm election.
Donald Trump has even said that Dobbs hurt Republicans in the midterms.
All right. That is it for today.
It is great to be back in the podcast with everybody.
I'm Scott Detrow. I cover the White House.
I'm Deepa Shivaram. I cover politics.
And I'm Mara Liason, national political correspondent.
Thank you for listening to the In Care Politics podcast.