What A Day - America Has No Kings
Episode Date: October 17, 2025This weekend, people across the country are taking to the streets for the second iteration of the “No Kings” protests. Organizers say they anticipate millions of protestors to attend thousands of ...demonstrations throughout the US. Republicans have called the protests “Hate America rallies” and have claimed they’ll be attended by left-wing extremists. Erica Chenoweth, a political scientist who studies protest, social movements, and democracy, joins the show to discuss who will really be attending the protests, and what Trump’s attempts to criminalize resistance mean for our First Amendment Rights.And in headlines, former Trump national security adviser John Bolton is indicted, the Senate fails to end the government shutdown for the tenth time, and the admiral in charge of US military forces in Latin America ends his tenure early as US-Venezuela tensions continue to escalate.Show Notes:Check out Erica's work – https://tinyurl.com/33d7uvn5Call Congress – 202-224-3121Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, October 17th. I'm Jane Koston, and this is what a day, where we want to celebrate Illinois Democratic Governor J.B. Pritzker's apparent talent at Blackjack.
According to his 2024 tax return, the governor won more than $1 million playing the card game on a trip to Las Vegas.
On Thursday, he said that he would be donating the money to charity, and honestly, I'm just impressed by anyone actually being good at gambling.
On today's show, a grand jury indites another one of President Donald Trump's least favorite political adversaries,
while Trump himself plays, you hang up, no, you hang up, with one of his most favorite political adversaries, Russian President Vladimir Putin.
But let's start with the no king's protest scheduled for this weekend.
If you attended the last no king's protest back in June, you were among more than five million people joining an estimated 2100 events across the country.
And this weekend's events might be even bigger with more protests scheduled,
which is tough news for House Speaker Mike Johnson,
who seemed very mad about it on Wednesday.
We call it the hate America rally that will happen Saturday.
Let's see who shows up for that.
I bet you see pro-Hamas supporters.
I bet you see Antifa types.
I bet you see the Marxist in full display,
the people who don't want to stand and defend the foundational truths of this republic.
And we do.
Okay, buddy, calm down.
But this seems to be a newly recurring theme on the right.
While June's rallies got criticism from Republicans for being, quote,
intersectional clown shows, this weekend's rallies are getting a very different response.
Apparently, every attendee is a Hamas super soldier who obviously hates America.
And that's why, obviously, Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott has decided to deploy the National Guard to Saturday's rally in Austin.
And Kansas Republican Senator Roger Marshall thinks troops might be needed in Washington.
in D.C. too. This will be a Soros paid for protests where his professional protesters show up,
the agitators show up, we'll have to get the National Guard out. Hopefully it'll be peaceful.
I doubt it as well. Very normal and cool. Of course, you can't talk about the GOP's attacks on the
No King's protests without talking about the Trump administration's efforts to curtail left-wing speech
and weaponize the government against its opponents. On Thursday, the Wall Street Journal reported
that the administration is working to target left-wing groups and donors.
through the IRS. So to talk more about the government's efforts to limit speech or doesn't like
and how protests can work anyway, I spoke to Erica Chenoweth, a political scientist who studies
protest, social movements, and democracy. Erica, welcome to what today. Thank you so much,
glad to be here. First off, I feel like our audience probably knows a lot about these protests
and has already attended an earlier iteration, but can you tell us a little bit about the
no king's protest this weekend and who is actually going to the no king's protest?
Well, what I know about it is that it's being organized as kind of a second version of what was
widely considered to be quite a successful protest mobilization on June 14th. And the idea is
to reprise that and to draw potentially even a larger crowd. Who's going? I don't know. I suppose
we'll be finding out. One thing that my team has just published today is a study suggesting
that we're seeing a lot more protest happening in counties where Donald Trump won the
election than we did during any, really at any period in a persistent way during his first
term. And so I do think we're seeing people from unlikely corners of the country, what many people
would consider to be kind of deeply red areas showing up and participating in protests in ways
that might be otherwise surprising to your listeners.
Yeah. In response to the first iteration of these protests, there were a lot of
complaints from the right that everyone who went was old and useless, boomers, whatever.
Now, they seem to be arguing that the No King's protests are only attended by Antifa
Super Soldiers and funded by, I don't know, the got. Actually, that's a great question.
Who is funding these protests? I don't know the answer to that myself. I actually think most
of the people who show up are certainly not paid protesters. I don't know any of those. One thing I'll
say is what we can observe makes clear a few things about these protests. One is that they're overwhelmingly
peaceful. So, you know, episodes of violence are things that we can observe. We can look for indicators
at protest events of injuries, of damage to property, of injuries to police. Those are things we can
observe and that are widely reported when they happen and that we can keep track of. And what we found
is that the current movement that's associated with No Kings has produced almost no significant injuries or property damage or anything like that throughout its entire duration this year.
It's something like 99.7% of the events feature no property damage, no injuries to protest or police.
Like these are overwhelmingly nonviolent and peaceful actions.
I want to ask you a broader question because we've seen with how the administration is talking about the No Kings protest.
a lot of talk about how they need to figure out
who's funding these protests
full of Antifa super soldiers
or something like that.
And there was a Wall Street Journal report earlier this week
that Trump is trying to use the IRS
to go after his political enemies.
Can you tell us a little bit
about what they're actually trying to do here?
Sure. I think there are two things
that are going on that's quite familiar
that we see around the world
among people you might describe
as aspiring authoritarians.
One is so just systematically mischaracterized the political opposition is criminal.
And that's just a way that they try to delegitimize their opposition using whatever
kind of tools they have at their disposal, whether they're legal or rhetorical or otherwise.
And I do worry very much about the chilling effects that this might have.
And I worry very much about the actual effects it might have on people who are engaged in
lawful, peaceful assembly that's protected.
under the First Amendment, you know, it's like, number one, the First Amendment, like, that's
the thing. So the government actually has the burden of protecting the right of people to do that,
not trying to find ways to undermine it through legal or quasi-legal means.
I think that this whole moment seems a little reminiscent of the time after 9-11, which is such
a baffling comparison to need to make. But the way that Trump talks about Antifa and his political
opposition reminds me of the war on terror, where you have a vague decentralized ideology
and you put all of the things that you're worried about on that ideology and call that
terrorism. And basically, it allows the administration to call anyone who disagrees with them
a terrorist. What's the reality of how these crackdowns on political opposition are going to
play out, given the First Amendment, given that there is some legal backing to speak out
against this particular government?
Yeah, I mean, it remains to be seen how deep the overreach will be
and also whether legal challenges and other ways of pushing are going to uphold the First Amendment
or whether we're in a situation where, say, the Supreme Court interprets the president's power
in a way that's more aligned with the way Donald Trump would like them to.
So there's a bit of uncertainty about this, but I think what we know now is the First Amendment
is the First Amendment and longstanding jurisprudence around it is that, you know,
the government cannot punish or censor people for expressing ideas, it disagrees with.
Like, that's the fundamental point. And so the important thing for folks to know is that that's
where things stand. And if we don't express our rights, they're not self-enforcing.
Like, we have to use them in order to keep them in a way.
You famously calculated that authoritarian governments around the world have been overpowered
when 3.5% of a country's population is mobilized in resistance. How did you come to that figure?
Like, what does resistance mean here?
How does this particular number prove to be so effective?
Yeah, so this comes from a study that I did with Maria Stephan between like 2008 and 2011.
And what we did was we looked at all of the mass mobilizations that had happened around the world from 1900 to 2006
that sought to oust an incumbent national leader, usually a dictator, or to create an independent country through secession, self-determination, or ousting it in
and sort of foreign military occupation or colonial power,
so that it was limited to those types of cases.
And then what we did was we looked at whether the mobilizations
were primarily people power mobilizations,
where it was unarmed ordinary people,
engaged in protest, strikes, demonstrations, et cetera,
or whether it was armed insurgency and armed rebellion.
And in our book, what we reported is that those that relied on people power
at that time were more likely to have succeeded.
And when we were sort of engaging with activists and others,
around those ideas, there was one activist who asked me if there was like a critical threshold for
popular participation that guaranteed the success of the people power movements. And I didn't know,
so I opened the data set. And I looked to see if there was one. And the answer was like none of the
movements had failed after they had mobilized three and a half percent of the population. So that is
the story about where the statistic came from. I would say the key thing to know about it is that it's a
historical observation around a specific set of cases. There have been exceptions to
it since those cases were published. And it's not a predictive or prescriptive number, right? We don't
know what happens when movements are actively trying to mobilize three and a half percent of the
population and aiming at that number as a target without the other trappings of what makes
movements succeed, like building, you know, a broad base of support, building a strategy that
allows them to elicit defections within the opponent's pillars of support, whether they're
building leadership, whether they are building a kind of staying power. And so,
So that's just to say the way that it should be interpreted in a kind of prescriptive way should be with caution.
Erica, this is super helpful.
Thank you so much for your time.
Thank you so much.
That was my conversation with Erica Chenoweth, a political scientist who studies protest, social movements, and democracy.
We will link to their work in the show notes.
We'll get to more of the news in the moment.
But if you like the show, make sure to subscribe, leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, watch us on YouTube, and share with your friends.
More to come after some ads.
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slash wad to get started. Here's what else we're following today. Head of lines. Mr. President
John Bolt was just indicted by a grand jury in Maryland. Do you have a reaction to that? I didn't know that.
You tell me for the first time, but I think he's, you know, a bad person.
I think he's a bad guy, yeah.
He's a bad guy.
It's too bad, but it's the way it goes.
That's the way it goes, right?
That's the way it goes.
The way it goes when Trump doesn't like you.
John Bolton was Trump's national security advisor in his first term, and the federal
indictment in Maryland Thursday involved mishandling classified information.
Bolton had served Trump for more than a year before Trump gave him the boot in
2019 over disagreements on how to treat despotic regimes like North Korea and Iran.
He then became an outspoken critic of Trump.
Prosecutors allege Bolton stored top secret records at home.
Were they in his gilded bathroom, too?
And shared classified information in diary-like notes with relatives.
The 18-count indictment also alleges that the personal email account Bolton used to share
the information was hacked by an entity believed to be associated with Iran.
Though the investigation into Bolton started before Trump's second term,
the case will unfold against the backdrop of Trump weaponizing the Justice Department against
his political enemies. So far, the running list includes New York Attorney General Letitia James
and former FBI director James Comey. In a statement Thursday, Bolton hit back, writing, quote,
Now I have become the latest target in weaponizing the Justice Department to charge those he
deems to be his enemies with charges that were declined before or distort the facts.
This week, the U.S. Senate failed for the 10th time to pass a
funding bill to reopen the government. One of the core demands holding up a deal to reopen the
government is extending Affordable Care Act subsidies. Senate Majority Leader Chan Thune appeared on
MSNBC and floated a compromise. Republicans would guarantee Democrats a standalone vote on the issue.
I've told them. I've said, and I've said we are willing to have the conversation. I've said,
if you need a vote, we can guarantee you get a vote by a date certain. At some point, Democrats have
to take yes for an answer. But I agree totally. We are all about getting health insurance down.
making it affordable to more people.
A Republican guarantee?
Sure.
Illinois Democratic Senator Dick Durbin
said that while Thune's suggestion
of a guaranteed vote on the subsidies was progress,
he was clear that, quote,
it's got to be more than a promise
that we might get around to it later.
When asked about the offer from Thune,
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer
was slightly less optimistic.
Look, we're not negotiating in public, plain and simple.
And Leader Thune has not come to me
with any proposal.
at this point. The Senate is set to vote next week to pay some federal employees, including
active duty members of the military, as the shutdown drags into its third week.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegesith announced Thursday that the Admiral in charge of U.S. military forces
in Latin America will step down at the end of this year. Admiral Alvin Holsey took the job late
last year, and the position usually lasts three years. The announcement did not provide a reason
for Holsey's early exit, but an anonymous source of the job.
told Reuters that Holsey and Higseth had been budding heads over the last few days.
Is it a coincidence that also in the last few days, Trump confirmed that the CIA is carrying
out covert operations inside Venezuela and that he declined to rule out conducting military strikes
on Venezuelan soil? Must be. I'm sure it's also just a coincidence that over the past few weeks,
alleged drug smuggling boats have been extrajudiciously bombed by the U.S. military
without providing evidence to Congress that the boats have anything to do with drug cartels.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro addressed Trump's threats in a speech on Wednesday.
He says there, quote,
no to regime change, which reminds us so much of the endless failed wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and so on.
Maduro also cited U.S.-backed coups in Argentina and Chile, after which right-wing dictators killed or disappeared thousands of people.
So, point to Maduro.
On Thursday, White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt was asked during a press gaggle whether Trump believes Maduro's days are numbered.
I think President Trump believes that Nicholas Maduro is an illegitimate president leading an illegitimate regime that has been trafficking drugs to the United States of America for far too long and we're not going to tolerate it.
Donald Trump, the peace president.
Trump says he phoned Russian President Putin Thursday to kick up momentum for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize.
I mean, um, peace in Ukraine.
His truth social post about all this said that the conversation was productive and that it could lead to a face-to-face meeting in Hungary.
Things have been icy between Trump and Putin lately, especially after that summertime summit they held in Alaska,
turned out to be a low-cal nothing burger.
There were no peace deals in Russia.
kept unloading drones and missiles on Ukraine.
But Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky has been getting more face-time with Trump.
Zelensky addressed to impress Trump with the White House in August, and he's set to be there again today.
The stakes are high.
Trump threatened to provide Ukraine with Tomahawk cruise missiles that can strike deep into Russia.
Ukraine's made a habit of destroying Russian oil and gas facilities, and the missiles could put more of them in reach.
As for whether Trump can get Putin and Zelensky to talk face to face,
Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt fielded that one to reporters.
President Putin discussed meeting together in Budapest,
and President Trump will talk about that opportunity with President Zelensky when he's here at the White House.
Trump says cooler heads might eventually prevail, though, thanks to him.
His truth social post boasts, quote,
I actually believe that the success in the Middle East will help in our negotiation
in attaining an end to the war with Russia slash Ukraine.
And that's the news.
One more thing.
It's been a tough time in America lately for everyone who values values.
You know, respect, dignity, not being a racist in a group chat.
You can feel as if the worst people in the world just keep benefits.
from being the worst. But not always. Sometimes, the worst people fail, miserably. Take Ryan Walters.
Until very recently, he served as Oklahoma's state superintendent of public instruction,
a position he seemed to view as a license to make Oklahoma schools as Trumpy as humanly possible.
For example, in November of 2024, Walters announced that he was requiring all Oklahoma schools
to show a video of himself, praying for Trump. Here's a portion of that video.
I will now say a prayer, and to be clear, students, you don't have to join.
But if you so wish, I'm going to go ahead and pray.
Dear God, thank you for all the blessings you've given our country.
I pray for our leaders to make the right decisions.
I pray in particular for President Donald Trump and his team as they continue to bring about change to the country.
That's after he decided that all schools in Oklahoma should teach the Bible in grades 5 through 12.
Getting copies of a certain Bible for every school would cost $3 million, which is odd because you can find the Bible for free online, like, easily.
And earlier this year, Walters decided that any teachers coming to Oklahoma from, quote, progressive states would need to pass a test to ensure they weren't too woke.
Now, here's where I usually have to tell you that Walters had tons of support from his fellow Republicans for his fight against socialism or something.
But he didn't.
because during his time in office, lots of Republicans in Oklahoma
seemed to think Walters was too focused on culture war bullshit
and not focused nearly enough on his actual job.
See, besides the nonsense I just listed,
things just kept happening to Ryan Walters.
Like the time somehow images of nude women
were playing on a TV in his office during a meeting.
Or the many times he made the state pay for his out-of-state trips to,
for example, go see a quote,
anti-abortion horror film, or meet with the creator of libs of TikTok. The total for those trips for
himself and his staff, $30,000. So when Walters unexpectedly resigned to lead a conservative group
aimed at, quote, destroying teachers' unions, even his fellow Republicans seem thrilled to see him
gone. Oklahoma's Attorney General said Walters was, quote, an embarrassment to our state.
One of the first acts of Walter's replacement, Lyndall Fields, he canceled that whole Bible curriculum
thing Thursday, saying he has, quote, no plans to distribute Bibles or a biblical character education
curriculum in classrooms. Instead, he wants to do something wild and crazy. Focus on Oklahoma's
schools. Before we go, every day on the news, we see the headlines, we hear from the nation's
most powerful leaders, and watch pundits analyze it all in studios far removed from the everyday
people caught in the crosshairs. Not anymore. Alex Wagner wants to step away from the traditional
media bubble and towards the folks most affected by her unprecedented times in her new show,
Runaway Country with Alex Wagner. She'll bring you stories from the front lines and the voices
of those too often left out of the conversation. Make sure to tune into the premiere of
Runaway Country with Alex Wagner on October 23rd. New episodes drop every Thursday. Make sure
to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and watch on YouTube.
That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
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But also, the wine industry is facing challenges from climate change and consumer dissatisfaction, like me.
Waterday is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe.
I'm Jane Koston, and look,
if the wine industry needs me to step up, I will meet the challenge.
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I don't know.
Thank you.
