What A Day - An All-Consuming Rage
Episode Date: October 19, 2023President Joe Biden touched down in Israel on Wednesday in a show of support for a nation in mourning – but also warned against the human cost of being swept up by wartime rage. He also confirmed th...at Israel agreed to allow the beginning of humanitarian aid into Gaza from Egypt.Representative Jim Jordan once again lost his bid to become the next House speaker, with more of his Republican colleagues voting against him in the second round. A third round is scheduled for today, but his losses raise questions over whether he can get the support of his entire caucus. And in headlines: the man long suspected of killing Natalee Holloway in 2005 confessed to her murder, migrant families with children will now only have 60 days to stay in New York City shelters, and the city of Columbus, Ohio approved a sweeping deal to cancel $335 million of medical debt.Show Notes:What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Thursday, October 19th. I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver, and this is What A Day.
On today's show, New York City is limiting how long migrant families with children can stay in emergency shelters.
Plus, thousands of people in Columbus, Ohio can expect to have their medical debt wiped out.
And I love the sound of that.
Absolutely. But first, President Biden touched down in Israel yesterday to visit with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other leaders.
This took place amid growing tensions in the Middle East over a blast at the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital in Gaza City earlier this week that reportedly has left hundreds of people dead.
And before we get into the details of Biden's visit, let's talk more about the blast.
There have been conflicting claims about who is responsible. So what more do we know at this point? Yes. So at this time,
both U.S. and Israeli intelligence indicates that the blast was from a failed rocket that was fired
by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which is another militant group in Gaza, which means it was not
from an Israeli airstrike, which was initially believed and
reported by many. And even before we knew what was what, that blast definitely had an impact
on Biden's visit. So tell us more about that. Yeah. You know, Biden, of course, was there to
show support for a longtime U.S. ally, but he used the opportunity to warn Israel against the human
costs of being swept up in
wartime rage. Take a listen. Since this terrorist attack took place, we've seen it described as
Israel's 9-11. But for a nation the size of Israel, it was like 15 9-11s. You can't look at what has
happened here to your mothers, your fathers, your grandparents,
sons, daughters, children, even babies, and not scream out for justice.
Justice must be done.
But I caution this while you feel that rage, don't be consumed by it.
After 9-11, we were enraged in the United States. While we sought justice and got justice,
we also made mistakes. Biden went on to advocate for Israel to allow the delivery of limited
quantities of aid into Gaza from Egypt, an announcement that Israel followed through with
shortly afterwards. Biden also announced $100 million in U.S. aid for Palestinian civilians, both in Gaza and in the West Bank.
Opening the Rafah border crossing from Egypt into Gaza is not without its complications, though.
At this time, there are long lines of trucks that are waiting in Egypt to bring food, water and fuel into Gaza.
But the area has been damaged by recent Israeli airstrikes.
Egyptian officials want Israel to guarantee
that it's safe before they go in.
And on the other hand,
Israel wants to make sure that these trucks are checked
to ensure that they're only carrying aid
and that that aid only reaches civilians,
not these Hamas fighters
that they are waging this war against.
Biden has said that the Egyptian government
has agreed to let 20 of these trucks into Gaza as a test.
If Hamas does not intercept them, they will allow more.
But that aid could start arriving as early as Friday.
So definitely some major developments there as a result of Biden's visit.
But this is all happening while protests in the Middle East continue to grow, especially in the aftermath of the hospital blast in Gaza City. It is unclear what,
if any effect, the U.S. intelligence findings about who was actually responsible for the attack
will have on these protests. Many believe that because of its unwavering support of Israel,
the U.S. is actually complicit in the violence that's been taking place. Here at home, there
have also been growing protests as well. Just yesterday in the U.S. Capitol, the advocacy group Jewish Voice for Peace
protested for an immediate ceasefire to, quote, stop a genocide from unfolding in real time.
So obviously a lot happening here at home, a lot happening abroad.
We will continue to keep you updated with all of the latest details.
Yeah, and I think those protests domestically and internationally are part of the reason
why President Biden is given a primetime address today
at 8 p.m. Eastern.
So I'm sure there's going to be a lot to cover from that.
Yeah.
Now let's go to Capitol Hill because just like that,
Representative Jim Jordan is a two-time loser
as the second vote on his nomination
to become Speaker of the House felled yesterday after 22 Republicans voted against him.
That's up from 20 during the first vote on Tuesday.
It just goes to show that Jordan and his skills of persuasion are lacking,
and by gaining only 199 votes, Jordan made history as that was the first time in 100 years
that a majority nominee earned fewer than 200 votes.
Like, shame and shade.
It's not the kind of history you want to be making.
That is bad.
Of course, Democrats remained united behind House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries,
as all 212 of them voted the same way for the 17th time this Congress.
And Representative Nancy Pelosi described the second vote best when she
said this. It was a triumph for democracy in our country that an insurrection was rejected
by the Republicans again as their candidate for speaker. I mean, she's not wrong. No lies detected.
No lies detected. None. I'm sorry. She's right. And she's also giving another example for why context is so important and why someone
like Jim Jordan should not be the next speaker of the House or the third in line to the presidency
because yikes.
Absolutely not.
Now, after the failed second vote, Republicans were supposed to meet behind closed doors
to discuss Jordan's nomination and next steps.
But that conference wide meeting never happened.
All right, okay.
And what is this that I hear
about a potential compromise with Democrats?
Tell us more about what's going on here.
Yeah, it's looking a little complicated.
So while the Republican House Conference wasn't meeting,
the Democratic House Caucus was huddled in a meeting
where reportedly doing a temp check, as we call it,
on whether or not Democratic
members would be open to supporting a resolution to empower the interim speaker, Republican
Representative Patrick McHenry.
According to NBC News, two sources confirmed these talks, but there is no clear indication
that Democrats would ultimately choose this move.
The New York Times also reported that a bipartisan plan to give McHenry power has been circulating
on the Hill.
And there are multiple proposals for timelines related to this increased power,
including recurring votes to empower McHenry on a biweekly basis, empowering him through November
17th when the government is set to run out of money, and empowering him through January 3rd,
2024. At the moment, the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus is leading the talks, and there
is a growing chorus of Republicans who are vocally against such a resolution, including,
you guessed it, Jim Jordan and his biggest supporters. Got it. OK, all I'm seeing is
Republicans being against things, but not exactly being for anything productive, which feels like
a very neat encapsulation of what's going on a little more
broadly. But anyways, what can we expect next here? Are we going to get another replay of this
failed vote for Jim Jordan today? Like, is this just going to repeat 15 more times? What do we
know? I mean, maybe at least that's what Speaker Pro Tem McHenry told reporters as he left the
Capitol building last night. And that doesn't quite match the confidence of Jim Jordan's statement to reporters that the third vote would be happening
today and that he's not backing down from this process. McHenry did add that while the vote
today at noon is not, quote, set in stone, Republicans wanted to have the option to go
to the floor today for another vote. And that vote will likely show more Republicans rejecting
Jim Jordan, as there are reports that GOP members are actually staggering their votes against Jim Jordan,
like they're taking turns on who's going to vote no, and it's giving a big old mess at this point.
Yeah, just a disaster.
I mean, of course, we'll keep following this slow motion train wreck
and all the chaos from the House floor, but that's the latest for now.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
The man long suspected of killing Natalie Holloway in 2005 has confessed to her murder, though he has not been charged with her death.
According to court documents released yesterday, Yoron Van Der Sloot agreed to plead guilty to extortion and wire fraud charges and receive a 20 year prison sentence in exchange for providing details about the Alabama teenager's disappearance.
Those charges stem from when he tried to extort Holloway's mother for a quarter of a million dollars, he offered to reveal the location of her remains.
Holloway disappeared during a high school graduation trip to Aruba, and her body was never found, though she was declared legally dead back in 2012. In his confession, VanderSloot said
he killed Holloway after she rejected his advances. He will serve time concurrently with
a 28-year sentence handed down to him in Peru, where he was convicted of murdering another woman
in 2010. Another prominent donor has severed ties with Harvard, blasting the university's response
to the Israel-Hamas conflict. Leaders of the Wexner Foundation, the nonprofit founded by
Victoria's secret founder Leslie Wexner,
said they were, quote, stunned and sickened because Harvard failed, in their minds,
to stand with Israel following the initial attack by Hamas.
Other wealthy donors and alumni have also sharply criticized the Ivy League school in recent days.
Meanwhile, Harvard students are still reeling from the sudden appearance of a billboard truck that showed up on campus last week.
It displayed the names and photos of students belonging to dozens of student organizations that published a letter calling Israel, quote, entirely responsible for the Hamas attack on October 7th.
Multiple websites have also posted the names, faces and class years of the letter co-signers.
And that's giving doxing up in the worst ways.
Seriously.
The truck, and others like it that have appeared at other universities,
is owned and operated by the conservative group Accuracy and Media,
and its efforts don't stop there.
The group has also purchased domain names for each of the Harvard students they've doxed,
and their next move is
to make websites for every single one, calling on the university to punish them like, this is
unhinged. This is entering the realm of harassment at this point. It is. It absolutely is. All of
this points to the kind of tensions that have been building at college campuses nationwide amid
the Israel-Hamas conflict, especially as donors continue to
pressure schools to take a stance on this complex and divisive issue, while also guaranteeing
students' right to free speech.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams this week announced that migrant families with children will now
have just 60 days to stay at emergency shelters.
The new rule will take effect next week.
In a recent statement, the
mayor's office says that after those 60 days are up, families can reapply for shelter if they are
unable to find a different place to live. All of this comes amid a surge of migrants arriving in
New York City. More than 126,000 of them have come since last spring, and officials say that
over 64,000 asylum seekers are housed in city shelters. It's not clear how many
families will be affected by the new policy. Mayor Adams last month already imposed a 30-day limit
for adult migrants housed in city-run shelters and is also trying to suspend New York City's
right-to-shelter mandate for single adults. And over in Massachusetts, Governor Maura Healey said
Monday that starting next month, her state will not be
able to guarantee shelter placement for newly arrived migrants. That is because Massachusetts
is expected to reach its shelter capacity by the end of October, and the number of families housed
in those facilities is on track to hit 7,500. Healey said that the state cannot, quote,
safely expand beyond that number, but added that Massachusetts will not abandon its own
right to shelter law, which legally requires the state to give eligible families a place to stay.
Starting in November, families with health and safety risks will be prioritized,
and others will be put on a waiting list. And finally, in Ohio, the city of Columbus this week
approved a sweeping deal with four local hospital systems to cancel more than
$300 million of medical debt. This is what I like to see. I want more news like this,
please, across the country. Yeah, absolutely. This is amazing. The agreement, which was months
in the making, is expected to bring relief to over 300,000 Columbus residents. The program
covers anyone who makes two to four times above the
federal poverty level, anywhere between fifty five thousand to one hundred and ten thousand
dollars for a family of four and must have received care from any of those four hospitals
in Columbus between 2015 and 2020. And folks who are eligible don't have to fill out any paperwork
because this just keeps getting better and better. they can expect to get a letter in the
mail soon. In a statement, Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginthert said, quote, no one should have to face
the prospect of financial hardship because they sought care when they needed it most. Forgiving
this debt will go a long way toward helping our fellow neighbors rebuild their savings,
pay off their bills, qualify for a loan, make a down payment on a car, or support our local businesses. Yes, yes,
and yes, these are the benefits of debt forgiveness. And I love that this is medical
debt. And I feel like you can swap out medical for any other type of debt and see these same
benefits. Yes, I'm talking about student loan debt. There you go. There is that. I mean,
there's also the fact that maybe we can make care a little more accessible to all. That is a thing we have been talking about around elections for a minute now.
Perhaps the thing that, you know, we are realizing the appeal of more and more.
So maybe as we head into future elections, as we head into 2024 and beyond, just something to note, something to offer up to politicians to be like, hey, you can endorse this.
You can think this is a good idea.
People actually really like this
and people's lives would really meaningfully benefit
in all of these ways.
100%.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go,
you know we're big fans of Kariyuma.
They make cool eco-friendly shoes
that we basically wear 24 seven.
So we're excited to be releasing our second collaboration with them, Kariyuma they make cool eco-friendly shoes that we basically wear 24 7 so we're excited to
be releasing our second collaboration with them kariyuma and love it or leave it there's just
something about fall that makes you want to get new shoes so why not get ones made with organic
cotton canvas natural rubber cork and recycled plastics and it doesn't hurt that they have tiny surfing dogs on them.
They come in pink and black and feature a whimsical scene that'll absolutely put some pep in your step.
Plus, Kariuma plants two trees in the Brazilian rainforest
for each pair purchased.
Run, don't walk, but not until you get your pair of shoes
at Cricut.com slash store.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe,
leave a review,
and tell your friends to listen.
What a Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe
at Cricut.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
What a Day is a production of Cricut Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Our show's producer is Itzy Quintanilla.
Raven Yamamoto and Natalie Bettendorf are our associate producers.
And our senior producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.