What A Day - An Anticlimactic End to Mayorkas Impeachment
Episode Date: April 18, 2024On Wednesday, the Senate moved to dismiss two articles of impeachment against Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas over his handling of the border. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer sa...id Democrats needed “to set a precedent that impeachment should never be used to settle policy disagreements.” Congressional reporter Matt Laslo breaks down the vibes on Capitol Hill.And in headlines: Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi warned Israel that even the “tiniest invasion” on their part would provoke a “massive” response, President Joe Biden may not appear on Ohio’s ballot this November, and Arizona Republicans defeated another effort to repeal the state’s near-total abortion ban.Show Notes:What 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
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It's Thursday, April 18th. I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver and this is What A Day, the pod where we have a new thing to worry about falling out of the sky.
Space junk. NASA confirmed that the object that tore through a Naples, Florida man's home was debris from the space station.
It had been floating around up there for three years.
Absolutely. The federal government is remodeling my home if this happens to me.
Yeah, I'm getting a farmhouse sink out of it. I don't know about you.
On today's show, Columbia University's president was on the hill for a hearing related to
anti-Semitism on the university's campus. Plus, Iran warns Israel of a massive response if it
acts after last week's attack. But first, the Senate moved quickly to dismiss two articles of impeachment against Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas on Wednesday.
The whole trial, if you can call it that, lasted about three hours. Here's Senate Majority Leader
Chuck Schumer speaking at a press conference after. What we saw today was a microcosm of this impeachment since day one. Hallowed, frivolous, political. And we felt very strongly
that we had to set a precedent that impeachment should never be used to settle policy disagreements.
It was an anticlimactic end to House Republicans' long-shot bid to oust Mayorkas. You'll remember
they had to vote
twice on his impeachment in February. The first one failed because too many Republicans defected.
Now it's all over and Mayorkas keeps his job. Yes, which I mean, should have been the case
from the beginning. We did not need to go down this whole sideshow. No, but here we are. I wish
Chuck Schumer had added unserious to his remarks there. That is what this was. But anyways, Juanita,
can you explain how this all went down for us? Well, on Tuesday, Johnson and other House
Republicans officially walked over the two articles of impeachment against Mayorkas to the
Senate. Congressional reporter Matt Laszlo was there. He's a contributor for Wired and has been
reporting on the Hill for nearly two decades. He says despite the somber nature of the proceeding,
everyone, even Republicans, knew that there was almost no chance
that the democratically controlled Senate would allow the impeachment proceeding to continue.
This was nothing.
Republicans kept clinging to it as like,
look, this is some action on the border.
But even then, when you pressed a little harder,
they knew this was nothing and going nowhere.
Laszlo says, if anything, the whole impeachment process was more about the 2024 election and
scoring political points. Absolutely, as has been very clear to many of us on this program for
this whole time. But I'm curious about the reaction from the House Republicans. This
would seem to be yet another embarrassing
defeat for Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson, whose job looks to be increasingly on the rocks
these days, thanks to the party's hard right. But what's the vibe over there? Well, at least
according to Laszlo, just the photo op of walking the articles of impeachment to the Senate was
enough for some House Republicans. And he says that speaks to the ways impeachment has become
increasingly obsolete. These lawmakers, they don't really believe what they're doing. some House Republicans. And he says that speaks to the ways impeachment has become increasingly
obsolete. These lawmakers, they don't really believe what they're doing. They're just looking
to dunk on TV every chance they can get. And watching Fox News today, after the impeachment
went down with Mayorkas, they're not really covering it. They will on some of the primetime
shows or whatever. But Republicans didn't take this serious. They saw it as an end. They will on some of the primetime shows or whatever. But Republicans didn't take
this serious. They saw it as an end. They saw it as a way to take a chink off of Biden's armor.
And that's where it's sad because impeachment is supposed to be the tool of last resort.
Laszlo says the question these days is...
Is Congress serious? Does Congress matter?
And I think they keep proving to themselves and the rest of us that they themselves are
becoming as obsolete as these tools that they keep using.
Yeah.
Thank you, Matt, for just underscoring this point.
Tools that they keep using and abusing, quite honestly.
And this is not the last
that we're going to hear about impeachment from this Congress either. You know, they are not going
to let this rest. House Republicans still seem pretty determined to find a way to impeach
President Joe Biden before the election, even if they have zero reasons as of now to do it.
Zero reasons, zero evidence. That's exactly right. On Tuesday, the White House declined
an invitation from the House Oversight Committee to testify in its impeachment inquiry hearing.
In a letter obtained by CNN, the special counsel for the president wrote that Biden had, quote,
done nothing wrong and accused the committee's chair, James Comer of Kentucky, of spreading
disinformation. And you'll remember, too, that the Republicans star witness in their investigation
into Biden and his family, an ex-FBI informant, has been arrested and charged for fabricating a bribery scheme involving the Bidens.
But that's not stopping Republicans.
Comer told Fox News on Wednesday that impeachment is still on the table
and that criminal referrals could come, quote, within weeks.
And that led to this testy exchange during Wednesday's oversight committee
between Comer
and the ranking Democrat, Maryland's Jamie Raskin. You have not identified a single crime.
Well, what is the crime that you want to impeach Joe Biden for and keep this nonsense going? Tell
America right now. You're about to find out. What is the crime? You're about to find out.
I hate that Congress sounds like an episode of The Real Housewives, but I also am like,
Jamie Raskin made it plain.
Just tell everybody what your evidence is.
They don't have any.
They have none.
And according to Laszlo, Comer even told him he knows there's nothing there when it comes
to Biden, that it's more about vengeance for the second impeachment of former President
Donald Trump after the insurrection.
I pushed him, you know, way at the start of the impeachment of Biden. And I got him to admit that, yeah, because they went after Trump
for that second impeachment, that's the reason we as a Republican Party have to carry through on our
end. Leslow says he was at the Capitol that day on January 6. He still says he can't understand
how Republicans seem to have just moved past it.
We'll keep following this story
as Republicans continue their unfounded impeachment effort
against President Biden,
but that's the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Tensions appear to be growing in the Middle East amid fears of a regional war.
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi on Wednesday warned Israel that even the, quote,
tiniest invasion on their part would provoke a,
quote, massive response. This comes after Iran attacked Israel over the weekend,
launching hundreds of missiles and drones on Tel Aviv. The attack was in retaliation for Israel's initial attack on an Iranian embassy in Syria earlier this month. Israel's military chief
seemed unbothered by Raisi's remarks, saying that Israel will respond to the attack, but he stopped short of providing any details on how or when that would happen.
Also on Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with officials from Germany and
Britain. They are two of several Israeli allies urging Netanyahu to de-escalate the situation.
According to the Associated Press, Netanyahu told his cabinet, quote,
we will make our decisions ourselves.
The state of Israel will do whatever is necessary to defend itself.
Meanwhile, the suffering of hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza continues.
The U.N. Children's Fund, or UNICEF, released a report this week
saying that more than 13,000 children have been killed in Gaza since October 7th.
It's possible that Joe Biden will not appear on ballots this November in the
crucial state of Ohio. At issue is a technicality in Ohio law that says a candidate has to be
certified 90 days before the election. Doing the math, that's August 7th. But Biden won't be
officially certified until August 19th during the Democratic National Convention. Last week,
a Democratic elections attorney in Ohio proposed to officials that Biden be provisionally certified before the deadline. But on Monday, that idea was
shot down by Ohio's Republican Attorney General in a letter to the Secretary of State. Democrats
still have a few options to make sure President Biden is on the ballot in the state. One option,
sue. The other, hope that the Republican-controlled legislature passes an exemption. They actually did in 2020 when both Democrats and Republicans had their conventions too late for the candidates to be officially certified in time.
Meanwhile, the president faces the same issue in Washington state and Alabama.
Washington's secretary of state said last week that they'll accept a provisional certification,
while Alabama lawmakers advanced a bill Wednesday to make sure Biden can be on their state's ballot. Even Alabama is letting him. Come on. So this is
pretty diabolical by Ohio. But at this point, we have to know we're dealing with the worst people
like we got to get ahead of this. Everybody, we got to look at the books beforehand. We got to
know the rules. Arizona Republicans defeated another effort to repeal
the state's near-total abortion ban. The draconian 1864 law was revived last week after a ruling by
the state's Supreme Court. And on Wednesday, Democratic State Representative Stephanie
Stahl Hamilton tried to fast-track her bill to repeal it. But Republican leaders in the state
house shut down her motion. That led to a round of applause by anti-abortion
activists who packed the audience as posted on X by the DNC.
Talk about diabolical though. Like, wow. Just sick people. This was the second attempt by Arizona
Dems to repeal the law and it will not be the last. Democratic State Representative Lupe Contreras
told the Arizona Republic newspaper,
quote, this is not going away.
We'll bring it back to the floor again.
Columbia University's President Manoush Shafiq
sat in front of a U.S. Congressional Committee
on Wednesday and strongly condemned antisemitism.
It's the latest round of antisemitism hearings
where lawmakers question presidents
of some of the country's most prestigious universities.
House lawmakers accused Shafiq of failing to protect Jewish students since the October 7th
attacks in Israel. Shafiq defended the university's efforts to protect its students and agreed that
the school was facing a, quote, moral crisis. Columbia strives to be a community free of
discrimination and hate in all its forms, and we condemn the anti-Semitism that is so pervasive today.
Meanwhile, dozens of students staged an encampment on Columbia's campus
to signal solidarity for Palestinians in Gaza.
Take a listen to one of the students on campus who spoke with the news outlet Middle East Eye.
As the genocide only gets worse, so too is the erosion of democracy across the country and on college campuses.
And this has a violent effect. In fact, we saw the arrest of students at Vanderbilt.
We are probably going to be arrested shortly here today at Columbia University.
And on the other side of the country, students at the University of Southern California
protested their university's decision this week to ban its 2024 valedictorian, Asna Tabassum,
from speaking at this year's graduation
ceremony. Tabassum is a first-generation South Asian Muslim student who minored in resistance
to genocide. She told the LA Times, quote, the university has betrayed me and caved into a
campaign of hatred. And finally, for the first time in 70 years, the NBA announced Wednesday
that it is banning a player for life.
Jonte Porter, a power forward for the Toronto Raptors, illegally participated in gambling
on his own games.
A league investigation found that he bet on NBA games while playing in one of the minor
leagues.
Porter also shared confidential information with bettors and intentionally limited his
participation in games.
For example, he claimed to suffer from an illness during a game and only played for
three minutes, which is so crazy.
Just wild.
It is just the latest in a string of controversies surrounding sports betting and its effect
on professional leagues.
As a reminder, NBA players are not allowed to make wagers on NBA games.
It is like the oldest rule in the book for these sports leagues.
Come on.
It feels like a pretty basic rule.
But also I'm looking at Mr. Porter.
Like, why would you like fake injuries three minutes into a game?
Like, find a better bet if you're going to do this.
That actually is about increasing your stats.
Like, I don't know.
Yeah, that's like the definition of not betting on yourself,
which I don't think is what we should aspire to.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
This week marks the national holiday for 20.
So we know you'll be looking for a good laugh.
Tune into terminally online to hear your dream blunt rotation of cricket hosts and staffers,
including what a day's own Trayvon Anderson, Jon Favreau and producers Caroline Reston
and Caroline Dunphy.
This week, the roundtable is covering all things Beehive, Jojo Siwa,
and the now TikTok famous guy who ghosted his own wife.
To get access to this exclusive series and get unexpectedly sore abs,
head to Cricut.com slash friends to sign up.
That is all for today.
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And if you're into reading and not just about Jonte Porter's stats like me, what a day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver. I'm Priyanka Arabindi. And watch out for space junk. Oh, my God. Cover those heads, everybody. You never know. I'm a very jumpy girl anyway,
but if some shit comes
crashing through my upstairs
into my dad,
I'm freaking out.
I'm like losing my mind.
So I don't know.
How would you react?
If the fates have it out
for you that bad,
like what have you done?
What kind of karma
is coming to you?
I just want to know
what you did.
Okay, final destination.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Our associate producers are Raven Yamamoto and Natalie Bettendorf.
We had production help today from Leo Duran, Greg Walters, and Julia Clare.
Our showrunner is Erica Morrison, and our executive producer is Adrienne Hill.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.