What A Day - Arizona Gets Ready To Vote On Abortion
Episode Date: September 9, 2024Arizona is one of 10 states where voters will get to weigh in directly on abortion access in November in the form of a ballot measure that would enshrine the right to the procedure in the state's cons...titution. On today's show, we're welcoming our new host of 'What A Day," Jane Coaston. Jane tells us more about her recent trip to Arizona with the 'Pod Save America' guys and speaks with Chris Love, a reproductive rights activist and a spokesperson for Arizonans for Abortion Access.And in headlines: The New York Times released a new poll showing Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump in a statistical dead heat ahead of the debate, the mother of the suspected Apalachee High School shooter says she called the school about half an hour before the shooting to warn a counselor about her son, and Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill was detained by police and placed in handcuffs a block away from the stadium ahead of Sunday's game.Show Notes:Check out AAA – https://www.arizonaforabortionaccess.org/Subscribe 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
Transcript
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It's Monday, September 9th. I'm your new host, Jane Koston.
And I'm Trevelle Anderson.
And this is What A Day, the show where Drake absolutely cannot catch a break, even at the Super Bowl.
With news breaking yesterday that Kendrick Lamar would be performing at the Super Bowl next year,
is there anywhere on Earth where Drake is safe?
Has anyone ever been successfully bullied out of the United States?
Because Kendrick Lamar is doing his best.
On today's show, a new poll shows the race between Vice President Harris and former President Trump is tighter than ever. Plus, a Miami Dolphins player is detained by police for a traffic
violation on his way to play and ultimately win Sunday's game. But first, Jane, this is your first full episode with us.
Tell the people a little bit more about yourself.
I'm from Ohio.
I'm a Virgo.
I watch a lot of sports.
I love sports.
I just moved to Los Angeles.
I still don't know where anything is.
And I'm so excited to be here.
And you also apparently know a lot about Arizona politics.
Just last week, we spoke about the transition of Arizona's GOP from the party of late Senator John McCain to election denying loyalists of former President Donald Trump.
You were just in Phoenix with Pod Save America over the weekend talking more about politics in the state.
How was that?
Awesome. And shout out to our fantastic audience.
And I got to meet Chris Love, an attorney and reproductive rights activist and a spokesperson
for Arizonans for Abortion Access at the Pod Save America show. Abortion is on the ballot in the
Grand Canyon State. The voters will be deciding whether or not to put the right to an abortion
in the state's constitution after the state's 1864 ban on abortion, yes, from 1864, was overturned
by the legislature. And I spoke with Chris again from the studio. Chris, hi. Hey. Welcome back to
What A Day. Oh, thanks for having me again. A long time no see. So we're less than 60 days from the
election. What are you hearing? What's the mood on the ground in Arizona? There's a lot of excitement, especially around, you know, the presidential race.
There's a lot of excitement about everything else, our Senate race. And there is the most
excitement about Prop 139, which is the Arizona Abortion Access Act, which will enshrine the
fundamental right to abortion in our state constitution.
Your coalition has had some major wins in your path to getting the initiative on the ballot.
Last month, your group announced that you got a record number of signatures and you scored a win with the state Supreme Court to ensure that Prop 139 is on the ballot. What are the remaining
obstacles you see between now and getting this passed in November?
From here on out, we're running a
regular old yes campaign, right? So I think our obstacles will always be involved with getting
our message out to as many voters as humanly possible, and then driving them to the polls
in November. And especially for our early voters, where in early October, they received their
ballots in the mail. So we've got to make sure that everyone is turning out for this election. But we also need to direct them on
where to find us on the ballot. This year, we're going to have four full pages. And that's because
our legislature set out 11 different referrals. We have a whole host of judges that are up for their retention votes,
in addition to all of the other things that will be on the ballot. So we've got to direct people
to Prop 139, which will be like somewhere on the last page on the bottom of the ballot.
Arizona is also a major swing state in the upcoming election. Most recent polls have the race
virtually tied in the state of Arizona, with Trump slightly ahead
of Harris by less than a point. I know that in the past, your coalition has tried to avoid making
this measure about Democrats versus Republicans. But Kamala Harris has made abortion access central
to her campaign and has generated a ton of enthusiasm in part by doing so. So does that
change how your group's approaching this particular ballot issue? Not necessarily.
I think we're happy to have our friends wherever we can take them.
We're very excited that the vice president is out and putting reproductive freedom front and center in her campaign.
We're excited about it because the more people that are talking about it, the more we can
relate it back to our proposition.
However, in Arizona, Democrats make up about a third of the electorate here.
And so we can't win anything with 50 percent without also talking to independents and Republicans.
So we're our message is as broad as it possibly can be in order to make those people feel OK about voting yes for our initiative.
The debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris is tomorrow.
What are you hoping to hear from both candidates?
I'm hoping to see that Donald Trump actually takes an actual position on abortion.
And, you know, I really enjoy listening to the vice president speak about abortion and reproductive freedom.
I really hope that she leans in on talking about abortion in general. I want to hear exactly what their plans are
for how to ensure that, you know,
folks across the United States will have abortion access
if they were the prevailing party.
Yeah, if Trump wins in November,
action to protect abortion at the state level
is going to become even more important.
How is Arizona for Abortion Access
preparing for that possibility?
Well, you know, this is the first step in many things that we need to do. But the first thing
was to make sure that we constitutionally protected the right to abortion here in our
state, right? So that's the first step. Then we need to do the things to make sure that that
abortion access is a reality for folks in Arizona. So although our campaign will finish up in December, the organizations that are involved
with the campaign will be doing the work of making sure that, you know, some of the things
that are barriers to abortion that are still on the books are taken out of law here in
Arizona.
Chris Love, thank you so much for joining me.
Thanks so much.
That was my conversation with Chris Love.
She's a senior advisor to Planned Parenthood of Arizona
and one of the organizers behind a ballot initiative
to enshrine the right to an abortion in the state's constitution.
That's the latest for now.
We'll get to some headlines in a moment.
But if you like the show, make sure to subscribe and share it with your friends.
We'll be back after some ads.
Now let's get to some of today's top stories.
It's going to be good.
We're going to be good.
We're going to be fine.
We're going to be fine. We are all in this together. Yes, we are. We're going to be good. We're going to be fine. We're going to be fine. We are all in this together.
Yes, we are. We're going to be fine. Yes, we are. Yes, we are. Yes, we are.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are set to square off tomorrow in Pittsburgh for their first and only scheduled debate ahead of Election Day. Harris was prepping in the city on Saturday and took a break to shop at a local spice shop where she said that she was honored to earn the endorsements
of former Republican Representative Liz Cheney
and her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney.
Yes, that Dick Cheney.
I know, it's weird for me too.
I think that what they both, as leaders who are well-respected,
are making an important statement
that it's okay and, if not important, to put country above party.
While Harris prepped in Pittsburgh,
Trump was in Wisconsin Saturday for a campaign event
where he seemed to downplay expectations for his performance.
You know, if I destroy her in the debate,
they'll say, Trump suffered a humiliating defeat tonight, no matter what.
The stakes for Tuesday's debate are sky high.
On Sunday, the New York Times released a poll claiming to be the first high-quality survey since the conventions.
It showed the race in a virtual dead heat, with Trump ahead nationally by just one point.
Last week, the Department of Justice released an indictment of two Russian employees of RT,
Russia's global TV network, suspected of funneling $10 million to a company called Tenet Media,
which employed multiple American right-wing influencers in an effort to push anti-Ukraine,
pro-Russian, and generally anti-a lot of other people opinions.
Here's just a sample from beanie-wearing Trump enthusiast and podcast host
Tim Poole, who was among the influencers involved in the scheme. This is psychotic. Ukraine is the
enemy of this country. Ukraine is our enemy. Being funded by the Democrats, I will stress again,
one of the greatest enemies of our nation right now is Ukraine. Now, several of the influencers
in question are saying that they had no idea
they were part of a Russian influence operation.
But I have a couple of general rules.
No one on the internet wants to help you commit crimes.
Absolutely never go cave diving.
And if someone offers you $400,000 a month
and a $100,000 signing bonus
to record four videos a week,
as the indictment alleges,
maybe something's up.
You know how people say, like, know your worth? Well, none of us, not one, is worth $100,000 a week for recording
YouTube videos screaming about Ukraine that get less than a thousand views. The mother of the
suspected Apalachee High School shooter says that she called the school about half an hour before
the shooting to warn a counselor about her son, according to text exchanges between her and her family.
Several of the shooter's family members had also been in contact with the school in the weeks prior
to the shooting, trying to get him help for, quote, homicidal and suicidal thoughts. School
administrators were apparently looking for the shooter in the minutes leading up to the first
gunshots. A student from the high school said an administrator came into her math class
and confiscated the backpack of a student with a similar name.
The 14-year-old gunman appeared in court on Friday but did not enter a plea or seek bail.
He's being charged as an adult with four counts of felony murder.
His father, who purchased the automatic rifle for him, is also facing murder charges.
Miami Dolphins star wide receiver Tyreek Hill was detained by police and placed in handcuffs hours before the start of his team's game on Sunday, just about one block from the Dolphins
Stadium.
Videos taken by many people in nearby cars show police officers forcing Hill to lay face
down on the ground while handcuffed.
Hill told reporters after the game that he was pulled over for speeding,
and the director of the Miami-Dade Police Department put out a statement
saying that the incident is being investigated internally
and that one of the officers involved has been placed on administrative duties
while the investigation is underway.
Here Hill is at a post-game press conference
responding to a question about why police officers handcuffed and forced him to the ground. I've been trying to figure that out too, man. Right now I'm still
trying to put it all together. So I'm not going to give you a version that I still don't know
what happened. You know what I'm saying? But I do want to say, I do want to be able to use this
platform to say like, what if I wasn't Tyreek Hill, bro? Worst case scenario. Hill went on to
score an impressive 80-yard touchdown
during the Dolphins' comeback win over the Jacksonville Jaguars
because the Jaguars put safeties on one of the fastest people in the NFL,
which is a very bad idea.
He celebrated by putting his hands behind his back
in a nod to the police incident.
And those are the headlines.
And finally, certainly the Watt Squad would like to know more about you, Jane.
Are you down for a little rapid fire moment?
Always.
Okay, first up, what trash TV star would you want to have dinner with?
Ooh, the entire cast of Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, but I am in charge of who gets to speak.
Next question.
What's your favorite football team?
The University of Michigan Wolverines, who are mean to me sometimes.
Okay.
And last but not least, what's the thing that interests you most about this election? I am interested to see if the Republican Party can crazy its way to the White House again, despite many people saying, hey, be less crazy.
Well, we surely will find out soon enough. One more thing before we go.
Empire City, the untold origin story of the NYPD is out now.
Hosted by Peabody Award-winning host Chinjurai Kumanika,
the series begins in the summer of 1835
when Black New Yorkers are being kidnapped
and sold into slavery in the South.
But their friends and families can't call the cops
because it turns out the kidnappers are the cops.
Can a group of Black resistance fighters stop it?
From Wondery, Cricket Media, and Push Black,
Empire City uncovers the hidden history
of one of the largest police forces in the world.
Follow Empire City on the Wondery app
or wherever you get your podcasts
to hear the first two episodes.
For early ad-free access, join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on you get your podcasts to hear the first two episodes. For early ad-free access,
join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
don't get too stressed about the polls, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just thinking about how Anthony Richardson's arm could be used in military operations, like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com backslash subscribe.
I'm Jane Koston.
I'm Traeval Anderson.
And buy a new spice.
Little cardamom, little cinnamon.
Oh, you could do like one of those salt blends because we all know that there are some people who don't salt their food and we know who they are.
What a day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Our associate producer is Raven Yamamoto.
Our producer is Michelle Alloy. We had production help today from Ethan Oberman, Tyler Hill,
Johanna Case, Jarek Centeno, Greg Walters, and Julia Clare. Our showrunner is Erica Morrison,
and our executive producer is Adrienne Hill. Our theme music is by Colin Gillyard and Kashaka.