What A Day - Dems Change Their Tune About Biden For President
Episode Date: July 3, 2024We may be starting to see a seismic shift in how the Democratic Party publicly talks about whether President Joe Biden should remain the party’s presumptive nominee for president. On Tuesday, Texas ...Rep. Lloyd Doggett became the first sitting Democratic lawmaker to call for Biden to leave the race after his devastating debate performance last week. Longtime Illinois Rep. Mike Quigley and Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island and Peter Welch of Vermont were also among those voicing harsh criticism of the president and his campaign. Most notably, South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn said he would support Vice President Kamala Harris if Biden dropped out of the race. Liz Bruenig, staff writer at The Atlantic, explains how the stakes of the race have changed in recent days.And in headlines: New York Justice Juan Merchan has delayed former President Donald Trump’s sentencing until September in the wake of the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani lost his license to practice law in the state, and President Biden proposed a new rule on Tuesday to protect around 35 million people from excessive heat in their workplaces.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/whatadayÂ
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It's Wednesday, July 3rd. I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver, and this is What A Day, the show that loves dogs,
unlike admitted dog killer South Dakota's Governor Kristi Noem
and third-party presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Yeah, this man was photographed posing with what appears to be a barbecued dog.
It's so sad, yes.
It's sad, it's disgusting.
There are people out there who want to vote for this man. You need your dog. Don't do that. On today's show, the sentencing
hearing and former president and convicted felon Donald Trump's hush money case is delayed. Plus,
Rudy Giuliani is disbarred in New York. But first, we may be starting to see a seismic shift in how
the Democratic Party is talking
about President Joe Biden and whether he should remain the party's presumptive nominee for
president.
On Tuesday, Texas Congressman Lloyd Doggett became the first sitting Democratic lawmaker
to call for President Joe Biden to leave the presidential race after his devastating debate
performance last week.
Doggett said in a statement, quote, recognizing that unlike Trump, President Biden's
first commitment has always been to our country, not himself. I am hopeful that he will make the
painful and difficult decision to withdraw. I respectfully call on him to do so. Longtime
Illinois Congressman Mike Quigley told CNN that he fears Biden could be a drag on down ballot
candidates. His decision not only impacts who's going to serve in the White House the next
four years, but who's going to serve in the Senate, who's going to serve in the House,
and it will have implications for decades to come. And in an interview with the online publication
Semaphore, Vermont Senator Peter Welch said it was, quote, inappropriate for the Biden campaign
to dismiss concerns about Biden's age. Clearly, a lot of conversations
about this happening over the past few days. What about House leadership? Are any top Democrats
changing their positions from this weekend, which was full throw to support for Biden or silence?
So far, no one in leadership is calling for him to drop out, but we are starting to see them open
the door to the possibility that Biden may not ultimately become the Democratic Party's nominee for president.
Speaking to Andrea Mitchell on MSNBC on Tuesday, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi acknowledged divisions among big party donors over whether Biden should stay in the race.
It's split. Some are like, well, how can we subject the process to what might be possible?
And others are Joe's our guy. We love him.
We trust him. He has vision, knowledge, judgment, integrity. Pelosi went on to suggest that Biden
do a few sit down interviews with serious journalists. The president is actually
scheduled to speak with ABC's George Stephanopoulos on Friday. Portions of that interview will start
airing on Friday night. The full interview will be available on Sunday morning. I know a lot of people,
especially people listening to this, will be very interested to see that.
Later on, Andrea Mitchell spoke with South Carolina Congressman Jim Clyburn, who was
instrumental in getting Black voters to support Biden back in 2020, helping him win the state's
Democratic primary. He is also the co-chair of the Biden-Harris
campaign. Clyburn told Mitchell that he would back Vice President Kamala Harris if Biden were
to drop out. This party should not in any way do anything to work around Ms. Harris. We should do
everything we can to bolster her, whether it's in second place or at the top of the ticket.
And interestingly, Mitchell asked both of them if they had personally heard from Biden since the debate happened. Both said no, they had not.
The stakes of the race have dramatically shifted in the last few days, not just because of the
debate, but also because of the flurry of awful Supreme Court decisions that came out Friday and
Monday. Decisions that will severely limit the government's ability to regulate industry,
that will upend cases against January 6th rioters,
and that Grant Trump brought immunity from prosecution for his role in the insurrection.
Right. So much has happened.
And to get a deeper understanding of just how much the race has shifted,
I spoke earlier with Liz Brunig.
She is a staff writer at The Atlantic.
She used to be an opinion columnist
at The New York Times and The Washington Post.
Here is our conversation.
In your column after the debate,
you wrote that only one message
came across as true on stage.
You wrote, quote,
our nation is shambling along the road to hell
and there doesn't appear to be an off-ramp.
We're starting now to see Democrats breaking with Biden. The first sitting Democrat,
Representative Lloyd Doggett from Texas, saying that the president should step aside.
More of them have been voicing skepticism about whether or not he's up to this campaign.
Is that the off-ramp that you were referencing? Or at this point, is that just wishful thinking?
It's a good idea. The people who are suggesting Biden should step aside seem right.
The thing that worries me is even if the Democrats were to replace Biden right now,
Trump has had a lot of time to campaign and comes back to the race being a former president.
Right.
I think it's going to be hard for Democrats to make up that ground,
even if they replace Biden with somebody right now.
At this point, which do you think is riskier?
Is it replacing Biden on the ticket or is it keeping him as the nominee?
I don't know. I think it's really hard to figure out which option actually puts Democrats in a better position to win the election. If I were seniors in the party trying to make a decision
about this, I think I would replace Biden just so voters feel like their voices are being heard.
You know, polls show after the debate, Biden lost a significant number of people who beforehand said
that they were going to be Biden voters. I think before that, Trump and Biden were neck and neck.
And after Biden dropped pretty far behind. So I think it's important for the party to recognize what people are saying
and what their feelings are. But I don't know if that's going to get them any closer to winning
the election. What do you make at this point of the way that the Biden campaign has responded
to the president's debate performance so far. They've done everything from blaming the
debate preppers. They said the president had a cold. They've accused the media of overreacting
to this. Is that just them doing their job, trying to protect him, avoiding further damage to the
campaign? Or are they refusing to face the reality of what we all saw? It is a campaign's job to try
to keep the candidate elevated and to pursue victory for them. So in
that case, you can certainly understand why the Biden campaign feels like they need to make excuses
for and explain away his debate performance, right? Because it looks like it's going to be a
significant hindrance. It's going to be a lot of material for Trump attack ads. And I think it's
going to be fairly impossible to escape some clips from that debate going further into the campaign.
But I think they're being unrealistic and they're not listening to what polling suggests about how this debate was received.
And I don't think people are necessarily going to be persuaded.
Yeah, I mean, speaking of the polling that we've seen, a new Morning Consult poll shows that a plurality of Democrats
say that Biden should be replaced. A new poll out of New Hampshire shows Trump leading there
after Biden's poor debate performance. POC News is reporting that a confidential polling memo
shows Biden's support plunging in key swing states and also putting other safe states
at play. So aside from replacing Biden, is there anything that Democrats can do
to kind of stop the proverbial bleeding at this point? I think they need a way to replace Biden
that's graceful. It seems like that's going to be hard because Biden doesn't seem willing to
step down from the race. And so I think the best thing for Democratic strategists to be doing right
now is trying to come up with a way to transition to a new candidate that doesn't signal weakness and chaos in the party.
Right.
So they'll need a narrative about why it was time to change and why they didn't change earlier and etc.
Shifting away from just the top of the ticket here, what are the risks to down ballot races that all of this kind of poses?
I think there are some significant risks to down ballot races. Democrats need this to be a good
election. And I don't think that the Democratic Party right now is making itself look like a good
steward of American politics. And so I wouldn't be surprised if Biden's performance at the top
of the ticket negatively impacted how Democrats perform in this race, even if it's only because of the risk of typical Democratic voters staying home.
If Biden were to drop out at this point, can you point to a candidate who could kind of cobble together the same coalition Biden did in 2020 or who could amass the coalition that Democrats would need to win the race?
You know, Gretchen Whitmer, her name has been tossed around quite a bit. I met Gretchen and
interviewed her during the Michigan primary that Bernie Sanders was in in 2020. And she seemed like
a completely competent, lucid, even charismatic figure. I would need to know more about her politics, which I don't think
are clear right now. And politics on a local level, even a state level, is different than
having a political vision for the country. But she's a candidate that doesn't immediately,
anyway, strike me as unreasonable. Yeah, I just want to follow up on that and ask about
Vice President Harris, because she's there. But what do you make of what would happen if she were the alternative? when you only have a handful of months until the election. I mean, there might be ways to improve
Hara's standing with the public,
but the Democrats haven't undertaken those measures.
On top of the debate,
we also got a slew of gutting Supreme Court decisions
Friday and Monday,
chief among them being the decision
granting Trump broad immunity
for his role in the insurrection.
And then yesterday,
Trump's sentencing in his criminal hush money case
was delayed until September
as a direct result of that decision.
Taken all together,
where does this all leave the coalition of people
who don't want to see Trump back in office?
If anybody was counting on legal consequences
for Trump's past behavior,
interfering with his participation in the election, I think those
hopes are pretty well dashed by now. So they're just going to have to face Trump head on, not as
someone who is disqualified from the race, but as someone they have to actually beat in the race.
And his polling numbers are, especially relative to Biden's, pretty good right now. So that should
be something that they begin focusing on in earnest, not holding out hope for one of these legal consequences.
I think there are a lot of people, a lot of voters who are feeling really
not good after watching that debate, increasingly cynical after the last few days. But what do you
think that they can do about it? Is there actual action that they can take at this point?
I would counsel people to pay attention to the alternative candidates that the Democrats are
tossing around, see if they feel comfortable with any of those candidates. And then if that's the
case, if there's someone who appears to have a good shot at taking the Democratic nomination
away from Biden, I think it makes sense for voters to kind of rally around those people
and demonstrate to the party that that's who they prefer to vote to. On some level, the situation
that we're in, Biden versus Trump, is a democratic outcome, which means people chose it. And I think
that this is a demonstration of why our democracy needs to be much more sensitive to the desires of actual
voters. That was my conversation with Liz Brunig, staff writer at The Atlantic. This story is
changing very quickly. We will obviously continue to keep an eye on it and keep you updated.
And the other thing we will be keeping an eye on is these polling simulations,
including the CNN poll that has Vice President Kamala Harris outperforming Biden,
Whitmer, California's Governor Gavin Newsom, and Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg,
and a head-to-head with convicted felon Donald Trump. But that's the latest for now. We'll get
to some headlines in a moment, but if you like our show, make sure to subscribe
and share with your friends. We'll be back after some ads let's wrap up with some headlines headlines
justice juan mershon the judge who presided over convicted felon Donald Trump's hush money trial in New York,
has delayed the former president's sentencing until September.
Trump was set to be sentenced on July 11th after he was convicted of 34 counts of falsifying business records.
But his lawyers asked Merchan on Monday to put everything on pause,
arguing that the Supreme Court's decision granting Trump broad
immunity warrants a new trial. Prosecutors for the Manhattan District Attorney's Office said that
they were fine with delaying the sentencing, but that they don't believe Trump's defense has a
strong case. The new day for the sentencing hearing is September 18th, less than two months before the
election. Listen, I'm a bit miffed for multiple reasons, including the fact
that I am scheduled to work on July 11th. I was personally looking forward to delivering this news
to you all, but I just checked my calendar. I'll be here on September 18th too. Victory!
We will have a good time. It is not all bad news out of New York. Former New York City Mayor Rudy
Giuliani lost his license to practice law in the state on Tuesday. Do you hear that? It is not all bad news out of New York. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani lost his license
to practice law in the state on Tuesday. Do you hear that? It is champagne bottles popping
in background. Giuliani's New York law license was suspended in 2021 over his involvement in
the former president's efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. And on Tuesday,
a New York appeals court ordered that Giuliani be completely disbarred,
writing that the ex-Trump lawyer had, quote,
no good faith basis to believe that the election was stolen.
A spokesperson for Giuliani said that now the ex-lawyer plans to appeal the order.
But this is the least of Giuliani's legal worries.
D.C. officials recently recommended that he should be disbarred in Washington, too.
He still faces federal charges in Arizona and in Georgia for election interference. You said miffed earlier. I'm a little miffed now that it seems like everybody is facing repercussions for January 6th and attempting to overturn the 2020 election,
except for Donald Trump. So truly, it is mind boggling the way that everyone else has got
caught up in the crossfire here. And he is just walking free. President Biden proposed
a new rule on Tuesday to protect around 35 million workers from excessive heat in their workplaces.
Extreme heat is the number one weather-related killer in the United States.
More people die from extreme heat than floods, hurricanes, and tornadoes combined. Under the
new rule, employers would be required to assemble adequate plans and training
for protecting workers from heat-related illnesses. Those include increasing breaks, access to shade
and water, and making sure new employees are properly accustomed to working in heat. Penalties
for employers who defy heat-related protections would also increase. The rule aims to safeguard
folks who are likely to suffer from heat exposure
on their jobs, including delivery workers, farm workers, construction workers, and those who work
in kitchens or warehouses. This comes during a summer that has proven to be historically hot,
and while the rule would be the first of its kind, it's still a ways away. The regulation
wouldn't be implemented until 2026. The Food and Drug Administration
approved a new drug that has shown promise in slowing cognitive decline in Alzheimer's patients.
The drug, developed by Eli Lilly, will be sold under the brand name Kaisunla. The once-a-month
infusion works by targeting proteins in the brain that are believed to be associated with mild and
early cases of Alzheimer's. Clinical trials have shown the drug slowing the disease's progress by a third.
It is a big deal because it is now the second drug that the FDA has approved to help patients with Alzheimer's.
Roughly 6 million Americans have the disease,
and that number could more than double by 2060, according to the National Institute of Health.
Yeah, this is really promising news.
As someone who lost my grandmother to Alzheimer's,
it's such a devastating disease.
And any medications that can help people,
I fully celebrate.
So I'm really excited about this news.
Absolutely.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
What even is a remix anymore?
Ira and Louis give their unfiltered opinion
on the newest remix drops from Ariana
Grande to Charlie XCX.
Please send me your favorite song recommendations
because I don't know who that is. Plus,
find out their picks for favorite queer
comedians with special guest Hannah Einbinder.
Tune in to keep it on Pocketcast
or wherever you get your podcasts.
And stream Brat Juanita. You have to.
It is the album of the summer.
Okay, I will do that.
That is all for today.
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Check it out and subscribe
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I'm Juanita Tolliver.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And keep your dogs away from RFK Jr.
Okay, look, just so everybody knows,
Josephine and Zora are safe.
I will protect my girls.
Yeah, I'm picturing like a Facebook status update,
like Mark safe from RFK Jr.
Thank you so much.
Period.
What a day is a production of Crooked Media.
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