What A Day - Dems: Chuck's Not Like Us
Episode Date: March 17, 2025While Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer may have kept the U.S. government from shutting down last week, his decision to help Republicans pass a spending plan has kicked off a civil war within the D...emocratic Party. Many on the left are desperate for a fight with President Donald Trump and seething mad at their own party, which they view as, at best, too complacent in the face of Trump's attacks. And Schumer is now the face of that white-hot rage, with questions swirling about his future as the party’s Senate leader. But Josh Barro, who writes the Substack newsletter ‘Very Serious,’ says Schumer did the right thing.And in headlines: The White House said it deported hundreds of migrants under the Alien Enemies Act despite a judge’s order, the U.S. launched a wave of airstrikes on Yemen targeting Houthi rebels, and those American astronauts who’ve been stranded up in space for months could return to earth this week.Show Notes:Check out Josh's newsletter 'Very Serious' – https://tinyurl.com/42x363hrSubscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8Support victims of the fire – votesaveamerica.com/reliefWhat 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
Discussion (0)
It's Monday, March 17th.
I'm Jane Coaston, and this is What a Day, the show that is wondering if President Donald
Trump knows what sarcasm is.
Here he is speaking with host Cheryl Atkinson on her show, Full Measure.
I'm not understating the complexity of all this, but as a candidate, you said you would
have this war settled in 24 hours.
Well, I was being a little bit sarcastic when I said that.
That's not what sarcasm is.
On today's show, the Trump administration
seems to have ignored a federal court order.
And those American astronauts who've been stranded up
in space forever could return to Mother Earth this week.
But let's start with Democrats, who averted a government
shutdown only to kick off an
intra-party civil war.
On Friday, Senate Democrats, led by Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, agreed to a continuing
resolution to keep the government open.
Democrats who supported the bill argued that permitting the government to shut down would
give President Donald Trump and Co-President and noted weirdo Elon Musk more power to make
life worse for everyday Americans. It's a stance Schumer reiterated in a Saturday interview with the New York
Times. He said there was no telling how far Musk and Trump would have taken a
shutdown. It can last forever. There is no off-ramp. One of the Republican
senators told us we go to a shutdown which is going to be there for six months,
nine months a year, and by, their goal of destroying the federal government would be gone.
But Schumer also said he knew his decision would make him persona non grata in the Democratic
Party.
I knew this would be an unpopular decision.
I knew that.
I know politics.
But I felt so strongly as a leader that I couldn't let this happen because weeks and
months from now, things would be far worse than they even are today that I had to do what I had to do.
It wasn't just Schumer who voted for the bill.
Nine other Democratic senators helped Republicans move it past a filibuster.
And that has pissed off a lot of other Democrats, like really piss them off.
Schumer even acknowledged in that New York Times interview that he and House Minority
Leader Hakeem Jeffries haven't spoken since the vote.
Because let's be real here, the continuing resolution sucks.
It cuts a ton of valuable services, and for reasons that escape me, also cuts more than
a billion dollars from Washington, D.C., including nearly 70 million dollars from D.C.'s police
department.
There's a bill in the works to stop those cuts from happening, so put a pin in that.
And there's the bigger picture.
A ton of Democrats think the time has come to stop giving in to Republicans at every turn, even when, yes, the actual available options for Democrats in Congress right
now are pretty limited.
Democrats are mad.
Sure, they're mad at Trump and they're mad at Musk,
but right now they're absolutely furious at their own party, which they view as, at absolute best,
complacent. Here's New York Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaking
to Jake Tapper on Friday. It is almost unthinkable why Senate Democrats would vote to hand the few pieces of
leverage that we have away for free when we've been sent here to protect Social
Security, protect Medicaid, and protect Medicare.
There's even talk of Senate Democrats needing new leadership. Some want
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to primary Schumer. And while Connecticut
Democratic Senator Chris Murphy didn't say it was to primary Schumer. And while Connecticut Democratic Senator Chris Murphy
didn't say it was time for Schumer to go,
he wasn't exactly effusive
in his support for the New York Senator.
He can lead this caucus,
but we need to have a conversation inside the caucus
about whether we are willing to stand up to Republicans.
Listen, we have options.
We could decide to not proceed to legislation as an ordinary course of business.
There are big fights ahead of us, like the debt ceiling, like another potential government
shutdown in six months.
So we have opportunities as a caucus to stand up and meet this moment.
And I think the American people are demanding that we do that.
Just yes or no before we move on.
Do you have confidence in Leader Schumer?
I still support Senator Schumer as leader, but I think the only way that we are going to be effective as a caucus is if we change our tactics.
And we have to have a conversation inside our caucus to make sure that we are going to do that.
Journalist Josh Barrow took the opposite take from pretty much every Democrat I know on his substack, very serious.
He argued Schumer did the right thing. the opposite take from pretty much every Democrat I know on his substack very serious.
He argued Schumer did the right thing.
So I had to talk to him about the continuing resolution, what this intrademocratic fight
is really about, and where we go from here.
Josh, welcome to What a Day.
Thank you for having me.
So you wrote a column about how Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer did the right thing by
not letting the government shut down.
The floor is yours.
Why was that the right move?
Well, because what were the other options?
I mean, people, you know, they, they, they want Democrats to fight and a shutdown
would have been an opportunity for a fight, but I didn't see any of Schumer's
opponents actually walking through what would happen next and providing a
convincing story of why that fight would produce a better policy outcome for
Democrats. I think in fact, Schumer has a strong argument that
would have produced a worse outcome, which is to say if you shut down the
government, you hand the president a lot more authority to decide what operations
of the government to keep open and which ones to close, because much of the
government is supposed to close when the government is shut down. Things that are
essential keep operating and there's supposed to be some sort of objective
standard for that, but in practice the president can basically say this is essential, this is not essential.
All the stuff that Doge has been trying to close and he's getting tied up with in the courts,
he could just close those things and furlough the people and try to build exactly the government he
wants with only the things he cares about continuing to operate. And because he'd have
that power, he also has no particular incentive to want the government to reopen once it is closed.
People forget Donald Trump did the longest government shutdown in history, 35 days, 2018
into 2019, basically just for funsies.
That was even before he had Elon Musk there and was really actually trying to dismantle
the government.
If you want the government to shut down, which has been their effort since day one of this
administration, being handed a government shutdown is actually helpful for that. Meanwhile, Democrats, if the
government is shut down, muddy the water about whose fault everything is. I mean, you have
the president seemingly trying to induce a recession in the United States, pursuing this
unpopular trade war. You're seeing the stock market tank and you're seeing a growing realization that
this stuff is his fault. And so then if you have this shutdown, then it makes it easier for Republicans to raise questions about, you know,
whose fault is all of this dysfunction in Washington?
You don't want to get in the way of your opponent when he's making a mistake,
and forcing a shutdown here would have done that.
Yeah, I think what we heard from some House Democrats was that passing this funding bill would give Trump and Elon Musk carte blanche
to keep dismantling the government because the measure contained no protections for existing spending.
But as you were saying from Schumer and others in the Senate, we heard that shutting down
the government would help Trump and Musk keep doing what they're doing.
So House Democrats are pissed in lack of a better term.
Why do you think that they are wrong?
What is going wrong in their logic about this?
Well, so I think there's a couple of things going on here. You know, the flexibility that
the president has because we'll be operating under this continuing resolution is the same
flexibility that presidents have from other continuing resolutions. It would be good to
have a full year proper appropriations bill that would set more restrictions, but we didn't
have those in place a week ago. I think there's also something that's a little bit cheap politically, where House Democrats
are able to vote no on this and say they did their part to block it and then blame the
Senate.
And so when people in the Democratic base are angry, and they are very angry, getting
them also joining in the chorus, people were mad at Chuck Schumer ins them from from political attack over this. I thought it was very interesting the other nine Democrats
who joined Chuck Schumer in voting for cloture because it was not a very ideologically cohesive
group of people. You had some moderates, but you also had, for example, Brian Schatz, the
senator from Hawaii, who's pretty progressive. He's widely rumored to want to be majority
leader in the future. And I think that was him showing, I'm ready to take tough votes that are unpopular,
but in the interest of the party in the long run.
And then the third reason I think they're angry
is that I think, while I think Chuck Schumer did
the right thing in the end, he didn't telegraph it
very clearly.
No, he did not.
No.
He basically, on Wednesday, he came out and said,
Republicans didn't have the votes to pass the spending
plan.
And then on Thursday, he says, he's going to vote for it.
And I think honestly, I think that that's part of why Democrats are so mad.
I mean, there are lots of reasons why we're going to get to that.
There was a lot of mixed messaging.
Do you think that was a failure on Schumer's part?
Well, I think on Wednesday, there was a failure.
I think, you know, up until Tuesday when this passed the House, Democrats' strategy was
Republicans are incompetent.
They cannot line up their very narrow majority together to agree on shared priorities.
And Republicans would have to come crawling to Democrats to say, we have to do a bipartisan
bill because we're too incompetent to do our own party-line bill.
And in fairness to them, this has happened a lot over the last few years.
Republicans have had terrible problems with cohesion.
The problem is once the thing passed the House on Tuesday, Democrats were just screwed.
And this is what happens when you lose elections, or it's ordinarily what happens when you lose
elections.
I think people have sort of forgotten because the Republican Party has been so dysfunctional
for so many years, they've forgotten that normally when you lose the election and the
other party is in power, they pass their agenda and that's a problem for you.
And it sucks. I get why Democrats are mad. It sucks to lose elections. It especially sucks to
lose elections and then have the party that won get its shit together and figure out how to actually
do things. That especially sucks. I get that it's an unfortunate situation. But the only thing to
do about that, I mean, one thing is that some of the things the administration is doing are illegal
and that's a matter for the courts.
But ultimately, the political win where you become able to block stuff through Congress,
you have to win the majority back in the midterms next year.
And Democrats, I think, will work very hard to do that.
But the problem is that those elections aren't until next year, and Republicans run things
for the next 22 months.
Yeah, I think that there are two separate issues here.
There's the micro issue of this
CR, which sucks, but there weren't that many options. And then there's kind of the macro
issue of people are furious and they're furious at congressional Democrats and congressional
Democrats are desperate for a way to push back against Trump or at least be seen as
pushing back against Trump. And that's what you see from the House. And I think that for many people,
I mean, you're hearing from people who are talking tea party
in a way that I haven't seen Democrats talk
in a really long time.
And the government funding plan, I think for some people
was like the first real tangible piece of leverage
that they had.
So if not this, then what?
I think it's really funny when I see people talking about, you know, Democrats
need our own Tea Party. I think they should look a little bit about how the Tea Party worked and
what it did to the Republican Party, you know, from start in 2009, 2010 when that movement starts.
The Tea Party has, over many election cycles, saddled the Republican Party with unelectable
candidates. You have these revolts in Republican primaries insisting that you have to nominate these
quote unquote ideologically pure fighter people.
And then they lose general elections to Democrats, even in places like Missouri and Indiana,
because they, you know, they force the party into nominating unappealing candidates and
then they lose.
The Tea Party also created this dynamic in the Republican conference in the House, especially
and to a lesser extent in the Senate, where you have these people who define themselves
by I fight, I fight, I am obstinate, I do not cooperate.
That led to this dynamic that persisted basically up until this month, where Republicans could
not get their ducks in a row, could not agree on a partisan agenda and actually pass it
through the House where they nominally had a majority.
That empowered Democrats. If you want to rebuild that on the Democratic side, if you want to go lose general elections,
if you want to nominate presidential candidates and saddle them with platforms that will cause
them to lose the presidential election, if you want to not be able to have an effective
congressional majority, then go ahead.
So do we need to do what James Carville kind of recommended and just kind of lie down and
take it until realistically January 2027 when a theoretical Democratic majority would take power in the
House or Senate?
I wouldn't describe it in the terms that James Carville described it, but I think he was
basically right that the way you win the next election is by the Republicans being bad rather
than whatever you do yourself.
Again, I realize it's very unsatisfying, but that's what it is to be in opposition.
I mean, you can lay out what your plans are
and what you would do differently,
but the thing is when you're in opposition,
you don't run the government.
And so Democrats should go out there
and talk about how terrible everything
that the Trump administration is that they're doing
and talk about what they would do differently if they won.
But that's the thing, you have to win
in order to do those things.
Bigger picture.
Yeah.
What does the mess over the shutdown strategy say about the state of the party right now?
And what should the party take away from this moment?
I mean, look, I don't think that a change in leadership in the medium term is a bad
thing.
I mean, you know, I don't like this being a catalyst for it because I think Schumer
had this specific question right.
But I think it's true that, you know, that the Democratic
Party does not have very dynamic national leaders in the Congress. And so I mean, Chuck Schumer is
what, 80 years old? So Schumer should step aside? Well, I don't think he should step aside right now.
But I think, you know, in the, you know, I don't think people are ready for him to go like immediately,
like today, they will take them to the airport if they need to. Sure, but I mean, keep in mind, aside from Democrats,
is there any Republican that Republicans have complained
about more in the last 20 years than Mitch McConnell?
And so I think, you know, sometimes to be an effective
legislative leader, you have to deliver messages
to your party that they're not happy to hear about.
You can't make them happy all the time.
So I don't know that, you know,
we need a presidential candidate in 2028 who is beloved.
I don't think we need a Senate minority leader necessarily who is beloved by the base of the party.
In fact, that might lead you astray in certain ways.
But I do think, you know, I think it's broadly a problem, the geriatric nature of much of the face of the Democratic Party right now.
I think that's true.
Josh, thank you so much for joining me.
Thank you, Jane.
That was my conversation with Josh Barrow. He's a journalist who writes a substack, Very Serious. We'll link to his piece in our show notes. We'll get to more of the news in
a moment, but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe, leave a five-star review and up a
podcast, watch us on YouTube, and share with your friends. More to come after some ads. Today's episode is sponsored by Acorns.
Acorns is a financial wellness app that helps you take control of your money with simple
tools that make it easy to start saving and investing for your future.
You don't need to be an expert.
Acorns will recommend a diversified portfolio that matches you and your money goals.
And you don't need to be rich.
Acorns lets you get started with the spare money you've got right now, even if all you've
got is spare change.
Basically, Acorns does all the hard work so you can give your money a chance to grow.
Ready to take control of your money?
Sign up now and join the over 14 million all-time customers
who have already saved and invested
over $25 billion with Acorns.
Head to acorns.com slash WAD
or download the Acorns app to get started.
Paid non-client endorsement.
Compensation provides incentive
to positively promote Acorns.
Tier one compensation provided.
Investing involves risk.
Acorns Advisors LLC, an SEC registered investment advisor. Here's what else we're following today.
I'm happy to see that the president is following up with his promises that he's going to keep Americans safe. And that means getting these criminal drug or gang members, clearly criminal in nature,
out of the United States.
The Trump administration said Sunday it deported hundreds of Venezuelan migrants over the weekend
under the Alien Enemies Act. President Trump issued a proclamation Saturday announcing that
he invoked an 18th century law that allows the government to deport non-citizens without due process.
The deportations earned praise from Republican lawmakers like Senator Mark Round of Indiana.
The Alien Enemies Act was last used during World War II to justify the internment of
Japanese, German, and Italian people living in the U.S.
According to Saturday's proclamation, the administration is using the Alien Enemies
Act to target Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang. in the U.S. According to Saturday's proclamation, the administration is using the Alien Enemies Act
to target Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang. Officials allege that its members have illegally
infiltrated the U.S. The ACLU preemptively sued the White House Friday night, and a federal judge
ruled Saturday that the government cannot deport people under the act until further arguments are
heard in the case. The judge also ordered that any migrant flights that have departed must return to the U.S.
But Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Sunday that the U.S. just did it anyway.
He said hundreds of Venezuelan gang members have already been deported to El Salvador.
Here he is on CBS's Face the Nation.
We don't want terrorist in America.
I don't know how hard that is to understand.
Trump announced Saturday that the U.S. made a deal with El Salvador to jail the deportees
for one year in exchange for $6 million.
A federal appeals court gave the Trump administration the okay to move ahead with some executive
orders cracking down on diversity, equity, and inclusion programs across the federal
government.
The appeals court Friday paused a lower court ruling in Maryland that had blocked some of President Trump's
anti-DEI executive orders from being implemented.
The ruling by a three-judge panel is not a final decision,
but means the directives can be enforced
while a lawsuit challenging them continues to play out,
a win for the Trump administration.
The EO's direct agencies to take steps to cut DEI programs
within the federal government,
and cut equity-related grants or contracts.
Judge Pamela Harris wrote, quote,
My vote should not be understood as agreement with the Order's attack on efforts to promote
diversity, equity, and inclusion.
The judge's decision suggests that the Trump administration should be allowed to prove
it can enforce the orders while following anti-discrimination laws. Sure, work to eliminate DEI efforts across the federal government without breaking
anti-discrimination laws. Totally doable. This was an overwhelming response that actually
targeted multiple Houthi leaders and took them out. President Trump announced Saturday that the U.S. launched a wave of airstrikes on Yemen
targeting the Houthi rebels.
According to officials for the Iranian-backed Islamist militant group, the attack killed
at least 31 people and injured dozens more.
The Houthis have targeted Israeli cargo ships, U.S. warships, and other commerce vessels
in the Red Sea since the start of Israel's war on Gaza.
The rebels have aligned themselves with Hamas and said that their actions are in solidarity
with Palestinians in the besieged strip.
In an interview with ABC Sunday, U.S. National Security Adviser Mike Walz said the attacks
were a message to Iran, demanding that the country pull support from the Houthis.
Officials for the group said last week that they would resume those attacks if Israel
continued to block humanitarian aid to Gaza.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on CBS Sunday that the U.S. strikes on Yemen will continue if the Houthis don't back off.
We're doing the world a favor. We're doing the entire world a favor by getting rid of these guys and their ability to strike global shipping.
That's the mission here.
Iranian officials condemned the airstrike Sunday, threatening to retaliate against the US.
Onishi, the first crew 10 astronaut through the hatch,
followed by Peskov.
The two NASA astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunny Williams,
stuck in space for nine months,
could come back to Earth soon.
Key word, could.
A SpaceX Dragon spacecraft made it
to the International Space Station Sunday,
if days are even real in space,
with four astronauts from the US, Russia, and Japan aboard.
They were welcomed with excited hugs and handshakes.
The Crew-10 mission astronauts are set to relieve
Wilmore and Williams of their duties.
Williams told Mission Control, quote,
"'It was a wonderful day.
Great to see our friends arrive.
Williams and Wilmore arrived to the space station last June on a trip that was only
supposed to last about a week. But after numerous problems with their
Boeing Starliner spacecraft, NASA decided to bring it back to Earth without the astronauts in it.
Now with their replacements at the space station, Williams and Wilmore could,
or should I say, are scheduled to head
back to Earth sometime this week. And that's the news. One more thing.
I have some good news for you, my fellow Americans.
Right now, everybody else kind of fucking hates us.
And that's a good thing.
Really.
Case in point.
This is Raphael Glucksmann.
He's a French politician who's a member of the European Parliament and the leader of
the Place Public political party, which allied with the Socialist Party in the 2024 European
elections and finished third nationally.
And his big message right now?
Everything America is doing, France should, um, not. We don't want that for France. So let's never, never let the Trump and Musk fan club in our country pass.
There he's saying in reference to populism and right-wing extremism, quote,
No, we do not want that for France.
So let us never let the Trump-Musk fan club pass into our country.
This intrigues me.
See, the populist right talks a lot about nationalism
and national identity, but it's a global movement.
Since the mid-2010s, countries around the world,
from Hungary to Brazil to Italy to the UK,
remember Brexit, have had to contend with the rise
of populist figures and parties.
And many of those figures, like Britain's Nigel Farage,
one of the biggest advocates for Brexit, are super best friends with Donald Trump. Here's Trump
giving him a shout out at a Pennsylvania rally on election eve in November.
You have a man from Europe, I don't know if he's here, I saw him backstage. What he did
was, what he is doing is sort of what we did a few years ago. He's doing a great job. He's a fantastic. He's always been my friend for some reason.
He liked me.
I liked him.
And he's shaken it up pretty good over there.
He was the big winner of the last election in the UK.
And he's a very spectacular man, very highly respected, Nigel
Farage.
But these populist politicians currently have a bit of a problem with their efforts to get
close to Donald Trump.
Donald Trump is really unpopular with the voters these populist figures are trying to
attract.
In the UK, 58% of voters don't like Trump, and voters across Europe particularly don't
like his efforts to abandon Ukraine, something right-wing figures like Marine Le Pen of France and Italian
Prime Minister Giorgio Maloney have had to contend with.
As Helen Lewis of The Atlantic detailed in a piece published on Sunday,
Donald Trump's actions haven't just slowed down the rise of the populist
right, it's helped liberal and center-left parties claw back ground.
Back in January, only 16% of voters said they wanted Canada's Liberal
Party, now led by former banker Mark Carney, to handle the economy, with 42%
preferring Pierre Poliev's conservatives. But throw in a few months of Donald
Trump's screaming about Canada becoming the 51st state and wielding tariffs as a
cudgel, and a new survey released Saturday found that the Liberals have
almost closed the gap on the question of who is best for the economy.
And Carney leads Poliev when it comes to who can best stand up for Canadian interests.
In February, the conservatives had a massive polling lead over the Liberal Party among
voters.
On March 11th, that lead had been cut to one point.
Yes, politics is complex.
And I am pretty sure that the success of the far right in
the UK, France, and Canada does not entirely hinge on whether or not our president is an
asshole.
But I do find comfort in knowing that apparently, our president being an asshole doesn't seem
to help.
Before we go, hey WADFam, we know you guys love true crime.
At least, I do.
So we are thrilled to share the newest podcast from Crooked Media, Shadow Kingdom, God's
Banker.
It's summer, 1982.
Roberto Colvi, the Vatican's top money man, is found hanging under a London bridge.
Official ruling? Suicide.
But the truth is far murkier. Calvi was entangled in a vast money laundering operation that put him
in the crosshairs of the Sicilian mafia, a secretive far-right Masonic lodge, and the Catholic
church itself. Forty years later, journalist Niccolo Manoni gets a tip that changes everything.
Follow him as he unravels a web of power, crime, and conspiracy to answer the question,
who really killed God's banker?
Listen to the first two episodes of Shadow Kingdom God's Banker right now wherever you
get your podcasts.
Or better yet, join our Friends of the Pod community to binge all the episodes today
at Crooked.com slash Friends or on the shadow kingdom Apple podcast feed
That's all for today If you like the show make sure you subscribe leave a review remember that early voting in Wisconsin Supreme Court election starts tomorrow
And tell your friends to listen
And if you're into reading and not just about how Elon Musk is heaving endless cash into Wisconsin's Supreme Court election in support of Brad Schimel, who supports an abortion law from the 1840s because, of course he does. Like
me, What a Day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at Crooked.com
slash subscribe. I'm Jane Costen, and if you want to stand up to Elon Musk, you can
start in Wisconsin.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Desmond Taylor.
Our associate producers are Raven Yamamoto and Emily Four.
Our producer is Michelle Alloy.
We had production help today from Johanna Case, Joseph Dutra, Greg Walters, and Julia
Claire.
Our senior producer is Erica Morrison, and our executive producer is Adrian Hill.
Our theme music is by Colin Gileard and Kashaka.