What A Day - DOJ Vows To Protect Election Workers
Episode Date: May 16, 2024President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump agreed to two debates on Wednesday. In agreeing to the debates, Biden and Trump are bucking the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates, wh...ich had been organizing debates since the 80s.U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said this week that the Department of Justice will “aggressively” prosecute anyone who threatens election workers ahead of the 2024 election. The announcement comes as a new poll from the Brennan Center for Justice found that more than half of local election officials are scared for their safety. Alexis Johnson, a former VICE News reporter who covers race, politics, and culture, says despite good intentions, Garland and the DOJ will likely struggle to keep that promise, leaving election workers vulnerable.And in headlines: Inflation dipped slightly in April, the number of Americans who died from a drug overdose decreased for the first time in five years, and a high-level Biden appointee resigned in protest of the U.S.’s continued support for Israel and its war in Gaza.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/whatadayNew York Immigration Coalition https://www.nyic.org/get-involved/
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It's Thursday, May 16th.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver.
And this is What A Day, the show where we're dancing on the grave of the Chuck E. Cheese
creepy animatronic robot band.
The company officially announced that they are pulling the plug on the band forever.
And our nightmares got a little less scary afterwards.
Truly creepy.
I don't know why this was a good idea.
Who thought of this?
Probably whoever thought of the terrible Chuck E. Cheese backstory. Look it up.
On today's show, inflation takes a tiny drop,
plus New York City Mayor Eric Adams puts his foot in his mouth yet again.
But first...
Donald Trump lost two debates to me in 2020. Since then, he hasn't shown up for debate.
Now he's acting like he wants to debate me again. Well, make my day, pal. I'll even do it twice. So let's pick the dates, Donald.
I hear you're free on Wednesdays. That was President Joe Biden challenging former President
Donald Trump to two debates on Wednesday. And Trump agreed. Biden and Trump will face off first
on June 27th on CNN, weeks before either of them is formally named their respective party's 2024 presidential nominee.
And the second debate will be hosted by ABC on September 10th.
Big news, but we have to go back to that audio.
He sounds like he is ready to give Donald Trump a knuckle sandwich.
It sounds like bring it on, like school fight vibes.
Make my day.
But I gotta love it. Gotta be honest. But
anyways, this is especially big news considering that Trump famously did not participate in a
single one of his party's primary debates. It was unclear that any debates would ever happen
during this election cycle. So what prompted Biden and his campaign to start this debate challenge?
According to reports, the Biden and Trump presidential campaigns have been discussing debate options for a few weeks now,
but Biden's team is saying
that they want to get in front of voters early.
Now, the campaigns and the networks
are still ironing out the details around mics and rules,
but both campaigns agreed that these debates
will take place without live audiences present.
As for the hosts, former President Trump scenes wide open.
Take a listen to what he said
on The Hugh Hewitt Show on Wednesday. I'd be willing to take anybody. You know,
what difference does it make? I'd be willing to take anybody. But, you know, the commission
got caught cheating with me. You know that. They turned down my sound, remember?
Gonna store that clip away for the end of June when he inevitably complains about whoever
ends up moderating this
debate. So speaking of the Nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates, how will their schedule
and their relevance be impacted by these two early debates? Their schedule was effectively
thrown out the window. Jen O'Malley Dillon, Biden's 2024 campaign chair, sent a letter to
the commission on Wednesday saying that President Biden would not be participating in the September and October debates that they scheduled because the original
dates are, quote, out of step with the timeline for early voting in the election and because of
the commission's inability to enforce the rules during the 2020 debates. So Biden and Democrats
have effectively joined Republicans in their rejection of the commission that has organized
presidential debates since 1988. Got it. OK, so they are aligned on that. But we have not mentioned third party candidates
like Robert Kennedy Jr. What does this mean for them? Based on the timing and the debate criteria,
folks like RFK Jr. have effectively been boxed out. Both CNN and ABC require that a candidate
is polling at 15% or higher in four national polls
and appears on the ballot in enough states to reach the 270 electoral votes needed to win the election.
While RFK Jr. has some polling that hits that mark,
he does not appear on enough ballots yet as he is still collecting signatures.
This also means that voters won't have the opportunity to see Kennedy on the debate stage,
which seems opportune
for Biden and Trump, who are both impacted by his candidacy, attracting some of their supporters,
as seen in three-way polls conducted by Sienna, New York Times, and NBC News. Kennedy shared his
frustrations on X, posting, quote, they are trying to exclude me from their debate because they are
afraid I would win. Keeping viable candidates off the debate
stage undermines democracy. I mean, question on the viable candidate part, but right, kind of
broken clock on democracy and access. So mixed reactions here. Looking ahead, we should keep an
eye out for Kennedy's ability to turn his frustration into action with his supporters.
And if Trump and Biden agree to any additional dates. Yes, definitely something we will continue to watch.
But speaking of the upcoming election, Attorney General Merrick Garland said this week that
the Department of Justice will, quote, aggressively prosecute anyone who threatens election workers
ahead of the 2024 election.
This comes as a new poll from the Brennan Center for Justice found that more than half
of local election officials are scared for their safety,
and about 60% of them are concerned about politicians
interfering with them doing their jobs.
At a press conference on Monday, Garland took a tough line.
If you threaten to harm or kill an election worker,
volunteer, or official,
the Justice Department will find you,
and we will hold you accountable.
The public servants who administer our elections must be able to do their jobs
without fearing for their safety or that of their families.
And this is just the latest effort to crack down on the harassment of poll workers after
former President Donald Trump tried to overturn the 2020 election results.
Yes, the Justice Department created the Election Threats Task Force back in 2021 for this purpose.
But relatively speaking, they haven't been able to do a whole lot quite yet.
Garland boasts of prosecuting 17 people and convicting 13 so far.
But hundreds of threats were reported after the 2020 contest and in elections ever since.
And in the lead up to this election, Trump has already started to sow doubt in the electoral
process and call on his supporters to monitor and potentially challenge the election results
at poll sites.
Alexis Johnson, a former vice news reporter who covers race, politics and culture, did
some reporting on election worker safety following the last presidential election. She told me that despite good intentions, Garland and the DOJ have quite the challenge ahead.
Just a heads up, there is some explicit language ahead. So if you are listening in the company of
children or people who would be offended by that, please feel free to skip ahead.
The attorney general said that they're working closely with local U.S. attorney's offices and FBI offices around the country. But in reality, Priyanka, like these local election
officials in like a small county in Iowa, like they're not going to know how to reach the task
force. You know what I mean? Like they're generally just reporting these threats to the local police
departments. So I'm just wondering, you know, what the DOJ is doing to kind of collaborate with these
local police departments and make sure that these threats are making it up the chain for these investigations.
You did a piece for Vice News back in 2022, where you interviewed Rick Barron,
the former director of Fulton County, Georgia's election department.
I want to play one of the voicemails that someone left for him that you
uncovered during your reporting.
Time's running out, Richard. We're coming after you and every motherfucker reporting. Wow. Okay. That is like a jaw drop moment.
Really.
I'm ashamed to say how many times I've heard that threat already.
And it still stings as much as it did the first time I heard it three years ago.
So crazy.
But you actually called back some of those people who made these threats to confront them.
What were those conversations like?
And what stood out to you about what these people had to say?
They were calling from their personal phone numbers, you know, and that's kind of how we were able to so easily reach out to them and call them back ourselves.
Right.
They were not afraid to say who they were, what their full names were.
And they also kind of showed no remorse.
And I was like, hey, do you remember saying this, you know, to Rick Barron?
And like, you know, do you regret any of that?
And they said no. You know, they felt
like it was their patriotic duty to fight for what they believed was a stolen election. Another thing
that kind of stood out to me was that a lot of them weren't even Fulton County citizens. Like
people were calling from outside of Georgia. People were calling in from Tennessee and Indiana
to harass these election workers. And it really kind of also showed a spotlight on the consequences of disinformation, right?
Because the gentleman we spoke with from Indiana
who called Rick Barron and he said,
quote, which side are you going to be on
when the shooting starts?
He told me that he watches One America News
and that One America News was the ones, you know,
convincing him that there was some shady business
going on in the Fulton County Elections Warehouse
and that they put the phone number up
to say call the Fulton County Elections Warehouse and stand up for your rights. And so
that kind of disinformation really seeped into their psyche. And then it turns into harassment,
and then it turns into threats, right? So it's kind of like this huge, nasty cycle. And that's
why they really felt like they were not wrong in doing what they did. You know, you mentioned
specifically following the 2020 election, we also heard from an election worker named Shay Moss during the congressional hearings about January 6th.
She described how the big lie basically turned her whole life upside down.
Take a listen to this clip from her testimony. I felt like it was all my fault. Like people are
lying and spreading rumors and lies and attacking my mom. I, my only child. And I felt horrible for picking this job and being the one that always wants to help and always there, never missing out one election.
I just felt like it was it was my fault.
How did these kinds of threats affect the lives of election workers like Shea Moss and like Rick Barron beyond just quitting.
I mean, you can hear the anxiety, you know, in her voice. It sounds like she has PTSD. And that's
what Rick Barron told us he had. That's why he ended up quitting. He had serious sense of anxiety
thinking, you know, he could be harassed or attacked. Rick Barron was bold enough, you know,
and courageous enough to speak to us on camera using his full name. But there were a lot of
election workers we reached out to who didn't want to go on camera because they were leaving their jobs and taking different routes
home. Some of them had bought new license plates because they thought that they were being followed
home. This kind of trauma stayed with these election workers. In every aspect of their lives.
Yeah, exactly. Something you've also covered in your reporting is how law enforcement at the state
and local level did not protect these people
in so many cases. Why do you think they can't or they won't protect election workers? Yeah,
we actually filed a FOIA to the Fulton County Police Department to get any information they
had on investigations into the threats that Rick Barron had sent over to us. And what they said
was that they never opened any investigations. And the quote that they sent us was, while many
of those comments were, quote unquote, upsetting, they sent us was, while many of those comments
were, quote unquote, upsetting, they did not rise to the level of a threat from a legal perspective.
And you just heard some of those threats, right? You would think that any of that would be illegal.
And in Georgia, it's illegal to threaten bodily harm against someone. It's a federal crime to
threaten somebody online. We spoke to a former DOJ official. Her name was Mary McCord. Her reasoning
was that sometimes it's difficult for law enforcement to distinguish between a crime versus free political speech in these specific times of incidences where people are making threats.
If prosecutors don't think they'll win the case, they simply won't bring the charges.
Which leads back to my questions to Attorney General Garland is like, how are you going to sift through this gray area and actually follow up on these threats and determine, you know, who you're going to charge and who you're going to let
slide? All of this brings us back to the present and the upcoming election. Former President Donald
Trump's campaign and the Republican National Convention said just last month that they plan
to deploy 100,000 lawyers and volunteers essentially to intimidate election workers at polling sites.
What will that mean for the people running our elections
or trying to do that as we head into November?
We saw a rise in recent years,
especially after the 2022 midterms of these poll watchers,
and it'll definitely do what it's set out to do.
It's set to induce more anxiety for election workers.
I mean, I can imagine showing up for work
and now like hundreds of people are staring at me or like recording me while I do my job. You know, the real consequences
of this is like not only are these election officials quitting and they're taking like years
of like institutional knowledge with them, but we have to think about who in turn will backfill
these positions. And there has been an increase of bad actors and election deniers that are
suddenly interested in these roles. Yeah, who are being pushed them by the RNC and Trump's campaign. Exactly. Now that there's
been an exodus of these election workers. What is it that we can do to protect our election workers
as they get closer and closer to never? What can we do to protect our elections? Because we need
them to keep our elections fair and free. It's hard to say because you don't want to be like,
show up to these polls and like have a standoff with the proud boys that are standing out there armed. You know what I mean?
But like it is important to show community and be in community. If you know anybody who works in
these positions, check up on them, let them know that you're supporting them and also like reach
out to your local officials and your local police departments and make sure they're doing their jobs
to keep people safe and actually protect their citizens,
you know, because otherwise
it's just going to be like
death to our democracy by a thousand cuts.
I think we just need to be,
you know, having as much support
for these people as we can,
especially going into this election.
That was my conversation
with former Vice News reporter Alexis Johnson.
That is the latest for now.
We will, of course, continue to cover this.
We'll get to some headlines in just a moment.
But if you like our show, make sure to subscribe, share it with your friends. We'll be
right back after some ads. Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Inflation appears to have slowed down slightly in April, according to a new report on Wednesday.
It was down 0.1% to 3.4% from 3.5% back in March.
Even though it's small, it's still a positive sign for consumers,
especially after
three months of price increases. The Federal Reserve is cautiously optimistic because if this
downward trend continues, it means that they're more likely to cut interest rates later this year.
But of course, we're not getting our hopes up too quickly. Prices are still pretty high. In fact,
another report released from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said that about one in five borrowers are using almost all of their available credit and maxed out cardholders are more likely to miss their payments or to fall behind.
The number of people who died from a drug overdose decreased slightly last year.
It's the first time the number of deaths fell in five years.
That's according to preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control released
Wednesday. Still, the number of annual overdose deaths remains stubbornly high, topping 100,000
last year for the third year straight. The CDC's report shows that while deaths from synthetic
opioids like fentanyl continue to make up the vast majority of fatal overdoses, the total number of
opioid deaths did tick down a bit. But it also shows the number of
people who died from stimulants like meth and cocaine inched up. Also on Wednesday, Walgreens
announced plans to start selling a generic over-the-counter version of the overdose-reversing
drug Narcan. A high-level Biden appointee resigned on Wednesday in protest of the U.S.'s continued
support for Israel and its war on Gaza. Lily Greenberg-Kahl, a Jewish American,
was a political appointee at the Interior Department.
She joins a growing number of staffers
who have stepped down because of Biden's policies
related to Israel's war in Gaza.
Greenberg-Kahl wrote in her resignation,
quote,
I can no longer in good conscience
continue to represent this administration
amidst President Biden's disastrous,
continued support for Israel's genocide in Gaza. Greenberg calls resignation came on the 76th anniversary of the Nakba,
the mass displacement of more than 700,000 Palestinians back in 1948. This marked the
end of the Arab-Israeli war and the beginning of Israel as an independent Jewish state.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams is under fire from immigrant rights groups and
fellow city lawmakers, and it's not for what you'd think. On Tuesday, during his weekly press
briefing, Adams, a Democrat, floated the idea of filling empty city lifeguard jobs with migrants
because many are, quote, excellent swimmers. How do we have a large body of people that are in our city and country that are excellent
swimmers? And at the same time, we need lifeguards. And the only obstacle is that we won't give them
the right to work to become a lifeguard. What? On Wednesday, Adams defended his comments saying
they were based on conversations he'd had with migrants at city shelters and that he's repeatedly
called for migrants to be able to work while their asylum claims play out.
The head of New York Immigration Coalition, though, called the comments racist
and accused Adams of, quote,
making light of the perilous and often life-threatening journeys people are forced to make
to escape violence and persecution.
Yes, that.
Globally, drowning is also the most common cause of death for migrants,
with more than 36,000 recorded deaths in the last decade,
according to the International Organization for Migration.
If you're interested in getting involved in responding to Adams' comments,
we'll link to the New York Immigration Coalition's information in the show notes.
Adams' comments come a little more than a week after New York Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul came under similar criticism for saying that black children in the Bronx, quote, don't even know what the word computer is.
When you have two top leaders in one state repeatedly saying harmful, racist, xenophobic statements, this is what they believe.
Absolutely. And they're saying this in public this is them trying to be
like the least offensive possible so can you only imagine what they do when we're not around
it's really upsetting to be honest and those are the headlines one more thing before we go we all
make bad decisions sometimes you know like eric adam and kathy huckle every day and although you
probably have a group chat
with friends to dissect what is going on in your life understanding the nightmare fuel that is
supreme court decisions might require a law degree or three so let strict scrutiny be your guide to
this decision season from abortion bans to trump trials law professors and hosts melissa murray
kate shaw and leah litman decode the drama and break down everything
you need to know and keep you sane in the process. New episodes release every Monday,
wherever you get your podcasts, and now on YouTube. Plus, keep an eye out for bonuses
whenever SCOTUS tries to set the nation back 60 years or so, you know.
It's probably pretty frequent in that case. They are in that studio.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
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Check it out and subscribe at Cricut.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And brace yourself for the summer debate.
Are you looking forward to a June debate, Priyanka?
Well, I already checked my calendar.
I'm on vacation, so I will not be watching that.
Have fun.
Have fun.
Priyanka's not tuning in, but we would love to hear what you plan to do.
Watch, not watch, just get debilitatingly drunk.
I don't know.
I don't know.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
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We had production help today from Michelle Alloy, Greg Walters, and Julia Clare.
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