What A Day - Don-Subpoena Relationship
Episode Date: October 14, 2022The House select committee investigating the January 6th insurrection held its latest — and potentially last — public hearing on Thursday, and voted to question former President Donald Trump about... his role in the attack on the U.S. Capitol. What a Day’s Juanita Tolliver recaps what we’ve learned so far, and what’s at stake with the midterm elections on the horizon.And in headlines: the Parkland school shooter was sentenced to life in prison, Social Security recipients will get their biggest cost-of-living increase in more than 40 years, and Netflix is set to launch a new, ad-supported subscription tier.Show Notes:BLK presents "No Voting No Vucking" - ft. Saucy Santana and Trina (YouTube) – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1KtAkBcd2PQVote Save America: Every Last Vote – https://votesaveamerica.com/every-last-vote/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Friday, October 14th. I'm Travelle Anderson.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi, and this is What A Day, the podcast that is very familiar with all of the ingredients of a Negroni Spagliato with Prosecco in it.
Yes, we are all at the exact same level of culturedness as cool young British actors on TikTok.
It's a huge thing on TikTok. Go order one this weekend.
All of the kids will be doing it. Yes, go treat yourself.
On today's show, a Florida jury has spared the life of the Parkland school shooter who killed
17 people, plus more developments in the legal saga over the classified material seized from
Mar-a-Lago. But first, the House Select Committee investigating the January 6th
insurrection held its latest public hearing on Thursday. The last one was back in July,
and needless to say, there has been a lot going on since then. From the FBI search for classified
documents as Donald Trump's Florida estate, and a separate Justice Department investigation into
efforts to overturn the 2020 election results, There has really been no shortage of material here.
And Thursday's hearing was also the last one before the midterm elections,
and maybe even the last one that will be televised.
And while the investigation appears to be winding down,
some members of the panel haven't ruled out holding more hearings in the future
before it's expected to release its final report at the end of the year.
In the meantime, the committee spent over three hours laying out new evidence and testimony
to show that Trump knew he had lost the presidential election, but still worked to overturn the
results.
And the hearing ended with an unusually aggressive move against Trump himself.
To make sense of all this, we're bringing in our very own Juanita Tolliver.
She's been following the saga from the very beginning.
Juanita, thanks for joining us.
Thanks for having me.
And I'm glad this, you know, knowledge of this painful process can be used for something good.
We will get into what we saw and heard from the committee yesterday in just a moment.
But the top line here is this. This afternoon, I am offering this resolution that the committee direct the chairman to issue a subpoena for relevant documents and testimony under oath from Donald John Trump in connection with the January 6th attack on the United States Capitol.
And the panel unanimously voted on this. Now, this is all
incredibly remarkable. But can you explain what subpoenaing Trump will accomplish here?
And considering that it's Donald Trump that we're talking about, do we actually expect that he'll
come forward? You know, what can the committee do to actually compel him to testify?
Look, Priyanka, I feel like remarkable is a tiny understatement. This is a massive cliffhanger.
Like, I think they recognize that there is nostatement. This is a massive cliffhanger.
Like, I think they recognize that there is no chance in hell he's going to come and swear under oath for them and testify. But what they are doing is the direct call out and they're
challenging Trump and his ego to step up. And we know how a man led by his ego is going to react.
He's going to want to make a scene. So even if he doesn't come before the select committee to
testify, expect him to try to make a moment on some right wing network and try to lay out his version of things, which will
likely be all the lies he's already repeated. I did appreciate that Chairman Thompson was a little
bit coy when reporters were like, oh, are you going to compel him? What are you going to make
him do? And he was like, ask Trump and shrug shoulders, right? Like that was his energy because he knows that will really get under Trump's skin. But Trump, of
course, knows they don't have prosecutorial power. So he's probably just going to sit back and wait
for the DOJ, who does have prosecutorial power, to come after him. Got it. So how has Trump
responded to this thus far? We know he's famous for, you know, sending a barrage of tweets, but he can't do that anymore.
So what is he saying in this moment?
Right. So apparently on bootleg Twitter, he's like, oh, I would have loved to come forward and testify.
Why didn't they ask me at the beginning?
But the reality is we know that he would not have come forward at any point.
But what Trump does like is a show.
So fully expect him to try to put on a show for his followers on. I don't even know what that app is called. Truth Social.
Truth Lies. I don't know. So he's going to try to put on a show, right? Like that's his favorite
thing to do here. But we also know his favorite thing to do is try to run out the clock on subpoenas
and avoid them like the plague. So this subpoena is one I think
that is going to expire at the end of this congressional term anyway. So he's probably
looking at it like I'll just run out the clock like I do in every other legal case when I get
subpoenaed. I think it's also important to note, right, that like he could have volunteered at
any point, right? He doesn't need to be subpoenaed at all. I'm sure they would welcome him in with open arms if he wanted to volunteer.
The whole country would just love to hear from him.
I want to go back to the new information that was presented here yesterday.
So there was a lot of speculation going into this hearing that it would be just a recap of things we had already heard.
But we ended up with a lot of never-before-seen video and testimony that was packed into these last few presentations.
So I want to know what stood out to you when you were watching.
Look, the word of the afternoon was montage.
We got a couple of big montages where they literally showed White House counsel
talking about how we told Trump that he couldn't win.
There was no path to victory.
And then they spliced that with Trump stepping up to a lectern talking about stolen votes,
talking about election fraud, all the things that he knew wasn't true.
I think the other montage that was amazing was of the staffers who were recounting when
Trump told them himself that he knew he didn't win, staring at a TV in the dining room talking
about how did I lose to this effing guy referring to President Biden, right? Like that testimony puts Trump clearly in his
point of awareness that he knew he didn't win and he was fully intentional about trying to overturn
the election results to stay in office, right? Like that's what the Select Committee did masterfully.
I think the other testimony that was revealed today was Secret Service materials.
We saw the reports that over recent weeks, Secret Service dropped off 1.5 million communications,
emails, planning documents. And some of that communication showed how afraid Secret Service
was about a mob of people armed with pistols and AR-15s and other weapons. How concerned even Pence's
Secret Service detail was about the fact
that Trump was tweeting about them. And that leads me to the last piece of new information
that I thought was just wild was the Twitter employee who was recounting how the spikes and
calling for Mike Pence's death went up every time Trump tweeted that he was a coward or he wasn't
doing what he was supposed to do. That is going to be critical, especially for the DOJ's continued investigation, because
it shows that Trump knows he had some degree of control over this mob, which he helped
to convene.
And he waited to the very last minute to tell them to go home.
And of course, that he loved them.
Right.
Well, you know, because you got to you got to have that message as well.
You know, I particularly found the clips of Nancy Pelosi on January 6th as the insurrection was happening, frantically calling various government officials to kind of figure out a safety support plan for folks.
Super compelling and revealing, especially in light of what we know was like a lack of action on Trump's part.
I wonder for you, which of those videos was like most revealing or perhaps most damning, you know, you think in this argument that the committee is making?
Look, I agree with you wholeheartedly that the video of Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Schumer calling everybody who Trump should have been calling was critical
because not only do you have Pelosi stepping up and doing Trump's job for him, one thing
that she repeatedly said while she was on the phone, especially to Trump administration
staffers, was like, he sent them here.
We're in this issue because of him.
Placing the blame as it should have been on Trump.
I think the other video was of Cassidy Hutchinson's testimony when she said
Trump told Meadows, we can't let people know we lost. I'm embarrassed. It's too embarrassing. We
can't let people know we lost. That shows the degree that he was going to, to lie about the
election results, which we know was the plan weeks before the actual election. What did the Roger
Stone footage also show? We're going to tell them, F you, you lost, we won, you're wrong, that's it, right?
That was the playbook.
Bannon reiterated it, Roger Stone reiterated it, and Trump executed it.
Definitely.
So based on how everything was laid out, you know, not only in this hearing,
but over the course of the last eight hearings that came before this one as well,
how well do you think the committee has kind of made their case?
What this select committee did is showed every single hearing that they are worth the wait.
So much so that the DOJ was pressed to get every bit of testimony, every bit of video footage,
all the evidence they compelled multiple times over the summer.
Remember, the DOJ sent two letters to the select committee saying,
please turn over what you have because we got some secret grand jury activity going on and
your information can help us. The other thing is that the Select Committee kept this issue
front and center for Americans. Now, did that have an impact amongst the viewers? I'm not sure. The
people who support Trump and believe his lies still support Trump and believe his lies. But
I think there's an even greater percentage of Americans
who are now concerned about the active threat
that Trump presents to our democracy.
And recent polling showed that number was about
60 plus percent of Americans
who are going to be going to the polls this November
with the health of our democracy
as a deciding factor in how they're going to vote.
You mentioned the election.
We are about 24 days away from
election day. And obviously, we can't stress enough how important these midterm elections are
for a number of reasons. But as it relates to this investigation, could you tease out how important
the midterms are as it relates to, you know, hopefully holding Donald Trump accountable?
All right. I got to start with the election as a deadline.
This select committee knows that if Republicans win control of the House in the midterms,
that they're going to stop everything in its tracks.
And they've made that explicitly clear.
Right.
And so the select committee has been working backwards from that deadline this entire time
because they know they needed to get their work done.
They know they need to collect evidence. They know they needed to get their work done, they know they need to collect evidence,
they know they needed to turn all of that over to the DOJ
before the midterm elections.
And so that is a big driver here.
The other big driver goes back to the truth,
making sure that the American public understands
the active threat that Trump presented to our democracy
and continues to present.
The threat is not over unless Trump is held accountable.
And so I think that is going to be something that's going to be a repeated message that we're
going to hear in the lead up to the midterms. Juanita, thank you so much for joining us.
My pleasure. I really like hanging out with y'all and breaking this down.
We will keep you updated as we learn more about the House Select Committee's next moves,
but that's the latest for now.
Let's get to some headlines.
A Florida jury has sentenced the Parkland school shooter to life in prison without the possibility
of parole.
He pleaded guilty last year to 17 counts of murder and more than a dozen counts of attempted murder for carrying out the 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. The jury foreman
said Thursday that three of the 12 jurors ultimately voted against recommending the
death penalty, though under Florida law, only one juror has to vote no to take that punishment off the table.
March for Our Lives, the gun control advocacy group formed by survivors of the shooting, tweeted Thursday, quote,
This is a heavy and hard day for so many of our allies and friends in this movement.
We wish the Marjory Stoneman Douglas community and all those suffering from the long-term trauma of gun violence healing and peace.
Yeah, we wish those very same things.
Now to some updates on former President Donald Trump's legal battle
over the classified documents seized from his Florida home.
And they are not particularly good for him.
First, the Supreme Court in a single sentence rejected his request to intervene
in the ongoing dispute over which documents can be seen by the
special master appointed to that case. Trump's lawyers asked the high court to allow the special
master to review about 100 of those documents. And that is important because the request,
if it was granted, would have kept the Justice Department from using those materials in its
investigation into whether Trump mishandled top secret information since leaving office.
And it could have allowed Trump's very qualified,
super competent legal team to see these sensitive documents as well.
Meanwhile, the Washington Post reported that a worker at Mar-a-Lago told the FBI
that he was ordered by Trump himself to move boxes of documents
after his advisors were subpoenaed back in May to hand them over.
Sources have told the Post that there is also surveillance camera footage to back that up.
As we saw with the January 6th hearings, I need the video.
Because the video can be riveting.
Drop the tapes.
Make it into a montage.
We like the montages.
Nearly 70 million Americans who receive Social Security benefits will get a big bump in their payments next year.
The Social Security Administration announces cost of living adjustments for recipients every fall.
But on Thursday, the agency announced an 8.7 percent increase for 2023.
That's the largest hike since 1981.
The boost is intended to help people who depend on their monthly social security checks,
like retirees, people with disabilities, and others who are struggling with rising prices on everyday needs like food and housing. Listen, that is so lit for people who
will get social security. I definitely can't count on that for ourselves. Unfortunately.
We are entering an era of Netflix. consider buying life insurance and chill because the
streaming giant will launch its ad supported option in the US on November 3rd.
New information about the package came out on Thursday.
It'll cost $6.99 a month with four to five minutes of commercials each hour and users
will be limited to slightly lower resolution video than what's on Netflix's standard plan
now, which I find to be wild.
Initially, about 5 to 10% of Netflix titles won't be available due to licensing restrictions.
Don't worry, though, because based on my calculations,
picking a movie will still take you 100% as long.
You know, I know we're all mad about the ad supported option now,
but four to five minutes of commercials in one hour
is not that bad.
That's not terrible.
I think I'm more incensed about the, like,
dropping the quality.
Like, I don't think net neutrality ever became a thing,
but that feels like the number one thing
they were, like, warning against.
Yes.
And here we are, living in that world.
Living in that reality.
Well, say goodbye to breakfast for dinner and hello to breakfast for liquor
because Kellogg's is releasing an Eggo waffle flavored alcoholic beverage this holiday season.
Yes, you heard that right.
It's called Eggo Nog and it's a cream liqueur with flavors of churned cream, cinnamon and nutmeg.
It's the perfect drink to keep hidden with a ton of locks and security devices
if you live in a house with children.
And it's great for recapturing that nostalgic feeling
of getting ready for school,
only slightly drunker and with a headache
that keeps getting worse.
It'll be available soon at select retailers nationwide.
I don't know about you, whatever floats your boat,
but that sounds disgusting to me.
There's somebody out there
priyanka who's like i have been waiting for a waffle flavored liqueur to change my life and i
love that they have this option now yeah listen until kellogg's is sponsoring this show that shit
is disgusting and then i will reassess my opinions once we get a check in the mail thank you very
much we've got to do a taste test for ourself, you know? That's fair. Come back next week. We'll taste test for a week.
And those are the headlines. We'll be back after some ads with the top contender for
this year's best voting based rap song. It's Friday, Wild Squad, and today we are doing a
positive twist on our segment, Bad Sound.
So take a listen to today's good sound.
He got mad jokes.
He don't seem broke.
The only red flag.
He said he don't vote.
This midterms for all the single Qs.
Wanna hit this booty, gotta do your civic duty.
No voting, no loving.
Yes.
No voting, no touching.
No voting, no nothing.
No voting, no fucking. No voting, no fucking. No voting, no loving. Listen, if you want to hit this booty, you got to do your civic duty.
Yeah, you heard him.
Oh, my God.
That was incredible.
That was an excerpt from a new pro-democracy banger called No Voting, No Vucking.
Yes, that's a V.
It features the rappers Trina and Saucy Santana,
and it's produced by BLK, a dating app for black singles.
BLK also took on public health last year
with the song Vax That Thing Up,
and their ability to put clear, actionable instructions
to a beat seems to be unmatched,
even by the music industry, which they are not even in.
But Travell, what are your thoughts on this musical masterpiece?
A great writer in person once said that desperate times calls for desperate measures.
Okay.
And I love the fact that we're getting serious about the need for civic participation in the form of voting by holding
out our wondrous treasures, you know, to make sure that people are going to the ballot box.
I love this for us.
It's one way to get it done.
And it sounds effective.
Honestly, that beat could get me to do anything.
Absolutely.
It's giving Lysistrata, okay? If anyone knows that reference,
you know, sometimes you just got to put things on lockdown to get the men in particular together.
I love this for us. That was incredibly good sound. Yes. One more thing before we go.
We have some exciting news from our friends at Pod Save America.
They are dropping a bonus episode this weekend featuring an exclusive interview with former
President Barack Obama.
He must have been busy when we gave him a call.
It's fine.
You do not want to miss their interview.
And you can be one of the first to
hear it by tuning into Crooked's takeover of Sirius XM progress this weekend. Listen on channel 127
or subscribe now and get up to four months free of Sirius XM. You can check out offer details
at SiriusXM.com slash Crooked. That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you
subscribe, leave a review.
Don't fuck them unless they vote.
And tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just the sugar content of Ego Nog, like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Travelle Anderson.
And Lego my Ego Nog.
It's yours for the taking.
Take it.
You can have it.
I don't even want to look at the back panel of that.
Good Lord.
Who knows what is in that?
It might change your life.
You might love it.
Yeah, it definitely might change your life.
I don't know for the personal.
Well, today's a production of Crooked Media. I don't know for the first time. Our theme music is by Colin Gillyard and Kshaka.