What A Day - Don't Manchin It
Episode Date: June 17, 2021President Biden had his first one-on-one meeting with Russian president Vladimir Putin in Geneva, yesterday. The leaders discussed recent cyberattacks and the state of human rights in their respective... countries ... and allegedly, things stayed basically cordial.Next week, the Senate has a scheduled vote on voting rights legislation, and a memo put out yesterday by Senator Joe Manchin laid out the kind of bill he would be willing to vote for. Manchin said he's in favor of voter ID requirements and other stipulations that progressives oppose, but even for his watered-down version of the bill to pass, it would require the support of 10 Republicans.And in headlines: the Education Department says Title IX prohibits discrimination based sexual orientation and gender identity, lots of rules at next month's Tokyo Olympics, and a litter of gray wolves is born in Colorado for the first time since the 1940s.Show Notes:The Intercept: "Leaked Audio Of Sen. Joe Manchin Call With Billionaire Donors" – https://bit.ly/3zA0EdqFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Thursday, June 17th. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Gideon Resnick, and this is What A Day.
The podcast Link plays on his Ocarina in Breath of the Wild 2.
Yeah, that's just speculation, of course,
but we think the new game will introduce both an ocarina and the ability to play podcasts.
Yeah, we're basing this on the best source that we have, Instinct.
Yeah. I mean, if you look at the trailer, it seems like they're just trying to tell us about it.
On today's show, some movement on voting rights legislation ahead of an expected initial vote
next week. Plus, we'll have headlines. But first, the latest.
I told President Putin my agenda is not against Russia or anyone else. It's for the American
people. Fighting COVID-19, rebuilding our economy, reestablishing relationships around the world,
our allies and friends, and protecting the American people.
That is President Biden summing up his first one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva yesterday.
It was one the world was watching because of all that was on the line.
As to how Putin himself walked away from the meeting, here he is.
The gist of what he's saying there from my own translation,
he doesn't believe there was any hostility during the meeting,
and they both came together to lay groundwork on issues like
cybersecurity. But I think there was more going on here. So Akilah, let's break down what actually
happened starting with cyber attacks. Was there common ground there? I mean, a little bit. So
they agreed to consultations. No one really knows what that means exactly. But as Ben Rhodes told us
earlier this week, Russia agreeing to even the littlest thing on cybersecurity is a really big step.
But Putin continued to deny that Russia was involved in recent cyber attacks targeting a major U.S. pipeline and a global meat processing company.
Biden was ensuaded by Putin's grandstanding about hacking and said, quote, I pointed out to him we have significant cyber capabilities.
He doesn't know exactly what it is,
but he knows it's significant. If in fact they violate these basic norms, we will respond,
he knows, in a cyber way. So cyber threats out here. Yeah, he is going to clap back on Twitter.
We also knew that Biden was going to press Putin on the issues of democracy and human rights.
So what came out of their meeting on that front? There, Biden got tougher and said that there would be, quote, devastating consequences if the jailed
opposition leader Alexei Navalny were to die in prison. Putin dismissed those questions, though.
He didn't even say Alexei Navalny's name and redirected the convo to issues in the U.S. like
the Black Lives Matter protests and the January 6th insurrection, which, you know, he's not wrong.
America has its own problems.
So, yeah, overall, there weren't any major breakthroughs to speak of.
But on that issue of cooling tensions, both of them claim their meeting was cordial.
What are observers saying, though?
So The Washington Post noted that Biden called the U.S. and Russia two great powers, which was noticeable because in the past, President Obama called Russia a, quote, regional power.
Real big dig there. Both leaders seem to be on their best behavior, with Putin saying that there were,
quote, glimmers of trust. Again, what does that mean? You kind of trust something that means you
don't. Anyway, things may be less frosty in a negotiating with a dictator sort of way.
So that was the big focus of the Biden administration on the international front.
But of course, there was a lot happening domestically, too, namely more movement on critical voting
rights legislation. So Gideon, take us through what went down.
This was a doozy. Okay, so on the one hand, next week, the Senate has scheduled a vote on voting
rights legislation. And for a while, the choice had appeared to be you can either try to get
Republicans on board with something they have vocally said they hate, or get rid of the
filibuster and just pass the For the People Act,
the more sweeping bill that's on the table with just Democratic support.
Then yesterday, there was some added intrigue with our dear friend, Senator Joe Manchin.
As a reminder, if people needed it,
he has been under massive pressure to join other Democrats to support the bill.
And earlier this
month, he wrote that op ed about opposing it as it was written. Yeah, he is not my favorite person,
but what's changed? Okay, so basically, Manchin puts out this memo that details what he's actually
looking for in a bill like this, which had been a constant question from other Democrats in the
Senate. They were saying, what do you actually want here? So
here is what we know about what Manchin is talking about would work to get his vote.
Manchin said first what he liked in this bill that can stay, provisions like creating at least
two weeks of early voting and banning partisan gerrymandering. Some of that would actually be
an antidote to some of the bills that we've talked about that are flying through Republican-led
state legislatures at the moment.
He also brought up making Election Day a public holiday and automatic voter registration via the DMV with the ability to opt out.
But pretty large one at that.
At the same time, he also said that he is in favor of voter ID requirements and allowing for some wiggle room for how and when local officials can purge their voter rolls.
Yeah, well, be more specific, Joe.
Anyway, all right, what was the reception to all of this among the Democrats?
Okay, so it's a mixed bag.
In an interview with Politico, House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn called the memo from Manchin a, quote, great first step.
Although Representative Mondaire Jones also told Politico, quote, I want him to understand that voter ID laws disproportionately exclude people of color from the franchise and civil rights groups will tell him as much.
Manchin is pretty likely to get strong pushback on that part, even though he has talked about a, quote, allowable alternative, like bringing a utility bill, for instance, to the polls.
Yeah. So if you live with several other people and you're renting and your name's not on that bill, I don't know what you're going to do. But I haven't been in
the Senate for a million years like some of these folks. But isn't the question still like how would
you get the support of 10 Republicans to break a filibuster even for something that is a watered
down version? Yeah, I mean, that is the exact question. And, you know, on the filibuster part,
we got another look at Manchin's position yesterday via this leaked call that he had with donors that was obtained by The Intercept. We can link to that
so people can hear the full thing. But basically, he said to these donors that he needed help
flipping some Republicans to vote for the January 6th commission in order to take away an argument
that the, quote, far left has for eliminating the filibuster, i.e. he would try to prove that there's bipartisanship
by having Republicans agree to a commission
that would investigate a day that they were attacked.
He's so naive.
Yep.
And at one point during this,
he seemed to even suggest that Republican Roy Blunt
could be persuaded to vote yes
by being offered a job when he retires.
Come on, they're bribing them.
Yeah, basically, that's what it sounded like.
So crazy, crazy stuff in there.
You know, as to where this all goes in the Senate, the Post reported that it's not clear if Majority Leader Schumer is actually going to try to reach some agreement with Manchin
or not before moving forward here.
But Schumer did say recently, quote, the idea that this can have some kind of bipartisan solution befuddles me because every
action taken in the legislature is done just with Republican state senators, Republican assembly
members with no Democratic participation or input. So he's not thinking the B word bipartisanship is
going to be a thing. We'll follow the bills all of next week when we'll
also have Crooked's political director, Shaniqua McClendon, here to break it down for us. But
that's the latest for now. It's Thursday WOD Squad, and today we're doing a new segment where
we run down some stories that were almost too edgy for our relatively edgy show. The segment is called No Parents because the stories are R-rated. So
if you're a parent who's going to respond to them by calling our moms or naming and shaming us on
Nextdoor, I suggest you skip the segment and instead go to Sherwin-Williams to price shop
for paints for the dining room. Cool parents can use your discretion. This is No Parents.
It was raining meds in New York earlier this month when a drug dealer threw a trash bag containing 19 pounds of marijuana off an apartment roof after his buyers tried to rob him.
Sad for the guy, but exciting for three pedestrians who experienced the event as free drugs falling
from the sky.
They grabbed handfuls and ran away. If any parents are listening, we're still in the no parents zone. Okay,
please fast forward or go to the nearest Lowe's and throw tantrums in the self-checkout area
until this segment's over. A cat was born with no butthole in Toronto. This condition is very
dangerous and obviously not fun, but the happily ever after is that the kitten was successfully
treated by veterinary surgeons last week, thanks to cat lovers who raised thousands of dollars to foot the bill.
Parents, even if you thought that story was cute and not exactly R-rated,
the next one could be so bad it makes you move your children to a different school district.
Please hit fast forward and we'll catch up with you all in the pillow aisle at a HomeGoods.
Production shut down on an NBC show called Ultimate Slip Inside earlier this month
due to a Giardia outbreak affecting up to 40 crew members. Giardia can cause terrible GI symptoms,
the ones you would guess, which affect the mouth and butt. It spreads easily in water,
so it's no mystery how it could derail a show centered around a 65-foot-tall water slide.
All right. All parents can come back now because we're leaving the no-parent zone.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
The Department of Education announced yesterday that Title IX prohibits discrimination based on
sexual orientation and gender identity.
Title IX is a landmark law that bans sex-based discrimination in federally funded schools.
The Trump administration previously decided that trans students were not entitled to protections under this law, but yesterday's guidance completely overturns that.
In a press release, the department said the new guidance was based on the Supreme Court ruling last year, which establishes that federal civil rights law protects queer and trans workers. Some advocates are kind of skeptical as to whether or
not this new interpretation will change the minds of local officials that seek to pass more anti-trans
bills. But the administration ensures that schools receiving federal funds will be punished if they
discriminate against trans students. That's what's up. A federal appeals court ruled yesterday that
North Carolina's ban on abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy is unconstitutional.
The ban was originally passed in 1973, which is the same year the Supreme Court issued its ruling on Roe v. Wade, making abortion a constitutional right.
Since then, state lawmakers have kept the law, arguing that it is largely symbolic because no abortion providers were prosecuted under this law.
The federal court's latest ruling reflected that it was not just symbolic and that the state's argument was
totally not reasonable. The law has been blocked since it was struck down by a district court judge
in 2015. The ruling comes as the Supreme Court recently agreed to hear a challenge to a Mississippi
abortion law, and we'll be following up with that hearing in a later episode.
Next month's Tokyo Olympics is shaping up to be
the least fun of all time with a metric ton of COVID rules for athletes and consequences that
include disqualification and deportation for people who break them. Oh my gosh. An International
Olympic Committee playbook distributed this Tuesday contains all the guidelines that we've
come to expect for pandemic era contests, daily testing, social distancing and masks. But it also
has some more creative ones, like a requirement, for instance, that participants not speak to
drivers when riding in official Olympics vehicles. That would be so hard for you. Yeah, I was going
to say a personal issue for me. I'm a friend to all the Olympic Village is known to be one of the
most romantic places on Earth. And the organizers of this year's event will distribute about 150,000 condoms to athletes.
But a spokesperson told Reuters the condoms are not for use in the village, since that would
violate social distancing. They are for taking back to athletes' home countries, no way, or maybe
protecting athletes' cell phones if their event involves swimming. Of course, over 10,000 athletes
will be in Tokyo, along with nearly 80,000 journalists, officials and staff.
So extreme precautions are warranted.
Even holding the Olympics was opposed by most of Japan until recently.
But as the country's vaccination campaign has ramped up, opposition has waned.
Happy early Father's Day to a wolf in Colorado who recently became the parent of the first litter of gray wolf pups to be seen in the state since the 1940s.
Gray wolves used to live all over the country, but were nearly hunted to extinction. That's a real sad one.
Conservation efforts reintroduced them to Wyoming and central Idaho beginning in the 1990s, but they've only started popping up in Colorado in the past two years.
This particular wolf and his co-parent have had the attention of Colorado wildlife officials for a while.
The officials believed both wolves to
be male then they saw the pups spent a long night with their advanced wolf textbooks and realized
that they were wrong last year colorado voters approved a measure to reintroduce gray wolves in
the state by the end of 2023 so hopefully this litter is the first of many i'm doing my part
in california by raising a wolf at home only he is shy and frozen in baby form and his wolf
credentials are a
subject of dispute in the animal science community. Yeah, we have to get that fixed ASAP.
Yeah, I trust Fauci. He knows what he's talking about, and those are the headlines.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
be a parent to a wolf pup, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just Olympic rules
about who's off limits for talking like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out.
Subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And look out, it's weed reading.
It is, you know, sativa with a chance of more indica
cloudy some indica in the forecast be careful
what a day is a production of crooked media it's recorded and mixed by charlotte landis
sonia tun and jazzy marine are our associate producers our head writer is john milstein and Thank you.