What A Day - Going Deep With The Veep
Episode Date: February 9, 2023Despite some combative moments from Republican lawmakers, Tuesday's State of the Union address was meant to deliver a message of unity to a divided Congress. Vice President Kamala Harris spoke to What... A Day co-host Juanita Tolliver about some of President Biden's bipartisan wins – and his challenge to Congress to "finish the job."And in headlines: Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy paid a surprise visit to the U.K., Disney announced a massive restructuring plan that will cut 7,000 jobs worldwide, and LeBron James broke the all-time NBA scoring record. Show Notes:What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked 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 Thursday, February 9th. I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver, and this is What A Day, where we thank Mitt Romney telling George Santos,
you don't belong here at the State of the Union, has the heat to become the new, you can't sit with us.
Yeah, move over, mean girls. It is time for the normally boring elder statesman.
This is your moment, Mitt. Take George Santos down so we don't have to.
I'd really appreciate it.
On today's show, the death toll continues to climb in Turkey and Syria following Monday's
massive earthquake.
Plus, Ukraine's president paid a surprise visit to the United Kingdom.
But first, the takes following President Biden's State of the Union address on Tuesday are rolling in. So we wanted to take some time to walk you through what people
are saying and what matters, especially for those of you who didn't watch the entirety of the
address for yourselves. This is what we're here for. We got you. No worries. So the overarching
theme of this speech, at least in our view, was really more of a bipartisan unity message than we've heard from Biden in past addresses.
We have a divided government now as opposed to the last time he did this, which could
be part of the reasoning behind the shift.
But of course, so could the timing as he potentially heads into another campaign for the presidency.
But Biden highlighted big bipartisan wins from his first two years in office, including infrastructure, the CHIPS Act, veterans benefits, and more, telling Congress and
the country, quote, let's finish the job. That, of course, does not sound like a man who wants to
throw in the towel quite yet. So as you spoke about with John on yesterday's show, Juanita,
that message of let's finish the job could become a convincing one for Joe Biden.
In my mind, it was a campaign slogan and beta testing, right? Like this was a moment where to show Juanita, that message of let's finish the job could become a convincing one for Joe Biden.
In my mind, it was a campaign slogan and beta testing, right? Like this was a moment where we know Biden had a massive audience, millions of people tuned in to watch this. And so he's test
driving some of this stuff. So I expect us to hear this again. And Jon Favreau's dad agrees.
So shout out to us. Shout out to you too. The only political pundits I need. But unsurprisingly, the bulk
of the focus of the State of the Union has been on the disruptions that happened during the speech.
Let's take a listen. Some of my Republican friends want to take the economy hostage. I get it.
Unless I agree to their economic plans. All of you at home should know what those plans are. Instead of making
the wealthy pay their fair share, some Republicans, some Republicans want Medicare and Social
Security to sunset. I'm not saying it's the majority. Let me give you, anybody who doubts
it, contact my office. I'll give you a copy.
I'll give you a copy of the proposal.
That means Congress doesn't vote.
Well, I'm glad to see you.
And I tell you, I enjoy conversion.
You know, it means if Congress doesn't keep the programs the way they are, they'd go away.
Other Republicans say, I'm not saying it's the majority of you.
I don't even think it's even a significant, but it's being proposed by
individuals. Oh my God. What? I wish, I wish, I wish that track included the sound of McCarthy
shushing his conference because he told them going into this address to act like you know better,
act like you understand the sense of decorum, but they just couldn't contain themselves.
They couldn't help themselves.
My mind is just stuck on the TikTok audio,
which is how broken my brain is.
But it's like, what on earth is going on
in the House of Commons?
Like, this is the vibe that we're getting.
This is crazy.
What is happening here?
That's the energy they were bringing, for sure.
Thankfully, he was very quick on his feet
in response there.
We love to
see him not getting flustered, even though that's crazy. But these very vocal outbursts do sort of
highlight the people he's dealing with here and, you know, some of the contentiousness that we can
expect between Congress and the president over the next year or two, especially with the fight
over the debt ceiling coming up and, of course, another election cycle. Right. Essentially, the drama is just beginning, so we all better buckle up. But during
the State of the Union address, President Biden also gave Vice President Harris a number of
shout outs about her work on abortion, climate change and small businesses. And I had a chance
to catch up with the VP yesterday while filling in for Zerlina Maxwell on Sirius XM Progress to discuss
the address and her planned trips to Georgia and Minnesota. Yeah, okay, pause for just a moment.
You said that pretty casually. You got a chance to talk to the Vice President of the United States
of America. That is so extremely cool. Oh my god. I did my absolute best to hold it together,
Priyanka. Yeah, well listen, I'm not meeting the Vice President, so I don't have to hold it together, Priyanka. Yeah, well, listen, I'm not meeting the vice president, so I don't have to hold it together here. That is so cool. Plus, I started by asking
Vice President Harris about the millions of Americans who applied to start small businesses
and how she worked to ensure that they had access to capital and resources during the past two years.
Take a listen to what she had to share. My second mother was a small business owner. She
owned a nursery school that, in fact, we lived in the apartment upstairs. And she was a business owner, a community leader,
a civic leader. She was, you know, an auntie and a grandmother to so many people in the community.
She hired locally. And so when I think about small businesses, my first thought is about
who small business owners are. And that's who they are across our country. Not to mention they are part of the economic fabric and lifeblood of
communities. And so I think about it through that lens. I think about it in terms of the overall
strength of our economy. Over half of American workers work for a small business or own a small
business. So my focus has been on getting them what they
need. And in particular, for our minority and women-owned businesses, access to capital.
I have traveled the country. I've met with so many small business owners who told me about
how they had an idea, how they were innovative, but went to a big bank and heard a term they'd
never heard before. And the term that they heard was they were told they were unbankable.
Oh, goodness, but see, this is the issue, right? So many of our small business owners who are
community based, they're in touch with their community, but the big bank doesn't necessarily
understand the community as well as the community banks do. So my work has been to get billions of
dollars to community banks to give access to capital to these small businesses.
I love that. And the proximity makes a difference. And I love that it's personal for you.
I also know that after this interview, you're going to be hitting the road. You're headed to
Atlanta, Georgia. You're going to be talking through climate change, clean transit,
infrastructure investments. And when it comes to climate change, you've been explicitly clear
that urgency is key. So can you tell me a little bit about what people in Georgia and Minnesota should expect to feel and see as some of these investments come to
fruition and translate into action in their states? I mean, first of all, we've been seeing
and feeling the extreme climate crisis, right? So everything from hurricanes to floods, my home
state of California, drought, and also floods, right? So what we are saying is that, one, it is an issue that is
banging on the door for immediate action, but the solutions also create opportunities.
I'm very excited about what we are doing to create a whole new industry around a clean
energy economy. And that's the work that's going to require folks to be involved in not only the
installation and maintenance of solar panels and wind turbines, but the work that's going to require folks to be involved in not only the installation and maintenance of solar panels and wind turbines,
but the work that's going to go into creating the manufacturing and the building backup
and the building of America's infrastructure around resilience and adaptation to climate.
And back to the point about small businesses,
do you know that the vast majority of American manufacturing companies
hire and have 20 or less employees? I did not know that. Yes, yes. And so when we're talking about
who is the construction worker or they have a construction firm, right? Who are the folks who
are involved in the manufacturing kind of the chain of the businesses that are involved in helping to build up our infrastructure?
We're also talking about small businesses.
And those jobs are good paying jobs.
Those jobs, so many of them do not require a four-year college education, but they do require the kind of skills that you can get through an apprenticeship program like at IBEW and our union shop.
So I'm going to be on the road as I've been
talking with folks about the jobs, about the way we are going to invest in a future economy,
and most importantly, how we are going to reduce the harm of this climate crisis. Because
in particular, our young leaders know it's beyond their watch that they're going to pay the biggest
price. And so we want to look to them for their leadership to help get the solutions implemented.
I love that. And I love the emphasis on the good paying jobs that are going to come out of this,
especially the ones that require skills beyond a four-year degree. Like this is something that
is accessible and shout out to the unions that are helping with those training programs.
And Madam Vice President, I got to say the tone of the address was optimistic and the president
was giving strong energy and kept coming back to a theme that was about it's time to finish the job.
And to me, it sounded like a campaign slogan in the making. So is that how you and the president
want the public to interpret this speech as we look ahead to 2024? I think that what the president has been so clear about and what we all should understand is that
we've created a historic number of jobs, 12 million jobs in just the last two years.
We have brought down, you know, over the past many months, the cost of gas as compared to where it
was at its height. We've had a lot of accomplishments,
but there's still a lot of folks who are hurting. And when the president talks about let's finish
the job, I know that what he means is let's implement all these policies. Let's get it in
the water that now seniors only have to pay $35 a month for their insulin. Let's see it through
and get the job done where we, because of our administration, are now going to cap the cost of prescription drugs for seniors to $2,000 a year.
Let's finish the job.
And I think one of the things about our president that people really should understand, we are not about just sitting around patting ourselves on the back saying, OK, we've done enough.
Not at all.
There's more work to do.
Let's finish the job.
I appreciate that, especially in the context of the historic success and the fact that
more is coming.
And a lot of people are going to feel that soon.
And one other issue where people are going to be looking for more support is an issue
you've been leading on access to abortion.
President Biden was clear that he
would veto any anti-abortion bills coming from Republicans, noting their intentions to try to
pass a national abortion ban. So as you've been leading the White House's fight for reproductive
rights, how do you plan to continue to defend access to abortion health care from these types
of attacks? Well, I'm going to continue to talk with the folks, especially the leaders on the
ground, about supporting what
they know needs to happen at the state level, as well as pushing for what we need to do, which is
have a federal law passed that ensures the protections that Roe provided. But, you know,
I was in Florida recently, for example. I mean, the laws that some of these states are passing
that would criminalize health care providers,
that would make it difficult for people to get access to basic reproductive care that includes
abortion, but not always. This is the kind of work we have to fight back against. And the bottom line
is this is about freedom and liberty. We are a nation that was founded on the belief that all
people should be entitled to certain freedoms and liberty, and in particular,
the ability of an individual to make decisions about their own body and not have their government
tell them what to do. Listen, one does not have to abandon their faith to believe and agree that
the government should not be telling her what to do with her body. And prohibiting her from life-saving care.
I know one of the guests was Amanda Zyrowski, whose family experienced that trauma in Texas
because as she was experiencing a miscarriage, doctors were too afraid to give her adequate
care for fear of violating the Texas abortion ban.
It's that type of concern that I think people are living with every day because it's, in
addition to the autonomy and privacy, it's also about life-saving care.
Absolutely. And I was with Amanda in Florida. If you hear her story, she and her husband
suffered horribly. And I think that, again, we should all agree that we are a nation that is
a developed nation. And so we say about ourselves. And that should mean that
women should be able to get the health care they need and should not unnecessarily suffer
because of some backward approach. Right. And one more question before you go on democracy.
The president was sure to emphasize that none of the progress, none of the gains,
none of the historic work that you all have been doing in this administration would have been
possible without democracy. Is that a message that you also plan to take on the road in the
coming weeks and months? Absolutely. And that's going to be about fighting to restore voting
rights in places that have tried to restrict voting rights like Georgia. It's going to be
about fighting to make sure that we all support election workers. We've heard the horrible stories
of people who are just doing their civic duty
to be election workers being threatened.
And it's about the work that we need to do,
saying that we are a country that was based on laws and principles
that should be upheld.
That's what makes us a role model around the world.
But we have to fight for that.
We can't take it for granted.
That was my conversation with Vice President Kamala Harris.
And while she deflected my question about 2024, Priyanka, I think we already know what's
up.
I think we know what's coming in a few weeks.
Yeah, you're right.
OK, but this is such a cool experience.
I just have to ask you, what was your biggest takeaway from that conversation?
Look, I think that the vice president made it absolutely clear that she and
President Biden are firm and fortified in what they want to do. They want to keep trying to
deliver for Americans. They want to make sure the public knows they did this along with Democrats
in Congress so that that all comes back to them in 2024. So make sure people know what was up and
what they delivered, but also that people feel the benefits of all the policies that Democrats
in the White House have been fighting for for years.
Definitely.
We'll be right back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Rescue and recovery operations continue for a fourth day today in Turkey and Syria.
As of our record time at 9.30 p.m. Eastern on Wednesday,
the combined death toll from both countries has reached over 12,000 people.
Survivors who have lost their homes are now struggling to find shelter as the region has been gripped in freezing cold temperatures.
At least 70 countries have already pledged to send aid to Turkey, and the UN is working to
get resources to war-torn Syria. Meanwhile, the aftermath of the earthquake appears to be
triggering some political rumblings. Critics of Turkey's president, who is up for re-election in
May, say that he failed to prepare for such a disaster and that his government's response has been
too slow. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky paid a surprise visit to the UK yesterday,
kicking off an unannounced diplomatic tour of Europe meant to rally support for his country's
defense against Russia. This is only the second known instance of Zelensky leaving Ukraine since the invasion
began last year. He addressed the British Parliament and thanked Prime Minister Rishi
Sunak for his pledge to train Ukrainian fighter pilots, and also gave a small shout out to former
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who backed Ukraine early on in the war before he was forced out of
office. Zelensky also made a stop in Paris to meet with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
He's expected to visit Brussels today to address the European Parliament.
Disney announced a massive restructuring plan that will cut 7,000 jobs worldwide in an effort to save $5.5 billion.
Our condolences to the Sorcerer's Apprentice, who is probably about to be told that their job is redundant.
The reorganization,
which has been underway since CEO Bob Iger
returned to the job in November,
will also split the company
into three separate divisions.
Disney Entertainment,
comprising of its streaming
and media operations,
a parks, experiences,
and products unit,
and ESPN gets to do its own thing.
Meanwhile, the majority
of Disney's cost-saving measures
will come from its content budget,
as streaming platforms like Disney Plus and its competitors
look for ways to make their platforms more profitable.
And some news from the Keystone State.
Democrats will take control of Pennsylvania's House of Representatives
after sweeping three special elections Tuesday night.
They stand on the shoulders of giants,
and by giants, we specifically mean Senator John Fetterman. Though Democrats hold a razor-thin 102 to 101 advantage, it'll be the
first time in over a decade that the party will have a majority in those chambers. This matters
a lot ahead of the 2024 presidential election because with Democrats in the majority, that all
but guarantees that Pennsylvania's 20 electoral college votes won't be disputed.
Just in case there's a revival of the stop the steal foolishness we saw in 2020.
Yeah, seriously, this has huge implications for our democracy and our elections, but also is such a big win.
I mean, this hasn't happened in over a decade.
So huge congratulations, huge thank you to the volunteers, the organizers, the people that made this happen.
Exactly. This is huge. Looking for james he's got it coming to the end of the third quarter
lebron james a shot in history
if you saw the goat emoji trending on twitter this week do not worry the dallas zoo did not
have another breakout.
With a fadeaway jumper Tuesday night in front of a home crowd in Los Angeles,
you just heard the audio.
LeBron James became the NBA's all-time leading scorer.
Ending his night against the Oklahoma City Thunder with a career total of 38,390 points,
James passed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's previously held record of 38,387, which the
fellow Lakers legend had held since April of 1984, about nine months before James was even born.
Abdul-Jabbar watched the game from the Lakers bench before symbolically passing the torch,
handing James the game ball. Also in the Crypto.com arena to witness the historic moment was a crowd fit for
the Grammys with stars like Jay-Z, Bad Bunny, LL Cool J, Denzel Washington, and Usher in attendance.
It really was a huge night in Crypto.com arena. I feel wrong to say that every single time, but
it was very cool. Our sincere congratulations to the GOAT. Maybe now we will forgive him for Space Jam, a new legacy.
I'm sorry.
I'm still not.
But this is really cool.
That doesn't excuse what happened.
Look, I hope this puts to rest any question about LeBron James's capabilities, abilities,
and standing within NBA history.
Like, he's the best, period.
But also, Priyanka, lay offoff space jam space jam did what it needed to
do i celebrate space jam i celebrate lebron james creativity on and off the court and that's all i
gotta say on that yeah yikes you know i'm gonna let him have his moment i'm not gonna rebut that
but the original space jam i think everyone will say that one was better but anyways and those are the headlines that is all for today if you like the show make sure you subscribe leave a review turn a red state
blue and tell your friends to listen and if you're into reading and not just how much people spent on
tickets to see lebron on tuesday like me what a day is also a nightly newsletter check it out and
subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And it's called the Staples Center.
Can we get a return to that?
Yes, it is.
Yes, it always will be.
I don't know if Staples has money to do this, but like we should just call it that forever.
But do we think crypto.com has money for this still?
Like, come on.
Nah.
You raise a good point there.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Jazzy Marine and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is Jossie Kaufman
and our executive producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.