What A Day - GOP Senators Ruin Their Summer Vacay for Trump Spending Bill
Episode Date: July 1, 2025As Republicans in Congress look to gut Medicaid with President Donald Trump’s supposed “Big Beautiful Bill,” the Supreme Court ended its session ruling on United States vs. Skirmetti that Tennes...see could bar gender-affirming care for minors. The ruling itself centered on whether or not such a ban would violate the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause. In a 6–3 decision, with the three liberal justices dissenting, the court decided the Tennessee law did not violate the clause. To learn more about what gender affirming care does, and what providers working on the ground think of efforts to ban it, we spoke to Dr. Alex Dworak. He’s the associate medical director of family medicine at One World Community Health Centers and specializes in LGBTQ medicine.Then in headlines: Republicans in the Senate are literally racing to pass President Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” by the Fourth of July, the Trump administration’s spat with Harvard continues as it accuses the university of being in violation of the Civil Rights Act, and Trump goes to “Alligator Alcatraz,” Florida’s new migrant detention center.Show Notes:Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What 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 Tuesday, July 1st.
I'm Jane Coaston.
And this is What a Day, the show that says, I get it, Pennsylvania Democratic
Senator John Fetterman, I get it.
Oh my God, I just want to go home.
I've already, I've missed our entire trip to the beach.
My family's going to be back before we get on that.
So, and again, I'm going to vote no.
He goes on to say that he, like every Senate Democrat, is opposed to the Republican spending
bill that would gut Medicaid and give tax breaks to billionaires.
But I don't know if there's another Senate Democrat who sounds as absolutely over it
as Federman.
And as someone who has been over it since Inauguration Day, I get it. On today's show, President Donald Trump heads to Florida for the grand opening
of the so-called Alligator Alcatraz Migrant Detention Center. And the Trump administration
is now accusing Harvard University of violating the Civil Rights Act. But let's start by
talking about gender affirming care, namely, what it actually
looks like. The Supreme Court ruled last month in United States v. Skirmetti that the state
of Tennessee could bar gender-affirming care for minors. The ruling itself centered on
whether or not such a ban would violate the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
The Court found that because the Tennessee law didn't discriminate on the basis of sex
or gender identity, it doesn't.
According to the Nonpartisan Health Care Policy Outlet, KFF, 27 states have bans on gender
affirming care for minors, though in at least two of those states, Arizona and New Hampshire,
those bans only apply to surgical care.
Both Arkansas and Montana have had their bans on gender affirming care for minors enjoined
by the courts, and challenges to bans on gender affirming care for minors enjoined by the courts,
and challenges to bans from other states are still ongoing.
But I wanted to back up a second and ask, what does gender affirming care do?
And what do the providers working on the ground think of the efforts to ban access to it?
I got the chance to speak to one such provider before last week's Supreme Court decision,
a doctor who works in a state that has recently restricted gender affirming care for anyone under the age of 19.
Dr. Alex Dworak is the Associate Medical Director of Family Medicine at One World Community
Health Centers.
He specializes in LGBTQ medicine and is an advocate for access to gender affirming care
for youth in Nebraska.
Alex, welcome to What a Day.
Thank you for having me. What is gender-affirming care?
Gender-affirming care is something that's thoughtfully done and it's not
just done for trans people. It's a way of helping people feel
more comfortable in their bodies, have better mental health, be more
authentically themselves, and it really has informed the practice of all of my
patient care, having learned to take care of trans people over the last several
years. How long have you worked with trans patients to provide this kind of care? And
what made you decide to get into this line of work? So I didn't get any exposure to this in medical
school or residency. The first patient who I worked with was around 2010, I believe, so shortly
after I got done with my residency training.
And she was a black trans woman who had HIV and high blood pressure.
And those of us who study medicine know that it's not an accident that all those things
went together in her literal body.
Part of it was being told by one of my mentors that this patient needs HIV treated or blood
pressure managed.
I'm like, okay, I got that.
And refill our hormones
while you're at it. And so when I asked her, don't I have to send her to endocrine for that?
She gave me this very British look of disappointment that I had seen more than once from her.
Handed me the guidelines and said, read this and go take care of her, trusting me to be open minded
and welcoming. I want to get additional training starting in 2015 and I've since
gotten over a hundred hours of CME specific to trans care as well as helping
to teach others. So I've made a very focused effort to get good at this.
Nebraska's ban restricted some of the care that you help provide. How are you
negotiating treating your patients? Well I'm still able to treat them, which is a significant reason why I'm still here
in Nebraska.
For the first time, I thought about leaving Nebraska when the ban was being debated, and
it's something that restricts care and has a mandate for 40 hours of therapy.
I already was asking for a letter of support from a qualified mental health professional
and was never just treating anybody without full informed consent.
I have had families where one parent is supportive and the other parent is not and I can't treat
those kids and I don't.
I mean, I talk to them, I talk to the parents, I answer questions, I allay fears.
I also say that's a logical fear when they're worried about how their kids might have to
move through the world.
Nebraska also requires a waiting period and requires that all hormone injections be administered
in the physician's office for safety, unless the kid isn't queer and that it's fine to
give them at home, or unless the kid is being given a much more dangerous hormone, which
is insulin.
You cannot kill somebody with estrogen or testosterone.
Insulin can and does kill people if it's drawn up wrong
or if something else happens.
So I see those contradictions
and I see that only the queer kids are targeted
and that just says it all for me.
And speaking of the kids you work with,
how are your patients feeling?
Have any of your patients left the state
since the ban went into effect?
Yes, several adults left the state even though the ban was aimed at children. One family
moved to a sanctuary state along with our other kids. Even before the raft of legislation
that started in other states, families had boat plans. They're thinking about where they're
going to go, how would we get there and what our lives look like. Many adults leave because
of politics and they tell me
that specifically. They say, we don't feel safe and we don't feel welcome here. I dedicated
my life to the care of the underserved. I put my mental health and my physical health
on the line and my life on the line during COVID when I knew people were dying. And the
state relied on my expertise and my professionalism and my sacrifices and what I asked of my family
because I didn't want to kill one of my patients
by getting sick.
I asked my family to isolate hard too and they did.
You know, to do all that and then to be told,
well, your expertise and your sacrifices
don't really count for anything.
And people who have no medical training
are going to ignore the people they're talking about,
the expert clinicians.
It really made me reconsider Nebraska as my home. I've
decided to stay and fight for my patients who can't leave and won't leave, but it still
hurts to be treated that way by the state that I have dedicated my life to.
LESLIE KENDRICK Nebraska Governor Jim Pillin celebrated the
ban when it was enacted last year, saying that we need to protect children from, quote,
potentially irreversible and regrettable decisions, decisions for which they may
not completely understand the consequences. Now this is a very common
argument we hear from Republicans against gender affirming care. It's an
argument that drives me personally absolutely crazy. This entire argument
assumes that being trans is bad and that you don't want to be trans and no one
should let you be trans and that if you are trans it's going to be a mistake that you
regret. But I am just an angry person with a podcast. You are an actual health
care professional. So what's your response to that repeated claim that we
keep hearing from Republicans? Well I'm an angry health professional who doesn't
have a podcast but it makes me extremely frustrated.
Regret rates are extremely low,
and they're much higher for some other types of procedures
like many other.
Knee surgery.
Yes, knee surgery is a big one,
and lots of other cosmetic procedures
and things that we are not restricting.
I think it's implied that there's a lot of big business
in this, and for me, that's absolutely not the case.
I'm a primary care doctor.
I work taking care of the underserved,
a lot of uninsured people.
If I'm making money off of this, somebody tell me
where the checks are going.
When this is attacked, my autonomy as a physician,
and again, all the hard work and study I put in
is also attacked.
Parents have their freedom taken away.
The youth and the adults who are saying, this is who I am and this is what I need to be healthy,
they're being ignored.
The consensus of the literature is being ignored.
The level of scientific understanding
that I hear from politicians who, as a general rule,
don't practice medicine.
I think there may be a few physicians in Congress,
I don't usually hear them talking as much about this.
That perspective of, well, you might regret this, it doesn't talk about the harm.
Doing nothing isn't neutral.
This is actively denying.
And one of the points that jumps out for me with that is the Trevor Project's 2024 report,
where having, accepting schools and families is a big factor in suicide prevention, even
more than access to medical care. And so when your society is rejecting you that way, it's going to
make more people hurt themselves, which as a doctor that's the opposite of what
I'm here to do. I'm from a red state, the state of Ohio, which keeps getting redder.
You are working in a red state and there are tons and tons of LGBTQ people in red states.
President Trump has signed a ton of anti-LGBTQ policies since taking office.
What is your message to other people in red states or people around the country in general
who feel hopeless in this moment where the only response is just move to somewhere else,
but somewhere else might not be better. Mm-hmm.
No, I think that my response is you're not alone.
There are many, many other people who are here standing up alongside you and with you,
and I'm one of them.
I have hundreds of medical colleagues who share my view that I just personally know
that people should be allowed to access this care. And I think a hopeful sign is that I have had so, so, so many young medical students,
resident physicians, PA students, NP students, early career physicians who want to learn
more about this care, who want to be welcoming, who want to make sure that they're doing this
care properly and add it to their skill set.
Alex, thank you so much for being here.
Thank you.
That was my conversation with Dr. Alex Dworak, Associate Medical Director of Family Medicine
at One World Community Health Centers in Omaha, Nebraska.
We'll get to more of the news in a moment, but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe,
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Here's what else we're following today.
Head of Lines.
The White House and the President are adamant that this bill is passed and that this bill makes its way to his desk.
Republicans need to stay tough and unified during the home stretch and we are counting
on them to get the job done.
That's White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt, who is very normal and very calm,
pushing Republicans to pass Trump's so-called big, beautiful bill.
As of our recording Monday evening Pacific Time, the seemingly endless marathon of voting on
proposed amendments was ongoing. Republicans are racing to get the mega bill of tax breaks for
billionaires and Medicaid cuts to Trump's desk before the fireworks start popping off on
Independence Day, which is now just three days away. Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer of New York had a message for his colleagues Monday. Senate Republicans have to decide.
Choose the American people or bow down to Donald Trump and his coterie of billionaires.
And Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota put his own spin on
the bill.
What we are doing here is extending tax relief for the American people, keeping their rates
low, making sure they don't have their child tax credit cut in half, their standard deduction cut in half, including
new provisions that provide more relief for working Americans.
Ah yes, I can hear working Americans across the country sighing with relief that their
health care is now at risk. But there's still Republican infighting over issues like gutting
Medicaid, clean energy,
and raising the debt limit by trillions of dollars.
A different reality is possible for Palestine, for Israel, and for the region. A reality
of shared peace, security, and prosperity. It starts with ending the genocide, releasing
hostages and prisoners, delivering humanitarian aid
and the full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza."
Ambassadors from Israel and Palestine engaged in a tense back and forth during a United
Nations hearing on the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East on Monday.
Deputy Permanent Observer of Palestine to the UN Majed Banmiah repeatedly called for
a ceasefire and accused Israel of violating UN resolutions.
Israel's ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, responded to Banmiah by asking him to disavow
Hamas before any talks could move forward.
So if you claim that you represent the Palestinian people, be responsible, be brave, and agree
with me today that the future of Gaza will not include Hamas.
But then Bamya accused Danon of using Hamas as a pretext to avoid a ceasefire with Palestine.
Your systematic killing of Palestinian civilians can never be justified.
We are not lesser human beings.
Meanwhile, Israeli attacks on Gaza killed at least 60 people on Monday.
President Trump will travel to the great state of Florida to attend the opening of a new
illegal alien detention center located at Dade Collier Training and Transition Airport
alongside Secretary Kristi Noem, Governor Ron DeSantis, Congressman Byron Donalds, and
other state and local leaders.
We hope to see many of you there. The facility is in the heart of the Everglades and will be informally known as Alligator
Alcatraz.
That's right.
Today, President Trump will personally attend the official opening of Alligator Alcatraz,
a brand new institution as preposterously cartoonish as it is cruel.
White House Press Secretary Levitt used some of the administration's favorite buzzwords during a press conference Monday.
The facility will have up to 5,000 beds to house, process, and deport criminal, illegal aliens.
This is an efficient and low-cost way to help carry out the largest mass deportation campaign in American history.
She sounds so excited, doesn't she?
Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis also said he thinks housing migrants in the
middle of America's largest remaining subtropical wilderness is a great idea.
What will happen is you bring people in there, they ain't going anywhere once they're
there unless you want them to go somewhere because good luck getting the civilization.
Ew.
The Trump administration seems to think this is hilarious.
Over the weekend, the Department of Homeland Security posted to its Twitter account a photo
of alligators wearing immigration and customs enforcement hats with the caption,
coming soon.
You know, like a serious government agency.
The visit comes as CBS News released its analysis of DHS data that found that detentions of
immigrants without criminal histories have increased significantly, reporting, quote,
From the first week of May to the first week of June, new ICE detentions of people facing
only civil immigration charges, such as entering the country without authorization, rose by over
250 percent. So to recap, Trump plans to hold migrants without criminal histories in a facility
that was built like, a week ago, that is basically intended to be a forever prison guarded by alligators.
Sure.
The Trump administration accused Harvard University of being in, quote,
violent violation of the Civil Rights Act over its treatment of Jewish and Israeli students.
The accusation came in a letter from the Joint Task Force to Combat Antisemitism Monday.
Their note also included a threat to cut off all federal funding to the university unless changes are made. And no,
they didn't say exactly what those changes are supposed to be. A Harvard spokesperson said the university takes anti-Semitism
seriously and strongly disagrees with the task force's findings.
This is just the latest escalation in Trump's months-long battle with the oldest, richest university in America.
The administration has already pulled more than $2 billion in federal funding from Harvard,
threatened to revoke its tax-exempt status, and attempted to stop international students
from enrolling.
And that's the news. Before we go, hey, Republicans in Congress are days away from passing their big, beautiful
bill.
As we've mentioned on the show, it'll cut health care for millions of people to give
billionaires another tax break.
Hate it? It's a good time to get on the phone with your rep's offices. Get everything you need to get started at vote save America dot com
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Seriously, tell your friends, family, neighbors, lovers, haters, and strangers on the street
just how bad the big beautiful bill is, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading, and not just about how despite the Republican spending
bill wreaking havoc on health care and food assistance to the benefit of the wealthy,
just 48% of Americans have heard anything about it it and just 8 percent know it would cut Medicaid by billions like me
What a day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at crooked comm slash subscribe. I'm Jane Kostin and folks
You are part of the 48 percent who know just how ugly this bill is
And if you live in a Republican district, you can make sure they know all about it.
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One of the best parts for me about hosting Reveal,
you know, your favorite weekly investigative podcast, is the interviews.
I love to sit down with people and try to gain a perspective that gives me and our listeners a new way of seeing the world
which is why we're launching More To The Story with me, Al Ledzin. It's a place
where I can talk to some of the most intriguing people to bring some context
to our changing world. Follow the Reveal Podcast feed and look for More To The
Story every Wednesday.