What A Day - Harris-Walz Centers Reproductive Choice
Episode Date: August 8, 2024Reproductive choice is on the ballot in 2024, and Vice President Kamala Harris is making it a central issue in her presidential campaign. Harris has been on the front lines of this fight, and since th...e start of 2024, she's been crisscrossing the country on a reproductive freedoms tour, emphasizing personal stories of people impacted by abortion bans. Meanwhile, Republicans have attempted to avoid this issue with equal enthusiasm. To learn more about the role that reproductive choice could play in this election, we spoke with reporter Abigail Tracy.  And in headlines: Taylor Swift concerts in Austria canceled following terrorist threat, the one-year anniversary of the Maui wildfires disaster, one of Arizona's phony 2020 electors pleads guilty, and American figure skaters finally collect their 2022 gold medals.   Show Notes:Check out Abigail's story and subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/23x2jhv3What 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     Â
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It's Thursday, August 8th. I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver, and this is What A Day,
the show that never expected former dance mom, company leader, and instructor
Abby Lee Miller to make her political debut on Kamala Harris' TikTok account.
Yes, it is an iconic, viral sound.
And I just gotta say, Kamala Harris' TikTok team, they're crushing it.
Yeah, shout out to her social media team, creating these amazing ads as well, like top notch.
On today's show, Taylor Swift cancels concerts in Vienna
following the threat of an attack.
Plus, an Arizona woman pleads guilty
to participating in a plot to overturn the results
of the 2020 presidential election in Arizona.
But first, abortion rights are on the
ballot both literally and figuratively in 2024. And the Harris-Walls campaign wants to talk about
this issue as much as humanly possible. Take a listen to how Vice President Kamala Harris
discussed abortion rights and reproductive freedom at her campaign rally in Wisconsin on Wednesday.
Donald Trump handpicked three members of the United States
Supreme Court, the court of Thurgood and RBG, because he intended for them to overturn Roe v.
Wade. And as he intended, they did. And now more than 20 states in our country
have a Trump abortion ban, many with no exceptions even for rape and incest.
And if he wins, we all know he will sign a national abortion ban to outlaw abortion in every state, even in Wisconsin. What I appreciate most is how she just lays out not only what Trump did with
his first term, but what he will do in a second so succinctly and the crowd is reacting as they
should. Absolutely. You don't hear it. But after this, she goes on to lay out very clearly what
she will do in response. It's very straightforward. And it's no wonder that in the face of this,
Republicans don't
want to talk about abortion rights. Vice President Harris is clearly so comfortable defending these
rights, much more so than President Joe Biden was. And, you know, Democrats are really tackling this
issue head on. It is resonant to them and clearly is resonating with voters. 100 percent. And Vice
President Harris has been on the front lines of the fight for reproductive rights for years.
And since January 2024, she has been crisscrossing the country on a reproductive freedoms tour,
emphasizing personal stories of people impacted by the abortion bans enacted after Roe v. Wade was overturned and meeting with state and local officials.
And remember, she was the first sitting vice president to visit an abortion provider in March 2024 when she toured a health center in St.
Paul, Minnesota, with Governor Tim Walz by her side, no less.
Yes, none other than future vice president Tim Walz.
If you out there, if you have eagle eyes, you may have noticed the clip of that actually in the intro video for Tim Walz when he was being introduced to this campaign.
It is very clear that both of them care
deeply about this. To dig into how abortion will be discussed by Democrats and potentially avoided
entirely by Republicans on the 2024 campaign trail, I caught up with Abigail Tracy. She's
a political reporter whose work has appeared in Vanity Fair, Forbes, and Inc. Magazine. I started
by asking her why reproductive rights advocates are enthusiastic
about Vice President Harris being the presumptive Democratic nominee as opposed to Joe Biden.
One of the things that happened is after the fall of Roe, Kamala Harris became the point person
within the administration to talk about these issues, to try to help legislators, advocates,
activists at the state level try to navigate what this political and
legal landscape looked like. Since the Dobbs decision and since Roe felt Kamala Harris has
been that person in the administration that individuals who are working in the reproductive
rights movement have reached out to, have sought advice from, and have shared their stories with. She is such a strong vocal voice on this
issue and advocates, activists, lawmakers, doctors, etc. could not be more excited to see her in that
position. I mean, it also helps that she doesn't shy away from saying the word abortion. So that's
also a refreshing tone shift here. And you've already seen that shift in tone. So Joe Biden,
you know, he has shied away from using the word abortion
in public remarks. When he steps aside and Kamala Harris stepped up, out of the gate,
there was a 30-second ad where she's saying Trump abortion ban like three times or something along
those lines. Like advocates and activists really see her as the person that has been kind of
holding their hand and with them
along for the ride ever since the fall of Roe. And Harris's vice presidential pick, Minnesota
Governor Tim Walz, also has a strong position in fighting for abortion rights. And he expressed it
on Tuesday when Harris introduced him as her running mate to the world. Tell us about Walz's
record on abortion in Minnesota, where he has served as governor since
2018. As a Minnesotan myself, you know, this is kind of a wild moment. Governor Walz, he's passed
a very progressive slate of policies since he's been there. He was, I believe, the first governor
after the fall of Roe to reinforce and codify the constitutional right to abortion through legislative means. So it was already existing
in the Minnesota Constitution. He kind of reinforced and recodified it. But also,
Governor Welts will talk about his personal journey around other aspects of reproductive
rights that we're seeing kind of come under attack that are in this conversation of what happens now.
Both of his children, he talks personally about the fact that his children were the
result of IVF treatments.
You saw him come up incredibly, incredibly strongly against Donald Trump and J.D.
Vance on that point.
Obviously, when Republicans talk about this, they tend to a little bit shy away from it.
They're not really coming out and saying that they're against IVF.
Yeah, let's classify this.
Here's the thing.
Here's the thing.
Because on the flip side of the Democratic push for broad reproductive rights and reproductive
freedom, Republicans have attempted to avoid the issue of abortion.
We've also seen their attacks on IVF.
And all of this has really culminated and come to a head since Roe v
Wade was overturned in 2022. But how do you anticipate their messaging on abortion and
reproductive rights changes at all with JD Vance on the ticket with Donald Trump?
There have been reports around JD Vance, you know, saying behind closed doors describing
the decision by Joe Biden to step aside from the ticket as a sucker punch,
which is wild. And now they're dealing with Harris. So the conversation has absolutely
switched because not only is Harris more comfortable than Joe Biden was talking about
reproductive rights, talking about the issues of abortion, about IVF, et cetera, but also
the conversation is now about those things. Whereas prior, it was really about Joe
Biden, it was about Joe Biden's age, his capacity, whether he could serve, whether he could run,
and whether he could serve another four years. And unfortunately, for Donald Trump, and unfortunately
for JD Vance, there are receipts floating around the Internet of J.D. Vance saying wild things on this topic and not even kind of mainstream Republican talking points.
We're talking a little bit more fringe when he's discussing the idea that individuals, for instance, who don't have children shouldn't have the same voting rights as individuals that do.
Those are very fringe ideas. And the reality is, you know,
Joe Biden stepping aside, Kamala Harris stepping up to the top of the ticket has really opened up
this space for a conversation to happen. And unfortunately for Donald Trump and for J.D. Vance,
what is filling that vacuum is past comments by both of them on this issue, when in reality, two-thirds of Americans
believe that abortion should be legal in most or all cases. And with abortion rights appearing as
ballot questions in six states, including Nevada, including Florida, big states electorally,
do you expect that abortion and reproductive freedoms will be as mobilizing an issue as it was in 2022
and in 2023 when we saw voters crossing partisan lines, demographic lines to turn out for abortion?
Yes, I will say that with a bit of a caveat. So one of the big things is actually what we saw
in some of the polling, kind of because Joe Biden wasn't this vocal voice on it, you actually
saw an erosion of support or approval among individuals who even identified as very pro
abortion access reproductive rights. So there just kind of was an enthusiasm gap. I think people
saw that. I think people felt that. The reality is, is like reproductive rights advocates and
activists that I spoke with have
seen that change. They believe that that has been undone at this point. But one of the key takeaways
when we're looking at this is the Republican National Convention. I was speaking with Christina
Reynolds, who works at Emily's List, and she talked to me about the fact that she has attended so many Republican national conventions. And
she certainly noticed that this year, they not only weren't making abortion a top issue,
they were not talking about it at all. That means that Republicans are seeing the fact that
their positions around abortion bans are incredibly, incredibly toxic and unpopular to the party.
That was my conversation with political reporter Abigail Tracy, and you can catch her work in the
What A Day nightly newsletter. We'll link to her most recent write-up in our show notes.
That is the latest for now. We'll get to some headlines in just a moment, but if you like our
show, please make sure to subscribe and share it with your friends. We'll be right back after some
ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Three Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna were canceled on Wednesday after Austrian authorities arrested two men who allegedly planned to target one of the shows
in a terrorist attack. The shows were set to begin today and were expected to draw nearly
200,000 fans in total. Officials in Austria said that the would-be attackers were radicalized on
the internet and had taken concrete steps to enact their plan.
One of the men is a 19-year-old Austrian citizen
who pledged allegiance to the Islamic State's current leader last month, according to police.
Police also said that they searched that man's home and found chemical substances.
Today marks one year since the start of the deadly Maui wildfires.
On August 8th last year, flames engulfed the historic town of Lahaina on the island's west side.
The disaster killed 102 people and destroyed thousands of homes,
and it's considered the deadliest wildfire in American history.
Hawaii state officials just reached a $4 billion settlement with victims of the fire
who sought compensation for the lives and property that were
lost to the flames. Federal and state officials have worked to help rebuild Lahaina over the past
several months by providing temporary housing to displaced residents and improving fire safety
protocols. But the island and its residents continue to struggle against a shortage of
affordable permanent housing, which has prompted months-long wait times
and some residents leaving Maui in search of lower housing costs.
One Republican has now pleaded guilty in connection with the scheme to overturn
former President Donald Trump's 2020 election loss in Arizona. Lorraine Pellegrino, which
is her real name, was one of the 11 Arizona Republicans who posed as electors and signed
a fake electoral college certificate saying that Trump had won the state. In reality, it was a tight
margin, but he did lose to President Joe Biden by just over 10,000 votes. Pellegrino pleaded
guilty on Tuesday to a single charge for filing a false instrument. Prosecutors dismissed other
felony charges against her, including conspiracy and forgery. In total, 18 people have been charged for their alleged involvement in the Arizona scheme,
including the 11 fake electors and several of Trump's close allies.
One member of the latter group, former Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis,
struck a deal earlier this week to cooperate with prosecutors
in exchange for the charges against her being dropped.
And we'll close out with a few quick updates from the Paris Olympics.
Where's our theme music?
I know, our favorite part of the show.
American runner Quincy Hall took gold in the men's 400-meter final on Wednesday,
beating out his opponents by four hundredths of a second.
And when I tell you he did it in the last 10 meters by giving his all,
it was phenomenal to watch.
It was insane.
It was just electric.
You have to watch it.
I think this race probably happened in a grand total of like 25 seconds, but an amazing 25-second watch.
In women's pole vaulting, Australian Nina Kennedy took gold, besting American Katie Moon, who won silver. Also in Paris, members of the U.S. figure skating team received gold medals that were aged to perfection
for a routine they performed over two years ago at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
The reason for the delay is that originally, first place went to Russia in the team competition,
with Team USA taking second.
Since then, Russia has been knocked down to third,
following the disqualification of
their star skater camila valieva for the use of banned substances russia did not come out to
wednesday's medal ceremony to receive their bronzes naturally but my question is did the olympics
committee take away their goals or are they just gonna be able to hold on to those this is so
embarrassing i would rather like not win anything than like win
and then be like engulfed
in this scandal of like
you didn't actually
earn it yourself.
Like it's no fun.
It ruins it all
for the rest of us.
Yeah.
It's truly unfortunate.
But you know what?
We are having a fun time
at the Paralympics anyways.
So we're going to keep
the vibes high.
And those are the headlines.
From the windows
to the walls.
Now that Vice President Kamala Harris has picked her VP running mate, now is the time And those are the headlines. From the windows to the walls.
Now that Vice President Kamala Harris has picked her VP running mate,
now is the time, more than ever, to tune into the news cycle of the newest episode of Polar Coaster.
Dan Pfeiffer and guest host Celinda Lake dig into where Trump and Harris stand in the polls
and in swing states, plus what the Democrats need to do to secure their win in November.
Head to Cricut.com slash friends to get access to this subscriber-exclusive series now.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
give the Harris campaign social media team a raise,
and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just the details of Jenna Ellis' plea deal 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 drink the sparkling water of justice, Lorraine Pellegrino.
I mean, it is a good water name.
That's a great last name.
And I mean, sparkling water of justice.
I'm like bitter like regular sparkling water.
I'm not aling Water Girl.
What it is, a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Our associate producer is Raven Yamamoto.
We have production help today from Michelle Alloy,
Tyler Hill, Greg Walters, and Julia Clear.
Our showrunner is Erica Morrison,
and our executive producer is Adrian Hill.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.