What A Day - Israel-Hamas War Protests Intensify
Episode Date: November 17, 2023Family members of Israeli hostages held by Hamas are currently on a five-day march from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, with plans to end the march in front of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s home. Meanw...hile, a protest calling for a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war was held outside the Democratic Party headquarters in D.C on Wednesday. And across the country in the Bay Area, dozens of protestors shut down the westbound lanes of the Bay Bridge for roughly four hours on Thursday.Republican Representative George Santos announced that he will not seek re-election in next year’s elections after the House Ethics Committee released its highly-anticipated report on Thursday. The report found that there was “substantial evidence” that Santos used campaign money for personal expenses, and concluded that Santos “sought to fraudulently exploit every aspect of his House candidacy for his own personal financial profit.”And in headlines: the Senate passed a stopgap spending bill to prevent a government shutdown, the Supreme Court declined to enforce Florida’s anti-drag show law, and China’s President Xi Jinping suggested that his country might lend more giant pandas to the U.S. in the future.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/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, November 17th. I'm Trevelle Anderson.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi, and this is What A Day,
the podcast that is sad that Gannett never even interviewed us
to be their new Beyoncé reporters.
Journalist Kashay McClay got the job.
Maybe we didn't get it because we didn't even apply,
but, like, they should know that we are the leading experts
on all things Beyoncé.
We're here every day.
Come on, Gannett, that was a big oversight on your part.
On today's show, the Senate passed a bill to prevent a government shutdown,
and it now heads to President Biden.
Plus, the Supreme Court issues a temporary win that protects drag shows in Florida.
But first, we have the latest on the war in Gaza.
For the second day, Israeli
forces raided the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza. Though the hospital has effectively not been
serving as a hospital in the last week or so because they don't have the necessary resources
to treat patients, the hospital is still a refuge space of sorts for civilians. But Israel continued
to raid the establishment under the guise that
Hamas leadership is or was supposedly hiding out in underground tunnels beneath the hospital.
Reportedly, Israeli hostages from the October 7th attack were also, in theory, held there.
And while the IDF says that they discovered AK-47s, hand grenades, military uniforms,
and a laptop with a photo of a kidnapped Israeli
soldier on it in the hospital, that has not been independently verified. And both Hamas and doctors
at the hospital have forcefully denied the idea that a Hamas command center is there. That said,
Israel did say that the body of one of the hostages that was kidnapped was found in a
structure adjacent to the hospital. We do not yet know exactly what they mean by adjacent, whether
it was under the hospital in these tunnels or next door or down the street. We just don't have
clarity yet. Right. A lot throughout this conflict that has not been clear, not been able to be
independently verified, making it very difficult for all of us who are trying to make sense of this from home. It's been well over a
month since Hamas's attack on October 7th. We have seen folks all over the world calling for a ceasefire,
disagreeing with the Israeli government's response in this conflict. But how are people in Israel
responding to this? Public anger at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's handling of this all is definitely growing in Israel.
So much so that now other elected officials are speaking up.
Yair Lapid, for example, he leads Israel's parliamentary opposition.
And he told the press that the country has lost faith in Netanyahu.
That's because he and others believe the ruling government failed
to prevent the initial attack and that they were slow to respond. Lapid said, quote,
we cannot allow ourselves to conduct an extended war with a prime minister that the public does
not trust, adding that Netanyahu, quote, must go now. Now, of course, political opposition against
Netanyahu is not new, to be clear.
But in the immediate aftermath of Hamas's attack, most of his opposition really rallied behind the war effort.
The fact that someone like Lapid is publicly critiquing the response at this point is definitely notable considering.
And interestingly enough, some of the family members of the hostages are saying similar things regarding a lack of
faith in the government. As we speak, in fact, some family members are currently on day four
of a five-day march from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem with plans to end the march in front of Netanyahu's
home tomorrow. The nephew of a 72-year-old hostage told Reuters, quote, I don't feel like we are in good hands. We don't
feel like we get enough information. I don't have a solution, but it's not my job to get a solution.
It's my job to demand my family back. How has the latest in the war, what's going on on the ground,
impacted things stateside? President Biden is repeating what we've heard Secretary of State
Antony Blinken say in recent days,
which is that the conflict must end with a two-state solution.
That's a position that isn't necessarily new for our country.
But the last major effort to pursue such a thing happened under President Obama when John Kerry was Secretary of State.
But the Biden administration is simultaneously still full-throatedly supporting what's been called Israel's right to defend itself against Hamas.
And so many people see those two positions as contradictory, as demonstrated by recent protests.
On Wednesday, for example, a protest was held outside the Democratic Party headquarters in D.C. with folks calling for a ceasefire.
It unfortunately turned a bit violent.
Get back! Back! Careful!
Look, I just got thrown. People getting thrown down the stairs. People getting thrown down the stairs.
Capitol Police and demonstrators on the ground have conflicting reports about how and why the
protests turned. But Eva Borgwart, a spokesperson for the
group If Not Now, which is one of the groups involved in the protests, and we had her on the
show a couple weeks ago, she said to Politico, quote, as protesters engage in a moral act of
nonviolent civil disobedience outside of the building, police charged at protesters and
attacked them without giving any warning or order
to disperse. The police pepper sprayed us, pulling them by their hair and throwing them downstairs,
resulting in over 90 injuries to protesters. And then across the country in the Bay Area,
dozens of protesters shut down the westbound lanes of the Bay Bridge for roughly four hours yesterday. Which side are you on?
They were demanding President Biden, who was in town for the APEC summit,
to call for a ceasefire as well. Some of the protesters did a die-in as well, covering themselves in white
sheets and placards that read 11,000 dead. That, of course, being a reference to the number of
Palestinians that have been killed in the conflict. Some 80 folks were cited by police in the Bay Area
demonstration. And there is also an update in the case of the pro-Israel protester who died after a clash with a pro-Palestinian protester in the L.A. area.
Can you tell us what is happening there?
Yeah, so earlier this month, Paul Kessler, who was Jewish, got into an altercation of some sort with Loe Abdel Fattah al-Naji.
They were on opposing sides of a demonstration in Thousand Oaks, and somehow Paul fell.
He hit his head and died hours later. We don't know yet the specifics of the altercation between them. But yesterday,
Al-Naji was arrested on suspicion of involuntary manslaughter. He is slated to appear in court
Monday afternoon by when we should have clarity on what criminal charges he will actually face.
Thank you for all of those updates, Travelle. I know there's so much happening on the ground in
Gaza, so much happening in Israel, so much happening here stateside and around the world.
We will obviously continue to keep up with all of it right here on the show. But now we are going
to switch gears to some news out of Washington.
It's been a crazy week in Washington, D.C., but yesterday was not to be outdone
by the rest of the week.
It really was going for a title of its own.
Everyone needs to pour one out right now
for one of the most prolific scam artists of our time.
That is Republican Representative George Santos.
Yesterday, he announced that he will not be seeking
re-election to the House in
next year's elections. Finally, after the House Ethics Committee released its highly anticipated
report on its investigation into him. Quick refresher on Santos. He is a freshman Republican
representative from New York. And over the past year, we have come to learn that almost every
personal and professional detail he provided about himself was a lie. And not only that, he has been stealing left, right and center from his campaign, constituents, donors, all of the above.
Yeah, it really has been a shit show for all things as it relates to him.
That report must have been pretty big, though, for it to finally get him to leave.
What exactly was in it? The ethics committee's report found that there was, quote, substantial evidence that Santos used campaign money for personal expenses.
More on those in just a moment, because they really are something.
And in addition to the federal indictment he caught last month for financial fraud and identity theft, they found evidence of additional unlawful conduct that Santos had not yet
been charged with.
That evidence was
immediately referred
to the Justice Department.
Their ultimate conclusion
was that Santos, quote,
sought to fraudulently exploit
every aspect of his House candidacy
for his own personal
financial profit.
He, quote,
blatantly stole from his campaign
and that he, quote,
cannot be trusted.
That last one,
really like a page from the burn book,
come to life.
But that is just the tip of the iceberg
when it comes to the juicy, juicy details.
Oh my God.
I've been seeing the headlines.
I know it gets just a little bit worse.
What else did we learn about this man?
So much more than we ever wanted to know.
A whole section of this report
detailed how Santos deposited campaign money,
nearly $200,000 into his personal account
and then used that for a number of things,
including cosmetic procedures like Botox,
trips to casinos in Atlantic City
and out to the Hamptons,
shopping trips at Sephora, Hermes, Ferragamo. I
mean, at least the man has good taste, I guess. But the real cherry on top were the charges from
OnlyFans, a platform that hosts content that we will not be discussing right here on this
family-friendly program. Nuh-uh, not for us. Santos, of course, denounced all of this as a
politicized smear. He went off on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.
But he did ultimately say for the first time that he will not be seeking re-election next year because, quote,
my family deserves better than to be under the gun from the press all the time.
As if that's the issue at hand.
Listen, if your family is indeed under the gun from the press, it is because of your
own activity, Mr. Santos. I agree. They probably deserve better, but not for that reason.
Right. I will also just note that I love that, you know, our elected officials are,
you know, supporting sex workers, hopefully not with money from their campaign because
you're not supposed to be doing that, sir. He didn't get that memo.
Right. He did not get the memo.
OK, so what happens now at this point?
Well, I mean, Santos is not running in 2024, but many of his colleagues and constituents, for that matter, think that that is not soon enough to be rid of this man.
There has been an ongoing effort to expel Santos from Congress.
An effort actually failed earlier this month despite having some Republican
support, but that is expected to change now that this report is out. A new resolution to expel him
could be filed as soon as today, and if two-thirds of the House votes in favor of that, Santos would
become the first member of Congress to be expelled since 2002. This is not something that they are
doing regularly at all. Many members of Congress who previously voted against his expulsion last time have already
said that in light of this report, their votes will change.
So while Santos might be bowing out of the race on his own terms, he might get the boot
a lot sooner than that.
And as he should, I don't think anyone is sitting here being like this man should keep his job.
Anyways, we will be following all of this more on all of this very soon.
But that is the latest for now.
Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines. Starting with some relieving news, a government shutdown has been
averted. That's because the Senate on Wednesday night passed a stopgap spending bill by a 87 to
11 vote. The House approved the bill on Tuesday and it's now headed to President Biden's desk
for his signature. He's expected to sign it before tonight's midnight deadline.
So we can all collectively catch our breath, but only for now,
because the bill only fully funds the government through January 19th.
So we will be doing this thing here again very soon, unfortunately.
Yeah, guys, we got to stop meeting like this.
Truly.
A jury has found David DePapp guilty on two
counts. DePapp attacked Nancy Pelosi's husband in their San Francisco home last year. He was
convicted in federal court of one count of assault on the immediate family member of a federal
official and a second count of attempted kidnapping of a federal official. He could face a maximum of
20 years and 30 years, respectively,
based on those convictions. Pelosi suffered a skull fracture after DePap struck him in the
head with a hammer just days before the midterm elections. During his trial, DePap said that he
wanted to talk to Nancy Pelosi about interference in the 2016 election and wasn't expecting to run
into her husband. The incident was captured on police
body camera footage and released publicly earlier this year. The sentencing date hasn't been selected
yet, but DePapp will face another trial on state charges. His court date for that is November 29th.
Drag queens, you're a winner, baby. The Supreme Court yesterday declined to enforce Florida's
anti-drag show law. That's the law we've talked about that
targets drag shows by banning children from any adult live performances that feature, quote,
lewd exposure. And while the law doesn't specifically call out drag shows, it's widely
regarded as aimed at them. So to get you up to speed, back in May, Hamburger Mary's restaurant
in Orlando, a restaurant that hosts drag performances including family-friendly shows, challenged the constitutionality of the law, saying that it violates the First Amendment right to free speech.
Then, a federal judge in Orlando temporarily blocked the state law from going into effect, saying it was vague and overbroad. Florida then asked the Supreme Court to step in and reinstate the law,
which brings us back to yesterday when justices refused to enforce it by a 6-3 vote. Justices
Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch dissented. Of course they did. And in a short
statement, Justice Brett Kavanaugh said, quote, the court's denial of the stay indicates nothing
about our view on whether Florida's new law violates the First Amendment.
Interesting response, Kavanaugh.
In the meantime, the legal challenge to the law continues back down in the lower courts.
So the TLDR of it all, the drag show, can go on in Florida, for now at least.
Now to a roundup of some union news. First, thousands of Starbucks workers at
more than 200 locations across the country walked off the job yesterday on one of the busiest days
of the year. That is according to Starbucks Workers United, the union that represents more
than 9,000 workers at the coffee giant. Take a listen to what they had to say.
What do we want? A contract! When do we want it? Now! When do we want it? Now! And if we don't get it? Shut it down! had to say. Unionized workers demanded contract negotiations and protested the company's
scheduling and staffing practices, and they chose to walk off the job on Starbucks' annual Red Cup
Day, when the coffee shops give out red reusable cups to anyone who orders holiday-themed drinks.
But the union said that the day is also, quote,
one of the most infamously hard understaffed days for baristas that work them.
Meanwhile, unionized workers at REI stores across the country
filed unfair labor practices against the retailer on Wednesday.
In total, the union representing the workers said 80 complaints were filed
with the U.S. National Labor Relations Board,
overstalled bargaining and workplace changes that, quote,
show a pattern of egregious anti-union behavior,
emotional manipulation, and retaliatory actions against workers.
And over in the world of automobiles,
United Automobile Workers at General Motors voted to ratify a new contract.
It was a close call, but ultimately,
about 55% of unionized workers voted in favor of it.
As for Ford and Stellantis, as of our recording time at 9.30 p.m. Eastern, workers appear to be headed towards
approving their respective contracts as well. And finally, the unlikely crossover of pandas
in politics. China's President Xi Jinping suggested that his country might lend more giant pandas to
the U.S. in the future. It's been a roller coaster of emotions for pandas to the U.S. in the future.
It's been a rollercoaster of emotions for panda lovers across the U.S.
who learned that America's remaining pandas, now at Zoo Atlanta,
are slated to return to China next year.
The beloved pandas at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C.
were actually sent back to China earlier this month.
But at a dinner with business leaders in San Francisco this week, she called the pandas, and this is pretty cute, envoys of friendship between China
and the U.S. That is pretty cute. It is so cute. I love that. He said, quote, I was told that many
American people, especially children, were really reluctant to say goodbye to the pandas and went to the zoo to see them off.
She didn't specify when the pandas would arrive or how many they would send.
But listen, if you have not seen a panda in real life,
maybe you need to get yourself down to Atlanta to see them before they leave.
That's me.
Honestly, I'm like the closest I've gotten is Kung Fu Panda.
And that's what I'm imagining as my little envoy of friendship.
Anyways.
I love that.
Shout out to you and everyone else who has only seen pandas via Kung Fu Panda.
Listen, I like this, but I'm a little hesitant because now he knows.
She knows where to hit us where it hurts.
He knows our soft spot for the pandas.
He knows that denying us pandas will ruin our collective spirit.
So I don't know how good I feel about that information, but I do like the envoys of friendship.
Right.
And those are the headlines.
We will be back after some ads to hear from you, the WOD Squad.
It's Friday, WOD Squad, and we're going to wrap up the week by opening up our mailbag again.
Last week, there were a bunch of elections, so many that we couldn't cover them all.
But a loyal WOD listener wrote to us to share some exciting news out of their own local races in Minnesota.
Celeste Harlow told us that St. Paul just elected its first ever all-female city council, and six of the seven seats are held by women of color.
Celeste told us in her email, quote,
I know we aren't New York or LA, but we are a capital city,
and this is huge to me as a citizen.
Yeah, this is huge to us too.
I love this.
This is very, very exciting.
And the incoming council members issued a statement
just a few days after election day.
They said, quote, despite over a quarter million dollars of conservative special interest spending
citywide, organized people beat organized money. St. Paul voters united and through thousands of
volunteer hours and grassroots donations, elected a diverse, progressive new council for our city.
Yeah, shout out to those folks who worked super hard to get these badass women elected.
Yes.
Local politics matter, y'all.
Hopefully it's inspiring for some of you out there in your own local neck of the woods to get involved.
Let's do it.
Okay?
Let's do more.
Thank you so much, Celeste, for pointing a spotlight on this win for us.
And if you out there have got a fun story or a passion related to something we talk about
on the show, or you just want to say hi,
you can reach us at heyatcrooked.com
or tell us on our Discord channel
once you've joined at crooked.com slash friends.
One more thing before we go,
shout out to the What A Day newsletter team who just hit 200,000 subscribers.
The What A Day newsletter is a go-to source
for the day's latest news
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If you have not already subscribed,
head over to crooked.com slash daily.
That is all for today.
If you like the show,
make sure you subscribe,
leave a review,
keep winning drag queens
and tell your friends to listen.
I'm Traevel Anderson.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And we don't mean drag queens like Katara.
Though I think Los Santos
will have a little more time
for his hobbies now.
Shout out to him or maybe not okay maybe not how long until this man's
screaming what a day is a production of crooked media it's recorded and mixed by bill lance our show's
producer it's itsy king dania raven yamamoto and natalie bettendorf are our associate producers
and our showrunner is leo duran our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.