What A Day - Massive Crowds Tell Trump 'Hands Off' My Government
Episode Date: April 7, 2025Hundreds of thousands people across the country spent part of their Saturday at ‘Hands Off’ rallies to protest President Donald Trump and his administration. Organizers say there were more than 1,...300 rallies scheduled, from Portland, Maine, to San Diego, California. But while progressives and liberals pretty much agree on what we’re against, we've been struggling to figure out what, exactly, are we for? And if Democrats are the party that believes governance is good, why aren’t the outcomes better? Marc Dunkleman, the author of the new book ‘Why Nothing Works,’ joins us to answer some of those questions.And in headlines: A judge ordered the Trump administration to return a man wrongfully deported to El Salvador, a second unvaccinated child in Texas has died of measles, and TikTok lives to see another day in the U.S.Show Notes:Check out Marc's piece – https://tinyurl.com/4mdprz4aSubscribe 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 Monday, April 7th. I'm Jane Coaston and this is What a Day, the show congratulating
a Santa Cruz Galapagos tortoise named Mommy. Yes, her name is Mommy. On having four babies
at the youthful age of 97. Now the headlines may say she's the oldest first time mom of
her species, but we all know life really gets going at 98.
On today's show, a judge orders the Trump administration to return a man wrongfully deported to El Salvador back to the U.S.
by tonight. And TikTok lives to see another day in the U.S.
But let's start with the anti-Trump protests that overtook cities and towns and pretty
much everywhere else across the country this past Saturday.
Called the hands-off protests, as in, get your hands off our Social Security, Medicare, free
speech rights, and economy, the rallies attracted hundreds of thousands of people across the
country.
Organizers said an estimated 100,000 people attended a hands-off protest in D.C.
Here's Florida Democratic Representative Maxwell Frost speaking on the National Mall.
They're the ones that are screwing us over on the job. They tell us that trans people are a threat to our children,
but they're the ones dismantling public education. They're the ones denying the climate crisis.
They're the ones poisoning our planet. They're the ones doing nothing about the national public health emergency of gun violence.
Another 30,000 people joined a rally in Chicago, according to the local NPR affiliate WBEZ.
And when I say across the country, I mean it.
There were protests in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Well today, Chopper 5 flying over a massive demonstration at the Utah State Capitol, thousands
of people gathering this afternoon as part of a nationwide protest of the Trump administration.
And in Charlotte, North Carolina, here's attendee Britt Castillo.
Regardless of your party, regardless of who you voted for, what's going on today, what's
happening today is important. It's disgusting and as as croaking as our current
system might be the way that
The current administration is going about trying to fix things is not the way to do it
And in Missoula, Montana
Where more than a thousand people came together on the courthouse steps to stand up to President Donald Trump and Elon Musk
People like Debbie being older, of course, I'm worried about Social Security,
but I'm also worried about human rights.
And Medicare.
And Medicare.
You go, Debbie. She gets it.
We learned a lot from these protests.
Namely that lots and lots of people don't like what President Donald Trump
and billionaire Elon Musk are doing on any number of issues.
Some cited the administration's attacks on trans folks.
Others made signs about terrifying uninhabited islands.
You can bring a lot of people together to say, we do not like this.
And let's be clear, that's good.
Be like Debbie.
Don't be too cool to make a sign and stand with your neighbors.
It is good to protest what is happening right now.
It is good to say what is happening right now. It is good to say this isn't it. But there's an important question that a lot of people are thinking about right
now. Progressives and liberals pretty much agree on what we're against. But what exactly
are we for? And how can we create it? And if progressive governance is good, which we
think it is, why haven't the outcomes been better? Why aren't we doing big things? High
speed rail, affordable housing,
meaningfully combating climate change,
making life better for people like,
you know, we keep saying we want to.
One of the people who has been thinking about this issue
is Mark Dunkelman.
He's a fellow at Brown University
and author of the new book, Why Nothing Works,
Who Killed Progress and How to Bring It Back.
We talked about why he thinks progressives hamstrung
the way the government works. Mark, welcome to bring it back. We talked about why he thinks progressives hamstrung the way the government works.
Mark, welcome to What A Day.
Thanks for having me.
So your book is coming at an interesting time.
I imagine you wrote most, if not all of it, long before the 2024 election.
Yet here we are with Trump as president again and Democrats,
even more adrift than they were eight years ago.
So to start, I wonder if you can put that loss
in the context of what you're writing about in this book. How do you see them related?
Well, I think that government doesn't work. The Democrats are fundamentally the party of government,
and if government doesn't work, that's a problem for us politically.
That's actually extremely straightforward. Yeah.
So your book sidesteps the ways that the Republican
Party is more than happy to throw spokes into the wheels of progress. And for the sake of
time, we will too. So with that said, why are Democrats also to blame for, as the title
of your book says, why nothing works anymore?
So my view is that for a long time, progressivism was focused on building up big institutions that could solve big problems.
And just for the purposes of conversation, how are you defining progressivism?
I mean everyone who thinks that government has some role to play in making things better.
So it's basically people who aren't conservative. So everyone from the far left to the moderate center
who would like to see government do more
to solve big public problems.
And the argument that I'm making here
is that for the bulk of the movement's history
from the late 19th century through the 1960s to 1970s,
we were all about building up big institutions that
could solve big problems.
The Tennessee Valley Authority, the Marshall Plan,
the Social Security Administration, Medicare, Medicaid.
All of these programs were efforts to take power where it existed and move it up
into big institutions that could solve problems that people couldn't solve for themselves on their own.
But then we woke up in the 60s and 70s and noticed that
this establishment that we progressives had created
Had also done a lot of terrible things the quintessential example is Robert Moses
Who in the book the power broker is depicted by Robert Caro is this?
Monstrous figure which I think in many ways he was
He reshaped the city of New York in powerful and horrible ways
In some in some cases, and also built incredible infrastructure
in others.
But the fact was that in 1974, when Robert Carroll writes The Power Broker and it wins
the Pulitzer Prize, he is essentially taking one example of power gone wrong, of power
corrupting, and everyone sees it as an emblematic of a much broader phenomenon.
And so we've spent 50 years trying to make sure that we never get another Robert Moses.
Is there a moment you can pinpoint?
You mentioned Robert Moses in talking about the 1970s, but is there a specific time where
this shift starts?
Because I'm thinking about the Great Society, for example.
And you have LBJ announcing the Great Society
at the University of Michigan at graduation,
basically saying like, we're gonna end poverty, we did it.
And you have this whole campaign of people,
Life Magazine goes to Appalachia and is like,
we can change this, we can electrify rural areas,
we can do anything.
And then something happens.
And is that what the pinpoint, is there our moment that you see in your research?
Well, my view is that there are two impulses within progressivism that have been there from the very start.
One is this Hamiltonian impulse to do exactly as you said, what LBJ was talking about,
which was to pull power up into institutions that can solve big problems.
And then a second, which is to say, oh, there are these powerful figures
and we wanna push power down.
That's all a Jeffersonian counter reaction
to those old Hamiltonian efforts.
So you see the tumult at the 1968 convention,
the folks inside are largely Hamiltonian.
They wanna do exactly as you said,
they wanna burnish the great society
and create new big institutions that are going to do great things.
And the folks marching on the outside are saying, no, no, no, we don't want big powerful
institutions anymore.
We want to pull power down away from those big institutions.
And after 68, the real zeitgeist within progressivism, I think, turns and embraces the view of the
people outside the convention, the marchers, the Chicago Seven, the kids who objected to the old establishment.
And so that is sort of the turning point.
By the time you've got the Watergate babies being elected in the 70s and you've got Gary
Hart running for the Senate in Colorado, his mantra is we are going to pull power away
from the establishment.
That becomes sort of mainstream within
democratic and progressive thinking. So that, I mean, that's the, that is the turning point.
It's sometime between the late fifties and the early seventies. Now it's, we've sort
of come again to a cycle, the end of a cycle, and we need to have institutions that can
do big things again.
So the tiny libertarian who lives inside me is a little worried because I want government to work.
I want big projects and to do big things, but I also want government to be accountable to voters.
I am concerned about eminent domain. I am concerned about the ways in which government, you know,
we keep hearing from the Trump administration of like, we can just do things and just forget about the courts.
We don't need them, which makes me anxious.
So can government work if politicians are also held accountable to voters
outside of when they're running for reelection?
Are these mutually exclusive?
I think they need to be balanced.
I think that the challenge here is not to say that the executive branch
should be able to do whatever it wants.
And it's not to allow the courts to basically have
such rigorous standards for every decision
that no one can make a trade-off
where there are clearly competing priorities, right?
You've got to build the transmission line
that's bringing the clean energy from the remote village
or the remote waterfall into the place
where the electricity is going to be used.
That transmission line is going to be used, that transmission
line is going to go through some forest.
Someone needs to be able to make that decision about where it's going to go.
That's going to be an executive branch official, not a judicial official.
And so what you need is some balance between the Hamiltonian impulse to pull power up into
the executive branch and the Jeffersonian impulse to ensure that the judiciary
Is able to ensure that no individual is, you know, really trampled in the process
Do progressives need to accept that sometimes there will be inevitably losers in any big top-down decisions that come when you concentrate
power in fewer hands I
Mean, I think that's the essence of what government is. It is taking a situation
where not everyone can win and choosing who the losers are going to be. And I think that
for the last 50 years, progressives have had a dream that if you just bring everyone to
the table, if you give everyone a voice, if you give everyone a veto over what might happen,
you will find some way where everyone is happy. And the truth is that when you're building
a high speed rail line, somebody isn't going And the truth is that when you're building a high-speed
rail line, somebody isn't going to like it.
When you're going to build new housing, there's going to be a
neighborhood that objects.
If you're going to build a transmission line or a clean
energy grid, there are going to be people
who come out as losers.
And the goal of government is to find some process where
those decisions can be made fairly but equitably.
So how do progressives start solving this problem, especially when it comes to like
an existential issue like climate change? How do we find the balance you say has been lost?
In that case, I think we need to say who we need to ask ourselves the question,
who is it that should make this decision? The reason that we don't have housing,
the reason that we don't have a cleaning grid, The reason that we don't have housing, the reason that we don't have a clean grid,
the reason that we don't have high speed rail
is that too many people have no's, right?
Whether it's through an environmental review process
or a community review process
or some other judicial mechanism.
And that the challenge here is to give everyone a voice,
but not a veto to make sure that the someone
ultimately is responsible so that we end up
actually building the stuff that we need.
Are you optimistic that the modern day democratic party
is up to the task of making these changes?
Because it seems to me like part of the challenge here
is that Democrats understandably want everyone
to have a voice and everyone's voices are mad
at everybody else's and then nothing happens.
Yeah, well, I think that is certainly the pattern.
You look at
these changes in the history of progressivism, no one at the turn of the 20th century could have
imagined the sort of the huge bureaucracy that was created by the point of the New Deal or the Great
Society. Nobody at that point could have imagined that the judiciary or that these individual
rights would come to the point where they were so
powerful that the establishment basically didn't exist anymore. It doesn't the establishment exist
somewhat today but doesn't have the power that it had generations ago. I just think it's inevitable
that Americans are going to see the frustrations or feel the frustrations of government not working
and eventually embrace an agenda that allows controversial things to get done again.
Mark, thank you so much for joining me.
Thanks so much for having me.
That was my conversation with Mark Dunkleman,
author of Why Nothing Works,
Who Killed Progress, and How to Bring It Back.
We'll get to more of the news in a moment,
but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe,
leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts,
watch us on YouTube, and share with your friends. More to come after some ads.
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Here's what else we're following today.
Headlines.
I was very scared.
Why?
Because I've seen news of that prison and I know they take criminals there.
My husband's not a criminal.
What was your biggest fear when you identified him?
I was scared for his life.
A federal judge doubled down Sunday on her demand that the Trump administration bring
back a Maryland man who was wrongly deported to El Salvador.
Kiyomar Abreu Garcia was detained on March 12th.
His wife, Jennifer, recalled the incident to CBS.
She says she's concerned her husband will face retaliation from a violent gang while
being wrongfully detained in the infamously dangerous Salvadoran prison.
Garcia has been in the United States for over a decade and received a protective court order
in 2019 forbidding his deportation to El Salvador in order to avoid
retribution from the gang. The Justice Department admitted last week that Garcia had been sent to
El Salvador by mistake. On Friday, a federal judge ordered the White House to bring Garcia back to
the U.S. by end of day Monday and condemn the administration, saying, quote, Congress said,
you can't do it and you did it anyway. The Justice Department claims the court has no power to order Garcia's return, but on Sunday the judge rejected their request to rescind her order.
The U.S. Supreme Court sided with the Trump administration in a 5-4 decision Friday to
cut teacher training grants they deem in violation of the president's executive order to eliminate
diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. The Supreme Court ruling lifts a temporary block put in place last month by a Massachusetts
federal judge to allow the grants to be distributed while the courts litigate the case.
The lawsuit was brought by eight Democratic-led states that argue more than 100 grants were
unlawfully pulled from programs that support teachers in quote, under-served communities,
and with the goal of hiring educators who quote, reflect the communities in which they will teach.
The decision marks the first major ruling
the court has made in Trump's favor
over litigation brought against
an executive order this term.
Justice Katanji Brown Jackson wrote in a dissent
that her conservative colleagues' eagerness
to get involved in the case was, quote,
equal parts unprincipled and unfortunate.
She said the court doesn't usually exercise jurisdiction
over temporary restraining orders
and that this one shouldn't have been an exception.
A second unvaccinated child in Texas
has died from complications related to measles.
In February, another child died in the ongoing outbreak,
marking the first measles death in the US in a decade.
There are currently more than twice as many measles cases in the U.S. than there were
in all of last year.
The outbreak was originally detected in West Texas, and nearly 500 cases have been reported
in the state.
Measles cases have also been confirmed in New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Kansas.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the former anti-vaxxer,
I guess that is what he would want us to call him, visited the grieving family Sunday and tweeted in support of the measles vaccine.
This is surprising because just last month, RFK Jr. told reporters that this is all super normal.
There have been four measles outbreaks this year in this country. Last year there were 16.
So it's not unusual. We have measles outbreaks every year. In this country last year there were 16. So it's not unusual.
We have measles outbreaks every year.
The White House is still downplaying the outbreak. A Trump administration official told the New
York Times that the child's cause of death is, quote, still being looked at.
President Trump on Friday granted TikTok another reprieve by announcing he would extend the
deadline again to keep it online in the United States.
The will-they-won't-they ban on TikTok has users across the country on their toes.
A law passed last year, and later upheld by the Supreme Court over national security concerns,
requires the app's Chinese ownership to separate from TikTok's U.S. operations or potentially
face a nationwide ban.
It's the second time Trump extended the deadline.
Trump wrote on Truth Social that his administration has been working hard on the deal to save the app
and that he would issue an executive order allowing it to stay online for another 75 days.
While prospective buyers have been emerging, it's still up in the air if TikTok owner ByteDance will
bite. However, the company did acknowledge Friday that it's been in discussion with the US
government over a potential solution.
According to multiple outlets, Trump's extension came as White House officials were closing
in on a deal.
But according to a person who spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity, China put
the deal on pause after Trump announced his new tariffs last week.
Trump said in his true social post Friday, quote, We hope to continue working in good faith with China, who I
understand are not very happy about our reciprocal tariffs.
And that's the news.
One more thing. Politics is not just about governance and working together.
It's about selling an idea or a set of ideas to millions of people and hoping they buy
in.
And currently, MAGA influencers on the internet are trying to sell a brand new idea on Donald
Trump's tariffs.
Actually, money is meaningless.
And also, you don't really need to buy things, do you?
Here's right-wing influencer Benny Johnson.
Incidentally, according to an indictment released last fall, he received hundreds of thousands
of dollars as part of a Russian influence campaign.
Now he'd like to tell you that actually, going broke could be good for you. Losing money costs you nothing.
This is just the reality of life.
Like, were you young and dumb?
How much money did you lose? Everyone loses money.
Everyone loses money.
It costs you nothing. In fact, it builds quite a bit of character.
And in case you were wondering, yes, Benny Johnson was among the right-wing influencers that spent much of 2024 complaining that President Joe Biden was making everyday essentials too expensive. But now, who needs money? You, maybe,
but not Benny Johnson. It's like a swath of the American right took the Sound Like My Very Nice
Liberal Mom in 1993 challenge. One big right-wing account tweeted on Thursday, quote,
You do not need the new iPad. You do not need the new cell phone.
You do not need the new video game console.
You want them.
There is a big difference.
And if you look at the people whining about the tariffs, I challenge you to ask them how
their lives have been affected in any way.
You hear that, American voters?
You may have voted for Donald Trump because you thought he'd bring back the economy of
2019, when you could afford things you wanted and things you needed more easily.
But in 2025, if you can't afford a cell phone
because of Donald Trump's tariffs,
you didn't need it anyway.
Finally, the Republican party
is taking a stand against consumerism,
despite the fact that, as we speak,
Donald Trump is selling meme coins to, you know, make money,
which, remember, doesn't matter.
And they're also suddenly very excited about working in factories,
despite having never worked in factories.
And not really planning on starting now.
Right-wing influencer Milo Yiannopoulos, perhaps best known for
making money off saying things like, quote, feminism is cancer, tweeted, quote,
men are depressed and addicted and broken because they have nothing to do.
They get no stimulation or satisfaction from BS email jobs.
I'm telling you,
white Americans will love working in factories again,
making things in the image and likeness of God the maker.
Now, he will not be working in the factories.
He's a British right-wing influencer.
The factories will be for you,
a person who wants to be
a doctor or a lawyer or anything else, just not work in a factory because someone decided
you should. Just like how these right-wing influencers will continue to be able to afford
consumer goods, even if you can't. Because this is a sales technique, not an ideology.
It doesn't have to make any sense because it's not really supposed to.
And we haven't really gotten into the people tweeting
about how they don't care about the economy
and hope everything burns down because burn it all down,
women suck, something, something, something.
But it's a sales technique that,
given how the American people work and live
and enjoy buying food and cars
and the occasional pair of sneakers,
I am very dubious will work.
["The New York Times"] I am very dubious will work.
Before we go, if you haven't checked out Crooked's newest series, Shadow Kingdom,
God's Banker, now is the time to do so.
It all begins with a tip from an old friend.
Journalist Niccolo Manoni uncovers a hidden story about Vatican banker Roberto Calvi,
one that goes beyond the official 1982 suicide ruling
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From there, things escalate quickly.
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What happens next?
Listen to Shadow Kingdom, God's Banker,
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That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, do
not look at the stock market, and tell your friends to listen. And if you're into reading,
and not just about how it is probably not a good sign that billionaire investor and big
Trump fan Bill Ackman is tweeting about how we need to delay the tariffs by 90 days or
risk quote, an economic nuclear war like me.
What a Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at Crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Jane Coaston and once again, Donald Trump said he wanted to do tariffs.
He's been saying this for like 40 years.
He was saying it to Larry King in 1987.
Like come on.
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