What A Day - No Truss, No Fuss
Episode Date: October 21, 2022Liz Truss abruptly resigned as Britain’s prime minister on Thursday, after just 45 days in office — making her the shortest-serving prime minister in the history of the United Kingdom.Hundreds of ...anti-LGBTQ+ bills are moving through legislatures across the country, many of which specifically target transgender people. Oklahoma House Representative Mauree Turner — the first out non-binary state lawmaker in the country and the first Muslim member of the Oklahoma Legislature — tells us how they’ve used their position to fight for their constituents and their communities.And in headlines: Ukrainians face rolling blackouts in the wake of Russian drone strikes, disgraced actor Kevin Spacey was found not liable for battery in a civil sex abuse case, and L.A. city council member Kevin de Léon said he won’t resign.Show Notes:Vote Save America – https://votesaveamerica.com/TRANSform the Vote – https://transformthevote.org/ Mauree Turner for Oklahoma House District 88 – https://www.maureeturner.com/Crooked 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
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, October 21st. I'm Trevelle Anderson.
And I'm Erin Ryan, and this is What A Day, where we're letting you know that Taylor Swift
changed the face of music as we know it last night, or alternatively, just released an
album that's fine.
Yeah, we don't know which thing happened because the album came out after we recorded, but probably for the best for us anyway.
On today's show, the U.S. said it has proof that Iran is helping Russia conduct drone strikes in Ukraine.
Plus, a Massachusetts woman faces assault charges for telling the cops to
buzz off using actual bees. Icon. Icon. It's the biggest day for lettuce since the invention of
the Caesar salad. UK Prime Minister Liz Truss suddenly resigned on Thursday after a mere 45
days in office. For reference, that's four Scaramuccis
or a little more than half a Kardashian Humphries.
That's a little bit of a deep cut,
but you know what I'm talking about.
Here is a clip from her 92nd resignation speech.
You have to admire her commitment
to keeping things as short as possible.
Given the situation,
I cannot deliver the mandate
on which I was elected by the Conservative Party.
I have therefore spoken to His Majesty the King to notify him that I am resigning as leader of the Conservative Party.
Short and sweet. We love that.
I mean, that's the one thing we love, you know?
And with that, Truss became the PM with the shortest tenure in the history of Great Britain.
And it means that a head of lettuce with googly eyes glued to it that a UK tabloid bet would last longer than her time as head of the British government has won that contest.
She's the fourth prime minister since Brits voted to leaf.
Sorry, I mean, leave the EU back in 2016
love this for her love this for us you know at least now she has you know a little special title
to her name but it's crazy to think right that just six weeks ago there were two Lizzie's at the
top of the British government and now there are are zero. How things change so fast.
The shortness of Truss's tenure is just the tip of the iceberg,
though she packed a lot of damage into those 45 days.
First of all, I did not miss your iceberg lettuce pun, and I appreciate it. Second,
she sure did. After taking over for Boris Johnson, Truss and her party promised to deliver a tax break to the very wealthy,
to the tune of 45 billion pounds.
Hey, that's one billion pounds for every day she lasted in office.
I love synchronicity.
At the same time, Truss's party also planned to issue huge energy vouchers to Brits
as a way to lower fuel costs amid the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Turns out this was bad policy. Financial markets freaked out because no one knew how they'd pay for all this.
And the value of the British pound tumbled, which led to the Bank of England intervening,
which led to a reversal of those policies and a bunch of important people getting fired.
But by that time, trust had already made a big mess.
So it sounds like it wasn't the people who were bad.
It was the ideas that they were, you know, putting out there that were bad.
So what happens next year?
Truss said in her announcement that she'd remain prime minister until a successor was appointed.
That will take place via an intraparty election that will likely be held at some point over the next week.
There are rumors that Boris Johnson might try to make a comeback, but beyond that speculation,
what's next for the UK government is anybody's guess.
Not Boris. Hopefully not Boris.
I mean, he literally...
We're tied to Boris.
He literally, I mean, she wasn't prime minister for long enough for people to forget how bad he was at prime minister.
Right. Absolutely. Now, hardcore WOD listeners may recall that just yesterday we were ragging on Miss Liz.
And so forgive us for dunking. But to many opponents of the conservative agenda, Truss's resignation is absolutely delicious to witness. Indeed. Like a well-put-together salad.
But don't feel too bad for Truss.
Imagine how you felt when you quit a job that you hated and were bad at.
Right?
We've all been there.
She must be so relieved.
It's like me quitting Express at the University Park Mall in the year 2004.
Congratulations to the people of the UK,
but more importantly, congratulations to that lettuce.
Shout out to leafy green vegetables everywhere. Now let's get into this week's edition of WOD The Vote. It gets me every time. So one of the banes of my literal existence right now is how transphobic conservatives continue to use our livelihoods as trans people as a political wedge issue.
As we speak, the nation's first trial over a state ban on gender affirming care for youth is happening in Arkansas. There, the state legislature last year ignored every major
medical association, all of whom affirmed that these treatments and procedures are safe and
medically necessary for trans youth, and they voted to ban it. They even voted to prevent doctors
from referring trans youth and their parents to other providers. So, four families and two doctors
are currently suing the state. Now, Arkansas's ban was the first of its kind in the country.
But in a year and a half since it was enacted, similar policies have been introduced in at least 22 state legislatures.
Yes, Texas, Florida, Alabama, to name a few.
And more broadly speaking, we're in a moment of intense anti-LGBTQ sentiments, especially on the state level. I'll remind y'all
that in the first three months of this year, lawmakers introduced roughly 240 anti-LGBTQ
rights bills, about half of those specifically targeted trans people. They are banning books by
and about queer and trans folks. Every single day, it feels like we as a community see another
headline about one of our trans siblings, you know, having to go to court to affirm our humanity and the care that we need.
Either that or another trans person, more often than not a black trans woman or femme, is being killed.
Thus far in 2022, at least 31 trans people have been fatally shot or killed by other violent means.
That's according to the Human Rights Campaign.
But be not dismayed, as my granny loved to quote from the Bible, because at the same time we are experiencing unprecedented legislative attacks, we also have unprecedented visibility as a community.
There are even multiple trans and non-binary people serving in elected positions nationwide.
Trans folks are literally facing some
of this hate head on in state legislatures. One of those officials is our guest today,
Maury Turner. They serve as a member of Oklahoma's House of Representatives and have the honor and
burden, I'd say, of being the first out non-binary state lawmaker in the country and the first Muslim
member of the Oklahoma legislature.
I followed their political career since they were elected, and now they're running for
re-election as their own governor and legislative colleagues pass anti-trans and anti-queer laws.
I started our conversation by first asking Maury about their impact in the state legislature.
I remember the first instance where I was just like,
oh, we're making a difference.
We were phone banking in the 2020 primary
and there was a woman who picked up the phone.
One of the volunteers, I believe,
was like telling her about the campaign.
And she said, there's someone queer running for office,
like in this district, I'm gonna go tell my wife.
And we've got black children
and I'm gonna tell them too.
And that's amazing. When we sent out our first mailer, I got a DM one day, it was from a librarian in the
district. And she said, I have a friend who, when they got your first mailer, it was crunched up in
the mail, but she has adopted two black girls. They saw the mailer and they, and one of them
said, that looks like me. They look like me.
That was just the beginning. We won by roughly 250 votes in that primary. And that was against
a six-year incumbent. We were able to defeat some very homophobic bills. That'll be one of the most
humbling experiences I ever get, right, is to give folks a bit of themselves in politics and to be a little bit of the
representation that I needed when I was younger, too. You mentioned the legal landscape, particularly
in Oklahoma, as it relates to LGBTQ plus legislation. It mirrors, right, some of the
anti-trans, anti-queer bills that we've seen populate across the country, particularly at
the state level. In Oklahoma, three trans students sued
the state over a law that forces them to use the bathroom that doesn't align with their identities.
As you mentioned, the governor there signed a law that prevents one of the state's largest
hospital systems from receiving pandemic relief fund unless they stop providing gender-affirming
and life-saving care for trans youth. I'm wondering, what has it been like on the ground
there in this moment to kind of witness some of your colleagues in the legislature vote in favor
of these measures in person, but then to also be this like representation, right, for so many folks
in your community at the same time? What is the phrase, right, like heavy is the head that wears
the crown or something like that? It's not work that I just get to leave at the legislature. It's not like a nine to five.
It's not just a, wow, we didn't get this policy win. And for a lot of folks who are not a part
of communities, they get to say, well, dang, that was a tough one. Maybe we'll get them next time.
But for folks who have been on the other side, on the receiving end of these policies, it's not just,
oh, we didn't get that win. It's like, well, how are we going to survive this?
With all of that comes folks who want to share their stories, right? They want to be heard.
And that's what I'm here to do. As a community organizer, that's my best skill is to listen
and find accountability through hurt. So many of the stories, a lot of them mirror my own
growing up in Oklahoma. And to see how much hurt that the state is putting back into families hurts a lot.
I ran for this office because I wanted to be able to give the youth of Oklahoma and the people of Oklahoma a little bit of what my mom gave me at home.
I was able to come out to my black religious mother in the second grade.
That's a privilege, right?
Because that's not something a lot of folks get, especially in Oklahoma, to have to carry the weight of everyone else's story,
and then also have to wade through it all because I live in this very kind of
niche intersection of life, where it's hard to be able to talk to folks and say like,
this is what I'm going through and have someone actually see me. That's part of it too.
Yeah, thanks for sharing that. You know, something I think that people often forget
is that trans folks,
we're not just impacted by bills
that are explicitly anti-trans.
We are affected and usually disproportionately so
by how legislatures lead conversations
about houselessness and mass incarceration and poverty
and all these other, you know, intersectional
issues that you've been working to bring a lot of attention to. Can you talk a little bit about
some of the key issues of that your platform is based on and how you've sought to kind of address
them in your first term? Absolutely. Absolutely. I didn't think I would be like this type of person
for 2SLGBTQ plus issues in Oklahoma. I truly didn't, right? I was
like criminal justice re-imaginement and rebuilding, like that's it, right? I came from the
ACLU focusing on those things. But because of these intersections, we work on criminal justice
re-imaginement and we specifically talk about re-imaginement and rebuilding because this criminal
justice system is working flawlessly, how it was designed. And that was to lock away our people, folks who are suffering from poverty,
folks who are suffering from inaccessible housing, inaccessible health care,
specifically mental health care.
So we are trying to reimagine and rebuild a justice system with our communities in mind.
Public education, making sure that we have accessible and well-funded public education systems, right,
from curriculum to guidance counselors in schools to
making sure that our teachers are being paid livable wages in Oklahoma. Accessible health
care, another one, right? And specifically, right, for mental health care, well-funded health care.
Right now, Oklahomans are self-medicating because we don't have access. Thinking about those
intersections, right, for the folks who are having to lean on self-medication, right, that then go into a criminal legal system that is not providing
you the resources you need because the medical system in our criminal legal system is not
adequate. Those are kind of some of the things that we're always thinking about when we are
creating any type of policy. So something that I'm really excited to see as we get closer to
the midterms is the, you know, record number of trans and non-binary candidates running for office across the country, like yourself, who want to make a difference, particularly those who are in conservative states, are interested, able, willing to go into those particular spaces and be part of those conversations. As a first yourself,
I wonder what your message is
for those who will be the seconds
and the thirds and so on and so forth
coming beside, alongside, behind you.
My mom, one of the best community organizers,
lobbyists I've ever met.
One of the lessons she taught me as a child, right,
was that, especially after I came out to her, was that like my voice is powerful and to always use it and to always
help others use theirs. For me, that's why I'm a legislator. I'm not here to be a savior or to
give you something, right? But I'm here to uplift the things that we have already been doing to save
ourselves and our communities when the government continuously punches down. And I hope that folks
are thinking about that and thinking like that when they are running for office. We don't get here on our own and we won't accomplish anything
that way either. That was my conversation with Oklahoma State Representative Maury Turner.
We'll have more on the many, many issues in the upcoming midterm elections coming very soon,
along with interviews from other candidates of interest. But that's the latest for now.
Let's get to some headlines.
Ukrainians are facing rolling blackouts after recent Russian drone strikes damaged nearly a
third of the country's power stations. Officials
are also asking people to conserve electricity so that repairs can be made as quickly as possible.
Earlier this week, we talked about how some of those drones were made in Iran.
While Iran denies these allegations, the U.S. said yesterday it not only has proof,
but also confirmed that Iranian military personnel have been helping Russian forces
with those operations from Crimea. The European Union, Britain and the U.S. have since announced new sanctions against
top Iranian officials, as well as the company that makes the drones. A federal jury in New York City
yesterday found that disgraced actor Kevin Spacey was not liable for battery in a civil sex abuse
case. The suit was brought by actor Anthony Rapp,
who accused Spacey of making unwanted and aggressive sexual advances toward him over
three decades ago, when Rapp was just 14. Though Spacey denied the allegations under oath. But the
former House of Cards star isn't off the hook. He still faces charges in the UK for allegedly
sexually assaulting three men. He's set to go to trial next June.
The Pentagon announced it will pay for service members and their families to travel if they
need to get an abortion or other reproductive care. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said yesterday
the Defense Department will set up a fund to take care of travel expenses for service members who
are stationed in states where abortion access is restricted. However, the new allowance won't cover the cost of the actual procedure.
Under an outdated, decades-old law, most abortions can't be paid for using federal funds,
so they can't be performed at military facilities,
and service members' insurance plans also don't cover the cost.
Man, the Hyde Amendment sure sucks.
Truly not a great amendment.
The Social Security Administration now allows individuals to select the gender that best aligns with their gender identity without providing additional medical or legal documents.
The policy was announced back in March, but it went into effect this week. The agency is also exploring an ex-gender option for people who don't identify as either male or female.
Well, you can put Xs on forums with pretty much any computer or printer or anything with a keyboard.
So I don't think the exploring should take all that long.
Like, I'm looking at the X on my keyboard right now.
It's right there.
You know, it really is a simple thing.
But, you know, our little elected officials and Social Security Administration people, they like to take their very, very long time.
I just got a passport with an X-markered on it earlier this year.
Oh, congrats.
You know, they released that. Thank you so much.
Limited edition.
Listen, rare. First of its form, okay?
And here's the latest update
on the leaked racist audio
from Los Angeles City Council members.
Council member Kevin DeLeon
said in an interview on Wednesday
that he, quote,
failed in his leadership
when he compared a fellow council member's
two-year-old black son to a handbag.
And if you want to know how bad he feels,
he also said he's not stepping down.
By remaining in his role, DeLeon is ignoring calls to resign from President Joe Biden, California Governor Gavin Newsom, and many, many, many others.
Even if he hasn't lost his job, he's completely lost the trust of his community. black real estate developers are refusing to keep working with him on a $1.6 billion
construction project because they think he has racial biases against them that have made
him uncooperative.
You know, I think part of the reason why dunking on Liz Truss is so fun and so it feels so
cathartic right now is because in the UK, people can just kind of gather around a public
official that's doing a bad job and being like, boo, you're doing a bad job.
And eventually they're like, okay, I have
reached a level of boos
where I cannot continue to
work and I resign. And in the
U.S., people just like
stick it out.
They force us to suffer.
And a reminder of the
honey sweet taste of tenant solidarity.
In Massachusetts, a woman released bees last week to ward off police trying to serve an eviction notice.
The man being served had been fighting back against his eviction for years, attracting the support of anti-eviction activists.
One of those activists was a 55-year-old professional beekeeper named Rory Woods,
and she enlisted the help of landlord-hating bees to help her out,
arriving at the site of the eviction with an SUV full of beehives
and allegedly shaking them up.
Several officers were stung,
and upon hearing that one of them was allergic,
Woods was quoted as saying,
Oh, you're allergic? Good.
Oh, my goodness.
Love her.
That energy is the energy that I aspire to.
She later pleaded not guilty to charges of assault and battery.
Shout out to two endangered species, bees and selfless legends like Rory Woods.
That wasn't even her apartment.
That wasn't even her eviction.
Well, you know, this is what we call community care.
It gives a new meaning to
the phrase, fight the power,
F the police. You know,
just unleash bees
on them. Why not?
Yes. All
cops are bee targets.
And those are the headlines.
We'll be back after some ads.
It's Friday WOD Squad, and today we're doing a segment called Good Sound.
Take a listen to today's Good Sound.
Rats are absolutely going to hate this
announcement. But the rats don't
run this city. We do.
This is not Ratatouille.
Rats are not our friends.
Oh no. Wow.
Counterpoint. I used
to live in New York. I lived in New York for almost seven
years. A, the rats do
run your city,
and B, you declare them not your friends at your peril. As you mentioned, that sound comes out of New York City, where sanitation officials and Mayor Eric Adams announced a new plan earlier
this week to reduce the number of hours that trash can sit out on the street the night before collection in an effort to cull the city's population of very bold rats who are not at all
like Ratatouille. Now, New Yorkers will be fined if they put out their trash before 8 p.m. Erin,
what are your thoughts on all of this? Oh my goodness. Okay. So the rats are way smarter than this rule. The rats are just
going to figure out a way to just treat the hours of 8 p.m. until the trash is collected like a sort
of happy hour for rats. Like they've been around for longer than we have. They can overcome
situations that were that are much more dire than any human has ever overcome there i would say that
a lot of them are smarter than people um one time when i lived in new york city i went to catch my
train at j street and i went to my normal place where i waited for my train and there was a rat
standing there as though he or she were also waiting for a train. And as I approached the rat looked at me like, why are
you standing so fucking close to me? Like, and so I did not go where I normally waited for the train.
I just stood there waiting for a train with a rat as though the rat were also a person. And I,
I just, this is not going to work. Anyway, what are your thoughts? You got punked by a rat.
But I've been there.
You know, I too have been there.
I always say that the rats in New York, they very much so remind me of, you know,
Sensei Splinter from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
Just super smart, super advanced.
Like, you know, they will fight you.
They will tell you to get out of their subway.
And you know what?
You got to listen to them.
But you're right.
They will adjust.
They will adapt to this.
You'll have more rats in your homes and in your apartments.
Sorry for you all.
Hate that for you.
Yeah, $4,000 apartment that is a rat party from 4 to 8 p.m. every night.
The Big Apple. You gotta love it. And that was good sound. One more thing before we go.
Have we mentioned yet that the midterms are coming up? We probably have. Don't let Election Day sneak
up on you. There's a lot on your ballot and you don't want to get caught off guard. Vote Save America is here to help you figure it all out. Head over
to votesaveamerica.com to find your polling place and see all of your options to vote in one place.
They even have a tool to help you learn more about all the candidates and local and state measures
and to use as a handy cheat sheet when you head to the polls. Remember, November 8th is your last chance
to vote. Maybe ever. No, not maybe ever, but this year for sure. And be sure to visit
votesafeamerica.com to make sure you're ballot ready. That's all for today. If you like the show,
make sure you subscribe, leave a review, don't allow rats to teach you to cook, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you are into reading
and not just pro-renter Twitter feeds
of Antifa bees like me,
What A Day is also a nightly
newsletter. Check it out and subscribe
at cookit.com slash subscribe.
I'm Erin Ryan. I'm
Trevelle Anderson. And happy
early retirement, Liz Truss.
Who would have thought?
I do not wish her happiness.
I wish her anxiety.
Sadness.
Just anxiety.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance and Charlotte Landis.
Jazzy Marine and Reva Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writers, John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Lita Martinez,
Michael Martinez, and Sandy Gerard.
Production support comes from Leo Duran,
Ari Schwartz, and Matt DeGroot,
with additional promotional and social support
from Ewa Okulate, Julia Beach, and Jordan Silver.
Our theme music is by Colin Gillyard and Kashaka.