What A Day - Republicans Impeach Homeland Secretary Mayorkas
Episode Date: February 14, 2024House Republicans impeached Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas on Tuesday in a 214-213 vote. Meanwhile in New York, Democrat Tom Suozzi won the special election to replace ousted Republ...ican Congressman George Santos, and Pennsylvania voters elected Democrat Jim Prokopiak in Tuesday’s state House special election.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may loosen Covid isolation requirements. Under newly proposed guidelines, Americans who test positive for Covid would no longer be advised to isolate for five days. Instead, they plan to recommend that people use their symptoms to determine when they should end their isolation.And in headlines: the Senate passed a $95 billion bill with aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, the death toll from last year’s West Maui wildfires reached 101 on Tuesday, and Meghan Markle teamed up with Lemonada Media for a new podcast.Show Notes:What 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 Wednesday, February 14th. I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver, and this is What A Day, the pod that agrees with Al Roker.
Give kids snow days!
Just give them the day off, people!
Period!
Wow, he's fired up!
Even though an epic snowstorm in the Northeast shut down schools yesterday,
New York City still held remote classes?
Listen to Al Roker, let the kids play, let them go to Central Park and sled, okay?
Truly.
On today's show, we'll talk about how that snowstorm put a damper on turnout in some key local races.
Plus, the CDC might shorten how many days you need to isolate after contracting COVID.
But first, Republicans have finally gotten their way and impeached Secretary
of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas yesterday. This was their rushed second attempt to impeach
Mayorkas for, quote, willfully refusing to enforce border laws and breaching the public trust. And of
course, Republicans didn't present a single piece of evidence to back up this claim. The final vote
count was 214 to 213. And while there was no dramatic
entrance from a member in post-surgical hospital scrubs like the first time around,
there was the return of Republican Representative Steve Scalise, who had been away from Capitol
Hill for the past six weeks for stem cell treatments related to his ongoing battle with
cancer. Wow. I mean, I guess a lot to take in. They fully impeached this man who did absolutely
nothing wrong.
They actually went through with it.
So what does this all mean for Secretary Mayorkas?
Honestly, not much.
While Mayorkas is now the first sitting cabinet member to be impeached since 1876,
it won't disrupt his day-to-day work.
As far as next steps, this partisan display will move from the House to the Senate,
where it will need a two-thirds majority vote to convict Mayorkas,
which is highly unlikely since Democrats hold a majority there.
Right. There was some concern about this vote even happening yesterday,
given the snowstorm. Tell us more about that.
Yeah, given the extremely tight margin for House Republicans,
they feared that the vote could have been upended by members missing flights
as a snowstorm swept through the Northeast region of the United States
and disrupted travel throughout the day.
But unfortunately, Republicans had the numbers to move forward with this impeachment effort,
even as Republican Representatives Tom McClintock of California,
Ken Buck of Colorado, and Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin
all voted no with Democrats for the second time.
In fact, when it comes to Gallagher,
days after he cast the first no vote last week, he announced that he wouldn't seek re-election.
Before yesterday's vote, Democratic Representative Dan Goldman of New York commented on MSNBC that
this move showed how far gone the GOP is. Take a listen. Mike Gallagher, two days after he made
that vote, announced that he would not be running for running for reelection because there is no place in this Republican Party for someone who wants to do the right thing, not whatever
the thing that the party wants. Truly. And this is not the first time that we've seen this either.
One lone Republican decides to stand up, do the right thing. And very shortly afterwards,
they're like, never mind. I am leaving this job. I cannot do this because they know they
know they'll be punished for it. It's so insane. You mentioned that this vote was rushed. Why were
Republicans in such a hurry with this? So House Republicans squeezed in this vote yesterday
afternoon so that it could be done before polls closed in the New York third congressional district
special election. That's the one to replace ousted former representative George Santos.
And Republicans knew that Democrats could pick up the seat and further reduce their tiny margin
of control, which they did. Democratic candidate and former Representative Tom Suozzi won last
night, which was especially great since the snowstorm likely disrupted voter turnout as the
New York Board of Elections reported turnout numbers that lagged behind the 2022 election.
It's also important to keep in mind that the outcome of this race didn't just impact House
Republicans' margin, but it is also an indicator for how issues like abortion rights and protecting
democracy mobilize and motivate voters, issues that we know the Biden-Harris re-election campaign
is centering in their messaging. So this win in New York 3 is a big boost for Democrats heading
into November 2024. By the way, in other election news, state Democrats So this win in New York three is a big boost for Democrats heading into November
2024. By the way, in other election news, state Democrats secured a win in Pennsylvania where
voters elected Jim Prokopiak in Pennsylvania's special election yesterday, giving Dems a 102
to 100 House majority. We'd love to see it. Absolutely. Some news to celebrate. Thank you
so much for that update, Juanita. Now we're going to switch over to some COVID news.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the CDC, is considering new guidance,
specifically loosening COVID isolation requirements.
Under these newly proposed guidelines, Americans who test positive for COVID would no longer
be advised to isolate for five days.
Instead, they plan to recommend that people use their symptoms to
determine when they should end their isolation. All this makes me deeply uncomfortable because one,
I don't trust people to do anything right for the public good. Like I'm just having massive
flashbacks from 2020 about how this can all be deeply harmful to everyone. So we should all get
ready for another surge, I guess. So what would they suggest people use to determine when they can go back into the world?
So this new proposal suggests that if people have been fever-free without the aid of medications for 24 hours,
and if their symptoms are mild and improving, they could go back to their regular routines right away.
It's not yet clear what, if any, guidance on masking will come along with this update, how long that will last. So we
have a lot to look out for. I am freaking out. So they're saying, hey, go back in public, even
though you have COVID and maybe don't even wear a mask. Wow. I just don't know what to make of all
of this because it feels like we have learned no lessons. So why is the CDC considering updating
their recommendations right now anyway? I mean, it's a good question, Juanita.
You're like, yeah, why?
None of the science around how infectious COVID is has changed at all.
So let's just start there.
But part of it has to do with changing attitudes and practices around COVID nationwide.
Many people no longer consider COVID to be the threat that they once did,
and many people also have some level of immunity due to either getting vaccinated or getting sick
or some combination of both over the past few years. There is a desire by some officials and
experts to make recommendations that are a little more realistic for people to actually follow.
The new guidelines would put the CDC's recommendations for COVID right in line with what they recommend people to do to avoid spreading RSV or the flu, indicating that COVID
is another one of these respiratory illnesses, which anecdotally I know is the way that a lot
of people think about it. But COVID still poses major risks to vulnerable populations like people
over 65 and those who are immunocompromised. According to CDC data, around 20,000 people are still hospitalized with COVID every single week,
and 2,300 Americans a week are dying of it.
In those over 65, deaths from COVID are two to four times more common than deaths from the flu,
and the long-term risks are far greater.
As many as 7% of Americans have reported long-term lingering COVID symptoms like fatigue,
brain fog, difficulty breathing, and joint pain. Even healthy young people with strong immune
systems can get long COVID. It can arise after just mild symptoms from COVID. And at this time,
there is still no known treatment or cure for it. I wanted to check in with our resident expert,
Dr. Abdul El-Sayed. He's an epidemiologist and the
host of America Dissected about all of this. Take a listen to a little of what he had to say.
So ultimately, I don't see any scientific justification for why we would do this.
This seems to be focused on what employers seem to want. And I worry that it's just a bit premature
considering the fact that we're coming out of a season with a pretty bad COVID surge.
One thing you can always expect Abdul El-Sayed to do is keep it 100. And I appreciate him emphasizing that this is all about economics. This is all about capitalism, not health care
and public safety. Yeah, some of what else he told me was that if we're really trying to do that,
sending workers back to work where they can infect other people if they're sick is not exactly an effective strategy either. Not a long-term play at all. Not that we should be
centering work in what we're doing here, but it's not the best long-term play either. But anyways,
if this new guidance is adopted, it would be the first time that the CDC has loosened COVID
recommendations since 2021 when they brought that isolation period down
from 10 days to five. This latest guidance would follow similar updates in Oregon and California
and is similar to what health officials from other states are moving towards as well.
The Washington Post reported that California's state epidemiologist Erica Pan pointed out that
workers who don't get sick leave or who can't work from home if they or their kids test positive for COVID
faced a disproportionate burden under the previous policy,
and that the strict requirements for isolation actually disincentivized people from taking COVID tests.
And in Oregon, where they changed their policy to something similar last May,
the data doesn't show any disproportionate increases in community transmission or severity since the update.
Elsewhere around the world, many other countries like the UK, Denmark, Finland, and Australia
lowered their isolation recommendations back in 2022. And many of those same countries also
decided that young kids don't need COVID booster shots because they are very unlikely to get
seriously ill from COVID. That is different than the US's policy, though many parents choose
not to do that
for their children. Still, the CDC is not expected to release their new guidance on COVID isolation
in the U.S. until April, so this is not final yet, but we will continue to keep you updated
as we learn more. That is the latest for now. We'll be back to some headlines.
Headlines.
The Senate finally passed a $95 billion bill with aid for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan yesterday morning.
22 Republicans joined Democrats
to vote in favor of it, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. All in all, the bill
includes $60 billion for Ukraine, more than $14 billion for Israel, $8 billion for support in the
Indo-Pacific, plus $9 billion for humanitarian aid primarily for Gaza and Israel and Ukraine.
Now the bill heads to the House where its chances of passing look pretty slim.
Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters yesterday
that he's not planning to put the bill on the House floor.
Trump also mocked the bill and said that aid from the U.S.
should be structured as a loan,
because of course he's obsessed with people paying bills,
even though he doesn't pay his own bills, but here we are.
And Biden isn't happy about all of this pushback.
He said in a televised
statement yesterday that the bill would pass if it was on the floor of the House.
So I call the speaker to let the full House speak its mind and not allow a minority of
most extreme voices in the House to block this bill even from being voted on.
I mean, right. Here's the sad part, though. I feel like people are already holding this
over Mike Johnson's head and say, if you bring up this bill, we will oust you just like we did the last guy. So we'll see
how this goes. Truly the most cursed position in politics. Turning to the Middle East, a U.N.
official yesterday sounded the alarm and warned that an Israeli ground invasion in Gaza's
southernmost city of Rafah could lead to a, quote, slaughter in Gaza. As we've discussed on the show,
Rafah is the city along the Egyptian border where more than one million Palestinians have sought
refuge, many without enough water, food, and medicine. A wave of Israeli airstrikes there
killed dozens of Palestinians on Monday, and Israeli forces signaled plans for a ground
offensive in the city. UN relief chief Martin Griffiths warned in a statement on Tuesday
of the dangerous consequences of a ground invasion in the city, writing, quote,
the government of Israel cannot continue to ignore these calls. History will not be kind.
This war must end. Meanwhile, negotiations toward another ceasefire and hostage deal in the Israel
Hamas war continued in Cairo yesterday. President Biden said earlier this week that
negotiators were working to reach an agreement that would free remaining hostages in Gaza
and stop fighting for at least six weeks. Take a listen to what White House spokesperson John
Kirby told reporters yesterday when asked about any progress. We're glad that these discussions
are ongoing. And as I've said before, they've been constructive and they've been moving in
the right direction. But I don't have a specific update for you today, and I wouldn't want to get ahead of discussions.
The death toll from last year's West Maui wildfires reached 101 on Tuesday when Maui
police identified another victim of the disaster. Paul Kapryski was a 76-year-old resident of Lahaina.
He is one of the final three people unaccounted for, and this comes just weeks after
Maui police formed the island's first ever, quote, cold case detail to find out what happened to
Kapritsky and the two people who are still missing, according to their database. Now to some labor
news. Paramount Global announced yesterday that it's laying off hundreds of staffers worldwide.
According to Variety, the company's CEO, Bob Backish, announced the cuts in an internal
memo to employees. And while the memo didn't specify the exact number of layoffs, several
news outlets report that the number could be around 800 employees or around 3% of the company's
global staff. Meanwhile, Disneyland character workers and parade performers in California
hope to unionize with Actors' Equity Association. A group of performers who bring characters like Mickey Mouse and Cinderella to life
announced their intent to unionize yesterday.
They are calling for increased wages, more stable scheduling,
and better safety conditions, among other things.
The group, called Magic United, started circulating union cards to some 1,700 workers last week,
and the group hopes to get voluntary recognition from Disney.
Most of the workers at Disneyland Resort in SoCal
already have labor unions,
but the parade performers and character actors
are one of the rare groups that are not yet unionized.
And finally, Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex,
is teaming up with Lemonada Media for a new podcast.
If you're thinking to yourself,
wait, didn't Meghan already have a podcast deal
with a different company?
You'd be right.
You might remember that Archwall Audio, Markle and her husband Prince Harry's production company,
landed an exclusive deal with Spotify in 2022 for Markle's Archetypes podcast.
It was one of Spotify's most popular shows with more than 10 million downloads across the globe.
But the two parties split in June last year.
The Duke and Duchess kept the rights to archetypes,
which is, hey, write these contracts right, y'all.
Seriously.
Keep control.
So in addition to developing a new show with the Royals,
Lemonada Media will also re-release
the first season of Archetypes
on all streaming platforms as a part of the new deal.
In a written statement, Lemonada wrote,
quote, we are beyond honor that megan has trusted us to help democratize democratize emphasis on that word access to archetypes and
that so many more people around the world will have access to this series soon okay i just got
to react to democratize because that word has heavy meaning in a moment where our national
democracy is directly under attack every single day so wow
yeah it's definitely a choice and maybe not one that i would use to describe putting your podcast
on apple music yes but you know that's exciting for megan new career opportunities they also
redid their website they're rebranding oh Will I listen to the first episode of whatever this new project is?
Sure, I will.
I can't help it.
I can't help it.
I just need to be honest with you.
I will do it and we'll see.
I'm intrigued.
I appreciate your honesty.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
If you've run out of fresh, crooked content for the day,
no, you haven't.
We have so much more to check out on YouTube.
Hysteria has a series called This Fucking Guy where they roast the men who deserve it the most.
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everything political. And Lovett has a new segment called What a Weekday, where he jokes about the
early breaking news of the week. For all of this YouTube exclusive content and more,
you can head to crooked.com slash videos to watch now.
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I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
And happy birthday, Henry!
That goes out to our audio engineer, Bill, his son, Henry.
Henry's turning four years old, and we couldn't be more excited.
Henry's a sleety pie.
We're so excited for Henry's birthday.
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