What A Day - Running As A Progressive In Texas with Jessica Cisneros
Episode Date: March 1, 2022On Monday, Russian forces made progress in their efforts to encircle Ukraine’s capital Kyiv despite being slowed down by continued resistance from Ukrainian forces. Russia and Ukraine also sent dele...gations to southeastern Belarus for initial talks amid hopes that the two countries could come to some kind of agreement, but did not come to a resolution.Today, Texas holds the very first primary of the midterms. The elections will tell us a little bit about how strong of a hold former President Trump has on the GOP, and show us if the state is ready to elect more progressive candidates. Jessica Cisneros, a progressive-backed candidate who’s running for Texas’s 28th Congressional District, joins us to discuss how she’s feeling about her race.And in headlines: A new study shows that Pfizer-BioNTech shots offer barely any protection from infection in kids 5 to 11 years old, a new climate change report found that countries are not doing enough to combat global warming, and jury selection began in the first criminal trial related to the January 6th insurrection.Show Notes:Vote Save America: Texas – https://votesaveamerica.com/state/texas/Follow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, March 1st. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice. And this is What A Day,
helping you calm your pre-State of the Union nerves if you're President Joe Biden.
Mr. President, just imagine that everybody is in their underwear.
Bernie, he's in his underwear. Marjorie Taylor Greene, she's in her underwear.
Supreme Court, all of them in their underwear.
All of them. And that will help you tonight.
On today's show, Texas's primary is today, and we are going to hear from progressive House
candidate Jessica Cisneros. Plus, several states announced that soon many students will no longer
be required to wear masks in schools. But first, an update on Ukraine.
As always,
the situation there is changing minute to minute, day to day. But here are the crucial updates as
we record this on Monday night at 9.30 Eastern. On Monday, Russian forces made progress in their
efforts to encircle Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, despite being slowed down by continued resistance
from Ukrainian forces. Meanwhile, the country's second biggest city, Kharkiv, was hit with Russian
rockets, including in residential areas. Those rockets possibly included cluster munitions,
a form of explosive banned by many countries. Ukrainian officials say at least 11 people died
in those strikes, but the final number is not yet clear. The UN's refugee agency said that at least
500,000 people have fled the country in the last few days.
Here in the U.S., the Biden administration is facing pressure to allow thousands of Ukrainian citizens to remain here rather than forcing them to return home, which seems like what they should do, pretty obviously.
Yes, it does.
There were also notably some talks yesterday between Russia and Ukraine.
So what can you tell us about how
those went? Yeah, so Russia and Ukraine sent delegations to southeastern Belarus for initial
talks amid hopes that the two countries could come to some kind of agreement. Ukraine officials
called for an immediate ceasefire and the removal of Russian military forces from Ukraine. Russia
was, quote, cagier, according to Reuters, with the Russian government refusing to articulate
what they hoped to gain from these talks. But as expected, these talks ended without any resolution.
Yeah. And one of the big ramifications for Russia has been these severe economic sanctions from a
number of countries, including the U.S., after their decision to invade Ukraine. We're starting
to see how that is starting to impact.
So how are they affecting Russia's economy?
Yeah, they are definitely having an effect.
Early yesterday, the value of Russia's currency began to decline,
and within hours, the ruble lost around a quarter of its value.
The Russian central bank attempted to lessen the impact
through a number of measures, including doubling its primary interest rate.
And in addition, the stock exchange in Moscow remained closed yesterday because of the, quote, developing situation.
However, the fact that the economy took a hit did not seem to change Russia's plans to continue
their invasion of Ukraine. But getting in the economy's downward spiral is expected to have
a severe impact on average Russian civilians. American economist Carl Weinberg told reporters
in a conference call yesterday that, quote, my gut feeling is that the Russian economy cannot
survive three weeks of this without failing altogether. Wow. And remember that there are
many Russians who do not support Putin's decision to invade Ukraine. An independent monitor said
the country has detained nearly 6,000 anti-war protesters as of Sunday. Yeah, that is pretty
amazing. What else are we seeing so far internationally in terms of responses to Russia?
Well, the consequences are spreading, and they're spreading to international sports as well.
On Monday, the International Olympic Committee recommended that sports organizations ban Russian athletes from international competitions.
And so FIFA, which governs professional soccer, banned Russian club teams from participating in future
games indefinitely. It also decided to remove Russia from qualifying for this year's World Cup.
The move comes just weeks before Russia was supposed to compete for one of Europe's places
in the tournament. And elsewhere, the U.S. said yesterday that it would remove 12 Russian
diplomats who were in America for a U.N. mission, claiming that they were actually intelligence
operatives who, quote,
have abused their privileges of residency in the United States by engaging in espionage activities that are adverse to our national security. That seems pretty intense. So that is the update we
have on Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Yeah, there will be a lot more to keep talking about in the
days ahead. But turning to some domestic news, today is the very
first primary of the midterms, and it is happening in Texas. So this primary gives Texas an opportunity
to, shall we say, show off how awful the state's new restrictive voting laws really are and what
possible ramifications those could have across the country where Republicans have passed similar
legislation. Thousands of absentee ballots have already been rejected,
and this has left many voters in the state, including people with disabilities and seniors,
unsure of exactly how they're going to participate here.
Plus, today will tell us a little bit about how strong of a hold former President Trump has on the Republican Party,
and it will show us if the Lone Star State is ready to elect more progressive candidates as well.
Trump has endorsed more candidates in Texas than in any other state,
and I am personally curious to see if that helps or hurts them.
Yeah, there's a trio of progressive-backed congressional candidates.
We're following pretty closely Jessica Cisneros, Greg Kazar, and Jasmine Crockett.
And Gideon, you had the chance to speak with Democratic House candidate Jessica Cisneros.
Is that right?
Yes.
So she is a 28-year-old immigration lawyer.
Pretty incredible to be that young,
especially in an industry that is quite old.
She is running in Texas's 28th congressional district,
which stretches from just outside San Antonio
to the U.S.-Mexico border
to unseat the longtime incumbent representative Henry Cuellar.
And Cuellar is a conservative Democrat.
I don't think it's a stretch to say that he's one of the most conservative Democrats in the House.
For example, he opposes abortion rights. He has criticized Biden's immigration policies,
primarily from the right. And Cicero's first challenge Cuellar back in 2020, and she lost by
a pretty small margin there. So there's been quite a bit of momentum. And another thing that is
looming over Cuellar's reelection now
is that the FBI raided his home
and campaign office back in January.
Never great.
Cuellar denies any wrongdoing in that,
but the FBI is currently investigating transactions
that he and his wife made with business people
and foreign officials in Azerbaijan.
And that whole story has allowed Cisneros
to not only differentiate herself with
him on policy, but to strengthen an argument that he is out of touch with the district and corrupt.
Yesterday, I spoke with Cisneros about her race against Cuellar, and I started by asking her how
she is feeling now that we have finally made it to the primary. A lot of adrenaline. My team and I
are exhausted, but we're also really, really excited because,
I mean, this is what we've been working for, right? And, you know, now to go into like these
final days with the momentum that we have right now, it's really special. And you were sort of
talking about a lot of different issues that are coming up in conversations with voters.
What are the main ones you're hearing about? Just sort of either things that are on people's minds because they're local issues or national issues or some combination of both.
The top two issues that we hear about all the time are health care and jobs.
And it's no surprise, right? And those were the same issues this last time around because
Texas 28th, for example, my hometown of Laredo, we've had about a 30% poverty rate for, you know, decades. We have about one
in four people that are not insured, that's not counting people who are underinsured. And that
was before the pandemic. You know, people have to work two or three jobs just to make ends meet.
The issues are still the same from last year around, but I have noticed the urgency that
people talk about, you know, why we need solutions to this, why we need to expand health care, why we need to create union jobs in the district or increase the minimum wage.
The urgency is a lot.
The stakes are a lot higher.
I want to talk for a second about immigration and specifically your experiences as an immigration lawyer motivating you to run for Congress.
How did that lead to this moment? And what has been your
response to the way this administration has gone about immigration policy?
Yeah, so I actually got involved in the immigrants rights movement back in 2012.
I was very much inspired by my parents, you know, immigrant story, the fact that I was born and
raised here in Laredo, Texas, where it seems like everyone has their own immigration story as well. And my parents were able to become residents and have their shot
at the American dream because of a pro bono attorney. So I wanted to be that person. And then
I become an immigration attorney during the Trump administration. And I start representing people
during that time. And it was just so incredibly heartbreaking to hear a
lot of immigration judges, despite them wanting to do the right thing and keep families together,
you know, the law just wasn't permitting that. And I was, you know, thinking about like, what else
can I do? And there was an effort in my hometown to find someone that was going to challenge Henry
Goyard. And I mean, I was already familiar with Goyard find someone that was going to challenge Henry Goyard.
And I mean, I was already familiar with Goyard and it took me having to go to Washington to intern for him back in 2014 to realize like how anti-immigrant, how anti-choice,
how anti-labor, like all of these, you know, issues that I knew were important and didn't
align with our South Texan values.
And then the fact that he
had voted to fund the border wall twice and then also was voting with Donald Trump 70% of the time.
So I was asked to run. So that's why I decided to take that leap of faith. The election happened
and President Biden was inaugurated. But we're still seeing a lot of the relics from the Trump
administration enacted. For example, the Title 42 expulsions and the fact that our asylum process still hasn't been reopened.
So I really do hope that the administration does something about it.
I know it's currently under litigation, but whatever the administration can do to prevent this harm happening from these asylum seekers is really important.
And you obviously have very different sets of policies
than Representative Cuellar,
but there's also a lot of kind of,
shall we say, personal stuff
that has impacted his perception
throughout the course of this.
So I'm curious, how did the news of the FBI raid
impact the perception of him
and perhaps how it may have changed your approach at all?
It changed the race in the sense that we knew from the very beginning, from, you know, day one,
when we launched that we were going to be the better Democratic candidate to continue holding
this district as a blue district. And I think that, you know, we were talking about kind of
the corrupting influence
that corporations and special interests have had on Goyad and how that's led to him throwing our
community under the bus. And I think with the fact that the FBI raid was an investigation
into like public corruption, I think that really cemented the idea in a lot of people.
And I think it also forced people to start thinking about who they were
going to be voting for. And to take a step back and look at things kind of statewide,
there are other candidates in this primary that I think would make a meaningful difference in
Congress like yourself, if the three of you all won. I'm thinking of Greg Kazar and Jasmine
Crockett. So what would it mean if candidates like the three of you all win in Texas?
Well, what I hope a win like this here, especially in a district like ours, which is in South
Texas, and I think the conversation around South Texas since the last election has been
that, you know, that this community is all of a sudden becoming more conservative.
I think it shows more that people are unsatisfied with the status quo and that if we really want to retain, you know, the Democratic Party's title as the People's Party, we can absolutely do it.
And I really hope that this basically causes a ripple effect.
Yeah, absolutely.
I want to shift gears to talking a little bit about how this election is going to be held more broadly.
So today's primary is the first election to be held under Texas's new elections law.
That has obviously made huge changes to voting procedures throughout the state. How has voting
changed for you and for constituents that you've spoken to? I mean, it's been really difficult.
So this terrible voter suppression bill that was enacted by the Texas legislature recently,
it's caused a lot of chaos and confusion. People aren't sure where they
have to show up to be able to vote. I'm taking this as like a dry run, I guess, for what to
expect in the general election and moving forward. And we've been doing everything we can as a team
to be able to respond to the questions that the community has. The solution is that Congress needs to act
and make sure that we're overturning
all of these voter suppression bills.
But in the meantime, I mean,
we just have to do whatever we can
to help as many folks as possible get to the polls.
So Josie, that was my conversation
with Progressive House candidate Jessica Cisneros,
who is running for Texas's 28th congressional district.
We'll have some links in our show notes
if you are a voter in Texas and need some information,
and we'll be back with some results when we have them.
But that's the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
The only COVID vaccine approved for children,
the Pfizer-BioNTech shots,
offers barely any protection from infection
in kids 5 to 11 years old.
That is according to a new study
from health officials in New York State
who looked at data from when
the highly infectious Omicron variant was surging.
However, researchers emphasize
that the vaccine still importantly protected against severe illness and hospitalization
and recommended that young children get jabs if they have not yet.
Meanwhile, New York's Governor Kathy Hochul announced that students in her state
will no longer be required to wear masks indoors at school beginning tomorrow.
California, Oregon, and Washington also jointly announced that they will be rolling back
their own mask requirements for students
by Saturday, March 12th,
a day where children are often in class.
That's a joke.
They're not on Saturdays.
All four states cited declining case rates
and hospitalizations,
but they did add that local communities
can opt to keep mask rules in place
if they feel that they are still needed.
New York City, for example, is going to hold on to its mask requirements in schools
just a few days more than the state before reportedly relaxing them this coming Monday.
There are three simple words that no world leader wants to hear. Climate change study.
Oh no. A new report released yesterday by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change found that countries are not doing enough to combat global warming and that the consequences will be disastrous.
While the impending doom of climate change is nothing new, the report is said to be the most detailed look yet at how the effects of global warming are currently being felt worldwide.
Pinned by 270 researchers from 67 countries, it cites several recent natural disasters around the globe as examples of how climate change is devastating humanity.
The report also finds that investing in short-term solutions like flood barriers is essentially useless because of how fast temperatures are rising.
The report concludes that if countries don't come up with a long-term plan to quickly reduce greenhouse gas and fossil fuel emissions, it could result in people around the world being forced to flee their own homes, leading to dislocation on a global scale.
Well, yeah, let's go on with our mornings. An all access tour of DC's federal buildings that
began last year at the Capitol continued yesterday inside a federal courthouse.
Jury selection began in the first criminal trial
related to the January 6th insurrection. Guy Reffitt of the far-right militia group,
the Three Percenters, is facing five felony charges and is accused of bringing an AR-15
and a pistol onto Capitol grounds, as well as threatening his own children if they reported
him to the police. All right. In a recorded conversation, he allegedly told his teenage son who turned him in,
quote,
traitors get shot.
A ref it who has been in pretrial detention for over a year now
demanded a trial against the advice of his lawyer.
And in a letter that he posted to Telegram on Thursday,
he said he was, quote,
prepared to stare down the barrel of tyranny
and receive the bullet of freedom.
Again, this is not how our justice system works,
but it is how they do trials in the world of Pirates of the Caribbean.
So easy to make the mistake.
While there are hundreds of other defendants facing similar charges for their role in the Capitol riots,
Reffitt is the only one accused of violating a federal law
that prohibits people from transporting firearms for unlawful use in a riot.
If he is convicted on any charge, Gideon, why would you say traitors get shot when snitches get stitches right?
That's the whole reason.
That phrase is available to you, yes.
And it's clever, you know?
It is.
Well, this gentleman is not the...
Yeah.
This shouldn't be the first thing on his mind, but maybe when all of this calms down, he
can think a little bit more about his word choice.
A Ukrainian national living outside his country participated in an act of resistance over
the weekend while also getting to destroy a luxury vehicle.
All of us can only hope.
When he partially sunk the $8 dollar yacht of his war profiteering
boss at a marina in mallorca hell yeah the ukrainian is a sailor and he came to believe
that missiles used in russian airstrikes had been manufactured by the company of the man
whose ship he works on the boss in question is alexander mckeeve the russian ceo of a state-owned
military weapons supplier when the sailor connected the, he quickly opened a bunch of valves to sink the ship,
then told his fellow crew members to get off
and that he would take responsibility.
Wow.
Demonstrating clear workplace communication
during a high-stress situation.
He's hired.
The yacht was damaged,
though the extent of the damage is unclear.
The Ukrainian sailor was arrested,
and when brought to court,
he said he intended to cause only material damage
and added, quote,
they were attacking innocents. I don't regret anything I've done and I would do it
again. No word on what that sailor is being charged with. But after this perfectly executed
act of vigilante justice, he has leapfrogged Aquaman to be my number one ocean based superhero.
Yeah, do better, Jason Momoa, take down a Russian war missile man,
and then we'll talk.
Beautiful.
Great work.
You know, Jason seems great also.
We're talking specifically about Jason as Aquaman.
Don't take it personally, Jason.
Yeah, don't take it personally.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go,
like we said before,
the State of the Union is tonight
and me and a bunch of the other crooked people
that you love, me you know them you love we'll be slacking our reactions live uh you'll
be able to follow along as well make sure to join us on crooked's youtube and twitch channels
all night long for the rest of your days until your dying breath watch us slack
that is all for today if you like the show make sure you subscribe leave a review re-watch pirates Dying breath. Watch us slack.
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If you like the show, make sure you subscribe.
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And if you are into reading and not just placards during an authorized tour of our nation's capital, like me, What A Day is also a nightly newsletter, so check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And don't forget our advice, Joe Biden.
Joseph Robinette.
If you don't believe in yourself tonight, young man, no one will.
I appreciate you for so many reasons, Gideon.
Among them is that you always remind me that Joe Biden's middle name is Robinette.
It's lovely.
It is lovely.
And that he's a young man.
He is a young man.
In this telling of the story.
Yes.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance, Jazzy Marine, and Raven Yamamoto are our associate
producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein, and our executive producers are Leo Duran and me,
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Our theme music is by Colinstein, and our executive producers are Leo Duran and me, Gideon Resnick.
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