What A Day - Sec. Pete Hegseth Is In My DMs
Episode Date: March 25, 2025Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin has been busy since assuming office earlier this year. Zeldin's been pushing President Donald Trump's climate agenda by rolling back Biden-era ...climate protections, deregulating businesses, and cutting staff at the agency. Former EPA Administrator and White House National Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy joins us to discuss how states and cities are stepping up to protect their communities and the planet.And in headlines: A reporter claimed that Trump administration officials disclosed war plans in a group chat on the messaging app Signal, the Supreme Court rejects challenge to a landmark freedom of the press case, and President Trump announced Susan Monarez as his nominee to lead the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Show Notes:Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8Support victims of the fire – votesaveamerica.com/reliefWhat 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
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It's Tuesday, March 25th. I'm Jane Coaston. This is What a Day, the show with absolutely
spectacular operational security. We have never added the editor-in-chief of a prominent
magazine to our group chat, and we never will. That's the What a Day promise. On today's show, lawyers for the White House are in court again to defend deportation flights
to El Salvador under the Alien Enemies Act.
And President Donald Trump is asking the Supreme Court to overrule a lower court decision to
rehire thousands of federal workers.
But let's start with the Environmental Protection Agency.
A federal department created by Republican Richard Nixon,
yes, Richard Nixon, focused, as you might expect,
on protecting the environment.
Or at least, it was.
Now the EPA, under Administrator Lee Zeldin,
seems less focused on cleaning up our air and waterways
or, heaven forbid, doing something about climate change and more focused on helping America achieve AI dominance.
Here's Zeldin on Fox News last week.
At the end of the day, we are about powering the great American comeback, making sure that
cleaner, safer, healthier land, air, water for all Americans are achieved.
But we also do it unleashing energy dominance, making America the AI capital of the world,
bringing back American auto jobs,
pursuing permitting reform, and much more.
Here's the thing.
AI consumes a ton of energy.
In 2024, Google reported that its greenhouse gas emissions
increased to nearly 50% since 2019
because of its push to focus on AI.
And greenhouse gas emissions contribute to climate change,
which seems like something the Environmental Protection Agency should be concerned about.
It certainly used to be.
But now the EPA wants to deregulate businesses,
cut back or eliminate EPA offices focused on making sure
underrepresented communities aren't exposed to environmental toxins and pollution,
and do everything possible to make sure companies can pollute as much as their little corporate heart's desire. Which seems, to me, bad.
So, to talk about what the EPA is and isn't doing, and what states and cities are doing to step up,
I spoke with Gina McCarthy. She served as the Administrator of the EPA under President Obama,
and was the first White House National Climate Advisor under President Biden.
Gina, thank you so much for joining me.
Hey, it's great to be here with you.
Thanks for having me.
So a group of former EPA administrators wrote an op-ed for the New York Times
about the behind the scenes work the agency does and how critical it is to our
everyday lives.
What are some of the things that the EPA does that people might not be aware of?
EPA does everything from, you know, regulating industries to making sure landfills don't
drop all their pollution into rivers and streams.
We work with local communities.
40% of EPA's money actually goes to states so that they can be supported in efforts to collaborate
and make sure that we're taking care of people's health and reducing pollution.
Our scientists and our policy people go out and do work on hydrofluorocarbons, which are
highly polluting in our atmosphere.
So there's lots of things that EPA does that people, I think, probably just
take for granted, frankly. They don't understand how difficult and complicated it is to actually
keep people safe. And the expertise and the policy and the science and the rulemakings
behind that have really saved millions and millions of lives.
Lee Zeldin, the new head of the EPA, has been very busy since assuming office.
He says he's rolling back dozens of environmental regulations, he's terminating grants, etc., etc.
He claims that he hasn't read Project 2025, the giant right-wing plan for this administration.
But everything he's doing seems to mirror what's outlined in that policy blueprint.
What does Project 2025 say about the environment and climate change? But everything he's doing seems to mirror what's outlined in that policy blueprint.
What does Project 2025 say about the environment and climate change?
Well, it doesn't pay a whole lot of compliments to EPA, that's for sure.
You know, Project 2025 is all about really minimizing the ability of the federal government
to do its job in every way, shape, and form.
So I think the announcement by Lee Zeldin was probably expected to happen as a result
of demands being made on him.
EPA's mission, that's been the case through many Republican and Democratic administrations,
its mission is to put health in the environment. He changed that. He said,
abundant energy dominance, which is code word for we need to just
advance fossil fuels. So those 31 rules that he's now
reconsidering are rules that are fundamental protections. I will
guarantee you that that's code word for saying, I'm shifting those under the rug
and we're not going to implement them anymore.
And there are rules like the endangerment finding, which if that leaves, then climate
change and greenhouse gases can no longer be part of the considerations that we should
be taking.
I mean, we know the impacts that climate change is having
on us and our health and our natural resources.
They want to take 65% of the staff
and throw them out the door.
They want to get rid of our scientists.
They're already talking about eliminating
our Office of Research and Development.
They're doing everything they can
to make it really impossible to continue to move forward
at EPA in the way that I think every one of us wants,
which is to protect ourselves and our families
and our future.
So speaking of the harm,
Zeldin isn't just targeting Biden-era climate policies,
he's going back even further saying he will reconsider
the EPA's declaration in 2009 that greenhouse gases are harmful to the environment and human health, which everybody knows. It seems
crazy. What would the consequences be of throwing that out? Well, that would mean that we have to
deny that climate change actually exists and then would have to look at how we make sure that we
don't help communities stay safe,
because that wouldn't be our job anymore.
And that's everything from severe rainstorms that
are creating floods to the wildfires that we're seeing,
wind storms and hurricanes and tornadoes
that we're seeing, which are all a result
of our changing climate.
It's pretty much a total effort to deny not just science
and not just EPA's mission,
but to deny that there are so many people in this country
that are impacted by severe pollution,
that are facing challenges with water quality or quantity.
It's fascinating how the environment has become this weird culture war cudgel.
And so on the one hand, you hear from Trump and from RFK junior talking about,
oh, we want clean water and clean air.
But then they also will give Lee Zeldin carte blanche to make greenhouse
gases great again.
And also that anyone who acknowledges
that climate change is real
and that there's something we need to be doing about it
is a radical left lunatic.
How do you think about that?
I think it's just sort of like my mind goes, boom.
You know, how is this at all consistent?
They don't care about these things.
They wouldn't have taken these jobs
and taken the kind of steps they have
to dismantle our federal government. My only sort of thing that I'm clinging to
is that I'm doing work now with America is All In, which is basically recognizing that
if the federal government is going to keep behaving like this, then states and governors
in cities and towns, leaders at the
subnational level are gonna have to step up. And the good news is they actually
are. You know, we are seeing mayors step up, we're seeing businesses and communities
step up. They know what's at stake. If we continue to move forward at the local
level, at least we can keep moving our country forward.
What we're talking about is now building a constituency base that recognizes that
if the federal government is out to lunch, we're going to eat their lunch.
That's how it has to be.
You've talked about the importance to step up on the local level and the state
level and that that's already happening.
But we've talked on the show before about how the Trump administration's
efforts to roll back climate protections will take a long time to kick in
because of all the legal avenues the administration has to go through.
And you've mentioned how, you know, we do have some reasons for hope, but
what impact are Zeldin and Trump's actions already having and what impact
do you think that they're going to have by the end of Trump's term?
What are you worried about over these next couple of years?
are going to have by the end of Trump's term. What are you worried about over these next couple of years?
If Zeldin is intent on not implementing regulations,
I think we're going to have big trouble
because they're already dismantling
the enforcement staff at EPA.
They're already talking about,
maybe we shouldn't need 10 regions at EPA
who are filled with professionals who actually know the areas that they're servicing.
If they get rid of both those things, then we have no ability to make a judgment
about what we're being exposed to and how we can protect ourselves.
And it's just shockingly difficult to try to figure out
how any human being could actually be that callous
and that indifferent to our lives and our livelihood
and the very people that elected them
because they're the ones first and foremost
that are gonna be impacted
because they have never been invested
in at the level they need to.
And you're going to see everything from agriculture on down, who's actually soon going to be in
an uproar because they don't have the support they need to succeed in feeding us and putting
money in their pockets, which is what they've been able to do through
every difficult administration. But this administration isn't difficult, it's indifferent, which is
very difficult for all of us.
The US has been a world leader in climate policies. Trump pulled us out of the Paris
climate agreement for the second time in January when he came into office. How does that impact global climate
change mitigation?
Well, it's been very difficult. And one thing that Mike Bloomberg has done is both in 2017
when the Trump administration pulled out and this year when he did, it's been Mike Bloomberg
who basically gave all of the money that the U.S. needed to have to actually put on the
table for the UNFCCC, which is the organization that is in charge of these climate efforts
and the climate conferences of the parties.
I was at the UN just two weeks ago.
I'm going to be going to Copenhagen,
and little old me and others are going to be representing
the United States of America,
because we don't have anyone in Washington
that wants that job.
To work with other countries,
not just to protect the interests
of those countries or America,
but to protect our ability to give our kids a future.
Gina, thank you so much for joining me.
Thank you, it was great to be here.
That was my conversation with Gina McCarthy,
former EPA Administrator and White House
National Climate Advisor.
We'll get to more of the news in a moment,
but if you liked the show, make sure to subscribe,
leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, watch us on YouTube, and share with your friends.
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Here's what else we're following today.
Headlines.
Why were those details shared on Signal and how did you learn that a journalist was privy to the targets, the types of weapons used?
I've heard I was characterized, nobody was texting war plans and that's all I have to say about that. Thank you
Secretary of Defense Pete Hicks F isn't hot water after reporter on Monday claimed Trump administration officials disclosed war plans in a group chat on
the messaging app signal
Journalist and editor-in-chief at the Atlantic Jeffrey Goldberg said those private discussions
Accidentally included him.
In an article Monday titled,
The Trump Administration Accidentally Texted Me
Its War Plans, Goldberg wrote that he received
a connection request on the app earlier this month
from a user who appeared to be
National Security Advisor Michael Walz.
He said he was then added to a chat group called the,
quote, Huthy PC Small Group.
Others in the group appeared to include
Vice President JD Vance and Secretary
of State Marco Rubio. Goldberg wrote he had strong doubts the text group was real because he, quote,
could not believe that the national security leadership of the United States would communicate
on signal about imminent war plans. Also, hello, why was he in the chat? Goldberg said just days
later he found out the US's going to bomb Houthi
targets across Yemen hours before it happened. Why? Because the account labeled Pete Hegseth
texted him the war plan at 11 44 a.m. While Goldberg chose not to directly quote the messages sent
by Hegseth, he did write that the information could have conceivably been used by a U.S. adversary to
harm American military personnel.
Goldberg wrote, quote, What I will say in order to illustrate the shocking recklessness
of this signal conversation is that the Hegsath post contained operational details of forthcoming
strikes on Yemen, including information about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying,
and attack sequencing.
When asked by reporters about the text Monday, Hegsath referred to Goldberg as a, quote, deceitful and highly discredited so-called journalist, which doesn't really answer the question, does it?
In a statement Monday, White House National Security Council spokesman Brian Hughes said
the group chat quote, appears to be authentic. But he added the thread as a quote, demonstration
of the deep and thoughtful policy coordination between senior officials. Maybe the White House and Pete Hickseth should chat on Signal.
And in horrifying and yet somehow completely unsurprising fashion,
reporters seem to break the story to our commander in chief himself.
You're reacting to the story, the Atlantic, that said that some of your top
cabinet officials and aides had been discussing very sensitive material
through Signal and included an Atlantic reporter for that. What is your response to that? Your top cabinet officials and aides have been discussing very sensitive material through
Ségolène and included an Atlantic reporter for that.
What is your response to that?
I don't know anything about it.
I'm not a big fan of the Atlantic.
To me, it's a magazine that's going out of business.
I think it's not much of a magazine, but I know nothing about it.
You're saying that they had what?
Someone clearly wasn't in the group chat.
Some Democrats are calling for an investigation.
The Trump administration once again wants the Supreme Court to do it a solid and block
a lower court judge's ruling it doesn't like.
The Administration Monday asked the justices to block an order to rehire thousands of probationary
status federal workers.
These are people who were either recently hired by the government or had moved into a different job
and had not yet earned full civil service protections.
The White House targeted them for mass firing in February
as part of a push to shrink the size of the government.
But earlier this month, a federal judge in San Francisco
slammed the administration's, quote,
sham process for axing all those people,
around 16,000 in total,
and ordered some agencies
to offer them their jobs back.
Naturally, the Trump administration isn't happy about that and wants the nation's
highest court to step in.
In a court filing, it argues the judge overreached with his ruling and that it violates the federal
separation of powers.
In other Supreme Court news Monday, the justices also declined to hear a challenge to a landmark
Freedom of the Press case.
Casino mogul and Trump donor Steve Wynn wanted the justices to revisit New York Times v.
Sullivan, a 1960s case that protects journalists from libel suits when they write damaging
stories about public figures.
Wynn had sued the Associated Press in 2018 for publishing sexual misconduct allegations
against him that dated back decades.
Wynn denies the claims and is apparently very upset that the AP decided to write about them.
Life is very hard sometimes.
Lawyers for the White House were in court again Monday arguing over President Trump's
use of wartime powers to deport alleged members of a Venezuelan gang.
This time it was in front of the D of the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.
The administration asked the court to lift a hold
on its use of the Alien Enemies Act
to remove people it says belong to the gang,
the Tren de Uruguay.
It's not clear when the three-judge panel
will issue a decision.
As of our recording late Monday, that hasn't happened yet.
But during the hearing, Circuit Judge Patricia Millett,
an Obama appointee, ripped into the
administration for not giving people the opportunity to challenge their removals.
There were plain loads of people.
There were no procedures in place to notify people.
Nazis got better treatment under the Alien Enemy Act than has happened here.
Nazis got better treatment.
Hmm.
Also on Monday, the lower court judge at the center of the case, District Judge James Boesbauer, Nazis got better treatment. Hmm.
Also on Monday, the lower court judge at the center of the case, District Judge James Boesberg,
again ruled against the White House.
He refused to lift his block on using the wartime law for deportations.
He said people should get the chance to challenge allegations they belong to Tren de Aragua
before they're removed.
You know, due process.
Lawyers will be back in Boesburg's court today for another scheduled hearing. DOJ lawyers are
supposed to say whether they plan to invoke state secrets privileges to
shield details about earlier deportations under the Alien Enemies Act
from the court.
President Trump announced Susan Maneras is his nominee to lead the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Maneras has been serving as the acting director since January.
Trump posted on Truth Social Monday that Maneras will, quote,
standards and disease prevention to finally address the chronic disease epidemic and make America healthy again.
Moneras was previously the deputy director of a research funding agency that supports
transformative biomedical and health breakthroughs.
Trump's announcement comes after the White House pulled the nomination of Dave Weldon
earlier this month.
The position requires Senate approval starting this year.
While Moneras does have a PhD, if confirmed she would be the first non-physician to lead the agency in more than 50 years. And that's the news. Before we go, a new episode of Polar Coaster just dropped.
In it, Dan Pfeiffer and Jon Favreau dive into the new 2024 election data and the findings
that came from it.
To access this exclusive subscriber series and more, subscribe now at Cricut.com slash
Friends.
That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, contemplate the fact that
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And if you're into reading, and not just about how this isn't the first time he's
done this and probably won't be the last, And the best way to fight back is for Wisconsinites to vote for the person who's not being
supported by noted weirdo Elon Musk, 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 Wisconsin voters, do your thing.
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