What A Day - The Kids Are All Left
Episode Date: November 16, 2022Republicans have essentially secured a House majority for the next two years. But the GOP is in disarray, as members vying for leadership positions point fingers at who's to blame for their midterm lo...sses.Young voters turned out in historic numbers this election cycle to support Democrats. Victor Shi, strategy director for the Gen Z-led nonprofit Voters of Tomorrow, explains how young people helped beat back the anticipated “red wave.”And in headlines: President Biden said it’s “unlikely” that a missile that hit Poland was fired from Russia, a judge overturned Georgia’s “heartbeat” abortion ban, and the U.N. said the global population has reached 8 billion people.Show Notes:Chicago Tribune: “Victor Shi: Young voters showed up and helped prevent major losses for Democrats (Op-Ed)” – https://tinyurl.com/pyx8b6reVoters of Tomorrow – https://votersoftomorrow.org/AP News: 2022 midterms live updates – https://tinyurl.com/2p8u52z2Crooked 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 Wednesday, November 16th.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And this is What A Day, where we're not sharing any Pete Davidson dating rumors until they're confirmed by the Associated Press.
Okay, let's be irresponsible just for a second, though.
Because when I saw Dionne Warwick say she's got dibs, she said I got next on Pete.
Like, that sent me.
And Nick, you know he's going to get there.
Like, he's making his way down the list. Nobody is safe, but in a good way, he seems like a nice man.
On today's show, the Polish government said two people were killed in an explosion near
the border with Ukraine. But first, a little update on where control of the House stands
after last week's midterm elections. As of our record time at 9.30 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday,
Republicans have essentially secured a House majority
for the next two years.
But one thing is very clear.
Their majority will be extremely narrow.
What we've been seeing over the past few days, though,
is a lot of infighting between these Republicans.
Republicans in disarray over who is to blame
for those results
and how they'll be moving forward.
I feel like we need some alliteration, right?
Like what's the Republican equivalent
of Democrats in disarray?
Because we gotta appropriately describe the chaos
that has enveloped the GOP.
Oh, Republican rancor, come through, Bill.
That's our engineer, Bill Lance,
coming in in the chat with that one.
The Freedom Caucus is just getting warmed up, I promise you.
And the MAGA Republicans are tussling.
Meanwhile, I'm over here like, do carry on.
Please carry on.
Yeah, the girls are fighting and we're fine with it.
After their midterms flop, a number of Republicans are ready to challenge Kevin McCarthy and his nascent leadership role.
So Priyanka, what exactly is
happening with him right now? Yeah, so earlier Tuesday, House Republicans voted 188 to 31 to
nominate Kevin McCarthy as their choice for House Speaker. Obviously, that's a clear victory over
his challenger from the far right, Representative Andy Biggs of Arizona, who also used to be
chairman of the Freedom Caucus. You know, if you aren't familiar, the roster is basically a who's who of congressional crazies. It's everyone from Marjorie Taylor Greene to Lauren
Boebert to Madison Cawthorn. May his career rest in peace, please. But the number of conservative
lawmakers who voted against McCarthy does complicate his path to becoming speaker because
in order to become speaker, he needs the support of the majority of House members, so 218 votes at a minimum. If the red wave actually happened and
there were more Republicans in the House, you know, he might have enough people to support him
outright. But because the majority here will be super slim, he can't afford to lose very many
votes. So in order to secure these votes from some of the most conservative members of his party, he might have to make some big concessions, including ones that make them more powerful
and him less so. Right. Just like you said, Priyanka, 218 is the magic number. And apparently
MAGA extremists are making their demands, including requests for sham investigations.
And like you said, those concessions could also include potential limits on McCarthy as speaker. So if the conference gets tired of him, they might have the option of voting
him out of his position. So if he holds on that, his life every day is going to be a living hell.
Let's just name it. Pandemonium. I'm cool with it though. Right. He earned it. So that's what's
happening in the House. What's going on in the Senate? Yeah, I feel a little bit like that Marie Kondo meme, like I love mess, like the little girl
in front of the burning house. Oh my God, so sinister. Reveling in the chaos here. But in
the Senate, Rick Scott of Florida said he would challenge Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for his
leadership role. Lots of Republicans, including Donald Trump himself,
are trying to set McConnell up as this fall guy for the Republicans' inability to take back the
Senate majority this year, despite having favorable conditions heading into the election.
Scott is not expected to be successful here. He's a first-term senator and the first challenger that
McConnell has faced as the GOP Senate leader in 15 years. But, you know, still not great that
he's facing this very public opposition. I personally think based on how disastrously
Scott handles messaging, what he's all about, how he handles himself personally, that would be a
great outcome for Democrats. Like, would absolutely love Rick Scott with the most unpopular ideas of
all time to become the head of that party. But I will not get my hopes up because it doesn't really seem like that will happen.
Right.
Senate Republicans are expected to hold leadership elections today.
So we'll see what happens, what comes of this very, very soon.
Honestly, this all feels like retribution because McConnell called out the low quality
candidates that Trump and Rick Scott handpicked to run in these midterm Senate races.
And that's it.
So you also mentioned
Trump in there, the ultimate drag on every Republican who ran in a statewide race. And
at this point, he has cost Republicans three election cycles, and he's getting a lot of
public blame from Republicans right now. In spite of all of that, he made a big announcement last
night. What did this man have to say, Priyanka? Yeah, about Donald Trump. He has been
unraveling in real time over the past week on Truth Social, as many Republicans have started
to distance themselves from him. On Fox News yesterday, one of their hosts showed a graphic
with 13 potential Republican presidential candidates for 2024. Trump was not a part of
the graphic. Fuming! Yeah, I mean, the man just mainlines Fox News all day and all night.
So that must have been painful for him to watch.
Yesterday, he had his little event at Mar-a-Lago, just like he said he would.
He's running for president.
It's not surprising because we all knew he was going to do this.
And that is all we're going to say about that.
He's doing exactly what we knew he was going to do.
And we got to keep in mind why he's doing it, right?
He's doing it because it's about self-preservation and avoiding any type of prosecution or accountability
for the multiple investigations he's facing from the DOJ, from Fulton County, for stealing White
House classified materials, you know, all of that. But what can we expect now from Republicans if
they ever manage to get their shit together in Congress? That's a gigantic if. And like you were
saying, we all know that Donald Trump is going to hide behind the excuse that they are just doing this
to me because I'm running and this is politically motivated and it's a witch hunt. Like we all know
what's happening. It is clear as day. But anyways, before election day, Kevin McCarthy spent a lot
of time talking about these so-called priorities for Republicans, about immigration, about cutting
off financial aid to Ukraine, kickstartstarting oversight, quote-unquote investigations into the Biden administration that
includes potential impeachment for God knows what, Hunter Biden, the list goes on. With control of the
Senate and the White House, obviously Democrats can prevent Republicans from making the worst of
their MAGA fever dreams a reality, But with this infighting between different factions
of the Republican Party,
who knows what they will even be able to come together on.
It remains unclear at this point.
Look, what's wild is that they have such an extremist
and destructive agenda,
and Republicans still wonder why they got their butts whooped
in these midterms, especially with Black voters,
Latino voters, union voters, and youth voters.
Look, the 18 to 29-year-old voters showed up and did what needed to be done,
especially with 89% of black youth voters and 67% of Latino youth voters supporting Democrats.
Of course, that made a crucial difference across the board and in states like Michigan,
where Democrats won a trifecta, and Arizona, where 70% of young voters supported Katie Hobbs.
Excuse me, that's Governor-elect Katie Hobbs. Put some respect on her name.
I had a chance to catch up with Victor Shi, a Gen Z organizer, co-host of iGen Politics podcast,
and strategy director for Voters of Tomorrow to talk about all of this historic youth voter turnout,
why they overwhelmingly supported Democrats, and how they plan to mobilize youth voters
for the December 6th Georgia Senate runoff. I started by asking him what it took to organize and mobilize
youth voters at these historic levels. The turnout that we saw among young people and especially
young people of color was just extraordinary and really just inspiring. A lot of the conversations
heading into the midterm election was whether or not young people would show up. There was a piece
in Politico saying that young voters are MIA because of just historical patterns. I know it's just all of these
media and these pundits were saying that young voters would stay home, but we very much did not.
And a lot of it, I think, is because of kind of this Republican Party and what it's done to attack
our lives and really strip away rights. And so part of the organizing effort was to have those
conversations with young
people on just a human level. So individual conversations, what we call relational organizing,
where we're basically just meeting young people where they are, whether it be on college campuses,
in high schools, online spaces like TikTok or streaming platforms like Twitch. And so I think
at the end of the day, it's about meeting young people where they are and just making the choice
between this Democratic Party and this Republican Party as clear as possible for young people.
And Republicans did a lot of heavy lifting for you because when we had that conversation on 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle, we talked about how Republicans have absolutely nothing to offer youth voters.
I feel like that's going to just continue in the future based on the destructive agenda they've laid out for this next Congress.
So I guess my follow up, since we know what Republicans are likely going to do, how do you think youth voters are going to hold Republicans accountable in this next Congress?
I remember back in 2020, so I was a delegate to the DNC convention.
And I remember a week later, I was watching the RNC convention and there was absolutely no policy platform whatsoever.
And they've just really kind of continued that practice throughout those next two years into 2022.
And so I suspect that'll be the same thing.
And young people aren't oblivious to the fact that this is the state of the Republican Party.
And the great thing about Gen Z is that Gen Zers and millennials and young voters, we are only going to increase in political power.
I think there was a study that showed by 2024, we're going to outnumber any generation older than us. And so part of the next steps for Gen Z and how we kind of clap back
against the Republican Party is to still go on those online spaces. And one of the things that
we do best as a generation is we troll Republicans. We remember that one incident with Trump's rally,
it was young people who really stole all the tickets and depressed the turnout on that. So
I think young people are going to do what we do best, and that's really organizing online,
but also kind of calling out Republicans where they are and saying that we will not tolerate what you are trying to do with our lives.
Right. Now, on the flip side, in your recent Chicago Tribune op-ed, you noted that young voters overwhelmingly supported Democrats
because of their investments in climate change, because of their efforts to protect our most basic rights, like access to abortion, canceling student loan debt, and more. And I'm
a firm believer, if you show up, you deserve to be not only appreciated, but courted. That energy
can't stop and it can't drop. And so what do young voters want to see next from Democrats
over the next two years to keep them engaged and motivated?
So I think a lot of the policy issues that we're focusing on, and you said that so well,
which is basically that Democrats have done so much to deliver for young people and what we
care about from climate change to gun reform safety bills. And I think going forward, what
we're going to be watching closely from the Democratic Party is that they don't stop just
here. So we know, for example, with the gun reform legislation bill,
that was just the first step. There is so much more that we should be doing when it comes to gun safety and what we should pass with that. There's also climate change. The Inflation
Reduction Act was a great first step, but we hope that now, hopefully with the Senate,
they'll pass more laws that'll make climate change better and that we'll have a better
planet for our future generations. And then also, this generation cares deeply about representation in government and who is representing us. There's a new push
by some youth organizations to go and establish a youth advisory council in the White House to
make sure that young people, now that we voted for them, have a seat at the table and are included
in those conversations. I love that. I also want to know how you're going to engage with Maxwell Frost, the first Gen Z representative elected to Congress. And I'm sure you are very proud of him,
but how are you planning to engage with him in this new Congress?
He is just kind of the best of our generation. He's going to go into this new Congress,
even though it might be a little tight. But in terms of just looking at a member of Congress
and being able to relate to them, there are all of these cultural points where young people can relate to Maxwell Frost. He is someone who supports Taylor
Swift and is a big Taylor Swift guy. But the great thing about last Tuesday was that it wasn't just
Maxwell Frost. There were so many people across the country who were Gen Zers who won their election
on the state and local level. I can even think of people from my home state, Nabila Syed, who's
just an amazing recent graduate and who's going to be in the Illinois State House. And all of these and local level. I can even think of people from my home state, Nabila Syed, who just amazing
recent graduate and who's going to be in the Illinois State House. And all of these kind of
races down ballot, I think are going to be great for Gen Z. We're going to look around government
and see people who actually look like us and we're going to actually pay attention.
And I also appreciate the fact that Gen Z voters are just getting started in terms of
throwing your weight around in these elections. And of course, the most immediate next election is the Georgia Senate runoff. So how are youth voters and voters
of tomorrow going to be engaging and mobilizing voters on the ground in Georgia over the next
three weeks? So that's a key state. And we remember back in 2020, that race also went to a special
election. And part of the reason why John Ossoff and Reverend Raphael Warnock were able to get
elected that election is because of young people turning out to vote in historic ways.
And you saw that directly from the campaigns too.
One of their key strategies was going to TikTok and creating these kind of new digestible
forms of content for young voters.
And so I think in this election, Georgia is a very unique state.
There are lots of minorities, lots of young people, lots of women.
And so all of these demographics are going to be key for Democrats in turning up our vote.
And one of the things I think is most important to note about Georgia is that if you didn't register to vote before November 8th, you actually can't vote in this special election because of all of the absurd Georgia election laws.
So this election is very much going to be about turnout.
And so all of us are going to have to do our part to make sure that we turn out the vote in Georgia. And I know that includes having conversations with
young voters, going to college campuses, and really kind of using young students and the
power of our voice to turn up that vote. That's what we're going to be doing in the next three
weeks before December 6th. That was my conversation with Victor Shee. And if you want to learn more
or get engaged with Voters of Tomorrow, we will add their website to the show notes.
That's the latest for now.
Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
The Polish government said on Tuesday that a Russian-made missile landed near its border with Ukraine, killing at least two people. The report, which has not been confirmed as of our record time Tuesday night, comes as Russia unleashed another volley of missile attacks against cities across Ukraine. The Kremlin has
denied Poland's claims, and it's unclear if it was an intentional strike. Still, NATO leaders will
convene today for an emergency meeting about the incident, though Poland, which is a member of the alliance, does not appear to be treating it as a deliberate attack right now.
And President Biden, who was meeting with world leaders for the G20 summit in Indonesia, said this.
There is preliminary information that contests that.
I don't want to say that till we completely investigate.
But it's unlikely in the minds of the trajectory that it
was fired from Russia. But we'll see. If it's determined that Moscow was behind the blast,
it could trigger Article 5 of NATO's constitution, which states that an attack on one member state
is an attack on all of them. Really, really serious stuff. A judge overturned Georgia's six-week abortion ban
yesterday, meaning that the state can no longer enforce it. The restrictive rule was known as the
heartbeat bill when it was signed by Governor Brian Kemp in 2019 because it outlawed the procedure
once a fetal heartbeat could be detected. It couldn't take effect until the summer after Roe v.
Wade was overturned, but the judge who issued yesterday's ruling found that the ban has no legal merit
because it was enacted years ago when abortion was still a constitutional right.
The spokesperson for Georgia's Attorney General, Chris Carr,
said that his office plans to appeal the decision.
And just when you thought there couldn't be any more good news out of the great desert state of Arizona,
yesterday voters officially passed a proposition that will make undocumented students eligible for in-state tuition rates and state-funded
financial aid if they choose to attend a public university or college. In case you didn't know,
non-citizens seeking higher education usually have to pay out-of-state tuition because of their legal
status, and they usually don't qualify for a lot of scholarships and grants to make up that extra cost.
This proposition will make college more affordable for more than 3,000 undocumented Arizonans every year, according to the American Immigration Council.
One of the babies born yesterday became the 8 billionth member of the global population, according to the U.N.
It is impossible to know which baby it was, but maybe once they all get a little older,
they can fight it out for the title.
UN officials frame the milestone as a reflection on humanity's advancements
in medicine, public health, nutrition, and personal hygiene.
For those of you keeping track,
$7 billion was just 11 years ago in 2011,
and considering that the global growth rate has slowed,
the UN thinks it'll be
15 years before we hit
9 billion in 2037.
Wow.
That stresses me the hell out.
Huge numbers.
And because somebody's
got to give all 8 billion of us
something to dance to,
the nominees for the Grammy Awards
were announced yesterday
honoring some of the best
music of 2022.
Surprising absolutely no one, least of all me.
The most nominated artist this year was Queen B, Beyonce.
She scored nine nods, bringing her career total to 88.
Count them.
That ties her up with one artist, Jay-Z,
who happens to be her raggedy husband,
but we'll take it.
We'll accept it.
Kendrick Lamar scored eight nominations, and Adele
and Brandi Carlile each got seven.
And there's no use dwelling on the negative,
but we'll just say that two other
people whose recent output
has been questionable were also
honored with nominations. Their names rhyme
with Dave Shusmel
and EOECK.
Yep. When I tell you,
I'm hype. I'm so hype. And in When I tell you, I'm hype.
I'm so hype.
And in addition to Queen B,
I'm so thrilled to see Memphis superstar Glorilla
get nominated
as well as the magnificent
Viola Davis,
who has a shot
at becoming an EGOT,
if her audio book wins.
This is Black Girl Magic
all sprinkled up
and through these
Grammy nominations
and I can't wait.
Totally.
I had no idea
that Jay-Z was the most nominated artist.
Also really surprising,
but like so cool that it's just them.
Just those two chilling up there.
Probably will be forever.
I guess you can say they're a power couple.
I will accept that moniker.
We'll allow it.
And those are the headlines.
We'll be back after some ads
to discuss the pain and heartbreak
that was millions of Swifties trying to simultaneously use Ticketmaster.
I hear it in your voice, Priyanka.
It's Wednesday, WOD Squad, and for today's Tim Check, we're discussing Panic, Taylor's version,
or the feeling that millions of Taylor Swift fans experienced yesterday when they tried to buy tickets for her 2023 Heiress Tour.
Tickets are being sold exclusively through Ticketmaster, and due to what the company described as, quote,
historically unprecedented demand, their website started seeing outages in the morning.
Swift crazed millennials found themselves waiting for hours in lines that didn't seem to move.
And people like Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez share criticism of the ticket giant,
which has often been accused of boxing its competitors out of primary and secondary markets and price gouging.
AOC tweeted, quote, Daily reminder that Ticketmaster is a monopoly.
Its merger with Live Nation should never have been approved and they need to be reined in.
Break them up.
So, Priyanka, this story is deeply personal to you.
How are you feeling about yesterday's ticket disaster?
So, listen, I didn't actually get to participate in any of this yesterday because I was on the wait list for the presale.
I didn't even get a code.
Oh, so you didn't even get in? You had to wait outside? I didn't even get a code to be a part
of the pre-sale. They said, no, sorry, you got to wait till it goes on sale to the general public
in, I don't know, two days. So I'm never getting a ticket. And we know it's going to be marked up
by then, like in the thousands, probably. Who knows? Apparently they're releasing more tickets. They
only had a certain number for presale, whatever, which like I hope. But the crazy thing of all of
this is this like dynamic pricing. Like had Ticketmaster just left all the tickets as is,
like it was just a crazy experience, but like everything was the same price. It was easy,
straightforward. That might be one thing, but you had people like logging on and
being like, I see tickets that are like $700. And you saw other people who were like, I see tickets
that are reasonably priced. Wait, wait. So they made it a variable? Yeah. Based on how much demand.
What the hell? They're totally price gouging, but that's fine because there were enough eyes on this
that tweets like AOCs, like people who are complaining about this company and its practices,
like are getting attention from people who did not care, did not know.
Right.
And had like no business caring about this before.
But you know what would take this to the next level?
I need Taylor Swift to speak out.
So Taylor, Taylor Friend, if you're listening,
your fans need you to call out these horrible price gouging practices from Ticketmaster.
And AOC can give you some notes and talking points if you need them, friend.
But we need Taylor Swift to lead this movement.
This fan needs a ticket also, by the way.
So thanks, Taylor.
You can send it to Priyanka at whataday.
I'm available.
I'll go anywhere.
Just let me know.
I just want a ticket, please.
And just like that, we have checked our temps.
They are hot, like the server's running ticket master.
One more thing before we go. The Crooked Store just launched some brand new merch from some of your favorite shows, including new sweatshirt designs inspired by Love It or Leave It and
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That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
send a birthday gift to the eight billionth child, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just emails that say,
you got the tickets from Ticketmaster like me,
I would be very into reading an email like that.
Right?
What a Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And let's all root against
E-W-E-C-K.
Just a disgusting human.
I can't believe he's even
in the lineup to be considered
for these awards.
Absolutely no.
Edit Undo Grammys.
Edit Undo.
You can take it back.
Bye.
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 producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.