What A Day - The Redistricting Game
Episode Date: October 30, 2025A Virginia judge allowed the state’s Democrats to pursue a redistricting plan on Wednesday that would permit them to amend the state’s constitution and redraw its congressional districts before ne...xt year’s midterm elections – despite a lawsuit from Virginia Republicans. Those Democrats are following a national trend, kicked off by President Trump. Back in August, Trump called on Texas to redraw its congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterms in order to minimize Republican losses in the House. And after Texas redrew its maps, California Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom responded by putting forward a plan to redistrict his state through a ballot measure, Proposition 50, that would redraw California’s congressional districts and push five Republicans out of their seats. Californians will be voting on the proposition on Election Day next week. To explain the fight and how the 2026 Midterms became a battle royale, I spoke with John Bisognano. He’s the President of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee.And in headlines, Congress continues to prove pointless as funding for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits are set to expire for millions of Americans, the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates again, and immigration officials deport a man living in Alabama to Laos despite literally being ordered not to.Show Notes:Check out the National Democratic Redistricting Committee – democraticredistricting.com/Call Congress – 202-224-3121Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What 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 Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Thursday, October 30th. I'm Jane Koston, and this is what a day, the show that's here to remind you that college football is politics, and politics is college football. Exhibit 1,215. Here's Louisiana Republican Governor Jeff Landry, who is very, very, very upset at recently fired LSU head football coach Brian Kelly, explaining a fun idea as to who should pick his replacement on Wednesday.
And you know what? I believe, I believe that we're going to find a great coach. I mean, maybe we'll let president.
and Trump pick it. He loves winners. You know? I'm not going to be picking the next coach.
But I can promise you, we're going to pick a coach. And we're going to make sure that that coach is
successful. And we're going to make sure that he's compensated property. And we're going to put
metrics on it because I'm tired of rewarding failure in this country.
Based on President Donald Trump's prior work in the sport of football, Governor Landry,
I don't think you want him involved here unless you want to be rewarding more failure.
On today's show, Congress continues to prove pointless, as funding for Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program benefits is on the verge of expiring for millions of Americans.
And immigration officials deport a man living in Alabama to Laos, despite literally being ordered not to.
But let's start with the hottest topic everyone is talking about right now.
Congressional redistricting.
A Virginia judge allowed the state's Democrats to pursue a redistricting complaint on
Wednesday that would permit them to amend the state's constitution. It allows Virginia's congressional
districts to be redrawn before next year's midterm elections despite a lawsuit from Virginia
Republicans. Those Democrats are following a national trend kicked off by Trump. Back in August,
Trump called on the state of Texas to redraw its congressional maps ahead of the 26 midterms
in order to minimize Republican losses in the House. After Texas redrew its maps, California Democratic
Governor Gavin Newsom responded by putting forward a plan to redistrict his
state through a ballot measure. Proposition 50 that would redraw California's congressional districts
and push five Republicans out of their seats. The message Prop 50 backers want voters to hear,
this vote is a way to stop Trump. Here's a Prop 50 ad starring New York Democratic Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. California, you know we don't back down from a fight, and this November,
the fight belongs to you. Donald Trump is redrawing election maps to force through a Congress that
only answers to him, not the people. If he gets away with it, all bets are off for our health care,
our paychecks, and our freedoms. And the wave of redistricting just keeps growing. So to explain the
fight and how the 26 midterms became a battle royal, I spoke to John Bizignano. He's the president
of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee. John, welcome to what today. Thanks for having me.
So typically, congressional districts get redrawn every 10 years based on new numbers from the
census, and it's very, very boring. So how did we get here? Why are we all talking about redistricting now
in 2025? Because Donald Trump is two things. One, he has consolidated a great deal of power within the
Republican Party, which we all appreciate. And two, he has made himself acknowledge publicly that he
cannot win this election fairly in 26, right? Through all of his bills and the public posture as
his approval-ranking tanks, he realizes and is comfortable being public with the reality
that he needs to cheat. So he picked up the phone called Governor Greg Abbott and said,
Texas, you need to gerrymander as much as you possibly can because we do not have the votes
to hold the House come 2026 if you don't. And so there are a lot of moving parts to this,
but before we get into the nitty-gritty, where does the House of Representatives currently stand?
How many seats does each party have? Well, right now, there's a majority.
in the House held by the Republican Party by three seats. There are vacancies consistently
throughout the cycle, but the reality, I think, is over the past two congressional election cycles,
it's important to remember that we've had the most representative maps, arguably in this country's
history. And I say that as a Democrat and Republicans won those two congressional cycles. I
acknowledge that. Now, the thing that changed in the past few months is the call that I referred to
earlier, where Donald Trump called Greg Abbott and said, you need to redraw, you need to steal
five seats out of Texas and pull us out of this paradigm where we are on a reasonable playing
field, where both parties have the ability to win to compete for the House of Representatives
and pull us back to a time of 2012, 2014, where it's really difficult for both parties to
compete.
And typically in midterm elections, the president's party loses seats in Congress.
This was less true in 2022, but extremely true.
if you recall 2014 or, more optimistically, 2018.
That's right.
So Democrats could very realistically win back the House next year, which is why Trump is
doing this.
Can you walk us through the Republican states that are working to redraw their maps ahead
of the 2026 midterms?
How many seats are realistically under threat here?
Yeah, I mean, anything between zero and 20, but what we're currently sit at, right?
I just want people to remember, current moment right now, as we sit here, three states have
redraw on their maps. And that's Texas, Missouri, and North Carolina. All Republican states
redrawing to gerrymander away Democratic seats. Texas took probably five seats, or at least by
their own estimation. Missouri took one. North Carolina took one. And I'll add six out of the seven
individuals that were drawn out of their seats were people of color. They're also trying to discredit
and pull back as many seats of color as possible. So it's not just about political party.
It's also a racial issue.
What other states are angling to redraw their maps because of pressure from the White House?
Yeah, so right now we're hearing consistent rumors from places like Indiana, Kansas, Nebraska,
even some in New Hampshire, where folks in the White House had threatened to primary the governor
or she didn't yield to the will of Donald Trump.
Yeah, I was very interested in the New Hampshire situation because their governor has no interest in doing this at all.
Yeah, seemingly most folks in most states have no interest in doing this.
And, you know, I had been talking to people in Texas all years, starting in January,
acknowledging that they could redraw at any time.
I know that that's true.
No one in Texas, both Republicans and Democrats, seemingly wanted to do this at all.
And yet, we found ourselves in a place where they all acquiesced to Donald Trump's pressure.
And seemingly, a map was drawn and sent to the governor of Texas.
So this was, like, completely concocted in Washington sent to Texas for execution, and that's where it landed.
Another thing that we're hearing a lot about or that I've been reading about is the ways in which this is all ending up in our favorite place, the American court system.
So what's the litigation strategy over these seats and over these maps?
Yeah, I think it's such a critical reality to remember that there is litigation in all these states.
And most of the states and the actions these folks are taking is by some measure illegal.
So whether it be a state constitutional issue or a federal constitutional issue or a federal statute,
issue that are being broken by redrawing these maps. Our organization, the National
Redistricting Foundation, is already in court in Texas, in Missouri, will likely be in court in
many of the other states that I referenced over the course of this episode, because trying to claw
back some of these maps from what Republicans have done is an equally valuable part of the
equation and trying to understand what it's going to look like in 2026. This year, we're
also seeing something that isn't historically common. Some Democrats are fighting fire with fire
and working to draw new congressional maps of their own.
So how many states led by Democrats are pushing back?
Obviously, California is the most notable and quickest to move.
California, Governor Newsom picked up a platform nearly immediately
when Texas got serious about what they were going to do
and started moving forward with a bill to move it to the people
and allow the people in California to decide
whether they wanted to fight back against Trump's Texas jurymander.
You know, we've seen consistent polling that's positively inclined.
I'm a superstitious person that won't say I know that we're going to win this election on November 4th on Prop 50 in California, but I feel hopeful and I feel very positively or optimistic about the path forward in getting five seats out of California, which would offset what Texas has done.
You're hearing rumors out of Maryland, in Illinois, places that are trying to take action to bring us back to that level of fair and representative democracy that I was talking about earlier.
now regardless of how the districts may or may not change ahead of the 2026 midterms and let me just say it's kind of insane that all of this is happening for a midterm election deeply like i just keep thinking about how midterms typically only draw voters who are the most committed in the first place but overall what does all of this mean for the future of american elections especially as so much of this seems to be about eliminating the seats held by the political opposition of
a given state. Yeah, and trying to use the year before an election even takes place to reshape or
pre-shape the exact look of the map and the electorate and what it's going to look like. I mean,
some people are making guesses when they draw these maps. They don't know exactly what the
electorate's going to look like, but the truth is they are trying to take this moment in time
and draw the Americans' people voice out of the equation, right? They don't want people to be able
to really have a choice. And so I think we need to do everything in our power to continue to
fight back. The other paradigm that's so bizarre is I'm not sure we've ever seen a White House
this comfortable with the reality that they can't win without cheating and so much so that
they're spending all of this time, right? Like they're having J.D. Vance basically used the
Indianapolis airport as a hub for Air Force 2, right? This guy has been flying in and out of Indianapolis
trying to twist state senators' arms to get them to redraw maps in Indy. It doesn't make any sense.
could be taking this time, this valuable presidential time, and using it to try and lower the cost
of drug prices, or, you know, lower the cost of groceries, things that people know that they need,
but this White House doesn't care about that. And they know that they've already lost that. And so
what they're really trying to do is cheat to hold on to power as long as possible.
John, thank you so much for joining me. Thank you so much for having me.
That was my conversation with John Bisignano, president of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee.
the news in a moment, but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe, leave a five-star
review on Apple Podcasts, watch us on YouTube, and share with your friends. More to come after some ads.
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Here's what else we're following today.
Headlines.
Snap recipients shouldn't go without food.
People should be getting paid in this country.
And we've tried to do that 13 times.
You voted no, 13 times.
This isn't a political game.
These are real people's lives that we're talking about.
That was a Republican Senate Majority Leader.
John Thune, getting very worked up on the Senate floor Wednesday over a problem that he helped
create. Unless Congress acts soon, funding for SNAP benefits will expire on Friday. Ironically,
Thune made those comments while blocking a Democratic bill to continue funding SNAP during the shutdown.
The majority leader also called the bill a, quote, cynical attempt to buy political cover by the Democrats.
But his finger pointing doesn't explain why he's also opposed to a similar bill to fund SNAP
from Missouri Republican Senator Josh Hawley. And even though President Trump told reporters this week,
Quote, we're going to get it done when asked about SNAP benefits running out.
Soon later clarified that the president meant, once the government is reopened,
SNAP will get funded. In other words, they're probably not going to get it done.
Meanwhile, a silver lining for federal workers amid this mess of a shutdown.
A federal judge in San Francisco indefinitely blocked the Trump administration from firing federal employees
while the government remains closed.
Her ruling indicates that the labor union suing the federal government will eventually win
on the grounds that the firings were arbitrary and politically motivated.
And somehow, the judge was not convinced by assistant U.S. attorney Michael Valkich,
arguing in court that Americans elected Trump because he's, quote,
someone known above all else for his eloquence in communicating to employees that you're fired.
That's exactly the type of compassion we can depend on from this administration.
The Pentagon has ordered every state National Guard to form new, quote,
quick reaction to forces trained in riot control,
according to an internal directive obtained by the Guardian.
The memo signed October 8th, direct states to train about 500 guard members each, roughly 23,500 troops in total, in tactics including the use of batons, body shields, tasers, and pepper spray.
Military trainers will deploy to all 50 states and even U.S. territories where paradise is apparently lost, like Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The goal is to make these units, quote, operational by January 1, 2026.
Military experts told the Guardian, the Trump administration's plan echoes a darker chapter of U.S. history.
when National Guard troops were routinely sent to put down protests, most infamously during the 1970 Kent State shooting, where four unarmed students were killed by the Ohio Guard.
Apparently, when Trump says he wants to make America great again, this is the again he's talking about.
In support of our goals and in light of the balance of risks to employment and inflation, today the Federal Open Market Committee decided to lower our policy interest rate by a quarter percentage point.
Absolutely riveting.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell announced the rate cut Wednesday, despite the delay of some federal government data thanks to the shutdown.
But...
The public and private sector data that have remained available suggests that the outlook for employment and inflation has not changed much since our meeting in September.
Conditions in the labor market appear to be gradually cooling, and inflation remains somewhat elevated.
It's the second cut this year as a central bank looks to bolster economic growth and hiring.
The Fed has a tricky job at the moment.
It's reducing borrowing costs to support the job market,
while still keeping rates high enough to avoid overstimulating the economy
and making inflation worse.
Powell also warned that further rate cuts at the Fed's next meeting in December
were not a guarantee due to the limited data and differing opinions between Fed officials.
Immigration officials deported an Alabama father to Laos,
though, wait for it, a federal court had ordered a halt to his removal after his lawyers
argued his valid claim to U.S. citizenship. A district judge ordered immigration and customs
enforcement to keep the 44-year-old man in the United States while he presented what the judge
calls his, quote, substantial claim of U.S. citizenship. He was born in a refugee camp in Thailand,
but was granted lawful permanent residence in the U.S. before his first birthday, according to court
filings. ICE took the man into custody back in June, following an annual check-in with immigration
authorities in Alabama where he lived with his wife and children. The executive director for the ACLU
of Louisiana said in a statement, quote, this administration has shown it will ignore the courts,
ignore the Constitution, and ignore the law to pursue its mass deportation agenda, even if it means
destroying the lives of American citizens. And that's the news.
One more thing.
We've talked a lot about Jeffrey Epstein on this show.
Over the past few months, as the fight over getting more information about his crimes,
his collaborators, and who knew what about his offenses against young women and girls.
We've talked about Trump administration officials who spent most of the 2024 campaign talking about Epstein's criminality
and how they get to the bottom of it going silent once in office.
But one thing we haven't done on the show
is talk about the survivors of Epstein's sexual abuse
or, more importantly, talk to them.
And that's the story I want to bring you today.
I recently spoke with Lisa Phillips.
In our conversation, she shared how she was first introduced
to Jeffrey Epstein, and the first time he allegedly assaulted her.
So I was a young fashion model in New York City,
living the dream.
I worked really hard to get there
and got this wonderful booking
through my model agency at the time
with another model
and we flew with the whole crew
down to Tortola in the British West Indies
and the other model was a young Polish girl
smart and beautiful
and we had a free extra day
where she was just like
you know I have a friend who owns an island nearby
his name's Jeffrey he's a really great guy
He helped me get my visa to work in the U.S.
So she was just like, I'd love for you to come with me and go to his island to spend the day there.
Like, why should we stay here?
I didn't really think that much of it.
I was in my early 20s, and so was she.
And so we went over to the island to be hung out by the pool.
And then after that, we had a really beautiful dinner.
And that's where I met Jeffrey.
And, you know, as a young girl, most men are attracted to you,
ask the same stupid questions.
But he was, like, very intentional with his questions, and he asked, like, where I lived, where I grew up, my relationship with my father and my family members, and just made you have that emotional feeling like, yeah, you know, great family, but, you know, that's not really around, never really calls me kind of thing.
So I was probably pretty telling.
Yeah.
And I liked him.
I just had never been around a person like that before.
So I went to the room where we were going to stay that night.
We were leaving in the morning, which I didn't know that was going to be the plan.
But that's what they had organized for us.
And so we were in her PJs, getting ready to go to sleep.
And there was a knock at the door by one of the other young girls that was there.
And she said, oh, Jeffrey's ready for his massage.
That's when everything went a little off.
And then I looked at the other Polish model and said, like, what's going on?
like what massage and she's like well we kind of just have to do it you know let's just go and just
get it over with and I'm like okay well it's just the massage is some older guy you didn't seem so bad
so I just followed her into his room there was a massage table so we started to do this massage on this
guy and and he was a little more like flirty asking questions about boyfriends and things like that
And he, well, he assaulted me.
Like many survivors of sexual abuse, Lisa didn't go public.
Instead, she returned to New York after the incident with a lot of shame.
She tried to forget what happened and didn't talk to Epstein for a while,
even though he contacted her repeatedly.
She said, ultimately, they reconnected for a few years after he introduced her to modeling contacts
to help further her career.
I didn't start speaking out until 2019 until he died.
And that was the first time where I started paying more attention because I had an emotional reaction to it.
You know, this was kind of a mentor person I thought was good for me, who really wasn't.
And I didn't speak about that type of abuse that was going on the entire time.
Were you also concerned, because you mentioned that there were a lot of powerful people that were so close to Epstein.
And a lot of those powerful people would have so much influence over your career, over what you would get to do in the future.
Was that something that held you back a little bit?
Of course.
Of course it did.
I would have never spoken out if Jeffrey was alive.
I would never have spoken out on my own.
I really did it because some of the girls that spoke out were underage.
And it was the exact same MO that he did with the 14 to 17-year-old girls in Florida.
as the 18 to 24-year-old girls in New York City.
So, naively, I just wanted to speak out and support them.
I had no idea it was going to turn into six years of this
and end up in Congress.
I asked Lisa about the so-called birthday book
released by the House Oversight Committee,
which was prepared for Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003
and included a hand-drawn note allegedly from President Donald Trump.
Trump denied that he wrote and signed the letter.
It was very telling, wasn't it? It was triggering for me and a lot of the survivors that I've talked to because it just shows the perverse world of Jeffrey Epstein and the people involved. It was like, wow, finally you get to see a look into how they all thought, how they all talked. That was Jeffrey. That is exactly how he used to speak about his life and his little cheesy little grin about what he loved in life was really sex.
Right? Even the P-word, he would say, like, that's what life is about.
Yeah.
So that birthday book was the best representation of the people around him.
Lisa has become a vocal advocate for survivors of sexual assault and abuse, including speaking out about Epstein on Capitol Hill.
I wanted to know what she'd say to people listening with their own stories of survival.
Thank you for asking that.
The most important thing for me to tell of survivors is don't be ashamed of what happened to you.
I dealt with that for 15 years.
Unfortunately, it happens to a lot of us,
maybe not to the degree of with Epstein or...
Right.
But some of us have narcissistic ex-husbands.
I mean, there's so many different levels of abuse.
Don't be ashamed of what happened to you
and that you have the power to own it
and to move on from it.
I just want you to know that there is light at the end of the tunnel.
And look at me.
Look at what happened to me.
And I'm out here speaking.
about it and owning it and healing from it and that you can too.
Thank you to Lisa and to all survivors for sharing your stories.
And when Congress returns, you can be sure we will be covering the potential release of
more information about Jeffrey Epstein's crimes.
Before we go, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said, there is power in unity and there
power in numbers. Turns out the numbers back him up. Just 3.5% of people can change everything.
This week on Assembly Required, Stacey Abrams talks with a professor behind that theory,
political scientist Erica Chenoweth, about how protest paired with strikes, boycotts, and
mutual aid can shift the course of history. Listen to Assembly Required wherever you get your
podcasts or watch on YouTube. That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you
subscribe, leave a review. Celebrate the dropping of charge.
against a man who made a Trump meme and got arrested for it and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading, a not just about Larry Bushart, a 61-year-old man who has been in jail
for the past month for posting a meme that quoted Trump's statements after a school shooting.
A meme the sheriff admitted to a local news channel was not a threat to do literally anything to anyone,
like me, what a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe.
I'm Jane Koston, and I'm so glad that free speech was the victor over those nanny state
Snowflicks. Finally, comedy is legal again.
What a day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Desmond Taylor.
Our associate producers are Emily Four and Chris Allport. Our video editor is Joseph Dutra.
Our video producer is Johanna Case. We had production help today from Greg Walters,
Matt Berg, Sean Ali.
Gina Pollack and Caitlin Plummer.
Our senior producer is Erica Morrison,
and our senior vice president of news and politics is Adrian Hill.
We had helped today from the Associated Press.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.
Our production staff is proudly unionized
with the Writers Guild of America East.
