What A Day - WAD Wrapped 2022
Episode Date: December 16, 2022As the year comes to a close, we look back at the stories we thought were most memorable in 2022. We talk about the rising momentum of the labor movement, the politicization of drag, the overturning o...f Roe v. Wade, and the historic gains Democrats made in the midterm elections.Show Notes:WAD will be on a two-week break for the winter holidays. We’ll have a new episode on Tuesday, January 3rd!What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastVote Save America – https://www.votesaveamerica.comCrooked 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
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It's Friday, December 16th.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Treval Anderson.
And I'm Juanita Tolliver.
And this is What A Day,
the only new show podcast
that isn't generated by an AI chatbot.
Go figure.
Nope, we prefer to write epic medieval poetry
about fast food chains the old-fashioned way.
Priyanka, you okay over there?
Look, I'm just doing whatever the algorithm tells me to do.
Goodness, she's crossed over
y'all.
Hey, Wild Squad, thank you
so much for joining all four of us
here on the show today. Yeah.
I love sharing the screen with y'all.
This is so dope. It's so exciting.
Very exciting. We are all
here together because this will be our last
show for 2022 before we take a two-week break for the holidays.
Yes, it is almost 2023, which is weird because I think it's 2019.
Yep.
That's for a different time.
We wanted to take a look back at some of the biggest stories from this past year.
And really, there were a lot.
Juanita, we're going to have you kick things off for us.
All right.
Let's start with the fact that workers stood the fuck up for themselves in 2022.
This year, we saw workers across the nation fighting for better pay, better working conditions, and better benefits.
Frankly, all of which they deserve.
And they unionized at huge rates.
In the words of Beyonce, this is hustle personified.
And 2022 should be remembered as the year of the union push?
Oh, definitely will be for me.
I feel like we covered so many stories like this on the show and I'm proud that we have.
Yeah, it felt like a real turning point.
Right.
We're far more union friendly than Joe Biden, apparently.
But that's neither here nor there.
Burn.
In the wake of the, I mean, sick burn, right? In the wake of the pandemic, which exposed and emphasized the longstanding poor treatment of workers, especially essential workers,
the union push hit a high note in April when more than 2,600 Amazon workers in Staten Island, New York,
voted to join Amazon's first union in the United States, recognized by the National Labor Relations Board.
That vote and the push to unionize, like many others,
was led by black and brown organizers
and was sparked by a 2020 walkout
led by Chris Smalls and Derek Palmer.
Shortly thereafter, we saw votes
at other Amazon facilities across the country,
as well as Starbucks workers rising up too.
Since the first Starbucks unionized in Buffalo, New York,
only one year ago,
more than 260 Starbucks in 40 different states have
unionized, giving the union an 80% win rate. And we've since seen collective bargaining units
formed at other companies like Chipotle, REI, and Trader Joe's. And it's not just service workers.
This year, congressional staffers did it too, y'all. In May, the House voted to allow their
offices to unionize with all Republicans
opposing the legislation, of course. And in September, Representative Andy Levin's office
was the first to unionize under the Congressional Workers Union. You know, I completely forgot about
the congressional workers also unionizing. Same. So I'm glad you mentioned that. It's so great,
isn't it? Yeah. And that was one of the big ways most recently.
I do love the audacity of like voting against your workers getting more pay and still just like having to see them every day.
It's just so uncomfortable.
It's par for the course, though, Josie.
It's par for the course.
Would you just be at least a little embarrassed?
You're like, since I'm actually going to have to get coffee with you in the morning,
I guess I'll vote for you to be able to put food on the table.
No, they lost the ability to feel that emotion a long time ago.
Right. The cruelty is the point. Front and center for the Republican Party.
And this year we saw workers collectively set boundaries and essentially tell their employers what was up.
And it was timely as private sector corporations
raked in record profits with inflations at a 40-year high.
But naturally, corporations didn't fight fair in these union votes.
In the case of Amazon, the company reportedly called the police
on workers handing out union materials in Kentucky.
They've been accused of illegally firing workers in Chicago,
New York, Ohio, and they've allegedly retaliated against
workers in Pennsylvania and New York for their organizing efforts. Not to mention, they have
also deployed anti-union tactics like allegedly threatening to close an entire warehouse in
Alabama if the workers voted to unionize there. Advocates say that these types of escalating
behaviors just show how concerned Amazon is about the impact of
unions, but workers themselves say they aren't deterred by their efforts. Also, that's illegal.
It is illegal. I feel like someone should let them know. That part. And when it comes to interference,
Congress and the Biden administration just interfered with the rail workers union negotiations,
right? That's right. Now, the rail workers have been working through these negotiations for years. And what they're asking for is more paid sick time so that they can go
to the doctor or care for a sick family member or take time off when they aren't well themselves.
And at the start of negotiations, they had zero sick days. Zero. I feel like I got to repeat that
for emphasis because none of us would accept that. So it makes sense for them to push for that time
off, right? Well, everybody knows that railway workers don't get sick. So indestructible human
science, apparently. It's just science. Yeah. Well, after negotiations this summer, the rail
companies gave them one sick day. And last month, the workers rejected the deal. So cue the Biden
administration. President Biden said, look, we got the holidays coming up.
We're just getting on top of the supply chain issues and inflation is still hurting people.
So we don't want to lose rail transit over this fight. Biden then issued the directive for
Congress to use legislation to force rail workers to accept the deal, which only gave them one sick
day. Now, this isn't a move you'd expect from the self-declared most union-friendly president in history, but alas.
So now the rail workers were forced to take this deal when they were seeking about 15 days of paid leave,
but they only got one personal day.
And I have to mention that Democrats did try to pass an amendment in Congress
that would have given rail workers six days of paid leave.
But of course, Republicans rejected that provision because the cruelty
is the point, people. You know, it's their make workers suffer platform.
Also, Biden's the Amtrak president as well.
Really awkward on his part.
Incredibly.
Literally has a station named after him.
This man has been talking about Amtrak since I've known him. Not personally. No, totally. Obviously, the story
and what's happening is not good. But the story being in the news and the more people it reaches,
people who don't work jobs that are associated with unions, I feel like if they're encountering
this, you know this is not right. That is the one maybe good thing to come from this is that
more and more people will understand,
even with the Starbucks stories and the stories of Amazon and all of the efforts to unionize
around the country, maybe hopefully people have slightly more understanding of like why this is
important and the way these workers are treated and how not right that is. Yeah. Yeah. And it's
a reminder, right? Like even when you don't win, imagine what this fight would have been like without
union help. Like, imagine what it's like to go up against the Biden administration.
Or Amazon. That's the second largest employer in the country, right? Like, that's a huge fight.
Exactly.
And I appreciate people came together for it.
Yeah.
All right. Let me pass the baton over to you, my friend, Traevel. What you got?
All righty. So when I was thinking of what I consider to be one of the biggest stories of
this year, I knew I had to do something on LGBTQ rights issues, right? Because in addition to me
being a card carrying proselytizer of the gay and trans agenda, we are literally living through what
is a historic legislative attack on queer and trans people.
I don't know if y'all remember, but on the very first episode of WOD this year, back in January,
I spoke a bit about what organizers were predicting would be an onslaught of attempts to codify transphobia and legislate transphobic discrimination.
That has absolutely happened, but there was also a broader attack on the LGBTQ community as a whole as well.
The GOP has taken their anti-LGBTQ political strategy and dressed it up as a social issue.
And now in many states, in addition to trans youth not being able to play sports because they're banned from playing on the teams that align with their identities. Teachers can't really teach about the likes of Harvey Milk or Bayard Rustin
because the Floridas don't say gay bill and similar laws elsewhere.
The health care that some trans youth need has been banned
because Republicans think they know better than every major medical association
that says such gender-affirming care is life-saving.
A congresswoman tried to weaponize her homophobic tears to stop Congress from passing the Respect for Marriage Act.
They've been out here wild and out of control, y'all.
Aunt Vicky, somebody get her.
Aunt Vicky, gotta go.
Listen, that haircut and that jacket.
Oh, child.
Oh, child. But a particular story I wanted to highlight is about how drag shows and drag queen story hours have become sites of protest and armed violence because of the GOP's foolishness.
We've seen the headlines about Proud Boys and their guns disrupting these events, as well as other right wing conservatives stirring up controversy, talking about how their tax dollars are being used to push a political agenda.
That's how they sound to me all the time.
That's exactly what he sounds like.
I don't know if you were doing Brian Kemp, but that was accurate.
I'm gagged.
Why not?
So according to GLAAD, the world's largest LGBTQ media advocacy organization, as of November,
at least 124 incidents of anti-LGBTQ protests and threats
targeting drag events were reported this year alone. The majority of them happened during
Pride Month in June into September, October, and November, including false rhetoric about
some drag performers being used in some folks' campaign ads during the midterm elections.
It's apparently, you know, drag is that much of an issue. You've got to put it in your campaign ads these days. According to GLAAD's analysis,
not only did anti-drag incidents happen in at least 47 of our 50 states this year,
the rhetoric around them has become increasingly violent. And I think it's important to connect
this to tragedies like the Club Q shooting in Colorado Springs back in November that killed five people and wounded more than a dozen
others. The club was known for its drag shows, having had one that night, and they were gonna
have two more the next day. So all of this made me think back to a special episode of WOD that I did
in June with producer Raven Yamamoto about drag as a tool for political organizing. Everyone under
the sound of my voice should revisit it, but I especially want to play this bit from Peppermint
of RuPaul's Drag Race fame. I asked her about this political moment we're in and what is keeping her
smiling through it all. Here's what she said. The thought that we're going to get through this,
and that's kind of what I tell myself. It's like, yes, it's bad, but we're not going to just drop dead instantly. I know that a lot of these things do threaten the livelihood,
if not the lives of many individuals, but we will be there the day after to reconvene and figure out
what to do. Peppermint said we ain't going nowhere. So y'all better get used to it. Period.
Period. Absolutely. Absolutely. And there are more stories to come.
Priyanka and Josie, you're up next.
But first, we'll be back after some ads.
We are back on What A Day, all four of us.
Yay!
We're each sharing our top story from 2022.
Priyanka, it is your turn.
Yeah.
So one of the biggest things to happen this year and really just like in decades in this country was the Supreme Court's ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson's Women Health,
which overturned Roe v. Wade.
Oh, it was a dark day.
It was awful.
I mean, also several dark days
because of like the way it happened
and the draft being leaked.
Like it feels like it happened several times.
But yeah, the constitutional right to abortion
and really to bodily autonomy
was something that was protected
for all of us as Americans
for nearly
half a century. And that no longer exists today because of this court. It'll never stop being
outrageous and wild that we are being subjected to this against the will of the majority of US people.
But here we are. And many people took to the streets against this decision, including here
in Los Angeles. We have some audio from our amazing producers, Jazzy and
Raven, who went to the protest in Los Angeles and, you know, spoke to some people, captured some
audio and really kind of took the temperature of what was happening on the ground.
I mean, I know I was outside the Supreme Court for you I mean I know
I was outside
the Supreme Court
for multiple reasons
yeah wow
I had a TV hit
but also to protest
y'all like
I was pissed
like and that was in May
when the draft was leaked
I was out there
like screaming my head
off with everybody else
so shout out to everybody
who protested
absolutely
yeah
it's one of those stories
I feel like all of us
have like this like visceral reaction.
And also, you remember where you were.
You remember how you felt or that news alert, however you found out.
That's something that'll stick with me forever.
And it was definitely that feeling of even when you know it's coming, when it actually
happens, the bodily reaction is just so intensely strong.
It's a life-changing moment for so many of us.
Totally. I mean, the consequences of it were very swift. When the ruling came out,
it set off a wave of abortion bans across the country in GOP-led states. Now, most abortions
are banned in at least 13 states. There's more legislation all over the place. The DOPS decision
also had an immediate impact on healthcare. Abortion clinics in several states have been forced to close or limit their services, which has impacted the
healthcare choices that people have every day, depending on whatever state they're in, and the
resources that they may or may not have to travel, you know, to seek the care that they need.
It's also triggered major legal battles where advocates have sued to block abortion bans in
certain states from being enforced. And there's been an outpouring of everything from grief to rage to what I do want to focus on.
I do feel like is I don't want to say a silver lining, but this new energy that we're seeing from voters and people who were never even voting or particularly engaged in our politics before have been kind of incensed by what happened.
And that is the only appropriate response, in my opinion.
Right. Roe being overturned was a cornerstone of the 2022 midterms.
I think that is a critical part.
You guys are leading right into my section and I like it.
We love it.
So, I mean, for example, voters in Kansas, not, you know,
what we typically think of as like a particularly liberal place, voted
overwhelmingly against a ballot measure that would have led the state to ban abortion back in August.
That was just the start. People tried to say, I mean, Juanita, we talked about the midterms. People
tried to claim that like the only thing that was motivating people in the midterms was inflation
and the economy, and this wasn't going to get voters to the polls. But Democrats
had historic performance for a midterm election year with an incumbent Democratic president.
Abortion-related ballot measures in five different states all turned out in favor of abortion rights,
even in red states like Montana and Kentucky. They were so clearly wrong. They so clearly
underestimated how much people cared about this and how angry and how willing to fight people are for their rights.
Yeah. And how it's an interconnected issue. Right. Like I remember talking to the head of Planned Parenthood and she was like, these polls are missing the point that people see it all attached.
Abortion is connected to our social well-being, our physical well-being and our health, our economic well-being.
It's a criminal justice issue. It's criminal justice.
It's everything.
Exactly.
Definitely.
I mean, definitely cannot overstate the ways that this decision has impacted this year and the news that we've covered. But Josie, I know we led right into what you're talking about.
So let's hear your top story of 2022.
2022, like 2021 and 2020 and 2019 and all the other years for a long time, you could
suggest was kind of a rough one.
There was plenty of depressing news.
When are we getting a good year?
I know.
Please.
I know.
I know.
It's been a minute.
There was plenty of depressing news to go around, but there were also some bright spots
or at least like dim spots, maybe not bright, bright, but brighter than maybe we expected.
And take, for example, what you just mentioned, Priy bright, bright, but brighter than maybe we expected. And take,
for example, what you just mentioned, Priyanka, the midterm elections. After what felt like a
particularly depressing campaign season to me, like promise after promise of the red tsunami
coming our way. Like I told myself I wasn't even gonna watch the returns on election night.
But then of course, I gave in and was pleasantly surprised to see that it was not much of a red
tornado at all.
Not a single Senate incumbent lost their election and Democrats managed to even gain a seat.
The first time in 60 years they've managed to even hold steady in a midterm election when they've had the majority.
For context, the last time that happened, JFK was president.
And Biden was probably hanging out with like Corn Pop or whoever.
It's been a minute.
Oh, God.
And in my state, Georgia, we elected a Democratic senator again three times in two years.
Despite efforts to make voting less accessible, people really came out.
And sure, part of that is because Herschel Walker was a uniquely bad candidate.
Is that how we're describing it?
Uniquely bad?
On account of the fact that he can't actually form a sentence.
But still, you know, this is a reminder that across the country, in the so-called flyover states in the South and the places that often get written off as lost causes, right?
There are people dreaming of a better, more progressive future.
They are ready to fight for it.
They're here.
Totally.
And Georgia, so much organizing happened, and especially by black women in particular, often by black formerly incarcerated women.
You know, imagine the possibility of what the country could look like if we really saw every state as a battleground state.
Yeah. And made the investments in infrastructure and made the long term investments in organizing.
I will never forget Representative Nakima Williams, who's also the chair of Georgia Democrats, being like.
She's my house member.
She was like, we organize every day with everybody, everywhere.
They left no stone unturned in Georgia.
And that's the model Democrats need to adopt for 2024.
10,000 percent.
It was an incredible, incredible effort.
It was done without much of the infrastructure that other states have in terms
of the actual organizing on the ground, get out the vote stuff. The actual organizing infrastructure
in Georgia is pretty underfunded. And this is just a reminder of like, what could it look like
if we actually put a ton of money into the between election work as well, right? But it wasn't just
that we avoided a red hurricane or whatever. I'm just switching up the natural disaster with each time.
We got a lot to pick from.
Lava.
Lava's next.
As someone who focuses on criminal justice, I had spent the past year hearing elected officials fearmonger around crime so much to get votes.
Threatening to set back the little progress we've made over the past few years, right?
And I was so scared on election night that this craven messaging by so many on the right and too many on the left, by the way, was go to work.
That voters would go right back to this 1996 mentality, lock them up.
And that didn't happen.
I mean, we're still facing an uphill battle, right?
There's still a lot of minds to change.
But it's clear that many voters are thinking differently about what safety looks like and engaging with the possibility that law enforcement isn't our only or our best
option. And they're willing to prioritize different solutions. The midterms were also a reminder that
more of this country is left of center than we often think. We are told real America does not
look like us. Real America looks like something totally different. And it's just maybe not the
case here, you know. And it's just maybe not the case here, you know?
And it's a reminder that Democrats have an opportunity now to go big,
to pass strong progressive policies,
to insist on a robust social safety net,
to support children and the elderly,
to reduce houselessness,
to help create the conditions under which people can thrive.
That is the mandate.
And so let's hope they do it.
And this is one more time when I'm like, look at Georgia. Senator Warnock ran on that type of platform, was reelected, beat his numbers from November even because this is what people want. Plain and simple.
Really? Yep. And those are our personal top stories of 2022. A couple of things before we go.
We know there were so many other stories out there from this past year that we didn't get a chance to talk about.
But let us know what you think by tweeting us using the hashtag What A Day.
You can also find us on Instagram at What A Day.
Also, we will be back on Tuesday, January
3rd. And when we do come back, we'll talk about the stories we'll be covering in 2023
and the things we are looking forward to seeing. I do not like saying 2023. I don't like it.
Wrap your head around it, friend, because it's coming, like it or not.
Not into it.
That's all for us in 2022. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
strike fear into your boss's heart by organizing your co-workers,
and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just quietly judging everyone's Spotify-wrapped like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Traebell Anderson. I'm Josieanka Arabindi. I'm Traebell Anderson.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Juanita Tolliver.
And happy holidays to all.
Happy Christmas, Mahana Kwanzaa Cook.
Are y'all eating any good food for the holidays?
All the food.
No.
No?
Are we recording still?
Can I turn it off and tell the truth,
which is that I hate the holidays?
I'm a holiday grinch.
Oh my gosh.
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 Lita Martinez,
Michael Martinez, and Sandy Gerard.
Production support comes from Leo Duran, Ari Schwartz, and Matt DeGroot. With additional promotional and social support from Awa Okulate, Thank you.