What A Day - We Need To Talk About Kevin McCarthy
Episode Date: May 13, 2022The January 6th commission issued subpoenas to five Republican Congressmembers including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy in order to gain information about communications they had with the White ...House leading up to the riot, during it, and after. These are critically being issued before the committee begins its public hearings next month.Tomorrow is a nationwide day of action with Bans Off Our Bodies rallies. These demonstrations are meant to empower people to stand up for abortion access in a time when Roe v. Wade is poised to be overturned by the Supreme Court. Kelley Robinson, the Executive Director of Planned Parenthood Action Fund and an organizer for the marches, joins us to discuss her message to folks who plan on attending.And in headlines: Finland’s leaders announced that their country would apply for NATO membership, Twitter fired two of its top executives and instituted a hiring freeze, and Spain is considering monthly medical leave to folks who suffer from severe menstrual pains.Show Notes:Ban Off Our Bodies Rally on May 14th – https://bit.ly/3P1KxgNSend us your pics and videos from your time at a rally – wad@crooked.comDonate to abortion funds, take action and more via Vote Save America – votesaveamerica.com/roeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, May 13th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Travelle Anderson. And this is What A Day,
where we avoided taking losses in the cryptocurrency crash simply by having low financial literacy.
That's right. I invest solely in gold bars. Those will never depreciate in any sort of value.
Well, you might want to look deeper into that, I believe.
I will be taking no further questions.
On today's show, with Ro poised to be overturned, we talk with one of the organizers of tomorrow's
nationwide march to protect abortion rights. This is not a drill. This is not an alarm.
This is the moment that we have been anticipating. Plus, we'll hear the entry that will probably make Ukraine the winner of tomorrow's Eurovision Song Contest. But first, some Trump and
January 6th news. Yesterday, the New York Times reported that federal prosecutors convened a grand
jury to investigate former President Trump and the possibility that he mishandled classified
information. Already, that grand jury has issued a subpoena. Gideon,
can you give us some background here? Yes. So as a refresher, the National Archives found out in
January that Trump had apparently taken something like 15 different boxes from the White House to
White House South, aka Mar-a-Lago, when his term ended. That is not typical. Federal law requires
that records be turned over at the end of a term.
And the committee investigating the January 6th insurrection has been requesting and receiving
various documents from the National Archives over the course of their investigation. There have also
been anecdotes about some records being torn up when the National Archives received them. Again,
not extraordinarily typical, not to mention
that toilet flushing anecdote that someone reported where Trump had apparently maybe put
some in the toilet. We don't really know. But when these particular boxes were returned,
the agency reported to Congress that there were some items in there that were, quote,
marked as classified national security information. Fast forward a couple of months to April,
and we found out that an investigation was getting started about all this.
Okay, so that brings us to the news about that grand jury and the subpoena.
What else do we know about this investigation?
Yeah, so the subpoena is to the National Archives, according to the New York Times sources. And also,
there have been some interview requests sent to people who worked in the White House towards the
end of Trump's term, presumably about why these things were taken, how they were selected. I don't
know. It's a little too early to say what would come of this, if anything. And as this story notes,
there are rarely charges and investigations pertaining to the handling of classified
materials. Ironically, we have a very recent example of that with Hillary Clinton's emails
in 2016. I will leave it there. Nonetheless, this is definitely something to keep an eye on
as we go forward. And that is far from the only subpoena news of the day. In fact,
there was a pretty big update on this from the January 6th commission. What's new over there?
Yeah, they issued subpoenas to five Republican members of Congress, including House Minority
Leader Kevin McCarthy, in these further efforts to gain information about communications with the White House leading up to the riot during it and after.
The other members here are Representatives Scott Perry, Jim Jordan, Andy Biggs, and Mo Brooks.
And as is the nature with subpoenas, these are coming now because these representatives did not want to get voluntarily interviewed. They are also critically being issued before the committee begins that round
of public hearings in primetime next month. So this does mark a pretty big moment in the
committee's actions overall, because it is the first time it has tried to compel fellow lawmakers
to testify. These are people they work with. It had been pretty reluctant to
subpoena GOP members. And according to multiple reports, they have been talking about past
precedent for taking such actions with sitting members. One of the Washington Post sites is an
investigation from the House Ethics Committee into the finances of former Democratic Rep. Charles
Rangel. That involved a subpoena. So it's unclear right now who of these gentlemen
is going to comply with this. And there's already chatter about the possible disillusion of the
committee if Republicans win the majority in November, as well as some members saying this
sets a precedent to just subpoena Democrats in the future. And on and on we go. We'll find out
more soon and keep you all updated on this.
All righty then, turning to a big event in the fight for abortion rights. Tomorrow is a nationwide day of action with Bands Off Our Bodies rallies set to take place in 400 cities across the country.
They're happening in Los Angeles, in Austin, Texas, in Columbia, South Carolina, D.C.,
all over the place. These demonstrations are organized by the Women's March, Planned Parenthood,
Ultraviolet, and MoveOn.
And they are meant to empower people to stand up for abortion access
in a time when Roe v. Wade is poised to be overturned by the Supreme Court.
And following that, 26 states will surely or likely ban abortions.
Yeah, this feels like a pretty monumental moment is about to happen.
For sure.
And I had the chance to speak with Kelly Robinson.
She is the executive director of Planned Parenthood Action Fund and an organizer for the Bands
Off Our Bodies marches.
I started by asking her what her message is to people who plan on attending these rallies
this weekend.
My message is it's time.
This is not a drill.
This is not an alarm.
This is the moment that we have been anticipating.
Our opposition is trying to take away
our access to abortion care,
and we've got to stand up.
We've got to have our voices heard.
And now is the time.
So y'all are calling it a day of action.
What are some of the specific actions
that you want people to take
after attending the demonstrations?
By day of action, we mean that this is a start to a new phase of the fight. Like our opposition has made their intentions very clear. Their goal is to ban abortion. Their goal is to control our
bodies and our lives, and we're not going to take it. So in addition to getting loud and showing up
in the streets, we're also going to be contacting our elected officials from folks in Congress to your governor, to your state legislature, to your school board member.
We are going to be contacting them all to let them know that no matter where you stand,
if you are a decision maker, you have got to protect access to care.
So now if Roe gets overturned, the nation would quickly become a patchwork of places with some
access over here, some
criminalization over here, a little bit of mix in between. What kinds of resources can people turn
to in order to get kind of clear answers on how to get care or how to afford it?
It's a scary reality to me, right? Like this is the first time that the courts will actually be
rolling back a constitutional right.
For today, abortion is still your right. Abortion is still legal.
And we want to make sure that folks have the information that they need to get it and that their rights are protected.
Now, as we move forward and this opinion goes into law, that won't be the case everywhere.
We'll be looking at 26 states that move swiftly to ban abortion access. So in those places, we're really talking about giving folks information about telemedicine, making sure people do know what's available in
their state, and making sure that people have the resources to do the things they need to do to
access care. That could look like driving hundreds of miles. That could look like finding healthcare
outside the traditional system. We believe in care no matter what, so we got to make sure people have the information to get there and the resources too.
Yeah, I like to remind people that 26 states is more than half of the entire country,
just because sometimes, you know, the recognition of how widespread the impact of this all can be,
I feel like sometimes isn't tangible for folks. But a lot of the messaging
that we've seen, particularly over the last week or so, is about electing more pro-choice candidates.
I happen to be one of those people who feel like we've been doing that, we've been casting the
votes for the people who are supposed to be right and not seeing much action come from it. So I'm
wondering like how you respond to those types of
folks who feel like maybe they just don't know how to move forward with everything in front of us.
Yeah. I mean, the first thing I say is there are some bright spots. We got to look to the helpers,
right? And if you look at places like Maryland, where we have elected a lot of pro reproductive
health and rights champions in that state legislature, they not only passed laws to
expand abortion access in the state, they overcame the governor's veto who was on the
wrong side of freedom, right? In California, they've passed outstanding laws to protect access.
In Illinois, they've done the same. There are so many states that are actually moving towards doing
the right thing that we have to tell that story too, because actually a greater world is possible. And in so many ways,
you know, we talk about this, but Roe was always a floor for access and not the ceiling. Like even
with Roe in place, it allowed so many states to put in barrier after barrier, right? Requiring
folks to wait days to get access to care, requiring aid, parental consent, not having
sex education. Like that was still happening even though Roe is in place. So I only want to say that there are some bright spots where because
we have voted, people have moved to action to put laws in place that actually expanded care.
Now, at the same time, we got some work to do. At the end of the day, the system is rigged.
These folks, they have been packing the federal courts with folks hostile to reproductive rights.
They have been gerrymandering the states. They've been suppressing our rights to vote.
Shoot. They have been trying to take away the rights of trans kids just to be seen like these people are doing so much to tear our communities apart. We got to call it for what it is. And we got to tell them,
hey, you are no longer going to represent me because you haven't been doing that all along.
It's an important moment for us to really hold elected officials accountable to the things that they have said and they have done. I wonder if there's in your mind anything more or more
specific you would like to see, whether it's the Democrats or like elected officials, more broadly speaking, do to protect access to reproductive rights?
We have to get to a place where this access doesn't depend on where you live, where you work,
how much money you make or your immigration status. And I think that what we're seeing now
is such an erosion of our rights because they're not like fortified in the
constitution to begin with as a queer black woman in america it is so clear to me that i'm fighting
for my rights every single day because at the start of this country i wasn't thought of as a
person right so a lot of what we're trying to do is yes address this crisis that we're facing right
now but acknowledge that abortion is the tipping point They are in a position to roll back so many of our rights because fundamentally we weren't
baked into the Constitution from the beginning.
We have to correct that.
So I think that what we're actually looking at is a generational fight, a fight that's
going to take us the next 10 or 15 years to fix the foundation of this country, for it
to start living up to the promise that it made to us, a promise that it's never fulfilled.
Definitely.
There's so much energy, so much momentum, particularly over the last couple of weeks
around this.
How do you keep the momentum going?
How do you keep the hope going as everyone waits for what will be the eventual ruling
next month?
We have work to do to keep people engaged and give them meaningful actions to take that
can actually make a difference. So moving forward, we're going to be making sure that
people have the opportunity to tell their story. Because at the end of the day, this isn't about
laws and policies. This is about real people's lives. That's a way we've got to stay engaged,
telling our stories to one another and not letting this be an isolated experience.
And Gideon, that's my conversation with Kelly Robinson,
the executive director of Planned Parenthood Action Fund.
We'll have links to info on tomorrow's nationwide protests
in our show notes.
Yes, and our producers will be going out
to cover the march in LA.
But WOD listeners, if you are going out yourself
to one that is nearest to you, we want to see it.
You can tag us in your pictures and videos if you'd like
on Instagram at whataday.
You can also make a voice recording to tell us what is at stake for you with Ro being overturned
and then email it to us. We may feature it on the show. Our email is wad at crooked.com.
And that is the latest for now.
Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
Finland's leaders announced yesterday that their country would apply for NATO membership, quote, without delay amid the continuing violence in Ukraine.
Sweden is also expected to apply in the coming days after its prime minister said it would consider joining the alliance last month. Finland's announcement has drawn strong condemnation from the Kremlin, and United Nations Russian Ambassador Dmitry Polyansky said on Thursday that if Sweden
and Finland were to join NATO, the two countries would become, quote, part of the enemy and, quote,
a target or possible target for a strike. Yikes. U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken is set to join Finland and Sweden's foreign ministers in Berlin tomorrow,
where they're likely to discuss the matter with other NATO leaders. This all comes as the United
Nations Human Rights Council voted to deepen its probe into Russia's potential war crimes in
Ukraine. Yesterday, the council passed a resolution urging investigators to focus on Russian occupied
areas near Kiev, where over a thousand civilians were found dead, several of whom were executed by Russian forces.
The resolution also calls for investigators to examine the regions of Chernihiv, Kharkiv, and Sumy that were occupied by Russia between February and March.
No one ever said having your company acquired by a Mars-crazed billionaire was easy.
Yesterday was a day of chaos at Twitter, the company that's being bought by Elon Musk,
which fired two of its top executives and instituted a hiring freeze.
To be clear, these changes aren't officially related to the looming Musk era of Twitter.
Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal said he was shaking things up because Twitter hasn't
been hitting its goals in audience and revenue growth. Agrawal fired Twitter's general manager
for revenue and its general manager. The latter exec posted on where else but Twitter soon after
writing, quote, The truth is that this isn't how and when I imagined leaving. The question of
whether Agrawal has job security as CEO himself is also up for debate.
Last week, CNBC reported that Musk would briefly serve as temporary CEO
after he completes the takeover, but the timeline for that is not known.
In the meantime, Twitter execs are advising workers to keep their heads down
to ensure uninterrupted posting.
At a company meeting last week, one said, quote,
we don't know what the future is going to hold, but what we'll know is we left it all on the field
for the people who rely on us every day. I love the commitment to the work that they're doing.
I genuinely feel for them in this moment, for sure. But i also am thinking about the app that gives me brain disease every
morning when i look at it um oh my goodness okay uh society may be finally coming around to the
idea that period cramps are in fact real because spain is gearing up to offer medical leave to
folks who suffer from severe menstrual pains. According to a draft bill leaked to the
country's media outlets, Spanish lawmakers are working on a measure that will allow folks to
take up to five days of sick leave per month as long as they have a doctor's note. The bill is
still in its early stages, but if it's passed into law, Spain would join a handful of countries that
already offer menstrual leave, like Japan and Indonesia, and become the first European country
to adopt such a measure.
The proposed rule is part of a larger effort within the Spanish government to expand reproductive health care and abortion access. In the same leaked draft bill, lawmakers also propose allowing
women over the age of 16 to get an abortion without parental consent, reversing a law that
was put in place by the country's conservative party in 2015. The bill is set to be presented to the country's cabinet early next week.
They are intentional, it seems, with the timing.
You know, yes.
If you responded to the work of Albert Einstein by saying,
picks or it didn't happen,
the National Science Foundation has some news for you.
Astronomers supported by the foundation unveiled the first image of the black hole that is at the center of the Milky Way galaxy yesterday,
further validating the theory of general relativity that Einstein posed all those many years ago.
If I could draw you a mental picture, the image looks like if you squinted at a tire that's gone up in flames.
True. Though what you're seeing isn't literally the black hole itself, but instead it's light
that escapes from superheated gas that the black hole pulls into its gravitational field.
This black hole is called Sagittarius A, and with mass equal to more than 4 million suns,
it's classified as supermassive.
The scientists who were able to characterize the black hole won a Nobel Prize in 2020, but it took an array of observatories positioned all around
the world to provide photographic evidence. That array is collectively known as the Event Horizon
Telescope, and processing and analyzing the huge amounts of data it recorded of Sagittarius A took
years. Now that Sagittarius A knows how good it feels to be photographed.
She'll definitely want the scientists to go faster.
Black holes are thought to occur commonly
at the center of galaxies,
though it's not known whether the black hole
gives rise to the galaxy or vice versa.
I will say the picture is very cool.
I want to start with that.
But?
It looked a little bit blurry.
I understand there's limitations when
we're talking about taking a picture of a black hole but i'm just gonna say it you know it's super
far away gideon we can't get you an iphone quality photo just yet but give us time i respect all the
effort again i'm just saying what we all thought when we looked at it. It is very cool. I'm afraid of staring at it for too long.
And those are the headlines.
We'll be back after some ads with some of the greatest songs written for competition in all of Europe.
It's Friday, Watt Squad.
And today we are reflecting on the event that unites a whole continent through the power of songs you can forget in one second.
The Eurovision Song Contest.
If you are not familiar, Eurovision is a songwriting competition that was first held in 1956 and helped launch the careers of artists like ABBA and Celine Dion.
Heard of them.
The performances are big, loud, and beautiful, and this year it's being held
in Italy with representatives from 10 countries
set to compete in the finals
tomorrow. Oddsmakers
have Ukraine's act heavily favored to win,
partly reflecting the way viewers and judges want
to show support for the country.
Next in line are the UK and Sweden,
according to a quick search on the
World Wide Web, but we wanted to make
some judgments of our own here and put on a sort of Eurovision WOD contest between the countries currently predicted
to fill out the top three. So, Travelle, are you ready to listen to and judge some clips of
Eurovision songs? Oh, yes. I'm ready to get my Simon Cowell, Paula Abdul, Randy Jackson on.
Let's do it. Okay, beautiful.
Let's start with the act.
Betting markets put in third.
Here is Sweden's Cornelia Jacobs with her song,
Hold Me Closer. Hold me closer.
I'll go and leave before the sunrise.
I'll be bleeding, but don't you mind.
I'll be fine.
Oh, it kills me. I found the right one after all the time. I like it.
You know, it sounds like a song that would play on a radio station that I don't listen to.
And so I love that for Sweden and Cornelia.
But yeah.
It's giving me a little bit of Ellie Goulding energy,
which means it's also giving me lift song energy.
I see the reference.
I see the reference.
Okay.
Okay, good.
Next is the UK's Sam Ryder with Spaceman. Black holes.
Okay, relevant.
You know, I could listen to that, you know, a couple times.
Why not?
It's in the zeitgeist.
Sam was involved in taking the photograph, clearly.
We apologize to Sam.
And finally, it is the predicted winner,
Ukraine's Kalush Orchestra performing Stefania. Wow.
That was interesting.
You know, I just, I did not expect that sound to come out of the speakers, but I'm intrigued.
I'm very intrigued, Gideon.
This one is decidedly different than the other two.
Oh, for sure.
I did the most different.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so Travelle, it's time.
What do you think?
Obviously, we want Ukraine to win on Saturday, just like the rest of the world does, but
based purely on the 15-second clips you just heard from Sweden, the UK, and Ukraine. Which song is your top pick?
You know, I think I'm gonna go with Ukraine's. I feel like I can do a little twerk to it if need be.
I feel like I could just experience it in so many different environments. And the other two songs
give me very specific energies what about for you right
the other two are like you're at duane reed or something and it's very that you're checking out
and that's that's what's playing my pick if i don't pick ukraine i'm in the international dog
house so i'm going to i'm also going to pick ukraine i do like it. I think my bias also here is that I heard a little bit more of it
than just the 15 seconds.
Dear listeners, I'm leveling with you.
And you're right.
There is a lot of different stuff in the song.
So different moods, different twerk opportunities,
different chiller opportunities within it.
It's great.
That was our Eurovision WOD contest.
Good luck to all you rock stars tomorrow.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, strike a pose for the Event
Horizon Telescope, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you are into reading and not just the lyrics to Spaceman by Sam Ryder like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crookedricut.com slash subscribe.
I'm Travelle Anderson.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And happy birthday to Josie Duffy Rice.
Yes.
We are sending her a hamburger and she's going to try it for the first time.
It'll change her life.
It'll be amazing.
We'll have some magic spoon on the side.
She'll love it.
Yep.
And what's the other thing? She hasn't eaten a hot dog? There's another weird one. Anyway, it some magic spoon on the side. She'll love it. Yep. And what's the other
thing? She hasn't eaten a hot dog or something. There's another weird one. Anyway, it's all coming
in one order. What a day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Bill
Lance, Jazzy Marine and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers. Our head writer is John
Milstein and our executive producers are Leo Duran and me, Gideon Res associate producers. Our head writer is John Milstein
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