The Daily - The Freshmen: Elissa Slotkin Confronts the Impeachment Backlash
Episode Date: October 9, 2019Days after moderate House Democrats announced they would support an impeachment inquiry against President Trump, a recess began and they returned home to their swing districts. Now they would face the...ir constituents. Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin of Michigan went to three town halls last week. We went with her. Guest: Representative Elissa Slotkin, Democrat of Michigan. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background coverage:Democrats face a tricky balancing act in battleground districts: protecting political gains from 2018 while selling voters on an inquiry into the president.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
Days after moderate House Democrats announced they would support an impeachment inquiry
against President Trump, they returned home to their swing districts on recess.
It's the first time they've faced their
constituents since that decision. Congresswoman Alyssa Slotkin of Michigan
went to three town halls last week. We went with her to all of them.
It's Wednesday, October 9th.
Congresswoman, I'd love for you to go back to a couple of weeks ago.
You're headed home to your district in Michigan for the first time since you've made this decision that you surely knew would upset many of your constituents.
that you surely knew would upset many of your constituents.
Was there any question in your mind whether you would hold town halls while you were back in your district?
Oh, no. No.
I mean, what we actually did was add more.
I obviously knew that the decision was going to be controversial.
So, no, it was more important than anything
for me to get in front of my district and go to the three counties in three days.
Hi there. My name is Mella. I'm the congresswoman's chief of staff.
And first and foremost, we did not expect such a big turnout.
In the very first one that we did was just walking into the Grand Traverse Pie Company in East Lansing and just basically not being able to get in the door.
Now, it was surprising how many people were there and just the physical getting in the
room, finding a tiny little corner where I could speak from, making sure people could
hear me in the way back.
Do you guys have anything else going on in the middle of the day?
My gosh, I'm thrilled to see so many people here.
I wanted to come home to the district and make sure that everybody heard from me directly on what's gone on in the past week, week and a half.
I mean, for me, it felt like this is how it's supposed to work.
You know, not everything is going to be, you know, unanimously supported by my district.
unanimously supported by my district. And at a bare minimum, whether people agree with me or not,
my job is to make myself available and to let my constituents hear from me directly.
In the past week, myself and six other members of the freshman class, all service and veteran folks, we all made the decision to come out. We wrote a joint op-ed to the Washington Post.
I wrote a similar one here in the Free Press
to explain our decision-making
and why we are calling for an impeachment inquiry.
And I will be honest with you,
this was a decision that I did not come to lightly.
It is not something that I went to Congress to do.
Many of you know, because you called my office,
I was reticent to call for impeachment in earlier iterations.
But for me, what happened in the past week or week and a half
was really something different.
The key and sort of most important piece of information
is that the President of the United States,
the Commander-in-Ch chief, reached out to a
foreign president and asked for dirt on an American, on a political opponent. Involving
foreigners in our elections in any way, I feel like has no place in our politics. Today, it could
be a Republican asking a Ukrainian. Tomorrow, it could be a Democrat asking the Chinese to dig up dirt and on and on and on. The idea that
there would be any question as to how we got the president that we got, that
foreigners played any role in it, was just beyond the pale for me. So I felt
it was something that I had to do to uphold my oath of office.
And there were people there with strong opinions on both sides of the aisle.
There were people who were extremely supportive and had just shown up to thank me for the decision.
And there were people who had just shown up, you know, to demonstrate their displeasure.
And, you know, we had to cut it short because the fire marshal was called.
Because the crowd was too big.
The crowd was too big
and it started to be too much for the venue.
And so we had to cut it a little bit short.
So my read from listening
to the first of these events that you did,
the one that was broken up
eventually by the fire marshal,
is that people were largely supportive
of your decision on the impeachment inquiry,
but that might have something to do with the fact that you were in a bluer part of your decision on the impeachment inquiry, but that might have
something to do with the fact that you were in a bluer part of your district, right?
Yes, absolutely. That first one in East Lansing, I mean, that just happens to be a more heavily
Democratic area. And so there were more people per capita that were supportive.
So let's talk about the second event that you did. Can you give us a picture of that part of your congressional district?
So Livingston County is more rural than the other two counties. It's a place that's changing, but that tends to be the most conservative part of the district.
And what percentage would you say of the constituents there supported President Trump and what percentage supported you? So I'd have to look at the exact numbers, but the entire district voted for Donald
Trump by seven points. And I'm sure in Livingston County, it was stronger than that. I used to joke
that our goal in Livingston County was to lose better. And we did. We won certain areas like the town of Brighton. And in
certain areas, we won 50 percent of the vote. But there are certain towns in that area where
less than 35 percent. The other piece that obviously I'm sure many of you are here to
talk about today is the issue of an impeachment inquiry. So let me.
an impeachment inquiry. So let me...
So I found it pretty interesting that you could tell right out of the gate that this second town hall was going to be different.
The issue that got to me was this idea that the president, the most powerful man in the world,
reached out to a foreigner, a foreign leader, and asked him to dig up dirt on an American, on a political opponent.
Fake news.
Fake news.
This is...
Don't lie.
Fake news.
Don't lie.
Don't lie into it.
He's your president.
Foreign leaders help each other.
It just...
I'm sorry, ma'am.
They don't.
This isn't your job. Do your job.
For me, it was extremely...
It's our representative.
It's our representative.
It's our representative.
I want answers!
Okay.
You know, for Michigan, which is a swing state,
you know, where we grew up having, you know, mixed families.
My dad was a Republican. My mom was a Democrat. We have a long tradition of being able to disagree without it being vitriolic. And what's been hard for us, frankly, I think as a state, is that some of that vitriol that's in Washington has been imported to Michigan. And it's made our Thanksgiving dinners uncomfortable. Moms will tell me all the
time, I don't want to talk to, you know, other moms when I drop my son off at school because I
don't want to walk on any minefields. You know, everyone's walking on eggshells on politics here,
and that's never how we work. I'm going to wait for the facts. I'm going to look at them
judiciously. I'm going to understand the sourcing. I'm going to do what I was trained to do, which is to look at the investors.
So I really noticed that in this town hall, the way that kind of national political talking points kept coming up again and again.
So I want to get into that.
There was this fascinating exchange you had.
I wanted to tell you that even though we're at the opposite end,
I sent you an email about immigration, and you sent me the coolest letter.
And I thought, wow, that's pretty neat.
Then I watched your interview on Fox News, and I thought, holy mackerel, this is a blue-dog Democrat.
I like her.
But when you fell off the cliff for me
was when you joined the coup against our president.
And it makes me really sad
because you read the transcript, and so did I.
The word dirt wasn't in there, and I don't like when you guys do that.
There was, he was checking on corruption. Where a woman expressed her frustration with you
for your use of the word dirt in describing what the president was seeking on that call
with the president of Ukraine. Can you tell me about that exchange and what you made of it?
Sure, sure.
I actually think that was an important point.
And people want to know that if we're going to go through this,
that there's going to be objectivity to it.
And language like that is not objective.
I use the word dirt, which is subjective.
I think that I've seen that over and over in my district. Language can be
very political. It's like a dog whistle, you know? And I made a point during my campaign to sort of
clarify my language as much as possible and keep it out of political dog whistle words.
I think that that was a relevant point.
So I want to know, in that five pages, and I read it, what denotes high crimes and misdemeanors?
I mean, honestly, just be honest with us.
I mean, you're a smart kid.
I mean, woman.
Thank you for calling me a kid.
Yeah.
I love a 43-year-old kid.
But I would like to know what specifically it was that jumps out at you.
Sure.
So thank you for asking your question.
I think the thing that was difficult for me,
I think the thing that was difficult for me, I have no individual knowledge on what happened
or did not happen with the Biden family.
I just know that when you're not sure about something
and you want to investigate,
you go to the American authorities.
And when the president acknowledged that he went,
he said it himself,
when he said he went to the president of Ukraine,
who is a real junior, you know, compared to the, he said it himself, when he said he went to the president of Ukraine, who is a real junior, you know,
compared to the United States,
that's a real junior country, right?
They depend on us for a huge amount of their military aid.
So when you go to a junior partner like that
and ask for a favor...
Because he really didn't say favor.
So this is why...
He did say favor.
I'm sorry, the transcript says favor.
Oh, yeah, you know what?
I think you're right.
He did say favor.
And what I would say is, for me, that wasn't enough to start an inquiry.
Now, if there is different facts to be borne out,
if there's more information to bring to the table, that should come out.
And we should be – for me, involving foreigners in our political affairs was beyond the pale.
It just was beyond the pale.
I don't know.
How about Hunter Biden making $50K a month for 14 months from a Ukrainian mining company.
No, nobody is ever going to investigate Hunter Biden.
Okay, so the administration is run by the president.
He runs the FBI.
If he was interested in a true and thorough investigation,
he literally could just ask his director to do it.
I trust our law enforcement to do the best investigation
anywhere in the world, always.
And that's who we should go to.
James Collins.
And I feel like that exchange opened up
a kind of larger conversation about trust
in U.S. government institutions.
There's a kind of recurring tension in these events that's
really, really well illuminated in your back and forth with the voters.
Yeah, my name's Bill Long. I'm a retired teacher from South Lyon, a registered Republican. I saw
you on Fox. Very impressed. I thought, wow, she's a Democrat? I mean, it made a lot of sense.
And I'm thinking if we had more Slotkins and fewer Pelosi's and Schumer's and Schiff's,
we'd all be better off.
But he made a statement about Trump should take it to the FBI.
The problem is he can't trust the FBI or the CIA right now.
It's that you and your colleagues believe that the president should take the kind of
questions and requests that he handled directly with the leader of Ukraine about corruption,
the possibility that Biden and his son were tied up in untoward doings, that he should
take those to U.S. authorities, that there are proper channels.
And some of your constituents are saying, nope, he can't trust those institutions.
He can't trust the intelligence community.
There are investigations going on right now, we know that, investigating Comey, McCabe,
these intelligence people that he should be able to rely on, and he can't. So
if these investigations turn up facts that show that there was in fact a coup to overthrow a
democratically elected president, will the Democrats accept that as fact? Or will they
just call it a conspiracy theory like they've been doing?
Yeah, we had that direct exchange in Heartland and we just respectfully disagreed.
We'll just have to have an amicable disagreement on whether the FBI and the CIA can be trusted.
I'm a former CIA officer.
I'm someone who spent my life doing everything I could to protect this country from homeland attacks.
I know exactly what those people are doing, risking their life every day alongside our military.
And frankly, I have a hard time hearing that.
I'll be honest with you.
And on the FBI side, these are folks who are sworn law enforcement officers.
They are federal officers that are not dissimilar from the folks who work in our communities here
every single day.
They get up every day for a lot less money
than they probably could be making
to protect the country because they believe in it.
And I do not believe that they are involved
in anything like a coup.
And we may just disagree.
And for me, I also think it's important that we just be clear on language.
A coup is when the U.S. military tries to take over.
That is the definition of a coup, sir.
And when a U.S. military tries to take over the executive branch, the presidency. And I just don't think there's any indication that our U.S. military is involved in any way in anything like that.
And I honestly, I mean, that that kind of commentary really gets at me as a former CIA
officer, as a Pentagon official, you know, who did three tours in Iraq. My husband was 30 years,
you know, in the army. My stepdaughter's in the army now.
That theme of just inherently not trusting our own government,
not to say we're perfect, but to hear a number of people across a few town halls
talking about their inherent distrust that the president somehow had to go to a foreigner because he
couldn't trust his own law enforcement and intelligence community, that just kind of got me.
If there's concerns about corruption, then you go to the American FBI.
You go to law enforcement.
I'm sorry.
I have a very hard time booing the FBI, ma'am.
You can boo the FBI. I will not boo the FBI.
That was the one time where I could feel my blood pressure going up.
To me, this is part and parcel of the president really attacking those institutions from day one.
And, you know, giving permission for everybody and anybody to just callously insult those institutions.
Those were some of the hardest moments.
We'll be right back.
So tell us about the third and last of these coffee hours.
Well, we pulled up and there was just a line just curved around the building with people trying to get in.
Can you hear me in the back?
Can you hear me?
There were sort of small protests. Four more years! Four more years! trying to get in. Can you hear me in the back? Can you hear me? Can you hear me? Yes?
There were sort of small protests.
Four more years!
Four more years!
Watch that.
In prison.
Okay.
And there were people in the room on both sides of the issue.
We're so polarized right now as a nation.
We have such a — I appreciate you videotaping me, sir.
That's very nice to hear my answer.
But I think one of the things that makes it challenging is we are so polarized.
And we know that folks were sort of mobilizing and sending around emails to try and get people to come out.
I just want to note briefly that at least one of the Republican emails that went out encouraging people to attend your events said, and I want to quote it,
to attend your events said, and I want to quote it.
Alyssa Slotkin will today host a town hall where the independent voters who elected her
will be completely ignored
because all Alyssa Slotkin cares about
is impeaching President Trump
and keeping her radical socialist base happy.
If anyone thinks that there's a radical socialist base in my district,
they haven't visited my district. It's, yes. You'd like to know where they are. Where are they?
I mean, to me, that is purely cut from some Washington talking points, that I'm on the
radical left. And all I can tell you is that, again, the former CIA officer and Pentagon official
hopefully has, I have established enough of a record with my district as being independently
minded that they know that that's just not true. When you say that at a certain point
in these back and forth, which, as you've just said, are pretty frustrating for you, you have to just say, let's agree to disagree. Does that represent a kind of sense of defeat,
that something has happened in this country that maybe no amount of listening or talking
or looking up a word in the dictionary and telling people what it means versus what they
think it means or presenting the facts as you see them can change people's minds. No, no. Because for me,
you have to remember as a trained CIA officer, you know, no one would have thought of me as an
optimist. But running for office and being an elected representative has literally restored my faith in people.
I mean, it has—
How do you say that after experiencing what people are now just hearing happen to you?
Because if you look at some of the tougher, more vitriolic exchanges, that's one thing.
But balance that against all the other questions in the room.
I want to thank you for your service.
You know, I'm very impressed with your background.
And I appreciate so much your devotion and your focus on the PFAS situation.
I do have some property on the chain of lakes.
And I actually liked a lot of things that you're working on,
PFAS and our water quality, you know,
all the other times that people who did disagree with me
asked a civil and decent question. But I have to just ask you,
if there's so much information still coming out, I'm disappointed that you would already have moved
in that direction, not taken the time to hear more that's coming forward. I think it's wrong
for America. You know, I just don't see how it's good for us.
And help me understand.
That, to me, is as good as I can expect
from someone who doesn't see the world the way I do
because they're asking for me to explain.
They want to hear it from me.
Even though I don't know if I convince them or not.
But that, to me, gives me hope.
So now that these events are over, Congresswoman, I wonder, broadly speaking, what you're reflecting on, having now held all these meetings in the district.
Did you leave these town halls with any new perspective on how it is that Americans are seeing the world
and processing this moment? I mean, one of the things I was most surprised by personally was
that most people at these events were basically in agreement that the president of the United States
asked a foreign leader to investigate a domestic political rival, pressured that leader to do so.
But not everyone agrees that that was wrong. Was that what was surprising for you as well?
I was surprised that people thought that that was okay. And I tried to give the example
in Heartland that, hey, today it could be a Republican president reaching out to Ukraine,
tomorrow it could be a Democratic president reaching out to China. I think it has more of
an impact on people because, you know, Ukraine might be difficult for folks to understand,
especially since they're a partner nation. But I think most people in Michigan understand
that reaching out to China would be a bad thing. But by the time I got out of the town hall,
the president had suggested that.
Right. He said China should investigate Biden.
Yes. And that shocked me. I mean, you know, I get shocked. You know, I just, I think that it surprised me because I think if people take a breath and think about it, they do not want
Chinese influence and a North Korean cyber attack that helps one candidate over another.
I just don't
think we want that. And I know, I know I cannot accept that. So finally, Congresswoman, I have
to imagine that you are an important perspective back in Washington, swing district, newly elected
somebody that your party cares very much about reelecting. So for your colleagues and helping
them understand what's going on in America and how all of this is landing, what are you going to make sure that they hear when you get back and judiciousness, that we maintain
ourselves as the adult in the room, that there's no need to come out of a meeting where you've
heard some new testimony and just start talking to the press about how this seals the deal
for you and you're done.
There are people who are seeking an objective process,
not just a political process, and that we need to hear that because this is a big deal to take
the country through this. I have been encouraging and will certainly encourage my colleagues to
treat it not as a political talking point, but as a serious thing that history will reflect back on and that needs us to put the mission and the process above ourselves.
So having absorbed a lot of talking points, you think it's really important that you not be spitting out a lot of talking points?
I'll be honest. I'm not sure. If you're not directly involved in communicating on this, I'm not sure why you need to.
The facts are going to come in every single day.
We're going to get new information every single day.
But we need to be able to do more than just an impeachment inquiry.
I would urge my colleagues to focus just as seriously on other legislation as they are
on this inquiry.
Well, Congresswoman Sluggin, thank you very much.
And thank you for letting us tag along with you to these events.
We appreciate it.
Thanks very much.
I mean, frankly, if you guys go ahead and impeach him, we may never have this meeting again because you might be out of here and be replaced by a Republican.
And that would be sad because you seem like a bright young lady.
Thank you. I've been called young twice in the past 15 minutes, so I'm already ahead.
So, a couple of things.
In the days since Representative Slotkin called
for an impeachment inquiry,
two Republicans have announced
their plans to challenge her
in next year's election.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Good morning. We were informed about an hour and a half ago
by the attorney for Ambassador Sondland
that the State Department would refuse to allow him to testify today.
On Tuesday morning, the White House blocked the scheduled deposition
of Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union,
and a key witness in the House impeachment inquiry.
Sondland's testimony was highly anticipated. A series of text messages released last week
revealed that he was deeply involved in the efforts to pressure Ukraine to investigate
President Trump's political rivals. After Sondland failed to show up,
the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee,
Adam Schiff, called it an act of obstruction
and said he would issue a subpoena
demanding Sondland's deposition.
The failure to produce this witness,
we consider yet additional strong evidence
of obstruction of the constitutional functions
of Congress, a co-equal branch of government. A few hours later, the White House sent a letter
to House Democrats saying it would cease cooperating with any element of the impeachment
inquiry, calling it an illegitimate effort to overturn the results of the 2016
election. Meanwhile, a new national poll found that support for impeachment is growing. The poll,
conducted by The Washington Post and George Mason University, found that a majority of Americans
support the decision by House Democrats to begin an impeachment inquiry,
and that nearly half of them say the House should recommend removing the president from office.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.