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Impolitic with John Heilemann

Joyce White Vance and Jill Wine-Banks

Impolitic with John Heilemann

Audacy | Puck

News, Politics

4.84.5K Ratings

🗓️ 9 February 2021

⏱️ 78 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Joyce White Vance and Jill Wine-Banks entered the Trump era with gold-plated resumes and sterling reputations in the legal world but modest public profiles outside it. Today, however, they are widely known as two members of a cadre of MSNBC legal analysts who conducted a four-year national civics lesson about the rule of law when it was being tested in unprecedented ways — a cadre notably dominated by women, many of them pioneers in their profession. Wine-Banks earned that status in the 1970s, when, after serving as one of the first female attorneys in the Department of Justice's organized crime section, she joined the staff of Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jaworski; she later became the first female General Counsel of the U.S. Army and first female executive director of the American Bar Association. Vance, too, is a trailblazer: the first woman appointed U.S. Attorney (for the Northern District of Alabama) by President Obama, she established for the first time a civil-rights enforcement unit in that office, prosecuted numerous high-profile public corruption cases, and launched a statewide investigation into inhumane conditions in Alabama's prisons. Along with two other female legal analysts. Vance and Wine-Banks recently launched a new podcast, #SistersInLaw. And with Trump's second impeachment trial commencing this week, Heilemann invites his friends and colleagues to discuss the case against Trump and why it matters so much — even if Trump, as most expect, is ultimately acquitted. They also delve into the wave of defamation lawsuits and legal threats aimed at right-wing media companies and the former president's lawyers, the degree of legal peril facing Trump as a private citizen, and the challenges facing Attorney General nominee Merrick Garland in repairing the damage wrought by Trump at the Justice Department. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone, John Hyelman here and welcome to Hell on High Water, my podcast from the

0:15.0

recount and I Heart Radio, with big ups to the one and only Rizza for our dope theme

0:19.0

music.

0:22.4

Donald Trump has been out of Washington and out of the White House for three weeks now,

0:26.5

he continues to cast a long shadow over our politics, as the nation's capital and the

0:31.1

country writ large, have grappled with the bone jarring aftershocks of the cataclysmic

0:36.0

events of January 6th, events in which Trump's complicity is extravagant and undeniable.

0:41.7

And now comes this week, in which the former president and his role in those terrible terrifying,

0:46.8

historic events will be center stage, as the impeachment of Donald J. Trump, Part D,

0:52.8

moves to the trial phase in the US Senate, and hence will be the primary topic on this episode

0:58.3

of Hell on High Water. And who better to guide us across the fraught and febrile zone where the 45th

1:03.1

president of the United States and the rule of law collide than a pair of dear friends of mine

1:08.0

and each other, who in the past four years have gone from being highly accomplished legal

1:11.9

stalwarts, well known and much esteemed among their peers, but largely invisible to the wider world,

1:18.0

two cable news superstars recognized far and wide for their expertise and effervescence,

1:22.7

their brilliance and bad assery. The first is former US attorney for the Northern District of Alabama,

1:28.5

and currently a distinguished professor of the practice of law at the University of Alabama,

1:33.1

Joyce Whitebans. The state of the rule of law in America is slowly improving, but this is not

1:39.6

the time for any of us to go to sleep. There's a lot of work to do, you need to stay informed,

1:45.2

you need to continue to stay in touch with your elected officials, because we have some heavy

1:50.0

duty work ahead of us. And second is former Watergate prosecutor and author of the Watergate Girl,

1:56.2

my fight for truth and justice against a criminal president, Jill Weinbanks.

...

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