Coming up at 4 pm today on the Rod Arquette Show on Talk Radio 105.9 KNRS, Kaysville City Councilman John Swan Adams joins the show to discuss the council's opposition to a move by Mayor Katie Witt to openly defy state Covid 19 restrictions and allow a concert in the park later this month. Plus, Dan Mahaffee, Senior Vice President and Director of Policy for the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress, joins Rod to discuss his recent piece in The Hill about how the political division in America is likely to threaten national security and economic prosperity. See below for a full rundown of today’s program.
Rod Arquette Show Daily Rundown - Tuesday, May 19, 2020
4:20 pm: Senator Deidre Henderson joins Rod for a conversation about the latest from the Lauren McCluskey case in which a former University of Utah police officer is accused of downloading explicit photos of McCluskey to his personal cell phone and showing them to other officers. Henderson is helping organize a hearing next month where university police can explain the policies and procedures of protecting victim's rights
4:35 pm: Heather Andrews, Director of Americans for Prosperity-Utah, joins Rod for a conversation about her recent op-ed piece in which she says Congress shouldn't use the Covid 19 pandemic as an excuse to bail out states that have been poorly economically managed
6:05 pm: Kaysville City Councilman John Swan Adams joins the show to discuss the council's opposition to a move by Mayor Katie Witt to openly defy state Covid 19 restrictions and allow a concert in the park later this month
6:20 pm: Dan Mahaffee, Senior Vice President and Director of Policy for the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress, joins Rod to discuss his recent piece in The Hill about how the political division in America is likely to threaten national security and economic prosperity
6:35 pm: Kait Webb, Wildfire Communication Prevention and Education Coordinator for the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands, joins Rod to discuss how predictive models show the wildfire season this year could be a brutal one and how Covid 19 is changing the way those fires will be fought