Skip to main content

tv   Meet the Press  NBC  March 31, 2024 6:00am-7:01am PDT

6:00 am
this sunday, show of force. >> our democracy is at stake. >> president biden is with obama and clinton. >> it's not just about the presumptive nominee on the other
6:01 am
side. it's the positive case for someone that's done an outside job in the presidency. >> will star power and a big cash advantage be enough to win over skeptical voters? >> i'll talk to democratic congressman jim clyburn of south carolina. >> plus trials and tribulation, a trial date is set for donald trump's first criminal trial with a gag order on the former president who is now selling bibles to raise money. >> we must make america pray again. >> while house republicans face a shrinking majority as more members head for the exits. >> this place just keeps going downhill and i don't need to spend my time here. how fractured is the gop and how will it impact 2024? i'll talk to republican don bacon of nebraska and keeping the faith. nbc's savannah guthrie shares hear faith journey and her message this easter in our meet the moment conversation.
6:02 am
>> the big message of the book is mostly what god does is love you and his love has nothing to do with our thoughts of him. it has nothing to do with our actions good or bad, it has nothing to do with who we are, it has everything to do with who he is. >> joining me for insight and analysis are katy rogers, white house correspondent for the new york times, former homeland security secretary jeh johnson and ramesh pannuru of national review. welcome to sunday, it's "meet the press." >> from nbc news in washington, the longest running show in television history, this is "meet the press" with kristen welker. good sunday morning and happy easter. the 2024 campaign is intensifying with that historic show of force for president biden from his democratic predecessors barack obama and bill clinton at radio city music hall. the biden campaign also announcing a new effort to reach
6:03 am
out to nikki haley voters using donald trump's own words against him. >> she's gone haywire. >> how do you bring nikki haley voters? >> i'm not sure we need too many. >> the president stepped up his attacks on the judge and his family in the new york hush money case after that judge imposed a partial gag order on mr. trump less than three weeks from the april 15th start date in that trial and now trump is asserting that none of the trial should, quote, take place during my campaign, falsely calling the criminal proceedings election interference. it is another reminder that we're covering this election against the backdrop of a deeply divided nation. this week there were signs of how this country has the incredible capacity to come together. we saw that in baltimore when the country rallied around that community after the collapse of the francis scott key bridge
6:04 am
which claimed six lives. >> we are maryland tough, and we are baltimore strong. so in the face of heartbreak, we come together, we embrace one another and we come back stronger. >> at an event centered on bipartisanship at the edward m. kennedy institute, i had the chance to speak to two governors this week about what is required for leadership in the crisis like the one baltimore is facing. >> whether it's a flood, whether it's a 9/11, whether it's a calamity like we saw today you don't know when things are going to happen, but to quickly convene with your team and develop a strategy and communicate to the public, that, to me, i think, is leadership. >> being with transparency and being on the news and answering questions and not backing down from everything and being clear
6:05 am
about what the metrics are, what the mission is, ooh, that brings everyone's temperature down and allows things to flow so much better. >> joining me now is congressman jim clyburn, democrat from south carolina. welcome back to "meet the press" and happy easter. >> happy easter to you, as well and up this for having me back. >> thank you for joining us on this holiday weekend. i do want to start with that tragic bridge collapse in baltimore. president biden has committed some $60 million so far, that's considered to be a fraction of what is needed. as you know, some of your colleagues some fiscal conservative republicans are already saying that they approve more funding for baltimore. what say you, congressman? do you think that congress will ultimately wind up approving more funding for baltimore? >> i certainly hope so. the fact of the matter is, all
6:06 am
of us, every state in the nation, all 50 of us will take our turns needing this kind of assistance. it may be gust storms in some places. it may be a flood or here in this part of the country, hurricanes. we all are subjected at one time or another to some kind of calamity, and we've seen this before. i will always remember how some of my colleagues failed to come to the assistance of a certain part of the country until it came to their backyards and then all of a sudden they saw the need for it. so when i hear my colleagues talk about baltimore in this instance, i remind those especially here in south carolina, we've got a pretty big port here, a very important port, and we've got a very big
6:07 am
bridge that we look upon with pride. what were to happen if that were to happen, what would our response be? so let's just remember that everybody gets their turn in need of assistance and we ought to be rallying around maryland, rallying around baltimore, doing what is necessary to get that economy back running again, to get those people back on the jobs. just remember, that port is closed. a lot of people are out of work and this is not the time of year you want to see that happening. >> all right. well, congressman, let me ask you about some other very big news this week, that historic fundraiser that saw former presidents obama and clinton join president biden, a show of force. they raised more than $25 million. obviously, energizing the base, no doubt it likely did that, but my question for you, congressman, do you expect to
6:08 am
see those former presidents out on the campaign trail routinely? will they be a common presence on the campaign trail? >> i think so, but not to show force, but more to show unity. unity of purpose, to show defense of democracy, that's what's going on here. three former presidents, all three of whom have had challenges and every one of them stood for what is right in this country and that is to protect this democracy and putting themselves below the needs, the dreams and aspirations of the american people. so what we saw in new york last thursday was a show of unity and a show of defense of democracy, and that is what we need in this country at this particular juncture. >> congressman, as you know, looming large over that event
6:09 am
including with some protesters is the war in the middle east an in fact, a new gallop poll now oppose israel's war in gaza and approval has dropped from 50 to 36% since november. there were a number of interruptions at that fund raiser and a growing number of democrats are calling this a genocide including alexandra ocasio-cortez. congressman, do you agree with congresswoman ocasio-cortez that what is happening is, in fact, a genocide? >> well, i would not analyze it to that extent, but i'll tell you this. what is happening is wrong and they na to make it right and that's what president biden is trying to do, trying to make it right. that poll showed more of a dissaefgsz with netanyahu than with the people of israel. we stand with the people of
6:10 am
israel. we do not like the fact that this country's policy is a two-state solution and netanyahu has undermined that two-state solution for as long as he's been in office. he sold his soul to the right-wingers in israel in order to maintain power for himself and those people are opposed to a two-state solution. biden is for a two-state solution. democrats are for a two-state solution. that is the only way for us to move forward, and so this drop in support has nothing to do with the people of israel and everything to do with netanyahu. >> congressman, do you think the u.s. is doing enough, though? it just approved another order of shipments of munitions and weapons to israel. chris van holland saying, quote, the biden administration needs to use its leverage effectively before greenlighting more bombs for gaza. commitments to preserve civilian
6:11 am
lives is what he's referencing and should the u.s. be withholding those munition shipments? >> the leverage has to be used and i think the president is using his leverage. >> but is he using enough of it, congressman? they just approved that new shipment of weapons. >> well, the question is what were the agreements made last year and the year before and whether or not we are going to keep our word? we cannot go back on our word and expect for other people to keep theirs. so we have to keep our word, and so i have no idea what may be in these deals and what the president may be living up to, but the fact of the matter is we must not lose our integrity as a nation and we've got to stand in support of israel. >> congressman, let me ask you about what's happening in south carolina this week. a federal court ruled that south carolina has to use a congressional map in the
6:12 am
upcoming elections that it called an unconstitutional racial gerrymander after the supreme court failed to weigh in on the case. pro publica has a report that you actually worked on republicans on this map by ensuring that 30,000 black voters would move from a neighboring swing district into your own. was that the case? >> no, that was not the case at all. when someone picks up the phone and asks you what are your suggestions as we are about to get these lines drawn? i offered my suggestions, and i didn't ask for my district to be turned into a minority district and that's what it is. people keep publishing that i have a majority, minority district and that is absolutely not true. check the numbers. so when you hear people misrepresenting and that's been going on throughout this whole
6:13 am
nation for several years now, a conversation. yes, i offered my suggestions. did they follow my suggestions? absolutely not, and so when you say you spoke to me and that there's an agreement that is absolutely not true, and i told the young lady who came to me with that story who happens to be from south carolina or at least she used to work here in south carolina, she was looking to make a headline rather than make a headway. so i would say that i was not surprised at this. remember, the court did the same thing up in north carolina the last time around. they allowed north carolina to go forward with the gerrymandered district that was not fair, so i was not surprised about this at all. >> let me ask you about congress, more broadly speaking, a growing number of democrats say they would protect speaker johnson from being ousted if he brings ukraine aid to the floor. do you think that's the case and would you protect him if there
6:14 am
was a move to oust him for bringing ukraine aid to the floor? >> well, let me say, first of all i stand in support of our leader hakeem jeffries. he is in those meetings and in negotiations and if he were to call me ask say, look, i would like to have your vote in support of johnson, he's got it. if he says to me otherwise, i will follow his lead and i am not in his meetings and i have no idea what the result of those meetings will be, but i stand in firm support of the leadership of the party, and let me say -- you mentioned south carolina. i want to mention something about north carolina. come thursday the vice president is going to be back in north carolina with 30 -- i'm sorry, $20 billion to fight climate
6:15 am
change and to lower the cost of energy in north carolina, and i might add, joe biden did not win north carolina the last time around, but he's demonstrated once again that he's going to be the president of all of the people irrespective of whether or not they voted for him in the election. >> congressman, quickly, before i let you go, we live in a very divided moment. this is easter. what is your message about bipartisanship. is it possible? >> i sure hope it's possible. i know this, we are now calling easter resurrection sunday, and i would hope that we can resurrect those things that have made this country great. i often said that this country has no need of being made great. we are great. we've all got to work together to make this country's greatness
6:16 am
accessible and affordable for all of its citizens be it education, energy, health care, whatever it is. those greatnesses must be made available to everybody and we ought to do that on the bipartisan basis. yes, let's have the contest. i love the contest. i love a campaign, but when the campaign is over let's work together and let's do what is necessary for this country to maintain his greatness. i have nothing against republicans. my parents were republicans. i worked very closely with the republican governor of south carolina because we want to make sure that energy, broadband, healthcare, education get to everybody. so that's -- i would hope that we can convene on a bipartisan basis and resurrect the goodnesses of the american people and maintain the
6:17 am
greatness of these united states of america. >> all right. congressman clyburn, thank you so much. i hope you have a very happy easter. thanks for joining us on this east are sunday. >> thank you very much for having me. >> and when we come back, former president donald trump faces his first criminal trial as the house faces a dwindling gop majority. will the fractured republican will the fractured republican caucus ce together forom hey! asthma's got you going through it? grab nucala for fewer asthma attacks.
6:18 am
nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask an asthma specialist if nucala is right for you. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪♪) hepatitis c? don't just treat it. crush it with mavyret. conquer it with mavyret. cure it. with mavyret. mavyret cures all types of hep c. in only 8 weeks. the virus multiplies daily and can damage the liver over time. mavyret stops hep c and cures it. if you've had hepatitis b, it may flare up and cause serious liver problems
6:19 am
during and after treatment. tell your doctor if you've had hep b, a liver or kidney transplant, other liver problems, hiv, other medical conditions, and all your medicines. do not take mavyret with atazanavir or rifampin. report right away yellow skin, stomach pain or swelling, confusion, and bleeding or bruising. hep c? crush it with mavyret. conquer it. with mavyret. cure it. in only 8 weeks. see hep c gone with mavyret. ask your doctor about mavyret. abbvie could help you save. welcome back. congress left town for a two-week recess after passing a bipartisan bill to keep the government open, but without passing aid for ukraine. speaker johnson has yet to bring to the floor the $95 billion senate aid bill passed more than six weeks ago, but opposed by many conservative members of the house republican caucus. in light of the delay ukrainian
6:20 am
president vladimirel zelenskyy spoke to the media on the increase in russian air power and the near-depletion of ukrainian ammunition posting quick passage of u.s. aid by ukraine by congress is vital. johning me is retired congressman don bacon of nebraska. welcome back to "meet the press" and happy easter to you. thank you for joining us on the holiday. >> thank you, kristen. happy easter to you and all of the folks listening today. a very special day for all christians. thank you. >> we really appreciate you being here, because i know it is a busy day. i want to start right there with aid to ukraine which i know you strongly support, and as i just mapped out, it hasn't been brought to the floor for a vote. so my question for you is when congress gets back from recess, how confident are you that this aid will be passed and how is it going to happen, congressman? >> speaker johnson is an honest man, one of the -- he truly
6:21 am
walks his faith. he doesn't talk his faith. he's committed to making this the first, the top priority when we return back to washington, d.c. most of the republicans that i work with, they want military aid. they are not in support of all the humanitarian aid that was in the senate bill and myself with brian fitzpatrick with pennsylvania and working with chair ed golden we put a bill together that focuses on military aid, a $66 billion bill that provides military aid to ukraine, israel and taiwan. also a border security in that. we put this in as a discharge petition and it gives the speaker and the house to amend our package. we'll get a bill that focuses on military aid, and i know the speaker also wants to have the repo after we possess the russian asset tos to this and it
6:22 am
may in in the form of loans and it's very important on the republican side that we just not give president biden a blank check and why is that? a lot of weapons that ukraine needs the president has not given them like long range weapons and they provide a stalemate in ukraine. why not give ukraine the weapons that are higher tech, more capable to help them prevail on the battlefield. so we want to force the president's hands on the kinds of weapons that we will provide. >> congressman, as you know, president biden's been asking for this funding which would allow him and the u.s. to provide more weapons and tacms for seven months. is that not the case? you mentioned the loan is something that donald trump supports, do you think that this is the way it gets through? through a loan? >> i think there will be segments of the funding that will be a loan.
6:23 am
it won't be the whole thing, but i will say the president has had the ability to provide a tacms all along and has not done it. if we do this bill, and i think we will, there's enough support in the house to get this done, and i want to make sure we have support in the senate. i don't want to do a ping-pong or send it back over the senate. this has got to be a bicameral, bipartisan solution, but we want to force the president's hand -- >> they sent over a bill months ago, congressman. the senate did send over a bill months ago and it got stall in the house. >> it didn't have a lot of bicameral support. it had over $30 billion in humanitarian aid and there's not that amount of support for humanitarian aid. they just did a $50 billion humanitarian aid and germany's committed more. we think our role has been more military aid because that's what we're good at, and i'm optimistic we'll get this done
6:24 am
in two weeks and i want to make sure it's bicameral because i don't want to send a bill over to the senate and it doesn't go anywhere and that's been my main concern. i have a commitment for the speaker and the foreign affairs committee that we'll put this on the floor and get a vote. >> that's significant. you have a commitment from him and you heard it here. let me ask you about the speaker of the house because you know that some republicans oppose him putting a ukraine aid bill on the floor. do you think he could lose his speakership over this, congressman? >> it's possible. i'm not going to deny it. we have one or two people that are not team players. they'd rather enjoy the limelight, the social media and the fact is with the one-seat majority and we'll wind up with a three or four-seat majority after the special elections and it's not three or four or five people and one or two people can make this a minority. i'm of the view that you work
6:25 am
with the team. i don't want to get 100%. 80% is the ronald reagan rule, but we have some people that if they don't get 100% they want to bring the house down and they make it dysfunctional. i do think there are democrats who do not want to see this election and they don't want to be there for a vote and after the bill we may have a standoff with the speaker. i hope the speaker prevails. he's doing the right thing. it's in our national security interest that ukraine remain independent. >> we have a bunch more to get to, so let me turn to impeachment. you said back in december, quote, once we realize there's not a high crime or misdemeanor, we should move on. has that moment come, in your view? >> right now the lawyers and the committee that i talk to say there is not a specific crime. you need that for a high crime or misdemeanor. the investigation was it merited an investigation to put the facts out and let the public look at it and make a determination, and i think it's
6:26 am
good to be transparent especially for an election year and let's put the facts on the table, but when i talk to the lawyers on a committee staff they say at this point there's not a specific crime that's been committed. >> so is it time to drop it, congressman? based on what you're saying is it time to drop it? >> i don't know if it's time right now, but i do think we're probably nearing the conclusion of this investigations, and i think it was important for the american people that yes, there's $24 million that the family raised and the money was moved around in and that within itself was not a high crime or misdemeanor. >> let me ask you this week, the gop nominee, presumptive nominee donald trump shared an image of president biden bound and restrained in the back of a pickup truck. the biden campaign responded and said that trump is regularly inciting political violence. the former president also attacked the daughter of the
6:27 am
judge overseeing his hush money trial in new york. given that you have endorsed donald trump, do you also endorse this threatening rhetoric, congressman? >> i don't support the rhetoric. by the way, we see rhetoric on both sides. i'm the target of a lot of rhetoric on both sides, and i want us to raise the bar of civility and how we treat the other side of the aisle for sure. i don't think he was inciting violence, but it is representative of the political dialogue we have today, and i see it first hand. i get the same treatment from the left and the right right now. our country is better than this. we're the strongest country in the world, and we are the best country to live in, but we're not going to remain that way if we treat our opponents in this way and that's the first thing i want to raise. we have to be a lot better of how we dialogue with the opposition. secondly, when it comes to this election, we don't need that. the issues around our site and our district, the number one issue, the number two issue and
6:28 am
the number three issue is the border. >> yeah. >> we should be focusing on these issues and quality of life and we will win. >> congressman, let me follow up with you, you say he's not inciting political violence and he has made threatening statements about the daughter of this judge. is that appropriate? is that appropriate to be going after judges and their family members? >> i'll just say it this way, that's not how i talk. i will lead by example on this. i think in my debates with my opponents i focus on the issues and that's how we win, and i think in nebraska and the midwest we don't like the nastiness. we have a phrase here, nebraska nice. it's real. so we could win on the issues and that's what we should focus on. >> donald trump is making the case, as you know, that he deserves total immunity. the supreme court set to hear arguments in that case. do you think that a president deserves total immunity, congressman?
6:29 am
>> no. all americans have to live by the law and we are all accountable for our behavior and so especially after you leave the presidency, everybody, any individual should be held accountable through the legal system, and so -- bottom line, every american is equally held responsible under the law. >> okay. let me ask you finally, if i can, obviously there's been so much focus on the bridge collapse in baltimore. we've been talking about the fact that the response so far has been bipartisan. some fiscal conservatives are already saying that providing more funds to baltimore would be like robbing peter to pay paul. what is your assessment? do you think more funding should be approved and on this easter, what is your message about bipartisanship and the possibility of working together on something like this? >> so you have two questions there. first, the federal government does have a role with this
6:30 am
bridge. i don't think it should be the sole payer, and to partnership with maryland and maybe the local authorities, it is a federal highway and the constitution we have, responsible the for infrastructure so there is a role there, and i think the federal government has to do its part. on easter, i just -- we have to remind ourselves that first of all, this -- resurrection sunday, it shows that god has power over death that we have eternal future with him with faith and we can't forget that. it's the most important day of the year for our faith. secondly, i think our faith calls for the golden rule. it calls for the fruits of the spirit in galatians that we should treat each other with respect, decency, and i think as christians, sometimes we forgot that in this political debate. we can't allow ourselves to be, we have to hold a higher bargain
6:31 am
and remember the golden rule as we work out the issues facing our country. >> congressman don bacon, thank you so much. we appreciate it. >> the party's popular ex-presidents raise big dollars for the current occupant of the white house. will the high bank type 2 diabetes? discover the ozempic® tri-zone. ♪ ♪ i got the power of 3. i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight. in studies, the majority of people reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. i'm under 7. ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as stroke, heart attack, or death in adults also with known heart disease. i'm lowering my risk. adults lost up to 14 pounds. i lost some weight. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction.
6:32 am
serious side effects may include pancreatitis. gallbladder problems may occur. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. living with type 2 diabetes? ask about the power of 3 with ozempic®. h&r block's tax pros average 10 years of experience. and we'll do your taxes for you- from start to finish. you know, for nearly 70 years we've prepared more than nearly 800 million tax returns worldwide. i should know, i'm h&r block's chief tax officer, kathy pickering. for us, expert help isn't new. so, when every dollar matters, get your max refund guaranteed with an h&r block tax pro.
6:33 am
we really don't want people to think of feeding food like ours is spoiling their dogs. good, real food is simple. it looks like food, it smells like food, it's what dogs are supposed to be eating. ♪ how did i ever miss this? before you were preventing migraine with qulipta? you'll never truly forget migraine, but zero-migraine days are possible. don't take if allergic to qulipta. most common side effects are nausea, constipation and sleepiness. qulipta. the forget-you-get-migraine medicine. (vo) welcome to lobsterfest. is your party ready? ready to attack this new lobster & shrimp stack? qulipta. ready for your lobster lover's dream to come true? they're two of ten lobster creations, only at lobsterfest. plus, cheddar bays for days. but lobsterfest won't last, so hurry in.
6:34 am
katy rogers new york times white house correspondent and author of "american woman. the transformation of the modern woman from hillary clinton." jeh johnson and ramesh ponnuru. katie, i want to start with you. three presidents raised more than $25 million. will it make a difference? actually, they raised 26 million, and i was texting with the campaign to get final numbers and it does make a difference. it's more than $6 million more than trump raised last month with the whole month of february. so it makes a difference because they are going to pump that
6:35 am
money back into battleground states. i think you mentioned nikki haley at some point on the show, but they're using that money to target voters who are open to anyone but trump so basically the campaign's point is we are going to use this money we're raising on voters which is different than how the trump campaign will use the money. >> jeh, you know president biden and president obama, and is obama going to be a big presence on the campaign trail? what are you expecting? >> good question. for the, you oversee the secret service and you notice things and i watched the two of them get off air force one and obama's following biden because he's the former president and he strides down the stairs and he did what he did for eight years which is head straight for the beast, the right here seat and all of a sudden you realize, oop, left turn, that's president
6:36 am
biden's. seeing them on stage they were all elected for distinctly reasons. obama was next gen, new energy, new intellect that transcended race. clinton was, it's the economy, stupid, and biden is battle for the soul of our nation, save us from the insanity. i hope the biden people, and those rationales don't translate easily from one campaign to the other. i hope that the biden people don't overlook the fact that the save us from the insanity rationale is even more compelling now than it was election 2020 when you look at what's happened since. january 6th, the criminal prosecutions and president biden's rhetoric has become even more extreme than it was in the run-up in 2020. so that case is even more compelling now than it was four years ago. >> you take me to ramesh. ramesh, what do you make of the
6:37 am
rhetoric that we are hearing from former president trump, this image that he's tweeted out of president biden tied up in the back of a pickup truck. maybe it energizes the base in a primary, but it plays differently in a general election, right? >> i think one of the peculiarities of this particular campaign matchup is that each of the candidates would be better off keeping a low profile and letting the public focus on the other guy because when the public focuses on either of these candidates it tends to think about the things it dislikes about those candidates. what we are seeing from trump is more of what has kept him a persistently unpopular figure, but it might not matter if biden is unpopular enough. if he stays in these numbers through november, the fact that trump is saying these incendiary things isn't going to matter. >> yet this all comes, katie, against the backdrop of these court cases. the first court date is april 15th, we now know. it plays very differently in the
6:38 am
general. >> i kind of disagree on that. i think that the biden campaign and the white house, although biden has directed everyone on down to not comment on the legal proceedings themselves, they're using this as an opportunity to really talk aggressively to talk about trump's behavior, how dangerous his rhetoric can be and also if you noticed in recent days they're using his messaging to how abure is the trump can be. he tweeted about winning his own golf tournament at his club and the president said congratulations. what an accomplishment. they're using this to draw contrast without talking about the legal problems. >> some democrats want the president to get more aggressive about donald trump's legal problems? >> i think it's unavoidable. the legitimate case to be made here is how can you vote for someone for president who is under four different federal
6:39 am
criminal -- four different felony indictments who may well be convicted of a serious felony by election day? i think that's a legitimate question to ask voters. so they have to impress this. >> it will reinforce trump's core message which is that my political opponents are using these cases to persecute me. that's why biden has been trying to stay out of this. he doesn't want to be in the center of this story. >> the difference between the primary and the general election plays out very differently. >> i also believe the most extreme part of trump's base accepts that, believes that, that he's being persecuted in some way. i don't believe swing voters buy that. >> i think the president has been pretty direct about trump lately in terms of in fundraisers in particular talking about he believes he poses a great danger to democracy in addition to everything else. >> katie, very quickly, we have about 30 seconds left. you have a book "american woman"
6:40 am
do you anticipate the first lady jill biden will play a significant role on the campaign trail? he's had powerful statements. >> she launched women for biden last month. she's going to launch educators for biden in april. she goes on campaign swings regularly and spent all last weekend in california. she is a potent fundraiser and the most popular surrogate he has so she will have a voice and presence. >> just about ten seconds. we've seen michelle obama play a big role for former president barack obama on the trail. >> absolutely. she was definitely a campaign asset. >> okay. great. thank you all for a great conversation on this easter. i appreciate it. i hope you all have a great holiday. holiday. >> well, he was a highly when you need to prepare for unpredictable adventures... (gasp) you need weathertech. [hot dog splat.] laser measured floorliners front and rear. [drink slurp and splat.] (scream)
6:41 am
seat protector to save the seats. [honk!] they're all yours! we're here! hey, i knew you were comin'... so i weatherteched the car! can we get ice cream? we can now. kid proof your vehicle with american made products at weathertech.com. if you're living with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis or active psoriatic arthritis, symptoms can sometimes take you out of the moment. now there's skyrizi, so you can show up with clearer skin... ...and show it off. ♪ nothing is everything ♪ with skyrizi, you could take each step with 90% clearer skin. and if you have psoriatic arthritis, skyrizi can help you get moving with less joint pain, stiffness, swelling, and fatigue. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine, or plan to.
6:42 am
thanks to skyrizi, there's nothing like clearer skin and less joint pain, and that means everything. ♪ nothing is everything ♪ ask your doctor about how skyrizi could help with your skin or joint symptoms. learn how abbvie could help you save.
6:43 am
welcome back. we want to take a moment to note the passing of former senator joe lieberman of connecticut. he served in the senate for 24 years and made history as the first jewish candidate on a white house ticket as al gore's
6:44 am
runningmate. a fiercely independent voice he served as an democrat and independent during his time in the senate and bucked his party if 2008 to support the presidential bid of his friend john mccain. lieberman was a candidate for president in 2004 and the democratic nominee for vice president in the tumultuous 2000 election. he joined "meet the press" 12 days after the votes were cast in 2000 with the results hanging in the balance. >> i think the most important thing i've learned and i hope it's the most important thing the american people have learn side that every vote counts. this is something that we -- politicians always say in campaigns, and i think the public may view it with some skepticism, but boy, look at this election. the second thing i've learn side that the system is resilient. our democracy is resilient and courts are there to do the right thing and i think ultimately
6:45 am
when there is a dispute that cannot be settled in the legislative branch or an executive branch or in the political press the courts are there not as democrats or republicans, but as individuals sworn to uphold the rule of law who will mediate and ultimately who will mediate and ultimately conclude this hold up. if asthma isn't treating you right... you might be treating it wrong. and i know, you've been going through it. but what if you get to it. a key source of your asthma inflammation.
6:46 am
enter nucala. it isn't your rescue treatment and it's not a steroid. it's an autoinjector you can do at home. just once a month. nucala targets and reduces eosinophils and helps your symptoms. think less asthma attacks... less need for oral steroids... less asthma-related hospital visits. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. it's not you - it's your symptoms. so, help get ahead of your asthma. get to the source, measured with simple blood testing. ask your specialist about nucala. ♪♪ i'm sarah escherich. i'm the life enrichment director at independence village, a senior living community in waukee, iowa.
6:47 am
everybody here really, really make you feel like family and that they love you. our goal with tiktok was to enrich the lives of our residents. i think i am a tiktok grandma. my kids think i am. i mean, we're the ones that are being entertained. time goes faster when you're having fun. keep tiktok. business. it's not a nine-to-five when proposition. fun. it's all day and into the night. it's all the things that keep this world turning. it's the go-tos that keep us going. the places we cheer. trust. hang out. and check in.
6:48 am
they all choose the advanced network solutions and round the clock partnership from comcast business. powering more businesses than anyone. powering possibilities.
6:49 am
welcome back. you know her as the co-anchor of the "today" show, but now savannah guthrie is showing a new side of herself, her relationship with her faith. while she doesn't consider herself a theologian, savannah says like so many americans she has had a spiritual journey throughout her life, from sunday school to choir practice, she always saw god as the sixth member of her family. in her new book, mostly when god does, savannah explores her relationship with god and how it has impacted the biggest moments of her life. ahead of this easter sunday, i sat down for a very special meet the moment conversation with my nbc news colleague to discuss what she's learned while reflecting on her deeply held
6:50 am
beliefs. >> why did you want to write this book now? >> you know, no one is more surprised than me that i wrote a book about anything let alone about faith and about god. it's definitely the most personal and vulnerable thing i've ever done. >> well, as someone who has known you for a long time i have to say one of the most beautiful parts of reading this book is that i hear your voice in every word. >> really? >> i felt like i was sitting with you. >> for better or worse. >> i think the world gets to hear your voice every morning on tv, but how did you find your written voice? your literary voice? >> i love to hear you say that because we are dear friends and i've had many of my friends say this is so funny reading this is like sitting and having coffee with you. >> it really is. >> or more likely wine in my case, but i wrote my own thought. i tried to make it very simple, very down to earth and very
6:51 am
accessible. it's not a religious tone. i'm not a biblical scholar, i'm not a theologian and i'm not offering myself up as an example of piety andel ridgeous learning and i'm just a regular human who has walked in faith and out of faith in years and years and these are some of the things i've learned and i didn't learn them because everything went well, i learned them mostly when things went wrong and disasters and disasters often of my own making, and the thrust of the book is very simple. it's simple and not easy and it's called mostly what god does and the rest of the sentence is mostly what god does is love you. >> as you say, you are a person of faith. you grew up with god as the sixth member of your household. you say -- what do you say to people who feel like they've lost their faith? how do they find it again? >> i understand, and i think god understands. we live in a broken world. this is not the world that god intended and there are hard
6:52 am
questions, and i try to talk about those things. where is god in a world that looks to be full of injustice and despair and suffering whether it's when we do in our business by looking at the news every day or whether it's lives lived where disappointment mounts and heartbreak seems constant. i ask those questions, what are we supposed to believe about god? how are we supposed to find him? i don't answer all of the existential questions of the universe that are unanswerable. spoiler alert. if i did the book would be longer and i'd charge more, but i don't think it is a mistake, and i don't think it is a lack of faith to grapple with those doubts and the number one thing i say is bring those doubts to god, bring your whole self to god. he's not afraid of the question. >> you do write candidly of the most painful times in your life, losing your father. i remember my friends asking if
6:53 am
i can still believe in god if his sudden death at the age of 49 had maybe doubted my beliefs. no, i said, this is when i need god the most. savannah, i think a lot of people still wonder how were you able to keep your faith and find such a strong relationship with it all these years later despite such a devastating loss at such a young age. >> when i said that to my friends i was 16 years old and that was my first reaction. no, i can't give up god. i can't lose my dad and god, not at the same time, but the rest of my life is a story of any kind of relationship where there's been a breach of trust and when we have things that come to us that are hard and we have suffering, it is a breach of trust. i write about this. i don't think that god is the author of evil, suffering and death. this is not the world that he intended, but the fact of the matter is and this is what's so difficult and this is the crucible of faith, for whatever reason, reasons we cannot possibly understand right now.
6:54 am
he does permit it. this world is still going on in a broken way that is full of heartbreak and it is very understandable to ask where is god in those moments and that is what my life has been about. asking those questions, and i think that what i've learned is it is relationship. i believe and this is my leap of faith that we will one day a better world on earth as it is in heaven and until that day we are asked to believe and just draw close to god and believe that he will draw close to us. >> very candid about the moments in your life when you did not feel close to god, when you could not access your faith. you are doing the hard work. you started that very early with vail by taking her to church and your mom said to him -- >> people keep asking me, do you talk your children to church?
6:55 am
yes, i drag them to church, yes, do i. >> and you do the work yourself. >> you have to do the work, but you're right. it's very candid. i write about taking not months, not days, not a few weeks and years, but yes, i believed in a distant kind of way, but it's not like i was waking up every morning doing bible study or had some pious practices or was living a life that i would want to hold up to some religious scrutiny. no, i was a regular person and there were times in my life when i was disappointed with the way thing his turned out that i probably did blame god and i just kind of checked out, and what i learned is that it doesn't matter how much we think of god. it does not matter what we think of god. it doesn't change how he thinks about us. it does not matter. it does not change how he treats us. so this is the big, i think for me, the big aha, the big message
6:56 am
of the book is god lovesio you and his message has nothing to do with our thoughts of him, it has nothing to do with our actions good or bad. it has nothing to do with who we are and it has everything to do with when he is. >> and you say that having children made you understand god's love for you. how? how did that revelation happen? >> i mean, you know this being a mom there's a revelation in every single way, but spiritually it really was, too. there was a moment when i realized when my daughter was born, of course, this love that was unimaginable to me before and unlike any other i'd experienced because it was the closest i think i'd ever to to understanding how god feels for us. a mother and father's love for their child is unconditional. it doesn't matter how they act. on their worst day your love is no different for your daughter no matter what she does, even if
6:57 am
she's a snarly thing, there is not one thing you could say for or against that would make you change your mind about her. when you realize that that's how god feels about us it's stunning. it's stunningly intimate and tender. it's almost too good to believe. >> you're having this conversation as we prepare to celebrate easter. >> yeah. what does easter mean to you and how do you make sure that it is a day that is filled with faith even while you're doing easter egg hunts. >> we do it all. >> and the big meal. >> every year i'm, like, count the eggs. we'll find one in july and it's going to stink and so we do all the stuff. we got the easter bunny. it's fun. why not? but we do go to church, and i do try to remind my kids why this day is so joyous, and you know, it's an interesting metaphor for life because of course, in the christian tradition easter is the resurrection and it comes after a day of darkness and a day of sorrow, but the sunday morning is so full of joy
6:58 am
because we know what we've lost. we know how dark it can be so when the light comes it is magnificent and that's the joy of easter. >> and just -- what is your easter message for everyone? >> i guess my easter message is remember that you are loved. you, specifically, everything about you. you are loved. you are adored. you are light. hold it in your heart if even for a split second and if you can do that today, don't forget to do it tomorrow. >> our thanks to savannah for that great conversation. finally, we want to acknowledge a somber milestone. it has been one year since wall street journal roster evan gershkovich was imprisoned in russia for doing his job. on friday the newspaper published this powerful front page, an empty space where all of evan's work over the last year should have been. here at "meet the press" we join our colleagues at the journal and news organizations across the country in saying that journalism is not a crime.
6:59 am
that is all for today. thank you for watching. happy easter. if it's sunday, it's "meet the press."
7:00 am
good morning. it is sunday, march 31st. this is a live look at japantown in downtown san jose. and this is "today in the bay." thanks for joining us, everybody. happy easter. i'm in for kira klapper. it's been a wet few days across the bay, so when will it end?

93 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on