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tv   Andrea Mitchell Reports  MSNBC  June 18, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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epshteyn, who is the legal advisor working with the legal counsel around the country, as well as jenna ellis, she pled guilty to charges stemming from the georgia federal election interference case last year. we are looking at another alternate elector, jim lamon. he is also going to be appearing for the arraignment today. it's not clear whether they will each be pleading guilty or not guilty at this time. >> vaughn hillyard, thank you very much. that wraps up the hour for me. i'm jose diaz-balart. thank you for the privilege of your time. andrea mitchell picks up with more news right now. right now on "andrea mitchell reports," vladimir putin making his first trip to north korea in 24 years as russia depends on north korea's surplus weapons to fight its war
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in ukraine. >> this is what's keeping the war going. the fastest way to end the war is for putin to be disabused of the notion he can outlast ukraine and all of ukraine's supporters. also,s rebid president bide unveiling a new immigration policy. it's a big primary day for two republican incumbents facing different challenges in oklahoma and virginia. a heat wave, as dangerous temperatures head towards triple digits from iowa to maine. ♪♪ good day, everyone. i'm andrea mitchell in washington. secretary of state blinken just wrapping up a pressing and wide ranging event with nato secretary-general stoltenberg
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citing nearly a dozen bilateral security deals between ukraine and nato allies as evidence our collective defense is the best way to combat vladimir putin's aggression. >> this is proof -- clear proof that all of our countries are with ukraine for the long haul. and that if mr. putin is counting on outlasting ukraine or any of us, he is misguided. he is wrong. >> adding to the urgency ahead of the upcoming nato summit next week in washington, d.c., the stalled gaza peace deal and cease-fire. >> there could be a cease-fire if they said yes a week ago. we will continue to work this with urgency and determination to see if we can bridge the gap. >> russia's advances in ukraine,
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especially with vladimir putin arriving in north korea today and likely winning an expanded arms deal from kim jong-un. we begin with richard engel in ukraine, janis mackey frayer in beijing, matt bradley in jerusalem and "washington post" foreign affairs columnist david ignatius. richard, to you. russia playing this as a friendly visit between two neighbors. they are in north korea. there's a lot of evidence the north is arming russia in ukraine and getting technology from north korea as well back. >> reporter: absolutely. it's a match made in heaven between these two pariah states. north korea needs just about everything. the people don't have enough food. the economy can't produce enough to sustain itself. the one thing that it does have in great supply is artillery shells, soviet-era shells which
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russia is burning through at an enormous rate. they can provide food stuff and some international credibility and clout, a pact forming with china, russia and north korea, and some sophisticated technology, particularly for icbms and big missile programs that kim jong-un prizes as he tries to seek a nuclear deterrent against the united states or has a nuclear deterrent. >> janis mackey frayer, his relationship with kim jong-un is increasing tensions across the asia pacific region. there was a situation this morning. along the dmz, what do we know about that? 20 to 30 north korean soldiers went across. it's clearly marked.
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as well as putin's visit, the importance of this first visit nearly a quarter century to north korea. >> reporter: this incident at the dmz that divides north and south korea happening hours before putin was expected to touch down in pyongyang. south korea's military says that it happened when a group of north korean soldiers, about 20 or 30 of them, heavily armed, briefly crossed the military demarcation line. officials were saying, it didn't look intentional. this is the second time it's happened in the past week. north korea has been sending troops to this border area to do construction work and to plant land mines, measures seen as preventing defectors from crossing into the south. adding to the tension are reports that multiple north korean soldiers have been killed
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in land mine explosions on the north sides of the dmz. south korea saying -- not saying exactly when it happened. they talked about it today as being a separate incident. we have to remember that there are no lines of communication right now between north and south korea. so information has been only trickling in. but, of course, all eyes will be on pyongyang tomorrow when the state visit with vladimir putin gets underway. the streets are decorated. his face is everywhere. there are banners. there are concerts planned and ceremonies. of course, much of the focus will be on the one-on-one discussions these to men have. north korea is seen as supporting russia with munitions. moscow in return has been providing aid and other
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technology. nato's concern is russia has been supplying know-how to north korea to advance its missile, its nuclear programs, and also its satellite technology programs. >> let me stay on ukraine and the whole alliance with these illegal arms that are going there. richard, let's talk about china. china, while not supplying weapons, is helping 70% of the military base of russia, which is prolonging the war. >> reporter: it's an interesting dynamic and one at play for the last nearly 2 1/2 years. what does china benefit from the war? how does it benefit in keeping this war going? because china is clearly supporting the war through supporting vladimir putin, giving him cheap fuel, now giving him a lot of electronics,
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components to use in the war effort. it seems that china is comfortable to have the west distracted, engaged in a war in europe instead of focusing on a pivot to asia, instead of focusing on taiwan and beefing up security in taiwan, although, it's doing some of that as well. it's making russia more and more dependent on china, dependent on north korea, dependent on the chinese sphere of influence. there's also a big power politics at play here as vladimir putin now in a sense has to go looking for weapons, scrounging for weapons in north korea. >> matt bradley, let's talk about the middle east, where i just came from. i understand prime minister netanyahu put out a video today, just before this news conference in washington, saying that secretary blinken had assured hum he would remove bottlenecks
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to the weapons. what blinken said is that's not the 2,000-pound bombs they have been using in potentially illegal ways against civilians, but other weapons, weapons potentially for the north where hezbollah, backed by iran in lebanon, is becoming more aggressive. potentially opening up a new friend. >> reporter: that's right. there's a second front to this war. there has been since the beginning. this is something we need to reiterate. this fighting in the north of israel and south of lebanon is fierce. it's ongoing. it has happened since the day after those attacks. we heard from antony blinken talking about this. we heard from benjamin netanyahu. these weapons are going to be crewucial crucial. hezbollah has an enormous stockpile, more than 150,000 ballistic missiles and missiles that can launch from long distances. precise ammunition. this makes them different from
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hamas, which is also an iran-backed group. the situation has been heating up over the past week, because israel has continued to attack senior hezbollah commanders, which has been inviting retaliation by hezbollah. we have seen huge swaths of northern israel set on fire by the exchanging of fire that's going on. we have seen 150,000 people who have been displaced by the fighting on both sides of the border. hundreds of hezbollah fighters have been killed. there's been several israeli civilians killed in the fighting as well as several israeli soldiers. this is a situation that if it weren't for the incredibly fierce war going on between israel and hamas in the gaza strip, this would be the headline, what's going on in northern israel and southern lebanon. that's why we are seeing another senior american diplomat. this is a man who is not a household name, but he will be very soon, if the war in the north really kicks off. he has been doing shuttle
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diplomacy, like antony blinken. now he is in beirut talking to the government, trying to tamp down tensions, trying to prevent israel and hezbollah from entering into a region-wide war. >> david, let's talk about all of this on president biden's plate. in this campaign, donald trump trying to make very much of this, blaming everything on -- everything that's happened since biden. but it started a long time before. the middle east, tony blinken trying again. the cease-fire proposal is stahl -- stalled. it was almost back to square one on a cease-fire and hostage release, which is so critical, even as israel has -- netanyahu has disbanded his war cabinet with the resignation of a key
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centrist former general, or two of them. >> you can hear the frustration in secretary blinken's voice as he was talking about the stalled negotiations. the u.s. has seen this as absolutely essential in trying to deescalate the situation, not only in gaza but throughout the region. increasingly, i think, u.s. concerns and those of israel itself are focused on lebanon, on the danger of a war in the north. we are now in mid-summer. israeli schoolchildren will go back to school in september. the children who live in those areas along the border have had to flee to hotels in the south and center of israel. people insist that they have to go home in time to start school. the time to get a solution is running out. the diplomacy with lebanon i'm told is fairly far advanced. there are detailed provisions
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that would take affect limiting where hezbollah forces could be deployed in southern lebanon, limiting israeli activities in lebanon as part of an overall package. that will be frozen until -- i think until we have some cease-fire agreement for gaza. that's been hezbollah's insistence. as blinken talked, you could hear the weight of the difficulty of trying to ratchet these conflicts down. >> it's been extraordinarily difficult. perhaps the most complex that you or i have seen in decades of following the middle east and the frustration also, of course, with the palestinian death toll, which has been horrific to say the least. let me ask you about ukraine, because richard reported last night showing some of the weapons delivery. he was with abrams tanks. there are other new weapons, you
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know, and i know, as does he, some of the weapons that they have long sought where they can go across the border to where the russians are based and firing barrages against northern ukraine. has halted the progress that russia has made since the freeze on the supplemental back in february that has been so damaging to ukraine when they first started retreating and then kharkiv at risk? >> i'm told by both ukrainian and u.s. officials that the russian offensive towards kharkiv, the largest city in the east, second largest city in ukraine, has been slowed, pretty much stalled. those u.s. weapons being fired
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over the border into russian territory have forced the russians to pull back so that kharkiv is less in range of russian attacks. so i think there's some relief that what looked like a potential devastation of kharkiv has been delayed. one thing that caught my ear in the discussion today, especially from secretary-general stoltenberg, was russian hybrid actions in eastern europe, russian strikes, sabotage, arson, other activities in countries like poland, the baltic states. that's an expansion of russian aggression. if the russians are beginning to operate inside poland, for example, that's a new turn in the war. >> that's a good catch. thanks so much, david ignatius. good to see you. thanks to all of you. executive action.
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president biden taking a big step this afternoon for half a million immigrant spouses of american citizens. sparking political backlash and probably legal challenges from republicans in an election. that's next when "andrea mitchell reports" is back in 90 seconds. stay with us. you are watching msnbc. liberty mutual customized my car insurance and i saved hundreds. with all the money i saved i thought i'd buy stilts. hi honey. ahhh...ooh. look, no line at the hot dog stand. yes! only pay for what you need. ♪liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty.♪
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president biden is trying to address a major campaign issue today. immigration. by taking executive action to
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shield half a million undocumented spouses of u.s. citizens who are subject to deportation. the spouses are. the election year policy change applying to non-citizens who have been here at least ten years and are married to a u.s. citizen, allowing them and their children to apply for permanent residence. the president is streamlining work visa requirements for dreamers, the children of undocumented immigrants, to get would visas after criticism of has not made them a priority. it comes weeks after president biden restricted asylum claims at the border. joining me now, monica alba and maria theresa cumar. what is happening today? there's a huge political benefit. i'm sure the white house is seeing this to balance what they did two weeks ago. how long can it last?
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will there be legal action, a preliminary injunction? is this messaging rather than substance? >> reporter: it likely will face legal challenges. the administration is bracing for that. the president did propose tougher immigration policies and shutting down the border effectively to certain asylum seekers. he mentioned in a few weeks he would lay out steps that would aim to make the system overall, which he called broken, better and more fair to more people who have been in this country for years and who have tried to contribute to society and have worked hard here. this will apply, as you mentioned, to the white house estimates more than 500,000 undocumented immigrants who married american citizens and who have been here for more than ten years. those are the requirements at least to apply. that application process will open sometime at the end of the summer. they will still be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.
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it doesn't mean everybody is automatically eligible. on average, we are talking about people who have been here for more than 20 years. then, yes, some of their children will be eligible to apply as well for green cards and eventually a potential pathway to citizenship. immigration is a key political vulnerability for president biden when you look at major polling. they are keenly aware of that. this is about the president coming out and saying, we have tried to be strict. we have tried to be tough. but there are also compassionate measures that should be taken into consideration when we talk about the immigrant population. our colleague julia ainsley did an interview this morning with somebody who would benefit from this program if it is able to get off the ground. take a listen to what she heard. >> an action like this has been way overdue. people said the same thing about
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daca, it wasn't necessary, it was overstepping. daca has turned out to be a very successful program. i don't see it as a bad thing. in fact, i see it as life changing in a positive way for hundreds of thousands of families and people. america is going to be stronger because of this. >> reporter: it's no accident that this is coming around the anniversary of daca. some of the dreamers will be able to apply for work visas if they meet certain requirements. >> maria theresa, let's talk about this. i think you are going to be at the white house event, which is 2:45 this afternoon in the east room. you represent an important constituency. you know the vulnerabilities that the president has right now. with many latino voters who the
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trump people are claiming and polling indicates are not as enthusiastic of joe biden as they were previously, depending which state. that's not a monolithic community, as you know better than i. is this just politics or is this substance? the dreamers have been ignored. they were not permanently extended because of congress. that could all go away if donald trump is elected. >> this is both political but also the decent, fair thing to do. we have been working with the white house for a decade. i recently found a picture of myself in the oval office in the white house speaking to president obama about this very precise issue. one thing that i do know, there's going to be 500,000 parents that are going to be able to safely put their kids to bed rid of anxiety. the political part is doing contrast that it's going to be very important. when you talk to latino voters,
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what is the biggest contrast between republicans and democrats? democrats care about immigrant families. this demonstrates it. then you have the contrast of what the former president is trying to do and he promises to do. he does not only want to separate families, but he wants to set up a cottage industry of detention centers around the country that promises to mobilize and incarceration anyone who looks not american, not white. this is a huge step forward for these families and the local communities, the economy of the local communities. it reminds us where our roots are and we are decent people and we take care of families first. >> how do you justify the actions he took on asylum a few weeks ago? that crackdown so severe and really in response, most likely, to not just the increase in people coming across the border illegally in between ports but
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the politics. >> the president was put in a hard place. he provided a bipartisan bill that was served up. the republicans, even though they negotiated with him, the most extreme members of the party didn't want anything to do with it. so this is an opportunity for them to go back to the table and say, this is how we respond to protecting our border. i think when you talk to voters everywhere, they want safe borders. they want to be fair and humanitarian. at the end of the day, this is communicating to congress that if the -- if they aren't willing to be the leadership they are supposed to have, the president is willing to take arc. >> thank you so much. more breaking news. justin timberlake was arrested last night. charged with one count of driving while intoxicated.
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he was held overnight and released this morning following his arraignment. according to the sag harbor police department, a source says the singer was eating at the american hotel in sag harbor and headed to a friend's house when he was pulled over by police. according to the police complaint, he told officers, quote, i had one martini and followed my friends home. timberlake's next court date is scheduled for july 26th. global threats. virginia senator tim kaine joining me to discuss vladimir putin's embrace of kim jong-un as ukrainian forces fight to hold key territory. you are watching "andrea mitchell reports." this is msnbc. mitchell reports." this is msnbc.
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mayor london breed 2024. financial disclosures are available at sfethics.org. for the first time in nearly a quarter century, vladimir putin is in north korea tonight to meet -- tonight over there, today over here, to meet with kim jong-un. russia is believed to be helping north korea with critical technology. joining us now, democratic senator from virginia tim kaine who serves on the foreign relations and armed services committees. thank you for being with us. i know you are concerned about the increased military and economic cooperation between north korea and russia, which has really, along with china, really bailed putin out during a tough period just when, of course, u.s. aid was being
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blocked. >> andrea, absolutely. what you see -- it has increased in the last ten years -- isning between russia, china, north korea and iran. they have realized that america's strategic advantage is not just in our people and our
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>> without china, their money as well, violating sanctions, and without north korea, putin would be on his heels, especially with his manpower problems and all the other problems he has had and morale problems. >> completely. and without iranian drones. putin doesn't have an economy that has the capacity to produce what he needs to maintain this war without the other bigger authoritarian nations in the world backing him up. we will be meeting -- the senate foreign relations committee -- with nato secretary-general stoltenberg. we will talk about nato and
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ukraine. we will explore, what are the ways that democratic nations can use tools to shut off or penalize those who are assisting this illegal russian war machine. >> david ignatius was commenting in a previous segment that from his sources, he is hearing russia is doing hybrid -- taking hybrid action against some of our nato allies like poland, which is a significant expansion of what they have done before, correct? >> they are. i don't want to get -- i don't want to say more than i can. but we see russia taking steps to destabilize nations in the eastern portion of nato. we have seen that for years. america was paying a lot of attention to russian efforts to interrupt our 2016 campaign. we paid less attention to what russia was doing to interrupt campaigns throughout the eastern rim of nato. they are very much frightened by
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democracies on the borders, because they know if russian citizens see successful democracies just across the border where people have freedoms and where there's a quality of life dramatically better than russia, then that makes russians look at their own leadership and say, why have you failed us? they don't want successful democratic nations on their border. they are undertaking these hybrid steps to destabilize them so the russian people won't fully grasp how badly their lead leadership is letting them down. >> are you attending the joint session with prime minister netanyahu, who is, according to many people in the u.s., not doing enough to let aid in or injured gazans out while we have this stalled hostage deal, and nothing excuses what happened on october 7th, but the progression
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of the war and some of the weapons -- u.s. weapons used have been disproportionate. >> i'm not thinking that much about a speech more than a month from now. i'm thinking about this hostage deal and cease-fire that's on the table. i have noticed in the last couple days, you see something extraordinary going on in israel. the israeli defense forces are trying to take pauses during the day in fighting in gaza to get more humanitarian aid to gazans. the prime minister is criticizing them. he and members of his cabinet are trashing the military for trying to promote more humanitarian aid to suffering civilians. this is so unusual. it demonstrates, along with protests in israel recently, the very, very fractious nature there. >> before i let you go, i know you and some of your colleagues have introduced new measures to try to professionalize our ambassador corps where numbers
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are creeping up of political ambassadors as compared to foreign service. the foreign service is a jewel in the crown of the administration's foreign policy. we have got some very good political ambassadors but some who have -- notably in congressional hearings been dreadful. >> it's my goal is to have the state department being as professional as can be. that's not only ambassadors, it's also in assistant secretaries of state and other key leaders of sections of the state department. there is a role for the political ambassador. they say, you sent us somebody who is a close confidante of the president. that can send a positive message. having the career ambassadors at two-thirds or above is a smart thing that takes advantage of the professionally trained
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service that suggests our interactions with other nations isn't at the whim of partisan politics. i have done a couple of bills. i have one pending that i'm hoping to get included in the state department reauthorization bill that we are working on in foreign relations right now. >> so much to talk about with you, as always, senator tim kaine. heat wave. dangerous temperatures in major cities ahead of the official start of summer, putting local leaders on alert. you are watching "andrea mitchell reports." this is msnbc. buzz but this hive isn't big enough for the both of us. boo oh wow, what a buzzkill. and if you don't have the right auto insurance coverage, paying for this could really sting. so get allstate, save money, and be protected from mayhem... like me.
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with nearly 150 billion people facing sweltering temperatures above 90 degrees for the next few days, the national weather service is warning it will be dangerous and long. more than 100 record high temperatures are expected this week. chicago's airport hit 97 breaking a record from 1957. joining us now is maura barrett. it's hot out there. you are on the beach, no less. >> reporter: you might be able to see the sweat on my forehead. it's hitting 90 degrees. we are expecting the high 90s today and through the rest of the week. folks showing up. the ice cream man behind me getting ready to sell opportunities to cool off. people looking to get into the water. officials warning even when you
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are in the water, it's important to take a break and get hydrated and sit in the shade so you get out of the sunlight. they emphasize cooling yourself off is essential. scientists are warning more and more about the extended heat waves and record-breaking temperatures because of human-caused climate change and increased carbon emissions. that's consider we see early heat waves in mid-june. we don't usually see this until august. that's something scientists are pointing out. labor and environmental organizations calling on fema to allocate funding for heat disaster relief. that's not something that fema does, but it could help local communities distribute water, help with the electrical grid, install cooling systems. that's something people have top of mind as this is the beginning of a really hot and toasty week. >> i have nothing wrong with the ice cream, but the rest of it, no relief until the end at the
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earliest. >> reporter: we need a treat, for sure. >> thanks, maura. the fake electors. a top trump advisor by the former president's side throughout most of the hush money trial is facing his own arraignment in arizona today. that's next. you are watching "andrea mitchell reports." this is msnbc. tchell reports." this is msnbc. en pretty. it's tough to breathe and tough to keep wondering if this is as good as it gets. but trelegy has shown me that there's still beauty and breath to be had. because with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy keeps my airways open and prevents future flare-ups. and with one dose a day, trelegy improves lung function so i can breathe more freely all day and night. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis.
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just arraigned. they all pled not guilty. joining us is vaughn hillyard. you know everything about arizona and about all of these players. all 18 people charged in the so-called fake electors case have pleaded not guilty. what's next for them? >> reporter: this runs out of the full slate. now all 18 pleading not guilty, which will allow this trial to go forward. of course, arizona attorney general brought this forward. in the last half hour, you see jenna ellis on your screen. she pleading not guilty. perhaps a bit surprisingly after she pleaded guilty along with three other co-defendants stemming from the georgia indictment last year. in her guilty plea in georgia a few months ago, she took responsibility for her actions and had a tearful apology to the citizens of georgia that she read inside the courtroom.
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yet today, she made a decision to go a different route. at this point, there's going to be the discovery process here. there's little reason to believe that if a trial would begin before the 2024 election, of course, there's a question over motions brought forward, whether some of the individuals try to sever the trial from having to be prosecuted at the same time as other defendants. each are facing nine counts for conspiracy, fraud and forgery. we are looking at a long road ahead. all 18 individuals have now entered the same plea agreement with the courts. >> vaughn hillyard, thanks so much. it's primary day in virginia and oklahoma today. a january 6 rioter is on the ballot in a georgia run-off. bob good, the freedom caucus chase, is facing a republican challenger backed by former speaker kevin mccarthy and donald trump, who is still angry that bob good backed ron
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desantis in the primary races. >> joining us now, former republican governor and presidential candidate john kasich and former obama white house communications director jen palmieri. can bob good survive this? he has donald trump and kevin mccarthy, a republican primary there in the 5th district. >> it's going to be an interesting one to watch. i have maintained that it's when you walk door to door, when you are out there with the folks you can overcome these endorsements by other people. that's one i'm going to keep an eye on. i think he will survive, andrea. i think he knew what he was up against. he probably got out there, shook the bushes and probably got himself in a position of where he can survive. a lot of times politicians worry when they get criticized by
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party figures or whatever that they're going to lose. i don't buy that. i think if you work hard enough and explain your position to people, you will survive and you will thrive. >> jen, let me ask you about the president. he is trying to address the immigration issue. inflation is going in the right direction. the one thing he can't get away from is the age issue. the republicans, especially after the g7, are taing things out of context. all of this fake information making him look older than he is. now he is only three years older than donald trump. he looked tired on a lot of that trip. >> the way i look at it is the only issue the republicans have left is joe biden's age. right? you look at -- there's not a lot of quarrel with the job he is doing. they have to misrepresent what is happening on stage with him
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to try and make people have questions about him. i know the white house and the campaign are beating back to say when things aren't true and being aggressive about that. the hard thing about this is once it's posted, it's hard to eradicate, get rid of it from the internet. you need to see more of biden, see biden on the debate stage being comfortable with how he speaks, how he engaged, how he is campaigning. that's the thing you can do to allay allay voters' concerns ab his age. but i really think it goes to what i -- where i started, which is they don't have anything else, all they have is questions about his age. >> which the first lady addressed sort of trying to proactively deal with that, and some of her campaigning out on the west coast this week. so, governor kasich, let's talk
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about the republican nominee going to racine, wisconsin, after trashing milwaukee, the site of the republican national convention. >> yeah. well, he's going -- obviously it wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania, critical battleground states. look, i mean, the big problem that joe biden has is that his base is not very motivated. the trump base is very motivated. it is interesting. and what biden is going to have to do is figure out how to get to the minority community, to get excited about turning out because, you know, right now it is razor thin in wisconsin, and it really is about who has got the intensity. and that's what biden is going to have to deal with. how -- what is he going to do to fire people up. his latest thing on the border comes as a result of his being tougher on the border, which made some people upset, so now he's trying to have another plan
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to mollify them. it is just that the people are not excited about it. and that's what the issue is, and here it is in june, and we're facing a republican nominee with a motivated base and a democratic nominee whose base is largely lethargic. that's got to be charged if biden hopes to win. >> and very briefly, jen, the debate next week, this is a big chance for joe biden to show his stuff, his state of the union joe biden, and be able to deal with donald trump. >> yeah, i think it is those things and being able to be one on one on stage with trump, to make sure the people understand he's responsible, trump is responsible for every abortion ban in this country. that there would be -- that we would pass the border security bill, donald trump stood in the way. there are things you need to get on the record there, on stage, even if trump won't agree that people can -- that will
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penetrate so that the most important issues that have not necessarily broken through with voters, that aren't paying attention, just the base that governor referred to, that they are clear on where trump is versus biden and this is the matchup. this is what they're going to face in november, a lot of voters still aren't sure that it is really going to be trump and biden. >> high risk, high reward for the white house having pitched that debate. john kasich, jen palmieri, thanks so much. next, our preview of the boeing ceo's testimony, tough testimony expected in terms of the questioning from lawmakers this afternoon. the families of the victims who died in two max 8 crashes expected in the hearing room. that's next. you're watching "andrea mitchell reports" on msnbc. at's next. you're watching "andrea mitchell reports" on msnbc. i knew some. since my fatigue and light-headedness would come and go, i figured it wasn't a big deal. then i saw my doctor and found out i have afib, and that means there's about a 5 times greater risk of stroke. symptoms like irregular heartbeat,
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just hours before boeing's ceo david calhoun is set to testify on capitol hill this afternoon, a new whistle-blower is coming forward, alleging that boeing mishandled and lost track
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of damaged and defective parts, likely installed on its airplanes. the whistle-blower is also claiming that he was advised by supervisors to hide the evidence from the faa. this, of course, as the aircraft manufacturer, excuse me, is facing ongoing investigations into plane safety and quality control on factory floors. joining us now is nbc news senior correspondent tom costello. this is the last thing that calhoun needed as he's facing questioning on the hill. >> david calhoun, the ceo of boeing, knows he's going to be the punching bag today, the pinata. everybody is going to take their shots at him. he knows this, boeing knows this, this is the name of the game, because boeing is right now in serious problems, in terms of their difficulties with the faa, the fbi, congress, the airlines, the traveling public, et cetera. so, we are also expecting that in that hearing room today will be some of the family members from the 737 max 8 crashes
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overseas that killed 346 people, and then the questions will be why after the max 8 crashes did you not clean up your act at boeing and then we had the max 9 door plug issue in january this year. i spoke with one of the family members of somebody who died, in one of the max 8 crashes overseas, take a listen to what she said about what she wants. >> i think people should be charged. i think that when people are not held accountable you're setting a standard of what you can get away with and i think this is the problem, when we don't learn from history, it keeps repeating itself. that's why we're here. month in, month out, with new reports of boeing happenings. the culture is rotten. and people need to learn that rotten fruit can be thrown out, and if it is not thrown out, it is not put in jail, then there is no consequences. >> she has been coming from the uk to washington for every hearing because she is here on behalf of her father who died. she's making point, they want control prosecutions of boeing, those prosecutions were deferred
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after the max 8 crashes, five years ago. they say, no, sorry, at this point, boeing has used up its goodwill. >> and they signed a consent decree that they were going to fix these problems. >> that's right. in order to avoid prosecution from the max 8 crashes, they signed a decree, which essentially said we will clean up our act. you can make the argument and senator blumenthal will today, they haven't cleaned up their act. >> tom costello, so glad you're on this case, thank you so much. >> you bet. and that does it for this edition of "andrea mitchell reports." remember, follow the show on social media at mitchell reports. you can rewatch the best parts of our show anytime on youtube, go to msnbc.com/andrea. "chris jansing reports" starts right now. good to be with you. i'm ana cabrera in for chris jansing. it has the potential to be life changing for hundreds of thousands of families. and could provide a political boost to president biden at the same ti