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tv   Politics Nation  MSNBC  June 22, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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good evening, and welcome to
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"politicsnation." tonight's lead, brotherly love. you're looking at a live shot of philadelphia's temple university where donald trump is expected to take the stage in a couple of hours, continuing his effort to court black voters by going into heavily black democratic cities and talking about black america's problems as he sees them to largely nonblack maga audiences. democrats have responded by flooding the university area with receipts of donald trump's record with black america. at the same time promoting the achievements of joe biden, who has his first opportunity to contrast himself with trump in real time this coming thursday as both camps prepare for the
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first presidential debate. with black voters historically caught in the middle of this election cycle with just months to go, we have joining me now, philadelphia mayor parker, a democrat. donald trump is is about to take the rally stage at philly's temple university, the latest of several campaign events he's held in black city, some in black neighborhoods, though it was mostly white turnout, as he tries to peel off black support from president biden. the democratic national committee responded to trump at temple by putting up billboards in the surrounding neighborhood hitting the former president over his record with black americans and promoting president biden's. philly is crucial for the president's fortunes in the twin
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state of pennsylvania, are you worried trump could cut into your city's vote enough to cause biden problems in november? >> no, reverend al, thank you so much for having me, but he's actually there, trump, the vile trickster, as i often refer to him as, is because he remembers how essential philadelphia is to ensuring that president biden wins pennsylvania. if you'll remember in 2016 he won pennsylvania by 44,000 votes. well, philadelphians rose to the occasion in the city that donald trump said specifically to the nation, bad things happen in philadelphia. well, we delivered for president biden. he received 81% of our vote, nearly doubling that vote margin. and he became our president of the united states, and we're going to do the same. this is simply a mere
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distraction, reverend al. and we won't forget how donald trump has failed the black community. sky high black unemployment. more guns and violence on our streets. and believe me, the higher healthcare costs for families in the city of philadelphia, particularly the black community, we haven't forgotten. >> now, staying with that, some polls have shown an erosion of president biden's support from segments of the black voter base, which he'll have a chance to address in his first debate with donald trump this coming thursday evening. what should his message to black america be and how should he deliver it by touting his record or calling trump out on his record or both? >> reverend al, let me just say this as it relates to polls. i became the first woman mayor in the city of philadelphia, and if i looked at polling as the sole indicator to how i would perform in this election, i wouldn't be here. what i as mayor will be doing is
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reminding philadelphians we will have to keep our eyes on the prize, and we will have to think about, for example -- and you can't make these numbers up. i'm a new mayor, i just got here in january. i have received from the federal government, the biden/harris administration, over $613 million for the city of philadelphia. for what, reverend al, can't go through it all, but $25 million for water and sewer treatment, for infrastructure, $317 million, mass trajs sit, $#158 159 million to reconnect a community in philadelphia that had been red lined and moved away from our city, and $2 million for additional brown fields remediation. so for me, i think a whole lot about baldwin, this is not simply listening to what people say, this is about watching what they do. and president biden has affirmed that he knows what it means to
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make philadelphia what i've committed, and that is to make our city the safest, cleanest, greenest big city in the nation with economic opportunity for all, and we can't do it without president biden, and that's what i'm hoping that he stays focused on. i talked to him personally on many occasions. i'm in close communication with his team, and we're going to stay focused on the facts. and it's my job as mayor, reverend al, and i want to be clear, i need to make sure that philadelphians know that we won't be had. we won't be took. and we won't be hoodwinked by any black faces in high places telling us that we should endorse trump. we won't forget about what he's done. and we're prepared to do that here in the city of philadelphia. >> let me get your opinion on the following nbc news is reporting that donald trump is focused on two or three candidates for his running mate ahead of the republican national convention in three weeks.
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ohio senator j.d. vance and north dakota governor doug burgum are at the top of the list, as we understand it, with florida senator marco rubio also in contention. this is according to nbc sources. missing, of course, from the suggested finalists are women or any of the black candidates once floated for the job like senator tim scott or congressman byron donalds. your thoughts on that, madame mayor, especially as trump tries to court black voters. >> reverend al, i want to be 1,001% clear, i wouldn't care if the running mate was black, brown, white, there is no one who can control for the policies that have attempted to destroy the democracy, the foundation on which our great nation is built, and that is we will give everyone access to the
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opportunity to be living on the path to self-sufficiency and anyone who subscribes to policies that are embraced by donald trump, we will give them no consideration. and you know, maybe i'm thinking about mayors now a great deal because i'm just returning from the u.s. conference of mayors meeting in kansas city, and as i talked to mayors in urban, suburban, and rural america, they have all said the same thing, we have to stay focused on how president biden, vice president harris has significantly contributed to helping to advance our respective municipalities and cities and not get distracted. >> yeah. >> so his presence in north philadelphia is a distraction, even if he decided -- someone said to me, cherelle is going to be a black or brown person -- for anyone to think that we are naive enough -- that donald
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trump is best for black community, you underestimate the power of the community -- >> let me go right there. before you go, i'm out of time, but since you brought that up, we've been talking about trump reaching out to black voters, and i want to get your response to some of that outreach effort. we had florida congressman byron donalds on this program several weeks ago. he's been in your city claiming -- he said this in your city of philadelphia -- claiming black families were stronger during jim crow and suggesting the black community has been worse off for supporting democrats. other black republicans have made similar comments. what's your response to that? >> my response to that, reverend al, is that the black community will not be duped. we know that when it comes to civil rights and voting rights we have used the power of our vote. we have used the courts.
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and we have used nonviolent civil disobedience and marching and advocating for what's in the best interest of us and anyone who could -- who think that they could convince black people that jim crow was better for the black community than us having the opportunity to be full citizens here in america is someone who is trying to hoodwink our community, and i think much more of the black community. we're keeping our eyes on the prize. president biden. safe, clean, green economic opportunity for all. how his work impacts our city and our people. and we're going to be working door to door. i'm excited. >> all right, well, thank you for being with us. and if you ever give up politics, think about preaching, you'd be great. >> oh. reverend al, i'm privileged to be here with you, sir. >> i'm privileged to be with you, philadelphia mayor parker. now to the presidential debate next week. joining me now is retired
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general wesley clark, former supreme allied commander of nato and a former presidential candidate. general, as always, great to see you, and i want to remind you of something, two decades ago you and i both ran for president as democrats looking to defeat george w bush, and i wanted to open up with this moment you might remember from your first democratic primary debate. it was right here in new york after you just entered the race in september of 2003 and some veteran democrats took issue with you jumping in the race. roll the clip, please. >> first of all, as the only new yorker, i want to welcome general clark to new york, and i want to welcome him to our list of candidates. and don't be defensive about just joining the party. welcome to the party. it's better to be a new democrat that's a real democrat than a lot of old democrats up here that have been acting like
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republicans all along. >> you might remember that exchange, and i might add that it was an honor running against you. and we always respected each other and always stayed within the boundaries of what we believed was good for the country, which is what i'm really concerned about on thursday night. that's why i wanted you on, because we have experience on the stage of at least running in the primaries. but now as president biden preps for his thursday debate, what lessons can his team learn from moments like this one from our debate 20 years ago? i don't know if -- >> so -- no, i thought you were going to show another clip. >> no. >> reverend al, it's great to be on with you. i loved being on that debate stage with you, and you were the only one who welcomed me in there, and it always meant a lot. and i think you're just a great
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-- you're a great debater, you're a great candidate, and it's an honor to be on with you. look, lessons, number one is you've got to make up your mind before you go in, three or four major points you're going to do. you've got to stay focused, be funny, and make it brief. don't pay too much attention to the questions, get your message out. in this case, going against donald trump, the president's got a lot of great things to say that he's done, and he's got a lot of great attack points against donald trump. in fact, he's got so many attack points we'd call it in the military a target rich environment. so he's got to be focused on what he's going to attack. i'm looking at, i'm thinking, okay, how about covid, okay? donald trump recommended we put bleach in our veins. he didn't tell us when he talked to the chinese president, this is an air delivered, serious virus. he tried to say it wasn't going
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to be important. he didn't recommend people take the vaccines, even though when he got sick he rushed over and did it. what kind of leadership is that? the results show america had one of the worst covid responses of any large nation. we lost a lot of people. joe biden came in the next round of covid, we did a lot better because we had president biden leading us through that. so that's number one. number two, this is a guy who's been impeached twice. not for politics but for actual things he did wrong in over -- in misusing his office of the presidency. and especially on january 6th where he basically tried to overturn the elections. how could any american vote for donald trump again knowing that he's already said he's going to be a dictator from day one? vote for donald trump once, it might be the last vote you ever take as an american president, because he intends to stay. number three on this is, got to listen carefully what donald
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trump says. he usually accuses the opponents of doing what he's doing, and then he does it. and he's been very transparent. he's very easy to read. donald trump's all about one person, donald trump. he rolls off those grievances, don't you feel sympathy for him. he's beat the law in every case except for one, and now he's a convicted felon. and he's got money behind him. he's got foreign money behind him. this is a man who's about donald trump and nobody else. don't be fooled. >> let me talk strategy with you a minute for the president. the debate gives him a massive platform to contrast himself with donald trump. should he try to appeal to persuadable independent voters or just engage his democratic base? >> oh, he's got to go for the independent voter, al, sure, he does. but he does that with two factors. number one is the record, which is a darn good record. and number two, he's got to show
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his energy, his alertness, his ability to focus, get the message out, be focused, be funny, and be brief on target. if he does that -- >> now, he's got to deal with that, a lot's been made about the debate rules. there'll be no live audience, no notes, and the candidates will have their microphones muted when they're not speaking. you've been through this process, how much do these little details matter? >> well, i think it helps not to have the audience there, honestly, because i think it lets the debate focus more on the candidates and the issues, whereas the distractions of just appealing to the audience. but you've still got to appeal to the audience watching on television. you've got to say things that are interesting and have humor in there to put life into the debate. i think having a mic turned off, that's a positive. i think donald trump would
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attempt to interfere as he did in the previous debates while president biden's talking. so i think that's a good thing. i think the debate rules are fine. they support president biden in this first debate. >> all right, now general, i want to play some comments from former president donald trump just a few hours ago speaking at the faith and freedom conference in washington. take a listen. >> we dominated. we saved the world with -- from those forts, and now they decide to take the names off and -- wait until you see ultimately what happens with those names. i call it a transition, like transitioning. they have a transition name before they name it the reverend al sharpton fort. fort al sharpton. >> now, while i'm honored trump is thinking of me, i'm sure there are others more worthy of having a military facility named
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after them, and like former president trump, i never served in the military, neither has he, and you would think after serving four years as president he knows the custom is to name forts after people that have done military work. but can you talk -- i'm not going to bite the bait by exchanging sound bites with him -- but can you talk a bit about why the pentagon has taken the thoughtful steps of renaming certain bases? because apparently, the former president does not seem to understand the reason that some people are offended by some, including some confederate jens. i remember he said it was fine people on both sides in charlottesville when we talked about general robert e. lee, so explain why the pentagon's sensitivity is here. >> look, these forts were named during the jim crow era. that's the truth. and they were named so that
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people in the south and these segregationist senators in the south and the governors would sort of accept the fort in their state. that was the idea. it was a form of racist appeasement. so if you were an african american soldier or hispanic or even an american soldier, finally you say, wait a minute, why am i at fort hood texas? you know who john bell hood was? yes, he lost a leg at gettysburg fighting for the confederates. he led the confederates into one of the worst defeats of the war in the attack on the union forces at nashville. he was a west point graduate who was disloyal to his country, disloyal to his oath to defend -- support and defend the constitution of the united states, or as it was given at that time. and he was a loser. why would you name a big fort after him? instead that fort is renamed for general cavazos, a man i served with and admired tremendously. the first hispanic four-star general in the army.
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a great loader, two years in combat in korea, a battalion commander in vietnam. this is a guy who knew soldiering. he knew leadership. he knew people. and the same thing is true at fort benning. there it's been renamed for general hal moore. and braxton bragg, he was a loser, and of course, he was disloyal. instead he named it fort liberty. and there's no more appropriate name for where the 82nd airborne is stationed than fort liberty. they're the nation's first response first, and they are the first to protect our freedom. so i think it's a smart move by the pentagon. it went through a commission. wasn't just one person making an arbitrary decision. and i'm really proud of that. and i hope that our soldiers and their families really appreciate the leadership shown by secretary austin and the men and women in the pentagon on this issue. >> well, thank you for being with us, good to see you again, even though it was through the screen. retired general wesley clark, a former presidential candidate. thank you again for being with
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us. >> thank you. coming up, while trump continues to take shots at biden over his mental ability, questions arise about his own mental equity and acuity and whether his -- he's actually ready for the debate stage. we'll be right back. r the debate stage we'll rbeight back. thing dims my light like a migraine. with nurtec odt, i found relief. the only migraine medication that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer. i'm sam, i have a three and a half-year-old puppy. talk to a healthcare provider levi is rambunctious, he's very active. so, levi's had to go to the vet because he was coughing a bit, and he ended up getting x-rays. it would have cost over five hundred dollars,
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and in interviews witnesses have described trump as meander and sometimes incoherent. it's not hard to believe these claims since we can see it ourselves in trump 's public appearances. take a listen. >> $1.2 trillion for their fake infrastructure -- he had a package of infrastructure -- he's doing another one, which is actually a smaller version, but it's even more -- okay? under our leadership, the forgotten man and woman will be forgotten no longer. and it wasn't forgotten, man and woman, four years ago was not forgotten. so there's a shark ten yards away from the boat, ten yards. or here, do i get electrocuted if the boat is sinking, water goes over the battery, the boat is sinking, do i stay on top of the boat and get electrocuted or do i jump over by the shark and not get electrocuted? but you know what i'd do if there was a shark or you get
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electrocuted? i'll take electrocution every single time. i'm not getting near the shark. >> i've spent some time on the debate stage myself, so i can tell you trump will have to sound a whole lot better than that if he wants to win over undecided voters. but while president trump is spending his time preparing for this forum by running around president biden is preparing and really taking seriously this debate. while trump is sticking to his preferred method of not getting ready at all. maybe trump will get by just winging it, as he has done in the past, but after skipping all the primary debates and spending much of the past four years either on the golf course or in the courthouse, it wouldn't be surprising if he turned out to be a little rusty and if trump's push to debate biden back fires, he'll have no one to blame but
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welcome back to "politicsnation." nbc is reporting donald trump has zeroed in on three top finalist who is could become his vice presidential running mate. north dakota governor doug burgum and senators j.d. vance of ohio and marco rubio of florida. let's bring in my political panel, david jolly, political analyst and former congressman of florida, and atima omara, democratic strategist and president of omara strategy group. he has said he'll announce his choice closer to the national convention, which begins july 15th in milwaukee. what does it tell us about
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trump's campaign and a possible second term that these appear to be the finalists? >> well, first, i think we might actually see an announcement around his sentencing as a distraction, an ability to steal the news cycle from donald trump's actual sentencing in the new york trial. but look, i think among the three finalists, the great concern for me would be a j.d. vance, because i think he's wholly unqualified to be vice president and certainly to be president of the united states. he simply doesn't bring the experience. when it comes to rubio and burgum, certainly you can question their idealogy, you can question rubio's fitness, the way he flip-flopped on donald trump, but i think in rubio and burgum you have somebody that regardless of idealogy would be qualified to be vice president. so if it's those three, look, we should celebrate that it's not kari lake and marjorie taylor greene and some of the other wholly unqualified people. my dark horse has always been rubio, and i guess he's moving up, simply because i think he's played the cards right with the base and with donald trump and
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because he brings some talent to the ticket, some sizzle. because of that, i don't think donald trump will pick him. he wants mr. boring burgum who the nation will never get to know by november. donald trump can own the spotlight. >> atima, if these are the vice presidential finalists, it appears trump has given up on the idea of picking either a woman or an african american as his running mate, are you surprised by that or do you think it's a missed opportunity for him? >> not surprised by that, reverend, especially because you know that -- you and i both know the whole gop base is not interested in candidates of color or women because they don't believe in a reflective democracy at all. if they do like candidates of color, it's people like herschel walker, who shows blind loyalty and doesn't show too much independence and intelligence that he could strike out possibly. that's what trump is looking for. he doesn't care for any of those
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things either, and he just wants somebody who's blindly loyal and marco rubio is probably the only person of color who's managed to really like demonstrate that blind fealty and play his cards right, as david said. so this isn't very surprising at all, and frankly, i wouldn't even put it past him if he thought he could get away with it with appointing one of his children, don jr. or i can have a trump there, if he didn't think they would invoke the 25th amendment to protect their own self. >> staying with you, as we were less than a week away from the first presidential debate of 2024, trump has raised the stakes with money. president biden enjoyed a financial advantage over his challenger so far this cycle, but the fundraising game has changed since trump's conviction. trump's fundraising from small donors and billionaire mega donors outpaced biden's in may. how important is the money game
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this election cycle? >> well, i'm a political strategist by day that espouses the idea that the ground game is going to win it, but to be fair, the fundraising is going to help that ground game. trump has parlayed that conviction and tried to change his campaign policies for more money from corporate execs to catch up to him, to biden. but what i will say is biden has built an aggressive ground game in those seven states that are going to be the battleground area where it's going to come down to 200,000 votes and hopping he stays in that lead because trump has now caught up to him, at least in fundraising. >> david, as trump looks to raise more money, there are stories that suggest he's often swayed by the last rich person he spoke to. according to politico, trump has shifted his positions recently on issues like tiktok, crypto, and green cards for college
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graduates based on input from wealthy donors. do you think this could hurt him with his maga base or are they locked in regardless of his positions? >> well, i think it'll get him in a pinch sometimes between now and november, but the maga base we know is super loyal. but it could get him in a pinch with persuadable voters. i think it says several things we largely know about donald trump. one, he's ultimately transactional. he's devoid of idealogy whatsoever. he does not care about a platform. he does not care about governing. he cares about people giving him money. but i think what these donors should realize is he's incredibly disloyal. if he would take my money for one transaction and then change his mind based on somebody else's money, that's somebody you can't stick with. that it's real danger, because trump in the white house listening to the last rich person or the last person on tiktok or the last person on twitter is a very dangerous chief executive.
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no new information, i think, in this reporting other than to remind the nation of a danger of a president donald trump. >> david jolly and atima omara, thank you both for being with us. coming up, is the gop working to make sure a law that's more than 100 years old affects the future of reproductive rights for millions of americans? i'll tell you in a moment. of americans i'll tell you in a moment. wanna know a secret? more than just my armpits stink. facts. that's why i use secret whole body deodorant for clinically proven odor protection everywhere. so i smell great all day, all hike, and all night. secret whole body deodorant. power outages can be unpredictable, inconvenient, and disruptive to your life, posing a real threat to your family's comfort and safety. when the power goes out, you have no lights, no refrigeration, no heating or air conditioning. the winds are not letting up at all here. we're going to see some power outages. number one thing to prepare for is extended power outages. are you prepared? you can be with a generac home standby generator.
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welcome back to "politicsnation." this week senate democrats introduced legislation to repeal the comstock act, a 19th century law banning obscene material in the mail that anti-abortion advocates want to use as a tool to stop the shipment of abortion pills across state lines. joining me now to talk about it is jessica macler, president of the reproductive rights group emily's list. thank you for joining us. let's start with the comstock act. what is it, and why is it so important to take action on it now? >> well, thank you for having me, reverend, and as you just outlined, this is a law that republicans have signalled that they are going to use to -- as a back door attempt to ban abortion nationwide. and honestly, this is just more
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of what we've seen since the dobbs decision. roe is not the end. we knew that they were never going to stop from. they are going to do everything and anything that they can to control our bodies, our lives, our personal healthcare decisions. and it's great to see senate leaders, i would say, note, driven by democratic pro-choice women working to repeal this law, but the truth is that if we really want to fully restore reproductive freedom, and if we want to return these freedoms that have been stripped from millions of americans across the country, we have to secure pro-choice majorities at every level of the ballot. that's what's going to be at stake in this election in november. >> now, monday marks the second anniversary of the dobbs decision that the conservative supreme court used to overturn roe versus wade. former president trump has falsely claimed that everyone wanted to return the abortion issue to the states, which is effectively what dobbs did. can you talk a bit about the
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impact the ruling has had since it took effect in the summer of 2022? >> well, reverend, what we're seeing is the consequence of dobbs and the result of returning this decision, quote,unquote, to the states is that people across the country are being denied life-saving medical care. we are seeing women being forced to bleed out at home, get to the brink of death before they are -- receive treatment, if they do. and this is what -- this is the chaos that cruelty has brought upon us by donald trump and republicans all over the country. and so it's life or death. we don't have to wonder what the reality is. we are living it right now. and again, that's really why we have to make sure that in this election we are electing pro-choice democrats and securing those majorities so we can restore these rights. >> now, the dobbs decision seems to have emboldened religious conservatives on a wide range of culture war issues.
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just this week louisiana governor jeff landry signed a bill requiring the ten commandments to be displayed in every public school classroom. now conservative lawmakers in the state are pushing for new laws targeting lgbtq teachers. is this slippery slope part of the dobbs legacy in your opinion? >> absolutely. you know, what we know about this is that it's not just about medical procedures, it is about control. this is about who gets to make decisions over personal medical healthcare for sure, but over our bodies, over our lives. and dobbs is one way that they are seeking this control. but they're not going to stop there. we see it in other aspects of reproductive freedom as well. they are going after ivf access. they are going after access for contraception. and they're not going to stop until they have full control over these decisions. >> one of the ways your organization is fighting back
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against anti-abortion forces is reto recruit more pro-choice women to run for office up and down the ballot, can you talk about how that's going and what it would mean for the electoral landscape in 2024. >> absolutely. emily's list is electing democratic, pro-choice women up and down the ballot all over the country. in this moment it matters. the imperative around women's leadership. women like lisa blunt rochester, running for senate in delaware, talking about her grandchildren conceived through ivf access. these stories resonate with voter, and they allow -- they really allow candidates to connect with voters and share with them that they understand exactly what's at stake in this election, and those are the perspectives that they are going to bring to the policies that are going to get us out of the mess that we're in right now when it comes to reproductive healthcare. and so democratic pro-choice women are going to be at the center of those democratic
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pro-choice majorities that we need to secure if we are going to fully restore our rights. >> now, if your organization and others are successful in pushing women to run and pushing for the large voter turnout among women, how much impact to you think it will have on the general election, because every you have women at a local level, pro-choice candidates at a local level, it will also affect the national races. how much do you think this could give impact nationally as well as locally? >> well, that's absolutely right. i think it impacts races up and down the ballot, and what is really powerful about this issue of reproductive freedom is that when we frame elections in this choice that voters have between democrats that are going to stand up for their rights to restore these rights and republicans who if we put them in power are going to take away these right, including a national abortion ban if we let them, voters turn out for us.
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i was on the ground in michigan this past week with alyssa slotkin, who's running for senate, we had a great crowd in western pennsylvania. people who turned out because they cared deeply about reproductive freedom. and that's something we see from the local level all the way up to the top of the ticket. and it's going to be really meaningful in terms of turning out the voters that we need to win these elections. >> now, i'm out of time, but i have to ask you this, there's the first debate this thursday night, what do you want to hear at the debate, from the debate, from the candidates? >> i think what we're going to see in this debate from the candidates is the choice in front of voters. we've seen this from the biden/harris xhrgs the biden/harris campaign, that they have centered their efforts around how they can do as much as they can to protect these freedoms, to grant access to as many women as possible p we're going to see donald trump -- i'm sure he's going to try to weasel his way out of it. we've got to be careful to pay
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attention to what he's done, not just what he's said. he bragged about packing the court that overturned roe versus wade. he has celebrated that. and that's what's at stake in this election. and that's, i believe, what we're going to see in the debate. >> all right, president of emily's list, jessica mackler, thank you for being with us. up next, remembering a giant. my final thoughts, stay with us. giant. my final thoughts, stay with us.
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this week the world, the nation, and the sports world lost a giant in willie mays. i grew up at a time where willie mays was an amazing example of our being able to use our skills, our tenacity, and discipline to rise to the top of whatever field we were in. willie mays played ball coming from segregated alabama like my mother, working his way through the ranks. and when he got on that field, he raced any doubt that the fact that jackie robinson had opened up baseball to blacks was a mistake. for those who thought, oh, they can't compete at that level, all they had to do was watch willie play and know that not only could we rise to the occasion, we could at the right game and time, we could dominate the occasion. he had a quiet dignity.
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i didn't get to know him as well as i did other athletes, but when i met him on several occasions, his quietness was backed by his sense of being and presence. you knew in your opinion the presence of a kind man but a man of great achievement. and when he stepped into eternity this week, we could all thank god that we knew a willie mays who came from a state and era where they had the negro league and when he went into the major league because of the sacrifices of others he was able to vindicate that sacrifice and show what we could do. we are all indebted to willie mays for his quiet dignity. he did not march with his feet like those did in those days and even we continue today. he marched with his glove and his bat, and he proved that we're capable if the door is
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open to walk through and deliver. may he rest in power, the great willie mays. we'll be right back. e eagr willie mays. we'll be right back. es playing detective. but the real mystery was her irritated skin. so, we switched to tide free & gentle. it cleans better, and doesn't leave behind irritating residues. and it's gentle on her skin. tide free and gentle liquid is epa safer choice certified. it's gotta be tide. our right to reproductive health care is being stolen from us. the rights for ourselves, our kids, and our grandkids. gone. just like that. i can't believe this is the world we live in, where we're losing the freedom to control our own bodies. planned parenthood fights for you every day. but we need your support now more than ever. visit this website, call, or scan the code on your screen, with your $19 monthly gift. help us win the fight for the constitutional right to control our own bodies. there's never been a more urgent time to join.
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so go online, call, or scan this code now. sign up with your monthly gift today, and we'll send you this "care. no matter what" t-shirt. it is your right to have safe health care. that's it. we need you now more than ever. go online, call, or scan right now. (♪♪) i'm getting vaccinated with pfizer's pneumococcal pneumonia vaccine. so am i. because i'm at risk for pneumococcal pneumonia. come on. i already got a pneumonia vaccine, but i'm asking about the added protection of prevnar 20®. if you're 19 or older with certain chronic conditions like asthma, diabetes, copd, or heart disease, or are 65 or older, you are at increased risk for pneumococcal pneumonia. prevnar 20® is approved in adults to help prevent infections from 20 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. in just one dose. don't get prevnar 20® if you've had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients. adults with weakened immune systems
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may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects were pain and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, fatigue, headache, and joint pain. i want to be able to keep my plans. i don't want to risk ending up in the hospital with pneumococcal pneumonia. that's why i chose prevnar 20®. ask your doctor or pharmacist about the pfizer vaccine for pneumococcal pneumonia. sara federico: at st. jude, we don't care who cures cancer. we just need to advance the cure. it's a bold initiative to try and bump cure rates all around the world, but we should. it is our commitment. we need to do this.
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that does it for me, thanks for watching. i'll see you back here tomorrow at 5:00 p.m. eastern for another live hour of "politicsnation." we have a great show for you with president biden's deputy campaign manager quentin fulks, the governor of new york kathy hochul will be with us tomorrow, and the mayor of los angeles karen bass. that is all sunday right here on "politicsnation." the saturday show with jonathan starts right now. with jonathan starts righ now. thou shalt not, what? donald trump rallies religious