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tv   Charlie Rose  Bloomberg  April 14, 2016 7:00pm-8:01pm EDT

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♪ >> from our studios in new york city, this is "charlie rose." good evening, i'm jeff glor of cbs news sitting in for charlie rose out on assignment. he is perhaps best known to american audiences for his performances in house. he returns to the television in the nighttation of manager. he plays richard roper. a billionaire international arms dealer. rolling stone calls him the perfect gentleman villain. we are pleased to have hugh
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laurie at our table once again. the perfect gentleman villain. wholeave a ready got a line in the manufacturing process. villainess nor gentlemanly. but the character is an interesting combination. he has a sort of superficial affable charm. in fact, more than charm. he is positively adaptive and get the world he has created is built on something very dark and wicked. jeff: before we talk about re -- thisper, le car novel in particular. hugh: these are the holy texts of my childhood, particularly my team years. .- teen years
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particularly the books about the cold war. and then 1990 came, the wall came down and i and others imagined that the spies are now out of work and possibly spied writers would also be redundant. i worried that he will -- he would have to hang up his typewriter ribbon. i happen to know he writes longhand. he is old school. delight, notmy -- were he equaled found a subject that was equal to the high stakes of the cold war, he found something that if anything exceeded those stakes. because the international arms trade is a truly dark -- these are dark and complicated waters. jeff: he changed with the times and you did as well to update
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the story for modern times. it begins in cairo, egypt of few years ago. you have been trying to bring this particular novel to some sort of screen forever. hugh: i have. i read it as soon as it came out. it was probably literally warm. i remember it very clearly. i got to the end of chapter three and called my agent and's head -- i would like to option this book. not really knowing what that means. i knew it was something that grown-ups did. i have never done it since. already, -- even though i had one of the first copies, i was already too slow and the great sydney pollack had already optioned it and had it for 15 years or so and a script was written by the great robert towne. what no film was forthcoming. i just -- but no film was
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forthcoming. this was a story i desperately wanted to see on the screen. i had the temerity to imagine myself in the role of the night manager. jeff: in your younger days. jacob: yes, thank you. the youth -- the world turns and hair fall out. got the script for the movie not a tv series. hugh: he wrote a movie and then made an odd public debt location -- declaration that the author was not fill mobile. lmable. he is writing thought rather than deed. there are not necessarily a lot of car chases and not much blows
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up. stuff blows up up here. we probably blow more stuff up than the others combined. we are quite combustible. ofis part of the nature being about ordinance. about the explosive material. we do blow things up. delivered, a contemplative show. hugh: i would say so. it is adult. it is literate. these are smart characters delivering -- manipulating for positions of power. dodging each other through wit and strategy rather than physical muscle and firepower. -- so in that sense, it is it is more contemplative than your average blockbuster but your average lot duster has
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accelerated to the point where it no longer follows the laws of physics. they can no longer bear something to fall at the national -- natural rate. even gravity works faster. jeff: you don't want to be the next transformers. you initially wanted to play jonathan pine, the hero in the novel. and the tv series. you ended up playing the villain, richard roper. richard roper is -- a man of advanced years, obviously. odd for me to stand there and watch a barrel young stud crushed my dreams in the palm of his hand. ile youngtch a vir stud crush my dreams in the palm of his hand. he is an englishman of a certain
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tribe who has been given every possible, imaginable privilege of modern living. sect is more -- no more that is blessed than the one from which this character has come and yet his response to these blessings, the way he'd knowledge is the gift he has been given is with cynicism. i think that is probably his greatest crime. a cosmic crime. he is described in the novel and in the story as the worst man in the world. there are a lot of competitors walking the streets. probably not far from here. but what distinguishes roper is his cynicism. he has had this extraordinary good fortune and blessings and his response is --how can i have sport with this? last --i bring every
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ring every last ounce of fun out of my position? that is how i roll. that is how they chose me. i have been researching untold villainy for decades. he is obliged as part of the process to identify what it is -- the way it is that the character rationalizes. unless you are a psychopath, people try to justify why they do what they do. --y have to way of falling they have to have a way of falling asleep at night. the way he does it is cruel and heartless but to himself, it is cruel and heartless because it is a cruel and heartless universe and i am doing what most people do not dare to do and am simply acknowledging it. jeff: he thinks he is the hero.
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hugh: in a sense. jeff: some version of a hero. hugh: there is another fascinating dynamic of it. we only started talking about it. at the same time, he knows he is wrong. i think, possibly, he might even be in his rather weird -- there may even be a christ analogy. he knows he will be a trade and engineers his own betrayal. jeff: because he knows he deserves it. hugh: at some level i think you might. jeff: are you executive producer? hugh: for whatever that is worth. jeff: you loved the novel and the material. hugh: i am not sure that i approve of actors getting credit that extend beyond -- jeff: some are pretty extensive.
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you stick it in a drawer. ler. a medd lacking confidence to do my own job, i meddle in other people's jobs. i always do. jeff: in what way? hugh: shouldn't we go faster? don't you think we should go over here? at some level, i am a complete pain in the --. reaction ranges depending on who you are dealing with. right? hugh: yes, it does. and some people quite properly resist it. -- i welcome don't
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it in return. it is good to have -- whatever instinct you have on how something should be done or how it ought to be staged, it is good to have that tested sometimes. sometimes i think -- why did i imagine that this scene was underwater because it is not written underwater. that is a silly example because there are no scenes underwater. it is good to have that challenge and to be forced to say -- i know it is. i know this is that her. and often and not, even more often, to say, you are right. let us go with your idea. by the way, i also do that. jeff: have you gotten better at commenting? hugh: sparing people's feelings? go cross-country, a great distance -- i would never come out and say -- just
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do it faster. i expend a lot of energy trying to make it seem like it is someone else's idea. it is amazing how often you can say -- by the way, i loved that idea that you had that we should do this -- jeff: underwater. hugh: underwater. you can persuade people that they thought of something. hypnotists and mentalists will say and psychologists will say -- jeff: it is happening right now. but speaking about cross-country, you did not have to go cross-country as when you "house." i know that was at times a frustration for you. the amount of travel involved. this series was not the same. hugh: it was much more contained. six shows. that tells the story of the novel. we go from beginning to end in
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those six shows. it is very contained. that i that, is the fact have dreamt of doing this story for 20 odd years. the anxiety that comes with dealing with something precious -- not to say that "house" was not. some of those scripts were gems but they were gems that i did not know about until i got the script on a tuesday and we shot on a wednesday. with this, i have had 23 years -- it is coming, it is coming and finally someone hands you the faberge egg. "house" was a villainous character. interesting, american audiences came to know you as house. --then they sell you in
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." you haveu in "veep a wealth of comedic experience. was that a necessary transition or role to introduce that side of yourself? wish i could say i had ever thought of an acting role with that level of sophistication. it was pure selfishness. " and theatching "veep chance came to watch it even closer, as in being there. ultra hd, actually sitting there. there i was. i can't say i was watching the best cast in television, i can now say the second-best but certainly a truly extraordinary collection of people doing something as well as anyone has
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ever done anything. i honestly think that julie of the week dreyfus -- julia louis-dreyfus is one of the marvels of our time. to be up close and watch her process -- when you see the show, you see 27 minutes or so of paired down storytelling. what i was able to see, and the people who work on the show were able to see our upon our of actual -- absolutely sublime improvisation. jeff: how much of that makes the final cut? hugh: it is pretty harsh. at some point, they release -- you will be able to see some of that stuff in the form of extra material. but even just in rehearsals, i saw things -- i saw her do things that i would have cheerfully paid $500 to sit on broadway and watch her do that. water given a glass of
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and the rest of the scene is -- you are angry. go. literally that. and i believe she can entrance anger ande -- st on a glass of water. i am decided as is everyone -- besotted as is everyone on the show. jeff: improvisational training. where is that her natural character? hugh: i don't know. it is interesting. what is talent? is it something she was born being able to do? or was it an appetite she was born with that she then apply to for years and years in many different areas with many great creators? i don't know which it is that the combination is astounding to
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watch. etsans hen talent circumstance it is a great thing. them asdon't think of being alternatives. mind, i thought house was a funny show. there were times when i thought this is funnier than anything else i have seen or been involved with. it was brilliantly written stuff. what it could also turn on a dime into something absolutely shocking or heart wrenching. nimbleness and change of tone was extraordinary. they all come from one place. storytellers and actors are trying to represent something
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that is real and life is really tragic and really comic at the same time. -- that is the miracle of our species. we deal with tragedy with jokes and we sometimes find great sadness at the same time. we are in a very odd species. maybe it is the same with dolphins. i don't know them well enough. humans -- ins and think the first time they have been compared at this table. congratulations. the end of this year, you have a chance, on hulu, another doctor for you. hugh: yes, technically he is a doctor. jeff: a shrink. hugh: he is a narrow psychiatrist -- neuro psychiatrist. half --irst page and a
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and then the page after that, i had completely forgotten. it is such a different world and attitude and tone that i actually forgot. ihope, i could be wrong, that hope the audience can do the same. not forget house but not have it cloud the way the story we are telling. jeff: night manager -- six episodes. i don't know. that is what they say. we have got to get it right. do whatever you want for two years, it is yours. let it run to rack and ruin. jeff: have you started taping? hugh: no, we will in about a week or so in san francisco. jeff: he is a conflicted, tortured -- hugh: we have an idea for a tv
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show, it is about someone that is not conflicted. a tough pitch. of course he is conflicted and he is older. obsessive tale about the relationship between the healer and one of his patients. many people who have read the novel made reference to the "vertigo" with james stewart. it has something of that. it has something of the same obsessive, slightly unsettling noir-ish quality. so far, as we have not shot a single frame of it, i can say that it is perfect. and shows great promise. as soon as we start -- if i start -- if i were to talk with you in the middle of next week, i would say possibly that it is
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a disaster. jeff: the night manager. and the wonderful, youthful, hugh laurie starring in it. thank you so much. ♪
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jeff: good evening, i'm jeff glor filling in for charlie rose. jacob weisberg is here.
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he is chairman and editor in chief of the slate group. his latest book is "ronald reagan." the biography argues that the 40th president remains profoundly misunderstood both personally and politically. fareed zakaria calls it one of the best books on american politics that i have read for years. jacob weisberg, welcome. jacob: thank you. misunderstood politically and personally by both sides of the aisle. i think so. on the right, reagan is misunderstood as someone who was -- who had buried fixed principles and always lived by his principles. as a politician was based largely on how pragmatic he was. how open to compromise. he once said as governor of california, if he could get 70% of what he wanted from the legislature of an opposite
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party, he would take it. when politics are so polarized, it is interesting to look back on the reagan era as a time when the president was ready to work with congress and even though there was a lot of political conflict about big issues, there was an assumption that on important things there would have to be a compromise. jeff: 70% --when he was in the oval office? jacob: it was something he said as governor but he had a similar dynamic in that it was a democratic legislature and congress when he was elected president and got his economic program through a congress that he did not control. he did it partly by compromising and partly by turning people and partly by winning over the public and using the public as leverage in relationship to congress. jeff: more of a compromiser then people might believe. jacob: that is one important part of it. another is that there was a gap
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between what reagan did and what he taught he was doing in many cases. on domestic policy. for example, reagan left the government in california twice as big as he found it. he left the federal government no smaller than he found it. tax rates were reduced of the overall tax burden was not. i think reagan often had somewhat of a distorting lens viewing his own accomplishments. what really happened and what didn't happen. those around him bought into the idea that he had transformed the federal government and he really did not. he did not eliminate a single federal agency. he did not reduce federal spending overall. he left a large deficit. a mixed legacy as a domestic policy figure and economic leader as opposed to his foreign-policy legacy that i rate somewhat higher.
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there is a gap between what he thinks he did and what he did. jeff: you call him the second most important president of the 20th entry after fdr. jacob: fdr overcame the depression. reagan has no accomplishment on that scale. but in international policy, i think reagan was a pivotal figure in the peaceful conclusion of the cold war. i don't think that was an accident. i do think he played a role beyond the role that another president might have played in relation to gorbachev and what was happening in the soviet union. jeff: the pivotal figure. jacob: garbage of initiated -- gorbachev initiated the changes. he wanted to reform communism while reagan wanted to destroy it. reagan had a key insight. basedf his insights were on an application of common sense to situations where people did not always use a lot of common sense. he saw -- he thought communism
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was ridiculous. he had dealt with communists in hollywood and thought they were stupid and not hard to defeat. he thought no one would choose to live under communism. people in the soviet union needed to be exposed to the way people lived in the united states to want to reject it. he had an idea that communism could collapse if things turn it to fall apart. in a lot of ways, i think he created pressures that made that more likely and made it happen sooner. the biggest one was the big hit between his first and second term. there is a lot of conservative myth -- mythology here. the second term was not the culmination of the first in relation to the soviets, but rather the repudiation. he had a huge military buildup and nuclear buildup in the first term. no negotiations.
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in the second term, that did not work for him. he wanted to make the world safer. he wanted to reduce the nuclear threat. because of what he had not -- what he had done in the first term was not successful, he pivoted and became the most of disarmament there was. he supported gorbachev and flummoxed everyone around him because they did not know where it was coming from. that change was what enabled gorbachev to do what he did. jeff: not the first pivoted he ever did. he transformed himself politically long before that. jacob: that is one of the things that is so underappreciated partly because it is poorly documented in relation to his hollywood career -- there was a playhouse he
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and also wased in, the internal spokesperson for ge. and made jet turbines lightbulbs, and all the things the future conglomerate did. it was over eight years, as the public spokesperson for ge that he went from being a liberal democrat that supported truman and thought about running for office as a democrat, to being so conservative, that ge did not want him as a spokesperson anymore. also, he was to the right of barry goldwater, quite literally three and one of the most important spokesperson for goldwater's campaign. sometimes i think it does not get as much attention as it should, whether it is a policy position he might take. what did you learn looking at that? you say am glad to hear
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that. one of the ways i related to reagan, is that he was a real writer yuri he wrote letters, extensively. , he was a good writer. him ad have given conservative column on "slate." he was a radio announcer, and often said he wrote for the year the eye.ot for in a way, the most interesting writings of his are these radio commentaries he did between the 1976 campaign when he narrowly lost to gerald ford, and in 1980, when he ran again. during that. bay, cbs offered him a slot to do commentary on the evening news, which was a powerful slot
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of political commentary. he turned it down and said he wanted to do radio commentary, instead. he did short essays every day, developed an ideology, and practiced his writing. jeff: is that what he retreated into? you talk about an emotional distance that he cultivated first is a survival mechanism as a child, and then used later, in your words, as a weapon. he went to the wedding to find himself, to cultivate that distance? jacob: i think that is part of it. you cannot be a writer and not have an interior life. he often kept us at a distance. theink this gets to psychological in a month of ronald reagan, the way that nobody felt close to him, or felt that they understood him.
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even his children, felt like there was a wall they could not get there. nancy reagan was the one person who was truly close to him, other than his mother. i think it does come out of this difficult childhood he had. grew up, lived in 10 different homes before he was 10 years old. his father was an alcoholic, and dragged the family around to illinois, chicago, would get arrested, and go back. it was a miserable childhood. reagan used his imagination to transform it into this idyllic, tom sawyer type of boyhood. ♪
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jeff: you called it a willed blurriness. what is that mean? he had very poor eyesight growing up, and his hearing when bad when he was making one of bank robberdo movies in hollywood, where someone fired a blank near his ear. as he got older, those things got worse. he did not see or hear that well. but he also chose to tune certain things out. that turned into a functional behavior, if you will. in politics, if you can convincingly ignore certain things, it is a skill, and asset. because he had a detached,
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slightly out of it quality, he was able to use it to good effect. one of the interesting questions -- is att one point what point did his alzheimer's kick in? and when did that blurriness become a physical artifact? jeff: it was fascinating to hear the stories about nancy, after she had just passed away, and the role that she played in not just the reagan white house, but ronald reagan's life. what was she, for him? jacob: she was an absolutely crucial figure. it is a great love story. he doted on her in this way. if she went away from the white house for a night, he love write her mooning letters. he was really unhappy when she was not there. but having that emotional stability allowed him to do the
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things he wanted to do in politics. important, she looked out for his interest in a -- in ways he did not. she thought he was naive and guileless. the enforcer, pushing him to do the things he did not want to do, when he needed to fire somebody or make a hard decision he was avoiding. jeff: him or her? she did not want him to run for reelection in 1984, after the assassination attempt in 1981, it had a terrible effect on her. that is when she turned to astrology and started consulting the stars whether he should appear here or there. she just became paranoid. paranoid, shesay was just worried he would get shot at getting killed. she wanted to go back to
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california. by 1987, when the alzheimer's began, probably having effect, he would not fire his chief of staff, who nancy blamed for allowing contra to happen to him. at some point, reagan would not do it, and nancy leaked the name of his successor to the "washington post." sheas unceremonious, and would go around him if she felt strongly enough. think ronald reagan was conflict-a verse and away i relate to. firing people is a horrible thing to do, people have been loyal to him. he did not want to do hard things. and sometimes, hard things had to be done and she would push them to do it. did he let her in? said, i am closer
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than anyone to him, but there is still a wall there. that is the enigma of ronald reagan. the wrong way to read that is to say there is nothing there. there is an interior life that ronald reagan has. but we will never have access to it. if he did not share it with the nancy, he did not share it with anyone. whatever the thoughts in his head were, that you can only really project. jeff: what would ronald reagan make of the current political season? jacob: he would be absolutely appalled by what is happened to his republican party. the positives effects of reaganismquestion -- -- at the first debate, i think ronald reagan was invoked 40 two times, and god was only invoked 13 times, which gives you
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insight into the hierarchy at the republican party. but i think they venerate him because of his success. they don't necessarily follow his example very closely, either, in terms of his specific ideas or manner. jeff: why do you think you would be appalled by what is taking place right now? jacob: for two reasons. first of all, reagan believed the republican party should be inclusive. pro-immigration, the term amnesty comes from ronald reagan. he used it to describe his policies in positive terms. party'sd to widen the appeal. he rejected the idea of any nativism, xenophobia. i think the party's policies are antithetical. trump is the most extreme example. before the first time, there is an open bigotry in the republican party, which reagan strongly rejected.
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even though many people would argue, the appeal to the reagan democrats and workers, was based in part on certain racial assumptions, coded racism. but that is not what he thought he was doing. it has not been explicit in the republican party until now. hard to say, you look at ronald reagan as someone who , handgun amnesty control with the brady bill, and though he later regretted it, made abortion legal with roe v in california, a woman's doctor to give a woman permission. in terms of the republican party, he would not get past iowa. but bigger than a policy gap, is the temperamental one. reagan had genuine humility.
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he knew his limitations. it was not just an act with him, that is rare in politics. you don't see that from ted cruz , or trump, who you can only talk about in terms of his level of narcissism. reagan was kind to people, had a genuine sense of humor. he was a nice person. he was personally generous. when you spend time reading his letters and research, you are sort of living with the person a little bit. you can think whatever you want about him, but he is hard not to like. and boy, that is the opposite of ted cruz during it is hard to find anyone in the world who will admit that they like ted cruz. jeff: that keeps cropping up. au are doing this trumpcst, podcast, no lack of material for you.
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are things changing a little bit right now? jacob: a week ago, i thought the worm was turning a little bit. i think it might be. 1237ump does not get votes, he is unlikely to be the nominee. many of the delegates who are committed to him are going to peel away, and something else will happen. it does not look like the numbers are pointed to him getting 1237. i also think the party's rational, self-interest will kick in. there are powerful factions in whichrty which do not -- recognize it would be a disaster to nominate him. but trump has exposed a gap between what the leadership of the party things, and what a huge segment of people who vote republican think on trade, immigration, on the side of trump'snt, cap's --
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supporters don't want social security cut. there is much more appeal to working-class that suffered from economic transitions, globalization, and so on. i don't see those people falling back into line. even if trump is not the nominee, and my bet is that he will not become a i don't think the party can heal that breach. you talking about than either john kasich or ted cruz, or the mystery candidate? jeff: or jeb bush, or marco rubio, or mitt romney. at some point, after the second ballot, third ballot, if nobody has a majority, we have not seen this. and four,th reagan that was the last contested convention, and it did not get past the first ballot. we do not have a modern president hearing --
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precedent. reagan-esque?dy rubio, i thought temperamentally was in the ballpark. he was the strongest candidate the republicans had. jeff: the establishment had. i thought he had the highest propensity to beat hillary clinton. he was doing really well for a while, but one debate was disastrous. but in the other debates he was good. latino,see he is young, you could see the party coalescing around this kind of figure. and trump killed him. he was flamed out by reacting to donald trump. game,ed to play trump's
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and nobody but trump plays his game, exchanging insults. he went down so fast after that, it was a real object lesson. rubio is not relinquishing his delegates, so we will see what happens at the convention. his name has not been mentioned hea possibility, given that was defeated so badly when he was. he has a future in republican politics. i don't think there is anything that happened that precludes them from running again, or being a running mate. trump even mentioned him as a possible running mate. possibly the most interesting convention since reagan and ford in 76. potential even more dramatic. jacob: i think we have no model for this. --ce the party were formed reformed themselves, driven by
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the primaries, it has been every year, the reporters dream of a brokered convention. this year, it sure looks like it is going to happen. it is going to depend very heavily on the rules committee and the convention committee, and all this politics that nobody but the real nerds like me pay attention to. the rules of the convention will determine who the nominee is. and the rules, there are some interesting quirks. there are new rules at every convention. the rules are set out the convention. delegates were bound on the first ballot to what candidate they vote for are not bound on the rules. if the rules committee decides they have to stop trump, who does more to liberate delegates,
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the delegates who are bound to support trump and do not like and many can vote for that rule. complicated,o be toeresting, the worst place understand it is standing on the floor of the convention. future of the gop is decided in large part, based on what happens at that convention, or after the election? jacob: if trump is not the nominee, he has a third-party -- out of spite, he might do that. is already laying groundwork saying, if i don't get the nomination, it is because i was cheated out of it. because of his ego and narcissism, does not support the idea that he could lose a fair fight. that't think you put humpty dumpty back together. i think there is a nationalist,
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nativist, trump wing of the party. if he is not leaving it, someone else is. it could be a faction within the party, or could take over the whole republican party. but you look at how much the people who think those things have in common with say, a jeb bush or mitt romney, or even a marco rubio, it is minimal. i don't think those people go on in the same party for very long. jeff: three parties? jacob: no third party has replaced -- jeff: very impactful parties? jacob: who knows, it could be something like a george wallace or strom thurman. there are parties that break off, there is a great line, third parties are like bees, they staying and then they die. they don't have impact to win elections, their impact is by pulling the major parties and
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their direction. exists for some time, and i don't know if you see that scenario potentially playing out beyond this election, whether it is trump leading it or someone else. jacob: it is hard to say, but i will go back to the point about the gap he has exposed. if you have the republican establishment, republican , getting a lot of people to vote against their own interests and beliefs, working people whose interests are not aligned with tax cuts to the rich, shrinking entitlements. all these things paul ryan talks about, these people don't support. but they vote republican. of somehow, the genius ronald reagan, was to bring everybody under this big tent and somehow bridge that gap during i think it is no longer bridge about. what form that takes, whether it
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is a third-party, fighting within the party, the party tearing itself apart, i do not know. but we are in a different world politically at the end of this election cycle than we were at the beginning. jeff: anybody from the other side of the aisle? jacob: four democrats it is different. now i feel the parties have traded places. when i first started writing about politics in the 1980's, the cliche was that the republican party looks for converts, and the democratic party looks for heretics. it was true. the democratic convention in 1984 straight from the union line, on a lot of issues. the party is more interested in vilifying you, then the november election. --ehow, hillary clinton was able to compromise around policies in the interests
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of winning. they're having a primary fight, but i don't think it is a fight to the death. i think democrats recognize the that of winning, in a way the republicans used to, with ronald reagan. the republicans are now more about their internal conflict, then in settling for part of what they want, as opposed to getting none of it. jeff: does that internal conflict get resolved this year or linger on? jacob: i don't see how it can be resolved this year. it is a deep cleavage that has been festering for a long time, now being exposed. i don't think that kind of conflict gets neatly wrapped up. the way it eventually gets wrapped up is partly by people moderating their positions, and partly around a person. when you have a ronald reagan show up, all the people fighting and the republican party about
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whether we should repeal medicare or leave it alone, they will say we don't agree about those issues, but we all of the -- all agree about this guy ronald reagan. his ability to convince all those people they will get something out of his presidency, even if they won't get everything they want, those are the politicians who are transformational within parties. they can do that. bill clinton in 1992 was very much like this. trade agreements and anti-them, did not quite know what bill clinton would do in office, but he brought them all along. he made them all think that he partly agreed with them, and he came out for nafta supporting deficit reduction, instead of bigger stimulus spending. talent --rical
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political talents. and who can do that on the right? not anybody. paul ryan? probably does he have the right qualities to do that. him, he isalong with a consensus figure, the job of speaker of the house is a job , youy can succeed at immediately get head-hunted. done all right in the job. but paul ryan is so identified with libertarian a la ticks and the minimalist government and tax cutting, that his ideological appeal to the trump-wing of the party is not going to be there. they might like them, but they won't support them. jeff: what would ronald reagan
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make a paul ryan? i think ryan consciously models himself after reagan. operating in the context of today's republican party, where you can't really be for immigration, you cannot be for a set of rational policies around the drugs. i think his views would be much more like reagan's. i read him as a reagan-conservative, i don't think policies make any sense, or his numbers add up any more than ronald reagan's did, i think they add up less. but he is very much a reagan-conservative. jeff: what positions did reagan have? started inan politics very late, he was already in his 50's before he got involved in it. younger,ted much biding his time. jeff: thank you very much.
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thank you for joining us, we will see you next time. ♪
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mark: i am mark halperin. john: i am john heilemann. and with all due respect to bernie sanders and hillary clinton can we are looking tisnales andar parties and al talking points and rebuttal. ♪ mark: happy gotham city debate date, sports fans. john: we'll cover the brawl between hillary clinton and bernie sanders. prosecutor f

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