tv With All Due Respect Bloomberg June 2, 2016 5:00pm-6:01pm EDT
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craig's the series -- >> the series now shifts back to california. >> the two best layers in the world are going head-to-head. -- best players in the world are going head-to-head. >> gnocchi injuries for either team, which means this year -- no key injuries for either team, which means this year, no excuses. from brooklyn. >> nicely done.
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mark: that california clash may come down to a buzzer beater, folks. it may also involve some overtime. there are other races going on, including big news. paul ryan said that he will vote for donald trump. diego, hillary clinton gave a foreign-policy speech to kickoff her five-day homestretch to work. .- tour the target of her speech was not bernie sanders. but the man she expects to face off against in the fall, donald trump. it was a big speed with a lot of soundbites. here is the money soundbite. ms. clinton: i believe the person the republicans have nominated for president cannot do the job. [applause]
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ideas are not just different, they are dangerously incoherent. really ideas,ven just a series of bizarre rants, personal feuds, and outright lies. [laughter] [applause] was one of the biggest, and i would say best speeches clinton has given in the campaign. how did she do? inn: we are not going to be the disagreement zone purely on the basis of how you phrased the question. i thought she did a great job. policy, clinton has an advantage not only in terms of her resume and experience, but she just has a greater command of world affairs. of trump's for all
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attractiveness to a certain subset of voters, on this question, if clinton can clear the threshold, she will win the election. i assume this will be an argument she prosecutes all the way until election day. mark: i was skeptical that a speech on foreign policy five days before she has to beat bernie sanders was a good idea. it was. she showed that she could do it with humor and elegance, and despite what trump said about her, pretty good performance skills. what democrats need to rally that sher is a sense can go into the fall and beat trump. i think she really short a lot of people today. john: humor is key. trump is funny. mark: funny with anger. john: correct. i reserved judgment on your earlier assessment that this might be problematic for her,
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but actually, i think she did herself a huge amount of god. mark: i do too. john: democrats have concerns about sanders on foreign policy. and thinkt clinton she can take trump on. she was very good on offense today. one of the golden rules of mall modern politics is if you want to know what trump is thinking about anything, check his twitter feed. he wrote this before clinton even spoke. , trumpclinton's speech also tweeted -- we will skip over the analysis of misspelling teleprompter and other matters. how dotion for you is
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donald trump do on defense? mark: he is going to engage her in some of the substance of her criticisms going forward. i think this is a case where, on tweetslush, trump's were no match for her sustained attacks. the contrast was exactly what she wanted. she predicted during her speech that trump would be tweeting angry things, and he did. trying toters she is reach, including women, married women, the contrast of taking someone down in a sustained way versus 140 characters i think works to her benefit. trump did not do well, and he suffers from not having the army of opposition workers and researchers that she does. john: trump cannot beat her with anger. in the end, i don't think she can beat him with anger either.
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can you clear the commander in chief threshold? that still matters. i don't care how many other rules have changed in our new political environment. hillary, crooked hillary, has resonance in some on foreign policy, it has no substance. he is going to have to be able to engage with her on substance and go toe to toe with her. mark: i would still like to think there will be a debate about who has a vision for the future, not just criticism of each other. she laid out today where she wants to take foreign-policy. i think donald trump has think lastand hard, because his foreign-policy speech was mostly criticisms of clinton and obama. said, paul ryan said today he will vote for donald trump in
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november. the speaker of the house made his announcement in an op ed published on the gazette, which is published in wisconsin. donald trumplieves will support the agenda paul ryan wants to pass through the house. there are some problems still in trump world with unifying republicans. rick snyder said he will not back trump. the republican national committee outreach director quit last night, suggesting she was uncomfortable working in concert with donald trump. the ryan endorsement was expected, but still very symbolic. does that mean that the movement is dead? john: if you think of this week
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as the week in which the dreams of an independent candidate going up against donald trump and hillary clinton have boiled down to a relatively obscure national review staff writer, a with a resume but who is not going to be picked, and now paul ryan, as you said, expected, but symbolically, it's a huge thing. i think the never trump movement is done. ark: it's going to send signal to donors and a lot of people. there is a clear separation between mitt romney and paul ryan. known for ap has wild that he was going to get this backing. he made it pretty clear in south dakota. still think there is work to be done, particularly with the financial community. but this is obviously a very big day for trump, even though ryan did it in a pretty understated manner. manner, buterstated he added one thin additional layer of glass to the argument that a lot of people are uncomfortable with truck -- a
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lot of people who are uncomfortable with trump has stated. i don't like him, but he's better than hillary clinton. ryan put the extra gloss on of saying hillary clinton is never going to support the house republican agenda. him,ll get something from maybe, and if you are rationalizing your support, that gives you a little extra bit of rationalizing power. ryan is on board. also onnald trump was defense today over his school, a.k.a. trump university. a video last night showed a handful of duden's praising the education they received that trump university. students praising the education they received at trump university.
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trump called the judge investigating his university very biased. he has toldt executives to reopen trump university after the civil litigation ends. normally, campaigns would use their sara gets to put on a full-court press. but donald trump's defense -- campaign to put on a full-court press. but donald trump's defense was donald trump. mark: there is a theory in democratic politics that many of the clinton advisers believe in is that now until the convention is when this thing will be won or lost. you look at what she did on foreign-policy today. you look at this attack on trump u.
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the press is very sympathetic to the argument the clintons are making, that trump university was a scam. is fighting back in a way that has worked for him before, but the assault has only just begun. if they don't do an after action analysis and look at the coverage of this and see how it is different from when he was attacked before, they are making a big mistake. looking at au are well coordinated attack in politics, you have not just the candidate, but the sar , yougates and the staff have employees, former employees, voices from within saying thisiverse is a scheme and fraud. if you are donald trump, you have a big megaphone, but that is coming at you from all directions. we are going to
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john: hillary clinton's foreign-policy speech in san diego was hotter than a guitar solo. here to help us unpack it is a lyrical correspondent casey hunt, who is following the political campaign -- is political correspondent casey hunt, who is following the political campaign on the trail. first, let's listen to hillary clinton. s. clinton: this is a
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man who has said that more countries should have nuclear weapons, including saudi arabia. this is a man who has threatened to abandon our allies in nato. he says climate change is a hoax invented by the chinese. he says he has foreign-policy experience because he ran the miss universe pageant in russia. unlike him, i have foreign-policy experience. i brokered a cease-fire between israel and hamas, negotiated the reduction of clear weapons with russia, twisted arms to bring the world together in global sanctions against iran, and stood up for the rights of women, religious majorities -- religious minorities, and lgbt people around the world. john: hillary clinton seems to be doing a couple of things in this speech. one, attacked donald trump. the other, offer an explicit
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defense of her record in the state department. how well do you think she pulled off that strategy today? casey: what struck me the most about this speech was that when we saw all of those dozen plus republicans try to attacked donald trump throughout the course of the primary, every time they did it, they deemed smaller than -- seemed smaller than donald trump. attacking him made them seem smaller by comparison. one thing i saw from hillary clinton today was to go after him in no way that made her seem bigger than he was, cash in a way that made -- in a way that made her seem bigger than he is. what stood out both in the room and, i assume you guys saw it on that in person, when she was talking about her record, there wasn't necessarily
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a vigorous defense of some of the pieces that will potentially be problematic, whether libya or the war in iraq. that i think it was the attacks that really stood out. a little's listen to bit more. this is her talking about being in the room when president obama gave the order to take out osama bin laden. ms. clinton: i remember being in the situation room with president obama debating the potential bin laden operation. advisers were divided. the intelligence was compelling but far from definitive, and the daunting.ailure were the stakes were significant for our battle against al qaeda and our relationship with pakistan. most of all, the lives of seals and helicopter pilots hung in the balance. it was a decision only a president could make, and when was as crisp and
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courageous a display of leadership as i have ever seen. now, imagine donald trump's hitting in the -- donald trump sitting in the situation room, making life or death decisions on behalf of the united states. imagine him deciding whether to spend your spouses or children into battle. imagine if he had not just his twitter account at his disposal when he is angry, but america has arsenal. do we want him making those calls, someone thin-skinned and quick to anger who lashes out at the smallest criticism? do we want his finger anywhere near the button? audience: no! the audience, practically rehearsed, helping her along and loving her. who do you think she was trying to reach with this speech?
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casey: a couple groups. some of the never trump national security elites like bill kristol. they will never get on the hillary clinton train, but there might be people out there willing to listen to this message, that hillary clinton is , steadyrienced foreign-policy hand. i think security moms, suburban women. haveimes suburban women been late to break for hillary. that happened in the senate in 2000. this is one way they think they can win them over earlier. i also think, potentially, there are some republican white men may might be able to win over with this. i think they know that is probably not a group they will do well with, but there are maybe a few. seemed extraordinarily
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confident today and she referred to donald trump throughout as "donald." what do you make of that? casey: i was asking about that, because it is dismissive. she has always said governor romney or senator mccain. somebody told me that it seems sympathetic -- sycophantic to say mr. trump. it is something we did not see republicans do much of in the primary. say to yout have to really quick, barack obama yesterday, hillary clinton today, that looked like a fermentable 1-2 punch. mark: -- fermentable 1-2 punch. -- formidable 1-2 punch. mark: when we come back, we go to silicon valley. ♪
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advance of tuesday's california primary, we thought we would do a little catch up on silicon valley, not the age be a program, although we are always pulling for pied piper. we mean the real silicon valley, which has grown into quite a political force. this year though, something seems a little bit off. the tech of has not warmed up to any presidential candidate so up to hub has not warmed any presidential candidate so far. to understand why, we might need a little history lesson. >> silicon valley front and center again. 1939, hewlett and packard start hewlett-packard in a garage. more stuff happens. things get invented. the internet.
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explodes. bill clinton. >> he passed nafta, the 1996 telecommunications act. >> al gore. >> al gore invented the internet. >> they also like bush. >> i will get the best scientific and technological advice from leaders in your field. >> silicon valley helps obama. obama helped silicon valley. executives from google visited the obama administration 128 times. >> facebook is opening a new office in washington, d.c. is hiring david plays. >> clinton has always had a hard ouffe.- david pl hardinton has always had a time. >> among your friends in silicon valley, how many of them are trump supporters?
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>> none of them overtly. >> elon musk said he wanted to send humans to mars by 2025. huge moment, because for the first time since silicon valley mattered in politics, they don't have a candidate. john: it's certainly true. valley, the politics there -- there are some libertarian elements. there are some left of center, some right of center. there are not a lot of far left and not a lot of conventional far right. donald trump's approach to global economics is not going to fly with a lot of the business community, particularly with x or it -- export oriented companies and tech leaders. and then you have hillary clinton. we talk about the absence of her economic message. bill clinton and the
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information superhighway. and of course, they love barack obama. but hillary clinton is on the it were.de of she is not beloved. they are wondering what to do -- wrong side of uber. she is not beloved. they are wondering what to do. not have anes authentic connection to their products. she is not someone who loves the things they do. she has been able to raise a ton of money. donald trump hasn't had to raise money. now they both need silicon valley, and they both need the image of silicon valley. asn though they are not politically potent as they were, they are still one of america's leading industries. california, technology, they are the huge part of the future. there is nothing like it in america. few: we've said this a
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times about clinton and trump. neither of them is running a forward-looking-future campaign right now. marco rubio was trying to talk about an economy of the future. candidates, i don't know that they see the value in it, let alone being able to capture it. mark: coming up, our colleague mike bender joins us to talk about paul ryan's op-ed piece and more. ♪
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correspondent. and here in studio, we have mike bender. dan, i would like to start with you because you are the dean, after all. tell us what you think about hillary clinton's broadside, sustained broadside against donald trump on foreign policy today. dan: she has had some bad days during this campaign. this is definitely not one of them. she was warming to this task long before she got up there to give this each -- the speech. a tough speech, mocking in all sorts of ways. she was clearly trying not just to disqualify trump, but to get under his skin in every possible way. he will respond tonight, no doubt, in ways only he can. mike, you have followed both sides of this campaign. do to be trump need to
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more presidential? how does he meet this particular challenge on foreign-policy from her and rise to the bait without rising to the bait? that is something he has been promising to do for months now, and he cannot get out of this right. look at the last months of his campaign. is one disaster after another. reports about his treatment of women. dan's colleagues getting audio of him pretending to be his own spokesman. one thing after another. or ninee eight instances of this, and i think that's what we saw clinton trying to do, trying to feed into that today, trying to get under his skin. past issses -- if prologue, she will be successful. to one of thee top fundraisers involved in the trump rnc effort. how does he or she think things are going?
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excited about the possibility of trump as a candidate and his ability to mark himself -- market himself. they are on easy the structure of the campaign. trump has been talking about raising a billion dollars. they are nowhere near that. fred malic told me he doubts they can do half of that. doing fundraisers every day. say what you want about jeb bush, but every time he was sitting down for breakfast, lunch, dinner, he was raising six figures. not done many fundraisers himself. they can't schedule him a week out. they don't know which super pac's to help. there is a sense of frustration. has created amp lot of excitement by being roughly even in national polls. how much of the structural
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problems can be cured simply by paul ryan saying he is endorsing trump? dan: i think ultimately, that is of limited al you. -- value. as you said earlier, this was inevitable and to be expected. it took longer than it might have for reasons ryan is the stable to explain, but i think ultimately no one doubted he would be on board -- ryan is best able to explain, but i think ultimately no one doubted he would be on board. there are people who don't have the responsibility paul ryan has to be a supporter of donald trump who are still holdouts. as mike pointed out, there are a lot of things he has to worry about. he will take comfort in these polls, and understandably so, but i think he cannot simply be
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complacent. it has felt as though he has been somewhat off stride the last couple of weeks given everything that has been coming at him. and perhaps and customarily so. -- not customarily so. seeway or another, what we from him in the next few weeks will be telling. as we know, what happens between the convention will be very, very important. mark: is #nevertrump dead? is there anything left of it? #nevertrump has been dead for quite a long time since it was essentially trying to prop up rubio in florida. what kind of success they would have had anyway. in 2012, the closest date was florida, decided by 1%. was florida,ate decided by 1%.
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gary johnson, who is getting some buzz now, got less than .5% in florida. is the clinton campaign building up the stakes too much, or do they have to go for the win? stakes have the been built by everything around it. sanders has raised the stakes by barnstorming california for the last couple of weeks. campaign knows she goes over the top in new jersey before california's results are in, but they don't want to lose the state. they know it would be another dent in her candidacy. so, the stakes are there, and she is going to try to come through with a victory. john: the great mike bender. dan falls. always great to see both of you. back, new york's attorney general. ♪
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donald trump says he wants to make america great again. bands want toous hand make america rage again. they even have a hat. tonight, we went to introduce you to the profits of rage with members from rage against the machine, public enemy, and to cyprus hell. between them, they have sold hill.han -- and cyprus they have sold more than 20 million albums.
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they decided they had to do something to disrupt the election cycle. on monday, they and belgium's -- they kroq, and , andled themselves on kroq then performed a concert at the o-go.ey a g they plan on staging a raucous during thecleveland republican convention. , this is the kevin and being show at 7:00. you have to be at the whiskey at 10:00 a.m. to get a wristband. >> this is the best $20 i have ever spent. >> hey, man, john. tom, this super band is your idea, right? >> the times demand a band like
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tsofits of rage to -- prophe of rage to rise. >> we want songs that are timeless and beyond us as individuals. there is an atmosphere we want to confront. >> why now? >> our nation and our world is on the brink of electoral insanity at home and environmental catastrophe around the globe. >> what is the state of the union? famously said there is no hotter place in hell than -- martin luther king famously said there is no hotter place in hell than for people who remain neutral in times of moral conflict. ♪
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[applause] >> the last time rage against the machine played in los angeles, we out through trump, sanders, and clinton by a margin of 3-1, so i think the general public is ready for our message. guys have three big catalogs to draw from, rage, public enemy, cyprus. you also have euro and music. >> we have a song of the time -- you also have your own music. >> we have a song of the time called "the parties over." >> we are done with the lies told to us for our votes.
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the party is over. we are standing up and making our forces known. ♪ has beeno-party system over for a long time. we have to come up with centuryg for the 21st that makes sense to the new generation in the voting marketplace. >> do you see a difference between the republican and democratic parties? >> not really. i never have. >> trump, clinton, sanders, why is this unprecedented? >> it is unprecedented. one of the things that has irked me greatly is the way the media talked about the trump
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campaign and the sanders campaign as both of them raging against the machine. we are going to set the record straight about what it really means to rage against the machine. people right, left, and center believe the system as it currently stands does not serve their needs. but what they are being offered through a tiny funnel of the process is a racist demagogue on one hand and a dreamer on the other hand, and in the middle is the lesser of three evils. hillaryat would be clinton? like yes, there needs to be an alternate voice that stands unapologetically with the people. what are you doing in july? >> there's this thing called the republican convention and that is the perfect place for us to cause a ruckus. we will be on the streets. >> you have a venue? >> we have a venue, and some
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things might be spontaneous. these are the kinds of things you don't broadcast to local authorities. we are going to be rocking furiously in and around the rnc. in philadelphia? >> anything is possible. we are figuring it out. >> at to the end of four days, if you have raged most effectively, what will of happened? >> timmy c will have gotten the nomination. [laughter] ♪ >> my view is that progressive,
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radical, revolutionary change comes from below, not above. even if you stake all of your hopes for your family on help, some of that doesn't work out. if you stake them on this xenophobic, fear-based racism, this is not going to work out either. been writinghave for decades attacked the system, not the candidates. change starts at the kitchen table, the classroom, wherever people gathered to talk about making the world what they wanted to be. here is the thing. songs travel the world. how do you want your country to be looked at from the outside looking in, because these songs are going to be played worldwide with the rest of the planet looking in. something has to be done. ♪
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"disliked by practically everybody." aboutworse could be said any individual. the attorney by general of new york to talk about his pending lawsuit against trump university. how big is this case in the scheme of things? cases againstught different for-profit universities before. this is part of a broader investigation. more than 5000 people were ripped off or millions of dollars. in new york, 600 or 700 people victims of the scheme. it was held as a university, but was never registered or certified, didn't do any of the things you have to do to call yourself a university. we brought the suit in 2013, long before anyone thought he would be the republican nominee for president. it is not politics. he made a case that he would
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teach people his personal secrets to get rich in real estate. he had nothing to do with the curriculum. the president of the university has testified to that under oath. it's a pretty straightforward fraud case, but now he has entered the political scene, so it has gotten a different level of attention. he has decided to attack me and the judge in the parallel case havelifornia, so we entered the debate. endorsed hillary clinton, correct? >> i endorsed her a long time ago. john: this is part of trump's argument that this is political. he also gave money to you at one point, correct? i won theter political primary in 2010, he gave me $12,500. john: so, just to address trump's view that this is all
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happening because of politics, do you have political motives he -- motives? started this suit in 2013 when he wasn't in politics. there is no credible evidence this is political. this is a fraud case. people who bought his pitches will tell you what happened. we have videos of him saying my handpicked experts will ll you my personal secrets. you can learn what i learned in a lifetime in a weekend seminar. testimonyom sworn that he gave, that the president of the university gave, that he did not pick the instructors. he did not write the curriculum, so they were not his secrets. letters were sent to the university saying you have to stop calling yourself a university. it was a scam from beginning to
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end. we do this with other for-profit colleges. have,what evidence do you if any, that is not part of the public record yet? in our of what we have case is in the public record. some stuff is sealed in the california class-action, although the judge in that case recently announced he was unsealing other portions of it. we have the playbooks, the the instructors, who were pitch men. they are clearly designed to get people to spend as much money on trump seminars as possible, and we have transcripts of the seminars themselves. it's nothing secret. mark: he has said he doesn't want to settle and he won't, but what would be a just settlement in this case? >> he has to pay back the people he ripped off and pay the fines assessed by the state of new york. you can't run around saying this is the halperin university,
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halperin law school, halperin school of medicine. we have laws about that. face of it, from your point of view, it should have been shut down from the first day. >> it was. we have the record, and this was all before the courts. been, these cases have pending for years. there have been motions made. a lot of the arguments he has made have been rejected. he has lost virtually everything in a set of motions decided earlier this year in our case. we have records of him sending deceptive records to the state department of education. we are moving to another state. we are changing the way we do business. at one point, there was a physical force entry into their offices because they claimed they were not in new york. this is all before the courts. in the his deposition california case. we deposed the president of the
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.niversity other employees and students have been deposed. we can use their sworn testimony. we are ready to go to trial. would anything change her mind to bring trump in? >> at this point, we are ready to proceed without deposing him. mark: thank you. the attorney general. don't forget, if you're watching us in washington, d.c., you can listen to us on 99.1 fm radio. we will be back with who we think will win in california, after this. ♪
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cavs, warriors, who have you got? be great. going to i still have the worriers, and i will tell you why. watch the way they played in the fourth quarter of game six. that elimination game against oklahoma city, that's the championship team. they are a great team, but i believe they will lose. long live the king. ton: head bloombergpolitics.com to look at the push to bring robert mercer into a yet to be formed super pac. and coming up on bloomberg west, the great cory johnson. we will see you tomorrow. until then, sayonara. ♪
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speech today in san diego. ms. clinton: even if i weren't in this race, i would be doing everything i could to make sure donald trump never becomes president because i believe he will take our country down a truly dangerous path. mark: secretary clinton delivered her remarks at the start of a five-day trip to california, one of six states holding primaries june 7. house speaker paul ryan says he will vote for donald trump. ryan made the announcement on twitter and in a column for his hometown newspaper. for the past month ryan had been reluctant to normally support mr. trump. turkey has recalled its ambassador to germany. the vote increases tensions between turkey and germany at a playing aankara is key role in slowing the flow of migrants to europe. the nba finals begin tonight.
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