tv With All Due Respect Bloomberg August 18, 2016 5:00pm-6:01pm EDT
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after donald trump's campaign changes this week, many eyes are cast on the cast of characters advising the nominee. we will talk about if you them to start off. he will begin with the ceo of team trunk, breitbart executive bannon. there are profiles galore about his eclectic repertoire. he has been called a conservative media provocateur and "the single most influential figure in the trunk campaign." other news organizations dubbed and "astreet fighter" media bob feller." -- bomb-thrower." interview he has done is with our own bloomberg culley, in which he insists trump can work with the republican party. faring?his bannon brand
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donny: it has been no secret that i have said all along, trump the man, he wants himself to run and never expected to be here, and he doesn't want to lose. he is literally going into the revolution business. he is doubling down obviously. do you know it's been a beating antiestablishment for republican senate democrats. the map does not add up. but coming out of the election, if he is not a loser, but i have 40 million people following me. i did not lose. this is a media political technology empire with basically trump as the media guy at as the salesman. loses. even if he it just got clear to me. mark: bannon should not let
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himself be so defined by others. he has an impressive resume. he is responsible at breitbart. there has been a lot that is negative, dark. three has a record of accomplishment as a businessman. i have not done any clearance, or what i read exactly what he's going to do. easy charge of message, building a future network? i have no idea. i can tell you the press, the filter they are putting on him is the one a lot want to put on trump -- she's going to go dark and negative. that seems to be the impression. the bannon brand is infecting the trump brand in a negative way. donny: this will be a new media party representing those 3-40,000,000 people trump has
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hit. his new campaign manager, kelly conway,ay -- kellyanne who has gotten glowing reviews establishment republicans. pro-life grouphe lists "no one is better at understanding what real people are thinking." the wall street editorial board wrote "she is a neoconservative with a talent for connecting voters that are not policy wonks." she says she has been humbled by the incoming price. and after to campaign managers do, she directed the good vibes towards her boss. the first female republican campaign manager. i did not know that, nor did donald trump ever mention that to me.
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you know why? that is not what he promoted me. that speaks very well of him. he has been doing that in the trunk corporation four years. -- trump corporation for years. donny: in the same interview, conway tried to find the sweet spot between wedding trump be trump and keeping his message on track. kellyanne: we would like him to give speeches like he has this week. lindsay delivers a speech in his own words, then people can focus on the content. i think we are going to sharpen the message. we are going to make sure that donald trump is comfortable about being in his own skin, that he does not lose authenticity. voters know if you are comfortable in your own skin. if he wants to go to a rally and
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neck with a crowd in a way that is just connect with a crowd that is spontaneous, that is how he got here. at the same time, we have pressing problems in this country. i am thrilled we have gotten so much coverage for the first two speeches. next week is immigration week, followed by education week. donny: same question for you, how is the kellyanne conway brand doing? mark: the opposite. she has always bridged the bird that -- bridged the gap between the establishment arianism and the voters. and she hasts her been in other presidential campaigns. some people are knocking her that she has never won a presidential campaign -- not many people have.
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her brand is thriving, and it is helping troubled a lot. -- trump a lot. donny: alpha males like trump like people of the same temperament.that is a war that has taken him down a lot, but if you look at people that are rising to the top, it's the people that are smart and tough, not namby-pamby people. ony spend so much time finding out who their people are 80 40's from the campaign. mark: he needs help because he is an amateur. i don't mean that in a negative way, he has never run for anything. donald trump's staffing shovel has been viewed as a slight to the campaign german paul manafort. some argue that he has been
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sidelined in part for trying to control the candidate to much. the editor of the national review depicted manafort as having been ousted. the campaign pushing back on any insistence that his power has been diminished. manafort in the campaign are dealing with a constant iv drip of news stories with his ties to russia and the ukraine. nbc news reported in 2008, manafort's firm was involved in a ukrainian oligarch. he did business with a russian billionaire also, and allegedly had times -- had ties to organized crime. campaign should expect more of these stories to come. besides business dealings, how is the manafort doing and how has it impacted trump's/
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? donny: once new people come in, and the guy is in charge -- and this whole russian thing that the bbc is reporting. 40,000 russian troops assembling on the ukrainian-crimean border. you do not want that guy around. he is getting trump to not be trump. for all of the above, i think he will be gone in a couple of weeks. mark: these stories are a problem because trump has been so close to putin, or at least rhetorically. i don't think you are right. the clinton campaign has 10 senior people dealing with all the stuff he needs to deal with. there is a lot of work left for paul manafort to do.
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big budget decisions, big political decisions, putting the correlations together. the work is being divided up, but he still has a big portfolio. donny: you are comparing the clinton campaign --trump ran a mom-and-pop business. teaches a people gut person. what you are saying is logical given how this candidate has run his campaign. i don't see a place for m anafort. mark: when we come back, donald trump is about to roll of his first general election tv spot. where, when, and what, after these words from our sponsors. ♪
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mark: since the national convention, hillary clinton's campaigns bent $22 million in tv dollars. that's about to change, donald trump rolling out his first election spots. he has reserved $3.9 million in ohio, north carolina, florida, and pennsylvania tomorrow through august. cap will likely become bigger, including some ad buys on cable. clintonarison, the campaign will spend $17 million over that same time. we don't know what the ads will look like. his team was looking at several different options regarding content. before we talk about what those spots might look like, let's take a peek at the spots currently airing, starting with the democrats and their many anti-trump messages. >> when i saw donald trump attack another gold star mother, i felt such a sense of outrage. what donald trump said about
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our members of the military being captured is a disgrace. >> you could see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her -- wherever. >> you have to ask yourself, do i want a person of that temperament controlling the nuclear codes? as of now, i have to say no. [laughter] >> at we make the economy work for everyone? hillary clinton's plan start here. donny: now here are some of the clinton as already on the airwaves. >> she's one of the wealthiest women in politics. >> we came out of the white house not only that broke, but in debt. >> wall street insiders, drew corrupt dictators. they all had one thing in common, their check, cleared. >> i never told anybody to lie. >> she does not believe in your right to keep a gun at home for self-defense.
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>> i don't think there is any way to legislate against outsourcing. i think that is a dead end. , leaving youtouch defenseless. the probe trump groups arriving those anti-clinton messages. runningrump groups those anti-clinton messages. donny: i think it will go down so nasty. are going tos ads frame hillary not only has untrustworthy, but a crook been part of this establishment that is los angeles and new york, media politicians. it's going to be very nasty and conspiratorial type. all the discussion has been on trump. he needs to go extreme in the ads. even if they are outright lying, coming u it will shift the campn
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back to hillary. you will see a nasty interpretation at a level we have never seen before. what about showing him being optimistic at rallies? pro donaldets his trump with all the media coverage. it's not the crowds, but the media coverage. today, it has been on donald trump. whoever makes it a referendum on the other one will win. mark: so you don't think he's going to run any bio spots? donny: no, he's not going to be having babies. babies.- hugging you have to come out with a pretty ugly alternative to get people off the fear of that. mark: do you think they will do
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missed under the clinton world -- i cannot speak today. i have to stop drinking before the show. [laughter] with us, casey hunt and jennifer epstein. jennifer, let me start with you. there should've been a lot more talk about clinton. it's interesting the kind of health conspiracy theory. she fired back hard. were you surprised they came back so hard? jennifer: the clinton campaign percolated. trump talked about it on hannity's show a couple times. wanted to do was let the media ecosystem respond to it naturally. to let fact checkers do they are debunking, and then finally they swooped in. they released a statement from communications directors -- they
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are trying to change what should have been something on the defensive into an offensive. one aide compared it to help president obama dealt with the birth certificate issue. donny: mark and i thought it was smart. something else that could have been big news, the fbi interview notes going up to the hill. are you surprised there has not been more on that? jennifer: yeah, when something gets to the hill republicans we goes pretty quickly. one thing that chuck grassley noted last night, there is a bit of classified information next in with mostly nonclassified information. which means that a very limited number on the congressional staff can actually read those notes. that i think is slowing down the
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whole process. the clinton campaign is ok with that because they don't want these selective leaks that end up making the story look worse. mark: i want to get to your overlook stuff. talk about the health care response and the fbi notes. decided theylearly needed to play defense here, which they haven't on a lot of things before. things trump has raised on the stump. he has talked about bill clinton's sex scandals in the 1990's. they said, we are going to be totally hands-off. i am interested in learning more why this that is, seems like a potentially bigger threat. on the e-mails, this is really difficult to understand if you are the average voter, right? you are down in the weeds with jason chaffetz, what's the
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difference between an e-mail header that is classified, -- exactly. it seems that the goal is to motivate republican base voters that are ready to believe republicans that will say this is a problem for her. mark: there is like it's between the americans held in iran and -- more0 billion stories about rush in syria. overlook on see the her foreign-policy record and credentials? kasie: one thing that trump has been handing to hillary clinton is the opportunity to talk about him, but never talk about herself. she has been able to escape and has not answered the latest iteration of this question.the wall street journal have raised this earlier . for the most part, she dismissed it. she has been supportive of this deal.
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she has not been asked, was this a good idea? she has not recently been asked whether this was a policy the u.s. should be revisiting. mark: it could come up at the next press conference. jennifer: there was not really an opportunity to ask. 's new team is going to go more negative and nasty than ever. i have a theory that traditionally it might backfire. even though 68% of the country say it's going in the wrong direction. people responded to the more positive talk in the conventions. kasie: when donald trump first won the nomination, there was a willingness. people were going to say oh, this is interesting, but suddenly he has won the nomination, and maybe i should take a look. through the conventions you see that willingness dissipate a little bit. i wonder if the sense of the
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electorate will move that way . general.re over in if they are able to help drive the president's numbers down, that could hurt. what is your sense on the health question in particular? you have a sense of why you thought that was a threat? er: i think they wanted to point out how ridiculous it was how what trump and his allies have been saying. i think it's crazy to say that she is in bad health. mark: comparing it to the birther thing. public polls showed a high percentage of americans questioned whether the president was born in the united states. this is a pretty research oriented campaign. i do not ask them. anecdotally, i've had
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a lot of friends that don't pay a lot of attention to politics asked me, what's the deal with her health? mark: even if only two people say it, that's enough. aides wereclinton supposed to take ethics training and it didn't, is this story a thing? kasie: this is one of those incremental stories that could blow up or fade. but it's the kind of headline that absent the noise with the trump campaign-- jennifer: there's so much noise from the trump campaign that it's overshadowing and drowning out all these questionable clinton things. donny: that's why i think the advertising will go really nasty. can you read and take us out of that? kasie: i'm going to thank
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the new york republican party. a democratic advisor, traveling chief of staff to vice president al gore. clinton.r hillary who are you for? >> the republican party. >> yeah. are you voting for donald trump? >> absolutely. >> he's from new york, you know that. >> absolutely. i'm a new yorker. like to do a little strategy swap. trump campaign, kellyanne conway acknowledged today it's behind, so you guys have got catching up to do. giving advice to donald trump and kellyanne conway, what would you tell them? tot are the building blocks a comeback? >> message discipline. mr. trump could focus on a couple of key messages and not jobhe clinton campaign's for them -- >> which two messages? not ast of all, this is specific message but it's a broader strategy. he needs to restore his as an acceptable alternative in a change election year.
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that? do you do >> well, it's complicated. and he's worked hard to -- and i don't think intentionally, but he has disqualified himself among strands of the general electorate. by the way, i thought the roundtable he did the other day, at least the optics on national security made sense, giving policy speeches and sticking to oressage on teleprompter not, it's important that he show he can be a president. if he doesn't get that back, all the negative attacks, all the tough ads, he doesn't have enough of the electorate to come election.in the >> what should joel and company for hillary right now? >> i say ditto. when you look at hillary, she's dodging the press for a little bit under a year now. so that would actually feed into that she's sentiment not trustworthy, that she's hiding something. john, if she were your iient and she said, john, hate press conferences. i'm up 10 points. you'd say, go do some press
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conferences? >> at least do one or two, right. did on fox -- she >> you're in this business. you know that every day that is about trump on the news, she wins. >> but she has to hedge. >> hedge or not, it's the right strategy. it's the right strategy. if i was managing her campaign, i would keep her under wraps as as we possibly can. >> but make every day about trump? canou know how things change very quickly. >> i'm talking about right now. >> if she doesn't actually do likehing that's sort of good will, put some good will in least, if you will, by at doing one press conference before the debates, and how the debates go -- >> maybe on an august friday. go.here you bury it, right! >> there are some people who make the case to her, get it done. >> or at least a saturday afternoon. >> you're saying a presser taking questions? >> yeah. >> at least 15 minutes.
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true. i think it's both candidates, i'd spend an extra hour a day on debate prep. going to be the last real impact moment with a national audience, a chance to change the dynamic of the race. if i'm secretary clinton, i'm in there, making sure i'm ready for any hay marker that's going to come her way. trump --m >> let me just reference this brilliant man's book. know that donald trump, there's so many questions you can ask him. i'm not talking about, tell me the year croatia was liberated. i'm talking basic 101, tell me the difference between a sunni and a shiite. do you prepare him for that? >> first of all, he's not going to be able to compete with her on policy. very few people can. i don't know many of her staff people that could keep up with the detailsinton on of public policy. but he's got to be able to deliver a message. keyuld pick two or three messages that i'd try to draw a
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make suren her and whatever the question is -- 90-minute debate -- >> he did a great job through debates,epublican pulling everybody into what he wanted to focus on. 101, though, right? >> actually, you might have three people in the race. >> maybe. >> you never know. >> the two vice presidential candidates are in, i think, as shape as any i've seen in the sense that both clinton and trump, i'm told, really happy with their picks. and both these guys are out events, notlots of really shackled in any way. do you see them as cancelling each other out? is one of them helping the other out more at this point? >> no. they're serving different roles. all, i actually think both of them made good picks, for different reasons. them have one eye on potentially the future in the next cycle. and so the calculation for both of them is different.
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say for senator kaine in particular, his ability to her, to deliver a message that's complementary to hers has been crucially important. and for governor pence, it's been reassurance to some of the audiences that want to make sure there's going to be, you know, an adult in charge or somebody can help guide the ship, if they get elected. very different things. strong is a conservative. i think that speaks to the basis of -- basics of the republican party and those that are far right, especially those that are ben carson, the ted cruz camp, to make sure that, you know what? inhave a conservative that's the white house. but those are questions, you trump is more to right.dle or to the and i think, you know, as we move along in the election process, trump is proving himself to have more
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right-leaning views. >> mark, this is the first time in the election, two candidates 100% brand it have a awareness. neither of these guys can make a difference. is that fair to say? the way you've talked about it is right. they're both helping in big the, as big as you can at bottom of the ticket. they're both going to log a lot coverage, which is really important. are your candidates who are on the ballot in new york this year about the prospect of a blowout at the top of the ticket? >> i think when you look at what the primary, you know, we had a lot of people come out. are excited, the fact trump won every county except for one. one.is >> but -- so the energy is very high. you know, we don't really expect to win much in new york city, given the numbers. i think it's 7-1 ratio. when you look at new york 2.5 or 3-1.more
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>> are you going to have a strong candidate for mayor next year? >> absolutely. be?ho is it gonna >> in due time. one race at a time. ha ha! >> the journal today, they raised the prospect of a blowout for hillary clinton. are you hearing democrats more don't take anything for granted, races are going to are more people thinking about -- >> i hear both. people.w a lot of there are two conversations going on. i think justifiably people are concerned about turnout. to make sure people stay focused till the very end of this race, that people don't complacent. you also hear talk of the expansion. we hear states like arizona and missouri, we haven't seen a very a long time, in long time. and so i do think people are looking at the map and they're numbers in those states in a different way. >> okay. you, gentlemen, both. when we come back, we're headed to break down some
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>> polls and more polls. there are a lot of polls out there, and polls lead to a lot of questions. when we have questions about polls, we either get on a plane to des moines, iowa, or we do to next best thing. we bring des moines here to gotham city. our pollster, who is going to answer two big questions that up. coming the first thing i get asked about all the time, and i don't have great answers but you do, polls now look at likely voters, some look at registered
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voters, some pollsters ask both within a given poll, why not one and go with it? >> to be perfectly honest, two different philosophies. there are those who say i'll at all thewe'll look data. >> this many men, this many women -- on everything we know. they don't want to do that until close to the election. which tends to be after labor day. before that, so they have lookhing to look at, they at registered voters, so they can look at times one, times two, times three, times four, and have a trend line. registeredit to voters for consistently, and then -- >> then you have the shift change where they're switching to likely voters. pollsters like i am, who say let the voters tell me who is a likely voter. how can i predict this election in particular, really any election, because there's so
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now that the electorate changes from cycle to cycle to cycle. >> like obama brings in more african-americans or -- >> or young people and they're better at turnout than the poll might predict. >> do you kind of layer in both and theonal battleground -- overall snapshot, has anybody come back for that? >> we took a look from the see what of polling to had been happening in election after election. you have some elections like eisenhower who led in polls in the beginning and end. but there have been several that surprises and twists and turns and changes of leads. so people have mostly been about dukakis being behind as much as 19 points, but leading by as much as 17 points. to beat. bush went on him rather handily. but there was a time that carter leading ford by a lot more.
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that turned to be a very close race. ford was able to make up where he was in august by time.on that is 16 percentage points. back to 1968. you had hubert humphrey at only 29 points. up toas the closest race that point in time. so looking back in history, you can say anything can happen. this race in particular, and with every day there being a new bit of news breaking that can change the poll, anything can happen. >> and it's safe to say that while it is possible that trump could come back, leaving aside the conduct of his campaign, leads in theat past, he can certainly narrow this contest? could.ertainly >> coming all the way back, maybe a taller order than has done.l been >> people have come back by more points than he's trailing. he's dug a hole he can't get out of i think is overstating the case. des moines, explaining it all to us, rather than going to the iowa state fair.
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>> throughout this presidential campaign, supporters and critics alike have commented a lot about choices.ump's word certainly trump speaks in a very distinctive language. a vernacular of simple, often effective, words and many, many expressions. you can call them idioms or filler phrases. them the trump abc's. for a long time, we've been listening to what donald trump republic. tonight we present what we believe is the definitive
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of the trump alphabet, naturally in alphabetical order. accomplish what nobody thought was absolutely possible. >> absolutely. be.bsolutely proven to >> absolutely a total lie. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> i know more about isis than me.generals do, believe >> believe me, i'll make you very proud of those justices. >> we can get them tow pay for me.believe >> i am the least gracious person that you've ever met, believe me. me, there's plenty of subject matter right there in they're taking it over big league. >> big league. >> big league. >> hillary wants to expand regulations, which she does big league. >> big. and big league. total control. ding ding! bong bong! married to anthony wiener. you know, the little bing bing bomb bomb... >> little mouth on him. bing bing bing. bing bing bing. by the way... we will build a wall. >> by the way...
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>> by the way... he's worked in north carolina, by the way. >> by the way... >> by the way... way...by the >> did this guy choked? he choked. chokee watched people over the years. and once a choker, always a choker. >> he's a choke artist. he choked. pure and simple. choke.ans he's going to he just choked. >> we have crooked hillary. hillary. >> crooked may be more accurate, actually. >> it's a crooked system. 100% crooked in nobody would be tougher on isis than donald trump. >> donald trump. >> everybody is gonna vote for donald trump. trump, donald trump. >> donald trump, donald trump. >> donald trump. >> donald trump. >> donald trump. donald trump. donald trump. >> donald trump. >> they obviously got to the pope. what a bad guyim donald trump is. >> he doesn't know me. never met me. about. know what i'm all >> knows nothing about me. they are really trying to
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stop me. >> i call it the failing new york sometimes. >> failed horribly. >> they're friends of mine. >> hillary is a great friend of mine. great friend of mine. >> tom brady is a great friend of mine in a friend of mine. mine.e are friends of >> get them out of here. get them out of here. here! them out of get them out! >> get him out of here. get him out. >> get them out of here. all right. get them out. the baby out. >> we don't know where they come from, really. this could be the all-time great trojan horse. >> this could be the great trojan horse. >> i like people that weren't okay?ed, i hate to tell you. >> i hate to tell you, it came to indiana. judge who is a hater of donald trump. a hater. he's a hater. hater. >> i made a lot of money dealing against china. moneymade a lot of dealing against other countries. >> and i made a lot of money
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doing everything i did. lot of money doing the apprentice, in real estate, i made a lot of money. everything i did. and complete joke. >> hillary clinton is a joke. >> total joke. a totalnk the guy is incompetent jerk. >> looks like a jerk. knows currency manipulation better than china. >> nobody knows -- knows -- >> nobody even knows who the people are. nobody knows what they're doing with the money. like astly, he cheated dog. he choked like a dog. >> he choked like a dog. a dog.o is sweating like >> they were hired like dogs. they hate little marco rubio so much. >> little marco. little marco. >> it's gonna -- >> look, the group of losers -- >> they're losers. >> just losers. >> millions of votes ahead. millions. billions. >> these other companies, they and they spend millions of dollars looking for oil. >> millions and millions of jobs. relationship with that. i don't think i've ever met him.
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never met him. >> honestly, i don't know david duke. i don't believe i've ever met him. guy, rickets or something. >> i never met him. >> and he was sweating so badly, i have never seen anything like it. >> we've never seen anything like it. with ben carson was terrible. i've never seen anything like that. >> i've never seen anything like it. >> we're gonna vote like you've never seen before. >> like you've never seen before. >> oh, boy! >> oh, boy! >> it always will be. okay? >> okay? >> okay? >> okay. okay. that's enough. sayingt of people are that. and a lot of people are saying that bad things are happening out there. saying.e are >> i promise you, i will pay for the legal fees. >> i can promise you. definitely over there, no question about it. >> he certainly lives above his means, no question about that. it.o question about there's no question about it. >> they'll never be able to fix system. by counting on the same people who have rigged it in the first
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place. folks, is rigged. >> it's rigged by big donors. businesses.siness >> it's rigged. >> the whole system is rigged. rigged.conomy is the banking system sl rigged. there's a lot of things that are rigged. >> we have a rigged system, folks. >> he knows what being ripped ripped i know what being off is. >> there's something going on with him that we don't know about. >> there's something going on that we all don't know about. >> there's something going on that we don't know about. >> we are led by very, very stupid people. shouldn'ty said, you say stupid. but it's true. they're stupid. >> stupid. stupidity. >> if i get the nomination, i'll latino vote. >> terrible. terrible. >> that's terrible. >> terrible. terrible people. >> terrible. so terrible. >> i thought he was terrific. terrific person. >> terrific person. >> what you don't talk about is ie thousands of people that
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do hire. >> thousands. i don't know how many. but many thousands. >> thousands and thousands. thousands. >> we're gonna win so much, you're gonna get tired of winning. andou're gonna get sick tired of winning. >> they'll get tired of winning. >> libya is a total mess. mess.s a total >> total mess. >> total mess. >> i have a great company with tremendously talented people. >> tremendous cash flow in tremendous net worth. understanding of this country. >> our message is unbelievable. >> unbelievable. >> unbelievable. >> i don't believe this! this is unbelievable. nobody believes it. press is so dishonest and so unfair. >> i thought they were very unfair. >> it's unfair. >> i was very viciously attacked. >> viciously. >> viciously. can't believe, i it. >> wow! wow. >> and i said, wow! wow!said >> oh, wow. >> i call it extreme. >> extreme. extreme vetting. >> he referred to my hands,
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betball, something else must small. i guarantee you, there's no problem. guarantee you. at thetake a look salaries being paid, what's going on at the colleges. >> you just take a look at on.'s going >> new hampshire has a huge heroin problem. believer ine cleanness. i'm not a huge believer in the phenomenon.ng >> lindsay gray has zero. >> how do you get 0%? >> zeros! >> zero, zero. >> bush. >> they put that masterpiece together. [applause] >> yeah. what do you think of the way trump talks? >> um, that's that man. i think that actually helps him. queens guy. that's the way we talk. you choke on it, you know. so that takes him off the billionaire pedestal and puts him, connects him to the man on can laugh ato we it. it's actually very effective. >> and that's entertaining.
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irradiance to keep their promises to release american citizens being held in toronto the money was oldest part of a settlement of a military equipment deal with the shaw of iran in the 1970's. the clinton foundation says hillary clinton is excepted president, it will no longer take foreign in corporate donations. yesterday on fox news, trucks of the american people should give the foundation of mrs. clinton doubt the benefit of the about my is received from foreign governments. homeland security secretary jeh johnson visited louisiana. federal governments issued a disaster declaration for 20 parishes. brazilian authorities are ofusing american swimmers lying about being held up at gunpoint. the country's chief of civil police says they four were confronted by
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