tv With All Due Respect Bloomberg October 24, 2016 5:00pm-6:01pm EDT
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margaret: morgan john are on the trail in ohio with vice president biden. -- mark and john are on the trail. a new poll has clinton leading trump a narrower margin than in recent polls. voting kicking off in florida, texas and other states, hillary clinton and donald trump are shifting to the final phase of their campaign.
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trump began his closing artemis this weekend with a big speech in gettysburg. it was the speech's has billed as a contract with america style opus about he will do. instead, trump threatened to sue the woman accusing him of sexual assault. this afternoon at a rally, trump continue to cover a lot of ground. mr. trump: investors, business daily. early voting in florida. rigged system. those pundits that dislike me and dislike you and dislike everybody, stupidity. somewhat with a hammer. and deletes them some. john podesta. the element of surprise. i went to an ivy league school for the forgotten people. this is bigger than brexit. " craziest thing in the world." trouble down. drain the swamp.
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coal, clean firefighters, president obama. sanctuary cities -- ivanka trump. do not even think about it. thank you, sir. ison't know who that guy but he looks a hell of a lot like honest abe. >> we've seen this before. what is he trying to do and what does it mean? how will it affect the results over the next couple weeks? >> we have seen that twice over the first week. first when they put melania tr ump out to give an interview about whether she accepted an apology from her husband. and then this weekend, the question of suing his accusers. he keeps going back to scandals he might have otherwise put you bed. i think it is a way of dominating the conversation.
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a lot of his policy percent -- proposals are not about him. i think that is where he is most comfortable. ret: it seems like it is alienating a lot of women. it does take them away from talking about his taxes. is there a rhyme or reason? to devote as yet sustained energy to telling a story about wikileaks, then he has to relitigating these accusations about what he has said and done around women. garet: you can see republicans ringing their hands because there is a concern that affects them. do you think that there is some case to be made that he can -- he can be separated from the rest of the party? sha: if there is any consolation for republicans like paul ryan who disagree with him about immigration and trade are not going to have to answer for -- legislation they would not
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want to vote for. the on that, i do not see what advantage this is giving. margaret: i agree. hillary clinton was campaigning with senator elizabeth warren in new hampshire. tossed maggie hassan a special shout out. think thisn: i election is going to turn on who is motivated to go. we need each and everyone of you to do everything you can to make it clear to everybody you know that our future is at stake. if you want to be part of a positive, optimistic, confident, unifying future, please vote on november 8. what i love about maggie is she is independent, she knows how to find common ground and how to stand her ground. and that is exactly the kind of leader we need in the united states senate.
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past few for the days clinton and her super surrogates have been focusing on helping democratic candidates. thank governor ted strickland, our candidate for the united states senate. electra cooper your next governor. roy cooper to the governor. your send katie mcginty to the senate. she is running against someone who refuses to stand up to donald trump. pat toomey heard donald trump insult a grieving gold star family who lost their son in iraq. he heard donald trump insult african-americans, pow's . sayingd him engage in
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terrible things about women. how much does he have to hear or to see? margaret: president obama is expected to endorse 150 candidates across 20 states, much sorter deeper down the ticket. is there any downside to this uel strategy of putting all this investment in the down ticket? unlikely obamary who has resisted any effort to be a figurehead for his party. i think this is in the clinton dna. they believe in building local parties and supporting local candidates. the risk is that she spent a lot of time trying to give republicans and right-wing independents cover. you saw the ads were your head a former bush administration official on stage. she had republicans, a lot of military officials. this is taking that sheen off.
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she is saying, i am a democrat. the risk is you tell those republicans coming along to her, the college educated republicans, that she might not be one of them. margaret: it is a little bit of mixed messaging. the flipside is that if there is a situation where it's a close race where donald trump contest the results, the stronger and the broader and the deeper a sweep she is able to have gives her more ammunition. maybe that is what she is doing. sasha: this may be the sign of someone willing to torture few points in her margin in exchange for a democratic said he and party building in parts of the country where the democrats have had a few good cycles. we will see an about-face in the last week if it is a two-point margin. as we mentioned, hillary clinton share the stage with the progressive icon elizabeth warren and things got nasty. >> get this, donald. nasty women are tough. nasty women are smart.
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and nasty women vote. november 8, we nasty women are going to march our nasty feet to cast our nasty votes to get you out of our lives forever. margaret: what does she really think? she was not the only voice from the left that made news today. in an interview, bernie sanders said he and other senators are planning to pressure linton on progressive legislation. he offered a blunt warning that he'd cause problems if she does not appoint -- key cabinet positions, including the treasury secretary. warren is on the trail. this.s is back doing what does it say about the
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relationship between clinton and the progressives on the left, whether they are going to get along? flipside of the people seeing a big margin and clinton on the cusp of all-encompassing victory. i don't think they want the story to be told that she won either because she brought over a lot of republicans and expanded the coalition so broadly that diluted their influence, or she won because trump is a disaster. this is putting a marker down early in a way that may be counterproductive for her, but a way of trying to tell a story about the election that makes them more central. margaret: they have already hunter in on tpp or they hope they have. i think warren and sanders are doing the same thing. they are doing it in a different way. coming more awkwardly out and saying, i'm going to challenge her. warren is out on the stump saying, i will do anything for her. it is important that it is a limited time offer. with string attacks -- strings attached.
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sha: elizabeth ward has a gift for sound bite that i do not think we saw coming from harvard law school. i think it is going to cause problems in a lame-duck. if they have a coalition that pro-businessish, republicans and the sort of organized labor anti-wall street left. margaret: as another superdelegate joe biden is barnstorming ohio, mark halperin and john heilemann are there with him. we will hear their thoughts from the trail when we come back. ♪
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the rust belt holding a rally in ohio. we talked about the influence he has been having on this presidential race. mark: we are here in toledo, ohio. vice president biede in the midst of a three city rotour. cleveland, talking about the fight against cancer. but what strikes me is how much joe biden campaigning in 2016 is like joe biden campaigning in 2008. or 1998. john: this is a man who loves the campaign trail. a lot of candidates do not love the retail part of it. what they like is being in office. joe biden likes doing this stuff, getting out pressing the flesh, being with the folks. he may at some point campaign again, but in any official capacity, this is his last campaign. not on the ballot himself that he is taking advantage of this.
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he is doing a ton of stuff not just for hillary clinton but for down ballot candidates. he's been focused on senate, democratic senate candidates and places the democrats need to win. mark: he is a guy who knows from the vantage point of being in the white house but also from being on capitol hill the difference for the democratic party and for hillary clinton's presidency of sheet wins of being the majority versus the minority. he knows a lot of senators, a lot of senate candidates. so he is, as you said, focused is on granular way on who the ballot, what are their chances, what he can do to help them raise money, do events. and you see in all of these campaigns now a very integrated democratic party, a very unified democratic party. the stop emitting cleveland at a clinton campaign office to review see in the brochure and the literature that very much focused on who else is on the ballot. and very much focused on the obama- biden legacy. one of the fascinating things is how he talks about the notion of hillary clinton is going to keep
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things going but do even more. very much in line with the tightrope hillary clinton is set to walk or she does not want to say the last 8 years wqas failure by building on them. john: i do think this down ballot thing is what is so striking. president obama is doing all of these endorsements for house and senate candidates. joe biden here tomorrow -- in pennsylvania. they have shifted in a way. the surrogate operation was always very strong with hillary clinton because -- today she is with elizabeth moran in new hampshire. barack obama, michelle obama, joe biden will be important her campaign. now they are feeling more secure and more confident that hillary clinton is going to win, they are saying we can afford to shift our focus. ted strickland is here running for way behind in the senate race in ohio. you can see all the super surrogates now starting to say, we are campaigning for hillary clinton but we are campaigning democratic enthusiasm in key battleground states where there are senators
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we must elect. and maybe total control of the capital hill if things keep moving in her direction. mark: the other thing you see as we have seen already today is a guy who continues to balance people have a great affection for him, but even though he has been vice president for almost 8 years, he is still regular joe. when he is mixing with people, they are glad to see him. they're inspired by him. but they are not intimidated. he puts people at ease. john: he does not want that. mark: he joked this morning in cleveland about he's the poorest guy ever to be vice president. when he was in the senate, one of the least wealthy senators. he wears that like a bdgadge of honor. john: people think he took the amtrak train because he wanted to be close to the people. he also did it because he could not afford to fly back. mark: this is a state where of all the battleground states, just a month ago, people talked
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about hillary clinton not winning ohio. you can tell from the way joe biden is acting, from the focus the democrats are putting on it, if there is going to be this movement towards hillary clinton, maybe they can put a lot on the democratic column which would be a boost for the party. john: the data brown states is still the place where donald trump is doing best, along with iowa. -- in the battleground states. now thery are coin toss states. the other thing you see in biden is just the degree of contempt he has for donald trump. not at all unique among democrats, true blue democrats, but the comedy made about wanting to take them out behind the bleachers. he hasn't said anything that provocative today. but you consent it. it boggles is mina donald trump is the republican nominee. and does not hesitate in expressing that sense of irritation, bordered on anger. we willen we come back,
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john: we are here with joe biden. as he hits the campaign trail for hillary clinton across the state. we talked a bit about biden and democratic prospects. where you seee of donald trump and hillary clinton on the campaign trail today? let's talk more broadly about what is going on today. mark: there is enough data that republicans can convince themselves that this race is not over. there is some new state polls that show the race quite close in some of the battleground states. even though you see the national polls one after the other
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showing a wide lead for hillary clinton. and republicans are doing the kinds of things you do when you're behind in talking about the polls are off, there is a secret vote for trump. i believe you see a fair amount of desperation, and intelligent -- an acknowledgment by kellyanne conway, trum pis behind. they're talking about clear out the swamp of washington. they will jump on any new wikileaks disclosure. there went thousand different closing messages at a time when he think he if he wants to have a chance, he has to focus m ore. john: it amazes me the extent to which people are amnesiac around the skies of things. we went through this four years ago. the discussion of rigged, back then it was skewed polling. there was a hidden vote for mitt romney. the obama campaign, and most of the public polling were consistent and they were in
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agreement. the public polling and the private polling. on election day, that polling turned out to be true with a few tiny exceptions. i find it sort of crazy that trump not only has he pursued this rigged election thing that but that he spent today -- at a time when he should be talking about something else, talking about how the polls are fraudulent polls. it's not true. b, it is not a winning message. that is not going to drive them closer to hillary clinton in the actual preferences of americans, just talking about how the polls are skewed. mark: the week kicks off with people looking at the abc/ washington post poll and the 10 point margin. that is the reality for donald trump. to convince people he can still win, he will have to have a credible national poll showing it tighter. more and more republicans making the organ, tru -- making the argument trump is oingoing to l.
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john: the one story that is getting a lot of attention is the notion that terry mcauliffe's political action committee made a big donation to the wife of an important fbi investigator. are jumping on that. what you think about that as a matter of politics and substance? mark: there is more to learn about the facts, but the key fact from in the scope of tory point of view is that the guy wasn't in charge of the investigation until his wife's campaign has ended. if they were trying to curry favor with the fbi supervisor, they were doing it well when he bats of him taking charge. he was in vi supervisor at a lower level involved peripherally in the investigation had-- an fbi supervisor. this is something that republicans will have a hard time being a silver bullet. i think we need to learn a little bit more about the facts of the case. john: all of that i agree with. so many of these e-mail controversies, thery are mildly
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troubling. the timelines in particular, you find they do not quite add up to the scare headlines. the main thing i keep taking away from all these stories as we get them day after day, without ever there being a giant bombshell, that alters the race, is just the extent to which it is going to be hell to hillary clinton to govern, to come out of the selection and try to put the country back together again, the smallt is things -- we see a small because we are exercising proper perspective, that on the right people think is one more log on the fire of corruption that they think -- hillary clinton is an illegitimate president. we are going to wrap up here from toledo, ohio. we will wrap it up and send it back to new york. mini sayonara. margaret: thanks to john and mark. whole to pick up on this
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notion we were discussing about terry mcauliffe and his contributions and what it says. is this a problem for clinton, but also what does it say about, like, the whole clinton machine and what it looks like as she would move into office? sasha: all of the wikileaks stuff, even her campaigning for ted strickland who does not stand a decent chance of getting elected, is something that the clintons encouraged to run on a ticket. it is just remind her how vast their political network is, their personal network. we see throughout these wikileaks releases the extent to which favors and loyalty surrounds them. 2008 forama caem ime in better or for worse, entirely unencumbered by relationships. margaret: he jettisoned reverend wright. sasha: there is another reason why there is been 8 years of no scandals around his high school because there -- this white
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house because there are no second or third to great link to them. the clintons have too many circles around him. margaret: she is trying to change the credibility dynamic. when you think about the virginia connections, tim kaine coming from virginia, terry mcauliffe would need to make a move in that direction for a replacement. all the machinations behind that. it does seem like it is just a guaranteed kind of drip, drip of questions and undercutting. is it always going to be a question about campaign-finance? sasha: and a foreshadowing of what may be the big story in 2017 which could be a special election to fill tim kaine's seat. the amount of money spent on a simple state senate race will be nothing compared to what could be spent if the senate hangs in the balance and next november. margaret: ok. that is exhausting to think about. we will be right back with our triple guest block after these words from our sponsors.
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we have a senior advisor to donald trump's campaign and liz the former deputy campaign manager for martin o'malley. as, we have aex republican strategist and formerly deputy campaign manager for carly fiorina. guys, thanks very much for joining us. >> thanks for having us. to toss ai am going newsflash to all of you. i want to know what you think about this. obama care premiums are going to in p double-digit increases many states across the country. arizona looks like one of the biggest increases. what impact do you think this could have a couple weeks before the election? is this going to give donald trump a new talking point for the closing artman of the race?-- the closing argument of the race? >> increases in some states over 50% of premiums -- the obamacare system survey has not worked.
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we have to be honest. the exchanges have failed. insurance companies are losing money and pulling out. and people are being taxed and punished you are not signing up, sometimes $1000 or $2000 a family. it is a broken system. mr. trump really play and replace it. sasha: be set in the first 100 days he will repeal and replace it. we would get through the whole campaign without him saying what it looks like ? >> hoouse savings accounts, making sure the people are covered int e the states. then making sure that people who don't want insurance to not have to buy insurance, they are not penalized for that, $1000 or $2000. the people who do want insurance, we will do our best to pla replace obamacare that does not -- with something that does not lose money for everybody involved. it, whate repeals
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happens to the 25 money people who have gotten coverage under obamacare? >> some of those people only have partial coverage and art teen olestra getting coverage. we will have to work through the system. that works very well because it does not penalize everybody at it provides people with the coverage they need to, and it is actually paid for and not paid or by taxes which don't exist and is funny money that obama try to pull out of the iar. air. he said, if you like you health care, you can keep it. that is a lie. also, the premium increases were a lie. margaret: sarah, from your persian taxes, how does this look to you and, i mean, look makingpanoply of things headlines, obamacare has not been one of them. how pivotal do you think this is? the republican nominee were running a campaign on policy instead of personality, it shows how far ahead we would be against hillary clinton. i think any of the other candidates would at this point
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the double digits ahead of hillary clinton. this is just one of the reasons. i think at this point not only is it late in the game where 15 days out, it is hard for anything like this to's token into the electorate -- -- soak in. on top of that, donald trump is not making an issue. he is litigating with his personality and his own issues in a way that does not allow these larger change narratives to soak in. only whe why he's the person you can loosen hillary clinton. >> with all due respect, -- i was asked to do that. the key here is this. thetrump did win nomination. he defeated a lot of other candidates such as carly fiorina. primary which was not rate like the democratic primary was raked against your candidate martin o'malley.
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he is talking about infrastructure and illegal immigration. if the media would allow us to concentrate on that -- sasha: the media is not going to invite a left wing strategist. >> i totally agree with you. i totally agree with you except that your guy is a specialist intv. he knows to be better than anybody who has ever run for office. he knows when he is stepping on his message and that is what he did in gettysburg yesterday. look, some people would say this is bad news for democrats premiums going up. let's remember with medicare, social security, it took some time to get those programs to -- now they are super successful. and both barack obama and hillary clinton have acknowledged that we do need to make significant fixes to obamacare to get on track and -- sasha: do you think hillary clinton has bought herself that years,n the next four
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that she will not be held responsible for these incremental hiccups along the way? >> i don't even think she needs space. what she needs to be able to do to tinker on the edges. overall, obamacare has been a great success. 25 million people have coverage they did not have before. they are not using the emergency room as their primary health care provider. look, inlook, in 2012, it was ao when for democrats with hispanics, women, black -- >> it was implement it it has been a failure because it cost more money, people are losing coverage. >> that is really not true. >> hillary clinton is not going to have room over the next four years, because she is not going to be president. donald trump is. he is going to replaeal and replace. he is a businessman who has created jobs before. unlike hillary clinton who is not done anything -- margaret: on that note, forest, stay with us, please.
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margaret: we are back with a trump campaign supervisor ad liz smith and sarah, republican strategist with us from houston. sasha: donald trump tweeted that the u.s-led iraqi operations in mosul are not going well. i wonder how republicans who criticize democrats for being cynical about war efforts are going to take that? >> not particularly well.
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on the flipside you saw a tweet about church bells ringing for the first time in mosul. this adds to the problems that will complicate the republican party after november 8. and what direction the republican party goes in. trump has single-handedly change the foreign policy of the party. a lot of people are in comfortable with that. >> as a representative of -- another part of the party, 90% of republicans are behind donald trump. 14 million voted for mr. trump in the primaries. there is no surprise in terms of america being put first, making sure our resources are used in a smart way. everyday americans, that is what they want -- to make sure we are spending here. when we are abroad we are there in a wise and smart way. sasha: if you're candidate becomes president in three
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months, if there are military operations that are underway around mosul, what would he do? >> you have to look at each operation on a case-by-case basis. very specific, in terms of operations in the past were repulsed out abruptly. -- we pulled out abruptly. he would not do that. i will not delve into the strategic plan in terms of mosul. >> you would be ok if people who dump it after we, say it is over ? >> i am not here is a military strategist but in terms of military strategy -- she would carry out the operation in terms of its winning end. close people are talking about a larger direction in sewer because we do not have in this country because we do not know who we are backing. what we should be doing is to beating isis. right now as the united states, that is an operation should be successful. what do we do in syria, and libya, what do we do with the isis controlled territories in
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iraq? we need to figure out at ending which clinton and obama have never gone to. >> what is stunning is how much the parties have changed. tried4, the republicans to say that john kerry appear french. mitt romney said that obama won on an apology tour. now the democrats are running that a party that believes in american greatness and believes in american exceptionalism, the police and the greatness of our military. and donald trump, the republican nominee is actively undermining the u.s. military and criticizing ongoing actions. margaret: i think the issue is that has been a week. it's been a week. >> what donald trump is saying is with we are going to carry out operations, we need to be successful. hillary clinton was not successful in syria, in terms of foreign policies she was a total failure in terms of the russian reset, look at china. hillary clinton and barack obama
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have made this country less a fan less respected internationally. donald trump will make sure we are respected -- 1980's donald trump was critical in the way of americans received vietnam veterans when he was proud of having raised money for a memorial in your. are you worried he is diminishing the service of people currently in iraq by saying that their message is a failure. >> 100% not. donaldveterans back trump your he will not have them dying in line like hillary clinton did at the v.a. >> i think both can be true. you look at the numbers and the polls it's why hillary clinton's o on trustworthy as numbers continue to be underwater. both can be true. hillary clinton has been bad on foreign policy time after time. he's saying is more specific than what i heard the candidate saying. that is why so many americans
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are disliking both of their options on november 8. margaret: let's move off a foreign policy. when you look ahead to the next two weeks, maybe the next few months, there are a couple of things donald trump may be trying to do besides win the white house. but can you talk little bit coming out of the last debate and the gettysburg address about the prospects of trump tv, the prospects of donald trump post- election life and do you see that as what's going on now or do you think he is trying to win a race? >> no, i actually do think that donald trump is trying to win the presidency. i don't think he knows how to do it -- because he cannot get over his own weaknesses as a candidate which is to stop talking about yourself, make this race about hillary clinton, her weakness. she has gotten every major and for policy - decision wrong as
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secretary of state and he wants this to be about him. that is where he loses the american people. that is where his numbers are failing. he is tied on leadership and tied on trustworthiness. he loses on temperament and badly. that is a problem. one he could've easily have fixed if you could control his inner demons. >> instead he's making it all about suing his accusers. sasha: if you were advising a democratic candidate and they were advised to go on trump tv, would you advise them to do so? >> no. i do not think that donald trump should be given any oxygen after this election. the facebookl you live program as a way for us to carry our message directly to the american people without the veneer of the western media -- to make sure, the facebook live we did at the debate was viewed by 200,000. about 10 million viewed it. it touched 20 million people.
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we are using it as a way to deliver our message and make people go out and vote for donald trump. margaret: can there be trump tv with president donald trump? >> with president donald trump there will be all kinds of opportunities for all americans. no sub 3% gdp growth under clinton-obama. >> thank you for laying the groundwork. margaret: liz smith and sarah -- in texas. i want to thank you all for joining us today. we will talk about wikileaks and more after this break. ♪
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john: you have a go-between who is a friend of his? are you suggesting on what the basis of what you know through your mutual friend, that in the next three weeks, that wikileaks will release or could release information that is substantially more damaging to hillary clinton that what has been released already? >> yes. i think the race is close enough and the electorate is volatile enough that any major revelation on either side could substantially decide the race. trump made me some breaks but to say he is out of it -- over? as you say, over? nothing is over till we say it is. inn: the embassy of ecuador knightsbridge, where julian assange has lived basically in captivity of his own choosing since 2012. we do know that he obsessively looks at the wikileaks twitter account. i'm going to start tweeting at
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the guy and see what happens. from the u.s. mark: is there anything i can do? can i handwrite a question? i would love to literally see him answer one question. it only takes maybe 30 seconds. what? of the podesta e-mails do you think the u.s. media has under reported? write a short answer. >> we got an answer. my question was, what
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aspect of the podesta e-mails do you think the u.s. media has underreported? one word --everything margaret: that was part of this week's episode of "the circus," mark and john's showcase series which airs sundays at 8:00. here to talk about wikileaks and other interesting thing is washington editor of the national review, and a political reporter from "the washington post." karen, i would like to start with you. julian assange says everything, are underd what we covering as the media in the race? is wikileaks being undercovered,a and what you thik of the most useful revelations inthe closing weeks of this race? >> i do think they have a point that they at least initially were undercovered. i think they are getting a lot of coverage now. but in terms of what has been revealed, the specifics are not all that revelatory, not all
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that shocking. but what it does is it really gives you a behind the scenes of handwringing strategizing that goes on internally within a campaign, and also, for those of us who are junkies about this backbiting, of the a lot of the organizational tension, which has been interesting and that the clinton operation on the outside seems to have run pretty in a pretty disciplined way, certainly a big contrast from her last campaign in 2008. theseat we sse iee in e-mails as some of the old problems, including a lot of the sort of clinton hangers on have continued. margaret: do you think there has been a " smoking gun" in this wikileaks and how much of the sort of level of coverage do you think could be explained by media bias?
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how much can be explained by donald trump just making so much news on other fronts that it is kind of hard to refocus on the first thing? >> the first batch of this e-mail came out the same day that the trump " excess hollywood" tape featuring his about making advancing towards women came out, so i do think it is natural that trump remarks were covered over and above these e-mails. that's largely why i think that they have gotten less coverage than maybe they should have. there was less excitement and thention paid to subsequent rows of e-mails that have come out. but the smoking gun that has been in these e-mails is not do they reinforce -- not only do they reinforce what people thought about hillary clinton, there is a tremendous amount of strategizing about how she is presented to the public and about all the tensions he tween
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the forces with the clinton global initiative, and the financial aspects of that. versus her public appearances -- what bill clinton is doing. but they also have not disabused the public of any notions that the public has had about her, about her honesty, about her transparency. they reinforce those things. and i think the biggest thing that could have companies e-mails with something that would have made the public turn and look and say, wow, these are honest, these are honest people of character who, what we thought about them is run. i do think it is a blow to hillary clinton and those in her orbit that there has been nothing to point to in these e-mails. i do think, though donald trump is getting the bulk of the attention during the campaign, once he gets into office, which it does seem she is likely to do, these sorts of things are going to haunt her throughout her entire presidency. sasha: there's, um, been a lot more coverage in the conservative media, some of the
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particulars of what has been in the e-mails. have you seen anything picked up that you think has the potential to break through into mainstream mass media and become more of an issue in the day-to-day of the remaining weeks of this campaign? >> i think that her comment about wanting free trade and open borders is certainly going far left. wit her with the her remark about open borders will haunte her with the right. you hear immigration hawks say, they are considered feverish and saying that for what some on the left want is open borders. here we have hillary clinton really saying that outright in her e-mails. sayso, it owon't be fair to these people are crazy right wingers accusing the left is something they do not want and of not coming to the table with good faith about protecting the
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before taxpayer presided subsidies, premiums for a mid-level plan will increase an average of 25% across state served by the federally run online market. however, administration officials say subsidies are designed ro rise alongside -- to rise alongside premiums. hillary clinton and elizabeth warren campaigned together in new hampshire. senator warren reminded voters that donald trump called clinton "such a nasty woman." warren said trump should know that nasty women are tough, nasty women are smart and nasty women vote. campaigning in saint augustine, florida, mr. trump told the rally that americans work "fed up with stupidity and weakness and with losing their jobs to other countries." in iraq, kurdish forces are dancing as they attempt to retake mosul. they have court and off 8 villages near the city.
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