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tv   Inside Politics  CNN  June 19, 2016 5:00am-6:01am PDT

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house in a cleveland suburb or quarter acre hot in oakland for that amount of money. >> something to think about. melissa, thank you. thank you for starting your morning with us. happy father's day to all of you out there including my dad. >> happy father's day, dad. [ siren ] the orlando nightclub massacre becomes an instant campaign flashpoint. >> i watched president obama today, and he was more angry at me than he was at the shooter. >> that tone a new pulse set off a wave of republican jitters but donald trump insists he's not the problem. >> republicans honestly folks our leaders have to get tougher. >> democrats call trump a fear mongerer. >> where does this stop? that's not the america we want.
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>> yet more evidence he is temperamentally unfit and totally unqualified to be commander in chief. ♪ i wanna see you be brave >> plus the primaries are over. will hillary clinton and bernie sanders make quick peace? "inside politics," the biggest stories sourced by the best reporters, now. >> i'm john king. thanks for sharing your sunday morning, happy father's day. three questions about the 2016 political fallout, one is a new dump trump effort another pipe dream by the presumptive gop nominee's critics or are donald trump's controversial statements bringing the republican party to a breaking point? >> our leaders have to get a lot tougher and just be quiet, to the leaders, because they have to get tougher, they have to get sharper, they have to get smarter.
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>> question two, will voters see president obama and hillary clinton as tested steady hands or as responsible for allowing isis to grow into a global terror threat? >> you can't break up the world into us and them and denigrate and express hatred towards groups because of the color of their skin or faith or sexual orientation. and not feed something very dangerous in this world. >> question three, after years of mass shootings and partisan debate, it might bring modest changes to gun laws. >> have the courage to stand up to the gun lobby when 90% of constitch wepts want change to happen, ask yourself, what can
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you do? to make sure that orlando or sandy hook never, ever happens again. >> with us maggie haberman, jonathan martin and cnn's m.j. lee. the murderer who called 911 touring his senseless massacre in orlando pledged loyalty to islamic state, a gay flight club this terrorist was looking to make more than one statement and also an election year. no surprise politics entered the conversation. donald trump as only donald trump feeling the need to tweet about himself while dozens of families were trying to find out if their sons, daughters, partners and friends were alive. that was a week ago in the immediate wake of the pulse nightclub nightmare. since then mr. trump suggested president obama somehow feels kinship who those who kill americans. >> something else in mind. people can't believe it.
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people cannot -- they cannot believe that president obama is acting the way he acts and can't mention the words radical islamic terrorism. there's something going on. >> there's a long list of republicans who called that statement and other statements like it out of bounds. then president obama calls trump a demagogue and fearmongerer. >> we have proposals from the presumptive republican nominee for president of the united states to bar all muslims from emigrating to america. we hear language that singles out immigrants and suggests entire religious communities are xl complicit in violence. where can you see this stop? >> a reminder he's running against hillary clinton, not president obama but president obama mixing it up with mr. trump back and forth throughout
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the week. at the end of the week a lot of republicans had the jitters trump sounds tough, that is his brand and he established that during the primaries but that his tone was over the line. >> wasn't just his tone, it was the speech he gave after the shooting. we should say what it was. he gave a speech and my colleagues, jonathan and alex burns wrote about this in sharp detail, proposals about bans that were fundamentally different than any norm we have seen in presidential politics in a very, very long time. if ever like this. it's not just sort of how he sounds, it is the details of what he's saying combined with the instinct for self-congratulation right after this had happened. so four years ago when the aurora shooting happened in colorado you had president obama who was a sitting president on campaign, mitt romney who had a speech planned for the next day halt the speech and instead basically gave a long portrait of grief about what was happening in the country.
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that is fundamentally at odds with what happened this week. you are seeing republicans who have been doing this sort of now very accelerated dance away from their nominee in a very difficult position because as much as they're saying they don't like the tone or in some cases the policies, not a single member of congress, including those who support trump, were defending what he said and that is very unusual. >> it is unusual and trump's response are you didn't like me in the primaries, what do you know? you're wrong. >> there is no change between the primary and the general. if he wants the rallies, if you listen to him speak, there is sort of one campaign. there's been no, as they say at all, there's not going to be, and that's what has the parties so wore rid, and jon to your point, chief test, this was a moment where okay, how do the candidates respond and trump responded in a new way that turned off millions of americans. it's not about politics or
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ideology. it's about decorum and taste and when people are laying in blood in a nightclub floor and you talk about how you were pressured about predicting this and i don't want congratulations. most people in this country look at that and they say, eh, that's not for me. >> you said he hasn't changed but the electorate has changed. that's one thing you listen to him and don't get the sense that he is sort of up to speed on this new electorate that he's facing. it's an entirely different situation than his primary electorate. i think someone either, a, hasn't told him, b, he's not grasping it or doesn't care. he knows audiences very well. he was very success envelope that. it's a different audience and that's what he's not reacting to. >> his audience are twitter feeds and rallies. both are reinforcing what he says. >> i think it's worth pointing out for trump's fellow republicans, things have gotten a lot more simple over the last couple of weeks. the entire primary campaign they
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were wondering and asking and pleading with trump to please tone down your red recognize when the leader of our party is speaking for to us get behind you. post-orlando it has gotten clear he has no intentions of doing that. now instead of wondering what kind of a presidential nominee is trump going to be, i think these republicans are having to decide is this someone i can get behind and i think the rhetoric that we saw after orlando made it just all that much more difficult for some of his fellow republicans to get behind him. >> to your point in the primaries he's running overwhelmingly white majority male, most republican primaries. in the general election it's a diverse electorate and majority women and much more so in the key battleground states. in the question of tone here's trump. he said this after san bernardino, listen to him after the pulse nightclub he said if people in that nightclub, remember it's pitch black in a nightclub, 2:00 in the morning. if people in the nightclub had guns strapped ta their
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arrangeles on a hollister he says things would have been different. >> if we had people where the bullets were going in the opposite direction right smack between the eyes of this maniac, if some of those wonderful people had guns strapped right here, right to their waist, and this son of a [ bleep ] comes out and starts shooting and one of the people in that room happened to have it and goes boom, boom, you know what? that would have been a beautiful, beautiful sight. >> now this is presidential campaign number eight for me i'm the old guy at the table. i've never seen a president who runs around doing this and this but again it begs the question, are we wrong? >> i don't think so. maybe, we might -- everything we know about general elections might prove wrong but i agree with jeff that there's 100 million voters who didn't vote in either primary or more who are going to decide this
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election and what trump is doing feels, you know, sort of like a release valve to some people. it offends other people, to jonathan's point he's not doing anything to expand out. it's just become this sort of self-reinforcing move. the states he was in last week his schedule, the other point i make about this, this is helping him i think not realize what the shift is in these audiences. he did a richmond, virginia, rally. for trump it was small, booked in a 13,000 seat arena, maybe 3,000 people there, not bad for a friday night for anybody but far from full, not great advance work and a different type of state. next week driven heavily by a fund-raising schedule set for him by the rnc was in texas for two days. he was in georgia, he was in north carolina. that one makes a little more sense. is he burning up weeks chasing money in states that are going to be pretty solidly read. >> right, and you mentioned has he learned the lessons of a primary or learned he's in a different environment.
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the campaign has studied republican primaries. they're after him every new cycle on every possible platform. number two, donald trump says he said this past week president obama should resign in disgrace if he didn't use the wds "radical islam." hillary clinton is reluctant to sues that term. she used radical islamism or radical islamist. it's like mr. trump i'll say this and then let's focus more on you. >> if it matters what we do more than what we say, and it mattered we got bin laden, not what name we called him. whether you call it radical jihadism, radical islamism, i'm happy to say either. what i won't do because i think it's dangerous for efforts to defeat this threat is to demonize and demagogue and declare war on an entire reyinlgon. religion. >> i was in cleveland monday and that was supposed to be the beginning of her big general election push. there was no music and fanfare
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and banners but that speech she didn't mention his name once that day, she did the next day, and presidential campaigns are job interviews, that's what we saw side by side screen there. she's making it clear she's not going to be backed into a corner of not specifically saying a word here but also going on to say something that president bush said eight years ago. he said i am not, 2001 excuse me, six days after 9/11 he said we are not going to paint an entire religion here, that is what is giving republicans so much unease about this, the tone and language of mr. trump. >> can you imagine being a republican senator on the ballot this year or governor and watching that trump clip that you played of him doing the impersonation of the bullet here. i mean, it's remarkable, almost like we'd have a great reaction shot watching that. it is incredible to see someone do that kind of thing. what it does, though, it's great for his base.
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it's great for a 35% to 40% group of folks in this country but it's just never going to get beyond that, and perhaps he doesn't want to get beyond that, but it turns off so many people. >> get to more on that in a minute. ahead the gun debate, there are votes scheduled monday. believe it or not votes scheduled monday in the united states senate. is orlando the tragedy that brings more than just debate. first a would-be politician, watch this, playing the imitation game. >> congratulations, you are now getting to hear a speech from the magnificent donald trump. we're learning languages in spain, from france, from germany, and china! >> hello, thank you for allowing me to speak to you today. let me start with the lunches. they are delicious! i don't have one improvement for them though. we need to make them free!
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okay. uh, do you get your fees back if you're not happy? (dad laughs) wow, you're laughing. that's not the way the world works. well, the world's changing. are you asking enough questions about the way your wealth is managed? wealth management, at charles schwab. . welcome back. what we're about to talk about is breaking news especially if you consider the congressional reaction or inaction. the senate is scheduled to vote on four proposals, two are competing measures with the stated goal of preventing those on terror watchlists from buying weapons and two repeating proposals designed to expand the government's background checks for buying a gun. just the fact they're having the votes is significant but at the moment because of partisan differences none of these amendments is expected to pass. donald trump suggested maybe coget the nra to compromise here.
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on the campaign trail this weekend he chose to takish would you president obama and hillary clinton. >> but he's largely to a large extent he's blaming guns. [ booing ] i'm going to save your second amendment, folks. i'm going to save your second amendment. totally. and hillary wants to abolish the second amendment, remember that. >> what is his position in the sense that trump says i can change washington. trump says i can get things done. lot of conservatives don't like it, trump says i'll cut deals and bring democrats in. let's have a meeting with the nra and see if we can get them to the table, modest changes they're talking about here. if he could do that, wouldn't that be a banner for trump, i got the nra to compromise. hasn't happened in the obama administration or bush administration. he's changed his tone, conservatives say this isn't about guns and aren't you one of
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us? >> the statement that the trump campaign put out mentioned this meeting that's forthcoming with the nra and wanting to look into the proposal of banning those on terrorist watchlists from buying guns but then you see him on the stage, on the campaign trail, and his tone is completely different, so it just makes you wonder, is there actually a disconnect here or is he always sort of recalculating what his stance should be and i think it's really important to point out as well that four republir s the problem the message they can run on, on the issue of gun control during the primary season is different from the message they need to run on during the general election. it's all good to say in iowa or new hampshire, i'm all about unrestricted gun access, but when you get to the suburbs of philadelphia or northern virginia, and you're trying to appeal to soccer moms and moderates, that message does not work as well. >> very true. it's very true and as m.j. said it's hard to know how much of this say calculation with trump and how much of this is a disconnect. >> how much of it is staff.
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>> correct. >> you get the disconnect sometimes between what they say on paper or what he says in a teleprompter speech between what he says at rallies. will the real donald trump please stand up? >> there has been an internal push and pull on a number of issues trying to get him in a serb direction and he is very prone to listening to whoever or following the advice of whoever he spoke with last. there is certain within the campaign, they are aware he is taking positions that are very far in many cases to the right of where the general election electorate is, so i think this is one area we feel like they're finding middle ground. he feeds off the crowds so he goes to texas where he's going to do well at that rally in dallas talking about the second amendment and look at the reaction he gets. so he'll keep doing it. >> in terms of guns overall, such a different conversation on the democratic side of this presidential campaign than even eight years ago, perhaps it's the combined toll of all the shootings, all the time the president has had to make this speech and hug families, but it
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is a different tone and certainly a different tone on guns than in 1992. no doubt about it here. >> let's make the contrast. democrats look at the obama coalition, african-americans in the inner city can push gun control. suburbs, cleveland, columbus you can push xwn control. here's donald trump in texas over the weekend, he talked about his plan to cut a teal with the nra or focus on something else. >> it's a deep seeded hatred and president obama is trying to make terrorism into guns, and it's not guns, folks. it is not guns. [ booing ] it is not guns. this is terrorism. >> hillary clinton on the other hand says no, mr. trump, it's both. >> i believe we americans are capable of both protecting our second amendment rights while making sure guns don't fall into
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the wrong hands. the terrorists in orlando was the definition of the wrong hands. >> just watching them, almost if you turn the volume down and just watch them, the body language even is such a contrast. >> right, and i think post orlando we really got maybe one of the clearest ways possible the fundamental differences between hillary clinton and donald trump. donald trump is all about exuding strength and saying that he wants a drastic change from the status quo and hillary clinton is all about experience. that's why she has been pushing the word temperament so often and i think basically all of her speeches right just saying that donald trump is not only lacking in experience but lacking the temperament to be commander in chief. >> it's fascinating. i was in the capitol on friday john and to your point there's nobody who thinks these bills will pass on monday in the senate, and even if they did, the house is a more conservative
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place. it's striking to think what the scenario would be if you have more of a pragmatic political veteran who called mcconnell off and called paul ryan and said we got to figure out this gun deal here. maybe we can work this from a terrorism angle, what can we do to buy us credibility with suburbanites but at the same time come up with a strategy and a plan. we're watching neither a strategy nor a plan. it makes you wonder what could have been. >> what could have been. we'll see what happens in the senate and we'll see whether mr. trump, he has a chance here as they debate these things. we'll see how thatlies out. up next new efforts to dump trump, try to find a way to pull off a convention coup. here's a tyke take our "inside politics" quiz this sunday. who comes off as more presidential, donald trump or clinton. vote at cnn.com/vote, we'll show you the results a bit later in
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welcome back. well, here we go again. you of course remember the stop trump effort during the republican presidential primaries. it failed. then there was never trump, a push by conservative activists to find a candidate to run as a third party ticket, alternative to a man they considered a fraud. now there's dump trump, their case trump isn't a real republican or real conservative that his poll numbers are tanking in key battleground states and they worry if trump stays atop the republican ticket the gop can kiss its senate majority good bye. never trump seems destined to failure but such an effort exists is remarkable. for the record trump thinks these people and other republicans who might not be
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part of dump trump but are frequently critical of him, mr. trump thinks they're a bunch of sore losers. >> we have to have our republicans either stick together or let me just do it by myself. i'll do very well. i'm going to do very well. okay? i'm going to do very well. lot of people thought i should do that anyway, but i'll just do it very nicely by myself. >> and on the campaign trail yesterday, mr. trump called it a hoax this new dump trump movement. >> there's a little movement, and i just heard today where it's coming from, it's coming from people that have been badly defeated, but wouldn't that be funny? okay. guy got much less votes, he got no states. ladies and gentlemen, our nominee is -- i don't think so. i mean forget about the legality because it's not legal. >> it is legal. parties can do whatever they want. if they show up at the
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convention and write rules allow them to dump them and get a majority on the rules committee and majority on the floor it is legal but is it feasible. >> not going to happen because there's no single alternative. that's the problem all along here for the last year or so, there's not one person who you know, everyone would galvanize behind. who is going to fill the void, ted cruz? scott walker, no. jeb bush? no. mitt romney? no. it's wishful thinking. that's what it is. it could happen but i can't see it. >> we've all lived through cycles where as you get to the convention parts of the party are holding their nose, parts of the party saying we're doomed to lose. 1996, republicans thought bob dole was an honorable man he won't embarrass us. >> what you said is correct because the inflammation caused with the party's existing voters who did vote for donald trump would be enormous and republicans are concerned about that. bob dole was a beloved figure
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within his party and seen as a republican, he was a veteran. he was beloved. that is not what donald trump is, so this is singularly different. i don't think that it is likely to succeed but i do think it's going to get some more oxygen over the next three weeks and this is not a media hoax. >> it helps by talking about it on the campaign trail. >> someone is going to try. >> of course. >> they'll try in the rules committee and somebody may try from the floor and so part of our conversation during the convention, which is supposed to be the cor nation and let's learn more about his family, let's learn more about his proposals, they're still trying to get him. >> speaking of the conventions you have to wonder at this point, given donald trump's rhetoric what is going to happen with him and the process of choosing a running mate and also the convention line-up. so who are going to be the people that are willing to get up on stage and vouch for the things that donald trump is saying, especially if he continues his current rhetoric and also in terms of choosing a running mate, a person who will have to defend every single day
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what donald trump is out there saying. >> can i add one thing to what jeff was saying, there's no alternative but it's more than that. there's no courage. there's no capacity on the part of the rnc and the folks who are at the convention to step up and say you know what? this would be a disaster for the party. i know millions of folks voted for him but we know better and we're going to strip him of the nomination and find somebody else. there's just no way. >> he did win. he won fair and square. >> he's absolutely right about that. >> absolutely. >> bon fair and square against a field, carly fiorina and ben carson had no political experience but the others had 193 years of combined office experience. so let's assume they fail, the speaker of the house, who has been very tepid about donald trump is likely to still be the convention chairman. paul ryan will have the gavel. listen to paul ryan talking to chuck today on "meet the press" if you're not for trump i'm fine with that.
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>> the last thing i would do is tell anybody to do something contrary to their conscience. this is a unique nominee but i feel as a responsibility institutionally as speaker of the house i should not be leading some chasm in the middle of our party. >> this is the different calculations the different leaders have. ryan is annoyed beyond belief with trump. mitch mcconnell is annoyed beyond belief with trump, i'm being kind in my language, if you talk to them or people close to them. ryan is thinking if trump tanks completely we lose the senate and maybe i lose the house or i have a narrow majority. he doesn't like trump. he thinks trump is a cancer on the party but if trump collapses, he gets hurt so he's trying to somehow stay close. >> these guys have to keep trump propped up to a certain level for the next few months to ensure their candidates survive and the calculation now from watching the congressional leadership is how much longer do i have to keep trump afloat to keep my guys in good shape?
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if we pull the rug out too fast we're going to hurt our turnout and hurt our candidates right now. it's getting to the point where if trump keeps saying outrageous things it's hard for these guys to stay out there with them. >> there was a precipitous drop after what trump said about the federal judge in the trump university suit. could you see it in polling graphs and it's continuing. right after the orlando shooting it continued based on what he said. that i think does make the calculation different and i agree with jonathan. what i hear from people i talked to we need it to look like it is close to the top of the ticket in order to help us but it becomes diminishing returns for some of these folks, that's why you're seeing what ryan just did. >> sometimes trump surprises us. earlier in the texas gun debate, seems out of control in the body language. listen to him in manchester, new hampshire, he does sound more presidential. >> a radical islamic terrorist
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targeted the nightclub, not only because he wanted to kill americans, but in order to execute gay and lesbian citizens because of their sexual orientation. it's a strike at the heart and soul of who we are as a nation. it's an assault on the ability of free people to live their lives, love who they want, and express their identity. >> now you could, imagine president obama saying that, you could imagine hillary clinton saying that. maybe a lot of conservatives don't like he was reaching out to gay americans there in some regard but we're all americans. was there a teleprompter in the room? >> there was a teleprompter in the room. >> this is fascinating, trump does have the ability to dip in and out of sounding more presidential or mature, but the problem with this is that even if he's out there in one speech or two speeches saying i'm a friend of the lgbt community, that doesn't change the fact
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that a lot of people view him as being anti-muslim, anti-immigrants and anti-women. that's sort of the bigger picture, problem that he has to work on. >> it still, i think it is only june 19th or whatever day it is, we still have to leave open the possibility of trump changing. he evolves as we have seen him here. he's a showman. i think that it's far too early to write him off entirely. i think that is unwise because of the standing of hillary clinton. she's not exactly on some ivory tower here. >> i agree with that but i think that's different than the trump will change. i think trump could not change and something bad could happen with hillary clinton. we were talking about this at the break, she's had two very, very bad news stories for her in the last two weeks about her e-mail. one campaigner not qualified at all, put on a government security board. trump has talked about that basically not at all. in fact i think you could count on two hands the numbers of times he's used her name other
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than to say crooked hillary in the last two weeks. that is frustrating republicans. we have this candidate in clinton who has deep flaws and we are not pushing it. >> we are not prosecuting the case against her. next, if you live in a battleground state you are learning a lot more about hillary clinton these days and learning it for good reason. be the you who doesn't cover your moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. be the you who shows up in that dress. who hugs a friend. who is done with treatments that don't give you clearer skin. be the you who controls your psoriasis with stelara®
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hillary clinton has at least one thing in common with donald trump, high unfavorable ratings. look at the numbers from a bloomberg poll last week. 54% of americans have an unfavorable view of the presumptive democratic nominee. her saving grace look at the nun on the right. two-thirds have an unfavorable view of her republican opponent, in the same poll 43% said they could never vote for secretary clinton, a whopping 55% said they could never vote for donald trump. safe to say america is not having a love fest with its presidential choices. team clinton is trying to change a few minds in places like nevada, colorado, ohio and virginia >> it's in the quiet moments for
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hillary it's always been about kids and when millions couldn't get health care, this first lady worked with republican answer democrats to fix it. >> she grew up to be one of the most recognizable woman in the world but less well-known at the causes at the center of her life but for hillary one thing has never changed. helping children has been a cause of her life and it always will be. >> so on the trail it's rock 'em sock 'em row bots between clinton and trump. that is a clear effort to get at that unfavorable. >> it is no doubt about it. many voters who are not alive during the period of the '90s or certainly old enough to vote, remind her what her life is about. it did not begin as first lady. she had a whole career before then. jonathan said it is rock 'em sock 'em on the campaign trail but below that, they want to
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make people feel positive about her and good about her to some degree. there's a lot of money behind there. $40 million in the clinton campaign and her super packs and allies is being budgeted for the next six weeks. donald trump how much are they spending? zero. >> to try not to bake the phrase but very much frame the race by the time we get to the convention. >> i'd say bake it. z> >>. >> that's pritty straightforward there. i was talking to a democrat, housing starts are down, there are issues for trump to jump on and remarkable to watch him ignore this stuff and pick up whatever sort of floating downstream every day. >> it's not only floating downstream this isn't shiny objectism, which in obama's case the more what the race was
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about. it's like out of the movie "napoleon dynamite" uncle rico talks about his high school football wins 20 years later. the primary is over. the primary is over. trump's crowds who voted for him and loved him may want to go over the glory days but he is not talking about the things that voters are going to vote on. >> one of the issues here is that you have this donald trump out there pretty much by himself, but there's no star power in the republican party wants to be anywhere near him. >> no governor appeared with him, any of his events in the last week. he had republican governors not a single one of them. they all had other plans every time. >> and john mccain going to arizona or he was in arizona. john mccain busy with his campaign at a time when it looks like you know president obama and the first lady. she has president bill clinton and here's bernie sanders, yes, there's still business to be done between the two but bernie
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sanders seems to be moving just the way secretary clinton wants him to. >> a major political task that together we face in the next five months is to make certain that donald trump is defeated and defeated badly, and i personally intend to begin my role in that process in a very short period of time. >> if you're inside the clinton campaign, that's mana from heaven. >> he's never going to probably be a full throated endorsement of her. he'll get there at some point but that is what the clinton campaign needs. they want him to talk to white working class voters. my e-mail and twitter and social media is blown up by his supporters saying we won't vote for her. i'm not so sure. come november a lot of his supporters will get on board. >> especially when he hits the road for her, when she's ready to be talking about the economy. i agree there are issues with
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the economy. overall people see the unemployment rate is 4.9% or whatever it is, but i think they feel that and they see the president representing sort of that comeback and his popularity has gone up over the last year as well. >> his ability to still command the stage, like a president can only, as we saw this past week, where he responds to trump and that stops traffic right there. there's nobody on the republican side that can do that for trump even if they wanted to. >> we don't have time for the sound by i wonder if elizabeth warren can bring bernie sanders supporters. she's out there on high octane. i don't know if she's auditioning for vice president, remember she beat scott brown in massachusetts, she's up in new hampshire yesterday nobody knows who are about losing to a girl than scott brown. she's pretty funny out there.
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>> it's funny i think you're going to see democrats sta are the to make trump not look like he's hiding something from you but like a coward. >> up ahead our reporters share from their notebooks. first the results from our "inside politics" quiz, who is more presidential in your book, hillary clinton or donald trump? everyone dialed into the clinton campaign, 86% of you said hillary clinton. (man) oh, looks like we missed most of the show. (woman) and there's no way to restart it.
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let's head around the "inside politics" table and ask our great reporters to help get you out ahead of big political news around the corner. maggie? >> donald trump is going to scotland this week, a trip that some of his advisers are hoping that he ultimately won't make. it's coming right after the brexit vote, it's a tumultuous time across the pond. there was just a slain politician. he's also not planning on making
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any kind of high level meetings there. he's going to literally go from one golf property to another so there are some people who, while that might help him reset and be in a comfort area are hopeful that he will ultimately decide this is not where he should be. >> it will be interesting to see if he says anything. likely turmoil in the markets perhaps. >> the full season of veep stakes speculations, tim ryan of ohio, a young congressman, democrat from ohio whose name popped up last week in a story in "the wall street journal" as one of those possibilities that hillary is looking at. white working class creds from youngstown area. as these things work often names that are nut circulation by campaigns who like surrogates not because they want that person to be picked but because they like that person. i think ryan falls in that category. keep an eye on him for a slot in the administration or to run for governor of ohio in 2018. the clinton folks like him a
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lot. >> if nothing else it boosts him up a little bit. jeff? >> next in the clinton/trump lecture series is the economy. on tuesday in columbus, ohio, hillary clinton is going to give her really the next in a series of speeches, in san diego at the foreign policy speech a couple weeks, on the economy, why donald trump would be bad for you and the economy. it's part of the clinton's campaign continued effort to define donald trump early. one thing after another on this but it raises the question, can she get to the white house, can she win in november on anti-trump sentiment alone? the campaign believes no. they're also advertising so much about her bio almost all of her advertising coming out of the box here is about her, building up her negatives because she has them as well. >> we'll watch that one. they think they had success with the first of the foreign policy speech. m.j.? >> we have an sec deadline monday that is going to shed some light on donald trump and his general election fund-raising efforts. we already know he's been struggling with some donors.
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clinton has been outspending him on both staffing and on ads on the air. so this is going to be a big data point that lets us know how is he doing now that he's general election candidate. two things i think worth watching the first is whether trump has given himself more must be, he doesn't want to self-fund his general election campaign but over the weekend he threatened to do that unless his party gets behind him. the second thing is how he sort of sets expectations in terms of how much money he thinks he'll be able to raise and also how much money he thinks he needs to raise. at first it was $1 billion and maybe not now so much. >> i'll close with this the official line is that marco rubio is talking things over with his family this weekend, with a final decision due soon. i'm told the florida senator told top supporters he will run for re-election to the senate. look for the official announcement in the week ahead. it's a boost to republicans hoping to hold majority. strategies working in ohio,
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wisconsin, pennsylvania and new hampshire, report a drop in donald trump's numbers in those states and there are growing worries mr. trump could drag senate incumbents down with him if he's unable to reverse his fortubes. florida was a big worry. rubio was adam ant after his campaign fiddled he was leaving washington. now rubio reversing course republicans are more optimistic about holding florida. thanks for sharing your sundays. happy father's day. see you soon. "state of the union" up next. ♪ what if we made a paint that was so special that was such a jewel among paints that you had to seek it out. nope, even easier than that.
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aftermath. red flags raised in the wake of the deadliest mass shooting in u.s. history. >> we did contact the courts and let them know we had a suspicion person in here. >> did the fbi miss a chance to stop the attack? the attorney general will be here live. this son of a [ bleep ] -- >>al

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