tv Inside Politics CNN May 26, 2019 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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different campaign. "inside politics." the biggest stories, source, by the best reporters now. welcome to "inside politics," i am john king. thank you for sharing your sunday. president trump is in japan. you can see he was at a sumo event. the drama cthat captures washington this week. al show down here in the nation's capital. nancy pelosi knows as good fight with the president helps her navigate and she knows how to get under his skin.
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no one is above the law. we believe the president of the united states is engaged in a coverer up. >> the president walked into the rose garden ercht whivent which this can only happen if the investigation stops. her response? questioning the president's well-being. >> the president stormed out, pounded the table and walked out the door? another temper tantrum -- again, i pray for the president of the united states. i wish his family or administration or staff would have an intervention for the good of the country. >> the president quick to return the insult. >> crazy nancy, i have been watching her and i have been watching her for a long period of time. she's not the same person. she lost it. it was sad when i watched nancy,
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movement to movement and the hands and the craziness and i watched that. >> cnn phil mattingly, you can watch that and you can call it drama or petty or personal. where are we in the sense you have the two most powerful people in town who did not get along to begin with. that's right, it is clearly an escalation but it is in a way of a dynamic that existed between the two of them which on the one hand, she has power on capitol hill and for the first two years of his administration, there as no competing for power center for president trump. before she was sworn in when you
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had the government shutdown, he has not accepted that he's not the only one calling shots on capitol hill. that's what led to these clashes. in fact has the constitutional mandate to do these investigation and perform oversight functions of him. something that speaker pelosi says in that press conference was that she considers this walk out and investigation to be staged in order to cover for the fact that she believes he did not do his homework. he walked in and not having coming up to what he promised to bring to the meeting which is some mechanism to pay for the $2 trillion in spending. he does not have a good policy and that's why he staged it. the sign on the left is about the number of the mueller investigation. it was a sign of how bashing the
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mueller investigation accusing the democrats wanting to re-litigate it. >> nancy pelosi is offering the 2020 candidates a lesson of how you can deal with trump in a trumpian way. with the michelle obama you go low and we go high. you are sort of questioning, got the substance abuse problem. you don't talk about a cover up, triggering your adversary to react. that's what trump has been doing since the campaign. pelosi is showing how you can use his own technique against him. >> democrats will tell you the focus of healthcare and number
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two is the president's tempermetestimon temperament. i want to show you some numbers. 35 democrats have come out to say impeach the president. hillary clinton won by average of 43 points and house democrat candidates won by average of 48 points. 35 democrats have been saying we should impeach the president. nancy is worried of the smaller number. republican seats and the democratic seats. >> i think we need to ascertain more facts and if those lead us to clear evidence of criminal n obstruction then we should
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proceed. >> it is our duty to get all the information before we make those decisions. >> we need to exhaust every single option on the table before we actually move towards impeachment. >> we are not rushing a judgment here. we are considering our options. >> she try to keep those people in congress, number one, the other democrats thinking as long as she's spiking the president, it will be okay. >> it is interesting you are not hearing anybody hearing no impeachment. there is a legal argument for doing that, too. you can't just go to the court. that's a matter of last resort showing that you have tried. they are stone walling you. in order to make that case to the judge and the public which is harder, they feel like they
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have to have run through these traps. do they lose the moment or have to explain this for the rest of the political campaign and up to the 2020 election. you are going to see bickering back and forth and trump is going to exploit that to as much as he can to either pelosi pushing the pendulum towards it impeachment. the faster they get there, the more they have to point out they don't have anything else. >> he's saying yes, he's giving his attorney general remarkable power. bill barr now has been given by the president a remarkable power that the attorney general has the authority to call the intelligence to give him everything they used. dan coats would have that power,
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that's his job before. he issued a statement that's interesting. i am confident that the attorney general will work with the ic in accordance -- he's nervous the attorney general is on a political mission here and is willing to compromise sources and methods or cherry pick document to release the public to help the president make his case. >> that thing was more than interesting. i thought it was a brush back pick. it has been of what people have been hearing. there is a lot of concerns of mueller here. and to make something perfectly clear despite what the president said. he did not declassify or publicly release anything. he transferred that power to the attorney general, the attorney general has the ability to see all these things.
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the concern you are hearing right now at least on capitol hill from a lot of democrats. we want things to be public, i am all for transparency in any way shape or form. you classify anything you want and release it. the concern is you will only declassify certain things that show or tell a certain narrative. we don't know what his intentions are. the idea considering there is an ongoing investigation -- maybe it is entirely -- maybe it is a lot of concerns. >> we shall see as we go forward. i was trying to be polite with the dan coats statement but you got it right. >> up next, trump enjoying an intensive sumo match in japan.
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saw there was all smiles with shinzo abe. this is not a substance trip. the president says it does involve conversations. this quick trip not without controversy. the japanese are alarmed at recent north korean missile launches. john bolton says no doubt those recent test violated the resolutions. this tweet from the president on saturday. the missiles disturbed some people but not me. supposed to be essentially a fun trip for the president and an important visit to meet the new emperor. he also stirs up controversies. the president saying so what essentially, not a big deal. something his own team thinks it
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is a big deal and japanese are worried about. >> it is no the first time you see how trump interprets something on the international stage. the president is much more of a non interventionist than bolton is. when it comes to north korea, you always see the president prioritize the idea that he and the north korean leader can shake hand and conclude of a deal of some sort and he can claim his victory. it seems like he's ignoring or politicizing the steps, this fuels that concern that he may be looking at trying to preserve the deal of all cost and handling over the north korean leader and also turning a blind eye. >> the president often at the beginning putting a high priority, at the end of the day most of what drives foreign
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policy and other global stages is the actual fundamental interests of the country and competing interest. but, president trump is taking it to a new level and so whether it was initially the antagonism between he and kim at the begin og f t ing of the term or love affair, he seems to put much weight on that kind of facts be dammed. he simply going to prioritize this sense that he has a good relationship. let's connect the dots if you will. i saw the tweet from the president, connect the dots. he says he's no fan of joe biden, he says north korea is a monstrous state. no real american leader would do
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it. does he have a point? this is another norm that happens so often that they just roll off us sometimes. we talked about the norms, the power to declassify sensitive information. he talks about investigative political post or embrace kim jong-un or whack at joe biden for what? >> he's trying to maintain the relationship. can you imagine if former politician x would have done this and what their response would have been. it is who we his and what he's trying to do of explaining what his mindset would be to the extent you can at this point in time. it provides a good window as to why shinzo abe is doing what he's doing. there is a recognition that the one-on-one relationship means everything to the president and everything if you are japan and you are concerned of the rise of
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china or north korea and the missiles that have been flying into your aerospace that doing everything you can to make the president feels like he's kek connected to your country. >> why don't more conservatives speak up, translating the president's tweets. >> i am okay with the missiles and taking a few shots against joe biden. >> trump does not seem to care, he did that with this tweet right now. >> it tells you republicans are willing to fall in line for the greater gain. no matter what's happening. you see that the president does not want to connect the two things because he thinks that ends up questioning his presidency and how he's running it or his conduct in the oval office. it has been more than two years and we are heading towards an
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election where their fate rests in the president's hand, too. >>s when that happens, the conservatives will be right back at the gates of the white house complaining about it. >> amnesia will pass. >> as we go to break this sunday, images from arlington national cemetery for this memorial day weekend. president trump and the first lady stopped by on thursday before japan to honor our american fallen heroes. be resents: a job well done. painting be done... and stay done. behr, ranked #1 in customer satisfaction with interior paints. right now get incredible savings on behr. exclusively at the home depot.
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why then if that's the case to some degree it is the senator is struggling this time. joe biden is the front runner right now. senator sanders comes in second but he's considerably high. let's bring in sanders' numbers here. he's running in the the teens. some polls are closer to 20% or 10%. bli basically running in the teens. last time he was one-on-one with hillary clinton. elizabeth warren shares many of his liberal position is the choice among sanders of voters
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describing themselves as liberal. a crowded field including someone who shares many of his progressive positions. another look at the polling here, among democrats paying a lot of attention to the campaign. binomi by joe biden is way on top there. senator sanders trying to find his place in a new and different race. pay close attention to me. i am the one who change the party. >> raising minimum wage to a living wage, not radical today. legalizing marijuana -- a radical idea four years ago, not so radical today.
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he's right. >> is that part of the problem? >> exactly. if you ever talk to bernie sanders, he'll tell you this is not about me. this is about my idea. this is about promoting these ideas that i have. and a number of democratic voters appear to have taken it seriously. if we don't have to support you to support your ideas, here are some other candidates who have the same idea. all of the other democratic candidates besides joe biden would love to have bernie sanders' polling number. he's got a solid and it is clear there is a base of voters for him it is about bernie. but, it is going to be hard for him particularly if that support is decreasing. the trajectory has got to be worrying for his campaign. what they need to do is take that base he has and fill on it
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and get bigger. >> but, you are right. don't under estimate him as many people did in 2016. he does have the loyal support and the deep fund raising so he can stay in the race. he's doing more traditional fund raising. you are watching warren, she's trying to play in the competition supporting for ocasio-cortez. as freshman member of congress. >> we sent mnuchin a letter asking him what he did as a member of the board when eddie lambert proposed gutting the business and closing it and buying back stocks rather than investing in workers. >> the american people deserve answer and we are out there to fight for them. >> ocasio-cortez using her leverage.
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if you're sanders, more prove there, you're lane. >> yoright now bernie sanders i an established figure and warren is a known figure which she needs help reaching out to young people. ocasio-cortez, you are seeing them making the run there. the big question is who can tap on the most constituents. more voters backing him and biden has more polls in those groups of voters. this is piecing together all the pieces, you need young people and leftest and minorities and women and everybody is trying to make a reach where ever they can grab. >> the thing i found interesting of the sanders number you put up. among the liberal voters when luk looked at it, biden and sanders
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were almost tied. the speech bit that you played show sanders saying all of his ideas were not radical anymore. that's the problem for him. it seems odd that he would underscore that. if his ideas are not radical anymore because joe biden has adopted many of them then it is a license for his supporter to say you know he seems fine. >> he spends a lot of time in his speech defending international relations and his opposition to the iraq war. how much of that in this campaign than the last is he's getting scrutiny for his past. inside bernie sanders' ten days
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focused, last time again people under estimated him in 2016 and did not vet him as much. >> he said as he start a star dumb dum of the campaign. it is one of the things people need to hear about. he can add to the i have been right on these issues and trying to pull out u.s. posupport for that. when you expand it a little bit, it is less of an area where you can draw clear contrast. if you are not sure where somebody is going to stand something, you are going the look back at what somebody have done in the past. i raises questions and he may have been right on those things but people are raising the questions and his response has been interesting. he called "the new york times" and they printed a transcript which i think is a back and forth, i thought it was
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interesting to read. to be fair, i thithat's how ber sanders talks to reporters. there is a recognition that this has become an issue. this is an issue that i need to address. it will be interesting to see how it plays out. it is important for all democrats to tie into policy. this is one of the areas where is trump is the weakest. he's been very unordthodox. >> remember how bernie sanders sa says -- bernie sanders among the democrats watching what's happening in the persian gulf and getting nervous. >> i am doing everything i can to prevent donald trump and john bolton from taking us into a wawar in iran. >> president trump is provoking another war in the middle east. we don't need another war. we theneed to find a way to wor
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with ally and partners and with our enemies. >> no, it does not make us more secure to enter into an escalation with iran. interesting dynamic in a democratic race, clinton's view, i am sure she will be critical of the president. but, in the last campaign, it was just bernie sanders staking out the antiwar. >> in that speech he gave yesterday, sanders did not sound defensive about his policy record. it was more he feels he needs to introduce this part of himself to voters because so much of his image has to do with his economic policies which are not to differentiated. number two, a potential differentiator for him particularly from a candidate like joe biden whose profile on foreign policy is similar to hillary clinton and much more
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interventionist. in the general election too democrats feel like trump got a lot of credit for being non interventionist in 2016. that picture is much more complicated andless clear than he's actually not interventionist so they want to make the case particularly to those swing voters potentially in the rust felt who may have looked at trump in 2016. they want to make the case that's not the trump was in the oval office. >> it is a great place, you go back and reveal foreign policy, close your eyes. we'll hear it some of those lines from joe biden. we shall see, some of the best campaign moments and some of the best candidates take on mcdonald's.
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administration is paying for equality and the actions they are continue to advance whether it is a war on trans people or the latest guidance of denying services to lgbt person or what we see in adoptions. >> no more big mac. the mayor says he and his staff will boycott the food chain until it starts paying $15 minimum wage to its workers. abortion rights is still a big topic. senator cory booker says if he's selected president, he's select an office of reproductive freedom. >> i have a daughter and a wife and a grandmother, i am going to stand up. women's rights are human rights. you are human, too. everybody should be standing up
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and fighting for i. >> up next for us, the president's ultimatum. drop ping the investigation or forgetting of getting anything done. ask your doctor if epclusa is your kind of cure. woman 2: i had the common type. man 2: mine was rare. vo: epclusa has a 98% overall cure rate. man 3: i just found out about my hepatitis c. woman 3: i knew for years. vo: epclusa is only one pill, once a day, taken with or without food for 12 weeks. vo: before starting epclusa, your doctor will test if you have had hepatitis b, which may flare up, and could cause serious liver problems during and after treatment. vo: tell your doctor if you have had hepatitis b, other liver or kidney problems, hiv, or other medical conditions... vo: ...and all medicines you take, including herbal supplements. vo: taking amiodarone with epclusa may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. vo: common side effects include headache and tiredness.
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ultimat the democrats can choose to investigate him for work with him. >> they have to go down their track. let them get rid of the nonsense first. when that is done, we'll go quickly, infrastructure is very easy. for me it is very easy. if you can't go down to tracks at the same time, it does not work that way. >> washington did work in some many ways in both the nixon and the impeachment. an irs reform bill and an over haul training program.
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in 1998, this president is not being impeached, they're talking about it and their politics are much more polarized now. so it is wrong to pin washington paralysis solely on the stare down between the president and the house democrats. still the list of things he will up by today's deepening dysfunctioning is significant. a t a tax fix for the gold star families and budget and spending bills and debt ceiling hike and the new trade deal with canada and mexico. we are not optimistic on this sunday. perhaps when they come back of the disaster bill, chip roy objected, just wants everybody to vote. >> it will be done in an overwhelming manner. the issues that's out there they would like to do or infrastructure or prescription
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drugs and issues they have to do. according to the white house, top number one priority is t is -- what happens this week, does it set them back for the remainder of congress or does it turn in one of those things we have seen the last year where the president changes his mind and they start to move forward. what they need to do to raise the debt ceiling could be incredibly difficult and there is not a lot of certainty that can happen. they need the president and the white house to be playing a positive role for that. >> he wanted immigration money as part of the disaster relief bill. they could not get the votes for it. is he going to get that in some other bill? >> the thing is they won the war on that. sorry the way you get that in tot another bill, he already
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lost that fight once over the holiday. i think that you are going to see -- it is going to depend on what the political pressure is. will the president cave for must-pass issue. you will see the democrats will be spinning that to make sure the blame is on him. >> it is a do nothing congress. the democrats have done nothing in the house. they have done absolutely nothing. other than investigate. >> they have done stuff it is just not anything the president agrees with. gender pay parity bill and reauthorizing violence against women act. the democrats passed in the house a number of things. the president does not support them because we live in a parallel universe.
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>> democrats are anxious of this perception they are so focused on investigating the president that they are not paying attention to americans bread and butter concerns. you hear pelosi talks about those policies. they can't as you think and pass all these bills and they'll die. they can't get things done for the american people but they would like to do because they don't have agreement from the republican senate. these budget battles, this is a huge test for speak ter pelosi. we talk about how good she's holding her office together, pelosi. they had to pull off the floor because the liberal ring of the caucus did not agree with the spending target. now they have 12 appropriation bills to try to get past committ committee. it is going to be a big test to
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see even if the house democrats can get it passed. >> and adding in the dynamic to speak of the president. don't go anywhere. some capital turbulence awaiting two big white house foreign policy moves. figuring steak and steak trumps ribs and steak. but, does it? fifteen combinations. steak, ribs, shrimp, and more. two meats. two sides. $14.99
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ask our great reporters to share a little something from their notebooks. >> i'm going to be watching what is next in the abortion wars. missouri became the latest state to pass a law sharply restricting abortion in addition to alabama, georgia, other states that have restricted abortion more strictly than we have seen before, looking for a court challenge. a judge in mississippi became the first to stop one of these laws. so these court battles are going to continue throughout the 2020 presidential race. they're going to be making their way through the courts. earlier this week thousands of women and others all over the country in multiple states came
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out to protest these laws. you have all of the 2020 democratic candidates coming out against them. this is an issue that's going to continue to simmer under the surface of the 2020 campaign. you can expect it to still be going on when we get to next year. >> michael? >> friday night another federal judge blocked another one of president trump's policies, this time the attempt to divert money to build his board herder wall. it is the 38th time a federal judge has blocked one of his policies. attorney general bill barr said it's a violation of principles. legal scholars say that's highly unlikely but there's more than a little bit of irony here.
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during eight years of barack obama's administration, a favorite tool of republicans was, you guessed it, going to federal judges asking them to block things they didn't like. >> the trump administration announced they would be selling and using an emergency provision in arms control law, $8 billion to the uae and saudi arabia. this is something congress had been holding and blocking for months at a time. now they've gone around congress to complete those sales. saudi arabia's support on capitol hill has really wilted over the last months. that is bipartisan. you're going to see lawmakers consider a number of ways to try and stop this happening in the future. third is the idea that these weapons would be going to yemen, the civil war, things of that nature. that is problematic on a
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bipartisan basis. lawmakers have been working on a saudi sanctions bill that hasn't yet moved forward. this might be a trigger for that. the administration legally believes they can go around congress and do this but there could be backlash. >> iran, they're regional rivals. the administration finally explained the escalation and movement of the combat strike group and everything else that's been going on in the persian gulf. is that going to be congress holding the administration to a very short leash of the conservatives wanting to see a lot of counter moves against what the iranians are doing, or will democrats try to push forward an authorization of military force that undercuts
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the 2001 instrument that the administration has been using to justify a lot of these wars in the middle east that they want to have more control over. something has to budge on both of these issues. >> i'll close with a reminder the president's next visit to japan is a lot more important than this one. the dow was down for the fifth week this past week. that hasn't happened since 2011. u.s./china trade tensions are the biggest factor. it would be worse in the markets except there's still a sense that president trump and xi will call a truce next month at the g 20 in osaka. the administration's tough actions against huawei have some worries that nationalism is now trumping economics and that a deal is less and less likely. president trump is betting this booming economy continues
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through his reelection year. the odds of recession before election at 30% if the trade climate says where it is. and 50% or higher if the u.s./china feud escalates some more. up next, "state of the union." dana bash is in the anchor chair. hey allergy muddlers... achoo! ...do your sneezes turn heads? ♪ try zyrtec... ...zyrtec starts working hard at hour one... and works twice as hard when you take it again the next day. zyrtec muddle no more.
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atta boy global threats. in japan, president trump splits with his advisors and defends north korea's dictator after missile tests. is the president's america first policy helping or hurting the u.s.? i'll speak with republican senator joni ernst next. and grinding to a halt. the president grants his attorney general sweeping new authority on the russia probe as a partisan squabble takes a nasty turn. >> you think nancy's the same as she was. she's not. >> a constitutional battle leaves washington at a standstill. plus, house democrats debate impeachment while 2020
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