tv Inside Politics CNN August 16, 2019 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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tried to make it happen again and stage this massive concert and paid $32 million up front to artists who in the end kept it and we got no concert. but i think it's a statement on where we've come but the hope that we can hang on to. >> bill is such a story teller and he really does it justice. please watch, you guys. catch cnn's special report tomorrow night at 9:00 eastern right here on cnn. that's it for us. "inside politics" with the great john king starts right now. >> thank you, kate. welcome to "inside politics." i'm john king. thank you for sharing your day with us. an israeli official says congresswoman rashida tlaib must hate israel more than she loves her grandmother. this after she asked for permission to see family in the palestinian territories and then says never mind when israel says yes. plus, a new complication in the china challenge. the white house okays a major arms sale to taiwan, something sure to anger beijing in an
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already tense time because of trade differences. and just an august snapshot, but a new poll shows elizabeth warren on the rise among democrats and it shows president trump running well behind all of the leading democrats. he insists he's not the least bit worried. >> you have the best unemployment, you have the most successful state in the history of your state and in the history of our country, and then you're going to vote for somebody else? oh, great. let's vote for elizabeth "pocahontas" warren. >> back to 2020 politics in a moment, but we begin this hour with a 180 from freshman democratic congresswoman rashida tlaib deciding she will not visit israel. that after the country granted her permission on humanitarian grounds to visit her elderly grandmother. tlaib tweeting in part i can't allow the state of israel to
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take away my light by humiliating me and use my love for my grandmother to bow down to their oppressive and racist policies. i have decided that visiting my grandmother under these oppressive conditions stands against everything i believe in, fighting against racism, oppression and injustice. she explains herself well there but just last night congresswoman tlaib was making the impassioned plea to be allowed to visit and vowing to fight for that right. >> you know, my grandmother is in her 90s. her granddaughter is a united states congresswoman. she should have to be able to see me, to touch me, to hug me, so i'm going to continue to fight back. >> now, the question of just visiting her grandmother came up yesterday after israel took a dramatic step barring tlaib and ilhan omar from making a broader visit to israel, citing the congresswomen's support of a boycott movement. president trump had taken the remarkable step of urging israel to say no to that planned visit. tlaib asked to visit on
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humanitarian grounds. and in a letter to the government, promised to respect israeli restrictions on such a visit, including a promise not to promote the boycott movement while visiting her palestinian grandmother. israel granted permission under those terms. now the interior minister in israel not happy. i approved her request as a gesture of good will on a humanitarian basis. but it was just a provocative request aimed at bashing the state of israel. apparently her hate for israel overcomes her love for her grandmother. tough words all around. with me today to share their reporting and their insights. dana bash, michael share and terani parti. where is this now and where is it going in the sense that it seems everyone has decided to go to their political corner and make the case that they think most helps them. the congresswoman in the end deciding i'm not going an i'm going to blame israel. israel saying, wait a minute, we did exactly what you asked and
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now you won't come. what kind of point were you making? >> i mean, you know, look, the sad part here is putting aside her grandmother, who is elderly, this was political from the beginning in every -- on all sides and every step. it was political for the two congresswomen who were clearly wanting to go to israel to make a political point. that's certainly allowed. it should be allowed. it was political for our president who wanted to send -- continue to send the message that he's been sending about casting these two congresswomen as sort of the face of the democratic party and it was political for benjamin netanyahu who's got an election that he's running and is going to come in about a month. so everybody was acting in political ways. and i think what is so sad about it is you would think that this would be a moment that all sides could sort of rise above the politics and say whatever -- whatever everybody wants to do in the kind of political sphere,
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these folks should be able to go to israel and make their point and everybody can react to it then. >> in the context of congresswoman tlaib, she says, well, her family pushed back and said do not accept these circumstances. do not come if it's just to visit your grandmother and you're essentially not allowed to speak or not say anything political when you come, don't do that. we've had interviews with her family from our folks on the ground there. critics say, no, what they see is an effort that she said yes, let me see my grandmother. she didn't get a bigger issue so decided to walk away. we have to take her at her word, but nobody trusts anybody. >> nobody trusts anybody at all. just from a political point of view, this time yesterday there was widespread condemnation of israel and the trump administration, the president himself for denying a duly elected member of congress obviously from america to go
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into what is supposed to be america's most trusted ally, israel, in the middle east. and that was widely condemned. now that israel -- things have changed a little bit and now the response that the congresswoman has had saying, no, i'm not going to go because i can't speak, that has leveled the political playing field, if you will, rightly or wrongly. look, there is blame to go on both sides. there is also understanding on both sides. it is an incredibly, incredibly difficult situation. but just on a personal level, if she did want to go see her grandmother, it's hard to explain why she didn't just say yes and come back and then say what she wanted to say politically about the fact that she thought it was absolutely horrible that she was silenced by the israelis. >> to your point, this decision, israel saying yes and then she's saying never mind essentially
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has changed the topic for a day because the bigger conversation yesterday was why would the president of the united states, it's just unprecedented, saying, yeah, i disagree with these congresswomen. but israel, if you've ever been to israel, they have a loud, vibrant democracy. two more voices making a stink in israel is not going to change a lot actually and it should be viewed as a good thing. if you have issued with israel, go make them there and prime minister netanyahu sit down with them and say here's why we disagree with you. so you've had a lot of friends of israel, former senator joseph lieberman who was al gore's vice presidential running mate says believes netanyahu made a big mistake here. >> this is a loss all around. i'm afraid it's really most threatening to israel's standing in the united states. this decision probably helps the boycott of israel movement more than the two congresswomen ever could themselves. >> it's an interesting perspective in the sense that the boycott movement, their
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views are getting a lot more attention because of this dust-up than if they had been allowed to go and israeli officials said sit down at the table, we disagree with you. >> we heard from joseph lieberman but we've also heard fairly unanimous consensus amongst a number of the 2020 democrat presidential candidates. and to me what's been interesting is if we look at 2016, we've seen a shift on the overall israeli/palestinian issue. as the conversation has shifted to health care and economy, he's shifted the conversation on some of these issues as well. >> and nothing is clean in this town anymore. nothing is clear in this town anymore. as this plays out and democrats were trying to make the case and even some republicans, prime minister netanyahu, you're wrong. president trump, you should not have intervened. this is a democracy, let them make their case. democrats defending the two
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congresswomen stirred up even more trouble. this is congressman ted lieu. >> i wish president trump would resign. i don't think he's going to do that but certainly i can call on ambassador friedman to resign. his allegiance is to america, not the foreign power and to the constitution of the united states, not to the president. >> if you go back in time, one of the controversies about congresswoman omar back several weeks ago was her raising this dual loyalty which is viewed as an anti-semitic trope. so ambassador friedman, they normally don't engage in political conversations, they try to back off and be diplomatic. but ambassador friedman saying congress passed a resolution condemning the bds movement. my head is spinning from the hypocrisy. congresswoman lieu had to delete the tweet. >> everything about this has been political from the start and it continues to be political as this back and forth
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continues. i think democrats are in an interesting position. they have the views on israel and palestine have evolved. different democrats are talking about it in a different way and are stumbling clearly as we saw with the congressman and using his choice of words. and i think going forward, president trump is going to try to take advantage of that and point to those errors or stumbles in the way they're talking as a way of showing that he is the clear ally and friend of israel and democrats are not. >> that's an interesting point because the senior leadership, from speaker pelosi on down, has tried to marginalize the views of omar, tlaib or tried to educate them or saying you're newer members of congress. congresswoman tlaib, you may have a palestinian perspective. congress m congresswoman omar, you have the refugee perspective. now when netanyahu does this and trump does this, it raises their stature among democrats because of the politics, everybody needs to go to their corner. >> and joseph lieberman said it beautifully, that the whole notion of the bds movement and
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these two congresswomen being outcasts was completely helped or maybe even hurt, i should say, by the fact that these two great democracies didn't feel comfortable enough in the democratic institutions and the notions of democracy to have a real discussion with these two members of congress. and it's still stunning to me. i can't wrap my mind around it. >> and it's a big change, right? not that many years ago support for israel was seen as a very bipartisan issue. it wasn't politicized the way it is now. you know, people sort of came and went and often co dels did trips to israel to go express their support for israel and that seems to have devolved into a much more partisan situation. >> the fascinating thing to me,
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netanyahu's calling card has always been strength. he looked like president trump's puppet yesterday. does that impact the elections a couple of weeks away in israel? does it help him? does it hurt him? he clearly thinks this is to his benefit. you can't answer that here in washington but that's something to keep an eye on. she surged to second place in the democratic polls, now elizabeth warren returning to a very sense sieitive issue. this time with policy plans. ♪ b♪ ♪ feels like i'm taking flight. ♪ [sfx: poof] [sfx: squeaking eraser sound effect.] ♪ i am who i wanna be ♪ ♪ who i wanna be ♪ who i wanna be. ♪ i'm a strong individual ♪ feeling that power ♪ i'm so original, ♪ ya sing it louder. ♪ i am, ooo ooo ooo ooo ♪ ehhh ehhh ehhh pre-order and get more. get up to $150 samsung credit, plus 6 months of unlimited music with spotify premium.
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from elizabeth warren as a new poll confirms her steady rise in the 2020 democratic nomination chase. the fox news poll has the massachusetts democrat in command of second place with 20% support. that's an 8-point increase since the same poll in july and a 16-point rise since march. team warren believes her detailed policy positions are a big factor in her gains. but today's revisits what has proven to be tough terrain from the senator. warren is outlining two policy plans specifically targeted to native americans. what's more, for the first time in months she will discuss native american issues at length in a conference in iowa. next week warren, you might recall, had to apologize after releasing a dna test designed to back up her claim of distant american native heritage. mocking warren is a trump staple and the president added a note about her rising poll numbers. >> i did the pocahontas thing. i hit her really hard.
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and it looked like she was down and out. but that was too long ago. i could have waited. but don't worry, we will revive it. it can be revived. it can be revived, right? it will be revived. and it can be revived very easily and very quickly and we're going to have some fun in the state of new hampshire. >> that's a mocking tone, many would say racist, but that means the president is paying attention. m.j. lee joins us from new york. what do we know about these new warren policies? >> certainly this is one of the most significant plans senator warren has put out both policywise and politically speaking as well. let me walk you through this quickly. part of this plan is a draft legislation that she's put out with congresswoman deb holland. she's of course one of the first two native americans elected to congress that would boost funding for critical native american programs and she's proposing an oliphant fix.
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this has to do with the supreme court ruling that ruled tribal governments had no jurisdiction over non-native americans on tribal lands. so allowing native americans, according to warren, to seek justice in cases like rape and other kinds of crimes. and a lot of the plan has to do with tribal lands and resources, including revoking some of these permits that have been given as a part of the keystone and dakota access pipelines. now, john, what i think is interesting is that senator warren put out a lengthy media post to go over these proposals. there's no mention in that post about her own family ancestry. that issue is of course the reason there was so much political controversy around her campaign earlier this year. it's the reason that she decided to put out this dna test showing that she had distant native american heritage. this is an issue that she's going to have to work through and i think the campaign knows that she will have to continue to confront, especially now that we know she's going to be
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participating in this conference in iowa next week where she is going to be onstage with tribal leaders and will certainly face questions about substance and perhaps about her family history as well, john. >> fair to say, m.j., they think the timing works for them here in the sense she is ascending in the polls, is in a stronger place. so if you need to deal with something, the earlier, the better, but from a position of strength? >> that's a good point. i think her approach and the campaign's approach has been to try to keep talking about substance. they don't want to revisit the family issue. she has of course apologized and wants that apology to stand. but the focus really is about these substance proposals and really let people know that these are issues that she cares about and i think particularly with the endorsement from somebody like congresswoman deb holland, that gives the campaign an opportunity to get out there with somebody from the community and say i'm focused on the
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policy and focused on making lives better for the native american community in this country. >> m.j. lee live in new york, appreciate the reporting there. let's bring it around the table. this is a dicey area for her because she had missteps in it in the past. but i want to start with the president, because he doesn't come after you without a reason. now, the way he does it, the pocahontas label, it's offensive, some say racist. it's certainly not presidential, but it's the way he does this. but he did go after her early. and she was struggling early on. and he used to boast that he was responsible for that. the fact that he's coming back and cognizant of her polling, he watches the democratic race as closely as anybody. that tells me that he knows. he knows that she has ascended in this race. >> it's pretty clear that she's been on the rise consistently for the last few months. i spent a week in iowa, and everywhere you go, the reception that she's getting has been pretty stunning. i spoke with several county democratic chairman who said they have never seen this level
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of organization at this stage in the caucus process. you know, they said that even voters said that they're hearing from her staff. they're getting phone calls to discuss the issues with them. one thing that voters pointed out is the pocahontas thing has been mostly forgotten and the fact that she did do that dna test, but they do bring it up sometimes when they're talking about defeating donald trump and someone who can be on the same debate stage as donald trump. they bring that up as a potential concern, but at least most of the voters i talked to said that they feel like the substance of elizabeth warren, the policy proposals that she's come up with and her performances in the debates so far does lead them to believe that she will be able to somewhat stand up against the president. >> and part of the solution to that is to start winning, which would help. if you could start winning, that answers some of the doubt. >> and this is not just about writi righting a political wrong or potential misstep early in the campaign with that dna test, it's about getting voters.
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i mean, you know, i haven't looked at the specifics about the native american vote in key primary states, but if she does start winning, she has to right any potential wrong that the native american community sees in her candidacy and her -- you know, her history here and that's obviously poked at by president trump. but what better way to try to bring everybody together and bring herself more into that community than bringing her calling card, which is a policy proposal. >> crowded field, every vote counts too. >> and part of why she's been so ascendant in the polls is to your point, she has been extremely, extremely well organized. you talk to her campaign staff and they believe you're beginning to see the fruits of what they laid early on. part of why she hasn't ascendant is people weren't paying attention to the grassroots that she was building not only in iowa but new hampshire.
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>> the use of the term "pocahontas" is offensive but the issue does come up to the point about electability you were raising and not just in republican circles. this is senator warren doing what many of the democratic candidates have done, gone on the breakfast club radio program to try to make your case. here's the question. >> when did you find out you weren't? >> well, it's -- i'm not a person of color. >> were there any benefits to that? >> no. "boston globe" did a full investigation. >> you're like the original rachel dozier a little bit. she was a white woman pretending to be black. >> this is what i learned from my family. >> now they try to be provocative on the show. that's the point of the show. >> but it's a topic she's still not totally comfortable with. i spent half an hour on a wide-ranging interview with her and i did ask her this question about some folks, even some democrats, do question whether your judgment on race may be off. i will say the entire rest of the interview she was completely comfortable moving to policy
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positions. her response to that question she shifted again to a policy position. i think that's where she's comfortable and i don't know that she feels fully comfortable yet in terms of how to answer these questions that even democrats have about whether her judgment on race might be off. >> the test of all candidates but especially one that is growing is to learn the lesson so you can keep growing. learn how to get comfortable in the areas where you may have a weakness or blind spot or where you've stepped in it before, had a misstep before. if you look at the fox poll numbers, 4% in march, 20% in august. that's a nice line. you like that line. you want your 401(k) to look like that. if you're a candidate, you want to look like a great stock on wall street. if you compare it, if you view her as one of the leading progressives in the race, the downtrend is bernie sanders. the uptrend is elizabeth warren. not exactly the same pool of voters, but the same kind of voters. >> which i guess just to put a little bit of skepticism here in, it does make me wonder whether when you're on that kind of trend and you're having the
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kind of success that you're having, whether it makes -- i mean, you know, the issues of native americans in the country are i'm sure very incorporatmpot i don't know that the democratic party is clamoring for a massive policy position on it and she could well have decided why poke the bear, right? why be -- why put this so out front that president trump can come in and raise this again and she's going to have more interviews like the one where she wasn't very comfortable. maybe they have a strategy and they want to get past this as soon as they can. but the question of like sort of right when you're -- right when you're having people talk about how successful you are, you -- >> except it's not necessarily a bad thing if you're one of 20 people running for the democratic nomination and he singles you out. >> it's a little risky, but it's interesting to watch a candidate -- you're right. you could just say hey, we're doing great, don't touch
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anything. or we're doing great, let's clean some things up. it's a risk and we'll watch. that's what make campaigns fun. up next for us, what doom and gloom? president trump says the economy humming along. so well, you have no choice, he says, but to vote for him in 2020. ♪ applebee's handcrafted burgers now starting at $7.99. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood you don't need to go anywhere dad, this is your home. the best home to be in is your own. home instead offers personalized in-home services for your loved ones. home instead senior care. to us, it's personal. switching to the aarp auto insurance program let's take a ride with some actual customers and find out. hey, well tell me about your experience when you switched to the hartford. - when i switched to the hartford, i'm sitting there, like, man,
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week on wall street. that volatility because of new recession fears. take a look at the dow right there. the big board up 271 points there. a better day following steps both in europe and china to stimulate growth. but the bigger challenge remains. can the trump white house and beijing settle a trade war, or will new tariffs be added by both powers later this year? now add this complication. just today a white house blessing of the biggest u.s. arms sales to taiwan in years, including new f-16 fighter jets. that is certain to anger beijing as the already delicate trade talks resume. aides describe the president is concerned about the market volatility and about talk of a potential election year recession. but at a campaign rally last night, optimism from the president and you might call this a warning of sorts. >> the united states right now has the hottest economy anywhere in the world. wages are rising, and you know who's the biggest beneficiary? blue collar workers.
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this room is a lovefest, i know that. but you have no choice but to vote for me because your 401(k)s down the tubes, everything will be down the tubes. so whether you love me or hate me, you've got to vote for me. >> trump 2020, love me or hate me. he's different. but yeah trump 2020, love me or hate me. help me there. >> it's no make america great again, but the fact that he's going for it. he knows that there could be some concern about the economy. that's why he's saying love me or hate me. but he is still trying to take credit for the stock market, which some republicans now think could be a concern because he has associated the health of the economy so much with the way the stock market is doing. given the way the stock market has been doing this week, voters could get concerned. >> and a recession or even just a significant slowdown short of a recession is a giant risk for
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any president heading into a re-election year. and this president, this president, he wants you to believe, and i get it. presidents are supposed to brag about the economy under his tenure. he brags about it in a way as if there was no economy when barack obama left office and he flipped the switch and all this happened. one thing he says when people challenge him on that, he should get credit for november, december and january, right, after the election because the markets did spike right after the election. so we decided to give him that credit. we went back and now we'll say give donald trump the jobs created not just in the 30 months he's been president but the final three months of the obama administration, excepting for the president's case. look what happens. 6.4 million jobs if you factor in november and december, 2016, after the election and january 2017, 20 days of which he was not the president of the united states. still then you go back to the 33 months before that, obama's economy still created more jobs. so the president has this impression that we were dead and he became president. it's just not matched by the
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numbers. that doesn't mean the economy hasn't been good under president trump, that the unemployment rate hasn't continued down under president trump, for which he has every right to brag. but his comparison to what is before him is just dead wrong. >> all that is really important for fact checking. that was really interesting to see. but what matters is how voters feel. and what matters is whether or not the blue collar workers he was just talking about at that rally yesterday really do feel like he kept his promise and they have a better life and have bigger pocketbooks than they had before. the jury is still out on that. >> the jury is out -- forgive me for one second because i want to get this in. the jury is out but you know peter navarro very, very well. he's one of the people who has encouraged the president to have this trade war with china. other advisers are nervous about that. number one he blames the fed. he says it's not the president's fault or his fault for the tariffs but listen to the end of this. >> i didn't write the book on the inverted yield curve but i've actually written several books about that within the context of the business cycle. we don't have a strict inversion
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of the yield curve. what we have is a flat curve, which is much less a sign of recession. the problem is that the federal reserve raised rates too far and too fast. so let's not do the doom and gloom. it's all good. >> that last line, if the economy slows or goes in a recession, let's not do the doom and gloom. >> this is another one of the presidential norms that this president an his people have absolutely busted through. you know, john, the assumption had always been for previous presidents that you don't want to have your rhetoric about the economy be mismatched with what americans are really feeling, right? like that's -- that's political death if you do that. if you're out there talking about rosy scenarios. >> we turn the corner, you can't turn back. 2004. >> you can go back to all presidents. >> you like your doctor, you can
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keep your doctor. >> this president just takes credit every time he wants to take credit. he doesn't worry about there being that sort of disconnect. and we'll see. the political rules have not seemed to apply to him. so can he talk in those kinds of rosy ways even though people are not feeling it? >> here's an interesting point on that. here's a president who's had a distant relationship with the big players in the economy. they didn't respect him in new york and doesn't of great relationships with them. he spoke with the head of jpmorgan, bank of america and citi. that is a president who is nervous about the economy, as he should be. whatever his name is, whatever his party is, if you look at the data heading into re-election. so he's reaching out and talking. you made the point what did blue collar voters think, that's the interesting point. i want to show you what the farm bureau produced. the president is counting on them. but here's their point. we remade this graphic from the farm bureau that the damage to the farm economy is way beyond soybeans, which the chinese promised to buy a bunch of
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soybeans and have not delivered on their promise. grain sales down, cotton and linters down, tobacco, dairy down, livestock sales down. if there's a recession further or further trade war that deepens that and you're calling maggie haberman at the rally, kevin steele a trump supporter says this. listen, i'm hoping to god he closes with china, just get the deal done. all of my money is in stocks. that is the sense -- forget the cable tv chatter. the president needs to answer the questions of his base. >> we were talking just a second ago about senator warren. paur part of her argument has been, no, the economy is not doing that well. she's been warning folks about an impending recession which speaks to part of her rise could be attributed to the very fact that some folks are feeling very differently about the economy. >> if there's a slowdown, the democratic arguments i think will get greater hearing too. if unemployment stays at 3.7%,
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then it's really hard to say things are bad. when we come back, a new development in an old story, the clinton email investigation. i can't believe it. that sophie opened up a wormhole through time? (speaking japanese) where am i? (woman speaking french) are you crazy/nuts? cyclist: pip! pip! (woman speaking french) i'm here, look at me. it's completely your fault. (man speaking french) ok? it's me. it's my fault? no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of dollars on my car insurance with geico. (pterodactyl screech)
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topping our political radar today, beto o'rourke back on the campaign trail today after two weeks off to deal with the mass shooting back home in his hometown of el paso. his first stop, a grocery store in canton, mississippi, after rolling out a new plan to take on gun violence and the rise of white nationalism. he's calling for a nationwide gun license registry and a mandatory assault weapon buyback program. a warning from senator lindsey graham has president
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trump prepares to meet with his national security team. a statement from graham says in part, a bad agreement puts the radical islamic movement all over the world on steroids. the plan aimed at ending america's longest war would significantly cut the number of u.s. troops in afghanistan. while it would include a u.s./taliban cease file it's not expected to have them control their fire on the afghan people or military. senator chuck grassley said the alleged investigation into the hack of hillary clinton's email server by china is now complete. joining me now is evan perez. evan, what's the result? >> well, john, you know, we hear a lot about no collusion. this is a case of no intrusion. this is what the fbi has been saying since 2016. chuck grassley, senator grassley and senator johnson have been looking into this issue of whether or not there was any evidence of a hack by the chinese. now, what they did is they
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interviewed a couple of staffers from the inspector general for the intelligence community who had raised concerns about exactly this, about some activity that they believe indicated a possible hack. they were concerned really about how the state department was handling this information, whether they were downplaying it. according to grassley, they do believe that the state department was downplaying the importance of this information. in the end, though, the fbi maintains that there is no evidence of an intrusion by a foreign government, either the chinese or any other. this is what they said in 2016. this is what they said in 2017 when we asked. and i looked into this again in 2018. this is the same thing. so in the end, it appears that there's still no evidence of this. but there's definitely some concern on the part of the senators that the state department did not handle this issue very well. >> evan perez, appreciate that. it's been a long-running drama. not sure this will ending it even if the senators think it's over. when we come back, a bit of a lightning round, including the
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president phoning a supporter after a big rally, calling him overweight. we make clear p to cover the eals in retirement, as well as all the things you want to do. because when you're ready for what comes next, the only direction is forward. mothat a handle is just a is jushandle.ir. or -- that you can't be both inside and outside. most people haven't driven a lincoln. discover the lincoln approach to craftsmanship at the lincoln summer invitation. right now, get 0% apr on all 2019 lincoln vehicles plus no payments for up to 90 days. only at your lincoln dealer.
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the need for his campaign to expand his aging inner circle. he has communicated his frustration that mr. biden's closest advisers are too old and out of touch with the current political climate, urging him to include more younger aides. >> i think they're still working on biden's myspace page. >> ouch. >> there is a recognition that biden has a team around him that might not be kind of the most nimble and obama is worried about his legacy. >> and biden has brought in some younger folks of late to see. mark sanford, former congressman, former south carolina governor, says he might, might challenge president trump in the primary. john berman wants an update. >> have you decided whether or not you are going to run? you gave yourself until labor day, i think. have you reached a decision? >> i have not yet. a couple more ts to cross and is to dot. but i am at this point growing
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ever closer in that direction. >> ever closer. okay. >> so he's saying his big issue is bringing up deficit reduction and it's honestly unclear if the republican base even cares about that as much as it did several years ago. so his decision he claims might be dependent on bringing back that topic in a discussion. >> it used to be a very sexy issue for republicans. he's bringing sexy back. let's move to the president last night at his rally in new hampshire. he sees a man he thinks is a protester and this happens. >> that guy has got a serious weight problem. go home, start exercising. got a bigger problem than i do. got a bigger problem than all of us. >> that guy turned out to be frank dawson, a trump supporter, who was actually ripping signs from the protesters and helping the president. frank dawson says he didn't see me rip the signs away. he said everything is didn't, i love the guy. he's the best thing that happened to the country. the president called him and didn't say i'm sorry but he
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tried to make peace. >> can we just take a step back and note that the president and the people around him were okay with him mocking the person as being fat when the person was a protester, but when it turned out that he was a supporter, not so much. and the fact is that i was told that that's exactly what happened. that he actually had already taken the sign away from the protester and that's why the president called him afterwards, because he is a supporter. >> if you're not insensitive -- >> he's a little self aware. he's president now, not real estate developer, but still looking to make a splash in the real estate market. the o) rs, run hopelessly in their cage. content on their endless quest, to nowhere. but perhaps this year, a more exhilarating endeavor awaits. defy the laws of human nature,at the summer of audi sales event. get exceptional offers now.
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aim to be there more. talk to your doctor about aimovig. a message to president trump today from greenland. look elsewhere for your next big splash in the real estate market. green la greenland is not for sale but it is open to cooperation between equal countries. that is an actual official statement from greenland's government after reports in "the wall street journal" that the president has asked aides to look into the possibility of buying massive island that sits mostly within the arctic circle. so people are making light of this, people are making jokes of it. if you understand the giant u.s. military presence that's already there, if you understand the rich natural resources, if we were back in the days of, say, seward and alaska or the louisiana purchase this might make sense, right? am i being too kind? >> like bring back coloniaism. >> here's from "the wall street
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journal" story. this person described the question less as a serious inquiry, but as a joke, i'm so powerful that i could buy a country. since he hadn't floated it at a campaign rally yet he probably wasn't seriously considering it. >> it just says -- this whole thing just says so much about the president, the way his staff views him, the way he views his own legacy, the fact that he's looking at his legacy not as president obama did with obamacare but with a real estate purchase is how he's looking at it. >> if you're steve bullock, democratic candidate for president, started a website to try to have fun with this, isgreenlandforsale.com. so this becomes, what does this become? the way to end a cable show? >> there you go. yeah. we'll see. i think to your point if he brings it up at a rally, then we'll know. >> then we'll know? >> then we'll know that at least there's something that he's going to continue to talk about. >> greenland is nice.
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why not? >> but it's not -- >> why not the galapagos islands? >> judgment call. that's it for "inside politics." we'll see you sunday morning at 8:00 a.m. don't go anywhere, brianna keilar starts right now. i'm brianna keilar live from cnn's washington headquarters. under way right now, thanks, but no thanks. israel lifted its ban of a democratic congresswoman in exchange for conditions on her trip. now the muslim congresswoman says she won't go after all. as the economy gets a bit shaky, the president spreads fear in the name of getting re-elected. plus, you can take the man out of real estate, but you can't take the real estate out of the man. why the president wants the u.s. to buy greenland. and a mystery deepens after disturbing video surfaces of a truck driving into
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