tv Inside Politics CNN February 5, 2020 9:00am-10:00am PST
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welcome to inside politics. i'm john king. thank you for sharing your day with us. it's verde in the president trump impeachment trial. and the partisan vote is on full display and the vote is four hours away. it is divided. immigration, school prayer. the president uses his platform to campaign. he won't shake her hand, she ripped up his speech. the president and house speaker at war across the wide and very partisan divide. >> members of congress, the
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president of the united states. [ applause ] >> we begin in washington with the president's shredded speech and last chapter of the impeachment trial. in the next few hours, two articles to be voted down for impeachment of president trump, one for abuse of power and the other for obstruction of congress. and forever impeached nancy pelosi likes to call it. a big win and vindicated and democratic anger fueled by impeachment frustration spilling out in the ceremony of the state of the union. boos and shocking surprise act of defiance by the house speaker. those ripped up pages, a new symbol of america's fractured politics. he shredded the truth, so i shredded his speech. that is how speaker pelosi
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explained herself this morning to house democrats. it is an outrage to president trump. >> it was a new low. i wasn't sure if she was ripping up the speech or ripping up the constitution. to have her stand up and tear up that speech really dishonored the moment. >> the next test of this divide, today's impeachment trial vote. let's get to capitol hill with raju. i expect we will see more in the senate. >> and the only thing, will they break with their party rank. we just heard from doug jones, and alabama democratic senator closely watched in a red state but he signaled he will vote to convict the president on both counts and concerns whether joe
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manchin of west virginia will come down and says he will not make it known until 4:00 p.m. and the arizona senator democrat has not said what she will do. the only question right now is what mitt romney will do, republican senator from utah, criticized this senator and voted with susan collins of maine for witnesses, susan collins will vote to acquit the president but romney has not said where he lies. it will be along party lines if not straight party lines. democrats in the house signaled they are not done investigating this president. jerry nadler told me earlier democrats are likely to subpoena john bolton in days ahead, something they've been demanding happen. the senate stood in front of that process and democrats opted not to do that.
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even though today's vote will be a decisive one, president will claim vindication, democrats say they're not done looking into what they view as the president's misconduct in office. >> closing the impeachment chapter and maybe another investigative chapter. thank you, manu. cnn, and olivia knocks with siriusxm and paul with the "washington post." today is an historic moment. presidents aren't impeached very often and the trial doesn't make it to the senate even less often. the atmosphere around it, last night was wide open how this town is busted. >> you had this incredible confluence of events. it was democrats on the chamber floor, you could see their faces
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getting angrier and angrier and more fearful. you have a failed iowa caucus and completely muddled field on the trail. they don't know who will hold the mantle for them in the election against trump. it was on fire. one of nancy pelosi's own guests, fret guttenberg, who lost a child, fred, he stood up and yelled at trump and that doesn't make the top five things that happened. >> in this climate of conviction or acquittal votes today. among those we are watching closely are on the ballot this year. susan collins votes to acquit the president. see how that goes on back home. from iowa and martha mcsally. republicans are lining up with
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the president. and doug jones, ruby red alabama, he went to the floor and said, i will cast votes that may cost me my job. >> his actions were more than inappropriate, an abuse of power. i believe the president deliberately obstructed congress with failing to cooperate in any way. i will vote to convict the preside president. it is not right or wrong or courageous act, simply following your oath. >> you could make the case doug jones will probably lose anyway. however, that's a bold move. saying the people of alabama want to impeach the president or oppose the president? >> he had an issue highly
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problematic of sexual impropriety with under-age girls but got a lucky break last time around. his strength is built on black voters in that state and particularly black women that came out and organized for him, they want to see the president impeached. he is in a tough spot. alabama is a tough state for a democrat to win. he had to choose politically between his base and potentially flipping swing voters who like the president. i'm not sure that latter category is gettable for him. in the end, he probably went with his conscious. >> we saw that playing out with the house portion, a number of congressman and women from very vulnerable districts torn which way to go. for the most part they went on party lines. that's something we've seen in both portions and something the republicans, especially the president's legal team has been emphasizing this was purely partisan and hit job on the president. >> because of the election year
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we're in, hard to know where to turn your focus. the president of the united states was impeached, as nancy pelosi said, forever impeached. the senate is likely today to acquit the president and leave him in office. this is an election year. the president wants to use it to his advantage and gin up the base. anti-trump voters, maybe that animates them to come out. in maine, purple state, probably blue in the presidential election. susan collins says the president did wrong and she will vote to acquit and believes he has learned a lesson. >> i believe the president has learned from this case. >> what do you believe the president has learned? >> the president has been impeached. that's a pretty big lesson. there has been criticism by both republican and democratic senators of his call. i believe that he will be much
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more cautious in the future. >> is there any reason in past history or recent reporting to suggest that's accurate? >> no. what he's learned, as long as he keeps his republican senators together, that's what he wants. >> i think it was susan collins at one point earlier in his term now he has learned his lessons and done this a couple different ways. >> three hours after that interview aired on cbs, he was giving the medal of honor to rush limbaugh. it was not a constrained president. >> he was telling the tv anchors, no, he hadn't learned anything because his call was perfect. we have in real-time rebuttals. >> what do we learn here. the president will probably be
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acquitted and will there be one or two democrats acquit him as well and the president claims it as bipartisan. the house judiciary committee might want john bolton. he's about to write a book. the transcript that's come out so far, damning things about the president and new information about e-mails out today underscores how the july 18th decision to hold military aid stunned officials who are assessed ukraine deserved to receive it and were preparing a javelin missile order. officials grew so concerned over the deferrals by the office of management and budget that they noted the aid was at serious risk. they should bring in these documents and new witnesses. the e-mail suggests president trump will call it political but
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plenty of material for democrats to say, fine, we will keep looking. >> and for the weeks to come, one of the e-mails we obtained was directly to secretary esper, the defense secretary, it warned him the president has a view of endemic corruption in ukraine and wants to cease all aid to ukraine, a direct quote. the defense secretary warned this would be a huge mistake if they go through with this. this was reverberating across the department of defense for weeks leading up to the call with president zelensky july 25th and after that. that e-mail was the same day as the call to president zelensky. even as all this was going on and the president was trying to assure him, we have good relations with you and please go investigate the bidens, still, defense department officials were panicking and bleeding to
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put a stop to this somehow. as we go to break, one of the senators we're watching, democrat from arizona, look how she responded to the president's state of the union. >> thanks to opportunity zones, spearheaded by senator tim scott as part of our great republican tax cut. so long as i am president, i will always protect your second amendment right to keep and bear arms. rs... but one blows them all out of the water. hydro boost with hyaluronic acid to plump skin cells so it bounces back... neutrogena® and for body... hydro boost body gel cream.
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stronger than ever before. [ applause ] >> the president last night using his "state of the union" address as a reelection road map including several detours from the facts. constant appeals to his base, judges, immigration and more and constant reminders of the election year climate and visceral visceral divide between the president and democrats. >> as we work to improve americans' healthcare, there are those who want to take away your healthcare, take away your doctor and abolish private insurance entirely. tragically, there are many cities in america where radical politics have chosen to provide sanctuary for these criminal
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illegal aliens. >> it was fascinating. no mention of impeachment. the president listened to his political advisors, leave that out. bullet point after bullet point to his base and try to shave margins of women and minority. you could feel it building. they felt the president says, i'm for protecting pre-existing conditions, his administration is in court trying to abolish obamacare. i'm for pretrial investigation drug costs. democrats say we passed a bill in the senate. chuck grassley has a different bill. if the president could, he could put them together. they just lost patience. >> what was fascinating about the state of the union, felt like a campaign speech, not campaign rally but the president stayed fairly on script and measured for him. you can see where this campaign is going in clear terms. divisive, intense on both sides,
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characterized by fierce partisanship. he is playing to his base and the mention of socialism his team thinks could be a strong argument, particularly if the nominee is bernie sanders or elizabeth warren and weak on healthcare issues they mentioned. it was a good template to see where the election was going. it was not traditional state of the union. >> one of the differences is you don't have nancy pelosi sitting behind you shaking her head literally at many of the points he was making. one of the most notable is the trade deals. the house and nancy pelosi was working very closely with the trade representative for weeks up to it and the president chose to take all the credit for himself. it's fine, a lot of presidents do that and you have nancy pelosi shaking her head. >> at the top of the speech, he has every right and reason to
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brag about the american economy. any president would. he portrays it when he came to the office, the president was dead and no state department in america if you listen to the president. you look at the first 35 months of trump compared to the last 35 months of obama, guess what, obama created more jobs over the same period of time. there are other facts he can brag about but can't get the context he inherited a pretty good economy and is doing better. >> i have no insight what the presume campaign internal polls tell them. over the last few months they've tried to break off the economy from what they inherited from obama. there was a fact cheat not too long ago, this is not a continuation of past trends. if you can pull up a graph of wages and unemployment, you can see it is in large part a continuation of existing trends. they really stepped up this campaign to say, obama had
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nothing to do with anything good with this economy. it makes me wonder what they're seeing behind the scenes. >> people are starting to, if you do the math, the recovery started a long time ago. but the democrats sitting there, getting mad, they're not sure how their nominating process is going to work out right now. they see the president at probably the strongest point of his presidency just as we head to the reelection cycle. the president's gallup approval. july 19th, below 40%. 2020, kicking 50% towards election. that might not look like a giant jump, the trajectory is going the right way for the president. look at the economy. may not be a huge thing, always his strongest point, the last year of the state of the union, just above 50%. where we are now, 60%. that is a slow trajectory up, going the way you want to know.
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we'll be picking a president soon, how do i feel? >> house democrats this morning were all over the map and didn't know what to do or think. on one hand, with nancy pelosi, great, rip up the speech in pure anger. on the other hand, they talked about working with him on infrastructure and lowering prescription drug costs. it was kind of jarring what you want to do. do you want to keep giving him wins on issues he will turn around and give you no credit for? he will take it and own it all himself. they keep saying they want to do that. there's a risk at a certain point. >> i think the process is very low. they want to do judges and impeachment and get out of here. you brought this up. democrats watch rally trump and say he will further alienate african-americans and suburban women. watch the president, same issues, different tone.
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rally, state of the union. >> before i took office, health insurance premiums more than doubled in just five years. i moved quickly to provide affordable alternatives. our new plans are up to 60% expensive and better. >> remember obama, 28 times, you can keep your doctor. you can keep your doctor. 28. you can also keep your plan, you can keep it. 28 times he lied. we should impeach him. >> we're working to replace our outdated randomized immigration system, based on merit, those that follow the rules, support themselves financially and uphold our values. >> today's democrat parties glorify immigration. many are fine people and all of that. some are stone-cold rapists and murders and people their
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countries don't want. >> whether we're republican, democrat or independent, surely me must all agree every human life is a sacred gift from god. >> virtually every top democrat also supports late term abortion ripping babies straight from the mother's womb, right up until the moment of birth. >> his campaign team was very happy, that in a -- again, there are fact checks, questions about issues, he was able to talk about the issues they wanted him to talk about to motivate his base in a less rally trump way, standing in the house of representatives. >> i think this is -- the conventional wisdom, this is the largest audience the president will get all year and the only thing only the president can wield to the union. the response never has the same kind of political power. to the degree he can modulate with the messaging here, he could win. a lot of the harsh words on the
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immigration stayed in the speech. >> a lot of americans stayed in the speech. >> speaking to folks at the white house right now, they've been pretty battered, even if they go out and put on a grave face of this impeachment inquiry, they're pretty battered and exhausted. at the end of the day they're getting the acquittal they wanted and emboldening them and the president's campaign to go ahead and grab this in whatever it takes. i think we will see a lot more bombastic rhetoric. >> they remember the last campaign, february, things change a lot over the course of campaigns. at this moment, they feel a lot better than they have in a long time. coming up, democrats focus on new hampshire with the iowa caucus hanging over them. >> the roengs i'm wearing a tie, i'm going to a plane in a few minutes to washington, d.c. to
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the final results in the democratic iowa caucuses. we do expect more results today. we're at 71% reporting from the iowa democratic party and former south bend mayor pete buttigieg remains in the lead. what's impressive about the buttigieg lead, looking at the scope, 99 counties in iowa, in 64, mayor buttigieg either leading or tied. that is impressive. bernie sanders close with hillary clinton in a two-person race four years ago, in second place with 25.2% of the delegates. they're hoping he can come back with the delegate chase. one moral victory is because he's ahead 1300 votes by popular votes. this is not how they tally the
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votes. it is new this year, sanders insisted on this. bragging rights for sanders. in the state of new hampshire hoping he can do better. vice president biden disappointing in iowa and reaching out to voters on climate change by mayor buttigieg. >> that's the corner i think we have to turn to get anything done. this is too big, too important, too existential to be another partisan political cover. >> climate change a huge issue with the democratic base. interesting the tone there. stressing an issue that's important to the democratic tug-of-war but listen to the tone there. >> independents can cross over.
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interesting for buttigieg to get a bounce because he didn't get credit on the night of the votes. >> he may do that in new hampshire. biden has shown himself to be fairly weak in iowa. there's room in that moderate space. the question is what happens when they move out of new hampshire and to more diverse states. and we look at iowa, places he won, his organization is great, won across the state, rural areas, obama trump counties. in the urban areas with latinos, a sizable latino population in iowa, the heart and soul of the democratic party, most reliable democratic voters, that was bernie sanders and warren, though she came in third had a pretty widespread. she didn't necessarily win but
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picked up people everywhere. there are great questions. this is great for mayor buttigieg but great questions. >> and we will see about new hampshire and south carolina and nevada and most diverse climates, we will see. it's disappointing you look at biden's turnout in iowa. he can say it's not our place. but he's the former vice president and the mayor of a small town just busted him. they said, it's okay, we have south carolina. listen to the different tone from the vice president today. >> 24 hours later, they're still trying to figure out what happened in iowa. at this rate, new hampshire will be the first in the country to get the vote. [ applause ] >> i am not going sugarcoat it. we took a gut punch in iowa.
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the whole process took a gut punch. this isn't the first time in my life i've been knocked down. >> it's a very different tone, the idea, i need your help. you want me to stay viable in this race, you have to come to my defense here. >> thp likes that. go back to obama v clinton in 2008, obama coming off a win had too much confidence and mocked hillary clinton, and she really asked for their vote. they liked that. john mccain always did well in new hampshire for that same reason. he's hoping that's what will happen. >> this caucus situation was an unmitigated disaster, but a lucky break for joe biden and now he can say he lost badly from what we're seeing from partial results but he can say,
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well, the process was crazy, let's move forward. early on they sent an aggressive letter to the iowa democratic party. certainly, you want to win but if you're not going to win, better for you if the whole process is -- >> now, he has to perform. you can't keep losing and saying you're the most electable candidate. when you lose against other candidates, hard to say you're the strongest for trump. bernie sanders is from vermont and elizabeth warren from massachusetts. she has a money and pulled money from south carolina and nevada and put a little more money into new hampshire. here's one of this ads. >> after wall street crashed r ourour economy in 2008, i confronted the system head on. created a consumer watchdog to hold the whole thing accountable.
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when republican senators were there i ran against one and beat him. i'm in this democracy for something that works for everyone. >> for elizabeth warren, this is a big week. she came in third and had a pretty decent organization in iowa. you can't keep coming in third, can you? >> obviously, you can't. there will be one or two races that make or break a lot of candidates. joe biden said in january the best month they had and places fourth in iowa. a lot of candidates had good money making campaigns and some had stronger ground games as well, and that's the interesting discrepancy we saw with obama in 2008, the ground game is as important as money and elizabeth warren trying to promote her ground game. see if it helps her. >> come back to the 2020 race
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later in the program. >> cnn is hosting the last democratic town halls before the new hampshire primary. special live two-night event starts tonight. coming up, the fbi director gives yet another warning about the 2020 election. [ applause ] thank you. it's an honor to tell you that liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. i love you! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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more than 25,000 cases have been confirmed worldwide, just 11 of those confirmed cases in the united states. elijah cummings widow will not be taking over his seat. she lost. the winner, former chairman. and it's heavily democratic district that includes baltimore. tough questions for the fbi director, christopher way on the house democratic committee some on the botched handling of the investigation and to put the go ahead on a trump campaign advisor. reminding congress of this, the russians, he says, still trying to meddle in the elections. >> director, are the russians interfering in our elections right now? >> i don't think we've seen any
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it was the president's speech in the speaker's house, and from the get-go it was impossible to listen to him without keeping a very watchful eye on her. [ applause ] >> i keep my promises. we did our job. freedom unifies the soul. [ applause ] >> to safe guard over 130 legislators in this chamber, have endorsed legislation that would bankrupt our nation by providing free taxpayer funded healthcare to millions of illegal aliens, forcing
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taxpayers -- california passed an outrageous law to declare their whole state to be sanctuary for criminal illegal immigrants, a very terrible sanctuary, with catastrophic results. [ applause ] >> i've been here a long time. i've seen a lot of the state of the unions including election year. bill clinton didn't like newt gingrich. i gould on and on. i've never seen anything like that. >> i've gotten that look from my grandmothers and never means anything good is coming. not a look of approval or praise. >> off camera, everybody saw her tear the script up. off camera, after almost everybody had left, she walked off the podium looking down toward the gallery, her vip box
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and where her husband and other dignitaries were, she took the shredded speech and waved it to them like a form of bounty. late last night when manu and i caught her walking out there was no cooling down, she said it was a manifesto of the truth. >> the bottom line is the state of the union is not a television event. you are chasing maybe 10 different audiences. the president's speech was structured for different moments. one of the most popular was the return home of the deployed soldier, the president gave us that and scholarship being freed up for a young student. this was a viral moment. this was, i think, nancy pelosi chasing a viral moment. >> you have the two most powerful politics in america who lead very different constituencies in the same country, even more polarized than the 2016 election.
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why can nancy pelosi act that way or the president act that way, do they have any reason to reach out to each other. 90% voted democrat for president and only 90% voted for trump. flip il it over, there's no overlap in the constituents. she can rip up the speech and he can refuse to shake her hand. you would think these two powerful people think we need a relationship. they don't. >> so much is theatrics. at the same time, they want to show the fact they're holding the ground. the hand shake where nancy pelosi reached her hand out and the president whipped around, minutes later the speaker's twitter page had that picture up with a caption saying, i will never stop reaching out across the aisle for the american people. they're trying to use that similar to an episode that happened in the white house
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several months ago she was standing up and the president sitting down and she had her hand out. she wants to show either she is empowered or trying to reach across the aisle and reach across the aisle. it plays to constituents. >> wild tv theater. next, joe biden says iowa gave him a punch in the gut. and an aggressive response. ♪
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joe biden is running fourth in iowa, in new hampshire fighting for survival taking aim at two of the men running ahead of him in iowa, bernie sanders and pete buttigieg. >> if senator sanders is on the party, every democrat up and down the ballot, red states and purple and blue states, every democrat will have to carry the label senator sanders has chosen for himself. he calls himself -- i don't criticize him. he calls himself a democratic socialist. >> is he really saying the obama administration was a failure. pete, say it out loud. i have great respect for mayor pete and the service of his nation. i believe it is a risk to be straight up with you, for this party to nominate somebody who never held an office higher than mayor of 10,000 people in indiana. i do believe it's a risk. >> he says he doesn't mean to
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criticize. there's criticize there. that's a candidate who understands he has a problem. >> it was something he was reluctant to do in iowa. at one point he took a shot at sanders saying he wasn't a democrat. the next day on television, saying, oh, no, he's a democrat. he's been reluctant to criticize and running on a message of unity and decency working on both sides of the aisle with republicans. this is what he has to do and clear mayor buttigieg gets under his skin a little bit. >> he needs a little bit of their voter base. bernie has a lot of white working class men that will support him. buttigieg is in that moderate centrist lane. biden needs to chip away at both of them to grow his own vote. >> interesting moment. we have a primary at this time. we will watch the candidates fighting out, joe biden getting aggressive. when you're sitting fourth in
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iowa and former vice president, you have to get tougher. great week in politics. don't go anywhere. the senate impeachment votes, starting right now. have a great day. >> i'm brianna keilar, live from washington's headquarters. for the third time, the senate will vote on whether to remove a president from office. and the president thinks he has a pass. will any democrats move to acquit him? after the iowa caucuses, the results have still not been finalized for results to the state parties threw the 2020 presidential race a curveball. one candidate is declaring victory
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