tv Don Lemon Tonight CNN May 28, 2021 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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we're keeping an eye on washington, d.c. tonight where the senate is still in session. the vote on creating a bipartisan commission to investigate the deadly january 6th capitol insurrection being pushed well into the night right now. gop leader mitch mcconnell doing everything he can to kill the bill, asking republicans to
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block it as a personal favor to him. a new warning tonight from the department of homeland security that white supremacists may try to target events commemorating the 100th anniversary of the tulsa, oklahoma, race massacre. president joe biden set to visit tulsa to honor the victims. and qanon congresswoman marjorie taylor greene off the rails tonight at a rally, hitting a brand-new low, comparing democrats to nazis. let's get right to capitol hill, cnn's ryan noble joins us now. good evening to you. we're waiting on that vote. what's going on? what is the holdup? what's happening? >> reporter: well, the holdup has nothing to do with the 1/6 commission, don. this is actually the bill that came before it on the legislative calendar, which is a bill they've called the endless frontiers act, which is actually a bipartisan piece of legislation designed to make the united states more competitive with china. but it is a massive bill, you
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know, hundreds of millions of dollars, and as a result, there have been amendments that have been added to it throughout the course of the night that have held the process up. and the reason that we're stalled right now is because senator ron johnson of wisconsin would like to see something added to this bill related to border security. so he's basically, you know, put his thumb on the pause button here, preventing the bill from moving forward. and what we're watching right now play out on the floor of the united states senate is they were in such a prolonged period of waiting for something to happen, that they called a quorum call and put a vote out that forced the sergeant at arms to request every absent senator to come down to the floor so that they could hash out these differences with this endless frontiers act, hopefully get it passed, and then eventually move on to the january 6th commission bill. so just kind of a legislative -- this is how the sausage is made here on capitol hill, and that's what's taking this process so long. >> but what is johnson's e
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endgame? you said this endless frontier bill. what's his endgame? >> reporter: so what he would like is some form -- and he's expected to go to the senate floor here in the next few minutes and actually specifically state what he is looking for. but he hinted to reporters that he wants something related to border security added to this package. even more specifically, something about the border wall. now, he hasn't told us exactly what he wants that to be, but our ted barrett saw him walking through the halls of congress with big posterboards, which he's going to use to try and build his case. now, this is something that's already been rejected. he actually had an amendment on the floor earlier today that was turned down. he then asked for some different proposal to be put into what they call the manager's package, which is kind of a group of all these amendments that are put together to kind of push through at the last minute. they decided not to do that. so that's kind of what has him angry here and why he's held up this process. don, he could hold up the process for quite a while. you know, there's a certain amount of time, you know, hours,
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we're talking up to 30 hours that they have to debate this bill, where he could just kind of keep everything held up until they get through that process, till he gets what he wants. he told reporters that we're going to be here for a long time tonight, until there's some sort of resolution. so does that mean that lawmakers decide they're just going to try to abandon plans for tonight, come back tomorrow with a fresh set of eyes and get everything done, or do they plow through into tonight to try and get it done? that's what we're waiting to find out right now. >> well, there you go, ryan. hope you ate your wheaties and you got some coffee on hand. thank you, sir. i appreciate it. let's bring in now cnn senior political analyst kirsten powers and brandon buck, a former top aide to paul ryan and john boehner. good evening to both of you. i mean here we go again. what is -- kirsten, what is ron johnson doing?
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>> you know, i -- i -- >> you're at a loss for words? >> he's another person whose head i cannot get inside of. but it really is -- this whole thing is just completely horrifying and depressing really. earlier when i was watching the replay, you know, as we've seen it so many times of what happened on january 6th, and really just sitting back and thinking, wow, the republican party really thinks that this doesn't need to be investigated. it's just -- it's just incredible to try to get your mind around that, that they are actually willing to not only get to the bottom of it in terms of holding people accountable, but don't even seem to want to prevent it from happening again, despite the fact that you have the mother of somebody who was killed going around and meeting with them, and they're not moved by it because it's all political. and for some reason, this can't be tolerated by the republican base. >> well, brendan, think about that. that was a similar question i
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was going to ask you. you have the mom up there, brian sicknick's mother lost her son. i mean there's no good reason why the senate gop would block a bipartisan commission to investigate something that they believe that they were right on it or even if they believe it didn't happen or if they believed it was antifa, or whatever they believe, wouldn't they want to get to the bottom of it? >> yeah, and republican senators have shown, ron johnson in particular, that they have no problem investigating things, whether it's benghazi or hunter biden or the origins of the russia investigation. but they're actually being quite upfront. you hear plenty of interviews with senators who are telling you very clearly they're making a political calculation. forget about everything else. they are making a decision that they think that having a commission will remind voters next year about what happened, and that is bad for their chances to take back the majority. and it's really as simple as that. all of the other arguments are for window dressing. i guess credit to them for being honest about that in some ways,
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but i actually really question whether that is actually a helpful viewpoint. there's still going to be investigations in congress. now they're just going to be entirely led by the democratic majority instead of having a true independent outside commission. so they're still going to have to confront this issue, so i think it's a little shortsighted to think you can just sort of push it off. >> look, kirsten, i know that republicans are embarrassed by this, and who wouldn't be? i mean look at the pictures. they should be embarrassed. >> right. >> it's embarrassing. there's no other way to put it. every time i look at this video, i keep thinking, wow, if i ever have to go on a tourist, you know, visit like that, then i don't think i ever want to be a tourist again. you could lose your life being a tourist. to think that mitch mcconnell went as far as asking wavering senators to kill it as a personal favor to him, i mean
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what are they so afraid of? >> well, mitch mcconnell cares about one thing, and that's about winning, winning elections. and it's clear that he doesn't care about anything else. and so that's what they're afraid of. they're afraid of not winning elections and, you know, he's afraid of losing the majority. i'm sorry. my dog is having a fit because she's been locked out of my office. i'm sorry if people can hear that in the background. i have a diva dog. yeah, i think that's the bottom line, and that's -- look, i always say i'm not surprised when there's politics in washington. but there are times that people have to rise above it, and this is certainly one of them. and it's such a momentous, historic, horrific event and act that occurred, and it could occur again. and that's -- that's the main thing, i think, is getting to the bottom of this and trying to understand how we can prevent something like this from happening again. and frankly, the republicans just don't seem concerned about that in the slightest.
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you know, they're perfectly willing, i guess, to put people in danger and not get to the bottom of how a police officer was killed and many people were injured. >> brendan, tonight this is what i've been -- when i said at the beginning, i want to talk to you about this, i want to talk to your old boss, the house speaker paul ryan only now speaking out against the former president and his grip on the party. but also tonight you have matt gaetz holding a trump-style america first rally. watch this. >> it was horrifying to see a presidency come to such a dishonorable and disgraceful end. so once again, we conservatives find ourselves at a crossroads. and here's the reality that we have to face. if the conservative cause depends on the populist appeal of one personality or of second-rate imitations, then we're not going anywhere.
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>> taking advice on party-building from paul ryan would be like taking advice on how to interact with your in-laws from meghan markle. >> these made for tv sound bites, oh, that gotcha. it's so childish and idiotic. listen, it's glaring to see two republican parties here. that's what's going on. paul ryan, though, is not the future of the gop. it's people like gaetz and marjorie taylor greene. so what gives here? i mean paul ryan speaking out, i'm sure you're glad that he's doing it, but that could have happened a long time ago. but gaetz and marjorie taylor greene, that's where the party is. >> yeah. i don't think he's trying to be the future of the party. i think he has had two years out of office and is able to see from a distance and outside of the pressure of being in the speaker's office the direction we're heading and has some thoughts on it and is sharing
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them. look, matt gaetz and marjorie taylor greene are certainly the superstars of the moment in some quarters. but this is a path to being a party in the wilderness forever if those are the people that we are highlighting in our party. i think the message from the speaker -- former speaker tonight was, look, we can have these cultural skirmishes and we can get hits and clicks if we want. but you need to have some grounding principles in which you believe, and we are so far from that right now. i know there's probably a lot of people on the far right who roll their eyes at that. but, look, a party needs to be built on some belief set, and we are so far from a belief set right now that it's so easy to get characterized. look, we're in the minority in the house, the senate, lost the white house because most people think we're crazy right now, because most people think we believe in qanon and support
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violent insurrections. look, we just need to get back to having, you know, a clear world view, and i think that's really all he's trying to say right now. he knows that one speech isn't going to change anythings, you know some good speechwriters. you probably should give it to matt gaetz because those dad jokes are not good. thank you very much. go get your dog, kirsten. i want tbrl historian jon meacham, host of the podcast fate of fact. he occasionally advises president biden as well. jon, thank you. good to see you. let's talk about the senate gop. they're choosing trump and insurrectionists over finding the truth. that's what your podcast is about. that's what you're doing right now. what does this mean for our democracy, jon, as we watch live pictures of the senate floor? >> it's potentially fatal, which is not something i would have said five years ago. i think the conversation about
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what speaker ryan has said and occasional voices is a lot too little, a lot too late. this is no longer about a fringe having a disproportionate influence. this is about the fringe dominating and now organically taking over the mainstream of one of our two major parties to the point where it's no longer a mainstream. it is, in fact, a trump party. and the problem for the rest of us is that because of the way the constitution is seleoral college, because of the organic constitutional developments since the 1790s, we need two functioning, rational, major parties to have a politics that's about the mediation of differences and the struggle for a temporary dominion in the arena. and you propose your solution,
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you fight for it, you implement it, you see if it works, and then you take it back to the people. that's the way this is supposed to work. right now we have lost half of that universe, and i'm not being alarmist. again, five years ago, i was quoting richard hoffstetter and the paranoid style in american politics, and there's always been a populist element and joe mccarthy and george wallace and huey long and ross perot and pat buchanan. we could spend the rest of the week with my boring you with the historical prologues to this moment. the difference is all of those moments were differences of degree from a consensus and a rational governing strategy as opposed to kind. and right now this is a difference of kind. having mitch mcconnell, who has given his life to republican power, but it was republican, and it was republican in the
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sense of eisenhower and nixon and ford and reagan and the bushes. he's now using all of his formidable skills, whatever you think about what he does with them, there's never been a more powerful senate majority leader including lyndon johnson than mitch mcconnell. he sing of single-handedly shifted american jurisprudence for the next half century, and what he's doing tonight is he is standing in the way of truth, of finding out how we had the most perilous hour for our democracy since ft. sumter. >> let me ask you this since you mention that. investigating an attack on our democracy that threatened their very lives should be an easy path to bipartisanship, jon. with tonight's vote, though, it seems like that we're going to know exactly how many republicans are willing to work with president biden.
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does that -- does he need to recalculate how he deals with republicans, or is he sort of locked in or blocked in here -- boxed in is a better way of putting it. >> yeah, i think he's doing it organically. i think he's reaching out where he can, and if they want to be part of solving problems and be part of the arena, they're welcome. but i think the people ultimately -- we don't really count in this because of our obsession with these things. but most people want to know, what have you done for me and my interests? and so as long as the president keeps delivering for them, i don't think people particularly care how he gets there. >> mm-hmm. >> so i don't think there's a reason for any kind of course correction. i think he learned a lesson. i don't know this for a fact, but my sense is that he learned a lesson from the obama years when obama thought he had a
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rational actor on the other side, and then folks like speaker boehner and others ultimately couldn't deliver the caucus. and i think that he's learned from that and is -- because of the voters of georgia, he's able to get some stuff done in this two-year period, and then we'll see what happens in 2022. >> president biden ran on uniting the country, reaching across the aisle, appealing to country over party. he has been trying, but is he losing that narrative now? >> i don't think he's losing the narrative. i think he's trying and they're not playing, and that's not his fault. >> mm-hmm. >> i think the thread of the argument of the biden campaign and the administration seems pretty clear to me, which is he believes we're in a fundamental struggle for the future of democracy versus autocracy. he says this all the time. autocracy means the rule of the one in greek, and that could be
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one party, one idea, or one person, who happens to have taken over a party. and so i think that at least from what i can tell from the polling data, the country thinks he's working hard for them. he's -- they're incredibly relieved they don't have to wake up every morning and wonder what the hell happened the night before in the white house. that's a big thing. so i think, you know, he's my friend, and i try to help him when he asks. so take it for what it's worth, but this has been a really good -- let me put it this way. given the way presidencies tend to get in trouble pretty fast, he hasn't, and this one hasn't. history will happen. trouble will come. it always does. but steady as she goes. >> trouble won't last always, though. that's an old saying. trouble don't last always.
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>> getting all biblical. >> jon meacham, it's always a pleasure having you on. enjoy your weekend. thank you, sir. >> you too. we've got more on everything happening on the senate floor tonight, and there it is live. so we're going to continue to follow this. republicans are all but certain to kill the january 6th commission before it's even begun. all but certain, but maybe there's a chance? i don't know. will any of them do the right thing and stand up for the truth? we'll talk about it. but, when grease and limescale build up, it's not as hygienic as you think. use finish dishwasher cleaner its dual-action formula tackles grease and limescale. finish. clean dishwasher. clean dishes.
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we're watching for the senate vote on the january 6th commission. republicans are poised to block it. joining me now to discuss is democratic congressman joe neguse. he's a member of the house judiciary committee. thank you for joining. i brappreciate it. i know you guys have a lot of work. you've been working hard, so i'm glad you're here. senate republicans expected to block the january 6th commission tonight. it's bshocking but not surprisig quite frankly. as mrs. sicknick said today, how can they not do the right thing, congressman? >> it's good to be with you, don. i agree with her. i think the way you framed the question tonight is the right way, which is will any of the republican senators stand up and do the right thing? and i suspect that we're soon going to find out the answer to that question. i, like so many americans, am
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aghast at the way in which senate republicans as well as the vast majority of house republicans have handled this particular issue. obviously as you know, january 6th was one of the darkest days in our country's history. our temple of democracy was attacked by insurrectionists. multiple people died. over 140 members of law enforcement were physically harmed, including lives lost as you mentioned. the life of officer sicknick. and to think that the senate republicans would respond by ignoring the truth of what happened that day and reject an attempt to create a nonpartisan, independent commission to ultimately investigate the events of january 6th, it's -- it's beyond frustrating, don, and i'm hopeful that a few more republicans tonight, that we can have ten republicans that ultimately will stand up for truth, choose country over party, and do the right thing. but time will tell. >> you know as a lawmaker, when people ask for favors, they say this is important to my district and constituents, and i need
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something at a local level. do you think it's proper, or should the minority leader, mitch mcconnell, should he be asking for personal favors when it comes to something so critical to our democracy? how would you interpret that? >> i think it's ludicrous. again, to think of -- the peaceful transfer of power is sacrosanct in our country, and to think that the minority leader would be engaging in that kind of conduct as it relates to this particular vote and this commission, i think is just beyond troubling. look, i also think, don, it's reflective of the fact that there really is no cogent reason for them to oppose this commission. it is purely political. it is a political calculus that the minority leader has made, and he's not even attempting to create a veneer of responsibility at this point, instead just being very blunt that it's a political calculation on his part. and i don't think the american people should tolerate it. >> senator joe manchin is furious at republicans voting on
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the commission, but again today defending his position on the filibuster, saying that he's not ready to destroy our democracy. is the country headed for gridlock if the filibuster stays? >> i think so, don. i think that eventually the senate democratic caucus will have to step forward and reform the filibuster. and for those who claim that the filibuster somehow protects bipartisanship in this esoteric way, i would just point them to this particular episode. i mean the reality of reflecting on what the filibuster is attempting to prevent in this instance. it's preventing consideration potentially of a bipartisan -- nonpartisan, rather, commission approved by the way in the house with the votes of 35 republicans, and ultimately it sounds like there will be at least four or five republican senator who's will do the right thing and vote for this commission as well. so the notion of the filibuster is protecting or somehow encouraging bipartisanship couldn't be further from the truth. it is time to end the filibuster in my view and in the view of many of my colleagues in the
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house, and i suspect the senate democratic caucus, if mitch mcconnell ultimately proceeds with a filibuster on the january 6th commission, i suspect that the position that has been the case in the senate of not moving forward with any kind of reform of the filibuster will simply be untenable. >> a lot of legislation is being held captive to the filibuster, including gun safety, especially glaring in a week when we're seeing another mass shooting, this time in san jose. can this afford to wait, congressman? >> no, it can't, don. and of course i mean the last time i was with you on your program was in the days after a tragic mass shooting in my community of boulder, colorado, where we tragically lost ten lives in another senseless mass shooting. in the ensuing eight weeks, we've had tragic incidents of mass shootings across our today including san jose, another community ravaged by the epidemic of gun violence. it is yet another example of why the filibuster has to be
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eliminated, so that we can ultimately make progress on these consequential issues that face us. my constituents are tired of inaction, tired of excuses. we know that we can save lives if the senate would simply take up the legislation that the house has passed repeatedly. >> congressman, always a pleasure. thank you so much. >> thank you, don. a new dhs warning. what they're saying could be a big target for white supremacy. plus congresswoman marjorie taylor greene is bringing up the holocaust again, but her supporters don't seem to mind. >> you don't need me to tell you. a lot of people don't like greene. >> that's okay because you know what? a lot of people didn't like jesus christ.
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a warning tonight from the department of homeland security about monday's 100th anniversary of the tulsa, oklahoma, race massacre. a dhs bulletin cautions that events commemorating the anniversary are potential targets for racial violence by white supremacists. that as president joe biden's traveling to tulsa on monday to honor black residents of the city's greenwood district who were attacked and killed by a white mob on memorial day in 1921. so let's talk more about this with cnn's senior law enforcement analyst andrew mccabe, the former fbi deputy
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director, the author of "the threat: how the fbi protects america in the age of terror and trump." andrew, good evening. >> good evening. >> how seriously is the department of homeland security treating these threats, and what will they be looking for? >> well, don, i think what we're seeing here is the department of homeland security is now thinking about and treating threats from domestic extremists in the same way that we have thought about and handled threats from foreign terrorists, foreign extremists over the last decade or so. and that is, i think, a very positive development. we know that the department of homeland security and the fbi both believe that the threat from domestic, right-wing, white supremacist extremists ask the most serious terror threat that we face in this country today. so they are thinking about it along the same lines.
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we also know that terrorists and extremists sometimes are motivated by dates that they believe are symbolic to their cause, right? so timothy mcveigh, the worst act of domestic terrorism/extremism, timothy mcveigh plotted his attack on the federal building in oklahoma city to coincide with the anniversary of the siege on waco several years before. you know, the benghazi attack took place on september 11th, 2012. so these symbolic dates sometimes have significance in those extremist communities, so i think what dhs is doing right now is, you know, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. they're trying to be careful, keep everybody thinking in the right direction. >> the homeland security secretary just yesterday, alejandro mayorkas said the most urgent threat in the u.s. is domestic violent extremism. he's also highlighted the danger of white supremacist extremists. what do you see as the reasons
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for that, andrew? >> i think the reasons are all around us, don. we ah saw all of those things c to life on january 6th. we are unfortunately living in a time when our right-wing, white supremacist, anti-immigration extremists have been really mobilized and inspired by the acceptance and the failure to confront them that they've received from the former president and from, to some extent, the conservative political movement in this country. so there has absolutely been a rise in violence from groups like the boogaloo boys and the oath keepers and the proud boys. you know, there's a reason we're talking about all these folks right now. it's because they've been on the move, and we're seeing increased incidents of violence, and that really came to a head on january 6th. so i think that our law enforcement and homeland security folks are doing the right thing by getting people to think about the threats that we
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might be facing. >> okay. so you think that they have -- following the january 6th insurrection, law enforcement officials, you think they've been able to get better intelligence when it comes to these kinds of threats? >> i hope so. i think that, you know, my bigger concern, don, is that we went into january 6th not thinking about the threat from these groups in the way that we should have been thinking about them. i think that there was -- you know, i would love to see a commission investigate this in a real and, you know, penetrating way. but my biggest concern is that there was information, there was intelligence that just wasn't taken seriously enough. so i see things like the bulletin that dhs is talking about in terms of the anniversary of the tulsa massacre as a sign that they are trying to be more proactive, trying to be more sensitive about the threats that they think are out there. it's a good thing for us. >> it's interesting you say
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that, that it wasn't taken seriously by the experts or the people in charge of security because the average layperson -- and we have been sitting here saying, this is dangerous, this is dangerous. something is bound to happen. we hope it doesn't, but if you look at what's happening online, the attacks that people are facing, it's just surprising that our intelligence officials or that law enforcement didn't see it coming when the average person could absolutely see that it was a powder keg. >> yeah. it's absolutely surprising. it's really concerning, and that is why we need a legitimate inquiry into what was happening here, right? we need some group to go in and say, what information did our law enforcement folks have before the riot? what did they think about it? what did they do about it? how did they communicate that information to their colleagues and other agencies to really peel back whether or not there were biases involved in the way
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they thought about that intelligence? we know they thought very seriously about the black lives matter protests the summer before. there was a massive show of force to try to make sure we had, you know -- there weren't instances of civil discord. well, where was that response on january 6th? how did we think about the information we had prior to january 6th? we're not going to know the answer to those questions until somebody goes inside those agencies and takes a look at the intelligence they had leading up to the event. >> andrew mccabe, thank you so much. i appreciate your time. thank you. >> thanks, don. cnn is taking a closer look at what happened during the tulsa race massacre. make sure you watch the new cnn film, dreamland: the burning of black wall street, monday, 9:00 p.m. i've seen it. it's excellent. next, marjorie taylor greene likening democrats to nazis at a rally tonight. >> nazis.
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so the big lie front and center tonight as the matt gaetz and marjorie taylor greene road show rolled into dalton, georgia. rally goers showing up to hear two of the former president's biggest supporters, and greene made it clear that she has learned nothing from the blowback over her comments about
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the holocaust, hitting a new low with this comparison. >> you know, nazis were the national socialist party just like the democrats are now a national socialist party. >> okay. let's bring in cnn correspondent donie o'sullivan, who was there tonight. so more on the embarrassment hit list for the republicans in marjorie taylor greene. she clearly feels there's no consequences in using holocaust and nazi comparisons. >> reporter: that's right, don. i will just say from being to trump rallies, from watching a lot of trump rallies over the years, you know, trump normally sort of whas punch lines and tries to do jokes and bits essentially, skits. what i found striking tonight was just the real unbridled
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hate. there was no really masking of it. even before greene came onstage, in her constituency tonight, gaetz was out there, and he didn't shy away from this issue. he spoke about them directly. have a listen. >> they call marjorie an anti-semite. if marjorie is an anti-semite, she is terrible at it because she is one of the most pro-israel members of congress to have ever served. it is so offensive that the establishment in washington, d.c. think they know better than you, think they know better than the people of north georgia. >> so you can clearly see there that gaetz and greene are two peas in a pod on this issue. he's out there vigorously defending her. >> okay. so, donie, rally goers are eating it up too, right? >> reporter: absolutely. take a listen to one woman we
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spoke to who was on her way into the event tonight. you don't need me to tell you a lot of people don't like greene. >> that's okay because you know what? a lot of people didn't like jesus christ. >> greene got in a lot of trouble this week for comments about the holocaust. >> you know what? we're all imperfect, aren't we? we all -- >> do you think she should apologize? >> um, actually, i don't know exactly what was said that -- about the holocaust, as to what she said. >> she spared covid restrictions to the holocaust. >> well, i can understand that when mengele, the nazi, and how he used children and people to experiment with experimental drugs. >> so you're talking about the vaccine? >> yes. >> reporter: and don, just the point i was trying to make to that lady is obviously this
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comparison is ridiculous but it's so historically inaccurate. i mean the vaccines, the leaders, even trump himself has taken the vaccine. the nazis weren't doing experimental drugs on themselves, but it just falls on deaf ears. >> but doesn't trump like to take credit for the vaccine, and so therefore if anybody would be experimenting, it would be trump if you believe -- i -- okay. i'm not even going to try on this one. donie, i want everyone to watch this moment. this is from greene. >> the cartels love the democrats. yeah, they're down there. they're like this. they're like, we're making a lot of money off of biden, joe biden. that's my really bad mexican accent. oh, they love him. >> so how did the crowd respond
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to this ignorance? >> reporter: they ate it all up. just -- they loved it. the crowd went wild just to that sort of totally unnecessary, you know, display of ignorance and insulation there. >> donie, thank you. i appreciate it. one heck of a job. thank you very much. we'll be right back, everyone. i knew there would be a lot of orders to fill and i wanted them to ship out fast that's why i chose shipstation shipstation helps manage orders reduce shipping costs and print out shipping labels it's my secret ingredient shipstation the number 1 choice of online sellers and wolfgang puck go to shipstation.com/tv and get 2 months free tony here from creditrepair.com taking to the streets to talk about credit. and wolfgang puck can you repair your credit yourself? yes. -great. how?
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okay. so the senate's still in session tonight. republicans all but certain to block the bill to create the january 6th commission to get to the truth of what happened on one of the darkest days in american history. the vote likely to come deep into the night. we will keep an eye on it, so make sure you stay close, stay tuned to cnn. i want to wish you all a great memorial day weekend. stay safe. have fun. enjoy your friends and family, and thank you for watching, everyone. our coverage continues.
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and sometimes the hardest thing about homework is finding a place to do it. so why not hook community centers up with wifi? for kids like us, and all the amazing things we're gonna learn. over the next 10 years, comcast is committing $1 billion to reach 50 million low-income americans with the tools and resources they need to be ready for anything. i hope you're ready. 'cause we are.
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♪ a crucial vote on the january 6th commission is now in limbo as republicans tie up the senate floor overnight. we will bring you the latest. plus, olympic determination. the organizers of the tokyo games say they will go ahead, despite a ground swell of critical voices. and remembering the victims, tributes to the nine people killed in the mass shooting in san jose. live from cnn world headquarters in atlanta, welcome to all of you watching here in the united states, canada and around the world, i'm kim brunhub.
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