tv Tucker Carlson Tonight FOX News May 22, 2018 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT
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mrs. debbie lesko. thank you. dan lapinski. thanks, dan. >> we're going to continue listening to the president at the campaign for life gala here in washington. >> oh, this man is from central casting. don't know him well, but i'll get to know him. john rutherford, where is john? central casting. great job, john. he's always defending me. actually most of you are always defending me. and from my neck of the woods, claudia heney. thank you, claudia. thank you. for those many that i've left out, i'm sorry. but i say give me a totally complete list, and i will call
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you tomorrow and apologize personally. all right? every day between now and november we must work together to elect more lawmakers who share our values, cherish our heritage, and proudly stand for life. and that is a great group of people i introduced, i can tell you that. we're also glad to be joined by a beloved member of my administration, a true fighter for faith and family, and your 2018 distinguished leader kellyanne conway. kellyanne. what a job he's done. what a job she's done. [cheers and applause]
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she is some fighter. she'll do the shows that nobody else dares go near. they'll say do this one or do that one. no problem, sir. others say, do you think i could take a pass, please? great going, kellyanne. what a help. finally to all the friends, activists and supporters of the life movement, who are here this evening, so many, this is a record crowd, your hard work helped us to achieve this historic victory, our historic victory, one of the great victories of all time in politics, that beautiful, beautiful evening in november. remember that evening? could it have been more beautiful? [cheers and applause] 2016. oh, that november 8th, 2016.
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on other side you had some very unhappy campers. they were not happy. they were going to have a big beautiful party. didn't turn out be such a good thing. now for the first time since roe v. wade america has a pro-life president, a pro-life vice president, a pro-life house of representatives, and 25 pro-life republican state capitols. that's pretty good. wow. that is pretty good. when i ran for office, i pledged to stand for life. as president, that's exactly what i've done. i have kept my promise and i think everybody here understands
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that. one of my very first acts as president was to reinstate the mexico city policy to prevent taxpayer dollars from funding abortion centers overseas. [applause] a few months later with marjorie in the oval office, she signed legislation to overturn the rule to fund for abortions with taxpayer dollars. marjorie was there with me. we have defended a number of judges who will defend the constitution and interpret the law as rin.
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written. [applause] we're putting on to the bench a record number of judges and in a short period of time we are going to have probably the all-time record for the appointment of judges. i'm very excited about that. my administration is also taking bold action to protect religious liberty. today we're making another historic announcement. for decades, american taxpayers have been wrongfully forced to subsidize the abortion industry through title x federal funding. today we have kept another promise. my administration has proposed a new rule to prohibit title x funding from going to any clinic that performs abortions.
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the house just passed a bill, but democrats in the senate are doing everything within their power to block it, although some are actually on our side, but they are working overtime to block it. so the story is '18 midterms, we need republicans, and that will happen. [applause] on this issue, like so many other issues, the democratic party is far outside the american mainstream. far outside. the united states is one of only seven countries in the world to allow elective abortions after 20 weeks when unborn babies can truly feel the pain, yet democratic senators like jon tester, heidi highcamp, claire
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mccaskill, all voted against the 20-week bill, and in favor of late-term abortion. we're nine votes away from passing the 20-week abortion bill in the senate. we have to get them out there. the democratic senators are up for re-election in 10 states that i won by a lot. i think we're doing very well. we have some of those folks that are running right now, and they're doing very, very well. i have a big, big surprise in six months. big, beautiful surprise. if we work hard between now and november every one these states can be flipped to a senator who shares our values and votes our agenda. democrats like to campaign as
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moderates at election time, but when they go to washington they always vote for the radical pelosi agenda down the line. can you imagine having nancy pelosi as the speaker of the house? can you imagine? can you imagine? that's why we're putting in place a massive campaign for a midterm victory this november. we will need to elect more members of congress who will protect life, support our military, secure our borders, and grow our economy and continue making america great again. [cheers and applause] while democrats in washington are resisting progress, my administration is delivering progress for hard-working
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americans each and every day, and we're doing some job. since the election, we have created more than 3.3 million new jobs. [applause] if i would have said that prior to the election those people back there -- you know who that is, right? that's called the fake news, fake news. they would have said, what a ridiculous statement. he's saying he's going to project 3.3 million new jobs. how ridiculous is that? guess what. we did it. fake news. something i'm proud of, african american unemployment is at the lowest level in history.
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[cheers and applause] hispanic unemployment is likewise at the lowest level in history. women unemployment is at the lowest level in 19 years. [applause] something you haven't heard for 21 years, wages are rising at the fastest pace in more than -- they said 21. i did hear 19. i have to be very accurate, folks. let's put it this way. wages are rising at a very fast level.
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very. [applause] got to be careful. if i was off by a week and a half, th it's a headline tomorr. we got him now. [laughter] something very important small business optimism is the highest that it's ever been. our great ways and means chairman kevin brady joins us tonight, has done an incredible job. thank you, kevin. with his leadership, republicans passed the biggest tax cuts, and reform, in american history. we doubled the child tax credit.
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we're going to be with kevin, the entire group, submitting additional tax cuts sometime prior to november. it's going to be special. you see what it's done for the country. it's going to be something very, very special. by the way, nancy pelosi and the group, you heard her the other day, she wants to raise your taxes they want to get rid of the tax cut bill and raise your taxes. somehow i don't think that plays well, but you never know, right? wants to raise your taxes. my presidential budget was the first in the history to include a proposal for nationwide paid family leave.
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we want to honor the invaluable time parents spend with their newborn children. foreign affairs, you've been reading a lot about foreign affairs, getting high marks in foreign affairs actually, we are as a country respected again. [applause] it's been a long time. because we've restored american strength and confidence. our military, and we just had it approved, $700 billion. it's historic funding for our great military. [applause] $700 billion. and we have left the horrible one-sided miserable iran deal. it's gone.
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[cheers and applause] one of the worst deals ever negotiated. we get nothing. we get nothing. we moved our embassy to jerusalem. [cheers and applause] if democrats gain power, they will try to reverse these incredible gains. these are historic gains. they will try to reverse many of them. so your vote in 2018 is every bit as important as your vote in
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2016. although i'm not sure i really believe that, but, you know -- [laughter] i don't know who the hell wrote that line. i'm not sure. [laughter] but it's still important, remember. that's why we will be campaigning for every last vote in every part of our great country. we will be campaigning for the votes of all americans, whether they're registered as democrats, and we got of democrats voting for us, as you know, in '16. they couldn't believe it. they could not believe it. we got a lot of barack obama voters voting for us. we got a lot of bernie sanders voting for us. can you believe it? mostly people that didn't like
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getting ripped off on trade. bernie sanders, he was right about that, but he wasn't able to do anything about it. these are people that want a government that protects faith, family, and life. just four republican candidates i helped raise a record-breaking $175 million for the republican national committee. nobody has ever been close. as part of our unprecedenteddest, our great vice president, a true leader in the pro-life movement, mike has been a true leader, has been working to elect more and more republicans.
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we will appeal to voters all across america who previously sent a democrat to washington only to discover they elected a proxy vote for chuck schumer and nancy pelosi. these are people that don't believe in borders, don't believe in fighting crime, don't believe in a strong military. they don't believe in what the people in this room believe, that i can tell you. so we have to do a great job. if democrats ever gain power they would try to put up the taxes so many things, open those borders. they don't want walls. they don't want people stopping. the other day, just the other day, nancy pelosi came out in
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favor of ms-13. that's the first time i've heard that. she wants them to be treated with respect, as do other democrats. that's not going to be happening. we're not going to release violent criminals into our country. we're going to shut down everything we have to shut down, and we're going to open up the great american energy. we are going to open up our energy. all fairness, that's already happened. we are now a net exporter of energy for the first time. we all know what a democratic majority would mean, especially for the people in this room on the supreme court. these are the stakes on election day. this is why you need to fight for victory in november.
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we can't be complacent. what happens historically, a tremendous percentage of the time, you win the presidential election, you become complacent. you're happy. oh, we won. isn't it wonderful? then another election comes up pretty quickly. two years, all of these congressmen can tell you. the senators like their term better. how about changing some of them to two years too? i don't think it's going to be. that would be a tough vote in the senate, wouldn't it? all of a sudden you come up again. and they get complacent. they say, we just won, so we sit back. the other side has energy and they win. it's a tremendous percentage of the time. i honestly don't believe that's going to happen this time. it's starting to show up in the polls. [applause] really don't believe it. every values voter must be
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energized, mobilized, and engaged. you have to get out. this organization bears the name of one of the greatest champions of freedom. in american history, susan b. anthony. she fought for decades to end slavery, to secure women's right to vote, and to respect the dignity of every single person. a great person, a great woman was she. now we have a chance to honor her legacy and restore the first right in the declaration of independence called the right-to-life. here with us this evening are lisa and bruce alexander and
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their family from gaithersburg, maryland. good place. in january of 2012 the alexanders attended the march for life and god put it in their hearts to adopt a beautiful child. two years later in january of 2014, alexanders got a call that a baby had been born who was opiod dependent. she desperately needed a loving home. she was in serious, serious trouble. the alexanders welcomed her into their home with wide-open arms. [applause] after the baby was treated for
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opiod withdrawal, they brought home their new and very beautiful daughter katherine. hi, katherine. hi. [applause] come on up here, katherine. come on up. katherine is 4 years old. she's full of incredible energy, spirit and talent at the age of 2 -- come on up, katherine -- she memorized "america the beautiful." she recites poetry. recently she announced to her dad that when she grows up she wants to be a famous police officer, and then when she gets tired of that she wants to become president. that's okay with me. [applause]
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she'll be president some day. every time katherine's older siblings come home from school, katherine runs into their arms and gives them a great big beautiful hug. they're amazed by how much she loves them and how much they love her. tonight we celebrate you, katherine. we celebrate your life. thank you, darling. [applause] we celebrate all lives. we celebrate the loving choice
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of adoption. katherine reminds us that every life is sacred, and that every child is a precious give from god. so true. [applause] as the lord says? jeremiah, before i formed you in the womb, i knew you. before you were born, i set you apart. when a mother and father hold a new baby in their arms, they are changed forever. when a child says mommy or daddy for the first time there's nothing like it anywhere in the world no matter what you do there's nothing like it. when parents watch their children thrive and grow, they're filled with a joy beyond words and a love beyond measure. you know that.
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thank you very much. when we stand for life, we stand for the true source of america's greatness. it's our people. our people are great. it's the people who grace our lives, who sustain our communities, and who make america a nation, a home, and this magnificent land that we all love so much. as long as we have faith in our citizens, confidence in our values, and trust in our god, then we will never ever fail. [applause] our nation will thrive, our people will prosper, and america will be greater than ever before. and that's what's happening.
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so this november vote for family. vote for love. vote for faith. vote for values. vote for country. vote for life. [cheers and applause] i want to just end by thanking the susan b. anthony list. you are very, very special people. it's a great honor for me to be here tonight. thank you to everyone. thank you to life and liberty. god bless you and god bless america. thank you very much. thank you. [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ >> that was the rolling stones in the background, of course, that was president trump speaking at the campaign for
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life gala in washington, d.c. good evening. welcome to the show. you just heard from the president. right now, though, we have a rare firsthand account from the center of maybe the greatest scandal in modern political history, the fbi spying on the 2016 trump campaign for nearly two years. obama administration officials and their do you telliful lackeys in the press denied that happened. now we do know that it happened. the obama administration used government agency to survey a rival campaign. there's no denying that. so instead the usual apologists are claiming it was a good thing, in fact, spying on trump to protect him. by the way, you have no right to know anything about it. even asking questions, a sign of disloyalty, shut up and obey. no thanks. tonight we have a direct account of what happened, the first full interview with a trump campaign official apparently targeted by an fbi spy. tim clovis was a former national co-chairman of the trump campaign. in 2016, he had a face-to-face meeting with a man believed to
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be with one of the fbi spies on that campaign. sam clovis joins us. thanks for coming on. >> thanks for having me on. >> you believe you had a face-to-face encounter. describe that meeting. >> several days before the september 1st meeting i had an opportunity to receive emails from steven halper, saying he knew carter page, and asked for a sit-down with me. he wanted to come in and discuss foreign policy and to provide some -- what he thought might be his -- some of his writings that would be able to contribute, help us, in the campaign. i arranged that meeting. we had that meeting in washington, d.c. on the 1st of september. it lasted about an hour. had the opportunity to discuss over coffee with him his
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research, and it was mostly focused on china. then i think after that meeting, and then on the 27th of september i received an email from him with several attachments. i can be honest with you, tucker, i haven't even opened those attachments to this day. i have no idea what was in them, but mostly papers titled that dealt with china. i think he used my meeting as a -- using my meeting as a bona fide with george papadopoulos, to have a meeting with him, that i did not know about, that was subsequent to my meeting with him on the 1st of september. >> so you didn't know him before? he emailed you cold? >> no, i did not. i just got the email that asked for the meeting, and he used the fact that he knew carter page. >> right. >> of course carter had been associated with our campaign. >> at what point did you begin
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to suspect he was working for the fbi, seeking to gather information surreptitiously on the campaign? >> well, our meeting was like two faculty members in the faculty lounge. i didn't think any of it until i started to see the reporting that came out recently. then i started to put two and two together. then it made sense to me that he was probing to find a weak spot in our campaign, someone who might be vulnerable to connecting things back to those elusive 30,000 emails that supposedly the russians had. i really think that's what his task was, was to create an audit trail back to those emails from someone in the campaign or someone associated with the campaign so that they could develop a stronger case for probable cause to continue to issue warrants and to further an investigation. i really felt after hearing all of these other things, listening to the reports that i've read,
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that this truly was an effort to build something that did not exist. i really think that was what his mission was. >> why haven't you read the attachments to his emails? >> well, one, i was busy. i worked 16-20 hours a day. we already had a lot of help on foreign policy in areas of china. i really didn't think they were going to contribute to anything. frankly, i've gone back and reviewed all my emails. i didn't report that meeting to anyone in the campaign, so the meeting was of no consequence to me as far as anything you could remember. i've looked through all of my personal emails, everything, and i can't find a record of it at all. >> interesting. that meeting may have played a key role in a much larger story. sam, thank you for that account. appreciate it. >> thanks for having me on tonight, tucker. appreciate it. >> thank you. the message of recent news coverage is pretty simple. you need to trust the fbi, the
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doj, the intelligence community, demanding any congressional oversight of any kind is evidence of treason. a longtime cia counterterrorism officer in the middle east, pakistan, all over the world, he was imprisoned for a couple of years by the obama administration for leaking information. during the course of that, his life intersected with robert mueller and john brennan, among others. thanks a lot for coming on. >> thanks for having me. >> you wrote a book about your time in prison. not much has been written about your intersection with brennan and mueller. tell us what you learned. >> robert mueller i had a more recent encounter with, when he created a task force. he was with the fbi at the time. i had no idea that he was under investigation.
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when i went public on the cia's torture program, the bush administration investigated me and determined that i hadn't committed a crime. they closed the case. a few weeks later, when barack obama became president, john brennan became the number two at the national security council, and he asked the justice department, eric holder, to secretory reopen the case against me. that went to robert mueller, and he created a task force -- >> you're telling me john brennan, who has a documented history of leaking to the press, asked for an investigation into you, which resulted you into going to prison with five kids, because you leaked. >> exactly. when i said that to my attorneys, the only response they could come up with is that's washington. the injustice is incredible. this is why i'm so happy to have this opportunity to speak with you tonight, because i know robert mueller, john brennan, and this is what they do, set out to ruin people. we look at the indictments in
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this called russiagate, that has nothing to do whatsoever with russia, by the way, and none of the indictments have anything to do with anything, they're what you call throw-away indictments. you have robert mueller who chooses a person, and then looks for a crime to hang on the person rather than discovering a crime and then investigating to see who committed the crime. >> i can't get past the fact that john brennan, again, with whom you worked for years, who we know leaked to the press classified information, adjudicated for you to go to prison because he said you leaked. >> it was worse than that. once i was arrested, we received discovery from the justice department, we received several memos between john brennan and the justice department. the first memo said charge him with espionage. the justice department wrote back and says he hasn't committed espionage. brennan wrote back, charge him anyway, and make defend himself.
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he waited until i went bankrupt and then dropped the charges. again, that's what they do. it's a way of exerting pressure that you can't resist. they have unlimited resources and you don't. >> we don't have time to get into the details your case. it's easily available online. i followed it because i'm a journalist. i wish more journalists reported you. i think you were shafted. >> thank you. >> i hope you get pardoned, because you deserve it. >> thank you. this president, more than any other president, sees injustice. this president is unique. most presidents when they give pardons it's during a lame duck period after an election. this president pardons people when he sees an injustice. another president did that, and that was abraham lincoln, he pardoned people throughout his entire administration. i'm confident if i can get in front of president trump, he'll see it's an injustice. >> it's an injustice. the fact brennan was behind it
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>> i discourage any discussion of impeachment. on the political side, i think it's a gift to the republicans to talk about impeachment. >> the last thing this country needs is impeachment proceedings that move forward as a matter of course because we don't like the president. >> you can't jump the gun and determine that somebody should be impeached when you're going to be voting on the impeachment issue. it is too early to talk about impeachment. >> they're all lying. the entire democratic party base wants the president impeached. john nichols writes this sort of piece asking why are so many democrats afraid of impeachment? john nichols joins us tonight. john, i don't think with you on much. normally i'd be here arguing
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with you, but i'll give you a sincere compliment, your piece was honest. this is the prescribed remedy for a president that's believed to gone off the rails. i don't believe that. you do. democrats support it. why do you think they're not willing to admit it? >> i think they're playing a political game. you assume they would impeach if they got power. i'm not sure of that. >> huh. >> i think that there is a tepidness about using impeachment as a live instrument of the constitution, holding a president who has, as you suggest, gone off the rails, who i would suggest abuses the office to account. but clearly at this point there's a tremendous pressure on members of the party, and on folks to not talk about impeachment. my sense is that it's problematic. if you are saying that the
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president of the united states has abused his office, if you are suggesting that he's doing things that are clearly impeachable, but then you say, well, but let's not talk about impeachment, that creates an unreality to the discourse, and frankly it's not appropriate. i think that, a, a discussion of impeachment is healthy. i think it's necessary. but b, it's also something that i think politicians of both parties tend to fear too much. >> what i like about it -- again, i'm not for it, but it's aboveboard. it takes place in public. people can make their public arguments. instead they're subverting entire federal agencies, and liberals should be concerned about this. if you have a case, be a man about it, say what it is, voters can assess it. that's why the founders put iting in the documents. why would they pretend it's off the table?
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it seems so feline and dishonest. >> again, i'm not sure they're pretending, tucker. we'll see if democrats get control of the house whether they would move on it. back in the george w. bush presidency there was a significant agitation at the grassroots of the democratic party, and frankly beyond it, among a lot of folks, for impeachment of president bush. >> i remember. >> i know you do, because you followed it. nancy pelosi came to power in 2007, and one of her first signals was able th off the tab. this is a complexity on this issue. where it goes back to, you and i both know, is the clinton impeachment, and there's a sense that the clinton impeachment led to political repercussions for republicans. in fact, if you look at it it, the repercussions are not as much as people assume. the nixon impeachment, not brought to fruition, but a
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serious moment, there weren't political repercussions for the democrats in that. i do think we have a lot of politicians on both sides, republicans and democrats, who avoid accountability moments -- and frankly avoid opening up the discussions when they should be doing so. >> right, exactly. they're avoiding accountability. i have to say -- again, i don't think i agree with you on anything, including what to order the dinner, but i appreciate the honesty of the actual left, you your party to honesty. not a backhanded compliment. >> thanks, tucker. >> brit hume joins us next for fbi spying and the latest twists and turns in the hunt for russian collusion. maybe he has evidence. we'll ask him that.
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>> tucker, don't confuse evidence with a conclusion. evidence gives the fbi and the department of justice -- >> i watch rachael mad doe, i get it, a lot of russians and emails, but where's the proof that this happened? >> i'm only giving the evidence i've seen in an unclassified manner. >> but there must be more classified that you're not allowed to see. we had a lively engagement with him last night. we offered a half hour in order to see proof of russian collusion, and there wasn't any. meanwhile today on "the view," former director of national intelligence, james clapper, who lied to congress on camera, said
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that president trump wasn't being spied on by the obama administration, they were just watching him, and trump ought to them thank for them. >> was the fbi spying on trump's campaign? >> no, they were not. they were spying on, a term i don't particularly like, but on what the russians were doing, trying to understand were the russians infiltrating, trying to gain access, leverage and influence. >> why doesn't he like that? he should be happy about that? >> he should be. >> yeah, he should be grateful that ingrate. we're joined by fox political analyst brit hume. why isn't trump more grateful to hear they were spying on him for his own good? >> interesting to hear clapper say spying, because the defenders in the media and elsewhere have been very careful about using that word, saying it wasn't spying that was going on, it was an informant. but mind you, of course, at that stage this was a
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counterintelligence investigation, which is to say that the fbi was acting in its capacity as a spy agency when they -- when they sent this guy in to see what was -- you know, to see what he could find out within the trump campaign with regard to the russians. pretty hard to argue that. >> you covered watergate. one of the gravest crimes that president nixon was accused of submitting was subverting federal agencies to gather intelligence on his political opponents. journalists were outraged by that. why aren't they outraged now? >> because they rather like the obama administration, and they cannot stand the ground donald trump walks on. that's really what this is about, the anti-tip think to him, the sense in the media and elsewhere that his election constituted a national emergencd
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when it happened everybody's heads exploded. this is where we are. >> doesn't a democracy die in darkness? >> well, of course e o. but the efforts of russia meddling are worth investigating, there's no question about that, but if you're inserting yourself into somebody's campaign, worried about the campaign, as some apologists have stated, wouldn't you say, you got a problem here, you got the russians trying to penetrate you here? that was considered, we now know, and it never happened. >> which is the most telling -- and thank you for reminding us of that -- the most telling detail. brit hume, thank you. the rest of us were distracted by the creepy porn lawyer. the u.s. seems to be lurching toward armed conflict, being debated in congress right now. you haven't seen it anywhere else. we'll see you what's going on. allergies with sinus congestion and pressure?
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making a creepy porn lawyer famous, actual news has happened. the u.s. moving ever closer to war with iran. on monday, they threatened to crush the iranian government. there's a debate right now on capitol hill over legislation that would allow military force against iran. the american military is exhausted. our government is broke, and iran, for all its many faults, is far from the main sponsor of terrors against americans, not even close. maybe you support going to war with iran, it's okay. you should know it could happen much sooner than you think. cnn will not tell you that, so we thought we should. we will follow it no matter how unpopular it is.
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tune in every night at 8:00 p.m. dvr it if you can figure out how that works. email if you do. good night from washington. sean hannity live from new york city. >> thank you. welcome to "hannity." more breaking news. the deep state continues to be exposed and the plot to influence an election and undermine a candidate and the president is one step closer tonight to being wide open. the president is blasts in terms of the fbi and called it, quote, a disgrace to this country. we'll show you the president's comments. plus, the meeting set for chairman devin nunes and chairman tray gowdy to finally, supposedly see the russia probe documents. it's about time but i don't believe them. we'll explain. michael caputo is saying there could have been multiple informants
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