tv Meet the Press NBC May 16, 2022 2:00am-3:00am PDT
2:01 am
. - welcome back to the "weakest link." [dramatic sting] three contestants trying to add to your bank of $58,500. and this round, if you can run the chain, you can get half a million dollars added to that total. another ten seconds will come off the clock, and we'll start with the strongest link from the last round, and, again, that's adaam. let's play the "weakest link." [dramatic sting] start the clock. adaam... - cheese. - correct. grace... - the army. - correct. nadeen... - bank. wes anderson. - correct. adaam...
2:02 am
2:03 am
- carrie underwood. - no, trisha yearwood. adaam... - sex - correct. grace... - bank. [dramatic tones] i cannot complete the question, but you did get that bank in under the wire. out of a jason momoa-sized $500,000, you banked a kevin hart-sized $12,500. and that brings your final bank to $71,000. the money moves on to the final round, but one of you is getting cut down to size. whose food for thought won't digest? whose nightmare about being naked in public will be replaced by tonight? it's time to cast your final vote for the weakest link. [dramatic sting] announcer. in this final money-making round, adaam claimed strongest link status for the fourth time in a row.
2:04 am
remarkably, he has yet to receive a single vote for elimination. grace and nadeen have both previously voted for one another. will they decide it's time to form an alliance? - the voting is complete. [dramatic sting] nadeen... - jane. - where are you from? - originally pennsylvania, but i live in nashville. - okay. and you missed a country music superstar, two of 'em. so it's trisha yearwood and her husband... - garth brooks. - that's right. she has a show on the food network. well, nashville's probably really embarrassed about you. - yeah. - why shouldn't you go home? - strategically, i would be the better person to go up against in the final round. - oh, because you're not that good a player. - mm-hmm. - okay. adaam. - yes. - why should you stay in the game? - well, i've been having a great time so far. - well, that's selfish. - isn't it? - grace... - yes. - you had a lot of stumbles in this last round.
2:05 am
tell me why you shouldn't be voted off? - because i need a chance to win the money so i can pay my student loans like every other millennial. - well, let's see who you decided... is the weakest link. [dramatic sting] - adaam. - nadeen. - nadeen. - nadeen, to paraphrase your idol steven tyler, "walk that way," because with two votes, you are the weakest link. goodbye. [dramatic sting] - it's been fun, nadeen. - bye, guys. - bye. sorry. - getting that trisha yearwood question wrong, i should probably just move back to pennsylvania. - whew. - i am super disappointed. i mean, steven tyler said, "i don't want to miss a thing," but i guess i just missed too many things. [dramatic sting] - adaam and grace have made it to the final round
2:06 am
and are about to play for the entire bank of $71,000. one of them will go home with that money. the other will just go home. - ooh. - who will it be? find out when we return to the "weakest link." [dramatic sting] [cheers and applause] i guess that's it then, huh? yup. see you around. i knew that was the last time i'd see tom. the truth is, i was spending too much online jake from state farm. don't give up what you love. state farm has options like bundling home and auto, so you get a rate that fits your budget. tom! i'm gonna buy more stuff! for surprisingly great rates that fit any budget... like a good neighbor, state farm is there.® call or click to get a quote today. ♪ ♪ was that the taylors? they must be going to great wolf lodge. i gotta get me one of those.
2:07 am
nothing brings the pack together like a trip to great wolf lodge. ♪ ♪ nothing brings the pack together like a trip add downy to your wash for all the freshness and softness of home. even when you're not at home. feel the difference with downy. ♪pour lower sugar for me♪ ♪ohh so subtly sweet♪ ♪pour lower sugar for me♪ ♪all new from pure leaf♪ ♪pour lower sugar for me♪ save on sunny-day outfits at kohl's! ♪all new from pure leaf♪ get tops starting at $18.69. shorts starting at $16.99. and women's sandals starting at $14.44. plus, take an extra 15% off. or save even more with a kohl's card. more style. more savings. kohl's ♪ ♪ aleve x. its revolutionary rollerball design delivers fast, powerful, long-lasting pain relief.
2:08 am
aleve it, and see what's possible. mmm. these new cheez-it puff'd are so cheesy, airy, and puffy. how'd you do it? with the puffderizer 5000, anything can be craveably puffy. [puffderizer 5000 shoots] [laughs] new cheez-it puff'd. defy your cheezpectations. see him? he's not checkin' the stats. he's finding some investment ideas with merrill. eyes on the ball baby. digital tools so impressive, you just can't stop. what would you like the power to do? on any weekend, workday, or wedding day, you just can't stop. healthy-looking skin feels amazing. eucerin advanced repair has more than ceramides, it has natural moisturizing factors locking in moisture for 48 hours eucerin. healthy-looking skin every day. choosing t-mobile is like paying for this... ...but getting that! ♪more, more, more♪ and so much more.
2:09 am
♪more, more, more♪ more 5g bars in more places. more savings so your family saves 20% versus the other guys! and we won't raise the price of your rate plan with our price lock guarantee. get more with t-mobile. more 5g coverage. more savings. and even more cool stuff. . - welcome back to the "weakest link." more 5g coverage. it's the final round. you will now play against each other head-to-head. i've got five questions for each of you-- no voting, no chain-making, no banking, just $71,000 for the one who gives me the most correct answers. adaam, as the strongest link in the last round, you get to decide who goes first.
2:10 am
2:11 am
2:12 am
- correct answer is cotton. grace... - [exhales deeply] ♪ - banana dance. ♪ gwen stefani. - the correct answer is josephine baker. adaam, this is your chance to take the lead. - oysters rockefeller. - the correct answer is oysters rockefeller. - [exhales deeply] - so, grace, you need to get this next question correct, or adaam wins the game.
2:13 am
grace... ♪ - oh, my god... [mutters] [sighs] - oh, i can see his face. oh, my gosh. ugh. harley. - is that your answer? the correct answer... is gilda radner. adaam, you are tonight's strongest link, and you'll leave here with $71,000. adaam... - yes. - what do they call it when someone's not being sarcastic with praise? is that a front-handed compliment? whatever it is, congratulations to you. - thank you. - how does it feel? - i feel great. - congratulations. - thank you. - that's it for tonight, america.
2:14 am
2:15 am
this sunday, mass shooting in buffalo. >> shots heard. >> ten people dead. nine of them african-american. what appears to be a racially motivated shooting. >> people in a supermarket shopping and bullets raining down on them. >> this was evil. straight up racially motivated hate crime. >> we get the latest from the scene. and i talk to buffalo mayor byron brown and new york's governor, kathy hochul. plus, the economy and the midterm. >> right now, america is fighting on two fronts. at home, inflation. rising prices. >> with costs going up, outpacing wage growth. our brand-new nbc news poll
2:16 am
shows flashing warning signs for democrats but republican leaders worry some of their candidates are too out of the mainstream. >> two men sleeping together. two men holding hands. two men caressing. that is not normal. >> independent senator bernie sanders of vermont. also, abortion politics. thousands march nationwide in favor of abortion rights. >> i can't believe we're going back to this. a tragedy. >> as many states move to restrict those rights in anticipation of a supreme court decision that overturns roe. joining me for insight and analysis are, "washington post" white house bureau chief, ashley parker, washington bureau chief, susan page and "washington post" columnist, matt. welcome to sunday. it's "meet the press."
2:17 am
>> from nbc news in washington, the longest running show in television history. this is "meet the press" with chuck todd. >> good sunday morning. well, it's happened again. a horror all too familiar in the united states. this time, the scene of what appears to have been an act of domestic terrorism was a supermarket in buffalo, new york. a white teenager, a boy, really. only 18. wearing body armor carrying an assault rifle opened up fire in an african-american neighborhood. nine of them black. and then two wounded, black. posted online, filled with racist and anti-semitic views, including the theory that whites are being replaced by people of color. authorities say the gunman who drove some 200 miles carried out the slaughter. also live streamed the massacre with a camera apparently on his helmet. the latest in recent mass shootings aimed at ethnic
2:18 am
groups. charleston, south carolina. african-americans in church. pittsburgh, pennsylvania. jewish victims in the synagogue. el paso, texas, latino victims in a walmart and now add buffalo, new york, to the list and of course seen a rise of hate crimes against asian americans as well. in a moment, i'll talk to buffalo's mayor byron brown and new york's governor, kathy hochul. we begin our coverage with nbc news correspondent emily, where are we on the investigation? i know the gunman was arraigned. what's next? >> reporter: hey there, chuck. investigators are looking into this as a hate crime and racially motivated violent extremism, and there's a number of signs pointing and explaining why, one, 13 people were shot between the parking lot behind me and the supermarket. 11 of those were black. investigators are also looking into an apparent manifesto that claims that the suspect
2:19 am
purposefully targeted this area of buffalo because of number of black people here. the other thing i'll point out, take a look at these images of what sources tell us are the suspect's weapons. they are blurred and that's because of messages of hate on them, racial slurs and the other thing we're mentioning more about this morning are the victims. these are people partaking in one of the most typical normal activities on a saturday afternoon. shopping in the supermarket. the governor telling me one of the people was simply trying to buy cupcakes for a birthday party. another person shot and killed was security guard. he tried to stop the suspect. here's more from officials on that. >> one of the individuals inside the store is a security guard, a beloved security guard who's a retired buffalo police officer. a hero in our eyes. engaged the suspect, fired multiple shots. struck the suspect, but because he had heavily armed armored plating on, that bullet had no round. the suspect engaged our retired
2:20 am
officer and he was ultimately shot and deceased at the scene. >> reporter: the suspect is being identified as 18-year-old payton gendren. if convicted with murder, he could face up to life in prison. we see him appear in court later this thursday. still very much a developing situation, chuck, but we expect later this morning to learn more information on both the victim and what led up and what happened and just absolutely horrific tragedy. this community shaken to the core, chuck. >> emily, thanks very much. joining me now is the mayor of buffalo, byron brown. mayor, welcome to "meet the press." >> thank you very much, chuck. >> look, i know this is an excruciating time to be mayor and that the city's in a lot of pain here. what can you tell me about the latest in the investigation?
2:21 am
all of it is still under apparently racially motivated, certainly seems like we get closer to drop the apparently. >> we are getting closer to dropping that. law enforcement has been working together around the clock since this occurred at every level, federal, state, county, city, and piece together very quickly that this was a racially motivated attack. the individual that committed this crime drove from several hours away. they were not from this community, and they drove here with the express purpose of taking black lives. >> you know, mr. mayor, to sort of see this, we had the toxic stew of this growing right-wing ideology, easy access to guns and our permissive internet culture that sort of rewards
2:22 am
sharing some of this violent ideas. where do we go first? how do we, how do you make african-americans in buffalo feel safe today? how about we start there. >> well, the thing that this tragedy shows us is that this can occur anywhere. it's not just buffalo. it's how to make people all across this country feel safe, it's not just african-americans, it's how to make people in urban america, suburban america, and rural america feel safe. the only way to do it is to really get to the point of sensible gun control and n' this country. to end hate speech on the internet and social media. to stop the proliferation of hateful ideology. those are the ways that we make
2:23 am
black people feel safe in buffalo, that we make people feel safe all across this country. >> you had been able to spend any time with victim's families? what have they been telling you? what would they like you to do? >> tremendous pain. victim's families just thinking about their loved ones. the precious lives that were lost senselessly. the hurt that they feel. the pain that they feel. and wanting to go on because their loved ones would want them to go on. buffalo is a loving community. we are known nationally and internationally as the city of good neighbors. so we will, as a community, wrap our arms around the families of
2:24 am
those we lost. we will continue to lift them up. we will continue to lift this community up. and we won't let an act of a hateful madman bring this community down and keep our community from moving forward. >> there's only so much you can do as mayor. you're going to need some help from the federal level here. what would you like to see from the federal government to make it your job easier to keep up? >> what we've seen in these mass shootings around the country year in and year out, month in and month out, and it's always the same, people send their thoughts and their prayers. lawmakers in washington say that there's something that must be done, and then there are some on one side of the aisle that block anything from being done.
2:25 am
it seems like there are those that believe owning a gun is more precious than the sanctity of human life. so i think people all across this country have to rise up. they have to speak more loudly and more clearly that there must be gun control in this country. this is a uniquely american phenomenon. these mass shootings don't happen in other countries across the world. we have to ask ourselves and more than ask ourselves, we have to take action to stop it, to stop it after this buffalo, new york, incident, to make sure that other communities, that other families don't go through this again. >> sadly, mr. mayor, what you've been said to me has been said by
2:26 am
a lot of mayors in moments like this and you just pointed it out and that's the wash, rinse, repeat cycle of washington not listening to the mayors on this is very frustrating. lot more that can be done, i guess, other than rhetoric here. but is there something else you'd like to see done? >> well, i would like to see sensible gun control. i would like to see ending hate speech on the internet. on social media. it is not free speech. it is not the american way. we are not a nation of haters. we are not a nation of hate. we need to send a message that there is no place on the internet for hate speech, for
2:27 am
hate indoctrination, for spreading hate manifesto. i'd like to see real deliberate action taken on gun control and ending hate speech on the internet. i will be a stronger voice for that. i've heard from mayors all over the country in the aftermath of this incident. i've heard from mayors actually all across the world and i believe that what happened in buffalo, new york, yesterday is going to be a turning point. i think it's going to be different after this in terms of the energy and the activity that we see. >> mr. mayor, i hope you're right. i hope you're right. we keep wondering, when is the incident going to be the one that finally shakes us out of this? mayor byron brown, buffalo, thank you so much, sir. >> thank you, chuck. >> joining me now is new york's governor, kathy hochul, who is also a buffalo native. governor, welcome to "meet the
2:28 am
press" on what i know has been a pretty difficult 24 hours. let me just start. look, this is your hometown. i imagine the pain is immense no matter what. this is your hometown. tell me about it. >> it's gut-wrenching, chuck. this is my hometown. i've lived here my entire life. lived in the city a few minutes from here. worked in local politics here with tim, a teenager, these are my streets and it is shattering to the collective psyche that an individual is willing to come and shatter the lives of so many well meaning people in the groets grois grocery shop. it hurts like hell. >> this is from the rising white supremacy, easy access to gun and a permissive culture on the internet and it all met together
2:29 am
in this horrendous attack. where do you begin when it comes to figure out how we can tackle all of this? >> well, you're right. there's three components of this. the white supremacist terrorism. the radicalization that's occurring of our young people particularly who are vulnerable to these evil ideas. it's all induced by the internet. and the fact that platforms are willing to share this information, allow it to be posted, a manifesto that's been out there that describes in great detail how someone wants to have an execution of individuals in a community that's targeted because it's the highest black population within a geographic area? that's all out there and also, the fact that this could be live streamed? how long was it live streamed before someone paid attention? these companies make a lot of money. they're very profitable, and in my judgment, they have the opportunity to be monitoring and shut things down before it gets to this situation, but also,
2:30 am
it's about access to guns and in new york, we have the toughest gun laws in the nation but right now, we have a case before the supreme court that could be decided in a matter of weeks that could allow people to have a gun that's concealed to walk in the top behind me with a concealed weapon this time. we've got to deal with the access to guns coming from places like pennsylvania, a few minutes from where the accused lives, he could have gone over to pennsylvania and was able to enhance the gun he thought legally in new york and also to have an increase capacity magazine, exactly what we think he did as well as just the pervasive attitude this replacement theory that you're going to target blacks and immigrants and jews because they're replacing the whites? it's a trifecta, a storm here and work vigilantly together to stop this now. >> let me ask on guns. a lot of people are going to scratch their heads and go, wow, an 18-year-old could legally buy most of these weapons and the
2:31 am
answer is yes, isn't it? >> well, in many states, yes. the state of new york, what he was able to buy was an ar-15, but he was able to enhance the magazine capacity. you can't have that many rounds purchased legally here in the state of new york but go over to pennsylvania, go to a gun show. this is why when i became governor just a few months ago, i started a nine state gun interdiction task force because most used on the streets of new york and now on the streets of buffalo are coming from out of state. we need a national response. since my time in congress, we've been trying to get a national response and so individual states will do the best they can, and i'm going to be posing more gun laws on tuesday to preschedule a press conference before this occurs but we need other states to step up and the federal government on our side. >> let's talk about holding these internet companies responsible. obviously, there's this law on the books to allow the internet
2:32 am
to sort of escape liability on so many things that frankly, we as television broadcasters, cannot escape the same liability. do you think they should be held responsible for this, the easy spread of this propaganda? >> i hold them responsible for not monitoring and alerting law enforcement. that's the issue here. people are sharing these ideas, videos of other attacks and they're all copy cats. they want to be the next great white hope to inspire the next attack. we can't let that continue. that's not happening in the basement of a kkk meeting anymore where you have a limited number of people who are succumbing to these evil influences. this is happening globally. they're looking at what happened in new zealand and what happened in pittsburgh and what happened in, they read this, they absorb this. this becomes part of their mentality and they share it with
2:33 am
others through the internet. that's the responsibility of the internet and the individuals who are responsible are the ones who own these companies and i'm going to be talking to them directly. >> we also have tv commentators and some political figures that sort of appease this right-wing extremism. sort of, you know, anybody that pushes back, maybe they come after it on speech grounds, freedom of speech or things like this but certainly seems as if there is a growing virus on the right, the far-right here that is spreading dangerously. >> and they need to be held accountable as well. any government leader that does not condemn it and condemn it today is a coward and they're also partially responsible. so let's just be real honest about the role of elected leaders and they need to be calling this out, not coddling the behavior saying it's just young people and their ideas. i'll stand and protect the first amendment any day of the week but you don't protect hate
2:34 am
speech, incendiary speech, you're not allowed to scream fire in a crowded theatre. there's limitations on speech and right now, we've seen this run rampant and as a result, i have ten dead neighbors in this community. and it hurts. and we're going to do something about it. >> it really does hurt. governor kathy hochul, really appreciate you spending a few minutes with us. and just know, we're all thinking of everybody in buffalo. thank you. when we come back, not only was the horror in buffalo all too familiar, it is also the most recent example of a mass shooting inired bysp (vo) while you may not be a pediatric surgeon volunteering your topiary talents at a children's hospital — your life is just as unique. your raymond james financial advisor gets to know you, your passions, and the way you give back. so you can live your life. that's life well planned.
2:35 am
(mom allen) verizon just gave us all a brand new iphone 13. (dad allen) we've been customers for years. (dad brown) i thought new phones were for new customers? we got iphone 13s, too. switched to verizon two minutes ago. (mom brown) ours were busted and we still got a shiny new one. (boy brown) check it out! (dad allen) so, wait. everybody gets the same great deal? (mom allen) i think that's the point. (vo) now everyone can get a new iphone 13 on us on america's most reliable 5g network. (allen kid) can i have a phone? (vo) for every customer. current, new, everyone. to show the love. can a company make the planet a better place? ♪♪ what if it's a company of people working beside friends and neighbors? pursuing 100% renewable energy in our operations.
2:36 am
aiming to protect, manage or restore millions of acres of land. and offering you more sustainably sourced products so you can become part of the change. so, can a company make the planet a better place? at walmart, we're working on it, every day. you're probably thinking that these two are in some sort of lover's quarrel. no, no, no. they're both invested... in green energy. and also each other. digital tools so impressive, you just can't stop. what would you like the power to do? >> welcome back. panelists here. reverend al sharpton. bureau chief susan page. contributing columnist matt bai and ashley parker. we have a toxic stew here.
2:37 am
white supremacy, ideology spreading. easy access to guns. permissive internet culture that almost encourages shares of these far-right ideologies. where do we start? >> we start by changing the tone nationally. we cannot just keep going through, as you said to mayor brown, you heard the mayor say this before in the government, federal government doesn't do anything. last night when i started getting calls from the chapter in buffalo of what happened, and then i started getting calls from government officials. first thing i said is, president biden needs to call a summit meeting of black, jewish, asian leaders, and sit down and talk about the growing problem of hate crimes and that this government will not stand by and allow this to happen. we need to have a tone when young guys like this understand the federal government will come down on them.
2:38 am
they're monitoring what's going on and they're not going to tolerate it. he should do this right away. i mean, we've gone from tree of life from charleston to now we're in buffalo. and we just are putting out regular press releases, rather than dealing with this with the urgency that it requires, and i reached out to jonathan and others and said, we ought to jointly go to the white house and deal with this because if it's not just black, it's jews, it's asians, lgbtq, it's everywhere. >> latinos. >> latinos, really latinos. the president needs to preside and say, this can't be tolerated. >> al, on the far-right, there is this growing virus and not enough, it feels like not enough leaders on the right call it out. they sort of, there's an appeasement of it to be generous. >> listen, there used to be political parties. there used to be serious
2:39 am
politicians who would step up and speak out against these kind of things. when david duke ran for office, they spoke out. party chairman, others did. it was well known he was an individual in his own part. and now to the country, people keep silent and that's silence is interpreted in ways that are not healthy. i'll say this. i'm frustrated in america that we're so incapable of doing things. when george floyd was killed, there were massive demonstrations. thought there was going to be a move for social justice and very little has happened. when in florida, we had parkland and then we had the mass shooting in a gay dancehall where a nephew of my wife was killed. there's some limited action. but when when you look at this, the frustration in america has to do with the fact horrific things are happening, governments are not doing
2:40 am
anything and political leaders are not doing anything and that's what the calamity is. >> the other component of this is, of course, guns. the reverend is right that tone matters incredibly but then you look at how all of these hate crimes are committed, and they're all committed with guns and this is an area where congress has been able to do absolutely nothing. and then there will be, you saw people you were interviewing talking about sensible gun reform but you look at sandy hook, you look at kindergarteners massacred, mother emmanuel shooting in a church, what happened in las vegas, a country music concert. guns touched every aspect of society and congress is able to do absolutely nothing. >> why do we keep having the same conversation we have before because there are things we could do. law enforcement could do more to surveil these toxic sites. social media companies do do more to bring them down. the news media could do more to
2:41 am
cover them and lawmakers find some common ground on guns and americans could stand up and say, these shootings, these hate shootings do not reflect america. this is a radical fringe. americans need to stand up and say, we won't stand for this anymore. >> we've talked about this. i covered columbine back in the, when this was new. this is now part of the culture. it's a recurring thing. and ashley's right. congress has done absolutely nothing. but you know, to speak what reverend al was saying earlier, and we may disagree about this, i can disagree with a lot of people, i don't think this is a more hateful, more racist country than it was 25 years ago, certainly not 50 years ago. i do think we have a segment of our political leadership that has emboldened and legitimized a very extreme and dangerous segment of our political dialogue. and that is responsibility for that and culpability for that and it is tied to the violence. >> but matt, racism has gone
2:42 am
from being fringe to mainstream. >> yeah. that's true. >> feels like a political organizing tool at times. >> normalized. you have to remember, this is an 18-year-old that is accusing in buffalo. when he was a 15, charlottesville happened. the president of the united states at that time said there are good people or fine people on both sides. this gives him comfort. that's why joe biden, who i believe is a decent and good man, needs to set a different tone and we need to deal with guns because the tone was set while this guy was a kid. being impressionable. that this is all right to be marching, saying jews will not repraise me. and he saw it from the white house. >> there's something particularly devastating about the fact joe biden said he was impelled to run for president because of charlottesville. and it seems to me that was sincerely and look at what's happening and feels like nothing has changed.
2:43 am
the culture is the exact same. >> it does seem, matt and susan, that every time there is an attempt to sort of deal with, particularly deal with domestic terrorism, this white supremacy issue. all of a sudden, there's a whole bunch of republicans in congress to start screaming speech. >> free speech is important. free speech is not a license to endorse things like replacement theory. this terrible, terrible theory that there's many of them jews trying to replace america with a black and brown nation to dilute the power of white people. that is un-american. what elected official? >> inhumane. not just un-american but inhumane. >> i'm close to a free speech absolutist as you'll find and i really believe free speech is threatened in a lot of corners in society, but free speech demands leadership and when you have a society that is free, you also have to have a society with leaders who stand up for
2:44 am
morality and for the right instincts and the culture. so that you don't take things that are on the margins of the society, as you say, and bring them into the mainstream and legitimize them. we have failed on that count and we continue to fail and these are the consequences. >> every day, it's every day. you know, immigration is a big deal to me. for immigrant children, babies to be blamed for formula shortage. i mean, come on. we're trying to find hate everywhere we can. >> absolutely right. and there are people on the right that are intentionally trying to create that divide on that issue. all right. when we come back, i'll talk to senator bernie sanders, a little bit about the midterm elections and new nbc news poll shows and new nbc news poll shows democrats headedor f what if you were a global bank who wanted to supercharge your audit system? so you tap ibm to un-silo your data. and start crunching a year's worth of transactions against thousands of compliance controls with the help of ai. now you're making smarter decisions faster.
2:45 am
operating costs are lower. and everyone from your auditors to your bankers feels like a million bucks. let's create smarter ways of putting your data to work. ibm. let's create thanks for coming. now when it comes to a financial plan this broker is your man. let's open your binders to page 188... uh carl, are there different planning options in here? options? plans we can build on our own, or with help from a financial consultant? like schwab does. uhhh... could we adjust our plan... ...yeah, like if we buy a new house? mmmm... and our son just started working. oh! do you offer a complimentary retirement plan for him? as in free? just like schwab. schwab! look forward to planning with schwab.
2:46 am
my a1c stayed here, it needed to be here. ruby's a1c is down with rybelsus®. my a1c wasn't at goal, now i'm down with rybelsus®. mom's a1c is down with rybelsus®. (♪ ♪) in a clinical study, once-daily rybelsus® significantly lowered a1c better than a leading branded pill. rybelsus® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop rybelsus® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking rybelsus® with a sulfonylurea or insulin
2:47 am
increases low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. need to get your a1c down? (♪ ♪) ask your healthcare provider about rybelsus® today. welcome back. we're going to turn now to politics. it's a truism that voters' views about the direction. 16% say it's the right direction and 75% say the wrong track. the wrong track number has been
2:48 am
70 plus for seven months, which in the past signaled big losses for the governing party. against 56% disapprove. the president has now become as unpopular as donald trump in this poll. a warning sign for democrats. voters are split over what they want to control congress. 46-46. that sounds close but for what it's worth in 2010, republicans had a two point lead on this question nationally and wound up gaining 63 top seeds. if there is anything approaching a silver lining for democrats, it's the iked supreme court dra decision, 60% say it should be legal and 37% say it should be illegal always or most of the time and abortion has become the top issue for people who will decide how to vote based on a single issue. yesterday i spoke to bernie sanders, the independent senator from vermont about what he thinks democrats can do to avoid
2:49 am
a shellacking in november. let me start with what you know probably instinctively these days but our polls has found 75% of the country think we're headed in the wrong direction. in fact, just 28% of democrats right now think the country is headed in the right direction. where do you stand? do you think we're headed in the wrong direction? >> i sure do. look, what we're looking at is a nation today where the billionaire class, the people on top are doing phenomenally well, chuck. the middle class continues to decline. we're seeing increased concentration of ownership in america, which has huge impacts for ordinary people. we've got three wall street firms, state street with access over $20 trillion controlling hundreds of corporations. you're seeing millions of people
2:50 am
unable to afford the cost of prescription drugs and put gas in the tanks. how they would think what's going on is good but what i and other progressives are trying to do is to put together a movement that tells the billionaire class in this country whose profits are soaring, getting richer and richer, you know what, you can have it all. we need an economy working for the middle class, the middle class, the elderly, the children, not just the few on top. >> it's interesting when you talk about the movement. we see it in our own polling. there are more people that agree with sort of your mindset that you're framing, we need big structural change but what do we do now before the elections? at the end of the day, you have the senate that you have, not the one that you want. what can get done now that can actually mitigate what looks like it's going to be a tough year for democrats? >> look. we passe in the biden administration one of the most
2:51 am
significant pieces of legislation in modern history in this country, the american rescue plan, which in my view, did a whole lot to help people deal with the economic turmoil that we saw as a result of covid and massive unemployment. what we have got to do right now is, it's not hard. you listen to the american people and not wealthy campaign contributors. what does that mean? it means that right now, you lower the outrageous costs in this country. the pharmaceutical industry with paid lobbyists in washington, dc. you expand medicare. i happen to believe that candidates that i support believe that health care is a human right, not a function of making huge profits for the insurance companies and the people who own them. you've got to move to expanding health care. you've got to raise the minimum wage to a living wage. you've got to create millions of jobs by dealing with the existential threat of climate,
2:52 am
and by the way, you've got to do what the american people want and understand it's women who have the right to control their own bodies, not the government. >> okay, everything you said there was being addressed in build back better. okay. wasn't it big as you wanted it, too big for some but why do we have nothing? that's the head scratcher here. understand, you don't have it all. why is it zero? why is there nothing? >> well, it should not be a head scratcher. you've got two members of the senate. senator manchin and senator sinema who sabotaged what the president has been fighting for. >> that's a strong word, sabotage. >> well, you help me out with a better word here. 48 members of the senate who wanted to go forward with an agenda that helped working families that was prepared to take on the wealthy and the powerful. you've got a president who wanted to do that. you had two people who prevented us from doing that. you have a better word than sabotage? that's fine, but i think that's the right word and i think
2:53 am
pressure has got to be put on the part of the people in west virginia, in arizona to say, you know what? why don't we stand up for ordinary americans and wealthy campaign contributors. why don't you have the guts to take on the trump companies and the insurance companies and the fossil fuel industries? >> i talked to pennsylvania democrats and they also blame senators manchin and sinema. they don't blame the republican. is that healthy for the party that all this concentration, should you have found something to do that isolates the republicans rather than you guys ended up dividing the party against yourself? >> i don't see it that way, chuck. i think on all of these issues, we had zero republican support for the proposal in medicare, in build back better that were enormously popular. so certainly, not just manchin and sinema. they are two of the 50 democrats who went in the wrong direction, but every republican did. so the point is, it's not just
2:54 am
manchin or sinema, you're right, it's every republican. the problem, i think, we've not done a good job in making that clear to the american people. >> let me ask you about the vote to codify roe this week. this is one of the votes that had 49 democrats, not 50. should the leadership have put a bill on the floor that would have gotten 52 votes including collins and murkowski to isolate the 48 republican nos? >> no, i mean, i think we'll see what happens. but to answer your question, i think nobody should think that this process is done. we should bring those bills up again and again and again. i had a rally earlier on saturday in montpelier, vermont, my state capital. people cannot believe that you have a supreme court and republicans who are prepared to overturn 50 years of precedent. so i think what we should do is on this bill, end the
2:55 am
filibuster, do everything that we can to get 50 votes on the strong as possible bill to protect a woman's right to control her own body. >> before this week about roe being overturned, you didn't use the abortion issue as a reason not to support people. you supported pro-life progressives, if they were progressive on economic issues. a mayor of omaha, i recall a race like that. has your mind changed? i understand that. but has your philosophy changed? is that a litmus test for you for progressives? >> this particular moment when literally a woman's right to choose is at stake that we have too many democrats who are prepared to support a candidate in texas who is one of the few anti-pro choice members. >> speaking of henry? you think that's going to stay? >> i do. and i'm supporting jessica,
2:56 am
supporting in pennsylvania, i hope she wins as well. >> you think at this point, being pro-life, you can't be in the democratic party or the democratic coalition? are you ready to go? >> we will see. all i can say is i think you have the overwhelming majority of people to consider themselves to be democrats to be pro-choice. i have been pro-choice my entire life and the candidates that i am supporting now are all pro-choice. a woman's right to control her own body is really on the line, and we have got to do everything we can to defend that right. >> last question, are you definitely going to rule out ever being a presidential candidate again or if there's an open race in 2024? >> why did i think you might ask that question? >> wrote it -- >> look, no, no politician i know rules out all options. everything is on the table, but
2:57 am
right now, my focus is to do everything i can to elect candidates to congress who will stand up and fight for working families in this coming midterm election. >> fair enough. senator bernie sanders from vermont. always a pleasure, sir. thank you for coming on and sharing your perspective. >> thank you. up next, something truly extraordinary for television. what might happen in china, move to seize taiwan this... is the planning effect. this is how it feels to have a dedicated fidelity advisor looking at your full financial picture. this is what it's like to have a comprehensive wealth plan with tax-smart investing strategies designed to help you keep more of what you earn. and set aside more for things like healthcare, or whatever comes down the road. this is "the planning effect" from fidelity.
2:58 am
on a day without migraine my whole body feels free. because my eyes don't shy from the light. my head doesn't pound. and my stomach isn't nauseous. it's time for migraine prevention delivered differently, through an iv infusion. it's time for vyepti - a preventive treatment for migraine in adults. vyepti is designed to start working fast, and to last with a 30-minute iv infusion, 4 times a year delivering 100% of the medication directly into your bloodstream. the power of a vyepti infusion can help to reduce monthly migraine days.
2:59 am
3:00 am
the suspected buffalo shooter is sitting in a jail cell at this hour as we learn more about the ten victims who were killed in saturday afternoon's grocery store massacre this morning we'll hear from a man who spoke to the 18-year-old suspect on friday before the shooting >> i saw him walking through the exit door. >> here at the tops. >> here at tops. on friday. and i said he looks -- he look out of place he looks out of place. and i walked up to him and said where are yo
146 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KNTV (NBC) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on