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tv   Meet the Press  NBC  September 19, 2016 2:30am-3:30am MDT

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back in quitman, the payne house has been virtually frozen in time since that dark december day back in 2007. after the deaths, it was abandoned. the christmas tree still stands today in the living room. nichole's prized garden, just weeds. but her mom tried to hold onto one piece of her daughter's memory. right after nichole's death, she took some rose clippings from her garden. >> she said that this rosebush represented life, hope and beauty. i took seven cuttings off of it. and i took them home. and one by one, they all died. >> reporter: but in what she considers a gift from god, one bush unexpectedly came back and lived. >> and now i have this big, giant rosebush in my regard. it's huge. it's covered in blooms. >> reporter: do you think of nichole every time you see it? >> absolutely.
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>> reporter: it should be called the nichole rose? >> that's right. maybe so. we can rename it. yeah. it was a miracle. >> that's all for now. i'm lester holt. thanks for joining us. this sunday an explosion in new york city injures dozens. another device away. >> it sounded like a million pianos dropped. donald trump ends one false claim. >> president barak obama was born in the united states, period. >> and embraces new ones. >> hillary clinton and her campaign of 2008 started the birther controversy. i finished it.
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or did he just revive an issue that's bound to hurt him? i will talk to tim kaine and trump campaign manager kelly ann conway. margin of panic. with the polls tightening, that's one way to describe what hillary clinton supporters are feeling. what's behind clinton's sinking numbers? joining me for insight and analysis are alex castellanos, maureen dowd, cornel katy tur. welcome to sunday, it's "meet the press." good sunday morning. americans woke up with yet another reminder that we're all living under the threat of violence and terror. an explosion rocked lower manhattan around 8:30 last wounding more than two dozen people. later, a second pressure cooker
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like the one in the boston marathon attack was found two blocks to the north. richard engel, who happened to be on the scene last night, joins me this morning. richard, what can you tell us what we have learned about this incident this morning? >> reporter: well, it was a loud explosion. it didn't cause a great deal of damage. it shattered a lot of windows and apparently went off incsidea dumpster. some story were shattered. we're not seeing a lot of scorched ground, we're not seeing a huge crater. it seems to have been a crude explosive device. a few blocks from where i am, an unexploded device was located in a pressure cooker. it looked very homemade, the thing you could find the recipe for online. the investigation right now is focusing on the linkages. who may have been responsible. was it a group of people?
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explosion that went off earlier yesterday in new jersey? but so far, doesn't seem to have caused many casualties. about half of those two dozen people or so who were injured have already been sent home. >> given that your beat takes you to the middle east and obviously, you spend a lot of time in turkey, any of your international sources finding any claims? anybody taking credit for this outside the united states? >> reporter: i credible claim. just talk and chatter. but i haven't heard of any connection to international terrorism or anything on that level. unfortunately, it is not just the middle east. the last year or so, i've been covering a lot of scenes like this all across europe as well. that's what the immediate concern was, did something happen in the united states? but i will say, this doesn't seem to be the kind of attack
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putting a bomb in a dumpster or putting it by -- with a timer by a race, it is not the most -- not the kind of -- similar to the attacks we have seen where people open fire with assault rifles. >> richard engel on the scene last night when it happened, thanks very much. that explosion last night in new york, as richard was referring to, was not the only event yesterday. they may be unrelated. they may not be. there were incidents where a pipe a 5k route in new jersey, during a race, it is being itigate as a potential terror incident. no one was hurt. eight people were injured in a mall where a man made references to allah before he was killed by an off-duty police officer. let me bring in pete williams. let me start with the new york city incident. the mayor specifically
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okay. what did he mean by that? it was an intentional device. it seems like we are parsing words. >> when he was speaking, he was -- we don't have enough evidence to say whether it's a terrorist incident or not. there's a considerable amount of luck involved here. first of all, the bomb went off in new jersey before the race started. that was apparently where the race was delayed. that's luck number one. secondly, that device in new jersey, which was th often tirely. a lot of evidence was left behind. that's the second piece of good luck. third piece of good luck, the secre second device in new york didn't go off. there's a lot to look at. one big question is, what do they see in common with the two devices? the one in new jersey, the one in new york, assuming they can ultimately -- >> investigators are working new jersey and new york as potentially one person or one
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whether there's a connection. they want to know if it's the same person or group. broadly speaking there are similarities. electronic timers, probably cell phones in both those things. but on the other hand, these are instructions that are, unfortunately, widely available. the al qaeda magazine has run articles about how to build similar devices. they will look at the very microscopic level, how were the wires connected together, that kind of thing. >> tell me what we knowab is that definitely unconnected? is there some thought there -- >> there's no reason to think they're connected at all. that appears to be a coincidence of timing. nothing similar at all. they will be looking at the man's past that was shot and killed. looking at his residence, seeing if he was inspired by isis propaganda. >> going back to new york city, there's probably more cameras there than any city in the world. i assume -- i have to think they
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interest. >> they have some video. it appears that the device that did go off in new york was dropped into this dumpster outside the buildings there. that's another difference between new york and new jersey. lots of -- there are cameras everywhere in new york. not so lucky in new jersey in finding surveillance video. but that's another productive line of inquiry for them. >> pete williams, i know you will work the story. thank you, sir. both presidential candidates responded to the news last was breaking, donald trump called it a bomb, a description that still isn't technically being used by officials in new york. >> just before i got off the plane, a bomb went off in new york. nobody knows exactly what's going on. we are living in a time, we better get very tough, folks. we better get very, very tough. >> later after an event for the congressional black caucus, hillary clinton also responded.
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wait until you have information before making conclusions. >> news of the explosion comes after the new more controlled donald trump has looked more like the old unscripted donald trump in the past 48 hours. first trump finally dropped his false suggestion that president obama wasn't born in the united states and then immediately made another one. >> hillary clinton and her birther controversy. i finished it. i finished it. you know what i mean. president barak obama was born in the united states, period. >> for what it's worth, the controversy did not start with hillary clinton's 2008 campaign.
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it has been promoted and nurtured by donald trump for five years. second on friday night, trump again raised the specter of violence against hillary clicli clicli clinton. >> i think that her bodyguards should drop all weapons. they should disarm. let's see what happens to her. take their guns away. okay? it would be very dangerous. >> condemned those remarks but hopes that they will help slow trump's momentum in the polls. joining me now is the senator from virginia, tim kaine. welcome back to "meet the press." >> good to be with you. >> before i get into the campaign, i want to get your reaction to the events that happened yesterday, the explosion in new york cit you also had incidents both in minnesota and new jersey. all unrelated.
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creates concern this idea that terror now is an everyday part of life that we have to worry about. what can a president do? what should a president do to try to deal with this -- with this threat that is now hitting the homeland? >> well, chuck, it's really important, and i would say experience really matters. as you know, hillary clinton was senator on 9/11 and was there at the world trade center as they she's been through this. it's been a searing experience in her life. she was part of the national security team that worked together to revive the hunt and wipe out bin laden. it's an important time where you have to have experience. you have to support the military. that's really important. on these instances whether they are in our cities or european cities, the key is having intelligence and having strong alliances where you can share intelligence. that's the way you stop one-off
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sharing unless the alliances like the nato alliance is strong. >> this is a new normal that americans have to deal with? >> well, look, i don't accept that. i don't accept it's a new normal. we don't know yet about the cause of these incidents. we're not allowing it to be a normal. we're trying to destroy isis right now. the second news from yesterday is the punishing campaign that we're waging again. isis is shrink battlefield. that's good news. the challenge is, as isis realizes they are losing ground, then they see whether they can exploit weaknesses elsewhere. military strength to shrink isis and beat them on the ground, but then the intelligence sharing to stop attacks. that's what we have do. >> senator, let me move to the campaign. in new hampshire the other day, you called the choice between donald trump and hillary clinton near existential. is that hyperbole?
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at stake here? >> i think the if i de fidelity values is at stake. >> it's a contrast in vision. hillary has a book filled with our campaign platforms and policies. we call it stronger together. donald trump wrote a book when he decided, i want to run for president, and the book is called crippled america. that is the vision choice that americans have in this election. let's just use one example. the equality principal. donald trump for five years was pushing the completely false notion that president obama wasn't born in the united states and wasn't an american citizen. chuck, it's really important to know how painful that is to so
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1850s, if you were an african-american in this country, you could not be a citizen, whether you were a slave or free or born here or born elsewhere, you could not be a citizen. we had to fight a civil war and change the constitution to change that. when donald trump for five years has been promoting the notion that an african-american president is not a citizen, that is extremely powerful and painful to african-americans and to others who know this painful chapter in er close? why in the last three weeks, is election has gone from w you had aead and we can debate the margin of it to now where he now has a viable path to the presidency that frankly didn't seem to exist? how did this happen? if everything you are saying is true, how did this happen? >> i think it's because we're a close nation. you know i come from virginia. i am used to only close races.
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run in 2014, but i told her, you are the underdog until they call you the winner. we went into the convention. it was tied. we did come out of the philadelphia convention with a good lead. it settled back down and it's close. we think it's going to be close. we just have to make our case every day about the basic pillars of the campaign, an economy that works for all, being safe through stronger alliances and building a community of respect rather than disrespect. >> clearly, one of the problems that you have is you are coalition, voters under 35. listen to some voters we talked to yesterday who were bernie sanders supporters who are struggling to support hillary clinton. >> i think it's a lack of trust. from releasing transcripts with big speeches on wall street, something -- some of the things that bernie brought out himself in the debates and other things like that. i think that's what people are still holding on to. that's what i'm holding on to. >> i think a lot of people who were so supportive of bernie
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offended, feel betrayed. i think it's going to take a little while to earn that trust. >> her message wasn't directed towards millennials and those in college. i think b can help her with that. >> the numbers are clear, senator kaine. votes under 35 are not enthusiastic about her. they are as interested in gary johnson as they are hillary clinton. if you don't have them, you don't carry north carolina, florida, ohio, virginia. i think you know that. >> yeah, we g do you believe in climate science or don't you? millennials do. hillary clinton and i do. donald trump doesn't. do you believe women should be able to make their own healthcare decisions or don't you? millennials do. hillary clinton and i do. donald trump doesn't. do you believe in immigration reform? do you believe in lgbt equality? we do. millennials do. donald trump doesn't. finally, do you have a plan to
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we have one. millennials need one. donald trump has ripped off students. it's on our shoulders to make the case. but on at least five issues, the differences between hillary clinton and donald trump are vast. >> you didn't mention one thing, that is the issue of trust and transparency. one thing i noticed with all of the policies that the hillary clinton campaign and your ticket has put out, there's nothing on government reform, nothing on transparency, nothing on how she d between her and what senator obama promised. he talked about bans about lobbyists working in the executive administration. some of his proposals, they didn't go through. but he made pledges and created transparency, made decisions that were necessary and a lot of people wanted to se why nothing from that -- from secretary clinton? trust is her biggest problem.y?t she's going to do to conduct a
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first, i think it's understandable that young voters and others want to get into this question. they need to also assess a donald trump who won't release his tax returns and who has ties with foreign governments that he refuses to reveal. let's go to hillary clinton. she has said one of the first three pieces of legislation that she's going to push in the first 100 days of her administration is to dramatically change the way campaigns are financed. this is fundamentally about we have allowed our campaign finance system to go to a dark money, super pac, non-transparent system. we do that as -- it's the heart of the reform of government. >> you think she's credible on this issue considering how associated she is with big fund-raising and things like that? >> absolutely. because we disclose our donors. we disclose them in the campaign, the foundation discloses the donors.
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foundation that was just caught making an illegal campaign contribution and trying to cover it up. we're all about disclosure and transparency. we think reforming the way campaigns are financed is the most important transparency government reform that the nation needs right now. >> senator kaine, i have to leave it here. thank you. be safe. >> thanks. when we come back, we will when we come back, we will hear from the other side. welcome to the world 2116, you can fly across town in minutes whole communities are living on mars and solar satellites provide earth with unlimited clean power. in less than a century, boeing took the world from seaplanes to space planes, across the universe and beyond. and if you thought that was amazing, you just wait. ? feel a cold sore coming on?
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welcome back. it has been a whirlwind 96 hours. joining me now is the campaign manager for donald trump, kellyanne conway. welcome back to the show. >> hi, chuck. thank you. >> let me start with friday's news first. how and when did donald trump conclude that the president was born >> you will have to ask him that. that's a personal decision. but we heard very clearly the three things he said on his own time line in his own terms on friday. number one, that associates of the clinton campaign started this birther question in 2007. questions senator obama's american roots. the iowa volunteer coordinator and, of course, as the mcklatchy d.c. bureau chief, now former,
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bloomenthal told him that senator obama was born in kenya. they sent somebody to africa to check it out. donald trump was not running for president against barak obama in a bruising primary in 2008. that was hillary clinton. two, donald trump said he put this to rest. hillary clinton couldn't close it, get the information he did. number three, you heard him say president obama was born in this country, period. he is moving on to all the things he talked about this week, tax credits. we got the endorsement of the fop, the fraternal order of police. huge endorsement. they did not endorse anybody four years ago. they endorsed clinton in 1996. we're happy with the developments like this. >> what i'm curious about is what cares about the clinton incident? donald trump for five years perpetuated this. this has been arguably part of his political identity for the
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what difference does it make whether clinton did it? forget clinton. why did he perpetuate it for five years? >> respectfully, i disagreer. it makes a huge difference as to who started this. hillary clinton never saw barak obama coming in 2008. that was her campaign. she was going to win. he beat her in the primary fairly and squarely. sanders coming. they haven't seen our comeback of the last month. she's not nimble, she's not resi resilient. it's expected she deserves it, it's her turn. so i do think it matters where it started. frankly, on this as he has been running for president of the united states, this year, donald trump has talked about every policy issue that there is. we have a few more to go. but if people want to hear what he thinks about policies that affect them, the economy,
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senator kaine told you before this segment, if you want to see what we think about policy, we wrote a book. go to our website. really? we're out there every single day -- >> kellyanne, hang on a minute. in a press release on friday, you called birtherism a smear. you used the word smear. so for five years -- you were doing it to try to attack hillary clinton. does that peemean for five year smear? if he was, why didn't donald trump apologize to the president? why didn't donald trump apologize to the family of somebody who died in a plane crash where he tweeted out innuendo this person somehow was involved in some coverup with the birth certificate? if your campaign believes it's a smear, shouldn't donald trump apologize to the president? >> we were reminding people where this started. it was used as a smear against senator obama by clinton
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interns who just got it all wrong and were a little bit too ambitious. these were chief strategists, pollsters, long-term confidants who were pushing this. in 2007 and 2008, chuck, donald trump wasn't running against obama was president. he wasn't smearing him about this. he was building buildings. he was being his successful stuff, a job creator. he was revitalizing communities. he was doing economic development everywhere. he had a new i respectfully disagree. >> kellyanne, in 2012 when he was thinking about running for president, he tweeted things like this. an extremely credible source has called my office and told me that barak obama's birth certificate is a fraud. in 2012, when i was 18, people called me donald trump. when he was 18, barak obama was barry sueto. those are a number of examples when he was running for president where he was bringing up this issue. how do you -- how can you
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his political identity? >> chuck, i think the only people left obsessed about this are those still covering it. mr. trump made very clear -- we hardly get clarity from the clinton campaign on very much. he took to the podium and took maybe a minute or less to state three very crisp things. now he has moved on to issues people care about. it's remarkable to me to be out there with people and hear what they want covered. i'm looking at nbc's poll this morning. i i mean top 20. >> i get what you are def deflecting. i understand why you are deflecting. >> i'm not. you are. this was five years of his political identity. by the way -- let me ask this. now that he believes the president was born in the united states, i think he has made a $5 million charity offer -- or $50 million charity offer. is he going to pay up on that front? >> you would have to tell me the details of that before i can
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however, i do have to say -- i want to go back to the polling. nobody wants to talk about the polls because they're tightening and we're up. >> we're talking about it throughout the show. i want to talk about friday. >> the other thing -- we can talk about friday all you want. i appreciate -- i can't believe so many in the media were upset they had to give 25 minutes of coverage to these incredible veterans and military heros who took the stage to them. don't they deserve 25 minutes of coverage? everybody is again because people get themselves up in this tizzy and project on our campaign what they think is about to happen. they keep on being -- >> wait a minute. i want to talk about the friday event. why is he so comfortable using the presidential campaign, using -- teasing out this announcement where he called, i want to keep the suspension going. he talked about keep the suspension going. why did he feel so comfortable using this event o friday to
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hotel? is that how he's going to conduct himself in the white house? >> our campaign event wasn't the opening of the hotel. our campaign event were military generals and heros, real heros. >> first words out of his mouth was nice hotel. >> he doesn't read everything from a binder that somebody has prepared for him. he is a funny guy. he went on jimmy fallon this week and showed america his lighter side. he got up and said, nice hotel. hes hotels and said, nice hotel. nice crowd. nice baby in the front. seriously? i'm sorry that the media thinks that it was going there for something. they don't need to cover it. but they want to cover him. by the way, if you look at people's twitter feeds after that event, i think it was these were not profiles in courage. people are supposed to be covering our candidate, not slandering him. consistently on social media.
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go there. >> let me ask another way of asking the issue whether he believes this or whether this was him looking at the election and you telling him, you have to soften your image. because he has been on now both sides of the following issues. birtherism, taxes for the wealthy, muslim ban, minimum wage, iraq invasion, abortion, self-funding his campaign. accepting syrian refugees, japan and nuclear weapons. he has been totally changed his position on all of these issues within the last year. why shouldn't voters look at this and, including the birtherism comment on friday, and say, he is another politician who will say and do anything to get elected in the moment? >> first let me address something you said earlier in the question. let me put to rest everybody's presumption that i have ever told donald trump, soften your image. i walk in the trump tower and i'm reminded this man did very well for himself before i got here. he is his own person.
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he is a people person. he is successful in tv. successful in business. to answer your question, this is a man who is running for office the first time. hes the nominee for president. why? because people do not see him as a politician. you want to take statement ez made, positions ez s he took as private citizen. hillary clinton has changed her mind. you told her running mate this woman -- you said to tim kaine, hillary clinton has these p problems of transparency and trustworthiness. she's done nothing to put to rest either one with all these days to go. i would argue that somebody who is not particularly liked and not particularly trusted by the public has nowhere to go. don't they feel trapped the polls are tightening now that we are giving our message to the voters and they are run ning $2 million of ads in the last couple days saying $22 million
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so she's not -- she's nowhere near where president obama was. >> are we going to get a definitive explanation from donald trump on how if he is elected president that he will wall off his corporation, wall off his kids so that foreign policy decisions don't somehow get intertwined with his international business dealings? doesn't he owe the voters a detailed explanation how of how he is going to it looks like we lost the feed. this was not on her. we will figure that out. our apologies for that. our apologies to kellyanne. we will figure out this technical difficulty in a moment. we will be back in a moment with the panel to break everything down with what we heard. later, we will discuss the other issue for clinton. where have her supporters gone?
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kellyanne conway, i understand we have you back. i want to give you an opportunity to answer that last question that i have. then we will enter the u interview. is donald trump going to present the american public an explanation of how he will wall off his business so that there are not even illusions or any cloud that would hang over foreign policy decisions and his international business dealings? >> chuck, thanks for the opportunity to answer the question. his son -- one of addressed this on a different network on friday. of course, we will consult with experts on what must be done and comply with the laws and what is needed. let me say, i hope the same question is asked of secretary clinton now. i mean, they have said they will shut down the clinton foundation or get away from it, the family will get away from it if she's elected. why not now? they were using the state department as a concierge for
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with cash asking for favors. they were given se n seats at s dinners. you will see folks were dropping a friend of -- >> donald trump is going to make a pledge he will never do any business, even remotely related to the trump organization, while in the white house? >> i don't make pledges on behalf of him. we will ask experts at this campaign what needs to be done. we will follow the law. when he is president, he will be president for all am he is going to be -- it's going to be a full-time job for him. >> kellyanne conway, the good news is there no conspiracy theories on our end or your enaend about that satellite blip. alex and katy who has been
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and a first-timer, cornell. live television, it's all good. katy, i find it interesting donald trump over the last 48 hours has been a lot different than the donald trump you covered for the last three weeks. >> he was on prompter quite a bit. he has been off more. that campaign event or hotel promotion on friday was a lot different. he did try to give the only no editorial presence a tour of his hotel. that doesn't jive with what kellyanne was saying. he was off script when he was talking about robert gates over the weekend, trashing him, off script when he was talking about calling it a bomb in new york before the officials were calling it a bomb in new york. he has been going after people on twitter quite a bit lately. maureen, you know about this. this is the donald trump that we were seeing more in the past. i think it's because he is
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the polls. he is riesing in the polls. >> you must have been happy for the three weeks and then suddenly you are like, there's old donald trump again. undisciplined donald trump. is he cocky? >> i don't think you are seeing that. you are see -- he is always going to be donald trump. there is no other donald trump. i think as we have learned in this campaign. but i still think this long-term tread has been longer than three weeks. donald trump is moving up in the polls. in the polls. donald trump is strength in an uncertain world. he is change where we're heading in the wrong direction. i think sometimes we get lost in the minutia of the campaign, all the small issues that aren't central to anyone in making a decision about picking a president. >> maureen, you know him a little bitter than anybody at this table, i think, even more so than alex. he loves members of the media. he does spend time talking to
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hates on them. what are you seeing from him? >> i started covering him when he made his first foray in 1999. so a lot is the same. because it's all his ego arithmetic. why would voters vote for you? because i got great ratings on larry king. because x number of men hit on melania. it was these success. he said he was going to put his name x number of times on a building he had just built. in that sense, he is exactly the same. he is judging himself by these numbers. in another sense, he is completely the opposite. because he was this new york white rapper bling king and liberal and now he is an
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abortions, completely different guy. which guy would he be as president? >> let me bring up the birtherism issue. does this -- what happened friday, did it put an end, as donald trump wants to say, or did it suddenly give the clinton campaign a way to motivate president obama more to help? thank >> thanks for poking me with a stick with this issue. we have been tracking this since 2008, through the campaign. next month myself. track sort of this would happen with racial and how it's impacted in the electorate. i'm not going to play nice games with this. this birtherism stuff is a soft place for racism to land. it's a soft place for racism to land, plain and simple. we have had a couple hundred years of presidents and none of them have had this attack on them. the making him not a real american, it is -- >> by the way, let me ask you,
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do you want to clear up what you thought about what the clinton campaign, if -- what did you believe? >> it's news to us that this was coming -- >> i don't think so. >> it's news to us. i was on the campaign. so for us on the campaign, we never saw this as something being driven by the clinton campaign. >> you never thought mark penn was trying -- you said -- mark penn wrote about other. did you think he was toying in that world? >> before here. from his memo, which mark called lack of american roots in which mark penn says, quote, i cannot imagine america electing a president during a time of war who is not at his center american in his thinking and values. if donald trump said that in 2008, we would all be sitting here saying, that was the start of the birtherism. >> he has been saying -- >> mark penn said this.
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>> it's coming from your candidate. it's been coming from him for quite a while. >> it did come from hillary clinton on a "60 minutes" interview where he said he was a christian, as far as you know. the otherness of -- >> that's further -- >> answer that part of that, alex. when do two wrongs make a right? he did it for five years after the fact. how do you explain that away? >> i would explain it this way. being on the trump team that, i think these two candidates are being treated very differently on this very issue. because this is something that hillary clinton's campaign started when it was convenient for her but the media covers it as if it is only donald trump who has taken the campaign -- >> alex, i have to tell -- >> that's not an answer. >> there isn't -- there's an answer here. i think the big question about
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the big question about obama has been, has he been -- has he considered himself more of a globalist than an american? there is an otherness to this president. people have tried to exploit that politically in different way. the clinton campaign tried to exploit it this way. the way their strategist said by saying his lack of american roots is an issue. >> make what donald trump has been doing comparable to what -- that's not fair. it's not fair at all. it's not even same. >> you should take that up with mark penn. >> i can take it up with hillary clinton. it's not something she's done. it's not something she pushed. it's not the same. >> i will pause the conversation here. we will come back, talk a little bit about the campaign and demographics after this. when we come back, in fact, it's headline like this one from "the wall street journal" that may be keeping the clinton campaign up
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look at this recent national poll that shows clinton struggles with this age group. her advantage dropped to over a five point lead now here in september. a fox news poll only has her up single digits among this group. you may know why democrats are worried. because both of these polls show her lagging far behind president be obama's performance. he won them by 23 pts let's look at the state of michigan where a poll shows clinton's lead among voters under 35 plummeting. a 24-point lead in august, now just seven. not good news for her. president obama won voters under 30 by 28 points in 2012. look at wisconsin. a poll shows clinton's advantage under 30 dropping from 30 to 23 points in the month of august. this shows her with the same
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falling with that group. what do we learn from this? where are the millennials going if they're leaving clinton? in many cases, it's gary johnson who has gained and those voters are moving to the undecided column. now clinton is trying to deploy surrogates across the country in an effort to try to yank the voters out and rebuild the obama coalition. among those is president obama himself. we will get to him when we come back in a moment. >> i will consider it a insult, an insult to my legacy if this community lets down its guard and fails to activate itself in this election. those new glasses? they are. do i look smarter? yeah, a little. you're making money now, are you investing? well, i've been doing some research. let me introduce you to our broker. how much does he charge? i don't know. okay. uh, do you get your fees back if you're not happy? (dad laughs) wow, you're laughing.
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let's bring back the panel. i think it was saturday "the new york times," maureen, had a lead that said -- interviewing upper west siders panicking. referred to it as the polls are show describe this east coast freakout that i feel like you have seen among the elite this week. >> right. my friends -- one of my friends calls it a national emergency. my friends won't even read any -- if i do interviews with trump. they won't read them. basically, they would like to sensor any stories about trump
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stories about hillary. they think she should have a f free pass because as she said, i'm the only thing standing between you and the ability. democratic strategists are -- >> there is -- let's talk about the numbers behind this concern. i pointed out the millennial issue. you have noted some of your work appeared in the "new york times." you noted there's an enthusiasm i its voters under 30, young african-americans, young latinos, what is the concern here? what hasn't she's dreaddressed? >> obama was a great love affair for these voters. 62% of the voters were under 35. we brought in a cadre of new voters. that's part of why he won. they were obama voters. they weren't democratic voters necessarily.
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issues. in the frame of this conversation, does she have to expand and get that vote? yes. but at the same time, you see trump right now, he is going to get the lowest percentage of millennial voters of any candidate in the last decade. this is three elections where republicans have lost young voters in a way that does not bode well for them. >> let me show the importance of it. in 2012, barak obama lost voters over 30 in ri carried all thundershoose statee he clobbered romney with voters under 30. she's got an enthusiasm issue, but trump is not getting the voters. gary johnson is. >> trumps voters are excited. they are reagan democrats. the excitement is there. where is the excitement in hillary clinton campaign? usually, it's in younger voters,
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presidential campaign. it's not there. the democratic establishment candidate is hillary clinton. if obama was a love affair, this is nanna clinton. nobody is excited about more of the same continuity in the democratic party. elizabeth warren, bernie sanders and obama can campaign all they want for her and they are pouring enthusiasm into a leaky bucket. it does not work. referred enthusiasm does not work in politics. two months out in 2012, we were wringing our hands over young voters. a lot of my republican friends said you will never get the turnout. when you look at the issues that lock in where she is and he is, it's not a contest. >> they are not excited. if referred enthusiasm does not work -- if you were to ask me, am i excited that cornell is
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vergara, i would say -- you have to excite voters. >> there is excitement at trump events. but there is excitement -- >> there's excitement at trump event. i will say this about what alex is mentioning. we would see trump voters wait in negative 5 degree snowy temperatures to see donald trump at a rally. my question is, are they going to wait in lin trump if they -- if there are long lines? i think so. are hillary clinton voters going to take a day off work and wait in line? that's the big question. the excitement level is different on the trump side, because they are so enthusiastic about him. >> let me sneak in a little break. what makes running for president so different than it used to be?
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we are back now with end game. i dowd is here. you have a book. you wrote something interested in your introduction about just covering presidential candidates. you yourself have come to the conclusion that there are different things that go into what makes a good presidential candidate. you noted the resume argument. just because you have the longest resume doesn't necessarily mean you are going to make a good decision. you were noting you thought this was not necessarily the best argument for president obama to

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