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tv   The Steele Report  NBC  January 24, 2016 10:00am-10:30am CST

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now. >> announcer: now from kwwl, this is the steele report. captioning provided by caption associates, llc www.captionassociates.com >> ron: welcome to this week's edition of the steele report. my guest this week the iowa's republican lieutenant governor kim reynolds, somemee i've been trying to get on the though for quite some time. she's been a former iowa state senator from osceola, a republican in iowa's 47th lieutenant governor, having served in thatat position since 2011 as she was on the ticket with governor terry branstad when they won convincingly in 2010. so you're the running mate, you still are. you're doing -- someone who's actually probably been the post active lieutenant governor that i can ever remember in iowa. you have been going around the ate the last few days trumping the agenda -- lt. gov. reynolds: : e condition of the state, yes. >> ron: and some of the things going on. what do you see as the centerpiece because this budget this year is a tight one and it
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all, thank you for giving neat opportunity to sit down with you. i appreciate that very much and i'm gl we were finally able to make that happen. it is an honor to serve and when the governor asked if i would run with him, he said we're going to run as a team and serve as a team, and he's been true to his word and 's an honor to serve iowans in this capacity. it is a tight budget. when the governor did the condition of the state, he talked about how together we've been able to accomplish some great things. we have a very fiscal discipline, we're ranked third, the best -- third best managed state in the nation and with the rd flu and wiwi commoditit prices under production and really epa and the rfs and the uncertainty and the impact that estimating conference reduced available revenue in december by about $149 million, and so it's a tight budget, and so we're determined to work on some important issues that we believe
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that's water quality and school infrastructure, education, really making sure that we have -- iowans have the skills theyeyeed to be scessful, so workforce is front and center. we want to continue to remain competitive as a state, to make sure that we have -- we continue to build out ouour renew fuel industry as well as looking at energy foils to make sure that -- policies to ke sure we cacontinue to have that be a competitive strange for iowa and have a fair-- advantage for aand have a fair and equitable justice system. the governor presented the condition of the state on tuesday, presented the budget on that point, and now we're talking about the condition of e state iowans. >> ron: iowans should know the budget is 7.4 billion. not muc but a little bit higher than the previous one. that's an awful lot of money and what do you see as far as education? the 4% democrats proposed, republicans a little bit lower,
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compromise is somewhere around 2.4, right? >> lt. gov. reynolds: well, last year we presented a two-year budget and we do every year, and so each two years of the legislative session, but we wanted to put two years in for education, 1.25 and the second year at 2.45, so we wanted to work hard to get there again this year. it was not easy to do that. that's $145 million of new money and what's also a key factor in the budget is the increasing cost of medicaid and we need to make sure if we follow through withthhe mananad care and the modernizing managed care, then the increase is already 40 million, but if we don't do anything and continue on the same path with the existing medicaid, increased cost is about 151 million and that eats up almost all the new revenue that's available. and so we really believe if we can follow through with coordinating healthcare, wowoing onoutcomes, making sure we get the population healthier through a managed care system, we can provide stability to the budget
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then be able to honor what we put in the budget for education and that's $145 million. >> ron: there's a battle over this medicaid privatization. you know that,nd then there's been a delay on the implememtation, so does thatat concern you, and where do you stand on that about why are you so in favor of the privatization as it's going forward, even though there is a delay? >> lt. gov. reynolds: first of all, there's 39 other states that did it, this isn't something new. we had a segment of our dicaid population that was managed care, so we've already participated in a small manner. the bottom line is medicaid as it is today is not sustainable. it just isn't. over the last ten years, the costs have increased 95%. that's not sustainable. we kanet continue to do what -- can't continue to do what we want to do with be increasing costs like that. this is a way to modernize the system, coordinate the care, get a vulnerable population healthy and bring stability to the
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i'm happy tuesday we received a conditional approvalal in december and we already implemented a safe harbor which allowed individuals to go in and out of network and would provide those providers at 100% reimbursement, so we had already tan steps toto really aleve some of the anxiety that was -- that you're going into a new system that exists, but we do have 93% of the providers are signed up today. they held over 350 meetings over the state of iowa, so we're continuing to do the outreach, we're continuing to provide the education, we're continuing to work with the medicaid population a awell as the providers. we had all four major hospitals that have signed up in december. we were making significant progress. we had really, i think, tripled the number of providds, and we can say today we're at 93% of the providers signed up. we're on the right track. >> ron: do you think it will continue to be a contentious thing in the legislative session? >> lt.t.ov. reynolds: they h he to figure out then how they're going to balance the budget. if they want to fund education,
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need to take care of the medicaid population, there's only so o ny available dollars, and so 've put forth a budget that we felt it balanced, it meant the -- met what iowans are oking for and it also honors the commitments that we made and that's funding education, teacher leadership and compensation, that's $150 million of new money, three-year phase-in, as wewe as honoriri our commitment to local governments for the backfill for the commercial and industrial property tax ee relief, so we want topped do that also. >> ron: the legislature is almost a year behind its own deadlines for funding schools, as far as deadlines they put on the schools. they crush the schools in the spring sometime because the schools have to come up with temporary layoffs or issue pink slips and it's unfair to the school districts. >> lt. gov. reynolds: and that was one of the things that the governor addressed in the condition of the state. he said what we're putting in our budget, he sajd it was $145 million and just realal encouraged the legislature to come to some consensus sooner
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meeting with superintendents, talking about the save our future proposal. that's certainly one thing that they continue to bring up us that they need to know, they need the certainty, they need to know what the amount is so they can put their budget together gaseed on what xhey'll -- based on they'll actually get. >> ron: a register headline i said a year ago said political future bright for kim reynolds. the governor was quoted as saying she's a full partner, taken the lead on stem and she's very involved on economic development, we can cover twice as much territory. that's the kind of partnership you were referring to earlier. no one knows what the governor is going to do, but is running for governor something in your future? >> lt. gov. reynolds: right now i'm running to be the best lieutenana governor i can be and be a true partner. >> ron: oh no. >> lt. gov. reynolds: really, we're just starting the second year of our second term, and the governor has not decided what he's going to do, so we're focused on continuing to grow
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>> ron: i always like to ask though. >> lt. gov. reynolds: that's okay. i love what i'm doing and i appreciate the fact that i do get to be a partner in this administration. >> ron: the caucus is now just a few days away. is the republican party in a way -- even nicki hailey and he speech a few daysago, didn't mention names, but she was not saying flattering things about trump or cruz. what is the republican party going to do about those things? can you sayy who you favor? >> lt. gov. reynolds: no, i haven't. we're so fortunate to be the first state in the ountry, and we want the candidates to go to all 99 counties, a great opportunity to test your organization and see what's weighing on the minds of iowans. we're very reflective of the nation, so it's a small state, you can cover it fairly easy. it's$ inexpensive with th media market we have and we want to
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have a fair chance in iowa, so neither one of us are endorsing and we're just encouraging them to go to iowa, go to all 99 counties and let iowans tell you what's'sn their minds andd ask you where you stand on pollses. positions. i said really as iowans, we have a besponsibility to hold them accountable and so when we as them the question and they ll us where they stand, we need to make sure that they stay true to their word and it's not something we hear in iowa and something different in other states. >> ron: the gogornor was saying last june that he didn't think donald trump would get the nomination, but i don't think anyone would have predicted that trump would be dukeoing as well as he is doing. >> lt. gov. reynolds: it's interesting -- >> ron: what does that say? >> lt. gov. reynolds: this is an interesting cycle, so different than it normally is, but it shows the frustration of not only iowans, but americans, and they don't like the dysfunction that's happening in washington, d.c., they don't like the fact@ that we're $18 trillion in debt
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going on around e world in foreign policy and they feel that america's leadership is on retreat insteaof being, you know, the leader in the world. and they really are concerned. they're concern about their safety, they're concerned about their children. i have seven grandchildren, one more on the way, i want to make sure that they have every opportunity at we had growing up. no guarantees, there's no guarartees for aanything, but an opportunity to be successful and thrive, and so there's a lot of concern that i think they're frustrated that nothing ever gets done and so i think that's reflected in what we're seeing on the campaign trail. so it's going to be interesting to see how this all plays out, but i would say that on both sides. both sides, there's some interesting things going n. it appars that sanders has narrowed the margin with secretary clinton, so it's interesting year in politics. >> ron: we're going to get you back on the show sometime in the near future. lieutenant governor kim reynolds, thank you for taking
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steele report. congress doesn't regulate wall street... wall street regulates congress. it's a rigged economy that sends most new wealth to the top 1%. d it's held in place by a corrupt political system where wall street banks and billionaires buy elections. my campaign is funded by over two and a half million small contributions. people who know you can't level the playing field by taking more money from wall street. i'm bernie sanders, and i approve this message.
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>> ron: welcome back to this week's edition of the sele report. our next est is democratic presidential candidate bernie sanders and i began our questioning by asking him a little bit about his personal background and how it shaped his views. you know, you have an interesting background. you're father immigrated from follow land, you had jewish members who died in the holocaust. that gives you a werful perspectiveabout how you view life. >> sen. sanders: it truly does. i was -- my dad came to this country at the age of 17 from a very small town in poland. he came to the united states with no money, not speaking english, and a couple of years ago, my brother and i had the opportunity to go back to at small townwn and it kind of blew me away, the kind of courage. 17 years of age, to leave your family to come to this country.
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york, -- brooklyn, new york, in a three and a half room rented apartment. my mother's dreaeain life was to get out of the apartment and own a home of her own. she died young, never achieved that dream. to me, one of the lessons that i learned as a child is what it's like to grow up in a family where we didn't have a lot of money and financial stress played a significant role in our life. it's not just myessage. it's the story of my political life. i am the longest serving independent in the hiory of the united states congress. i've taken on democrats, i've taken on republicans, i've taken on every special interest that you can name, whether it's wall street or the pharmaceutecal industry or the insuranan industry. i have taken theheon on behalf of working people in the middle class.
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and i'm running for president because i honestly believe at a time when the middle class has been disappearing for 40 years, when many in iowa and vermont are working longer hours forr wer wagag, and yet almost all of the new incoming wealth is going to the top one percent. that old-fashioned economics just is not going to work. we need leadership now, frankly, that is prepared to take on the billionaire class, take on wall street, take oncorporate america, and say, you know what? our government belongs to all of us and not just a handful of very very wealthy people. i think of all the candidates t there, my life work and political background is best suited to do that. >> ron: so you're talking about -- i've seen your ads saying the rigged economy. i get a lot of my questions from friends who are both democrats and republicics or viewers who always have ideas about what we should ask the politicians that i have the privilege of
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>> rononone of them said to me today, the rigged economy that senator sanders is talking about, isn't he a part of that? didn't he help create that, he's been in congress to long? how do you answer r that? >> sen. sanders: sometimes you get -- you know, i'm one out of 100 members of the united states senate. i was one out of 435 members of the house of representatives and not the president of thehe united states. so you can spread the blame around. but i think if you look at my record, i am somebody who has voted against all of these disastroro trade agreemmts, somebody who is trying to raise the minimum wage to a living wage, $15 an hour over the next several years. i'm somebody who has fought to brbrg about healthcare for every man, woman and child in this country as a right. somebody who has fought very, very hard to end a campaign finanae system which nowow allows billionaires to buy elections. i kind of don't think it's fair to lump all members of congress togeer and say, well,you're all the same.
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are trying todo. i'm proud of the record that i've established. >> ron: you spent a lot of time in iowa already by the time we air this. i think you'll have been here 15 times and with a huge schedule on the most recent visit to iowa, so getting your people to the caucus is absolutely vital to have any chance of winning. what is your plan to do that? and can you realistically defeat hillary clinton for the nomination? >> sen. sanders: look, we started this campaign at about 3% of the polls nationally. my guess is when we began, 80, 85% of the people in iowadid not even know who i was, let alone what i stood for. we have come a long, long ay. and i think we have narrowed the gap between secretary clinton and myself, so if yourur question is do i think we can win, yes, i do believe we can win. and i believe we can win because what i am trying to do and what i have done for months is go around this state e small l towns, tthe larger cities. we've had town meetings where just huge turnouts, so what we're doing is pretty
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we're doing meetings. people are asking me questions, i'm rponding. we have put together a really strong organization. we have a lot of volunteers. we're knocking on doors, making phone calls. but your point is right. if we're going towin this, we theed to bring our people -- we need to bring our people out, we need a large voter turnout and that's what we're working to do. >> ron: socialism, a lot of people say you're just a socialist. my friend phil wanted me to ask you, why do you think that kind of socialistic philosophy would work in the united states when it doesn't work in countries like russia? >> sen. sasaers: well, i have nothing to do with what exists in russia or the old soviet union and that's the first point that has to be made. the soviet union was an authoritaria communist country. the democratic socialism that i talk about is similar to what goes on in countries like denmark, sweden, norway, and other countries around europe and what thoho countries ve accomplished, and i don't think
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if you take a country like deny mark orfinland or norway, nerve that country has healthcare as a right and they do it in much more cost effective way than we do. do you know how much college education costs in the coununies? it is free. seniors get very strong retirement benefits and by and large, you have a government in those countries that try to develop policies that represese dinary people rather than the wealthy and the powerful. further, in our country, you have programs that are socialistic. one is called social security. i don't knowowoo many peoeoe, most people i know think social security is a pretty important and good program. they think medicare, which is a single payor health insurance program for the elderly, they think that's a pretty good program. i don't want toto get people too nervous, but the local public library and police department and fire department are socialist institutions. the point being, bottom line, i want to see a government thaha represents all of us and not as
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small number of wealthy campaign contributors in the year 2016 when we talk out public education -- and by the way, iowa, as you know, is one of the states that has historically been a leader in public education. what we were saying 100 ars ago, 120 years ago, what workingng people were saying, our kids are entitled to a free public education. up to 12th grade, okay? well, the world has changed and today in many respects, a college degree is the equivalent of what a high school degree was 50 years ago, right? so i happen to believe that we should have in this country a situation where all of our kids who have the ability and the desire, not everybody, but who have the ability and the desire, the qualificatios, they should be able to get a college education because we're going to make public colleges and universities tuition free, so everybody has the abilily to go to college regardless of the
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also working to substantially lower student debt in this prrblem. how we pay for it? we pay for through a tax on wall street speculation because wall street, when in their greed and behavior, crashed this economy, the middle class bailed them out and now it's time for wall street to help the middle class in this country. >> ron: how would you describe the center fees of what you want iowa and the rest of the country to know about your campaign and why you feel you're the best candidate on the democratic side? >> sen. sanders: not only do we have the strongest agency to represent the middle class and working families, and that means free tuition to public colleges and universities, raising the minimum wage, rebuilding a crumbling infrastructure and creating millions of decent-paying jobs, pay equity for women workers, but what i have said over and over again is that no president, not bernie
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effective in taking on the big money that controls our country, wall street, corporate america, the corporate media, the large campaign donors, unless we have what i call a political revolution, unless millions of people, including many who have given up on the politqcal process -- we have one of the lowest voter turnouttof any major country. i want people to jump back in and say loudly and clearly, you know, in our great country, this government has to work for all of us and not just an instal number of people. i am cacaing for a political revolution and what gratifies me very much as i go around iowa and this country is we're seeing a lot of working class people and young people kind of standing up and saying, you know what? you have got me excited. i want to get involved in the political process. that's what i want to see happen in this country and that's what we need. >> ron: you may ororay not have to worry about it, but donald trump has hinted at a third party run if he doesn't get the flom nation.
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is that something youconsider? >> sen. sanders: no. i made a promise. i am the longest serving independent in the history of the congress. when i got into this, i said we're going to compete for the democratic nomination. if i lose hat, iwon't run as an independent. i happen to believe -- and i know not everybody necessarily agrees with me. i happen to believe that climate change is real, it is caused by man activity, it is already causing very, very significant damage in our country and around the world, and what the scientists tell me, and i'm on both the environmental and energy ommittees. what they tell me is if we do not get our act together, and that means breaking our dependency on fossil fuel, momong to energy efficiency and sustainable fuel, and by the way, iowa is one of the leaders in this country in terms of biofuel and wind. >> ron: we have a lot of@ wind. >> sen. sanders: you have a lot and congratulations to the people of iowa. we need to do more of thatall over the country and if we do not do that, what i have to say to you is the planet we're going to be leaving our children and
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much less habitatae and healthy planet and we can't allow that to lap. we have to work with china, russia, india, countries around the world, and we can do it and in the process we'll create millions of jobs. so count me in as somebody who be believes, along with pope francis, for example, he talks about us moving ina suicidal direction, we have to transform our energy system and that's why i opposed the bakken pipeline because it just encourages the skaf admintration and transportationonf fossil fuel. >> ron: just briefly, i have a couple more questions here. the fed recently, for the first time in a decade, raised interest ratat. was that the right decision? >> sen. sanders: i think not. the fed has the responsibility of controlling inflation, but also of giving us astrong economy in terms of empmpyment. and i worry very much that while the official unemployment rate may be 5%, real unemployment is
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include people that have given up looking for work or are working part time. i think what we need to do is do our best to make sure that install and peed yum sized businesses can get affordable loans and interest rates thth remain low and those businesses create the jobs we need. >> ron: secretary clinton has the star power of her husband coming into iowa. how do you deal with thaha >> sen. sanders: we'll unveil the small four of my wife jane. i've known bill and hillary for manying many years. bill, watch out, jane is now on the campaign trail and you are in trouble. look, you know, we are taking on, you know, a woman who is perhaps the best known woman in -- one of the best knowow people in our country, let alone the world, who is the wife of a former president who is known by everybody. so we know what we're up against. we have, you knono very formidable opponent here.
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secretary clinton's record with my record, i think you will see more and more support foryou are candidacy. >> ron: we'll leave it on a lighter note. when you see larry david portray bernie sanders, what do you think about that? some people say he looks more like bernie sanders than -- >> sen. sanders: that's what i thought. i called larry up and said can i get you on the campaign trail? you do a better flee than i do. i though it was hysterical. >> ron: thanks to presidential candidate bernie sanders for taking the time to talk with kwwl fuse. that's it for this edition of the steele report. we'll see you next week and also online on kwwl.com.
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