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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  August 10, 2013 3:00am-4:01am PDT

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makes a difference. membership helps make the most of your cashflow. i'm nelson gutierrez of strictly bicycles and my money works as hard as i do. this is what membership is. this is what membership does. this is russian president vladimir putin. well, this is russian president vladimir putin and an adorable fuzzy puppy dog. so cute. hi. sorry. vladimir putin, as we have docu -- look. oh. as we have documented on this show before, vladimir putin likes to be photographed with animals. he likes to be seen as a macho tough guy. preferably a shirtless tough guy. added a stereotypical character to the village people lineup. something happens when you take vladimir putin out of his preferred natural shirtless habitat and you instead put him on stage in front of the press.
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macho shirtless vladimir putin becomes slouchy i really don't want to be here vladimir putin in a suit. here he is earlier. look at the look on his face. earlier this year with the prime minister of japan. here he is a few months later pulling the same mug. standing next to german chancellor angela merkel at the g-8 summit in ireland. everybody is having a good time. here he is at the same event with president obama. oh, please, won't somebody just give me a puppy? or maybe a python? maybe a wooden plank i could break with my forehead? yeah, that putin, patented putin posture that i would prefer not to be here posture, that got kind of an affectionate mention today in the east room of the white house. >> i don't have a bad personal relationship with putin. when we have conversations, they're candid, they're blunt. oftentimes they're constructive. i know the press likes to focus on body language and he's got that kind of slouch looking like
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the bored kid in the back of the classroom. but the truth is that when we're in conversations together, oftentimes it's very productive. >> president obama in a press conference at the white house today saying that vladimir putin looks like the slouchy bored kid in the back of the classroom. it's not a surprise that the press conference today focused in significant part on mr. obama's relationship with the russian president since u.s./russian relations are all over the headlines right now. it's not just russia's decision to provide temporary asylum to the nsa leaker, edward snowden, or even russia's high-profile arrest recently of a u.s. diplomat who they have accused of being a cia spy and who they perp walked to a great effect. it's not even just russia's decision to ban american couples from adopting russian children. it's also russia's recent spate of anti-gay legislation which has drawn lots of criticism from the west, and some calls that the world should boycott the upcoming winter olympics that are due to be held in russia next year.
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>> i know that one question that's been raised is how do we approach the olympics? i want to just make very clear right now i do not think it's appropriate to boycott the olympics. we've got a bunch of americans out there who are training hard, who are doing everything they can to succeed. nobody's more offended than me by some of the anti-gay and lesbian legislation you've been seeing in russia, but as i said just this week, i've spoken out against that not just with respect to russia, but a number of other countries where we continue to do work with them but have a strong disagreement on this issue. and one of the things i'm really looking forward to is maybe some gay and lesbian athletes bringing home the gold or silver or bronze. which i think would go a long way in rejecting the kind of attitudes that we're seeing
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there. and if russia doesn't have gay or lesbian athletes, then it would probably make their team weaker. >> russian team at the olympics will be weaker if they have a lack of gay athletes. very nice. so a large portion of the president's press conference today focused on what to do with the putin problem. but what the president got the most passionate about today was a domestic issue. the issue of health reform. the health reform law that he signed back in 2010. one of the things we've been reporting on for the last couple weeks is how much the republican party and conservative groups are trying to message against health reform right now. how much they're trying to make the august congressional recess we're in right now and specifically the august town halls happening at home in congressional districts, how much they're trying to make those all about hating obama care. and so we are seeing anti-obama care ads running on television right now, in august, in this weird political time when there are no nationwide elections. we're seeing the republican campaign committee in the house
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putting out these packets for republican members of congress telling them how to stage manage their town halls with their constituents to make them seem as anti-obama care as possible. well today we saw some of the push in the other direction from the president. the president, today, both making the case for health reform on its merits, but also going right at republicans for what the material consequences would be if they did get their way and found a way to get rid of this law. >> as we speak right now, for the 85% of americans who already have health insurance, they are benefiting from being able to keep their kid on their plan if their kid is 26 or younger. folks who have been bumping up with lifetime limits on their insurance, that leaves them vulnerable. that doesn't exist. seniors have been getting discounts on their prescription drugs. that's happening right now. free preventative care.
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mammograms. contraception. that's happening right now. now, what happens on october 1st in 53 days is for the remaining 15% of the population that doesn't have health insurance, they're going to be able to go on a website or call up a call center and sign up for affordable, quality health insurance at a significantly cheaper rate than what they can get right now on the individual market. now, i think the really interesting question is why it is that my friends in the other party have made the idea of preventing these people from getting health care their holy grail. their number one priority. the one unifying principle in the republican party at the moment is making sure that 30 million people don't have health care.
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and presumably repealing all those benefits i just mentioned. that's hard to understand as an agenda that is going to strengthen our middle class. at least they used to say, well, we're going to replace it with something better. there's nothing even a pretense now that they're going to replace it with something better. >> president obama today talking at length and with some passion about the major legislative achievement of his first term which was health reform. what he would like to be the major legislative achievement of his second term, of course, is immigration reform. the president chose to end his press conference today on this very punchy call that immigration reform needs to get done. he said it would have the effect of adding $1 trillion to the economy. he said it would improve the housing market. it would be a boone for the high-tech industry. and this is how he decided to end his nearly hour-long presser. >> get that bill on the floor. put it up for a vote. i am absolutely certain that the votes for the senate bill, which
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strengthens border security, demands responsibility from undocumented workers to pay a fine, pay a penalty, get to the back of the line, reforms our legal immigration system, holds employers accountable. i am absolutely confident that if that bill was on the floor of the house, it would pass. this is one where you've actually got some pretty broad consensus. i don't know an issue where you have labor, the chamber of commerce, evangelicals, student groups, you name it, supportive of a bill. let's get it done. all right? thank you very much, everybody. >> i am certain this bill would pass if it made it to the house floor. let's get it done. the president finished with that. in his mind i'm sure he dropped the mike and then he walked off stage. in terms of strategy, what he said there about how it would pass right now if only the house would vote on it, there are enough republicans who support
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it that it seems like maybe he's right. an that is increasingly the line from people who support immigration reform. remember, it has already passed the senate. and just numerically it is starting to see like the president is probably right and proponents of immigration reform are probably right, that if there were a vote in the house on what already passed in the senate, there are enough votes to pass it in the house, too, which means it would become law. the longer that this goes on, the clearer that that becomes, that it would pass if they just allowed a vote on it, the longer that is clear, the more unsustainable it becomes for the republican leadership in the house to just refuse to vote on it because they know the vote will go against them. that was a fascinating moment during today's press performance.
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i think he should sort of stick a pin in that and see how that plays out when the house comes back to d.c. but the main point of this rare formal presidential press conference today was what the president announced at the very beginning in his formal statement at the time. it had to do with national security, with what our country is doing to protect our national security, and crucially, with how much we are allowed to know about it. the last time the president spoke at this level of detail on the issue was this big drone speech back in may which was all about how we need to be more transparent and have a better informed debate about national security and war and specifically the u.s. policy of using drones to kill people in other countries. if, after that speech, there was any suspicion that that speech means that president obama will actually start disclosing more information about killing people with drones if he gets asked about it, yeah, if you thought that that speech meant he was going to be more open in discussing these matters, apparently, no, the president today laid that to rest. >> if i can ask in the interest of transparency, can you tell us
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about these drone strikes we've seen over the last couple of weeks in yemen? >> i'm not going to discuss specific operations that have taken place. again, in my speech in may, i was very specific about how we make these determinations about potential lethal strikes. so i would refer you to that speech. >> so you won't even confirm that we've carried out drone strikes in yemen? >> i will not have a discussion about operational issues. ed henry? >> the rest of the press conference today was kind of slightly free-wheeling, i'll take the next question, everybody gets a follow-up. joking about your new baby. making fun of major garrett. ha, ha, ha. it's august. i'm going on vacation. somebody asked about drones and it's like, no, boom, full stop. i do not talk about that. it's like you're listening to music in an elevator and all of a sudden a metallica rift kicks in. president obama announced at the top of the press conference a number of proposed changes to our nation's surveillance programs and what we're allowed to know about our surveillance programs and how programs get approved. checks and balances.
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president obama called on congress today to pursue changes to part of the patriot act which okays the mass collection of telephone records. he said there may be more safeguards that would be put in place with regard to that program. the senate intelligence committee has already said it will set hearings on the issue for the fall. the president also today called for a major change to the court that grants the government permission to conduct that sort of surveillance. it's a court that only meets in secret and the way it works now is that the government, only the government, only one side, argues their case in front of the secret court for what surveillance they want to be able to do. and then the judge, after hearing their argument in secret, rules on their request. the president said that should change. today. he said the court should also hear from the other side of the argument.
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there should be an adversarial voice making the case against the government and the judge should rule after hearing both sides. almost like a real court. the president today also announced new efforts at transparency when it comes to these kinds of programs. he said he has directed the justice department to release new details on the nsa's bulk collection of telephone data. he said now is the time to get that information out there. >> rather than have a trunk come out here and a leg come out there and a tail come out there, let's just pull out the whole elephant out there so people know exactly what they're looking at. let's examine what is working, what's not. are there additional protections that can be put in place? and let's move forward. >> while the president was at the podium speaking, the justice department, in fact, released this new 23-page document that details what the government says are the legal justifications for this kind of surveillance. and also what its limits are. joining us now, nbc news justice correspondent, pete williams who has been poring over that document today. pete, thank you very much for being with us. >> sure. >> how much of the elephant has been unveiled? what do we know because of this document that we didn't know before?
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>> a lot about the legal rationale. some of the operational details. for example, they said, something that officials have been saying that the only metadata that's gathered is the numbers that are dialed, how long the call lasts, certain other networking information, but not, for example, the location from which the call is made. so if you're on a cell phone, the metadata doesn't include where you were. some other things included the fact that the way this works is you get a phone number from a suspected terrorist overseas, for example, then you go into the database to see what other numbers that person has called. but the document makes clear that the nsa is authorized under this law to go out what they call three hops. what that means is they can look at the phone numbers dialed by that phone number, then they can go out one ring and look at the numbers dialed by all those people. and then go out two more rings. so three hops in all that the law allows them to do. so those were some of the operational details that we got. >> the idea of the three-hop leeway, which is a strange phrase, i see what you mean.
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it does call into question how important it is that a specific number is at the center of that request. i mean, isn't the basic idea about warrantless searches that they have to -- there has to be some specific amount of relevance to an investigation. you can't just troll broadly in a sort of general warrant way, right? >> well, two points about that. first of all, there seems to be little legal question that there's no search warrant required simply because the supreme court ruled a couple of decades ago that there's no fourth amendment, that you have no privacy interest in your telephone records. the question was never whether there was a search warrant. it wasn't a constitutional question. the question was a legal one. whether -- here's the problem. the law says intelligence agencies can only gather
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material that's relevant to a terrorism investigation. that's your point. so opponents have been saying, well, how can every phone number dialed possibly be relevant to an investigation? and that's really the bulk of what this white paper today said. they say, first of all, it's well-settled law that materials are relevant to an investigation not only when they bear directly on it, but also when it's reasonable to believe that they could lead to other information that bears directly on it. so in other words, the paper says the government can gather a big box of materials if it thinks there's a smaller box of evidence inside. they give some examples, a doctor who was ordered to turn over 15,000 patient files to look for health care fraud, or a law firm that had to turn over all the records on its clients in an s.e.c. investigation.
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all that upheld by the courts. and secondly, this paper says the program meets the relevance test because of the unique name of phone data, that it allows relationships to be discovered only if the government has all the records to start with. this is what intelligence officials mean when they say, to find a needle in the haystack you have to have the haystack. >> pete, on the issue of the fisa courts, senator ron wyden is one of the critics of the president on this issue. he called the fisa court the most one-sided court in the nation. what kind of judges get appointed to sit on this court in secret. the kinds of proposals that the president made today about that court, would those be radical changes to the way that court operates? >> well, it would be a radical change because for the first time you'd have somebody in the court urging the court not to do what the government wants. the problem is who's that person going to be? and, you know, the administration does seem serious about trying to figure out a way to make this work. obviously it would have to be a person who is, has all the clearances. would it be a government official? would it be somebody at the justice debarment sort of like an ombudsman or inspector general who goes in there and tells the court, don't do
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whatever the government asks? you won't have a traditional adversary like in a normal court because nobody would know in advance you're about to go get their phone number. so it's not like, you know, the government doesn't even know whose phone number they're getting so you couldn't call up harry and say we're about to get your number, come in here and argue against it if you want. it would have to be some institutional person. it's difficult to know how it would work. >> pete williams, nbc news justice correspondent. thanks for helping us us this. i appreciate your time. i'm going to go out on a limb here. i'm sure in virginia when someone enjoys a nice meal, usually if you're a restaurant, you enjoy that nice meal, you have to pay for it. generally it is the person who ate that meal who pays for it. this concept is apparently completely foreign to virginia politicians. how that had suddenly become very politically important is next. [ male announcer ] these days, a small business can save by sharing. like carpools... polly wants to know if we can pick her up. yeah, we can make room. yeah. [ male announcer ] ...office space. yes, we're loving this communal seating. it's great. [ male announcer ] the best thing to share? a data plan. at&t mobile share for business.
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ask your doctor if including advair could help improve your lung function. [ male announcer ] advair diskus fluticasone propionate and salmeterol inhalation powder. get your first prescription free and save on refills at advaircopd.com. happy friday and a special happy friday to the residents of the great state of virginia. where today it was the grand kickoff for the commonwealth of opportunity tour. governor ultrasound, bob mcdonnell today starting off the first day of his week-long statewide why are you declaring victory tour with stops in salem and row neck and bristol? saying he's taking this tour to, "highlight virginia's successes during his administration." because virginia has become the commonwealth of opportunity under his leadership. "the last 3 1/2 years have witnessed significant progress in addressing the challenges facing our citizens in their daily lives.
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virginia has more jobs. virginians have more opportunities." and, of course, virginia's governor has a new watch and a suede jacket and a bunch of other really nice stuff. the watch, in fact, is a rolex engraved just for him. being governor of the commonwealth of opportunity, opportunity, also afforded bob mcdonnell the opportunity to drive a ferrari without paying for it. being governor also afforded his wife a $10,000 suede jacket she didn't have to buy. plus designer handbags and shoes. plus there was the lake house vacation he didn't have to pay for and the $15,000 chicken dinner at his daughter's wedding he didn't have to pay for, plus $120,000 in cash paid to the governor's wife, sister, and to the governor, himself. lots for the governor of the commonwealth of opportunity. a lot of opportunities taken during his time in the statehouse so far. why not celebrate how awesome this publisher's clearinghouse giant check jackpot of a governorship has really been for
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old fiscal conservative bob mcdonnell? take a victory lap, gov. why be ashamed? kick off your commonwealth of opportunity tour the very same day the "washington post" publishes new information about what yet more cash that you have taken since you have been governor. this time it was $50,000, apparently, that governor bob mcdonnell took from a virginia beach doctor. the governor took the money from the doctor then turned around and offered that same doctor a seat on a state medical board. but this time, thankfully, there appears to be a saving grace for the governor in that the quo was apparently rejected by the quid. even though the governor took the doctor's 50 grand then offered the doctor that seat on the state medical board, the doctor did not accept the offer. so, saving grace. since governor ultrasound has decided to just be completely u.n. embarrassed by all this, totally unashamed, federal grand jury, grand schmury, it's the commonwealth of opportunity for me. hey, buddy, have i got a deal for you? governor ultrasound is trying to appear untroubled by all the trouble he's in, the other
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person in virginia politics getting into deeper and deeper political trouble is virginia's attorney general, ken cuccinelli who also took thousands of dollars in cash and prizes from the same virginia guy who showered the mcdonnell family in gold and suede and ferraris and watches. but part of the reason that ken cuccinelli's problem here is getting better and not worse, in the sense that it's more entertaining and that more that way, is because ken cuccinelli at least so far is keeping all of the stuff he got. when bob mcdonnell finally broke down and hired a team of professional apologists and spinners to try to deal with this gift-gate problem he is having as governor, first thing they made him do was to give the money back and say he was sorry. then they made his daughters give back the money they got, too. no word yet on the suede jacket and the handbags that went to his wife. no word on the rolex, actually, either. hey, at least they've given some of it back. baby steps.
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although ken cuccinelli took bob mcdonnell's lead when it came to accepting gifts like those while he was in august, ken cuccinelli has no yet picked up on the how to make it seem better after the fact strategy. ken cuccinelli who is now running for governor acknowledges getting $18,000 in gifts from the same guy who gave so much of the stuff to bob mcdonnell. free vacations. free plane trips. a big $1,500 thanksgiving dinner spread for his family. and ken cuccinelli has been criticizing bob mcdonnell for taking these gifts. he's trying to position himself as if he's the big ethics guy in virginia politics now. which is amazing. but even as he's trying to position himself that way, ken cuccinelli is not giving the
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gifts back, himself. he is keeping them. he said last week there is no way he can repay gifts like these. since he's already taken them. he said there are some bells you can't unring. how can you pay back a dinner? you've already eaten it. the fact the governor had his daughter repay the $15,000 dinner the guy bought for her does not seem to have sunk in with mr. cuccinelli. you don't have to cook for the guy, ken. just pay for what it was worth when you ate it. when pressed about it again, it dawned on cuccinelli what was expected from him in a situation like this. he said, "you mean, just write a check?" yes. he said, "if i could do that, i just might do that but that's not something i can do from my family's perspective." to further clarify what the
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gubernatorial campaign meant, the campaign followed up with "as a father of seven children, like most virginians he needs to manage a family budget and his comment simply reflected that reality." the reality is ken cuccinelli cannot give back the gifts he got while in office because, well, he and his family, they ate them. so they get to keep them. happy friday, virginia. it is going to be a long, interesting august. 123450 stpao give it a few taps, and...it's taken care of. this is pretty easy, and i see it works on hotels too. you bet. now if you like that, press the red button on top. ♪ how did he not see that coming? what's in your wallet?
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the chair recognizes the gentleman from american samoa. mr. fing-faloomabinga. >> the man who set off the
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faloomabinga, that congressman is back in the news today as is the other congressman who he called fing faloomabinga. that's coming up. my favorite story of the day. please stay with us. it starts with little things. tiny changes in the brain. little things anyone can do. it steals your memories. your independence. ensures support, a breakthrough. and sooner than you'd like. sooner than you'd think. you die from alzheimer's disease. we cure alzheimer's disease. every little click, call or donation adds up to something big.
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ocuvite has a unique formula not found in your multivitamin to help protect your eye health. ocuvite. help protect your eye health. this is a free-standing clinic in toledo, ohio. it's called the capital care network of toledo. until recently, until less than two weeks ago, this clinic had a transfer agreement with the nearby university of toledo medical center, so if something went wrong at the clinic with one of the patients there, the medical center could accept the clinic's patients. they could be transferred there for further care. things like that only happen very, very rarely at a clinic like that, but they did have that agreement with hospital in place. until july 31st. the agreement with the hospital expired that day. and thanks to ohio governor john kasich and the republicans in the ohio state legislature, that agreement between that clinic and that hospital cannot be renewed. at the end of june, ohio republicans passed a budget that contained a whole new slew of ohio antiabortion laws.
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these laws were not debated or proposed as regular legislation to go through the committee process on all that but slipped into the giant budget with no mention signed by john kasich, and now they are law. part of the new law bans that local hospital from keeping the transfer agreement they used to have with that local clinic. the law says the clinic cannot stay open without that transfer agreement. and then the law makes it illegal for the hospital to sign that transfer agreement with the clinic. it's tidy, right? you make the law require something then you change the law to prevent you from getting that thing. and by virtue of the fact you don't have that thing, you get shut down. there used to be two clinics that provided abortions in toledo, but the other was shut down by the same provision in the law two months ago. that clinic had been around for 30 years. it had been bombed and protested and forced to move three times, but it had always kept its doors open. until it shut down in june because this new transfer
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agreement, t.r.a.p. in ohio law. now the other clinic in toledo. the last remaining clinic in toledo is getting shut down, too, by the same law. you hear people talk about t.r.a.p. laws. this is the kind of t.r.a.p. they mean. require a clinic to have something, and then ban them by law from having it. and you shut it down because they don't have it. this is how republican legislators and governors are banning legal abortion in our country whenever they're in power, roe v. wade or no roe v. wade. prior to this summer, ohio had 13 abortion clinics. by the end of this summer, thanks to john kasich and the republican legislature there will not be 13 clinics left but 11 clinics left. ultimately this new republican law is expected to whittle down the number of clinics in the state of ohio to maybe eight? half of them gone. you think they'll stop there? since the november election, so less than a year, republicans in state governments have been
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passing laws to shut down abortion clinics from coast to coast. texas had 42 clinics that provided abortion services. republicans passed new restrictions this summer that will probably shut down 37 of those 42 clinics. wisconsin had four clinics. republican governor in wisconsin is slated to bring that number from four town to two. mississippi has just the one clinic in jackson. that one, the republicans are fighting to close that one down as well and it seems like they may be close to doing it. in north dakota, same deal. there's one clinic for the whole great big state. this spring republicans passed a law that aims to shut down that one last clinic. in alabama, there are five clinics that provide abortion services. republicans passed laws in the spring that would close three of the five clinics. in virginia, the number of clinics right now is at 20. it's slated to go to four. in north carolina, 16 facilities, republicans passed new restrictions that are expected to close 15 of those. 15 of the 16. so this is before the republican
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party in north carolina launched its efforts to shut down clinics and this is likely to be after. it is sometimes difficult to explain this larger trend of republicans creating these new impossible to meet demands on abortion clinics. these legal requirements designed to shut clinics down. in the abstract, it's hard to imagine what that means. in the specific, when it's happening it seems crystal clear. joining me now, connie pillich, ohio state, democrat, running for ohio state treasurer. thank you for being with us tonight. it's nice to have you here. >> thank you. >> so how likely do you think if is this clinic will be forced to shut down? the reporting today can the "toledo blade" made it seem like it's basically a done deal. >> i think that's accurate. it's very likely that it will be shut down. governor kasich and his friends in columbus have made it virtually impossible for this clinic to obey the law and stay open.
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>> with the only two clinics in toledo being shut or about to be shut by the provision in the law, what will women in toledo do if they want to access abortion services? >> well clearly these provisions in law create quite an undue burden on women who are seeking safe and legal medical procedure, so they're going to have to travel. they're either going to have to go to detroit, cleveland, or columbus. those are the closest places, but what is also extremely possible is that some illegal operation will set up shop to try to satisfy the needs there. >> one of the things that makes a big practical difference to women who have to travel a long distance in order to get an abortion is the length of time they have to spend away once they have made the travel. obviously if you can go somewhere close to home, the time you have to spend isn't as much of a burden as if you have to travel to some far away city.
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does ohio have a mandatory waiting period for women seeking abortions? >> ohio has a 24 hour waiting period. for the women in the toledo region who have to travel several hours away, this, of course, not only gives them transportation expense with the price of gas. if they have to stay overnight, they're going to have to pay for lodging or they're going to drive home for several hours and then drive again back the next day or whenever their next appointment is. unfortunately, many of the women in ohio who do seek an abortion are already mothers. they have children at home.
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and most of those women are single moms. so they may not have the support system at home to help them care for their children, so this is definitely creating an undue burden. in that respect, i think becomes an unconstitutional provision. but look, this is playing out, as you said, it's just another in a long string of attacks that are atrocious invasion of women's health that were snuck into the budget and other pieces of legislation most of the time with very little debate or even public knowledge. and i actually wrote an op-ped for the "huffington post" about this which is on my website, conniepillich.com. people can read it there if they choose. what's clear is it's a deliberate concerted effort to make women have less access to safe and appropriately available medical procedures. >> what you just mentioned there about the lack of debate, that
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does seem to be one of the important things about what's happened in ohio. obviously we are seeing this push from anywhere across the state, anywhere across the country where republicans are in control. we're seeing them shutting down clinics and doing everything they can to fry to get rid of abortion in their states. but in ohio, the fact it was all passed as part of the budget, that there was never some omnibus antiabortion, run through the legislature, debated in full and the state had time to realize this was happening. is there a sense in ohio that maybe people didn't know this was coming? toledo is likely to have no access to legal abortion very soon and it's going to start happening in other big parts of the state shortly as this law kicks in. is ohio ready for this? do people know this is happening? >> i don't think people know that much about this, and clearly other clinics will be targeted in much the same way that the toledo clinics were. but when you put these provisions into the budget and when you do it the way it was done this year, sometimes slipped in almost in the middle
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of the night with no chance for any debate, it's just really an egregious abuse of power. and it has nothing to do with promoting public health or making sure that our women can lead safe and productive lives. it's only about harming women's health. women deserve to have safe medical procedures, no matter where they live in ohio. and this bill and these laws are making that impossible for many women in ohio. >> connie pillich, ohio state representative, candidate for ohio state treasurer, i should say. we'll post a link to that op-ped on our website that you mentioned. thanks for your time tonight. >> thank you. just ahead, the speaker of the house and a reindeer and a lawmaker from american samoa converge in the strange political netherworld that we call august. stay with us. protect your family... and launch your dreams. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side. does your dog food have? 18 percent? 20? new purina one true instinct has 30. active dogs crave nutrient-dense food. so we made purina one true instinct. learn more at purinaone.com i missed a payment. aw, shoot.
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happy friday, and happy august. after today's press conference, the president heads off for his august vacation today. he will have on martha's vineyard in massachusetts. local fishing reports i checked today seems to indicate maybe martha's vineyard is hoarding the striped bass this summer since none are make it down the cape. president gets eight days at martha's vineyard for august vacation which is not fair because i don't think he fishes. august is supposed to be recess time for congress. look at them rushing to leave last week, bolting for the exits. get me out of here. august recess time in congress used to mean vacation, right? time off from politics. now it means congress rushes home not to vacation, but to the screaming town halls. orchestrated for maximum confrontational youtube ability. this newly shoutty political august can be fun as far as
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politics goes as long as you're not the one being screamed at. if you're not just a back bencher, if you're in the congressional leadership, you actually have more to deal with right now than just the crazy town hall think. recess for the leadership means traveling all over the country to raise money for the most vulnerable members of your caucus. so it's often the new members of your congress. the new congress critters, right? from the marginal districts. members you maybe don't even know. who you now have to spend the whole day with raising money so they can try to keep their seats. it's got to be the worst part of being in congressional leadership. they've all got to do it, all got to do it every year. sometimes, though, someone in leadership having to do this thankless job ends up drawing the particularly short straw. and that guy this year, that guy today, was john boehner. did you see what they made john boehner do today? that's next. what are you doing back there?
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it's time to build a better enterprise. together. ♪ >> that is not just a man wearing trouser socks wearing trouser socks while playing guitar, that is the republican congressman from the great state of michigan soon to be a candidate. the man is in washington no more. congressman mccotter is now former congressman mccotter because of the scandal in trying to get himself reelected. most of the signatures he had were fake. they were fraudulent, photocopied so clumsily because the first word had been cut off, warning about election fraud. since he didn't qualify for the republican primary on account of having no real signatures for his campaign, mccotter not only quit his election race, he quit
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congress, and resigned with the headline, drag another match. he quit the race and congress just four months before the 2012 election. and that timing created a real mess in his michigan district. the seat he left hanging is a totally overwhelmly republican district, the republicans are guaranteed to win, no matter who they are. and because everybody thought that mccotter would have been reelected to another term no serious candidate challenged him in the republican primary. the only republican in the running was this kind of wacky guy. when mccotter went up in smoke last year, it was just this man left, a professional santa claus re-enactor. he ended up being a republican
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on the ballot. and even by michigan standards he is kind of amazing. he once played a doctor in a 9/11 movie called the president goes to heaven. that is him. i once described him as kissing a stuffed reindeer in this photo, i have to tell you that the reindeer is alive, i regret the error. but he got his name on the republican ballot in the heavily republican district, and thanks to mccotter, he won, he won a seat in congress. the reindeer herder won a seat in congress. and now, he is amazing not just for michigan, but also for washington. >> i have a lot of people calling me up and saying that there is all of these conspiracies and so forth and so on. you probably heard them. doomsday of man, civil unrest, do you have any operational
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plans in the event there is civil unrest, if you're going to arrest innocent civilians and put them in fema camps? do you any plans like that? >> no plans. >> the answer is clear, nothing like that, how about any other plans like that? >> no plans at all. >> he is a congressman now, governing one fema camp conspiracy theory at a time. anything else like that? republicans are working hard to keep him. today, the speaker of the house held a michigan fundraiser for bentivolio, the price, a thousand bucks if you want to be listed as a host. the republicans are working hard, raising money for him, dispatching the speaker of the house to raise money for him. giving him real jobs in the real congress, the other day they let him run the house chamber for a while. >> the speaker, washington, d.c., june 17th, 2013, i hereby appoint the honorable bentivolio, signed john boehner.
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>> what happened next may be my favorite tape on this show. there he is, running the house chamber, all he has to do is announce the names of the colleagues when they come up to speak. the names and where they're from. and this is his first customer. >> the chair recognizes the gentleman from american somolio -- mr. -- >> mr. folumabinga? no, he has been in congress representing american samoa since 1989. and i don't know how many times he has had his name mangled. but he is a her for for the grace with which he handles it. >> the chair recognizes the gentleman from american somolio,
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mr. fulumabinga. >> thank you, mr. speaker, it is american samoa. >> he let that ride, that he was called mr. folumba and chooses to stand up for the place he is from, and not himself. when we saluted him in that incident, i didn't know why it was that he was addressing the house that day. turns out he was speaking out about this. the name of the washington, d.c. football team which he refers to as the "r" word because their full name is painfully racist. getting them to change their name is one of his major efforts in congress. he asked the team owner and the league to change the name, introducing a bill regarding the trade name, because it is
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insulting to native american people. change the name of the washington "r" word. they send a lot of players to the nfl, which they're very proud of. but his comment is like goliath. this is a vertical uphill fight, but i can tell you tonight that he is getting somewhere. real progress at this point. yesterday, the website slate.com said they would no longer refer to the washington team by their r word name. they announced they too, would stop using the name. today, the folks at mother jones said no r word for them either. they are all lefty publications, as you may expect. but it includes mainstream papers like the kansas city star, growing as another nfl season is growing. yesterday in week one of the why
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don't they change their names beat the tennessee titans by one point. tomorrow, the giants play the steelers. sunday, the bills play the colts. happy football season, everybody. and i hope your team has a a name you can say without wincing. "weekends with alex witt" starts now. making his case. president obama with a staunch defense of his health care program had an interesting take on his relationship with vladimir putin. a live report ahead. in the wilderness. a new search in the kidnapping suspect and the 16-year-old who disappeared with him. dramatic and deadly. floodwaters and drenching rain sweeping parts of this country. will the dangerous weather hit you today? are you more or less inclined to grab a burger now?