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tv   MSNBC Live  MSNBC  April 6, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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-- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com this is the most difficult search in human history. >> i don't want to raise false hopes. >> it's a race against time now. good sunday afternoon. i'm craig melvin. you are watching msnbc. crews have heard something. they've heard something as they search for that missing airliner and heard it several times and right now a ship that could figure out what is making those sounds has just reached the location. also, developing at this moment, an elite rescue team just plucked a young family from the high seas. their story coming up. and the detroit man beaten nearly to death by a group when he gets out the check on a boy he just hit with his truck. his family calls for help and
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the world listens. i'm going to talk to that man's son. we don't need the government to select our leaders. >> the bigger problem is bought access, bought influence and a tilted playing field. >> the supreme court loosened the rules on how much one person can give a candidate. what that means for your vote and what that means for our democracy. mitch mcconnell has been in there way too long. >> i gave him two votes to get it right and he's let me down both times. >> we need to get rid of mitch mcconnell. >> they want to ditch mitch. is the leader in trouble in the home state? we'll check in with the tea party wing in the bluegrass state. a lot to get to. we start with breaking news in the search for malaysia airlines flight 370. a sophisticated british ship just arrived at the site where a chinese ship reported hearing pings. the hms echo has tools aboard the ship that could determine
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whether the pulse signals detected over the weekend are related to the missing jet. at this point, three, count them, three different signals have been detected in the indian ocean. nbc's katy tur joins me on the phone with the latest of kuala lumpur. what do we know about the search effort at this point? >> reporter: it is overnight right now in malaysia and the search area just off perth, australia. hms echo just arrived on scene. now, the second one they picked up was a mile from the original. they believe, the chinese believe it could be the black box pings from hmg-70. >> there's a pulse or pinging. maybe a little longer. the pulse is typically picked up by sonar.
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>> we seem to have lost nbc's katy tur on the phone there for us. >> reporter: hey, craig, craig, craig. >> we have you back. i have you. thank you. keep going. >> reporter: i'm sorry. one more time. so the pulse from the black box, 37.5 kilohertz, gives off that frequency because nothing else in the ocean sounds quite like that and why the chinese hopeful it could be it. a lot of skepticism of experts saying the chinese don't have the technology to find that. that's why hms echo rushed to the scene. also ocean shield, that is an australian ship going there, as well, but the first it heard its own awe kousic technology.
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all the leaders are being very cautious and urging everyone to be cautious, as well. they need to confirm that the noises were part of 370 before they get anybody's hopes up. they warn that they could have very many of these noises in the next couple of weeks or months as they keep searching for this plane. the families are being cautious, chinese families here in kuala lumpur flown back to beijing and not getting the answers out any longer and might as well wait in beijing and don't want their hopes up. they had false leads in the past. they're hoping and waiting that this could be it but they're going to wait and see. craig? >> katy tur overnight there for us in kuala lumpur, thank you.
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now a developing story right now, in fact, on the high seas a. dramatic rescue in the middle of the pacific ocean. the california family that you see in the video right here, that family has been hoisted to safety after their 1-year-old daughter became seriously sick at sea. air national guard members jumped to aid yesterday and hours ago the family was brought aboard a navy ship. nbc's jennifer bjorklund is live in los angeles. what do we know at this point? >> reporter: u.s. navy warship, a frigate, rescued the sick baby at sea. they picked up the little girl and her family this morning about 1,000 miles offshore off of mexico's pacific coast. the 1-year-old girl, her parents and 3-year-old sister were helped on to an inflatable raft and taken aboard that u.s. navy frigate this morning and now headed to san diego to get the
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little girl to a hospital. eric and charlotte kauffman and daughters were just a couple of weeks into a cruise around the world on their 36-foot boat called "the rebel heart" and lera fell seriously ill with a fever and rash and wasn't responding to medicine on board. and then seeing here the california air national guard sent a military transport plane from san francisco and men carrying medical gear and other supplies parachuted out of the plane into the ocean inflated a dinghy and boarded to treat the little girl and been on board and stabilize her. they were there this morning when the navy ship pulled up and eric kauffman the father writes on the blog. he's a licensed u.s. coast guard captain and a certified dive master and stuck at sea with nowhere to go and told the
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communication was down. the steering was down. craig, every time they turned on the engine a family friend said they were talking on water and stuck with no help. >> jennifer, when are they back on soil? >> reporter: well, the good news is they're on board that huge navy frigate right now. brought on board this morning and they're headed to san diego. they're saying possibly by wednesday they could be back on u.s. soil. and that little girl needs to see a doctor they say within two days. >> all right. jennifer, thank you. to politics now. president obama will again be taking executive action on an issue that's been bogged down in congress. the president on tuesday will issue two orders on equal pay for women. one will bar federal contractors retaliating against workers that talk about how much they're paid. the second will require contractors to provide data on the gender, race and pay of those hired. the white house says full-time
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working women make on average 77 cents on the dollar compared to men. this disparity still continues some 40 years after the equal rights amendment was passed by congress but never ratified by the states. i want to bring in pennsylvania democratic senator bob casey. senator casey, co-sponsor of the paycheck fairness act going to the senate floor this week. thank you for being with me. first of all, why is there a need for presidential order? >> thank you very much. i think it's important to employ every strategy here. the president has authority to take executive action on this and i think he's right to do that. because if you don't have a very clear directive to employers but in this case because about 1 in 5 workers employed by the federal government through the federal contracts, he can do that by executive action and say you cannot retaliate and produce
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information to make sure we're moving further down the field to make sure that there's equal pay for equal work. unfortunately, that may be the limits of what he can do by way of executive action so i believe it's very important that we pay equal pay legislation. this is a matter of basic justice for women and especially for the next generation, for young girls studying in school and need to know we'll have laws that ensure fairness. >> what will your proposal provide that the presidential order does not? >> well, some of it will be consistent with what he will do. there's an anti-retaliation provision which would then apply to all workers, not just those employed by way of federal contra contracts. >> explain why that's important, that retaliation clause specifically. why is that so important talking about equal pay for women? >> well, because sometimes in order for a woman to make a claim or to bring a complaint to an employer, she's got to know not only what she's making but
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what others are making and she needs to inquire about that and to have that threat of retaliation over her head could be an impediment to her getting any measure of justice so that's an important provision. we also want to make sure, though, that the law provides more opportunities for a woman who may bring an action. she should be entitled to compensatory damages, not just back pay but compensation going forward and in limited instances but this is an important tool is punitive damages. she should be -- those should be able to her just like they're available in other actions that involve employment discrimination. >> yeah. what does it say about you, what does it say about your colleagues in the senate, as well, that pay equity, something that's been in the works for decades in congress can't pass and that president obama once again feels compelled to use executive action to make something happen? >> it shows that in my judgment
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that there's one party in favor of fair pay and one party's been holding it up so the republicans in the senate have a choice this week. they can join us in moving forward with this legislation or they can block it as they did several times in the past. i hope they join us in this. >> pennsylvania senator bob casey, senator casey, always good to see you. thank you for being with me this sunday. >> great, thank you. also making headlines, the white house announced that president obama will be attending a te moirl service wednesday at ft. hood. last week's shooting rampage at the texas army base, the second on that base since 209. three were killed, 16 wounded. a debate over base security dominated the sunday talk shows wlrks to arm members of the military while they're on base. >> we should be looking at the idea of senior leadership at these bases, give them the ability to carry weapons. they defend us overseas and
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abroad and defend our freedom abroad so the idea they're defenseless when they come home on the bases, i think the congress should be looking at that and having a discussion with the bases about what would be the best policy. >> i'm not one as someone who's been on many, many bases and posts that would argue for arming anybody that's on base. i think that actually invites much more difficult challenges. >> when we come back, who's this guy trying to take down the most powerful republican in the u.s. senate? here's a hint. he's not a democrat. first, though, is it bedtime for democracy? now that the high court has raised the bar on campaign contributions, we have got three leading experts gathered around the table. this is msnbc.
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we don't need the government to select our leaders. we need the people to select the leaders. it is about political assemble. it is a most important right. >> that's shaun mccultutchen. let's get right to the brain trust, all experts in the cross-section of money and politics. liz kennedy, counsel at the public policy organization. specialty is voting rights law. nicklas confasorius with "the new york times" went ron christie, former special assistant to p george w. bush. thank you for being with me on a sunday afternoon. i want to start with you. you wrote in part, as scholars digest the court's decision,
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it's thrust party leaders, lawmakers with leadership pacs and candidates into a pierce competition. already? what have we seen so far? >> within a few minutes of the decision you had people calling up donors, e-mailing them saying, hey, the cap is gone. could you consider a contribution to my committee, my pac or my boss? >> do we have names? >> well, in a fund-raising aid to nancy pelosi sent out a, you know, e-mail, few donors asking for more money for the dccc. on the same morning that pelosi saying this is a terrible decision. >> shaun says -- you're about to jump in there, liz? >> what we're going to see is public policy of the country even more reflective of just the policy preferences of the wealthy few, the elite donor class rather than the government actually responsive to the public policy preferences of the
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vast majority of us, the donor class has very different policy prempbts prervess and we saw that in the failure to raise the minimum wage this week. >> the donor class, who are we talking about? how many people are we talking about essential bankrolling federal elections in the country? sheldon adelson we know, the biggest fish in the pond and not the only fish. >> that's right. look. i want to go back to what was said a moment ago. if you read the supreme court decision, they say, look, we might not like the amount of politics in politics, but the first amendment protects the freedom of assembly and association and what we're looking at here, craig, the fact that the supreme court said we might not like nazi marches, people who are doing offensive things like flag burning, but the government does not have a compelling interest to limit the amount for the people to spend.
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>> the government did have an interest. >> i have to jump in. >> interest in regulating the amount of money that flowed into our political elections. >> the government still has that compelling interest to protect our democracy from corruption. to answer ron's point, it is completely inappropriate and this is a point that's been made strenuously by first amendment scholars, title one article the first amendment does not protect the right to buy the government but from the former dean of the chicago law school jeff stone. this is a corruption of the first amendment. the first amendment is an exercise, is a tool for the exercise of self government. it protects the important relationship between the public and the popular will and political speech and the government responsiveness there to. what ron is talking about is a question to whether these rules were viewpoint not viewpoint neutral but are content neutral and the caps only affect a few
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hundred people that are actually coming in to spend anywhere near the actual contribution limits, this is a decision that makes the politics devolve to an argument of rich people. >> that's interesting. i want to show folks at home, this is a look at congress's attempt to try to rein in campaign finance. 2002, sought to limit soft money. 2007, the high court started to chip away saying limits by nonprofits were constitutional and 2010, of course, citizens united. that decision saying that spending by corporations and union protected by the first amendment. nicklas, are we at a point now and in the democracy where it's a matter of time with this decision, just a matter of time that all limitations are struck down? >> i think what we're seeing
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especially in this decision and citizens united is the court, you know, chipping away at the reasons that are allowable to restrict political fund-raising, political speech as they consider it. right? we see them saying fewer and fewer circumstances of which we're appropriate to restrict contributions. you can look at those decisions and read the tea leaves and say, yes, we are headed towards striking down the contribution ban. what i haven't yet seen is a serious effort in, you know, among lawyers to strike down the disclosure provisions for the contributions. >> one of the interesting things, i read the decision and interesting, because you had justice thomas who since said, you know what? there should be no restrictions at all. people should be able to give as much as they want to whomever -- does that make sense to you, ron christie? is that a good idea? >> i don't think so. i mean, i agree with the rational. i read the opinion, the concurrent opinion and agree with where he's doing and has to
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be plimts and looking at the decision, they still keep the individual limits in place, the amount to give to a party. there should be some limitation and the government has an interest in having that. i want to go back to what liz said. what we're looking at here is quiz pro quo and ill legality here and looking at what the state might regulate for corruption purposes, it is quid pro quo and should be limits in certain bases but i don't believe it will. >> if the high court said money is free speech, folks that don't have money, when's that mean for their speech? >> really great question, craig. we need to unlock that money equals speech. justice stephens in the powerful dissent questioning whether money equals speech again in the mcconnell decisions there was -- so basically the question is whether it burdened first
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amendment rights. so many of the rules do not burden first amendment rights but since the majority has come on to the court, they have struck down every campaign finance law in front of them because they have said it burdens every law overly burdens rights without considering the democratic integrity we require at a democratic society and the legitimacy and the responsiveness of the government is under question and seeing how that affects american voter who is are falling out of the process because they're believing government is bought and sold. >> ten seconds, lastly to you, really quickly. who's going to win? i mean, that's all we ever care about. >> that's all we care about. >> with the new decision. >> not the american public. >> who has the advantage? >> too early to say which party wins. enough rich people in both parties to take advantage of this. what i think is very true is if you're wealthy, you win. liberal or conservative wealthy,
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you have more powerful in this system than before. >> we did not get an opportunity for you to tell folks about the new benefits as subscribers. i'm sorry. >> subscribe. >> good plug. >> we have to get you back. thank you so much. former congressman jesse jackson is moved in alabama. meanwhile, a source telling "the chicago sun times" during his stay in north carolina jackson was put in solitary confinement after clashing with prison officials. a guard apparently did not take well to jackson advising inmates of their rights as prisoners. jackson convicted of illegally using campaign money. if you wear a denture, touch it with your tongue.
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all. >> a family reacting to the news of two arrests in the brutal beating of a detroit man. i'll talk to his son and daughter coming up. also, a mother invents a way to give her son and others who can't walk a chance to take the first steps. yea. try alka seltzer fruit chews. they work fast on heart burn and taste awesome. these are good. told ya! i'm feeling better already. alka-seltzer fruit chews. enjoy the relief! on buying a car for... when i was introduced to truecar,cess.. i didn't have to second guess myself. i felt more confident... in what i was doing. truecar made it very easy for me... to negotiate what i wanted, because i didn't really need to do any negotiating at all. i just knew from the get-go that i was... flat out getting a good deal. when you're ready to buy a car, save time, save money, and never overpay. visit truecar.com
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including calcium and vitamin d to support strong bones and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle. all with a delicious taste. grandpa! [ female announcer ] look for valuable savings on boost in your sunday paper. more than 100 folks arrested last night in santa barbara after a spring break street party turned into an all-out riot. several police officers were also hurt o. officials say the crowd swell to about 15,000 at the height. i'm craig melvin. here's a quick look at the top stories making news right now. as the search for mudslide victims continues in oso, washington, the first funerals are starting to take place there. the first of three memorial services yesterday along with a candle light vigil. to sports now, and then
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there were two. last night, a night of upsets. uconn playing kentucky. of note here, the women's team of uconn takes on stamford. in 2004, the men and women won national championships for the first time ever. now, they have a chance to do it again. and when i say first time ever, the first time that a men's and women's program at the same institution done it. tomorrow marks a pivotal point in the oscar pistorius murder trial. the former olympic sensation will take the stand hoping to convince the court he killed his girlfriend by accident. here's nbc's mike tiabbi. >> reporter: he may not be the first witness in his own defense but that's the custom under law, but because of a future scheduling conflict, it could be
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the first pathologist. the double amputee olympian admitted he fired the shots on valentine's day last year. he says it was an accident. he thought he was shooting an intruder. but four prosecution witnesses testified they heard a heated argument between a man and a woman before the shots rang out. >> after the first set of shots, there was a female screaming for quite a period. and then, just before the second set of shots there was a male voice in between that you could definitely hear two different voices and then the shots and then quiet. >> reporter: it's not a who done it but why he did it and the evidence came from reeva steenkamp herself in text messages to pistorius from her cell phone. in four messages before the shooting, steenkamp complained about the boyfriend's jealousy, public tantrums and constant criticisms. >> i'm scared of you sometimes
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and how you snap at me and of how you will act to me. i just want to love and be loved, be happy and make someone so happy. maybe we can't do that for each other because right now i know you aren't happen pain i'm certainly very unhappy and sad. >> reporter: pistorius is expected to testify. audio only and not on camera as is his right and the defense will say the vast majority of the text exchanges with steenkamp describe a relationship that's happy and loving right up to what his lawyer called the unfortunate date. >> incoming message that the deceased received can't wait to see you, would you like me to pick you up. and then outgoing response, i really can't wait to see you, boo. and another one from the deceased, i would love that, angel. >> reporter: reeva steenkamp cannot speak anymore but oscar pistorius can and it's his
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likely testimony that will ensure he walks free or spends 25 years in prison. reeva steenkamp cannot speak but he can and when he does, and how persuasively he testifies could go a long way to determine whether he walks free, spends time in prison on firearms and the equivalent of manslaughter charges or goes to prison 25 years for first-degree murder charges. craig? >> mike, thank you. meanwhile, back here in detroit, two teenagers are under arrest after police say they participated in a man's public beating on that city's east side. steve utash on his way home from work when he hit a 10-year-old boy who ran in the street. he got out to make sure he was okay and then when he was attacked. you can see the video here showing a mob of what looks like at least ten people beating the man in the street. it was so bad it left him
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unconscious. joe and mandy join us. steve is their father. joe, how's your dad? >> still in a medically induced coma and they're not really telling us too much more than that. that's the hardest question to answer is because we never get any new news on his shape because he's in the same shape he was when he went in. >> mandy, we mentioned that two teenagers have been arrested. they have not been charged yet. what are police telling you guys about where the investigation itself stands right now? >> we don't -- we don't really have that much information. we were just -- we get a call from them stating that they had arrested two people. i am -- i'm happy that they got two of the ten or 12 of the people that were involved with it and i'm hoping that they start talking.
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but we don't really know anything else besides that but i'm glad they found two of them. >> have either of you seen this surveillance video yet? >> yes. we watched it a lot. >> unfortunately we have. >> when you watch that video, joe, what goes through your mind? >> how nobody could stop it and how, you know, there's nine people on my dad and, yet, still another car pulls up and gets out just to walk around his car to start kicking my dad and i just can't see how anybody could have that much hate to be sitting there sitting somebody that's not moving and just to hurt him that bad. to me, seemed like they wanted to kill him right then and there and he would have lost that life in f that lady did not come forward and tell everybody to stop and just to see him in the hospital fighting for his life right now is just so unbelievable because he never hurt anybody in his life. and seeing that video is -- is
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just like a ride of people just beating my dad and just continuous beatings, that doesn't make any sense and we are all trying to figure it out like why. that's the biggest question is why they do this. if it's none of the family then, you know, then they didn't beat him because he hit the kid and if it's not that case, why did they beat him? >> mandy, how have people been reaching out to you and your family? >> through every means possible. i mean, i'm getting e-mails. they're posting on the foundation website. facebook. they're stopping us in the streets just to give us money and tell us how sorry they are for what happened. people are reaching out in every way they paeshl can to try to help us. it's great. >> we checked the website right before going on here and last check is $95,000. have you guys been surprised by
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the outpouring of support for a stranger for the most part to allow the folks giving this money? >> yeah. most definitely. i mean, when i put that $50,000 as a goal, i figured that was -- that was me asking for too much from people because they don't know him and i didn't want to seem like we were trying to be greedy or anything like that but for us to exceed that goal within 48 hours and for 3, 4 days later $90,000 i can't even begin to thank the people. i mean, everyone seems to be so touched and outraged by it that everyone is just here, here. how can i help? how can i help? anything i can do to help you, let me know what it is. >> even just their words, i mean, we all have trouble sleeping at night because of what happened to my dad, our relatives feel the same way. we're wondering why but when we get up in the middle of the night because we can't sleep and
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go online and see the comments and everybody supporting us, i mean, it does make it feel a little bit better and you can go lay back down and seeing the world is coming and -- >> on our side. >> supporting our dad. >> joe, mandy, thank you so much. all the best to steve. let us know what's going on. >> thank you. up next, a mother gives parents of disabled children a leg up. her unique invention and inspiration. it's today's big idea. that's straight ahead. later, the minority leader in the senate really in trouble? could he get beaten in a primary? we'll go to his home state and find out. to gauge whether or not the projects will be done in a timely fashion and within budget. angie's list members can tell you which provider is the best in town. you'll find reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare. now that we're expecting, i like the fact i can go onto angie's list and look for pediatricians.
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with special needs. >> thanks to a new device, children who have never been able to walk before may soon take their very first steps. it's today's big idea. it's a standing and walking harness for children with special mobility needs like cerebral palsy, for example. there's a harness for the parent and child and goes on sale tomorrow. debbie is the inventer of it. joins me live. we should note for our viewers at home, this is not just a big idea, not just the product. this is very personal for you. what inspired you to come up with this? >> yeah, well, when my son was about a year and a half with cerebral palsy, i was told not to crawl him and walk him and then around 2 i was called into the intervention center and said your son doesn't know what his
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legs are. so like any other mother, i went home and cried for a week or two and then i started to try to walk him but how do you walk a 2-year-old? you are on your knees, you are stooping over. my back was killing me and i was feeling sorry for myself. and i said, there had to be a better way and i started making, tying our legs together, all kinds of harnesses, shoes until i got to something that's similar to today's up sy. >> we are showing images of your son. how does it work and how long did it take you to perfect it? >> well, okay. we're -- i'm letting him do as much as he can. he's full weightbearing on the legs and i'm giving him balance with the double harnesses. i can feel his initiation of steps through the sandal.
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the first time he went out in my invention he walked three steps and collapsed. by the end of the year after doing this once a week, we could go out for two hours. >> wow. >> go, eat pizza, go to the mom and pop store, visit friends and he got to enjoy a life and a childhood and explore the neighborhood, explore the kitchen, the house. meet friends eye to eye. and for sure it enriched his childhood. >> debbie, according to the website, the price that's quoted is $489. that's a lot of money for most people. do you know whether insurance is going to cover this for some families and are you guys doing anything to make it more affordable? >> i can't say what's going to happen insurance but i pay much more than that just for any part of a cushion or back of a wheelchair or any part.
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if this enables a child to walk for a few years, a lot went into the development on this. like two pairs of sandals, high quality and to me doesn't seem expensive for what you're going to get for it. >> debbie, we'll leave it there. debbie, thank you so much. it's called the upsee, today's big idea. do you have a big idea that's making a difference? tell us about it by e-mailing us. there it is right there. when we come back, he's their senator. why do so many people in the bluegrass state want to ditch mitch? company relocating manufacturing to upstate new york? i tell people it's for the climate. the conditions in new york state are great for business. new york is ranked #2 in the nation for new private sector job creation. and now it's even better because they've introduced startup new york - dozens of tax-free zones
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and ask about all the ways you could save. liberty mutual insurance -- responsibility. what's your policy? . with mitch, we've got to start over and get somebody new who is has conservative values. >> i see america going in the wrong direction and i want to
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turn it around to where it's more based off constitution. not socialism. >> mitch, i dare you to debate. i dare you to debate him. step up and be a man and debate him. >> we don't have any information on that man's hat. but i can tell that you there is a battle brewing in the bluegrass state. but not your average rank and file republican. he's the highest ranking republican, mitch mcconnell. and at least for now, the far right and democrats are united in an effort that has been dubbed very simply ditch mitch. editor for the grio.com, you
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were following the rally closely and for the folks who want to ditch mitch, what's their biggest gripe with mcconnell? >> well, within kentucky there's supporters among matt bevins that say he's been there a bit too long. he was never one of those charismatic wild politicians and so he doesn't have the strong connection that he needs to. nationally is where this is a serious race. freedom works held the rally that you saw footage of and they are focusing on this race. they think that if they can just unseat mcconnell, they can strike fear into the senate and get them to move closer to the rand paul, ted cruz ring where they oppose everything out of the obama administration using whatever tactic is necessary. >> they would hold up his head as a trophy. >> yes. that's essentially the idea. the idea is that it would really send a message to everyone that
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they are not going to accept backing down and making a deal. now, most people would say that inevitably someone has to make a deal because the government can't stay shut down forever. eventually you'll end up with a default. but if you have someone stronger in there, you can take the extra step. >> "the new york times" reported that the tea party may be nudging republicans to the right. may be nudging republicans to the right with the implicit threat of primary challenges but when it comes to recruiting quality challengers to take out incumbent senators, it is falling decidedly short. they point to the race that is playing out in the palm meadows state. how much sway does the tea party have in the swing state and nationally? >> i would say a lot. if you look at these states,
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mitch mcconnell and matt bevin have differences. mitch mcconnell has moved to the right over and over and over again. it's hard to be a tea party person and run right now because the incumbent republican is moving to the right so much you can't -- you can't distinguish between them. the tea party is influencing politics because immigration reform is dead in washington. pretty much everything is dead in washington and also the medicaid expansion in 20 states is dead in states as well. that's because the tea party is so powerful and republicans are worried about them that the republicans don't make any moves to the center. the difference between mcconnell and ted cruz is ted cruz shuts down the government over obamacare. >> you reported 370,000 people in kentucky have signed up for health insurance under the health care exchange. there's been an example held up
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by the administration of where obamacare is working well. how is that going to play into this campaign in the bluegrass state? >> surprisingly, craig, it's the impact that it is making is that people still dislike obamacare. matt bevin and mitch mcconnell talk about wanting to repeal it all the time. alison grimes, if you asked her about the law, changes the subject. it's not on her website anywhere. it's not a big issue. barack obama is so on top of the approval ratings that anything associated with him is just negative to the point where the governor and his allies are calling it beshear care instead of obamacare. >> this is what matt bevin said yesterday. take a listen. >> impressing each other, impressing people in the media,
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painting this false illusion of what is happening to those of us out here in the real world that are paying for all of it. >> what did you say? >> my sound is out. i can't hear. >> no audio. >> i can't hear. i can't hear. >> sorry, i have no audio. >> sorry about that. we are having trouble with the
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thanks for disrupting your afternoon. i'm karen finney. new revelations of the cia and torture and a new gop plan to save their party and the country. women of america, we just need to get hitched. >> every so often republicans do acknowledge that they are in a little bit of trouble. >> jeb bush and bobby jindal are promoting forces for a new super pac. >> new republican. >> new republican. >> that commercial is a dandy, isn't it? >> the senate intelligence committee torturing prisoners after 9/11. >> it chronicles a stain on our history. >> it's very sad to see senator feinstein and what she is doing. >> vice president cheney set a tone and an attitude for the cia. >> how many american lives would you be willing to put at risk. >> it's