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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  June 6, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT

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like. >> that does it for this special edition of all in america, on the road in the conservative heartland. there's lots more about our reporting, even more stories from kansas at our website. i'm chris hayes. good night. happy friday. thanks for being with us tonight. if you are a 23-year-old paratrooper when you took part in the allied invasion of nazi occupied europe in 1944, that would mean that today on the 70th anniversary of that invasion, you would be 93 years old. just like jim martin is. jim martin, a veteran of the 101st airborne division, and he today at the age of 93 chose to mark the 70th anniversary of the d-day invasion by parachuting in once again. whereupon he promptly gave the single most straight-forward and magnificent on-camera interview i have ever seen anyone do in
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any context in a very long time. watch this. after parachuting in, again, age 93, he lands. reporters swarm in, everybody is taking his picture. he gets one interviewer gets him on camera. he gets two questions. watch his answers to these questions. >> did it remind you of back then? when you jumped 70 years ago? >> no, because there wasn't anybody shooting at me today. >> what was your feeling before jumping? >> well, to tell you the truth, riding around in the plane is boring. it's when you get off the plane, that's when it gets exciting. when you go out the door, that's a moment of excitement. there's no fear to it. it's just something you do. >> right. exactly. plane ride, boring. leaving plane in midair, not boring. no, it's not scary to do this, interviewer, when nobody is shooting at you, it's not scary. i have done the same thing with people trying to kill me. no, i'm not scared.
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geez, any more questions? if you do not love paratrooper jim martin for this interview, go to the cardiologist and get your heart checked because it's not working right. consider also the news today of bernard jordan. he's 89 years old. and in january, he moved into a nurszing home in hove. he reportedly tried from the nursing home to sign up for a bus trip for d-day veterans to go to normandy for today's commemoration ceremonies for the 70th anniversary, but for whatever reason, he was told they did not have space for him and he would not be able to go. yesterday at 10:30 in the morning, he left the nursing home for his usual trip into town. he's able to be up and around on his own. the trouble is by 7:15 p.m. yesterday, he had not come back from his little trip to town, so the nursing home looked for him and then called the police. the police searched the area. they contacted nearby hospitals, they contacted bus companies and taxi companies. nobody had seen bernard johnson.
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everybody is very worried. turns out, he went to france. he went to normandy. after the police put out notice they were looking for him, another d-day veteran who the british press says is just slightly younger than mr. jordan called the police and said don't worry about bernard jordan. i got him, we're together, and we're in france. we're at a hotel and we're going to the d-day ceremonies. bernie jordan was part of the d-day invasion. he served with the british royal navy. he apparently pinned his service medals on yesterday underneath his rain coat before he went out for the day and he had a plan. he and his buddies say they're doing fine. he would be back in hove in a couple days after they finished celebrating, and then look. look at this. this is great. this is the local police chief tweeting the news of what happened. 89-year-old veteran reported missing to us by a care home who said he can't go to normandy for d-day remembrance. we found him there, meaning at normandy. that was last night from the local police chief.
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now look at the police chief's latest retweet on the subject from tonight. this is from just a couple hours ago. apparently mr. jordan was found on the ferry ride as well from france back to britain tonight. look at the picture. the tweet says bernard jordan, the d-day veteran who sneaked off to normandy has got himself a fan club on the ferry ride home. good man. amazing. >> today and for the last several days, president obama and other world leaders have convened in france to honor surviving world war ii veterans and to commemorate the turning point in world war ii. the largest amphibious landing in world history, 156,000 troops and paratroopers, 200,000 naval personnel. it was the allied invasion of nazi-occupied europe, and that invasion, as hard-fought as it was, it was successful, and it opened a portal for american and allied armies to be able to swarm into europe. it turned normandy into the
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busiest port in the world after that successful invasion, and ultimately, it turned the tide against hitler. complete victory against hitler's forces in europe would come in less than a year after what happened 70 years ago today on omaha beach. >> if prayer were made of sounds, the skies over england that night would have deafened the world. captains paced their decks. pilots tapped their gauges. commanders pored over maps. fully aware that for all the months of meticulous planning, everything could go wrong. the winds, the tides, the element of surprise, and above all, the audacious bet that what waited on the other side of the
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channel would compel men not to shrink away but to charge ahead. fresh faced gis rubbed trinkets, kissed pictures of sweethearts, checked and rechecked their equipment. god, asked one, give me guts. and in the predawn hours, planes rumbled down runways. gliders and paratroopers slipped through the sky. giant screws began to turn on a model that looks more like ships than sea. and more than 150,000 souls set off toward this tiny sliver of sand upon which hung more than
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the fate of the war. but rather the course of human history. >> president obama speaking today at d-day ceremonies, 70 years on. the element of surprise that president obama mentioned there, that was very, very real. look at the los angeles times headline from the next day, once we knew the invasion had started. that was the "l.a. times." this is the "ann arbor news." here "the baltimore sun." this next one is amazing. look at this. this is the st. petersburg times in florida. like lots of other papers, they tweeted an image of what their d-day headline looked like that day. that's like a font you measure in inches and feet. the detroit news, hitler's wall broken as allies move inland. the last one, this one is great. this is the norristown times herald in pennsylvania.
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allies in france, and then look at the subhead, land by sea and air, speed and land, in greatest war operations of all history. and part of the reason the headlines were a foot tall was because of surprise. i mean, yes, it was such a massive and audacious move and it did not only change the course of the war but the course of history, but part of the reason the headlines were a foot high when it happened was it really was a surprise. yes, they knew the allies would attempt an invasion of europe but when and from where and how would they try to do it? that waw one of the hardest fought and greatest secrets of all times. and so when it happened, it was a shock. and part of the initial reaction to the initial news that it was happening was actually that it might be a hoax. when they started getting these filtered reports that something was going on in europe, the first reaction was it might be a hoax, it might be disinformation put out by the nazis to disappointment people, to
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dishearten the people of europe who were hoping and praying this invasion would come. we know that suspicion that it might be a hoax was part of the initial reaction to the d-day news. we know that was part of what they thought because we've still got access to the sound of the live news as it broke. you may -- you may know that we broadcast, all of us here at msnbc, who brought cast from new york, we broadcast from nbc headquarters in rockefeller center in new york city. and specifically, we, our show, do the work out of what used to be the nbc radio news studio on the fourth floor of this studio, and we hold our news meetings every day in the specific place in this building where n bbc rao news broadcast to the nation the very first word that d-day had begun, even though they weren't really sure if it was true in the first reports, so we got this out of the archives today. this is one of the first unconfirmed reports of d-day
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came in. it was after midnight. nbc radio news had signed off for the day and was playing music, and basically from the spot my desk is, this is what happened. from a room that looked like this right here in this building where i work today. ♪ >> we interrupt our program to bring you a special broadcast. the news agency said today in a broadcast that the allied invasion had begun. i repeat, the german news agency transocean said today in a broadcast that the allied invasion had begun. there was no allied confirmation. the german broadcast could be one which allied leaders expected would be made with the purpose of up setting patriot plans inside the conquered countries. this bulletin has come to you from the nbc newsroom in new
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york. there is no allied confirmation. german naval forces off the coast are engaged in a battle with enemy landing craft. the german news agency said the allied invasion operations began with the landing of airborne troops in the mouth of the same river. i repeat, however, there is no allied confirmation of this claim. we return you now to your regular scheduled broadcast. >> and now here's a bulletin. as i said when i first went on the air a few minutes ago, the associated press says the berlin radio broadcast that the allied invasion has begun, that our troops are landing. but there is still no allied confirmation. this may be an enemy trick. there has been no allied confirmation, i repeat. >> there has been no allied confirmation, i repeat. this may be an enemy trick. unconfirmed reports, and then just about an hour later after the piece you just heard, they got the real word, confirmed from london. watch this.
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>> and now, we have just been informed that we can expect in a very few seconds, in a very few seconds, a very important broadcast from the british capital, and so now we take you to london. >> under the command of general eisenhower, allied naval forces supported by strong air forces began landing allied armies this morning on the northern coast of france. this reading of communicating number one from supreme headquarters allied expeditionary force. >> ladies and gentlemen, this is new york, nbc newsroom again. men and women of the united states, this is a momentous hour
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in world history. this is the invasion of hitler's europe, the zero hour of the second front. the men of general dwight eisenhower are leaving their landing barges, fighting their way up the beaches into the fortress of nazi europe. they're moving in from the sea to attack the enemy under a mammoth cloud of fighter planes, under screaming shells from allied warships. >> that was robert st. john, and the place from which robert st. john was breaking the news to the nation, weirdly enough, is our newsroom today where we work at the show every day. 70 years ago, the main nbc newsroom was on the fourth floor. here was what was then the front door, marked news and special events, where they collected and processed information from across the world, like you heard those foreign broadcasts that they couldn't confirm. news wires and telegrams and rad radiograms, the studios were right next to it and that's where they told the world history had taken a 90-degree
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right angle turn. joining us is michael, a presidential historian. thank you for being here. >> thank you, rachel. i couldn't imagine anything more chilling and exciting than to hear those broadcasts. >> it's -- i mean, cutting into the music in the middle of the night. we know from the way they wrote about it, they honestly didn't know if this was a hoax. imagine the newsmaking decision about whether or not you put it on the air, knowing you may be doing the nazis' work for them by crushing hopes for them. it must have been an unbelievably tenls time. >> that was the fall of war. one other thing, the night before fdr was part of all this because he had given a speech declaring the fall of rome and saying that was a great thing. he knew that d-day was beginning, didn't say a word. the night of d-day, he said last night when i spoke to you americans about the fall of rome, i knew this was happening. >> wow. well, let me ask you about something that you have written about recently, michael, that really piqued my interest.
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it was about presidents and d-day. obviously, d-day, 1944. at the ten-year anniversary of d-day, general eisenhower, who had led the invasion, was president, yet he did not do anything publicly to commemorate it. i know we have never lost sight in our country about how important d-day was. it's not like something that was forgotten that we rediscovered. how is it that we have these massive commemorations now, but eisenhower didn't do that? >> well, in eisenhower's case, needless to say, ten years later, almost everyone alive remembered this with huge excitement. eisenhower didn't want this to be about him. he felt that for him to go to some white house ceremony or to go to normandy would look as if he was congratulating himself. that's what the greatest generation did not do. he was also a very emotional person. on one occasion in 1952, he was speaking during a presidential campaign to a veterans group, began talking about the casualties, the men who had died
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on d-day, and began to cry and put a handkerchief over his face. this is a guy who is known for -- there's the image of that -- known for anything but this. was usually a very steely character. so on d-day 1954, that tenth anniversary, he spent it not at a ceremony. he spent it at camp david in seclusion with his family and sent out a 300-word statement that was just magnificent in its breve ate and eloquence. >> that's amazing. we're going to find that and post it online tonight at our site along with your tweets about that, which i have to say have been remarkable. i just want to ask you, over time, between then, between 1954 and now, 2014, over this period, how have presidents made decisions about how to mark this anniversary? obviously, eisenhower is the only one who could have made it about himself, but how could other presidents handle it in putting president obama into context?
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>> nobody really did it until 1984 for various reasons. president reagan gave that speech with dramatic staging and a well-written speech. it was so good it was actually used in his political commercials that fall. that speech is so well-remembered and so much admired that every president has gone back there on the major anniversaries. but they all know they're not going to live up to that kind of rhetoric. nevertheless, no president would ever dare stay away. >> michael, nbc news sprelsh historian, thank you for your time tonight. i'm really glad you could be with us. >> me, too, rachel. >> a lot coming up. big developments out of texas that you might not have heard about, although they have big national implications. and news on the politics of the whole bowe bergdahl situation. we have a lot ahead tonight. stay with us. book any flight or hotel and if you find it for less, we'll match it and give you 50 dollars off your next trip expedia, find yours
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be a couple of people, but it's only like, you know, two pairs is a couple of pears or two buckets is a couple of buckets. two gay people can't be a couple, so get out the scare marks. today, though, the republican party of texas at their state convention, they did decide to get rid of the homosexuality tears at the fabric of society language. they only adopted that language in 2012, but today, they scotched it. instead, they added something new. under homosexualty, they say this. the new platform that picked says, quote, texas republicans recognize the legitimacy and value of counseling which offers reparative therapy and treatment to patients seeking escape from the homosexual lifestyle. so good news, texas gay people. you no longer need to escape from texas because republicans are out to get you for tearing at the fabric of society.
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texas republicans now say you don't have to escape texas. they just expect you to escape from being gay, and you can stay by the help of quack science that is officially confirmed by the state of texas. you, too, can slam a pillow with a tennis racket and yell at your mother and you, too, could come out not gay. >> the therapy to cure people of being gay came today at the texas republican convention, which they bill as the nation's single largest political event. it's an every two years test of partisan political will. i'm happy to report that partisan will in 2014 republicans is very strong. the run-up included an announcement that no, the log cabin republican gays could not have a booth to pass out flyers and stuff. first, you get the reparative therapy so you become ex-gay and then you can have a booth so you
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can be the log cabin republican ex-gay. and if you think that should extend to not making pot illegal, you're also not welcome to set up your hippie stoner booth because no one at the convention is allowed to advocate for policy that contradict the platform that includes both pot and gay people. over the years, the texas republican platform has been like a diagnostic workup of politics. so far, republicans want you to know that benghazi was a cover-up, climate change, again, scare quotes, is an agenda to control every aspect of your life. congress should appeal the voting rights act, all of it, and they want you to know they deplore all discrimination and now if somebody could just fix the gays. that's not really the heart of what they're fighting about because none of it is going to cost them the party in texas,
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but this might. there were 4 million hispanics elginigible to vote in the last election. at some point, that number is going to grow, and it may make texas a swing state. maybe by 2016, that's the democrats' great hope, or 2018 by the earliest is what you hear from texas republicans. they want to stay in charge of texas, they're going to have to figure out a way to continue winning elections which means they can't afford to keep losing hispanic voters. in 2012, the last convention, the texas republican party drafted and passed a platform in favor of immigration reform, seriously. they called it the texas solution. yes, it started off with tea party friendly stuff, secure the border first and stop giving people citizenship just because they're born here, which would be an amazing change. but along with those tea party friendly proposals their texas solution immigration proposal amounted to a guest worker
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program. a program you can sign up for even if you come to this country illegally. oh, my god. amnesty, everybody freak out. the tea party has waited two years in texas to vote that out of the platform this year in 2014. the anti-immigration part of the tea party world calls themselves protect texas. their rallying cry was this. the battle is on for the future of the republican party and for our country. the message of the other side that wants to keep the immigration plan, their slogan is just as clear. their slogan is this, keep texas red. do something for immigration reform or republicans are going to lose texas. and by immediate consequence, any significant hope of controlling the white house or congress for a long while. that's the fight they're having right now in texas at their republican convention, at least when they're not pledging to turn gay people into straight people. how is this big important question going to work out in texas? and is the way in texas
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ultimately going to be the way it works out for the country as republicans everywhere figure out how bad the math is for them. joining us is wayne. he's had the pleasure of covering the republican state convention this week. great to have you here. >> great to be with you, rachel, as always. >> let me ask you about this convention versus texas republican conventions past. they're always kind of amazing and always huge. is it more contentious than it usually is on this immigration issue specifically or any of the other things they're changing or tweaking? >> it is contentious. it was contentious two years ago. it was somewhat contentious four years ago. the key here is, let's quote, reasonable folks among the republicans who, as you have so well set up in the set-up piece, are worried about the future of the party and alienating every hispanic potential voter from el paso to lubbock, are saying we've got to do something. we can't be the party of no
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anymore, and this fairly modest appeal to a guest worker program, the texas solution, is one thing we could do. but it will be contentious tomorrow. the debate is going to be on the floor tomorrow between those folks in the party who say let's have this guest worker program, secure the border, but let's not have this harsh rhetoric. it can't good for the party. we'll see what happens. >> in terms of the state-wide candidates, texans running for congress in november and some of the conservative heroes, people like ted cruz, are they getting in on this argument and throwing their weight on one side of the argument or the other? it seems like they could be potentially king makers if they wanted to be. >> i talked to ted cruz just a few hours ago. he's leaving the platform, including the immigration matter, to the grass roots. put the people behind cruz and behind rick perry and behind the
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gubernatorial nominee greg abbott and others in the party say we really need this language that doesn't alienate hispanics. so that debate is very much under way and recognized because just a few hours ago on the stage, greg abbott, the man who is being challenged by wendy davis on the democratic side, not only talked in pretty glowing terms about hispanics and the need to expand and appeal to the constituency on the shared values the party offers, but also had his wife come out on stage, she is a latina, and made it clear he wants to make a play for south texas. spanish-rich south texas, and this republican party's days of alienating hispanics ought to be over. >> do you expect this will be settled by binding vote tomorrow, if the tea party loses on this, and they keep in the pro immigration reform, does
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this become a rallying cry, a permanent split in the way the conservatives fight with each other in texas? >> i think there is a split. i think it will remain fairly permanent, at least for the time being. i think what it really will be is the opposite. this offers a model. this language offers a model for every republican who isn't from the beautiful red state of texas to say, i'm conservative. i want to secure the border, but here is a way we can talk about immigration without being accused of amnesty in a way that doesn't alienate and repel the constituency that's growing. look, there is a party very much a constituency inside the republican party, in texas, who is going to talk tomorrow and will argue amnesty, no amnesty, no way. but i sense that even here, although the rest of the platform, as you said, is pretty conservative. even here on the issue of
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immigration, the are far reaching, far viewing folks in the republican party who say if we're going to grow, we have to figure out how to talk about this issue in a successful way. >> this is going to be a fascinating thing to watch over the weekend. seems like there's a real prospect the tea party side in this is going to lose in texas, which i think is going to be sparks for a long time. we'll see. wayne slater, thanks a lot. enjoy. >> thank you. all right, a best new thing in the world coming up. it involves my new fake boyfriend. he is 89. he does not yet know of my existence, but i'm working on it. stay tuned. [ female announcer ] grow, it's what we do. but when we put something in the ground, feed it, and care for it, don't we grow something more?
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nrm. last night on this show, a rare and wonderful thing happ happened. are you ready? look. look at that. whether you love senator bernie sanders of vermont or you hate him or you don't much care, but you see him on the news. one of the things that is a constntd about bernie sanders is
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that he's kind of a tough guy. and i don't mean to say he's cheerless, but whether he's talking about good news or talking about bad news or breaking news, bernie sanders looks very serious all the time. you know sam the eagle from the muppets? by which i don't mean to suggest that senator sanders is not perfect in every way, but he's not a big smiler. last night on this show it was news in and of itself that we got this big grin out of bernie sanders live on tv. we got him on the show to talk about the unlikely achievement of coming to an agreement with republicans. he put forward an effort in february to help v.a. health care, but republicans in the senate filibustered it. there was worry that republicans were going to filibuster it again and we were going to get nowhere in terms of fixing the problem, but behind the scenes he was able to get senator john
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mccain to sign on to a deal with them. their expectation is their deal is going to bring enough republican votes to actually get this passed for veterans, so something might get done, and senator sanders beamed. i'm not kidding, it caused spontaneous applause in the control room when he showed his pearly whites. since that announcement, they put out a statement saying they applaud the compromise. they hope it gets done. between the bipartisan endorsements and bernie's smile, and the iava saying yes, politically, there ought to be nothing to stop it. interesting about veterans groups, especially on days like today, this d-day commemoration, veterans groups in the u.s., at least the big ones, are usually treated with widespread respect, even deference when it comes to policy on veterans issues. that's why it was shocking recently when the opposite of that happened. this past memorial day, richard
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burr of north carolina put out this open letter ripping america's veterans organizations telling them they were doing a terrible job. he said the most recent senate hearing on the v.a. made it clear to him, specifically veterans groups' testimony at the hearing, made it clear to him that veterans groups were more interested in their own livelihoods and washington connections than they were the needs of their own members. wow. their testimony at that hearing must have been really terrible to earn a rebuke like that from a senator on memorial day from a senator who isn't even a veteran himself, right? here is that testimony. look at how upset richard burr was at that hearing when he sat there listening to that testimony. look at how -- wait, look how upset his chair is. senator burr -- now it's possible he was in his chair but slumped to the floor so you couldn't see him, but actually, cameras in the hearing room --
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look, this moment when he got up and walked out as soon as the veterans groups began their testimony. richard burr got up and left as soon as the veterans groups began talking and he only returned at the end of their testimony to tell them, thanks very much, you guys, but you have to get out of here. >> not that i don't love you guys, but we're going to try to get the next panel in before we get into the series of votes that will bring a finality to that, so thank you. >> thank you. in this case means please leave. richard burr getting back to the room just in time to tell the veterans groups to leave after he skipped their testimony. their testimony that he later said was so upsetting to him he had to send out an open letter ripping veterans organizations on memorial day. i should note this cowardly form of failure is not just a richard burr problem, although he does wear it well. this particular kind of failure happens a lot right now in washington. over the last few years, this has become a very popular way to
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make a fool out of yourself as a politician. here's another instance. this tape i'm about to play, for example, this is one of the all-time great recorded instances of senator john mccain accidentally hitting the angry button when really what he might have been aiming at instead is the button marked i'm sorry or i'm embarrassed, but since those are apparently tiny buttons that are hard to hit, he hit angry. senator john mccain screwed up badly and he sort of emotionally misfired all of his anger into the microphone of cnn's capitol producer at the time. >> tempers flaring on capitol hill. senator john mccain lashing out at one of our cnn producers who questioned why he was missing a key hearing on the attack of the united states kaunlslet in benghazi, libya. he's been a sharp critic of the president and his administration, complaining lawmakers are not getting enough information. when asked why he missed that meeting today, he lashed out. >> one of those republicans who did not go to that briefing, it
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was a classified briefing, was john mccain. now, mccain at the time was having a press conference yesterday, lashing out at the administration for not getting enough information and calling for a select committee to investigate it all. well, our ted barrett caught up with the senator earlier today and wanted to know why he didn't go to that briefing and to say the least, it did not go well. >> cnn then posted the audio exchange between their producer trying to get senator mccain to explain how he could justify this thing. there's a classified briefing on benghazi going on from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. john mccain did not go. at noon, he scheduled his own press conference demanding more information on benghazi. he had to skip the meeting with the information about benghazi in order to complain he was not getting the information. do you care to comment on that, senator? >> listen, i understand that you did miss this briefing
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yesterday. >> i have no more comment. i'm not going to comment on how i spend my time. i will not -- i'm not going to comment. i have no further comment. >> senator mccain really did skip a briefing on benghazi so he could hold a press conference demanding information about b benghazi. his office called it a
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scheduling error. the administration offered an expert briefing on the rollout to house democrats and republicans. house democrats accepted. house republicans reportedly ignored the offer. when house democrats did get their briefing. house republicans said they were outrage they'd weren't having one too. fox news headline, boehner calls for briefing after republicans are snubbed. boehner put out a statement. far too much information is concealed from the public. all members and the american people demand answers for the debacle. now, briefing had been offered to them. they didn't bother to respond. but after that statement, the administration said okay if you really want that briefing we'll schedule it for you. then they held it. the hhs briefing that the republicans demanded. and well -- >> i would say there is about 20 members in there. >> 20 of them showed up.
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for context here there are more than 20 republicans in the house. there are more than ten times 20 republicans in the how. but only about 20 of them showed up. after they were so outraged that they were not being offered information that they apparently actually did not want. it is so much more fun to demand information than to actually receive it. receiving information is boring. takes forever. it's totally not like just going on fox news and complaining. it's like a dog chasing a car. so much more fun to chase the car than to catch the car. what are you going do do with it once you go out. this is an increasingly frequent, modern failure. just happened in a big way. on the new things republicans want to be a scandal. this is senator chambliss top republican on the intelligence committee. him speaking on fox on the show that is hosted by my friend greta van sustren. a live interview not on tape. what that means is senator saxby
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chambliss was live talking how the administration was denying congress the information about the bowe bergdahl prisoner ex-change. congress is out of the loop, the administration hasn't explained. more information is needed. while doing the interview, the administration was conducting a classified briefing for all united states senators to explain those act things. senator chambliss walked out of the briefing to go on fox news to complain he couldn't hear what was being explained to him so he left so he could go on fox news and explain that he couldn't hear it. after that briefing was over, chuck todd tweeted that a lot of nbc personnel were trying to track down senators who had gone to the important classified briefing on the bowe bergdahl situation, according to chuck, many are admitting they left early. quote, amazing so many senators from both parties didn't stay for the briefing until the end." meanwhile there is lots of briefings never mandatory, you
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can go or don't go itch you want to. when you don't go, you leave early, you are outraged that you didn't hear enough. like senator saxby chambliss and senator mccain. senator mccain did go to the beginning of the bowe bergdahl briefing. senator mccain stayed long enough at the briefing to ask one question. but then he walked out shortly after shot offing at an official over what he kiddconsidered an unsatisfactory answer. the bowe bergdahl hearing, john mccain turned up, hated the answer, screamed the person that gave him the answer, left. walked out to a nearby camera, and said about the briefing he just walked out of, i learned nothing. >> i learned nothing in this briefing. >> the one he left in the middle of. it must be hard to be a member of congress. i don't want the job. i don't know very many people who do. it cannot be part of the job to demand information that has been offered to you and that you have decided not to listen to. it cannot possibly be part of the job to insist that you have
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been denied critical information that you yourself were too lazy or otherwise occupied to bother to absorb. this is a new, increasingly frequent form of really, i mean, political lying in washington. it depends, getting away with this lie depends on us being ignorant and easily led when it comes to actually what is going on in that big boring catty high school called congress. there is a roone to know what hearings are going on, when, and who is invited, and who ought to be there. and yet it sound boring all of a sudden. until all of a sudden it is the punchline on an ambitious member of congress turning himself into a laughingstock. if you are skipping the briefing to complain there is no briefing. we're not laughing with you, congressmen, we are laughing at you. here you go. good catch! alright, now for the best part. ooh, let's get those in the bowl.
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happy friday. best new thing in the world, boy
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do we all need one. this is great. at the top of the show tonight we brought you the story of bernard jordan, 89-year-old british navy vet who snuck out of his nursing home in southern england. they were worried, they called police. but today, he turned up in france. he is a d-day veteran when his nursing home told him they hadn't got him on an organized trip to go to normandy today, he just went on his own. hooray. now the best new thing. since we have been on the air, bernard jordan arrived safely back in england. apparently he made lots of friend on the ferry from france to england once his story got out. because an itv reporter was able to find him in the ferry terminal in england when he got back. now we know the best new thing in the world today is that mr. jordan says he is going to try again next year. >> i'm going to try, if i am still with us, but if i am still about, i should try next year.
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>> nothing is going to stop you basically? >> oh, no. >> was it worth it? >> oh, definitely. yeah, yeah. >> have you any idea how much interest there has been in this? >> i didn't realize. no, no, no. >> do you think you are in trouble when you get back? >> i might be. but i hope not. >> bernard jordan, nursing home escapee to normandy, says he is going to try it again next year. best new thing in the world by a mile. fry try to tell me it's not. that does it for us tonight. we'll see you again monday. now you have to go to prison. due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. an inmate assaults a prison staff member. >> hold on to him.