tv The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC March 10, 2015 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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>> that's right. >> that's basically what we want to do without realizing, in fact, that it's with us and we're already part of it. >> ta-nehisi coates, from "the atlantic." thanks. >> thanks. thanks to you at home for joining us. when hillary clinton bowed out of the race for president in 2008 when she gave her concession speech saying she was getting out of the race and she was going to be endorsing barack obama, she gave that speech at the national building museum, which is a very boring sounding name for a place, but the national building museum is one of the most beautiful large-scale rooms of any kind in washington, d.c. just the lobby, the main floor of the national building museum is a gorgeous, gorgeous space. and in that speech that she gave on june 7th, 2008, this very sad occasion for senator clinton and her supporters after this
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hard-fought primary campaign, at that sad moment, senator clinton, she has given that speech, she looked up at this huge audience she had for this concession speech, she looked up at the people who were listening to her, right, she looked up at the beautiful ceiling of that lovely building that she was in, cast her eyes upward, and she delivered the line for which that speech is remembered. and even though this was a concession speech, the line for which that speech is remembered is not the concession moment. it's not remembered as a sad moment or as a regretful moment. what that speech is remembered for is basically the political equivalent of, i'll be back. it was a great moment. >> as we gather here today in this historic, magnificent building, the 50th woman to leave this earth is orbiting overhead. if we can blast 50 women into
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space, we will someday launch a woman into the white house. [ cheers and applause ] and although we weren't able to shatter that highest, hardest glass ceiling this time, thanks to you, it's got about 18 million cracks in it. [ cheers and applause ] and the light is shining through like never before filling us all with the hope and the sure knowledge that the path will be a little easier next time. >> will the path be a little easier next time? that is what hillary clinton is testing right now. and at one very basic level it seems like, yeah, it's going to be a lot easier this time. in part because no barack obama. in fact, nobody has really ihas really
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as really s really running against her this time. there is no senator barack obama of illinois who she needs to defeat to win the democratic presidential nomination for 2016. and i do not say that as an insult to senator bernie sanders or former senator jim webb or former maryland governor martin o'malley all of whom really do seem like they are running and they will try to contest the nomination against hillary clinton but honestly it's not the same. it is so much not the same that it is reasonable now to wonder if the democratic presidential primary process this year might just not have any debates in it at all because why bother? so at one level it looks like it will be easier, much easier for hillary clinton to secure the democratic party's presidential nomination this year but winning the nomination and winning the presidency are not at all the same thing. and there is a big open -- a historical question of how to run for the presidency if you don't really have to run in a primary.
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and there's also the question of how to do that while also being hillary clinton, because being hillary clinton is not like being anyone else in the entire world. nobody else has gone from being first lady to being a u.s. senator to almost being a presidential nominee to being secretary of state, to being the all but inevitable nominee from her party. i mean, even though she is not a sitting president running for re-election or a sitting vice president, nobody has ever been this inevitable as a nominee without already occupying the white house at the time they seemed inevitable. hillary clinton is always doing something that nobody has done before. so there's no normal, right? there's no reasonable expectation of what might happen next based on what happened before because with her, more often than not, it's never happened before. and that partly explains why every time hillary clinton does make an overt public foray of some kind where people and
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reporters get access to her, it is always an incredible scrum, right. and she and her political folks clearly know that, and they manage her public and political appearances accordingly. before today secretary clinton had not had a press conference or taken questions from the press corps in two years. she spent the last couple of years working on causes that she cares about and giving speeches for money that were mostly closed to the public and closed to the press, the kind of speeches where she would only make news "a" f. she wanted to or if "b" somebody threw a shoe at her. in the ramp-up to this inevitable but as yet still undeclared campaign for 2016, hillary clinton has been picking her political events and her public appearances very, very carefully with an eye toward capitalizing on what will be the historic nature of her nomination if and when the democratic party picks her to be the first female presidential nominee from either major party in this country's history. so hillary clinton's first speech in 2015 was an event in silicon valley focusing on
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women's achievement in the tech field, her second political event of 2015 was a speech at emily's list focusing on women's achievement in politics, the need to have women reach the highest levels of politics. today at the united nations it was her third major public speaking event of 2015, and it, again, focused on women and women's achievement, and this is how she was introduced today at the u.n. >> i have wonderful excellencies on the table from a former prime minister, president, a future president. i'm just saying -- >> secretary clinton gave this major address today at the u.n. after being introduced like that. the address had been planned in advance for months. it was basically seen as the
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20th anniversary commemoration of one of the highest profile most widely praised things that she did when she was first lady of the united states, in 1995 when she went to china she gave a blistering speech as first lady that attacked china while she was in china, attacked china for its policies related to women and girls and discrimination against women and girls. she declared in that speech in 1995 that women's rights are human rights and human rights are women's rights. that was 20 years ago. today at the united nations was meant to be the book end for that speech, and, oh, my god, did she get a good turnout of press for her appearance today at the united nations. but honestly they were not there to cover her speech on women and girls and women's achievements and women's rights as human rights. look at the press today. look at this. the press was there in such huge numbers at the u.n., in numbers almost never seen at the u.n. for anything.
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the press was there like this today for hillary clinton because for the first time in two years, hillary clinton said she would be taking questions from the press corps, and today they knew what she would be taking those questions about. >> madam secretary, can you -- >> andrea. andrea, thank you, andrea. >> thank you, madam secretary. can you explain how you decided which of the personal e-mails to get rid of, how you got rid of them and when? >> hi, right here. >> secretary clinton. >> she sort of is squashed. >> hi, secretary. i was wondering if you think that you made a mistake either in exclusively using your private e-mail in response to the controversy around. >> did you or any of your aides delete any government-related e-mails from your personal account? >> how can the public be assured when you deleted e-mails that were personal in nature you didn't also delete e-mails that were professional but possibly unflattering? >> madam secretary -- >> why did you wait two months? why did you wait two months to
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turn those e-mails over? i mean, the rules say you have to turn them over. >> secretary, why delete the personal e-mails -- >> secretary clinton -- >> i'd be happy to have somebody talk to you about the rules. i fully complied with every rule that i was governed by. >> secretary hillary clinton today in the first news conference she has had with reporters in two years since she was secretary of state. she started off by making remarks about women and girls and human rights, which is the subject of her speech today, nobody asked about that. then she moved on and made more remarks about these republican senators writing to iran to try to undermine president obama. she made very sharp comments criticizing republicans in the senate for that. nobody asked about that. basically the questions for her today were about her use of a private e-mail account while she was secretary of state. secretary clinton said today that she used a private e-mail account simply because it was convenient. she said that the e-mail server she used was secure, that it had been set up for the office of her husband, the office of former president clinton and that the server was physically kept in a location that was
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guarded by the secret service and that there were no security issues with regard to the server. she said her use of a private e-mail account was allowed under the laws and rules that applied to her as secretary of state. she said any government official who uses a private e-mail account is individually responsible for deciding which of their e-mails is work related and then handing over work-related e-mails to the government so they can be archived and accessed for public records purposes. she said she did that just like any government official is expected to. she said she did delete tens of thousands of e-mails from her time as secretary of state, but she said today that those were purely personal e-mails, things that had nothing to do with her official responsibilities as the head of the department of state. >> we went through a thorough process to identify all of my work-related e-mails and deliver them to the state department. at the end, i chose not to keep my private, personal e-mails, e-mails about planning chelsea's wedding or my mother's funeral
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arrangements, condolence notes to friends, as well as yoga routines, family vacations, the other things you typically find in in-boxes. no one wants their personal e-mails made public, and i think most people understand that and respect that privacy. >> the story is going to go on for awhile. even though secretary clinton says she handed over all her work-related e-mails, did she hand them over quickly enough? will there ever be some sort of third party assurance that they were all of her work-related e-mails and that nothing work reeled was either held back or deleted improperly. even though she says her private e-mail server was super secure and no issues with classified material or anything else about the security of her transmissions, can anybody else attest to that? what explains the discrepancy between the white house saying she didn't follow the administration's guidance on government business using private e-mails?
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what's the difference between that assertion and her assertion today that what she did was both allowed and fairly common. as secretary of state hillary clinton apparently instructed state department staff that they should not conduct official department business from their personal e-mail accounts. if she did set rules for state department staff that she did not follow herself as secretary of state, is there a good reason why she didn't follow the rules that she set for everybody else? the questions are going to go on for a long time. the state department announced today that they would conduct a review of secretary clinton's self-proclaimed work-related e-mails at her request with an eye toward releasing them publicly some months from now so some months from now, right, we'll be talking about this all again even if we don't talk about it another day after today and that's not likely. this story is not going away soon. the questions about the story won't go away soon and the story itself will stay alive at least several more months while the state department completes this review. and so is the path to the presidency going to be a little easier this time than it was the last time?
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don't know. all right, secretary clinton does appear to be blessed this time around with no real primary that she has to run in order to win the nomination at least alt t , at least at this point that's how it looks. but that does not mean that the process of running for president is something that she or her campaign can control or do entirely on their own terms. when hillary clinton ran in 2008 by this time in the process, by this point in the calendar year, she was already in. she was already officially a declared candidate as of january. she was already officially running her presidential campaign. she'd been in for weeks by now. she got in in mid-january. remember that. i'm in, and i'm in it to win it. well, this time around as we head deeper into march, not only has she not declared yet that she's running, not only has she not officially started her presidential campaign but as recently as a few weeks ago people were talking about the prospect of her not even
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declaring she was run gning for months yet deep into the summer. let the republicans beat each other up while she can float above the fray and choose to talk about things she wants to talk about and choose to not talk about things she doesn't want to talk about. engage at will. take the questions you want and not the questions you don't. that fantasy appears to be dead now. there are reports today that secretary clinton will be declaring her presidential candidacy and officially starting her campaign maybe as soon as just a couple of weeks from now by april 1st. hillary clinton is the most famous woman in the world. and she has been for a very long time. there is nobody else like her in politics, and nobody else has done the things that she has done in politics. but that does not mean that there's going to be anything easy or anything predictable about her effort to become the first woman president of the united states. maybe the only thing you can predict about her run for the presidency is that the person in the front row who will get in the first question and the most aggressive question and the one question she got today actually about women's rights and she
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will get those questions in there if it kills her and if she has to stand on a box to do is nbc's own andrea mitchell who was there today with secretary clinton at the u.n. andrea, it's great to see you. you were on a box, weren't you? >> i was on a box. >> how tall is this box? >> a lot taller than i am. i had to get high enough so the camera could see me and so that she could see me. >> well, she addressed you by name when she called on you. you got the first very aggressive question secretary clinton today.osecretary clinton today.f secretary clinton today. you have spent a lot of time with her at state and in her previous career. is what you saw today at the u.n., am i right in saying that's a very atypical experience for press and the u.n. and what goes on there? >> i have never seen anything like that. i've covered the u.n. for decades. it is a very sedate place. an ambassador comes out, a handful of reporters, you know, ask questions, politely. it was madness today. this was a circus, and it was interestingly a combination of the political press corps and
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some diplomatic press corps, the state department press corps who had followed hillary around and in mostly respectful ways. she has not seen anything like this since 2007/2008 because this now was an energized, active group of reporters wanting to ask questions about something that she had stonewalled on for two weeks, frankly, and many people, democrats as well as certainly republicans, but political analysts think it was self-imposed, this injury that this all could have been disclosed and dealt with much sooner. >> in terms of substantively how she dealt with questions today, i tried to run through sort of the assertions of fact that she made and some of the questions that remained. certainly we've already seen today, particularly among fellow democrats there's been giving her basically some credit for coming out and talking about it for making herself available for questions for not trying to stay out of this but rather engaging, she's getting credit for that but in terms of the substantive story, what she addressed, what she advanced today on the story,
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do you think that she made progress in terms of satisfying people as to what happened? >> i think even just coming out was progress. her explanation that it was convenience was a little striking because there was guidance. it wasn't a rule, it wasn't a regulation, it certainly wasn't a law but there was guidance you should use the government e-mail system. she used a personal e-mail system. it seemed i think because -- it seems rooted in the experience the clintons had had in the '90s. this goes back to the last such press conference, not combative, it was in the state dining room in april of 1994, she was wearing a lovely pink sweater, and she was addressing the question of cattle futures and whitewater and the rose law firm and whether they had special benefits from and favors because of their position in arkansas and she answered questions, you know, till the cows came home and it was a day when there was a lot happening on bosnia and a lot of other stories we were really more interested in covering but this
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was the first chance to interview the first lady about all of this, and she yielded to advice to answer all those questions, they said to her, this will be the end of it. just answer these questions, and six months later ken starr had been appointed and there was a prosecutor, so her experience has been if you answer questions they'll want more, and they'll never be satisfied, and so that's why she hunkered down but in the era of social media, i don't think you can politically you can't get away with it especially in the weeks leading up to the launch of a campaign. let me just say this, there were a number of us from the state department press corps, you know, who covered her before, who really wanted to cover the international women's day events. >> yeah. >> i was in beijing with her so -- >> in 1995. >> in 1995 so that arc goes back live very far for me, and this was incredibly meaningful. i think the report they issued jointly with the gates foundation yesterday, the clinton foundation and gates foundation report on the new -- it was very important and had a
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lot of data in it, and i wish we had been working on that, frankly. >> in terms of what happens next here and what we should expect, we do have a weird situation politically in terms of patterns and being able to count on the historical record in that we've got basically the no primary plan on the democratic side. we have also got hillary clinton who has this incredibly unusual path to where she is now. she's been such -- she's been a political pioneer and she's done things nobody else has done in terms of the path she's followed. given what you've seen in all the reporting that you've done with her over the years, do you think if she formally starts a campaign and put that apparatus in action, she will be able to weather these kinds of things and make decisions about these different to what she's able to do now? >> yeah, because at least she's hired really smart people from the obama white house, from the obama's campaign and others and i think one of the arguments against delaying any further is that she didn't have an apparatus to deal with these questions when they first came up because she doesn't have a real campaign office, and i
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think she's hired a lot of smart people, working them in with some of her, you know, former aides who have been with her all along. i mean the real core clinton people and i think she's building a very strong team. but now she's given ammunition to the benghazi investigating committee which was floundering and now it has a new life bred by the questions and the conspiracy theories and those that just don't trust her answers on e-mails. wonderful footnote, "the wall street journal" posted today or, yeah, earlier today that bill clinton does not send e-mails. he has sent two, one to the troops and one congratulating john glenn on his spaceflight, two in his entire life. >> yeah, and probably not, you know, for want of temptation in that regard. andrea mitchell, nbc chief foreign affairs correspondent, host of "andrea mitchell reports" at noon weekdays on this network. great to see you in that footage. we got much more ahead including a response from one of the real live independents in the united states senate.
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it was wednesday when when we got that shocking news out of south korea that the u.s. ambassador to south korea had been at a breakfast meeting in seoul when attacked by a man wielding a ten-inch kitchen knife. the man slashed ambassador mark lippert's face and arm. ambassador lippert was taken straight from the meeting room to the hospital. he ended up getting 80 stitches to repair the giant slash to his face. well, today ambassador lippert was released from the hospital. the ambassador has suffered some nerve damage in his left hand. you can also see he has an impressive four-inch wound on his right cheek, but he seemed to be in very positive spirits today. >> it was obviously a scary incident, but i'm walking, talking, holding my baby, you know, hugging my wife, so i'm -- i just feel really good.
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>> the alleged attacker remains in custody, facing charges of violating korean national security law and attempted murder. the man's believed to have been making some sort of protest against the u.s. and south korea holding joint military exercise s, but honestly who cares.s, but honestly who cares. once you're stabbing people in the face nobody cares about why you're doing it. the state department may add further security for the embassy and embassy personnel. but the very good news today is the american ambassador to south korea attacked just viciously last week mark lippert is well enough to have been released from the hospital today. more ahead. stay with us. ♪ nineteen years ago, we thought "wow, how is there no way to tell the good from the bad?" so we gave people the power of the review.
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loretta lynch, please stand up. [ cheers and applause ] we look forward to you being the 83rd attorney general of the united states of america. [ applause ] >> that was this weekend in selma, alabama, during the 50th anniversary commemoration of the march across the edmund pettus bridge and the police violence against those marchers that led to the voting rights act in 1965. federal prosecutor loretta lynch getting a huge ovation at brown chapel in selma. she was introduced to the crowd as the next attorney general of the united states. key word there being next. loretta lynch was nominated to be the next attorney general. more than four months ago. but the republican-controlled senate has not been willing to hold a vote on her nomination. it's not like the senate isn't in the business of doing
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confirmations right now. just yesterday the senate confirmed a new intellectual property enforcement coordinator and also a new director of the u.s. patent and trademark office, whoo-hoo. two very important posts, not, however, the country's top law enforcement official. i don't know why this isn't a bigger story for the beltway media, but no nominee for attorney general has gone through something like this. for somebody for whom there are no substantive objections to her nomination, no one nominated to be attorney general has ever in the history of our country been held by the senate for this long. she's already been approved by the judiciary committee. it's just that the republican leadership in the senate won't allow the full senate to vote on her. unprecedented. democrats are starting to stamp their feet about it a little bit including harry reid making yet another call today for her to get a vote. the latest word from senator mitch mcconnell who runs the senate now is that maybe they'll vote on her next week. we'll see. we've heard that before, though. even if they do finally get around to voting on her next
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including two international leaders, former british prime minister gordon brown, he of the amazing jaw line and even better hairdo was a lecturer there for a few years in the late 1970s before becoming prime minister, also the current president of iran, hassan rouhani got his ph.d. there in 1999. here he is receiving that degree. the title of his thesis was apparently the flexibility of sharia law with reference to the iranian experience. the president of iran has a scottish ph.d.. and it turns out having an advanced degree from a highly regarded western university is kind of a thing in the iranian government. iranian cabinet ministers have lots of advanced degrees like cal berkeley and mit and lsu. in the iranian cabinet they've actually got a better stack of graduate degrees from high-level american universities than we currently have in president obama's cabinet here at home, and that turns out to be
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a very awkward backdrop to one of the weirder dumber things to happen in washington in a very long time and in this iteration of washington, that's saying something. that story is next. ♪ bring your vision for the future to life. for more than 145 years, pacific life has been helping families achieve life-long financial security with innovative tools and strategies. talk to a financial advisor to protect your family and plan today. pacific life. the power to help you succeed. pacific life proudly presents "humpback whales", a whale-sized movie for giant screen theaters. it's a significant improvement over the infiniti we had... we went around the country talking to people who made the switch to ford. the brand more people buy. and buy again. oh i love it... we test-drove the escape... we both said, "i think that's the one"... and i really enjoy the pep in its step... that's the ecoboost...
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over the past several years if there was one thing congress could agree on and very often there's barely even one thing congress can agree on if there was one thing that congress did feel all "kumbaya" about it was condemning the nation of iran, ah, look. iran sanctions approval unanimous in senate sweeps house 408-8. that was in 2010. the following year even though the white house was strongly opposed, every single u.s. senator again voted for more iran sanctions. the year after that, more sanctions passed the senate, 94-0. again, over the objections of the obama administration, the following year, the senate unanimously approved a resolution saying that if israel launched a military strike on iran, the u.s. would be fully supportive of that. then last year it was kumbay-we hate iran again when all of congress came together to deny a visa to iran's choice to be u.n. ambassador. in the most polarized congress
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ever, when people can't all vote together on a we like puppies bill or we like pie, democrats and republicans have been able to come together no matter what even when the white house was super opposed, they have been able to come together and vote together against iran until now because now a brand spanking new freshman republican senator from arkansas named tom katz has figured out a way to blow up that consensus. senator tom cotton wrote an open letter to the leaders of iran and got 46 of his senate republican colleagues to sign on to the letter with him. in so doing, tom cotton has accomplished something that pretty recently would have seemed impossible. he's gotten everybody in congress to start fighting with each other over their previously consensus approach to iran. democrats denounced the tom cotton letter but beyond that they all united in opposition to it. even the democrats who have been most aggressively hawkish on iran are against tom cotton on this, and suddenly one of the last areas in the whole world where republicans fighting with the white house could rely on
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democrats to help them out against the white house, that appears to be done now and that's just the democrats. it should also be noted tom cotton appears to have split the republicans on this previously consensus issue, as well. most republicans did sign on to the tom cotton letter, but some did not and are being pretty vocal about why they didn't. and so now there's a nice big vocal rift opening within the republican party over this issue. so for those of you keeping score at home, we have gone from year after year after year of this kind of agreement to 47 republican senators squaring off against the rest of the republican senators who are squaring off against all the democrats and, yeah. so that's the strategy here, and then again there's the letter itself, which itself as a document is an astonishing thing this is from the letter. "it has come to our attention thing. this is from the letter. "it has come to our attention while observing your nuclear
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negotiations with our government, that you may not fully understand our constitutional system. the offices of our constitution have different characteristics, for example, the president may serve only two four-year terms whereas senators may serve an unlimited number of six-year terms. also, cat starts with "c." pie, good. boo-boo, owie. i mean, really? iran's foreign minister replied to the republicans and tom cotton with his own really nicely passive/aggressive letter written in english, quote, zarif expressed astonishment that some members of u.s. congress find it appropriate to write to leaders of another country against their own president and administration administration. quote, it seems that the authors not only do not understand international law but are not fully cognizant of the nuances of their own constitution when it comes to presidential powers in the conduct of foreign policy. you idiot. republicans in congress have been working very hard to kill the administration's talks with iran on the nuclear issue.
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they've been doing that for a very, very long time. they threatened legislation to try to scuttle the deal. that was something that might have even had democratic support before mitch mcconnell tried to fast track it last week and got all screwed up. they invited israel's prime minister to give a speech denouncing the deal before the whole u.s. congress. the most visible effect of that thus far appears to be the endangerment of benjamin netanyahu's prospects for re-election at home. well done. but this, this letter is such a sad sack attempt to stop the talks and stop the deal that the iranians are publicly marveling at how dumb this seems. the foreign minister of iran basically just told them off about what they don't understand about the constitution and he actually has a better argument than they do. and at home just politically it also seems like an explicable strategy for the republicans. they took something on which they were united and were
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often united with all democrats on the matter and they instead turned it into a shouting match. if their goal is to keep some sort of unified pressure on iran they have alienated some of their most committed allies and turned what used to be an everybody nod together issue into an issue that feels a lot more like partisan chaos. joining us now for the interview is an independent senator from maine, angus king. he's a member of the armed services and intelligence committee, intelligence committee is a co-sponsor of legislation that would require senate review of any nuclear deal with iran but today he took to the senate floor to denounce this open letter to iran's leader. senator king, thank you so much for being with us. >> rachel, good to be with you and you hit it right on the head. this whole thing is bizarre because the bill that was put in barely a week ago by bob corker, the republican chair of the foreign relations committee, was headed, i believe, for a veto-proof majority. people were clamoring to co-sponsor it. bob corker was very careful to keep it bipartisan. he wouldn't put a republican on it until he got a democrat and
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was building out from the middle and all of a sudden it got blown up. i mean, this is -- if this isn't an example of snatching victory from the -- defeat from the jaws of victory, i've never seen it. it's a very strange turn of events. >> i'm glad you -- >> they have politicized, they have politicized and made partisan an issue that was never partisan before. >> i wanted -- i'm glad you brought up senator corker there because that last point is exactly what i was going to ask you about. senator corker, as far as i understand, is one of the republicans who did not sign on to senator cotton's letter today. it's got unanimous democratic opposition. it split the republican senators including senator corker and his incredibly key position on this. i wonder if you see this as sort of a fluke occurrence or does this imply that there are sort of fishers in the senate in terms of people trying to take a leadership role in this where we shouldn't really feel like we can predict what's going to happen next on this previously very predictable issue. >> well, what i find so troubling about this is that it proves once and for all that
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there's nothing in this town that won't be a partisan issue, that won't be politicized. in working on this bill with bob corker and lindsey graham and tim kaine and others, my concern was, you know, can we have a serious debate on the merits of this deal, or are some members of this caucus going to vote against it no matter what just because it's coming from this president and, unfortunately, the events of the last couple of days, you know, they sort of point out that that may be the case. rachel, this is maybe the most important negotiation since the cuban missile crisis. this is a really important negotiation for america, for israel, for the middle east, for the world, very serious issues, the consequences if the negotiations fail are enormous and to turn this into a partisan issue is -- it just -- it's
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pretty sad, really, and as i say, it's bizarre because if these folks wanted to exercise congressional control over this decision, bob corker had the vehicle to do so with democratic support. but, you know, people like me, i'm staying with it. but, you know, this is getting close. i mean, can you imagine, rachel, you know, you're too young to remember. i remember if the congress had gotten in touch with khrushchev in the middle of the cuban missile crisis and said, don't pay any attention to this guy kennedy, deal with us, you know, that's essentially what we're talking about here, the president lead on foreign policy and, as i say, i believe congress should have a role, but let's exercise the role once we know what the deal is and in a responsible, nonpartisan way. that's the way it ought to be handled. >> do you think that what the senators have done with this letter could materially affect the likelihood of a successful deal being achieved? >> it's possible. i think the possible real downside here is that iran has
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politics just like we do. they have factions. they have people that were really wanting to move forward with these negotiations because the sanctions were having such a negative effect on their economy but there are also people in the regime who never thought the negotiations were a good idea, they view this, an atomic weapon, as part of national sovereignty and prestige and didn't want this to happen. my concern is i don't think it's going to happen. i thought zarif's response was pretty measured, but it clearly endangers -- it will empower the hard-liners in tehran saying, look, this proves you can't deal with america. they can't be trusted. they can't speak with one voice. let's walk away. the other piece of this, rachel, you've got to remember is this just isn't us and iran. there are five other countries involved in this. all the members of the u.n. security council plus germany, they're involved in these
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negotiations and, in fact, it's their sanctions more than ours that are really imposing the pain on iran, and if they see us screwing this up because of partisan political differences here in america, they can say, look, okay, we'll live with a nuclear iran, we're not going to enforce the sanctions anymore and then the whole thing falls apart and we're in a very bad place. >> yeah, and good luck for american leadership in the world on even unrelated matters if we screw this one up simply because of our own internal inability to handle our own business. independent senator angus king, of maine, member of the senate and armed service committees it's really great to have you here. thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> we'll be right back. stay with us. you know, because we're never gonna need it. until one day, we do. now that cut-rate policy is costing us big. makes you wonder if there's something better out there . see car insurance
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the police practices are due at least in part to intentional discrimination as demonstrated by direct evidence of racial bias and stereotyping about african-americans by certain ferguson police and municipal court officials." and then the thing about this report is that they then printed some of that direct evidence, including really racist e-mails sent by ferguson officials through official e-mail accounts apparently during work hours, including officials like police supervisors and police commanders and court supervisors, with no one ever being disciplined or even being told to shut up. they include a e-mail stating -- president obama would not be president for long because what black manholes a steady job for four years. another depicting president obama as a chimpanzee or an african-american was admitted to a new orleans hospital for a pregnancy termination.
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two weeks later she received a check for $5,000 and she phoned the hospital to ask who it was from. the hospital said crimestoppers. another, a june 2011 e-mail described a man seeking to obtain welfare for his dogs because they are mixed in color unemployed lazy can't speak english and have no frigging clue who their daddies are." another, an october 2011 e-mail included a photo of a bare-chested group of dancing women, apparently in africa with the caption, michelle obama's high school reunion. so that's what top police commanders and court officials are e-mailing about at work on their work e-mail. the doj says their review of documents revealed many additional e-mails that exhibited racial ethnic bias. this is the important part. our investigation has not revealed any indication that any officer was ever disciplined. so that changed once the department of just released this report a few days ago. the mayor of ferguson announced people who had never been
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disciplined before were being put on leave, being fired. so far a court clerk, a police captain, a police sergeant have all lost their jobs. they're trying to put this thing back on the tracks in ferguson. late tonight the city manager reached a mutual separation agreement with the city council in ferguson. the ferguson city manager has resigned tonight. also, a local judge has resigned. the state of missouri has stepped in and put a state judge in charge of the local courts there to try to get that city back on try, to try to restore some kind of trust in what they do. so there's been a lot of drama, and even some reckoning in the last few days because of the justice department's investigation into what's been going on in this town. and the justice department's findings about how black people have been treated by the police and the local court system and these vivid examples of the kinds of racist drek that was seen as okay and no big deal, even when top officials were sending it around on their work e-mails, their official accounts, i mean, this is incredible. can you imagine get thing at work from your boss? nobody saying anything about it,
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nobody thinking this was weird. bare-chested group of dancing women, apparently in africa, michelle obama's high school reunion. imagine getting that at work and people thinking it's no big deal. what i did not see coming is how the conservative media would react to this same news. i mean we're all working from the same set of facts. but look how this story comes out when you see it on the fox news channel. >> so it's not a story of institutional racism in ferguson, it's a story of blood sucking local government that's trying to get every ounce of revenue that it can to either feed its penguinssions or whatever. >> there are few companies in america, whether public or private, which if you sic 40 fbi agents on the company and review every e-mail, you won't find any racist e-mails, any inappropriate comments, and then to tar the entire organization with that is additionally problematic. i got to steal the last word on that, brett. good to see you. >> good to see you. very few companies in america
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where you won't find a photo of bare-chested group of women in africa with the caption, michelle obama's high school reunion. the president is a chimpanzee. you know what, i don't get e-mails from my colleagues like that. i don't work at fox, so i can't speak to what they get in their in-boxes but e-mails depicting president obama as a chimp, the michelle obama's high school reunion, e-mails describing a man trying to obtain welfare for his dogs because they're mixed in color, maybe those kinds of e-mails happen where you work. maybe my office is an outlier. i do not get those types of e-mails and if i did get sent something like that at work, i would expect people would get fired and that is what is in the process of happening right now in ferguson, missouri and apparently at the fox news channel, that's an outrage, because this is normal for the american workplace. very few companies in america are not sending e-mails around about lazy, unemployed black people and the
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president being a monkey. that's normal, right? the fox news channel says that's normal. that i did not see coming. that does it for us tonight. we'll see you again tomorrow. now it's time for lawrence o'donnell." >> rachel, i'm with you. i've never seen e-mails like that in any workplace i've been. i don't know why people working at fox think those are in every workplace in the country. >> in more companies than not. really? >> and big difference between private company's e-mails and the e-mails of the administrators of justice in ferguson. >> exactly. >> very big difference that doesn't seem to be understood at fox news. >> maybe it was a typo. maybe they didn't mean it. >> thanks, rachel. well, today, former secretary of state hillary clinton added her objection to that letter sent by 47 republican senators to the leaders of iran. and tonight, t
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