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tv   With All Due Respect  MSNBC  January 22, 2016 3:00pm-4:01pm PST

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there is infrastructure there. >> he is going to be a player. it is going to be hard. get home. i have to get home. we will be back monday and dig out for more mtp daily. if it is sunday it is meet the press. with all due respect starts right now. >> i'm john heilemann. >> and i'm mark halperin. with all due respect to jeb bush if you are going to show up late you need the note from your mother. on this show cruz plants his flag, clinton starts to drag and jeb bush pulls a trick out of his bag. ten days to go to iowa and every day new attempts to cane citizen trump. today there is the biweekly gloss national review. william f. buckley famously said the national review stands for
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history yelling stop and the new editors lined up 22 conservative writers to convey that message to donald trump. you might recognize names. one immediate implication is that the publication has been cut off from participating in a republican candidate debate. what does donald trump think of all of this? >> i wonder. >> last night at a rally in vegas he was predictably unimpressed. >> the national review is a dying paper. its circulation is way down. not very many people read it anymore. people don't think about the national review. i guess they want to get a little publicity. it is a dying paper. >> are you more or less impressed? >> i am less impressed than donald trump is mainly because trump is calling them a loser.
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i don't think the national review are a bunch of losers but they are misunderstanding the nature of trump's appeal. this is an jong-un kind campaign contribution to donald trump. anything establishment against trump is good for trump. >> the people who wrote there, some people we know and respect think ideas are going to stop trump. we thought for a while you are not going to stop trump by an interest group, magazine, only another candidate can stop trump and nothing they wrote will hurt him. it is only going to help him. >> many of these people submitted their arguments are powerful arguments. they are well written, well argued. not just missing the substance of the arguments. i'm saying like a bunch of guys in washington with elbow patches and tweed coats saying donald trump is bad for the party will put no brakes but hit the
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accelerator. >> reports of another round of speculation. the amount of money it would take to break through now, the question of what arguments would use no one is going to stop trump except another candidate if anybody. >> somebody has to go toe to toe with him. to me that is a factor in terms of who is plausible. if you look at a bunch of candidates they are not plausible as someone to stand in the ring with donald trump. some guys will never be big enough to take on trump. some are, though. >> second time a conservative publication has been booted out because it crossed donald trump. you can argue the trump people demanded it but it does raise questions about the participation in the debates. >> the republican party has not handled the debate thing well. donald trump can fight many fights at once in addition to feuding with national review he is focussed on his chief candidate rival. today trump's campaign released
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an ad that will run, the first of trump's -- first negative ad trump yet released in this campaign. the topic, ted cruz on immigration. >> i'm donald trump and i approve this message. >> sounded like you wanted the bill to pass. >> of course, i wanted the bill to pass. my amendment to pass. what my amendment did is take citizenship off the table. it doesn't mean that i supported the other aspects of the bill. >> i want immigration reform to pass. and it allows those here illegally to come in out of the shadows. >> that amendment would have allowed undocumented immigrants to remain in the u.s. permanently and obtain legal status. how do you square the circle? >> it wouldn't. >> people want to take back their country in a humane way but we have to have a country.
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we have people pouring in and doing tremendous damage. if you look at the crime, if you look at the economy we want to have borders. to have a country you have to have borders. we don't have borders right now. >> so that was trump going after cruz. of course, naturally on good morning america cruz had something to say about it. >> i stood with jeff sessions and steve king and led the opposition that defeated amnesty. donald trump was publically supporting amnesty. >> mark, we are going to talk about cruz versus trump as we have the last couple of days and probably will for many days in the future. who today is winning the battle? >> trump is advertising on immigration, making a claim about cruz. he is on his immigration. cruz going after trump on imminent domain. >> in an ad. >> it's not central to his campaign. it is an issue that they believe
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could maybe break through because conservatives do care about it and because it is relatively undiscussed in the debate. i don't think ted cruz could argue he is more on message than trump is. the best thing ted cruz could say is expectations game in iowa is setting up well for him now. if he wins iowa it is bigger. >> just look at this from a little bit of distance. donald trump promised to spend television money on television. this is his first negative ad. he is going after ted cruz on one of cruz's strengths. after discombobulating him he sees ted cruz reeling. he is going straight for the jugular in iowa on this issue. trump is on offense. cruz is on defense. the guy on offense is winning the battle. >> the thing about the reality, though, here is that cruz is in iowa. that is his state. there is no other state where he is close to trump. this is an ad in iowa on an
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issue where trump is showing strength. even if you take the total -- the merits of what they are -- trump is showing strength and when trump is showing strength he does well. i will give cruz credit. he is not flailing, not showing discombobulation. >> not compared to other folks. equally as interesting is clinton v sanders. team hillary trying to figure out a way to apply brakes on bernie momentum. a new poll shows sanders with a relatively healthy 50 to 41 lead among new hampshire democratic primary voters. what could close the gap maybe a combo of both. bill clinton went after sanders talked about how mad sanders is. today the candidate herself suggested that sanders
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presidency would not build effectively on obama presidency as she says she would do. where are we on how the clintons are doing in trying to find a way to slow sanders down? >> they have a new ad out today that is a foreign policy ad, the notion that she can do all aspects oft job. there is an argument there. i think maybe the strongest card they are starting to play is not the thing about sanders being a socialist but he is not really a democrat. trying to reinforce the notion that this guy is really not really loyal to the party. >> the clintons want to try to stop sanders' momentum. there is a school of thought that says probably bernie sanders is going to do really well. it is a much different narrative for her. if he won them both. some people are saying talk
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about your record and the economy. talk about historic first female president and these contests and if you lose them you can go into south carolina in a more optimistic way rather than compounding the losses. >> i sound like a broken record going back to 2008. they have not in that race and so far in this race, once they start to go negative they have not usually been able to pull themselves back from that. in 2008 they spiralled out of control. they waited a long time and then went there and couldn't pull it back. i will be really interested to see if in the closing week whether they can get to that place. will she say i have taken my shots and want to be positive. >> you can understand the frustration of the clintons because while they are being negative sanders and his operation are being really negative. they are treating him like he is simon and garfunkel.
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julian moore, joel benison and the nfl all coming up. first we talk about marco rubio getting pinched in jeb bush's bag of tricks when we come back. huh. introducing centrum vitamints. a brand new multivitamin you enjoy like a mint. with a full spectrum of essential nutrients... surprisingly smooth, refreshingly cool. i see you found the vitamints. new centrum vitamints. a delicious new way to get your multivitamins.
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yesterday we mentioned the circular firing squad of the four establishment republican candidates has largely avoided john kasich. after our interview with kasich yesterday that changed. he is quaralling with jeb bush. there is another interesting clash in this cohort and that involved marco rubio tangled with jeb bush and chris christie to be the candidate of the establishment. the problem is he is also squaring off with ted cruz for reasons that are sort of hard to explain. i ask you, does this make sense to you? is this a good thing he is fighting with cruz in. >> a long period where they were fighting and then it died down.
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rubio is taking it from all fronts. this shows we are the guy to beat. i think there is only so much band width the guy has to fight. i don't think on balance it is good. if rubio can emerge third in iowa and looks like he will be third. it looks that way now. he can do as well in new hampshire he is getting licks in on cruz now. may be good to get that dynamic going. it is a little high wire because he is fighting with a lot of people. >> i understand why ted cruz wants to try to damage marco rubio. ted cruz going to have to get through marco rubio if rubio becomes the establishment candidate. i know if you talk to the other establishment candidates they sit there every day and say -- >> i will say that marco rubio on paper has the potential to compete for votes with ted cruz. >> on paper. not right now.
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yes, the case that rubio in some ideal scenario was the guy who can be the crossover candidate establishment and tea party. nobody talks about marco rubio anymore in terms of evangelical. some point ben carson support could collapse in iowa and new hampshire and south carolina. i think rubio is potentially there to get at least some of it. it is vital to finish as the top establishment finisher. >> you think this is a play for carson support in iowa to guarantee a strong third place. >> and huckabee and santorum. jeb bush needs something of an assist so he is doing what generations of bush men have done, asking help me mom literally. former first lady barbara bush who is arguably most popular
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member of that group is sending out letters. today the bush campaign put out this web video with a very special message from mom. >> jeb has been a very good father, a wonderful son, hard worker. his heart is big. when push comes to shove people are going to realize jeb has real solutions rather than talking about how popular they are, how great they are. he is doing it because he sees a huge need and it's not being filled by anybody. of all the people running he seems to be the one who can solve the problems. i think he will be a great president. >> yesterday jeb bush's sister got on a conference call with alums of both previous bush administrations and said she wouldn't be surprised if bush 43 was out on the trail. the bush name has been something
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of an albatross for jeb so far. is it possible the bush brand could help. >> this brings warm memories. we all know she was mean and tough as anyone. she went negative on donald trump without fear. i would like to see the campaign unleash her on trump. it can't hurt. at this point all those guys in that level place it doesn't hurt jeb bush to have them. >> in this fight for the establishment the bush brand has some loyalty. if the establishment panicked and said we can't have trump and cruz it could be a lot of voters, some suburban women may say where is a safe place to go to try to stop what they look at as madness. the bush brand and endorsement may help. >> at this point the bush name,
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the negatives of the bush name are pretty firmly baked in the cake. anybody not going to vote for jeb bush because they don't like the fact that he is a bush for whatever set of reasons, those people are not voting for jeb bush probably ever. those that are still available may not think it is a bad thing. >> that mild shot at trump, fine. i want to see 43 all in taking down trump. interesting to see. >> 43 and his mom. >> i would love to see that. coming up, a prisoner's dilemma for the four establishment candidates. we will talk about that and show you video after this. the latest on the first major snow storm of 2016. 85 million people are under blizzard watches or warnings including washington, d.c. where more than two feet of snow is possible. nasa just released this dramatic image of the storm bearing down
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on the east coast this morning. luke rusert is live in the nation's capitol. how is it looking there now? >> reporter: good evening. it is coming down and coming down fast. the worst of this storm is supposed to hit d.c. at 1:00 a.m. saturday morning and the mayor asked everybody to stay off the road for the duration of the weekend. public transit will be closed. buses and trains here in d.c. with the idea to shelter in place. this has the potential to be a historic snowfall in washington, largest since the 1920s. this is a city that has not done snow well. the mayor is trying to be as proactive as possible. the plows are on the road. the big worry, though, is the power. washington is built around a lot of trees. still power lines above ground. the worry is the power to go out before workers with get there because of how high the snow will be it could take days.
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that is the safety concern. people seem to take the advice of the mayor. >> thank you. now let's go to charlotte, north carolina where the storm has ground that city to a halt. what does it look like right now? >> reporter: hi there. you know we have watched clear skies transform into sleet and now snow here in charlotte where the big concern is the ice. the ice might weigh down tree branches and then weigh down on the power lines resulting in massive outages. right now we are about 67,000 homes in the dark as crews work around the clock to get a handle on things. another big concern is the roads. people being urged to stay home unless travel is absolutely necessary. in preparation for this storm crews dumped some 2 million gallons of brian briem.
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we had the possibility of black ice very real and scary heading into the evening. people urged to stay safe and check on neighbors as the storm continues. >> thank you. with all due respect will be right back after this. i take pictures of sunrises, but with my back pain i couldn't sleep and get up in time. then i found aleve pm. aleve pm is the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. aleve pm for a better am.
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torn between cooperating for the greater good and trying to save themselves individually. that is the situation the four establishment presidential candidates find themselves in especially in new hampshire two weeks before the primary. this sunday on show time at 8:00 p.m. it is the second episode of our weekly series, "the circus" that we produce with mark mckinnen and bloomberg politics. this episode is called "prisoner's dilemma." the winners may turn out to be trump and cruz. here is a sneak peek. >> sure sign of how important this state is to the future. >> what is your name? >> a child will always get my attention first. you guys all around.
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big heavy equipment. these kids come to see a candidate for president should get -- >> so this is a gift for coming. i think it symbolizes the tortoise in the end wins. >> is that the approach? >> sure is. >> ladies and gentlemen, i give you the next president of the united states, senator marco rubio. >> our next president better be someone frustrated by the direction of our country. i am. and not only am i upset, i am passionate about issues we face in america because i faced them in my own life. when i talk about student loan debt i am the only republican that talks about it consistently. i had over $100,000 in student loan debt. when i talk about people living paycheck to paycheck it is not a special i saw on pbs. i believe it because i lived it.
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>> appreciate it. thank you for coming. >> we just saw marco rubio in a town hall forum. he is a good communicator, has a great new generation message. >> how are you? what is unique about new hampshire? so i would like to introduce my husband, john kasich. [ applause ] >> i went to my high school reunion when i was a congressman and a guy said i understand you are a congressman. i was like yeah. he said i voted for you one of the most likely to succeed. what happened? >> you know, i have been very, very close to moose on a number of occasions. the thing about the moose is when you see it i'm talking
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about these city slickers, when you see the moose, the head and the antlers are so big that when you look at it you wonder how does it keep its head up. am i right? >> people think that everybody here is angry. you know, we have candidates that walk into these meetings and it's all about the negative and the dark. i call them the prince of darkness. i'm the prince of the light. >> if you want to divide the country, if you want to yell and scream at the other side you should not vote for me. if you all come out against me then i'm pretty well done. >> the honorable chris christie. >> thank you. how completely fabulous to be in a house dominated by republicans. when i get to the white house i know how the decisions will come
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in to this office. they will come fast and furious. we need to elect someone president of the united states who has done this before. >> thank you. thank you all for coming tonight. i appreciate it very much. >> he has been relentless. he is putting a lot of effort to new hampshire. >> what you are going to get is a direct answer from me. >> so let's get to work. >> the thing that has been a conundrum is he has had moments and getting decent crowds and doing really well in town hall meetings. >> that was an academy award level performance. very good. >> but at the same time there has been almost no sign that he has gained any real traction in terms of looking at the poll numbers. >> don't worry. i will be ready for battle tomorrow. >> that is a taste of circus. we are still cutting the episode so that is a lot more on sunday night. all four of these guys are not giving up. no one is playing at the string. no one is thinking i won't do
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that well. all four of them can make a case, do make a case and have a credible case to say i'm the guy who after the new hampshire primary establishment says you are our man. >> you try to talk to them in the abstract if you don't do well in iowa and new hampshire what happens if you tank in iowa or new hampshire presumably you get behind one of these guys. they won't admit the possibility that that might be where they want to end up. they profoundly believe in the end somehow in the next couple of weeks with all of that undecided vote in new hampshire that somehow it will come together for them in the end. >> you go to their events, there are decent sized crowds. incredible level of interest and questioning. they are not trump rallies and the intensity of cruz. all four of them can go into the final home stretch for new hampshire and say i'm going to surge at the end. i think all four of them are
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performing pretty well. you don't see any of them sort of dropping off in their game. i think all of them have upped their game. it makes it exciting. for the establishment four is too many. >> and it is way too many. they are going around they said to us we talked to them, they are going around and hearing from people i have yet to decide and hearing that they are thinking about the others in that cohort. so they know who their competitors are. anthony this is also not abstract. >> one thing people see in this episode is the contrasting styles. four establishment guys. all of them are their own unique way the zen of john kasich, intensity of chris christie is something. that will be sunday on show time, the circus. we do it in partnership with bloomberg politics and show time. coming up, hillary clinton's
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joining us once again is the man who tells hillary clinton when she is up and down. given recent news it makes sense that we would want to leave brooklyn headquarters for a little bit. great to have you back. last night we dealt with this new most recent poll, cnn orc shows your candidate back by eight points. i know you have points of dispitation with that poll. please tell us why that poll is not to be believed. >> first of all, if you look at the poll it is an outliar. more importantly it is a sample of 280 people in a caucus where their methodology would forecast about 315,000 people voting or participating in the caucuses in iowa. >> to be clear that would be more than participated in barack obama's historic -- >> almost 50% more.
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more importantly, going through the calculations last night for them to arrive at the number they did based on their sample they had to have a sample that was 53% male and 47% female. last caucus was 57% female and that's quite a difference. that is a swing of nine points of women that will effect your outcome. my point on a lot of these polls is these are tricky states. the other point that particular organization, i have said this to the folks at cnn they had it wrong in 2008. they had hillary clinton beating barack obama in iowa by two points in the last poll before the caucuses. obama ended up beating hillary clinton by nine points. that is 11 points off. track records matter. >> based on public data and your data where do you think the race in iowa and new hampshire is? >> i think both are close. the key in both of these states is if you go back to 2008 a high
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number of voters make up their mind in the last week. iowa was 27%. new hampshire was 50%. i think we had the advantage in iowa. i think we are building a little momentum going towards the end here. i think he has a little advantage in new england, in new hampshire where you know new englanders have almost always competed like favorite sons in the new hampshire primary. >> is it true to say they are both close enough that either could win either race? are they that close? >> given volatility that happens late because of the special role the voters think they play there i think we can be surprised like last time. >> if secretary clinton who has big leads in other states, if she lost them both as a matter of not static analysis what would happen to the race? >> i think one column was written yesterday or the day
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before out of the cook report which is a pretty respected analytical media outlet that looked at the whole delegate map and said you can look at iowa and new hampshire whatever happens there you have to take the longview of delegates sp it was a strong case for why secretary clinton would be strong no matter what happens. >> would her leads narrow in other states? >> i think the dynamic in the first two states and their interplay and interaction are probably greater than any other races that happen because they are six months of attention. when we come out of the states we get into a little more of short time horizon so you don't have six months to compete and communicate. you are going into states i think it is harder to see big twings in those states. i will say when we look in 2008 when i was working for then senator obama we looked at the super tuesday state we had a pretty good road map of where we
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thought we could win and where we thought we had a chance and would play. that map held up pretty well because you don't have the same amount of time to do the things you can do in iowa and new hampshire. >> in 2008 you raised this point. in 2008 hillary clinton ran as candidate of experience. 35 years experience, ready from day one. all of her credit, resume. that is what she ran on. barack obama, your team looked and said we can slice her to ribbons on this. this is a change election and you did. she now running on the basis of the advertising i have seen she is running as the candidate of experience, ready from day one, resume is strong and can do all facets of the job. why is it smart for her to run on that basis this time when it was so dumb for her to run on that basis eight years ago? >> it was dumb but just beatable. here is why. every election has a different dynamic. at that point there was hyperpartisanship in washington. we had a republican president
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for eight years that had gotten us into two costly wars. the economy was already sinking in a way that middle class and working class people were feeling. and barack obama ran about fixing the broken politics in washington and was very much an outsider, had a track record of working with republicans and leveraged that. the dynamic today here we are in the last year of barack obama's presidency is the american people know that we have fought our way back from what was a devastating crisis in 2008. they know we have made progress and know we are not done yet and really want a candidate and a president who can get things done that is really going to make a difference in improving their lives. that is the core question into the caucuses and the polling places. which of these people can get things done that will improve my life. >> this is not a democratic electorate craving change and
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hope? >> i think they have ground they want to keep making up. i think they want to keep making progress. i think they want to get across the finish line to get back to the security they had before the crisis that hit them in late 2008 and obviously caused a lot of upheaval to the economy, the worst most people have seen. >> what is it about bernie sanders that causes a lot of democrats to like him? >> he is an energetic speaker. he is passionate about the issues he cares about. there is no question about that. and i think that they feel i think all voters feel that there is work that still has to be done to unstack the deck as hillary clinton says. she started out in politics to change the odds for people who had the odds stacked against them. i think there are limitations. he came across as very authentic but in the last five days we have seen him really shift positions that some of which he
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held for a long time. some of which he uttered a few days ago and has to walk back including denigrating groups like planned parenthood and human rights campaign as part of the establishment. people who have been on the front lines and tried to walk it back talking about the leadership. the leadership had been on the front lines, too. i think people are take ag closer look now. i think they liked him a lot for enthusiasm on the issue. i think he is getting more scrutiny and not holding up as well. when you have a candidate who changes from health care plan, position on guns, criticizing groups like planned parenthood and human rights campaign you got to hold up under the stress of these things. these are tough things and they want a president who has the tenacity and doggedness to fight so they will get things done to make their lives better. i think right now we are in a very fluid period and in good shape in the closing argument we
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are having which goes to john's question. i think hillary clinton is making that argument soundly every day. >> the dynamic is fluid but she is being strong and the person she is. she is a very tough customer. she is willing to get on the front lines. she is willing to take on powerful forces all over the world and all over the country. she has been doing that for a long time. >> next time you come on we ask the question why it is that hillary clinton's opponent and chief strategist are both socialists. when we come back the fabulous julianne moore right after this. we were below the 88th southern parallel. we had traveled for over 850 miles. my men driven nearly mad from starvation and frostbite. today we make history. >>bienvenidos! welcome to the south pole! if you're dora the explorer, you explore. it's what you do. >>what took you so long? if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance,
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and click to activate your within. neither of our next guests endorsed donald trump for president even though some would say one of them does a pretty decent imitation of sarah palin. that would be julianne moore involved with every group for gun safety. >> thank you both for joining us. what motivated you to get involved with this cause in such a public way? >> we were just talking about that. i think it was newtown. i spent the day trying to keep the news away from my daughter. she looked at her phone and somebody posted on instagram. i thought i can't take this
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anymore. i thought as a citizen and a person who has a little bit of a voice culturally as actors do i would like to lend my voice to this and bring other actors into it. >> talk about your -- you have been with this group since the start. talk about the strategy. you are going about this in a different way. >> i joined every town after the vote we had in the united states senate on the background check compromise that failed by five votes. we had a majority of u.s. senators vote yes. i realize we have to go on the ground level, build the ground game and do this on a local level to get another shot in d.c. and congress. we built grass roots networks and over 3.5 million supporters. being able to work with celebrities and the creative council to help elevate the
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issue. we have every town survivor network from all works of life who can speak truths to this and say this is real. really as a way to kind of take this issue locally and build up and grind and build up that support to get more policy changes in state houses and congress. >> you face resistance some from organized groups like nra and some from other whose don't want changes in the law. what do you say to people directly who disagree with the notion that there need to be more laws in the books to deal with gun safety? >> i would say this does not have to be a divisive issue. it is not a partisan issue. this is really about safety. it's not about control. it's not about elimination. it is how we can make things safer for everyone and keep guns out of the hands of people who are dangerous. and i know plenty of responsible gun owners who feel the same way and feel like there should be
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background checks everywhere. why not have a lock box if you have a child in the house? how do we keep guns out of the hands of stalkers and terrorists and criminals. >> if you talk about this issue in just that way and really boil it down to specifics of should we do a background check before someone buys the gun we have 90% of the american public in agreement. this is really not the divisive issue once you break it down to individual policies. >> you are head of the creative council. there is a conservative argument for some people who say we have to figure out mental health and the culture industry. what do you say to those who say hollywood is a huge problem in the culture of guns in america and violence? what do you say to people when they make the claim? >> there is a big difference between fantasy and reality. it is not possible to be
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killed -- within a movie it's not really happening. no one is being killed. it is fantasy. however, in our country it is possible to be killed by a gun while you are sitting in a theater watching the movie. that is completely different. >> do you not think there is anything to the notion that kids -- this is out there, this argument that kids are sitting in front of video games all day long from the time they are 6 or 7 years old until they are 18 years old that that doesn't change the way they think about violence and guns? >> i think there is a responsibility to represent things responsibly. i do personally y. do not think that that is the root of the problem, however. i think it is access and that's really what it is. >> the entire world consums the same, plays call of duty like we do. we have a higher rate of gun deaths and injuries. a big part of that we believe is
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easy accessibility that we allow to fire arms. >> we have seen a bunch of prominent incidents. that has not fundamentally changed the dynamic. what will have to happen for you to have more success at the state level and federal level? >> it is a question that i have heard from years ever since i have been doing this work. i think every incident whether it makes the headlines and whether it doesn't, more americans realize something has to be done on gun violence. and as a result we have grown to millions and millions of supporters. we have been having victories in state houses across the country. oregon became 18th state to require background checks on gun sales earlier this year. if you look at the local level you can see republicans and democrats coming together voting for measures and hopefully with elections we can help change members of congress who continue
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to stand in the way of this progress. >> when you talk about culture change, speaking about it and voicing their concerns and showing up and more and more of us adding our voices that changes the dynamic significantly. >> i want to ask you a question not on this topic. i got to ask you this because it has been a huge debate. academy awards, second year in a row all white nominees. >> i don't know if you have seen the news but there has been a huge announcement. >> changed regulations they are going to double the number of female members and minority members and changed voting rules so they have made changes. >> you think that is important, the academy is not diverse enough? >> i think it is wonderful that she has stepped up to the plate and changed it so quickly. >> sarah palin back in the news. >> she is back in the news. >> some chance we can get you to
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play? >> not here. not now. >> the next. >> just a cameo can we get you back? >> chapter 3. >> thank you for joining us. when we come back the nfl and the presidential candidates like you have never seen them before. after this. this bale of hay cannot be controlled. when a wildfire raged through elkhorn ranch, the sudden loss of pasture became a serious problem for a family business. faced with horses that needed feeding and a texas drought that sent hay prices soaring, the owners had to act fast. thankfully, mary miller banks with chase for business. and with greater financial clarity and a relationship built for the unexpected, she could control her cash flow, and keep the ranch running. chase for business. so you can own it. chase for business. i tabut with my back paines, i couldn't sleep and get up in time. then i found aleve pm. aleve pm is the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus
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we are back with our coverage of the first major snow storm of 2016. at least seven states plus washington, d.c. are operating under states of emergency as the storm delivers a brutal mix of snow, ice and gusty winds. let's bring in bill karins. >> the moderate snow turned into intense snow and that is heading up i-95 into the d.c. area. and the snow is intensifying in baltimore and shortly in
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philadelphia. to the south we have an icy mess in much of the carolinas. snow is beginning to taper off in kentucky. we have about 30 million people plus in the blizzard warning. we have warnings into nashville and memphis and snowing in birmingham, alasbama. the bulls eye is northern virginia, maryland maryland and eastern pennsylvania and washington baltimore area we could see highest totals, two to three feet especially to the west of the area. 24 to 30 inches total. gusts of 50 miles per hour. that snow will be piling up in snow drifts in downtown d.c. further to the north still nailed in areas like new york. not quite as hard as d.c. but we will still see a foot plus even in new york city, a high impact storm. >> we go back to with all due respect right after this.
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the week is over. who won it? >> the belief in the media that he can win iowa and new hampshire has a chance to -- >> when you say something right that i agree with i sound like a copy cat guy. the american people, bernie sanders just is on a roll. the guy is on a roll. i know he said various things and some things he had to be defensive. >> he said bernie sanders could win iowa and new hampshire. >> right now we have polls in iowa and new hampshire that have bernie ahead by more than the margin of error. next week. >> in d.c. you can listen to us
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live on bloomberg 99.1. coming up "hardball" with chris matthews. stop the primary, i want to get off. let's play "hardball"." good evening. yesterday we showed you the flood of establishment republicans beginning to lineup behind donald trump because they hate ted cruz so much. today we are watching the other usual suspects, assorted right wingers trying to do a stop trump movement. both sides are ignoring the sage advice of one richard nixon who advised if you hear of a stop x movement bet on x. this is one hell of a way to pick a candidate. the national review put out the

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