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tv   MSNBC Live  MSNBC  May 15, 2016 1:00pm-2:01pm PDT

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check us out today to see how you can become one of them. legalzoom. legal help is he. a very good sunday to you. i'm richard lui. thanks for being with us. at this hour, trump firing back. his angry response to "the new york times" story about his treatment of women. reince priebus also speaking out on the topic. >> i have to tell you. i think all these stories that i think come out and they come out every couple weeks, people just don't care. >> this as one of trump's closest advisers is revealing what went on behind closed doors.
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and the democratic candidates fight it out in kentucky. first, we start with this hour with president obama. the president unleashing a blistering assault on the current political climate at his commencement address at rutgers university. he directed his attack at donald trump. >> suggesting we can build an endless wall along our borders and blame our challenges on immigrants, that doesn't just run counter to our history as the world's melting pot. it contradicts the evidence that our growth and our innovation has always been spurred by our ability to attract strivers from every corner of the globe. that's how we became america. why would we want to stop it now? >> that happened moments ago.
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halle jackson was watching that. also following the trump campaign for us. trump is very quick to respond to attacks. as the president makes that intimation, he's quickly eager to do so. >> what we're being told from sources within the white house is that the president will wait for the democratic nomination to officially wrap up. for hillary clinton to go from being the likely nominee to the presumptive democratic nominee. that's either when the primaries end or when bernie sanders get out of the race. we will see president obama take to the campaign trail to do exactly what you just saw him do right there, take on donald trump but probably in a more direct way. the trump campaign is expecting
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this. the campaign knows the democrats including hillary clinton and president obama and other members of the administration will be coming after him, guns blazing. we saw secretary of state john kerry come out against donald trump in this rare attack last week. it's something we will likely see more of down the road. >> trump responding to "the new york times" article from former female employees and tweeting about that. >> we're seeing another one just within the last couple of hours. trump trying to push back against this article saying, everyone is laughing at the times for the, quote, lame piece they did. for him at times, it has been an effective one in trying to quell the discussion around a topic he doesn't want to discuss. when it comes to his issues with women, we have seen this come up again and again. donald trump's vulnerabilities
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with women when it comes to the numbers not just in a general election, but with women as well. for trump, he may want to laugh off or downgrade this piece from "the new york times," but it is almost certainly not the last time we'll be hearing about donald trump and women. >> thank you so much for that. >> thank you. >> and for more, let's bring in our republican strategist and a senior little reporter at politico. you are a trump supporter. you saw president obama here making those head nods toward donald trump and his policies about the border with mexico. how worried are you once the big dog gets out of the dog house? >> not worried at all. i think it is pretty disgusting
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what president obama is doing. as a sitting president, barack obama should be above the fray, but he's never shown the ability to do that. donald trump's success has been his response to the failures of the administration. he's a free man. >> but you're disgusted. why are you disgusted? >> it is below what the office is supposed to be. he's the outgoing president. he should act above the fray. he's not doing it. >> donald trump has been known to not necessarily have the most decorum sometimes as well. >> trump is not the president. barack obama is the president. >> but he wants to be. >> barack obama is not campaigning for anything. he should be concentrating on governing. >> bush supported mccain. >> he supported mccain, but he didn't do the same thing. barack obama has been doing it for months where he'll
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spontaneously bring up donald trump and say something about him, like the country is not a reality tv show. it's not necessary. it's not helpful. >> what do you think about this? president obama at this commencement speech making a small portion of his speech talking about immigration basically and that way we exist next to another country, the united states does. what's your take on it? >> i think barack obama is itching to get into this presidential race. one of the big reasons why is his approval rating has been on the rise. george w. bush was not heavily involved in the 2008 campaign. that's because his approval rating was terrible at the time. barack obama is nearing a high compared to four years ago. he was at a low in 2014. he stayed out of the midterms, but democrats and hillary clinton's campaign think he's one of the best surrogates to go off donald trump.
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>> close, but not too close, right? because for the hillary clinton campaign, there are certain issues she may not have that simpatico with it. >> it's a really fascinating dynamic. they're trying to gin up latino voters to get them excited about this campaign. they're hoping donald trump helps their cause. >> i want to turn to this, a report just coming out from bloomberg. it's a polling of bank and business leaders and what came of that. is that the group that supported barack obama in 08 and 12 and are now backing the democrat this time around? does that worry you? >> there's plenty of time for the republican party to come
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together and bring in a lot of those voters. hillary clinton has been giving speeches in front of a lot of these people like goldman sachs. >> i think the counter might be is he said i'm a business success story. yet business leaders who are other success stories are not getting on the same train. >> not everyone is going to agree on anything, right? people will have disagreements and grudges that they've held for a long time. >> he's in real estate, which is perhaps different. >> finance, banking, inventoven capital. i do expect the business community to back trump. >> what's your perspective on this as we look at the key business community because of not only what they represent as voters, but how they're shifting from one party to another and it
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looks the democrat right now? >> trump has shunned the donor community. this is to strengthen the primary. he said he wasn't taking people's money. he raised money through the sales of hats and the like, but he didn't woo these folks. he's starting from behind a little bit. yes, some of them may end ups e upsidiupsid up siding with hillary clinton. some may come to donald trump. >> one said he's going to give 100 million or more. you don't need that long to write a check. there's plenty of time between now and the election. >> you're talking about that op-ed that was written in support of donald trump. wish we could have more time. thank you so much. you'll be joining us later for more on the democratic race. i'll talk to you both later. turning now to the democrats. hillary clinton and bernie sanders are locked in battle
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ahead of tuesday's primary in kentucky where 60 delegates are up for grabs there. >> there is a big difference in this primary campaign between me and my opponent bernie sanders. i voted to bailout out the auto industry and he voted against it because i wanted the save those millions of jobs. >> what we're going to tell those superdelegates is that if they want the strongest candidate to defeat donald trump, bernie sanders is that candidate. >> caskasie hunt live in louisville, kentucky. any shift in hillary clinton's tone from what you heard during her rally? we got a little bit from the bernie sanders' rally there as well. >> it's pretty clear they're making an aggressive push here in kentucky.
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bernie sanders of course has wrapped up some wins over the last couple of weeks and the clinton campaign would like to be able to break his momentum here. she's campaigning in many of the same locations he's campaigning in the next 24 hours or so. it's a place that the clinton campaign feels the race is very close. it could go either way. for the clintons, losing here would be a blow. this is a state that's been very good to her and her husband. she did well here in 2008. bill clinton was the last democrat to win this state in a presidential race back in 1996 in a general election. they have a lot of friends, political allies here. hillary clinton was campaigning for a senate candidate who ran against mitch mcconnell here in kentucky. it was one of the few political
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events she did in 2014, but there are a couple of things working against her here. her comments about coal jobs that she tried to walk back and fix with events in west virginia. they're relevant here too. coal is a very important industry here in kentucky. the clinton campaign also privately believes there are a lot of conservative democrats who may be trump supporters who will be voting in the democratic primary. is state is very historically southern democratic, so there are a lot of conservatives that are registered with the democratic party. there are many registers democrats than that are registered republicans in kentucky, but they have a tendency to send republicans to office. the other thing i will say is the margin here in kentucky will matter. the clinton campaign is looking at it as a way to potentially put this nomination fight to bed more quickly if they keep the margin closer than they
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otherwise might be. they really do want to be able to put this phase of the company behind them. at this point, it really is a difficult position for them to be in, to have the republicans already wrapped up and the democratic fight continuing on. >> thank you. right now in manchester, england, authorities investigate a suspicious package that forced tens of thousands of fans to evacuate a big soccer match. plus, the deadliest bus crash in texas that they've seen in years. what authorities believe might have caused that tragedy. (laughing) there's nothing like making their day. except making sure their tomorrow is taken care of too. financial guidance while you're mastering life.
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we want to get you straight to some breaking news. officials confirming just moments ago that a ninth person has died from their injuries
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after a charter bus crash near the mexico border. 44 others remain injured. we are in laredo, texas, where we heard from the county's medical examiner just moments ago. what did you hear there? >> reporter: we heard this ninth victim, a woman, passed away sometime this afternoon just adding to this tragedy. it is one man and eight women deceased. seven died at the scene. those other two were taken to hospitals where they later passed away. now the victims are mostly we're told in their 50s or 60s with the oldest being 83 years old. they were traveling on a charter bus to a casino on the texas-mexico border yesterday just before noon when the accident occurred. there were in other cars on the road. they do say it was raining at the time. the county's chief medical examiner reacted to the events of the past 24 hours just a few
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moments ago. >> what are you telling families? >> how sorry we are. this is the worst commercial vehicle accident that i've seen in ten years that i've been here in webb county. >> reporter: more than 40 people were injured in this accident. they've been taken to several texas hospitals. we're told that the red cross is assisting them, also assisting the families of those who passed away as they continue to look into what caused this accident, richard. they're hoping they may get some answers from the driver of the bus who we are told survived. meanwhile, the ntsb is here on scene launching their own investigation. we're hoping to hear more details about what they've uncovered coming up later tonight. >> part of this is those who are injured and hopefully not too seriously. what's the latest on that? the bus rolled and any details in terms of what happened? >> reporter: that bus there rolled. you can see how violent the collision was. the medical examiner did point
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out those windows are designed to break. there obviously was a lot of glass. those injuries who you haies wod from broken bones to bruises. doctor's hospital in laredo, they treated and released ten people. five people had injuries so severe they had to be sent on to hospitals that could offer more intensive care. it gives you an idea of the widespread injury and treatment and response this accident has received. >> a ninth person now being named to those who have passed away. developing now in england is where we take you. manchester unite's premier
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league match was cancelled today when a suspicious package was found. manchester police said after an inspection an incredibly life like explosive device was found, but the object was not viable. do you have any new information on that device that was found and who might be responsible for it? >> not as yet, richard. we're still waiting for what manchester police say will be a full update to come. they were still checking that entire stadium, old trafford, which is a huge sports stadium. a capacity of about 75,000. very noteworthy and historic place. manchester united an extremely popular team not just in this country, but around the world. it was the last game of the season, a big game with
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implications for both manchester united and their opponents, but police say they were justified in evacuating the stadium before kickoff and really checking out the suspicious device. it was found by an employee at the stadium about a half an hour before kickoff. it is described as incredibly lifelike, but not viable. in other words, a fake bomb of some sort. nothing confirmed by police as of yet. really the big question is who put it there, why did they put it there, how did they get it in. all of these questions being investigated right now by manchester police. but as you can imagine, richard, a very sensitive topic and this just shows how seriously police are taking this sort of thing in this era when you have this country on a severe alert for a
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possible attack. >> many fans watching all across the world, as you were noting there. man u. so popular. the white house wades directly into the transgender bathroom issue. (vo) on the trane test range, you learn what makes our heating and cooling systems so reliable. if there's a breaking point, we'll find it. it's hard to stop a trane. really hard.
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. political backlash continues over the historic directive from the obama administration, saying that schools must allow transgender students access to such facilities consistent with their gender identity. >> the challenge here is not to isolate anybody. it's not to discriminate against anybody. it's not to make anybody unsafe. it's actually to ensure that our schools are as inclusive and respectful and safe as they can possibly be. >> and the latest clash comes as the federal government battles north carolina on the hb-2, which bans transgender people
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from using the restrooms of the gender they identify with unless it matches the sex on their birth certificate. joining me now the former assistant attorney general of the department of justice's civil rights division. this is a position you have known very well having held the roles of signatories that came down from the federal government. right now it's being called guidance. that's the official language. yet there are some educational groups that are saying we must treat this as law. what is this? >> it is a hybrid. it is in fact guidance because this is a letter saying how the federal government will interpret the law. the law is title 9 in this particular case. that's a statutory provision. the law is clear in its
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simplicity, but it never took into account these transgender issues. the federal government takes on the aspect of an advisory opinion, if you will. those who don't like it can say we're going to contest it in court, and those who do like it say we're going to treat this as law. >> there are educational institutions and organizations and their representatives saying, hey, we are going to treat this as law. the reason being is because we need to have a very good relationship with the federal government because there is an economic relationship there. >> exactly. there are two groups broadly speaking who support the letter that came out. those who are in the transgender community and the second group are education institutions that receive federal funds and therefore or subject to title 9 enforcement. the university of north carolina is saying, for example, wait a minute. not so fast. we're not ready to give up our money for this.
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>> there's been some reporting that this guidance has been discussed quite sometime as consistent with nothing that is not sudden or reactionary. any awareness of that? >> yes. in fact, there have been policy statements that go back to 2014. that's two years ago. that's not 20 years ago, but that is a reflection of deliberation in the department as well as legislators who are interested in the transgender issue. >> i want to shift from that which came from the administration to that which came from north carolina. there are two federal lawsuits to north carolina on north carolina's law. the issue with that is how do you actually use that law? how does it get enforced? >> on the state level, let's take high schools as an example
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because that's where the key case in the fourth circuit has come up with a young woman who transitioned to a boy in terms of her identity. >> identified as a boy. >> exactly. what the state is saying to the entity of the state, which is a school board, you have to comply with this. if you comply, you are subject to the penalties that we legislate in the state of north carolina. >> how would you handle that having to enforce this law? how does that work practically speaking when you do have a transgender individual that might be caught -- how do you catch this violation? >> well, what happens as a practical matter is the state attorney general enforces the law at the state level and he passes that information to various district attorneys. those district attorneys are the eyes and ears of the state. those district attorneys would take a complaint from parents or from anybody who says we don't
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believe that the state law is being enforced properly. we want separation in the bathrooms across the board regardless of gender identity. if those complaints were made, then the state would have to decide to bring an action to court. >> would that be a -- you said parents in your example. would that be going to the police department, to the school? how would that work? >> they could go to any entity of the state and make the complaint. it could be the board of education. it could be the police. the police would turn it over as an administrative matter to the board. >> you're a lawyer working for the state of north carolina. would you say that would be a tough thing for you to enforce? >> yeah, it would be. what has happened is at the practical level this is not a problem. at a practical number level separating kids by gender identity is not a problem.
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it's not a problem for any of us. you and may have been in other public bathrooms where some other man was there. i don't know what happens in the bathrooms of texas and north carolina, but where i go into bathrooms it's not an issue. we're not looking at people and trying to determine if this man is really a man. he goes into a privacy stall. why would that be an issue? here in new york city, it's not an issue for years, including in the school districts. >> thank you. >> thanks for having me. next, we'll turn back to the 2016 presidential race. clinton and sanders holding events in kentucky. a look at whether clinton has sp something to prove in these remaining primaries. hmmmmm...
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voters there head to the polls on tuesday and there are 60 delegates at stake, including five superdelegates. here's what they had to say just a short time ago. >> along comes trump and says he doesn't really care. let them all have nuclear weapons. he says he would use nuclear weapons. this is scary, dangerous talk. this is the talk of a loose cannon. >> what the establishment is doing today and always does is to tell you and tell the people that real change is impossible, that you've got to think small, not big. >> sanders is now on his way to puerto rico with three stops planned there tomorrow. clinton is staying in kentucky trying to win tuesday in order to gain back some momentum after losing to sanders in west virginia last week. for more on the race ahead is
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the former democratic adviser to governor o'malley. how big of a primary is this in kentucky for hillary clinton because she's trying to regain momentum, but it's also a state she's supposed to win, if you will? >> that's the thing. she handily won it in 2008. if she loses this, it kind of feeds into this she's going to leave the primary very, very bruised. if i'm hillary clinton's campaign, i would be more concerned about california, which is next in june. and it's a state with a heavy latino population. there's a distancing going on with immigration. i would be more concerned about california. it represents the future that donald trump doesn't want us to have and less about kentucky to be honest. >> we're going to get to
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california in just a little bit. i want to stay on kentucky, though. shane, if you can here, that's one of the narratives. she's supposed to win it. her husband did well there. she did well in 08. in addition to this, if she were to lose it, what does that mean, therefore, for california? >> i think the democratic race is over more or less mathematically. bernie sanders has very little chance of catching hillary clinton in any fashion unless he takes the democratic establishment that he's really against and flips them in his favor. but kentucky still matters because if you're hillary clinton, you do not want to limp out of this primary. eight years ago, she won every single county in kentucky except for two. eight years ago, she won every single county in west virginia and this year she won every single county in west virginia. it is an important primary because it's going to send a
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message going forward about her appeal in certain parts of the country. >> so now we will move to california. the san francisco chronicle just endorsing bernie sanders as the candidate. this a week ahead of california's june 7th primary. this is the big one. if it is going toward bernie sanders -- that is just san francisco. california has like five or six states within itself. we'll stay with that for a second and assume that might be a larger thematic here. the other narrative related to that is she needs to pivot now. she needs to make a change. does she need to make a pivot and if so, what would that be? >> i think there's so many wasted opportunities for the clinton campaign. her biggest vulnerability is that people don't trust her. they don't believe she's authentic. when she drags her feet on
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supporting progressive policies, like the transgender bathroom, the department of justice guidance that the president put out, or immigration, she's always second. i think it's been a wasted opportunity up until now. she's been playing it very safe and obviously very poll tested. in california, she has a real opportunity, as does bernie sanders. i think what "the chronicle" supported was senator sanders idea of having a debate there. i think that would be the best thing both of them could do, especially for latino voters. let's remember senator sanders right now has the most progressive policy on immigration of the democrats. secretary clinton has yet to reveal an immigration plan and has switched positions on deporting refugee children just like that. latinos don't believe that. a debate in california will be an opportunity for secretary clinton to explain to latinos
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why she changed her mind and to convince us it's not just because she wants our votes. >> talk about that point that gabriella is bringing up and that is the immigration vote. the latino american and asian american vote. there are over 10 million people there are who were born abroad. what does this say about her attraction and his attraction by those voters? >> i want to answer one other point which is hillary clinton does not necessarily want another big debate with bernie sanders. you saw at the top of the segment she wants to talk about donald trump. bernie sanders wants to talk about the democratic establishment. she's trying to pivot and say the fall campaign has begun. there was talk about a debate previously, another debate during this time frame.
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it hasn't been scheduled yet. they're beginning to run out of time, but she has so far performed much more strongly than bernie sanders among african-american and among latino voters. there are definitely still questions in some of those communities about her, but thing there are far more questions about donald trump. >> you have to give voters a reason to vote for you. not just against somebody else. something that wasn't covered at all really on television and in mainstream media is the last time secretary clinton went to l.a. to do a latino event there were thousands of protesters at her event with a very strong message to her. the most recent polls, i think they came out last month. they show her lead in california by six points now. not the 60-something she started with. >> the dichotomy you bring up is again engagement versus policy,
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which i think gabriella, her point is when we look at bernie sanders, she is farther along than what we would like to see with hillary clinton. thank you both on this sunday. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> next an undocumented immigrant's fight against cancer and the right to drive. imit wheu earn bonus cash back. then - those places change every few months? i think i'll pass... quicksilver from capital one puts nothing in your way. you simply earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, everywhere. you can't dodge the question... what's in your wallet?
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unless you have allergies. flonase is the first and only nasal spray approved to relieve both itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. go ahead, embrace those beautiful moments. flonase changes everything. "daddy doing work",d it's funny that i've been in the news for being a dad. windows 10 is great because
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i need to keep organized. school, grocery shopping. my face can unlock this computer. that's crazy. macbooks are not able to do that. "hey cortana, remind me we have a play date tomorrow at noon" i need that in my world. anything that makes my life easier, i'm using. and windows is doing that. recent presidential primaries and general elections show that california is not the decider. the issues that drive that state are not much talked about, but this year is different and it's immigration policy that could sway june 7th's primary in california. i met with one woman who spent months trying to change some of that policy even as she was about to lose her battle with cancer. a tough fight did not scare
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maddie, including her fight to improve immigrant rights. it started with a dream to get this, a driver's license that says she could drive legally. >> i've been driving for 11 years with fear. >> an undocumented immigrant, maddy could not get a license, but still the mother of two drive, even teaching her kids how to do it. >> it's an answer to my prayer. >> and for 1.4 million like her estimates california lawmakers. and then last year a new law took effect allowing undocumented immigrants to get driver's licenses. maddy was one of the first in line. one allowed young immigrants brought to california illegally to receive school financial aid. these laws show the deep history of immigration policy in the state. >> california is ground zero for the immigration issue. 8 out of 10 californians think that it is a very high priority issue.
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>> it's the most of any state. more than 10 million californians born in another country. a quarter from latin america. one half from asia. what candidates say on immigration resonates with most californians as the june 7 primary nears. >> i'm doing the right thing when i do this. whether it is a muslim or something else, i have to do the right thing. >> we are going to fight for comprehensive immigration reform with a path to citizenship. >> if these people can get naturalized and they can become citizens and become eligible to vote in the registration process, it could make a material difference in these elections. >> maddy's journey started in the philippines. >> she's been driving without a license. >> and then led to her being a spokesperson for a southern california campaign that in the end gave her a license to drive. in recent months, her cancer continued to grow.
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it made maddy a passenger instead. her new license left unused. maddy passed away last month. her family is raising money through go fund me to pay her funeral and medical costs. ironically, there in california it just passed state health care for some undocumented immigrants. what the tsa says it is doing to fix long lines and why it might not be enough. you live life your way. we can help you retire your way, too. financial guidance while you're mastering life. from chase. so you can.
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shoshow me more like this.e. show me "previously watched." what's recommended for me. x1 makes it easy to find what you love. call or go online and switch to x1. only with xfinity. if you're flying this summer, you could be waiting in long lines for a bit of a time. passengers across the country are suffering through a worsening situation at airports with tsa security lines stretching for hours in some cases, even causing passengers to miss their flights. the u.s. travel association is calling the situation a national crisis, citing the economic impact. tsa announced friday it is working on a plan to mitigate incredibly long security lines
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at the nation's airports. secretary jay johnson said he would increase overtime. >> contemplate increased wait times as you travel. there will be wait times, but we want the public to know we are working hard to alleviate the wait times in partnership with airports and with airlines and to ensure that air travel remains safe and secure in the country. >> joining me now, kenneth honig. you're aware of the plan and the details. one of it is to take resources where they're not being used as efficiently and put them in other places. >> that's part of it. the other part is we're also looking to hire people. they've gotten budget lines to
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increase the amount of overtime. authorizing overtime gives them a huge amount of flexibility because now you're using people and paying people when they need to be there. >> the tsa says they are going to be trained. 200 new recruits. to offset that, they're seeing 117 people quit a week. is that a big number from your experience and why is this happening? >> they have a lot of people leaving and a lot of them come in. they get a lot of morale problems and get beat up in the press and congress. congress says this week we're yelling at you for long lines. if there is a security breach next week, we're going to yell at you for not taking enough
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time to check people. in terms of their working conditions, they have an issue that a lot of these screening points were shoe horned into these places that are small. these new huge pieces of equipment have been shoved into smaller spaces, which means they have no room for break space or office space. >> it's often, as you can see, going through the airports and the united states in spaces that weren't necessarily designed for it. you bring up the other good point of if they don't have the space for the machines themselves or the lines, what about the resting spaces? what about the spaces with the lockers? what about the spaces where they can go when they arrive and leave? >> a lot of that is lacking. their locker room space is just nonexistent. their break room space is a public lounge and a public area.
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they can't relax because they're constantly being watched by people. >> what can passengers do on the other side as they see these long lines in front of them? is there any way they can prepare? >> there are a lot of things people can do to help make the lines better for themselves and make the lines better for other people. for one thing, the tsa has a program that is $85 for five years. that's nothing. you answer a questionnaire. now you get on what amounts to the express lane. you don't have to take your shoes off or your belt off or a laptop. it's a much quicker line. 100 hours for five years. you get into the cbp trusted traveler program, global traveler. not only does it get you on tsa precheck, but on an express line
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when you're coming back through the country. >> when you're going through immigration. >> you don't have to see an immigration office. you can now go to a kiosk. it is like working an atm. people should prepare themselves. don't wait until you get to the screening point to start emptying your pockets. i have a little bag that i take. i take everything out of my pockets and i put it all in the bag. that's hanging on my carry-on. there are no liquids in your bags when you get there. if you have children, make sure they don't have any toys that are a problem. >> what grade do you give them in terms of fixing the problems they have outlined? >> they're going to make the best effort, but still long lines. >> a, b, c, d, e, or f?
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>> i would give it a "b." there's still going to be long lines this summer. >> have a great weekend. [engine revving] [engine revving] [phone buzzing] ♪ some things are simply impossible to ignore. the strikingly designed lexus nxurbo and hybrid. the suv that dares to go beyond utility. this is the pursuit of perfection.
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if you have diabetes and burning, shoing pain in your feet or hands, don't ffer in silence! step on up and ask your doctor about diabetic nerve pain. tell 'em cedric sent you. out of fuel and no runway in sight. this plane is going down in the water. >> i was definitely under water. and the aircraft was rolling to the left. >> there were bodies, there were people on the floor in the galley. >> a routine flight out of new york slams down in the hudson river. >> at this point i'm thinking, this can't be happening to me. >> a 767 hijacked, violently forced into the ocean. the most dramatic ditching ever caught on camera. >> the plane was tumbling or something. i said, that's it, i'm dead. >> in the next hour, life and death ordeals in pilots' and passengers' own words. >> the captain just said, brace for impact. >> dramatic animations that put you right at the terrifying scenes.