tv MSNBC Live MSNBC June 20, 2016 11:00am-12:01pm PDT
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no this is a-ok if states want to restrict these large assault style weapons, the supreme court will not stop them. >> thanks so much my friend and colleague. that's it for news this hour. coming up connecticut senator, chris murphy the man who filibustered for nearly 15 hours talks about today's gun vote on the hill. my colleague, tomhomas roberts is on now. hi. i'm thomas roberts. we're following transcripts of the orlando gunman revealing ominous threats he made about isis. breaking news in the race for the white house, you're fired! a seismic shake-up un this trump camp weeks before the republican convention donald trump parting
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ways with his campaign manager, corey lewen dowski and sources say he personally lyally delivered that news to him after meeting with his family. lewandowski a few minutes ago. >> i don't know i'd say it's a surprise. i am honored to be part of this team. i have time to go back and spend time with my family the most important thing. i have said and will continue to say i will support donald trump in anything he has. if i can play a role formal or informal, that would be an honor to have. this has been an honor and privilege from the beginning. >> for more on lieu wan dowski if he has regressed and all of this as trump faces republicans and recognized he needed to do something dramatic speaking with my campaign reporter kristen welker last hour.
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>> why were we hearing a lot of folks inside the campaign were caught off guard. were you caught off guard? >> this was news to me definitely. the campaign is going into a new direction and we have the same goal to get mr. trump into the white house and defeat hillary clinton. this was what needed to be done. >> a lot to talk about. our very own kelly o'donnell with fresh reporting going on inside the campaign. it was moments ago msnbc landed the one-on-one interview with corey lewandoski. here it is in full. >> there were a lot of people saying people like ivanka was pushing ging on you as campaign manager because they thought ityou were not beneficial to mr. trump. >> i don't think that at all. my strategy has been and at some level of success let trump be trump. you have a person who has
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completely changed the way politics is viewed in this country for better. you have a person like donald trump who has had his heart and finger on the pulse of the american people for a long time. i like to say i'm a person who's been able to help implement some of his ideas. that's what i've been able to do. anybody to say that the family disagreed i don't think would be accurate. >> reporter: there's a lot of talk about the need to traditionalize and saying trump needs to change. you've always been against that. let trump be trump has been a constant million ker ofoneyikermoniker. what do you think? >> we see independents that haven't voted before and massive crowds and those people are so energized. what's coming up is the hillary clinton regime and they have massive resources to go and talk about what their liberal agenda
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is. what you have on the other side is a small tight-knit operation very successful in the primary operation and now mr. trump says it's time to build a more efficient campaign. that's the process we're moving forward to now. >> reporter: what do you think about the state of the campaign now as you left it what changes do you think needs to be implemented to win in november? >> i think working closely with the republican national committee is important and that's something we have been doing very well. they have 500 people on the ground in battleground states to supplement that with campaign staff, a great beginning and continue to grow. i don't care you need to have a determinate amount of money you have to raise as a benchmark but i think you have to have enough people in place to push back on that machine that will clearly have all the resources available to them to push a liberal agenda. >> were you surprised this morning when this happened? >> i don't know it's so much of a surprise. i want to say again how honored i am to be part of this team. i now have the privilege to go
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back and spend time with my family really the most important thing. i have said and will continue to support donald trump in any endeavor he has. if i can play a role in this campaign, whether formal or informal that would be an honor. it's been an honor to be part of this from the beginning. great. >> reporter: you will still be at the convention and still ch the new hampshire convention? is that something you will still >> yes. it will be something different than in the past and mr. trump brings so much flair and excitement to things and will be so different and i have as chair of the new hampshire delegation delegations. >> reporter: no plans to resign, the campaign hasn't asked you to do so? >> they haven't asked me to do so and i look forward to being at the convention. >> you have been really loyal. you've been with this guy. as this was happening, any regrets or anything you'd do different differently, do you think? >> i never look back and say what i could have done
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differentialdifferent differently. i want to work as hard as i can. i tried to do that to the best of my ability. for me giveing 100% of my effort is the best i can do. looking at what we've been able to achieve from an historic perspective is so amazing. 14 million votes, running 16 senators and governors and presidents and what he's been able to achieve in this process has been extraordinary and nobody can take that away from him. what you will see moving forward the american people will understand there's only one person running for president that will create jobs for our country and make our country better and america great again. that's mr. trump. >> how do you feel personally about him. nobody is closer to he except for his family than you over the course of the campaign, you're he right hand guy, body man, how do you feel personally about donald trump today, not donald trump the candidate? >> honored, so honored and thank thankful and grateful. it's been so amazing.
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i wouldn't change one second of my time with mr. trump other than to say, thank you. it's been a great privilege and honor. >> reporter: what's next? >> i'll play with my kids. >> wouldn't change one second of it all. >> nbc's kelly o'donnell has been speaking with sources inside the campaign. i want to point out, two voices heard there, nbc's ali vitale and chris having that moment to ask corey lewandowski those questions. seems he remains loyal to a fault to donald trump even on a day getting news of his departure from a campaign he designed from infancy. >> reporter: however surpriseing and painful it may be to be severed from the campaign. lewandoski played the gracious card there protecting himself in a way that preserves future opportunities and reflects better on the candidate. that's a class move from a man who has been described as very contentious throughout this process. that is not unusual for top
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political operatives they are often fierce defending their candidate and lewandoski has often been described that way. he indicated he did not think the trump family had any issues with him. my reporting and some colleagues reporting there were concerns from donald trump's children and ivanka and her husband, jared about corey lewandoski's experience and capacity to run a campaign at the general election level. it's one thing to be successful in a scrappy primary fight and compete against 16 other candidates in that child field we saw unfold. very different to have the knowledge and background to run a campaign into the fall. also my reporting says it was lewandoski who often put up roadblocks to new hires, the ramping up sizeing up of a campaign necessary. tension between the original team and those coming in from the outside. i'm also told that he felt some
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mistrust between the rnc and trump campaign. that's understandable when you consider the stop trump efforts and war of the primary season. at some point, political professionals are able to make that turn and work together. i'm told that was a harder thing for lewandoski to do. i'm told that donald trump ultimately reached this decision by looking at the polling, looking at what he would acknowledge as a couple of very rough weeks for his campaign and while the candidate himself may be personally responsible for a lot of that lewandoski was also tasked trying to reach out to the party to build consensus and support for trump. that has not been going well. doing something dramatic and also signaling to the party, perhaps the media, voters and outside critics, trump would be willing to shake things up in order to try to show he wants to win and do what is necessary to win. for a man who prides himself on loyalty as trump does severing his ties to his campaign manager
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is not an easy thing to do but he wanted to demonstrate, i'm told by sources, he is willing to do what is necessary to fix his campaign and fight on. >> i also heard we will be having an interview with donald trump trump, jr. certainly soon and we will air that. getting that family side of things as we're finding out and you're reporting, where they fell being part of any leverage to see lewandoski leave the campaign. thank you. appreciate it. ben ginsburg is an nbc political analyst joining me from washington. you know it other campaigns had shake-ups before and john mccain and hillary clinton with campaign managers. is lewandoski to be used as a scapegoat for every campaign misstep so far and if so does that inspire confidence for a trump reboot to the general. >> first of all, congratulations to corey for putting a positive face to what was really an
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unceremonious dumpings. the problem is to unceremonious dump dumpings, they feel a lot worse a week from now when you're at home playing with the kids but also stairs at the walls. if they do try to make him a scapegoat, that's probably a tactical error. perhaps the rough ejection was a tactical error. the questioning about him being a delegate to the convention and chair of the new hampshire delegation is a positive card for him to play. after all, the last thing the trump campaign would want and probably the first thing that's occurred to the delegates who were trying to dump trump is wow, if the campaign manager, who's now been fired comes and talks at the convention against mr. trump, that's a potentially seminal moment which is why unceremonious dumpings when you're down in the polls and when your opponent is putting an awful lot of tv on against you is a bad combination.
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>> it would discount all the hard work he did as campaign manager to secure his home state of new hampshire in that first primary after a defeat in iowa. we know how the campaign shifted with paul manafort now in charge the new campaign manager in this originally brought in to wrangle the candidate but he has this lengthy resume of rebuild rebuilding campaigns deep establishment in this gop connections. from what you know of paul manna manafort manafort, does this fireing have his fingerprints on it? >> i don't know about that about the internal ramifications of the trump campaign. there was reporting of two rival camps within the trump campaign and that's never good. this is june. you don't want any turmoil in your campaign at this point. they need to make a quick pivot into a really positive convention to come across with a message. that's made much more difficult by hillary clinton putting 23$23 million worth of ads on the air
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in eight battleground states in the next two weeks and her super pac putting an almost equal amount on. >> all right. speaking of our kelly o'donnell i just had an opportunity to talk to, she says she has sources in the rnc that told her this top management change will help tremendously in the sprint to cleveland and there is still enough time to get the presumptive nominee back on track. do you agree with that? >> maybe. i'm not sure it's the central point. the dynamic occurring now in the republican party, you have the rnc in an unprecedented position helping out trump in terms of ground game and fund-raising and data analystics. but the elected leaders during the republican party have take an step during the last week away from the campaign.
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that puts the rnc in an unprecedented position of conflict in june before the election and month before the convention having to deal with both the campaign that's relying on it for more than ever and its elected officials, base leadership in the house and senate and statehouses not totally on board with the trump campaign. >> a lot to follow as we ramp up to cleveland. ben ginsburg. glad to have you on. >> thanks. to capitol hill where we will have votes on four gun proposal proposals, today's votes just a week after the worst shooting in u.s. history that was a mass shoot shooting. the senator leading the charge in the filibuster is connecticut's chris murphy. he joins me next. thanks for the ride around norfolk! and i just wanted to say geico is proud to have served the military for over 75 years! roger that.
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pay attention to today's votes and use your voice. it matters, we need you. this is the only change if we continue making it impossible for the members of congress to ignore. by stepping up your action has the potential to create a domino effect. have the courage to do it. we have done it before and can do it again. >> we have a new video released by the white house and vice president joe biden urgeing vote others to put pressure on members of congress particularly senators who will vote on four gun control measures in about three hours. two are sponsored by republicans and two by democrats. all are expected to fail even florida senator, bill nelson who represents orlando expressed doubt. >> for us to get 14 republican senators under the gun literally with the nra, i think is going to be a stretch.
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to get 60 votes to break off the filibuster filibuster. >> all of this as donald trump and the republican party and even nra struggle to get on the same page. >> if some of those wonderful people had guns strapped right here, right to their waist or right to their ankle, this son of a [ bleep ] comes out and starts shooting. >> i don't think you should have firearms ss where people are drink drinking every american needs to start having a security plan. we need to be able to protect ourselves because they're coming. >> joined now by senator chris murphy who led the historic filibuster on the senate floor also on the votes today. your own bill for background checks is expected to fail. what's your next move when and if that happens? >> i think it's difficult to get
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that many republicans to vote on background checks but they will get to see for a last time whether they support where 90% of america is criminals shouldn't buy guns. it's still an outstanding question how many republicans we can get to stop terrorists from buying guns. i won't have a backup plan until 5:30. there are compromises happening in case both do fail. you're seeing in general, a lot of republicans, from donald trump on down really uncertain how to position themselves on this issue. used to be you called stay in lock-step with nra and get re-elected year after year even if your constituents disagreed with you. i think those days are over and this is a critical moment and it might fail but there is a lot of work to perhaps get a compromise. >> a lot of folks are looking at this thinking a dialogue is being created and move the
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needle down the line as we're reeling from what we witnessed a week ago, families still burying family members they lost that night and new polling finding 52% of voters support a ban on the sale of assault weapons like the kind in orlando. 43% oppose it. what do you say to those after the event of orlando? it wasn't caused by guns but caused because we have a problem with radical is islamic terrorism or radical islamic extremist extremists? >> after 9 lech/11, they changed their strategy and now going to lone wolf attackers to buy assault weapons. the assault weapon is the weapon of choice for terrorists.
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it stands to reason we would now try to address that new reality and make it harder for them to get their hands on those weapons. what we're asking for is not terribly radical. if you're on the terrorist watchlist you probably shouldn't be allowed to buy a weapon and amazing there will be 50 some republicans that will vote against that. it is terrorists stopped from getting on airplanes and explosive devices we should make it harder to get assault weapons. >> you have this supreme court member making it harder to hear connecticut's ban on assault rifles and governor malloy in your home state 2013 after sandy hook. do you think it will take a larger decision some day by the u.s. supreme court to decide the proper balance between gun rights for americans and gun control for the safety of a proliferation of weapons being sold to american consumers? >> absolutely not. the supreme court actually has already definitively weighed in
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on this question. it was justice scalia himself who said that wellhile the supreme court held there was an individual right to own firearms, that was not unconditional. just as scalia said you can impose limits on the kind of weapons people own and limits on the kinds of people that own weapons. the supreme court has clearly said everything we are talking about is totally constitutional. if you're a law abideing gun owner and haven't committed a violent crime or on the watchlist nothing would affect you. this is already settled law by the supreme court, just a decision by the political body to make real what people out there have already decided should be the law. >> senator countries murhris murphy, we will let you get back to work and look forward to that vote this afternoon. investigators release transcripts of the 9 won/11 calls
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fibts we're now learning the exact words of the man responsible for the first mass shooting in modern u.s. history, the fbi releaseing edited transcripts of the trabs script ofnscription at the pulse nightclub. he identifies himself as an islamic soldier and calls for america to stop bombing syria and iraq and that is why he was out here right now. when he was asked what he had done, he said "you already know what i did." there was no evidence the shooter was directed by foreign terrorist organizations. >> what i can tell you is while the killer made these murderous
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statements he did so in a chilling, calm and deliberate manner. yes, the audio is compelling. to expose that now would be excruciateingly painful to exploit them in this way. >> pete williams joins me now from washington with more on this. the timeline updated by the fbi today and new transcripts released, what more are we learning as this investigation remains active and moving forward. >> transcripts may be a bit of misnomer. this is an expanded timeline. i think we should pause before we go into this to say how extraordinary it is to see this level of detail this early on in an investigation. this kind of minute by minute thing we never saw in the boston marathon bombing investigation, for example, until the trial. the fbi put out a great deal of information here. this is this timeline. the shots fired report comes at 2:02. officers arrive on the scene two minutes later and enter the
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nightclub and shoot at him and force him into the restroom and call for more s.w.a.t. teams and he makes these three 911 calls, the first at 2:35. there were three calls with a total of 28 minutes total with two police noergsz. first at 3:03 and 3:24. in the 3:24 mateen says he has an explosive vest on like the one they wear in france and claims there are explosives in his van, none ever found. 4:21 the police pull an air-conditioning unit out of a dressing room window and that allows more people to escape. another new detail eight minutes later victims tell police mateen said he would put explosive vests on victims within 15 minutes, four total. no explosives found.
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at 5:14 report of shots fired and 5:15 he's dead. we're also told the police knock knocked two holes in the wall trying to knock a hole to the bathroom. they knocked the first hole wasn't quite the right one, they knock a second hole people start coming out of that one. in this meantime mateen comes out of the first hole and that's when police kill and shoot him. it's actually outside the nightclub he's shot and killed. the other thing is this timeline after police initially encountered him and after that no one is shot inside the nightclub until the very end when they storm in through the holes in the wall. >> that's from the 2:00 a.m. timeline all the way to the back end. roughly that middle portion where no one inside the club was shot that's what they're say saying? sfloonkts exactly. >> any new information on the wife and investigation that's
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open against her? >> i would say this. the investigation goes on. they're still questioning lots of people and we don't expect -- several officials have told us not to expect criminal charges to be filed against anybody for at least several more days if there are any charges filed. >> pete williams reporting out of washington. appreciate it. breaking news on the race for 2016. this big shake-up inside the trump campaign campaign manager corey lewandowski fired. new information about what preceded lewandowski's exit from the campaign next. buthat is changing. at temenos, with the microsoft cloud, we can enable a banker to travel to the most remote locations with nothing but a phone and a tablet. everywhere where there's a phone, you have a bank. now a person is able to start a business, and employ somebody for the first time. the microsoft cloud helped us to bring banking to ten million people in just two years. it's transforming
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your car insurance policy is 22 pages long. did you read every word? no, only lawyers do that. so when you got rear-ended and needed a tow your insurance company told you to look at page five on your policy. did it say "great news. you're covered!" on page five? no. it said, "blah blah, blah blah blah blah blah..." the liberty mutual app with coverage compass makes it easy to know what you're covered for and what you're not. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. we go back down to breaking news we've been following today about the trump campaign and shaking things up today by fire firing corey lewandowski, trump's original campaign manager out. all all of this as trump faces what could be a delegate mutiny in
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the convention. lewandowski appeared upbeat shrugging off any illusion this was due to strife within the campaign. >> is there strife within this campaign? >> i don't know if i would call it that. i have the privilege of spending back with my family the most important thingened i have said and will continue to support donald trump in any endeavor he has. if i can play a role in this campaign whether formal or informal that will be an honor for me to have. it's been such an honor to be a part of this from the beginning, it's been great. >> michael, i was reading your piece. you had something at 5:00 a.m. talking about the strategy forward because the republican presumptive nominee would be talking with members of his
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family about the path forward. >> did you have an inkling this meeting with lieutenants would result in corey lewandowski being pushed out? >> this is kind of shocking and not shocking. talk of corey lewandowski being removed from the campaign going to the iowa caucuses in february when trump lost a race he felt he should have won. lewandowski held on then an incredible ride the next few months and managed to hang on at every iteration and scandal trump has walked into. i think you heard in the interview you had earlyier, you could tell there was some surprise in corey's voice there. i don't think he ex 13ek9pected that this morning. barely a day went by in the campaign recent weeks there wasn't some talk about corey getting sidelined and maybe eventually pushed out. >> was it more the adult kids or manafort or combination of all
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of the above. donald trump and we know from his past demonstrates a loyalty with lewandowski, even through the breitbart situation with fields and stood by him and brought him on stage. this doesn't seem truly from donald trump, seems like someone else helped convince this. >> we interviewed trump in his trump tower office and asked him about the relationship between manafort and lewandowski. he said they were getting along great and had no indication there was anything different. said if there was a problem he would fire one of them. now, we see that today. i think what happened is trump doesn't usually carry a cell phone, he doesn't engage in e-mail. he hears what -- from the people who are around him. corey was that guy most often. manafort was not interested in engageing trump on these battles, on these enterm battles.
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you mentioned the family. i think that was ultimately lewandowski's downfall here. you mentioned loyalty, when he start -- when the friction started happening with his children, the loyalty to family is going to trump so to speak, anything with the campaign manager. >> we know new polling shows hillary clinton has a seven point lead new polling over donald trump. is this reboot really just way to repackage trump before the convention and also try to ward off any type of mutiny with delegates, shoreing up the fact that he is the best gop candidate? >> yeah. he's been able to hold off any of these delegate challenges so far. i would expect that to continue. but the polling, i think there is the key, right? we hear trump in televised interviews and his rallies constantly talking about polling. that's what he's like one-on-one as well.
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every question i asked him, he would bring back to polling and this slide in the polls in recent days and recent weeks had to be weighing on him and certainly must have helped grease the skids here on corey's exit. >> he certainly likes to hear number 1. we do hear about the polls a lot. michael bender on bloomberg politics. thank you. >> today, we've been asking you in our pulse question of the day will corey lewandowski's fireing lead to a change in the tone of the campaign. let's look at the results in how you voted so far. 5% say yes 95% say no. the pulse remains live. keep your votes coming in. pulse@msnbc.com. this coming out from the white house, the vice president talking about donald trump. blasting policy proposals suggested by the presumptive gop nominee, fresh remarks made moments ago by joe biden.
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vice president joe biden wrapped up remarks in washington, d.c. just a few minute ago when he blasted policies by donald trump without mentioning trump by name. take a look. >> when we build walls and dis disrespect our neighbors, we'll quickly see all this progress evaporate evaporated, replaced by a term of anti-americanism and course of rift throughout our hemisphere. the choices that make our region less democratic and less prosperous and less secure actively undermine our american national interests. >> vice president joe biden moments ago out of washington, d.c. transgender singer nasyasmine
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jimenez was singing that night of the shooting. she has not spoken out about what it was like to be at pulse and she joins me now for her first television interview after this. you worry. you do whatever it takes to take care of your family. and when it's time to plan for your famils future we're here for you. we're legalzoom, and for over 10 years we've helped families just like yours with wills and living trusts. so when you're ready start with us. doing the right thing has never been easier. legalzoom. legal help is here. after a long day, jen stops working, but her aleve doesn't. hey mom! because aleve can last 4 hours longer than tylenol 8 hour. what will you do with your aleve hours? trolling for a gig with braindrone? cat blame you. it's a drone you control with your brain, which controls your thumbs which control this joystick. no, i'm actually over at the ge booth. we're creating the operating system
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after a meeting with top lieutenant and family members, donald trump delivered the news he was fireing campaign manager corey lewandowski. just minutes ago we caught up with donald trump, jr. in the corey lewandowski disaster. >> reporter: what happened this morning? >> we released corey lewandowski from the campaign. we had a great relationship with him. everything was very amicable. the process of transition from presumptive nominee to actual nominee. as we grow the team and working with outside partyies and namely the gop, the campaign has to evolve with that. >> reporter: was there a tipping point or fireable offense here? >> just the nature of moving on. there were things corey was
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incredible with. he did things that were historic with my father to take on these 17 governors with political experience and to win with a political neophyte and make records with voters that's unheard of. now, going against a bigger machine and clinton machine, very big and has the media message behind it and america's message and we have to go towards that. we have a great relationship and great split. you probably saw his talk today. we continue to have a great relationship with corey. >> reporter: why today, though? >> just the timing. we will not delay everything until the convention and come out of that. we will regroup and get everything set and come out of the convention running. we will always be a lean mean machine, something we've done unlike everyone else they spent more money in the first two months when they dropped out than we had for the nomination. we will always run that way because that's the way my father
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thinks government should be run and will be run, it won't be a slush fund. we have to be lean and mean to evolve. >> reporter: he was escorted out of the building by security. that seems like not an amicable split. >> there are protocols in place, i don't care if you're an intern or this when those things happened, that's what happened. again, you've seen what's happened with him and us and we have had a great relationship with corey and a friend and mentor as we're learning politics as well and been a great friend and i will be a delegate for new york at the convention and he will be lead leading the new hampshire delegates and i'm sure we will as well. >> he will stay as the new hampshire delegate? >> yes. he will run the new hampshire party. >> reporter: you comfortable with that? >> i'm fine with that. >> reporter: the rnc and the trump campaign was really strain strained the last few weeks, no
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clear concept who was in charge cross messageing when it came to paul and corey. do you think that is going to change going forward? >> i think that's certainly going to change. i don't know there's necessaryily miscommunication. when you're used to working for someone for a year and paul has been in charge for a few weeks, there is still relaying that to everyone. this is a busy place and everyone is going and all the time on. i think there could have been miscommunications throughout that process and i think that will simplify some of that. >> paul's been in charge since april 7th. if he's been in charge since april 7th, is there an expectation it can get better with the party going forward? >> i think it certainly can get better with the party going forward. we have a great relationship with ryan now. we are going forward. we are taking on the establishment from both sides. i think the american people have
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spoke than narrative as something they actually want and the bernie effect on the other side. a lot of people really want to see change. they're sick of government and sick of d.c. as usual. we're moving forced that and think we will do that with the rnc. >> that was katy tur talking with donald trump, jr. and the corey lewandowski ouster and more of katiee katy's interview in the next hour. and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unit to fight cyber-crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information so we can track down the criminals. when it comes to the cloud trust and security are paramount. we're building what we learn back into the cloud to make people and organizations safer. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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an update now out of orlando where approximately 50,000 people attended last night's vigil for the 49 slain of the pulse massacre. the 49 victims names read aloud chanting we remember them after each name. how about it for a poignant moment when during the point of this vigil a full rainbow appeared overhead.
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undoubtedly the way the pulse nightclub was covered and discussed will be different for everybody. for those involved in the mast mast -- largest mass shooting for history will be forever remembered. jasmine jimenez, a performer at the club she is seen with society'oto mayciety brced so to may or and his partner, they were close friends. she is known as jasmine across the world and joins me now for her first interview since the pulse nightclub shooting. thanks for being here and first of all, tell everybody what the last several days have been like for you and how you're feeling. >> thank you so much thomas. for me it's been very
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difficult. i haven't experience anything i have been experienceing lately. i have to struggle and make it a positive thing. it's been very bad. i can't sleep. i barely eat. i can't be in close places because i really get very scared. i'm trying to get professional help and i'm just taking day-by-day. >> can you take us back to that night, what it was like? in the video we see sue posted to facebook smiling and dancing with those friends there. what happened in this moments when the chaos began? >> basically, it was like a regular night for us. it's very -- it was a very humble place to be very secure for us. we would never expect something like that happened. we was having fun with the same people that always go there. i've been working there for years, even before it was pulse, it was revolution.
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the same co-workers amazing people. we have a lovely night of happiness. everybody enjoyed the performance. i went to change. when i went to change i went outside to just mingle with everybody, have a good time take pictures with them make them feel comfortable and happy. that's when i took the video. while i was taking the video, you see, i'm debateing not having no drinks because i wanted to leave early as i was cooking on sunday for everybody else everybody that works with me in orlando so we can make a beautiful dinner at the pool. i was telling them i wanted to leave, they was telling me don't, don't, wait a couple minutes. i played the video and if you see, it's an amazing place to be. after i turn off the video, i was debateing how they want me to stay there in the same way i was
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like scared and i wanted to leave because i know i have to get up early in the morning and try to cook. we got in agreement, i was going to work my bags -- i was going to take my bags to the car and i was going to come back spend a couple minutes, 20 30 minutes. while i went to the back get my bag, before i went to the back eddie asked lewis to take me be with me to walk me to the car and bring the bag to the car. as soon as i get the bag and we talk to the bar i gen, i say -- i told them i just walk out. i didn't even put my hand to the door, when i heard the first shots. that's when i ran. by the time i throw myself in the car and lewis throw hisself in the car, the second round came out. when i looked back i realized
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that it was a really bad situation because everybody was screaming, everybody was trying to run out of there. the first thing i did was call the promoter and manager and ask her if she was okay. the only thing he could have told me was run to the house, get out of here. while i was calling my mom, lewis call eddie and eddie say that he was okay. that was right after the first round. when the second round start we couldn't get in touch with eddie at all. >> eddie is lewis' partner. we know eddie texted him saying don't come back because there was a shooter. so many people jasmine, that have survived talked about feeling guilty. >> yes. >> dealing with that type of emotion, why they were spared why they were able to get out and survived. >> exactly. >> are you dealing any of that? >> i feel a big guilt.
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i have lost over 10 to 15 friends. when i call them friends, because i'm there performing they're always there supporting my career my show. we always -- every time i go to orlando. if we don't go to have dinner we go to the pool we just do something together. for me to lose so many friends and not even 15 friends, i lost 49 fans that are there with me i feel guilt because i want to be gone and don't have too many victims to leave this world. it's something i carry and carry in my heart and always asking god, why? why me? why did i need to be in that door to run out before? if i would never decide to take those suitcases to my car, i would not be
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