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tv   Sex Slaves  MSNBC  June 24, 2016 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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among them is expected to be a really big decision on abortion rights. this is potential the biggest abortion rights decision in years. we were also expecting a decision on mopped in the bob mcdonnell, former governor of virginia, corruption case. these will be the last decisions of the corruption case. these will be the last decisions of the term. we expect them all to come out some time on monday around 10:00 a.m. so have a good weekend, but get some sleep. monday's going to be really busy. that does it for us tonight. we'll see you again on monday. also, that cat we had here hi, ari. >> hi, rachel. and i think we know from the oral argument they were very skeptical of that trial against bob mcdonnell. >> i will have that on. have a very good weekends. s as you know by now, 17.5 million voters triggered a financial melt lost more than $2 trillion down the in global market. today. $2 trillion today. and tonight, we have the latest
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on where this chaos goes, how it started, and what britain's unexpected disruption means for the u.s. >> i'm shocked that we actually have voted to leave. >> the market's taken a dive. >> my vote, i didn't think would matter, because i think we would remain. >> i'm actually regretting it today. >> the dow jones dropping over 600 points. >> this is the worst period i recall since i've been in public service. >> so, yeah, quite worried. >> i do not think that it would be right for me to try to be the captain that steers our country to its next destination. >> i don't care who it is, as long as we have a brexit government. >> it's about the right of the people of this will country to settle their own destiny. >> we would prefer a different outcome. >> the special relationship that exists between our two nations, that will endure. >> maybe today, he's not running for president. he's selling sweets. >> you should try to get to see the suites. they're two of the most beautiful suites you'll ever see. >> i'll try to do everything i
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can to defeat donald trump. >> one, two, three. >> thank you, everybody. thank you. >> announcer: this is "the last word" on campaign 2016. >> good evening to you, i'm ari melber filling in for lawrence o'donnell. it's a special friday edition of "the last word," to make sense of a story that matters more than most. people in politics and the press use the word "historic" a lot. an "historic" election. an historic victory. but today the world woke up to a decision that lives up to that designation. a development that ends a chapter of history that began 43 years ago when britain joined the eu. that chapter is over. the european union lost its second largest economy and greatest political power. the movement called leave 51 to 48 votes, stunning experts who had expected a more anticlimactic outcome. over 17 million in britain voted
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to leave. 16 million voted to stay. british prime minister david cameron, who opposed brexit and backed the plan, putting it to a vote, he re-signed in response. >> i think the country requires fresh leadership to take it in this direction. i will do everything i can as prime minister to steady the ship over the coming weeks and months. but i do not think it would be right for me to try to be the captain that steers our country to its next destination. >> cameron tried and failed to strike a middle ground before the vote. he'd used domestic opposition to the eu to push for reforms, like rolling back benefits for migrants as a compromise instead of this brexit. one of the leaders of the leave movement, nigel farage, celebrated the vote. >> ladies and gentlemen, dare to dream that the dawn is breaking on an independent united kingdom. we have fought against the multi-nationals, fought against big politics, we fought against lies, corruption, and deceit. let june the 23rd go down in our
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history as our independence day. >> the repercussions have begun. the british pound posted its largest one-day fall ever. global stock markets lost $2.1 trillion today. in america, the markets tanked on their own $830 billion. the dow down 610 points. the s&p, you see there, 76 points. down, nasdaq, over 200 points down. president obama, an opponent of today's decision, did strike a respectful note today. >> yesterday's vote speaks to the ongoing changes and challenges that are raised by globalization. but while the uk's relationship with the eu will change, one thing that will not change is the special relationship that exists between our two nations.
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that will endure. the eu will remain one of our indispensable partners. >> that is certainly true, but the question is what kind of partnership will be left in europe, a continent that has paid dearly in lives and in treasure for past rivalries and world wars, politicians now in france, denmark, sweden and the netherlands already calling for their own referendums on membership in the eu. we begin tonight fittingly with nbc news keir simmons, reporting this story in london. why did this happen and why did it surprise so many so-called experts? >> well, i think it surprised people because, there is just such a division within this country. never has the united kingdom fell less united. and ari, if you want a symbol of that, you only have to look at the world-famous british newspapers overnight. here you have "the sun," which campaigned in favor of an exit. its headline, "so long, farewell."
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the "daily mail," which as well campaigned in favor of an exit, "take a bow, britain." it was the day the quiet people of britain rose up against an arrogant, out of touch political class. but then you have "the daily mirror," which campaigned to stay europe, and its headline, "so what the hell happens now." and just take a look at one more here. the "financial times," britain breaks with europe, but the headline which you may not be able to see, which i think is telling, says cameron quits, sterling plunges, a roar of rage. what happened here, ari, effectively, is that millions of people who feel disenfranchised, who feel like london, the capital, has nothing to do with them, who feel like decisions were being made in brussels and europe that did not connect with them said, we are fed up with this, we don't want this anymore.
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the issue, though, ari, and why the financial marks around the world have reacted so badly is that what we now have is a very long process that could be very, very bitter. effectively, it is a divorce. and if you like, what's happened today is that one partner has got the courage to say to the other one, i just can't live with you anymore. but now, as anybody who's been through a divorce knows what that can be like, knows, now, there will be the arguments over what to do with the children, what to do with the house, what to do with the money, it can get very, very bitter. that is what europe faces, writ large. and in a sense, what you've been seeing is two sides already, politically.
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one side saying, we really need to get tough with britain, in france, for example, saying we really need to make sure that other eu countries don't get, as you were mentioning the idea that they should do -- >> right, that there's -- >> -- and the other side -- right. that there's a danger that the eu will fall apart. the other side, including the leader of germany, the pope himself, saying, no, we need to really negotiate and be careful. otherwise the damage that will be done to the european economy there, for the world economy, including the american economy, will be profound and long lasting. >> stay with me, keir. i want to bring in david smith, washington correspondent at "the guardian," and laura main, white house correspondent for france's canal plus. you hear that reference. i want to play a little bit more from nigel farage, because there's what is being done and who is doing it. the idea that some of the anti-eu forces excelled with the argument that this was all about bad things being done by foreigners, including not just the idea of migrants, but in the west. take a listen. >> threatening people too much actually insults their intelligence. and the listen from the obama visit is even more fascinating.
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and a lot of people in britain said, how dare the american president come here and tell us what to do. and it backfired. and i think we got an obama brexit bounce, because people do not want foreign leaders telling them how to think and how to vote. >> is that right? >> yeah, this would be a populist movement. it's interesting in this story, and it's tragic. we spoke with a lot of people who voted against britain staying in europe, and they told us, we don't want what's happening in europe. we are exceptional. we want to do something different. and we want to sort of send a message to the rest of the world that we don't want technocrats. we want to take care of us. so that's really interesting, because it's the same one used all over the world in different parts of the world. again, global populist message. >> and david, on that point, it works twofold if the experts are the problem and the experts can't be believed, then the argument's marshaled about the economic damage, i think some of which in the short-term is evidenced today, aren't going to always be believed by the populist. >> that's right. one of the politicians, michael gove, really pushing the lead campaign, actually said at one
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point, people are sick of experts. so by definition, whatever facts and figures were produced, people rubbished because there was this strong anti-establishment sentiment. it's worth remembering not only the government, but the main opposition party, and most opposition parties all supported remaining within the eu. and the people decided, decided otherwise. and i think it was a coming together of factors, what we've talked about, there was the surge of immigration in europe, because of the crisis in syria and elsewhere. so immigration was a very hot issue. and as president obama mentioned, also, deep underlying causes to do with global trade and globalization. >> and so, keir, how can we read some of those trends or interpretations into the constituencies that voted?
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because we have a pretty simple breakdown on uk vote. to remain, scotland, northern ireland, london. to leave, wales and england. leaving carried the day. what do you know about those areas and what that tells us? >> what it tells us is back to the point i made at the beginning, which is how divided the uk is. london voted 2-1. scotland voted 2-1 to stay in europe. there are even people talking about london becoming its own city-state. that is far fetched, obviously. because it isn't far fetched in relation to scotland. and just think about that. if the scotts do really push to remove themselves from britain, there's a whole constitutional issue there. the british are going to be taken up with just trying to deal with unraveling that constitutional issue, just trying to fight that battle in northern ireland. as you know, there is a long history of sectarian troubles, as a result of questions and whether northern ireland is part
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of the united kingdom, or whether it should be part of the island of ireland. so a real pandora's box. and you want to think about that the uk is the country that is going to need to be at the table, renegotiating deals with europe, negotiating new deals with europe. what those who said britain should leave the european union said was that britain can go in, best foot forward, and get great deals around the world. the issue is, whether that's true or not. whether in principle, that's true. the issue is, how is britain going to do that with a prime minister who says he's leaving in three months, with its constituent parts saying they want to leave britain. it is a very, very difficult picture. again, that is why the markets are saying, at the very least, the uncertainty that this now holds out is frightening. >> right. and laura, i mean, the markets often try to price in future events. this doesn't seem totally priced in, because it wasn't fully expected to happen. and what could be priced in next
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is other countries. here's la penn in france, known as a very divisive figure, talking about this. >> a rebirth of nations, but perspective, that's a rebirth that is designed and called for to be ethnically nationalist and a closed door to migration. >> yes, she's running for the french presidential elections. she's in the polls at 30%. she's an extremely important figure in the french political life. and she's calling for a frankxit. she's calling for the french people to do the same thing the english people just did. in terms of fact, on tuesday
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you're going to have a european senate. francois hollande, the french president, he's going to try to be the peace negotiator in europe. and he wants to try to quiet the things, the uncertainty, and a lot of people all over europe are extremely worried about the beginning of a recession. >> so, david, what do we look for in those remaining countries? should people be worried about other important countries leaving? and then what is the eu at that point? >> yeah, it's a very unpredictable, unstable time. if you look at countries, such as sweden and denmark, maybe greece. this gives a lot of encouragement for those who would push for a referendum of their own, possibility to break away from the eu i don't think the eu itself is in -- is under existential threat, but it is an unraveling and just talking to people today in washington, from a u.s. perspective, that does
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seem fear that this alliance, which was born out of the ashes of the second world war, is guaranteed peace and stability on the continent for all these decades, it has taken its biggest blow and that has complications economically and even in terms of the military as well. >> and laura, a lot of american political commentary immediately looked through this through the u.s. lens and part of what trump and other anti-immigrant sentiment is in the united states. do you think that makes sense, or is that a misfire from an internationalist perspective, because this is more about europe than the u.s. >> from an international perspective, it completely makes sense. people in europe are extremely worried with what's happening globally. and this is what they didn't want to have to deal with.
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they have a lot of terrorist attacks this year. it's very uncertain climate, in terms of the economic situation in france, in different, other countries. so they really want to know what's happening. i just want to tell you something, because people think that england is going to be our -- it's a very long process. and it's a very technical one. it's going to take months before it's going to happen. they have to rewrite the new regulations. they have -- it's part of a treaty which was done, which is called the treaty of lisbon, and in the defense of article 50, and it's going to require a lot of technicity, a lot of sittings, a lot of discussions, and that's the hope of some european leaders, it's going to take time and during this time, maybe there's hope to rebuild a new europe. >> laura haim, david smith, thank you for joining us, and keir simmons will be back with us in the hour for more reporting. coming up, donald trump's visit to scotland didn't do much to make him look presidential. and a new poll out tonight should spark a lot of talk inside the trump campaign war room.
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how some american votes are feeling and looking. squeezed by the economy, are u.s. voters are going to take lessons from the uk's exit? that's all ahead. (man) oh, looks like we missed most of the show. (woman) and there's no way to restart it. (jon bon jovi) with directv there is. ♪ you see, we've got the power to turn back time ♪ ♪ so let's restart the show that started at nine ♪ ♪ and while we're at it, let's give you back your 'do ♪ ♪ and give her back the guy she liked before you ♪ ♪ hey, that's the power to turn back time. ♪
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back here at home, president obama speaking at a fund-raiser for governor jay inslee in seattle, washington. we'll monitor that tonight and bring you anything that comes out of it. with my moderate to severe ulcerative colitis, the possibility of a flare was almost always on my mind. thinking about what to avoid, where to go... and how to deal with my uc. to me, that was normal. until i talked to my doctor. she told me that humira helps people like me get uc under control
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and keep it under control when certain medications haven't worked well enough. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. raise your expectations. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. britain's decision to leave the eu is echoing right here in the u.s. in two big ways. economically, it's costing
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americans billions of dollars, as we reported at the top of the hour. politically, the presidential candidates are outlining their responses and both the trump and clinton campaign are fund-raising off this news. but it was donald trump who was closest to the vote, literally, as he made a business trip to scotland to reopen its golf course in turnberry today. many were eager to hear how trump would tackle the news unfolding right there in the region, but he began his news conference in a truly bizarre fashion, even by the standards of a trump news conference, which is really saying something. now, again, the continent is on fire, he is at the fire, and his first appearance there, instead of addressing the fire, he talked about his golf course. really. here's nbc's katy tur. >> reporter: as the uk's brexit votes had markets plunging overseas and at home, donald trump was touring his scottish golf course and promoting his resort. >> inside the lighthouse right now is incredible suites.
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>> reporter: turning to the global chaos unfolding around him, trump saw opportunity while the world worried, both financially -- >> look, if the pound goes down, they're going to do more business. >> reporter: and politically. >> i really do see a parallel between what's happening in the united states and what's happening here. people want to see borders. they don't necessarily want people pouring into their country. >> reporter: the fight to leave the eu similar to presumptive gop nominee's play book. appealing on issues of trade, immigration, and nationalism. >> i think that's something you can point to in this campaign and say, there's support for what i'm doing, not just in america, but across the world. >> reporter: though this was not a campaign event, trump in turnberry to promote his brand, he didn't exactly stumble on the world stage. >> reporter: are you traveling with any of your foreign policy advisers?
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are you huddling with them to find out what the best way for you to react is? >> i've been in touch with them, but there's nothing to talk about. i've been saying that i would prefer what happened. i thought this would be a good thing. i think it will turn out to be a good thing. >> the hillary clinton team quick to use it all as political fodder. >> more people are coming to turnberry. >> reporter: clinton's campaign was caught off guard by her own populist uprising in the primary against bernie sanders. now some democrats are nervous what happened in britain could be a harbinger of a stronger-than-expected populist zeal in the u.s. that propelled sanders and trump. ironic that trump would praise brexit here in scotland, one of the few places that voted overwhelmingly to stay in the eu. and why there are similarities, it should be noted that the uk's electorate is significantly less diverse than the u.s. ari? >> thanks to katy tur for that report. joining us now, rick tyler, msnbc political analyst, former spokesman for the cruz campaign, and david corn from mother jones, and also an msnbc analyst. david, i don't want to belabor the point, but when you ask a presidential candidate whether
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something's good, you usually mean at a minimum for the u.s., maybe for the world when both things a possible. he literally took the questions today as, is it good for his business? >> you know, though, it used to be the saying, what's good for gm is what's good for america. here, it means, what's good for trump. after orlando, his first tweet was, hey, people are congratulating me, i got it right. that's what this meant. and then this week, today, this bizarre press conference when he's talking about the lighthouse and the suites. there's nothing to talk about with foreign policy advisers. and don't worry about me. i'll be fine if the pound goes down. if the markets tumble, don't worry. i know how to handle this. i can just imagine if he becomes president, you know, coming out one day, you know, the dow's gone down 13%, but let me reassure the american public, i made a killing! it's narcissism of the highest order. rick, defend this guy. >> go ahead, rick. >> look, i would love to defend
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him. i think it was a missed opportunity. it was another sign that donald trump hasn't quite his campaign together. he should have had advisers on that plane, he should have had a statement for whichever way it went. remember, going into the night, it was going to go the other way. and in fact, that's the market had very large gains. i think over almost 200 points in the last couple of days, because everybody thought that the uk was going to stay in the eu, and of course, they took all those gains back today when it reversed itself. but, no, he really had an opportunity to explain why he thought it was a good thing that the uk was leaving the eu. he had a perfect opportunity to do it and he really didn't articulate it all that well. >> but, you know, ari, if i can jump in. because i'm just so excited about this. the thing is, he was asked about brexit a few weeks ago. and he really didn't seem to know what it was. he hadn't thought about it. he hadn't really supported it. he jumped on it, because it won
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at the end of the day. and in fact, mother jones today, we went back and looked and found a piece he wrote three years ago, in which he was talking about the need for greater economic cohesion in europe. actually, taking the opposite position that he took today. i know you're shocked by that, but he didn't care about brexit, until he smelled a political opportunity. >> yeah, you know, rick, at a certain level, the candidate who's the nominee of your party at this point has a category error. in other words, he's literally on the business trip, he is literally talking about the business, and when he's asked about policy and international decisions, which affect people, including everyone's 401(k)s and retire accounts and what we're going to do as a country in the u.s., he blows it. he doesn't categorically get the question, that it's not about the self-interest of his personal fortune. i'll throw one poll at you. it is early, but this is not where your party would want to be in terms of 46% now for clinton in reuters' new poll.
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33% for trump. does this give any of your colleagues second thoughts going into the convention? >> look, i've said over and over again, if donald trump continues to trail hillary clinton by double digits, it's going to get a lot of people pause. because, you know, this was a perfect opportunity. and by the way, look, this is a warning. this whole leave of the eu, and nobody predicted it, or very few people predicted it. and the people said, no, we've had enough of micromanagement from brussels and regulation and taxation. and i think there was a lot of overreaction today. look, yes, we lost a lot of value in the market, but that's not real value. that value can come back. markets don't like uncertainty. and we'll have a new certainty at some point and the markets will come back. i think, overall, it will be better for the -- for the united kingdom. i think it's doing to be going to be better and they'll do very well. but, again, donald trump had
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a -- just didn't do a very good job explaining that today. and it was a missed opportunity. >> david, on the politics of that, we're going to go more into the international policy throughout the hour. but on the u.s. politics of that, does it help hillary clinton to simply look competent, like she understands what's happening, while donald trump doesn't seem to understand he's running policy instead of being ceo? >> i thought the add the clinton campaign put out today made her look solid and make him look kind of foolish and almost irrelevant, which no one wants to be. so i think, again and again, i think the same thing happened after the orlando tragedy that she comes out and looks steady, she talks about what this is about, not about herself. and, you know, how many times is he going to miss this opportunity, as rick puts it, because, actually, he's not interested in much beyond donald trump. >> right. well, the only question i didn't get around to asking, david corn, is whether this international crisis is good for
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mother jones' magazine at a business level. >> i was going to ask the same question. >> if we had more time, i'd get to that. david corn and rick tyler, have a good friday night. appreciate it. >> great article, david. up next, the economic anger that did motivate some voters in the uk. also motivating some people here in the u.s., and that means motivating people who support trump, but also bernie sanders. stays with us. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing a farmer's market.ve what's in this kiester. a fire truck. even a marching band. and if i can get comfortable talking about this kiester, then you can get comfortable using preparation h. for any sort of discomfort in yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it.
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hours after the stunning brexit vote result, experts around the world were left with the question of why a majority of british voters chose to leave the eu. voters seem to have been divided along the lines of income inequality. london, the richest region in the uk, voted to remain by nearly 20 points. but many less-educated working class regions that have felt all the effects of wage stagnation, they voted to leave. now, alan greenspan is, of course, the former chair of the federal reserve and he's known to be respected on wall street while criticized by more progressive economic experts. but his diagnosis today of the problem overlaps with the progressive concern from occupy to the bernie sanders campaign. when real incomes are down, people aren't benefiting from the so-called benefits of an economic system and then the entire system can lose legitimacy. now, he calls it a political problem for the eu and may be an existential one. here he is on cnbc. >> i think this is just the tip of the iceberg. and the reason i say that is
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that this problem that's causing the british problem is far more widespread, fundamentally, what we are looking at is a massive slowing in the rate of real incomes across the whole european spectrum. real incomes are not going anywhere. and that is creating a serious political problem, which is not easy to resolve. >> we are joined by jared bernstein, senior fellow, and former chief economist at economic policy adviser, to vice president biden. he's an msnbc contributor. keir simmons, also back with us. jared, starting with you, one response here is for at least to lecture people who voted to leave on why this isn't in their interests. another response is to look at their interests and how underserved they have been or feel they have been with this economic inequality and real
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income decline. >> yes. and i think the latter is a very smart place to be. i agree with the analysis that says that that's certainly a big part of their motivation. by the way, there's a strong anti-immigrant sentiment in the leave vote, that we shouldn't leave behind, as well. and in fact, you can see that very much in our election, of course. and there you have a situation of lots of people who have been left behind, for whom all of this economic growth and market dynamics that we talk about, it's been kind of a spectator sport for them. they hear about it on tv, maybe they read about it in the newspaper. they certainly haven't seen it in their paychecks. and in our election, you've got a candidate, and in the brexit, you've got candidates saying the reason this is happening is because of that immigrant over there, or in the case of the european union, because of some of their really non-representative, not democratic practices. i thought that was legit.
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when, in fact, a lot of what's going on is about the bargaining power of workers, the erosion of the minimum wage, high unemployment rates, the lack of unionization. a lot of things progressives have been working on for a long time. >> yeah, so keir, at the risk of trying to apply wisdom from the rapper 50 cent to brexit, which is difficult, he was once asked how does the recession affect his community, and he said, the recession? it's always a recession here. we are living through this the whole time. and so speak to the people in the outskirts and the other places, outside of london, who have felt, for a long time, underserved, or to jared's point, do you think that is kind of trying to make it sound better, and this was a lot more about racial, nationalist, anti-immigrant sentiment? >> i think this is a mixture of class, of culture, of economics. i think one point to make is think about britain and the economy of britain and how the financial sector, the big banks dominate that economy. there are many other sectors, too, of course.
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but think about the fact that london represents that. those big banks are based in london. i think there is still a lot of anger, a lot of fury, even, about what happened going back to 2007. what happened when there was the financial meltdown, a perception that huge amounts of money were spent on keeping the banks afloat, and people looking and saying, hold on a second, what happened? because that money doesn't seem to have reached me. and then, as i mentioned, the cultural side, the reality is, and, you know, within my own family, when this is all happening, i think, first, about my children, and what future this is for my children. but also, within my family, my own dad, who doesn't live in london will also say to me, you know, you londoners, you're like this, you're like that. there's a real divide
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culturally, and that is the kind of split that causes the kind of resentment that has paem going to the plat box and kind of voting with their heart rather than their head. and we're seeing this now with people talking about regretting their vote already. >> you say regret. keir, that goes to the question. do those people who voted that way believe that their fortunes will be improved? >> well, i think people do believe that their fortunes will be improved, because the campaign said that. a lot of money is sent to europe, and that is true. britain is a net contributor to the european union. the campaign to say we should leave the european union said, well, we can get that money back. the issue, of course is, look, this was one vote. there is now two years, maybe some people will say even ten years to regret it. so never mind the principle of whether you think it's good for britain to be inside the eu or not. the question is, with all of that wrangling and potential
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conflict, what happens to the british economy, to the european economy while that's taking place? while those negotiations are taking place. >> and jared, i mentioned a bernie sanders economic critique. here he was reacting today. >> i think what this vote is about is an indication that the global economy is not working for everybody, you know? it's not working in the united states for everybody, and it's not working in the uk for everybody. when you see, you know, investors going to china and shutting down factories in this country and laying off over a period of many years, millions of people, people are saying, you know, global economy may be great for some people, not for me. >> the negotiated version of that statement would be, hey, wall street or any wall street in any country should take this more seriously, so you don't get this level of backlash. >> yeah, and i think that bernie sanders there is making a very germane point. and it's one that's been very live in our own election campaign, not just for him, but actually from him, donald trump, and from hillary clinton. you know, for years, whether you're a democrat or a republican, your answer to globalization, to communities
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that have been hurt by it, to workers that have been hurt by it, and not just hurt by it yesterday, but hurt by it for many years running has always been more globalization. here's yet another trade pac. and yes, the last one didn't work well. but this one is going to be great for you. if you don't believe that, then you just don't understand global macro economics. well, i think that the -- one of the positive attributes, in at least our campaign, i think, leave is more complicated in the brexit, but in our own campaign, is that that falsehood has really been evaluated. the problem is, where do you go with it? do you blame immigration? do you blame the others. do you blame the european union? you know, if you're donald trump, do you blame the muslims and the mexicans? in fact yb i think what bernie's been trying to do and hillary as well, has been to suggest that globalization is here to stay. we're not putting that tooth paste back in the tube, but it has to be managed. the eu very much bungled the management of immigration and fiscal policy. we see the result. we can't do that anymore here.
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>> and folks, obviously, in the uk felt there was another option after they have been told so often, this is the only way, take it, suck it up, although it's complicated. jared bernstein and keir simmons, thank you very much. coming up, bernie sanders saying he will vote for hillary clinton. ♪ one coat, yes! ♪ there is a day, for every number. ♪ ♪ there is a time, for all my slumbers. ♪ ♪ and i can see, that i can't run and hide. ♪ one coat guaranteed marquee interior. behr's most advanced paint.
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are you going to vote for hillary clinton in november? >> yes. yeah, i think the issue right here is i'm going to do everything i can to defeat donald trump. i think trump, in so many ways, will be a disaster for this country, if he were to be elected president. >> bernie sanders there today on "morning joe." he's not conceding the democratic nomination to clinton, however. here is what he said precisely about that. >> i want to fight to make sure that we have the best platform that we possibly can, that we win the most delegates that we can. and that we transform -- the goal of our campaign was to transform this nation. we talked -- you know, we are in discussions, frankly, with the clinton camp and it would be of no great shock to you that what we want from them is to be very, very strong on a number of issues. >> joining me now is katherine rampl, opinion columnist for "the washington post." obviously, there's a lot going on in the world, if anyone's had
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their tv on our newspaper out or internet fired up. so what might have been a key time for bernie sanders to really apply this pressure doesn't feel as big. it seems to me, politically, the leverage he has is, a big list of people who have supported him, who have donated a lot of money. and rather than leveraging that and getting with the nominee, he seems to be playing out what is a slow-motion concession. is that good politics in your view for the issues he wants to push? >> it certainly doesn't seem to be that way. but i also don't think he has a lot of bargaining power at this point. i think that's why he's essentially capitulating without calling it as such. that he realizes that he doesn't have the votes, he doesn't have the delegates. there were -- there was a lot of
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commentary in the last couple of months about whether the bernie or bust crowd would, you know, stay in that camp. and the poll data suggests that they have softened their views on hillary clinton, and that, you know, they're not so attached to their candidate. >> right. the policy news is he has pushed the platform. that does matter. you can track where parties. are. just this week. or really any other candidate to the words of the platform. it seems like a tilting at windows. >> if he really wanted to foment this political revolution, it was a very strange strategy to issue, to usher it in from kind of a top-down position, you know, basically from the presidency down, which is what he was pursuing. i don't entirely understand why he hadn't earlier in the
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campaign been recruiting, stumping for, endorsing, raising money for, you know, down-ballot candidates who were in his mold, in that sort of very progressive mold. and doing more for them now. do more for them then, rather. it seems like a little bit of little, too late at this point. i guess this is really the only direction he has to go in. >> right. >> but, yes, this is what he should have been doing all along. >> right, it's a direction if he's less focused on the white house. there are examples. howard dean's group turned into democracy for america and did a lot of grassroots stuff. thank you very much. coming up, a little bit more of what president obama just said tonight in seattle. g to ren g to ren and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me go further. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. doctors have been prescribing humira for over 13 years. humira can lower your ability to fight infections,
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president obama just talked about the stakes in the 2016 election, while speaking at a fund-raiser out in seattle, washington. we're going to play that for you, next.
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amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing mention this earlier tonight, and now we have it for you. president obama was speaking
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just moments ago at a big fund-raiser in seattle, washington, and he ended by speaking directly about what he views as the stakes of this election. let's play that for the first time. >> that's the choice you face this november. between dividing ourselves up, looking for scapegoats, ignoring the evidence. or realizing that we are all stronger together. you know, if we turn against each other, whether it's divisions of race or religion, we're not going to build on the progress we've started. if we get cynical and just vote our fears or we don't vote at all, we won't build on the progress we've started.
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america has been a story of progress, but has not gone in a straight line. there have been times where we've gone forward and there have been times where we've gone backwards. and what's made the difference each and every time is citizens. voting. and caring. and committing. to our better selves. coming together around our common values and our faith and hard work and our faith in each other and the belief in opportunity for everybody and assuming the best in each other, not the worst. because whatever our differences, we all love this country and we all care fiercely about our children's futures. and we don't have time for charlatans and we don't have time for hatred, and we don't have time for bigotry. and we don't have time for flimflam.
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and we don't -- we don't have the luxury of just popping off and saying whatever comes to the top of our heads. don't have time for that. >> president obama speaking moments ago. back with me is katherine rampel. you look at that, he said stronger together. that's hillary's slogan, but on a day like today, after brexit, where a lot of europeans are saying they'd be stronger apart. >> yes. i think that was not an accident. so much of what we're seeing right now around the world is about breaking apart, separatism, nationalism, disunity of some kind. we're seeing it not just in the uk, we're seeing it in other than european countries, we're seeing it in east asia and all over the place. and it's no coincidence that he's bringing this up today.
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it's also, i think, no coincidence that he happened to knit in hillary's new slogan, as well. he's trying to remind people of the role that he played in 2008, in knitting together this country, and passing the torch on to the next democratic nominee. >> and he's doing that at a time, after a week where the supreme court basically left in place the blockage of his attempt to deal with the immigration problem. but donald trump seems to be making more traction with that, at least among the hard-right base. the question is, with a new poll out tonight showing him down ten points, whether that's going to work, that message against what they call stronger together is going to work in a general election at all. >> it's very hard to say. i think president obama cares about his legacy and he sees his legacy as being best protected by not having what could potentially be a very destructive president in the white house. and having, instead, a successor who basically represents a continuation of many of his own policies. whether this particular speech will do the trick, whether the shock of the global panic from financial sell-off today, from the brexit will do the trick, will scare americans into saying, you know, maybe having a vote that's entirely based on
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giving the middle finger to the establishment is not such a great idea, maybe that has consequences, we'll see. i don't know. >> that partying too hard at elections can lead to a very long hangover. catherine rampell, thank you. that wraps up our broadcast this hour. it has been quite a week of news and developments. thank you for spending time with us. they're all american girls raised to believe it could never happen to them. >> everybody likes me and wanted to be my friend. >> that sex slavery is reserved for foreign girls. >> but it's a million dollar industry. >> my daughter has been kidnapped. >> that

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