tv AM Joy MSNBC April 2, 2017 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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ting ft.as huh, crisis averted. we know from the filings that were dumped by the white house on friday that general flynn failed to report the money that he received from that rt propaganda arm under the kremlin as well as two other russian entities. >> good morning and welcome to a.m. joy. that was adam schiff of the house intelligence panel earlier today on the new revelations again about michael flynn and his ties to russia. this time financial filings that show payments to flynn from russia linked entities that he had previously failed to disclose. the new filings are part of a friday white house document dump detailing the financial holdings of top administration officials in the form that flynn first submitted in february, he failed to disclose a paid speech that he gave in moscow, as well as
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income that he received from russian affiliated companies. flynndded the details of those paymts to a second amended version of that form that he signed on friday. and joining me how is illinois congressman mike quigley. let's start with that amended filing. why is it tham michael flynn, who is now out of government, had to file an amended disclosure form about his finances? >> well, regardless, it still goes to the original filing. he has to be truthful in that. i don't know the particular rules and ethics requirements, but just because you leave government doesn't mean the requirements still weren't there in the first place and don't stand with you as time goes on. we now understand a little bit more about why the general was speaking immunity. >> let's go into just a little bit more about what was known about michael flynn at the time that he was hired to be donald trump's national security advisor. we know that there were concerns about him that were raised by the acting attorney general at
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the time, salaryuat -- sally ya. the guardian is reporting information in addition to the payments he received from rt, payments for speeches in moscow, doing work for the government of turk turkey, there were contacts potentially with a person who is affiliated with the russian gru with a russian graduate student who flynn met on a trip to cambridge. he invited her to accompany him on his next official trip to moscow to help with simultaneous translation and the guardian is saying that flynn and her remained in e-mail contact conducted through an unclassified channel. in one of his e-mails he perefe himself as general mischa, et cetera. >> let me tell you. what i was first concerned about
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was the fact that general flynn had been fired by a previous administration for just these kind of problems. some of nuances that you are going into is work that the committee is investigating right now, the documents we're looking at. as we go forward people that we interview. it is difficult for me to remember which field comes from what was open source and closed source. but i'll just tell you unfortunately general flynn is fertile ground for investigations russian influence into the democratic process. we are going to take our time. we are not going to prejudge, but i assure you, when i was asked who do you want to testify first, who would help you understand most if they testified fully and completely, and general flynn was my first guest. >> and on the question of his testimony, the ranking member of your committee, congressman adam schiff earlier expressed spent
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schi -- skepttism that he would do so. let's let you listen to that. >> the skepticism is we'll need to consult with the justice department. we don't want to do anything that will interfere in any case that the justice department may decide to bring. we also have to determine whether he really can add value to our investigation, whether we need him to learn information we can't learn from other sources. >> and, sir, the senate intelligence committee has already indicated they are not open to the idea at this time of giving michael flynn immunity to testify. to your knowledge, is the house more open to that idea? >> oh, i don't think so. i think ranking member schiff raised an important point there. we would need what we call proffer. what is it exactly he anticipates to testify to? we would have to work with our senate colleagues. we would have to work with the justice department to make sure that we're not stepping on their investigation because that investigation, again, wouldn't
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necessarily involve just general flynn but everything in this investigation is tied to everything else. it's extraordinary complicated, intertwined. so there is no rush to do this. i anticipate at some point in time general flynn will be before us. i think at this time he probably recognizes it makes sense for him to come forward. we'll have to see. >> and lastly, sir, do you have confidence in the chairman of your committee, chairman nunes? >> i'll say this. chairman nunes ran an extraordinarily fair process through the first part of his term. the first two years under this chairman i think he's done a great job. it's been difficult obviously under this president. i think he has conflicts intern internally. we have to recognize, though, he's not stepping down. the only other person that could make him step down is the
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speaker of the house. he has said he won't do that. so we have to work together at this point. chairman nunes has to realize he can't serve two masters. he has to do this investigation impartially to maintain its credibility. so we have to trust each other. we have to move forward. but we can't have any more midnight excursions. we can't have any more distractions. we can't cancel any more public hearings on this matter. so much of it is in the chairman's hands. >> thank you very much for your time. >> thank you. >> and joining me now is the white house correspondent for "politico," washington bureau chief and former pentagon official. let's jump right into it. you heard congressman mike quigley saying the only person that could remove nunes is the speaker of the house. you had jackie spears say absolutely not. she has expressed a complete
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lack of confidence in him. from your reporting, does nunes survive? >> i think he will survive as long as there are no -- there's no further reporting of more links between him and the white house. i think his credibility has been greatly damaged and he needs to show that he's aggressive about this investigation, that he's not partisan and he's not carrying the water for the white house. but, i mean, if speaker rhinoing what he knows about the fact that he went into the white house retrieved information from white house officials, presented it as if it was independent information for a press conference that supported the president's claims that other officials have completely dismissed and he still thinks he could stay on, i think that he would need to do -- i know. maybe there needs to be more information of complicity with the white house, but for now, at the end of the day, it is the speaker of the house's decision and he doesn't think that is enough. >> david corn is laughing at the idea. why are you laughing?
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>> i'm not laughing at tara because i love tara and her reporting. i am laughing at the whole investigation. this investigation i think is shot. it is done. it is a dead parrot. it is not alive. and i don't see how it gets back on track. i mean, you know, imagine what nunes would have to do at this point to show his independence from trump and the republican party and from the cover up or the stone wall, the disstrtract that the white house has been able to mount. every time he's had a chance in the last week and a half he's blown that opportunity. so i feel bad for adam schiff because i think he would like to have the investigation move forward. but at this point anyone that nunes does from here on in is 100% suspect. i feel bad about that because we need the congressional intelligence committees to do effective oversight overall and particularly on the russian trump scandal. >> i think there have been other members of the house
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representatives who expressed a lack of confidence. jackie spears the first to come out. i want to play you guys what adam schiff had to say about the central point here, which is the white house's own role in proffering that information to nunes that he turned around and proffered back to them. here's adam schiff earlier on cnn. >> first the deputy assistant to the white house informed me when i went to see them that these are exactly the same materials that were shown to the chairman. now, this is a very interesting point. how does the white house know that these are the same materials that were shown to the chairman if the white house wasn't aware what the chairman was being shown. >> rosa brooks, your answer to that question? >> i think never underestimate the role of stupidity. that's what this is a story about. i think this is not necessarily a vast conspiracy. although, you never know. i think this is a bunch of
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overzealous staffers thinking they are doing the president a favor. i think this is nunes liking the cloak and dagger aspects of rushing off to the white house to view secret documents and mouthing off about it and now they're all trapped in this web they created. the credibility of the house investigation at this point is absolutely shot. luckily, that isn't the only investigation on the senate side, the snooenate intelligenc committee seems to be a more serious options. >> we interviewed leader pelosi yesterday. we aired that interview yesterday on this program and she said the same thing. let's listen to leader pelosi talking about the nunes investigation. >> do you think he has credibility now as the leader of that investigation? >> no. i think he not only has lost all credibility, i think he's tarnished the office he holds. he's brought discredit to something that is a very, very serious position in the congress. we don't know what the conversation was with the speaker, but if the guidance was
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go to the president and then go to the press, that was very wrong. >> pretty definite. you're starting to see what looks like the movement of some people connected to mike flynn out of their positions. we have just learned that k.t. mcfar land will no longer be in her position. she's being offered a u.s. am b bass doorship to singapore. >> honestly, i have been hearing rumbling about k.t. being removed from her role since mike flynn was removed. that's why dina powell ended up getting the deputy position, which "politico" reported on last month. it's a little suspect when you have a new boss who brings on a new deputy. you have two deputies. who's the boss? i'm not surprised to hear this. i have heard from staffers internally that she was considered to be a lightweight and seemed to be a little too
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politicized in some ways and not carrying her weight. so not surprised to hear about this. have been hearing rumbling for a while, but her connections to flynn make her toxic. >> why is it that mr. cohen seems to be the only improvable object? >> you have to ask yourself what did the people of singapore do to deserve this? sorry, from half of america, we ae poll guise singapore. this is what is sad, joy, what is the number one job of the government? to protect the american people. in the white house, who has that responsibility? the national security council and staff. it has been a mess from the beginning. donald trump hired flynn to do this job and he didn't last more than a couple weeks. there are people there, such as the folks that played around with nunes on that midnight run and they're still there. it is not just it is confidence
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and they got caught up. it's been lying. sean spicer has been out there lying about what the nsc did and didn't do in this instance. the fact they can't get the national security advisor's office straight is really troubling. >> is this what people worried about when they talked about the plitization of the nsc by mr. bannon? >> absolutely. there is an internal war i think is going on and that war is between the grown ups and there are a few of them at the nsc. he's not a partisan guy. rumor has it he has been trying to out the people that are political hacks. he's obviously working against the bannon way and we'll see how that turns out. i think as david says, the depressing thing is this is not just some kind of reality show. this is actually america's national security we're playing
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games with. let's hope the grown ups prevail. >> we shall see. thank you very much. when we come back, what incentive could trump possibly have to team up with the russians anyway? the not to secret answer when we return. o secret answer when we return. so secret answer when we return. -so-secret answer when we return. if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture... i can tell you prolia® is
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not appropriate. now i'm mashing these potatoes with my stick of butter... why don't you sit over here. something for everyone is awesome. fi your awome with e xfinity stream app. more to stream to every screen. i don't need anybody's money. that's nice. i don't need anybody's money. i'm using my own money. i'm not using the lobbyists or donors. i don't care. i'm really rich. i'll show you that in a second. >> in covering any political scandal, step one is always follow the money. when it comes to trump, why
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would an alleged billionaire need more money? the answer extreme debt. let's review trump's financial history. after trump tower was built in 1983, donald trump went on a spendi ining spree. he opened trump hotel and casino in 1980. then trump's castle. mar-a-lago, the trump air shuttle, the trump princess yacht and the atlantic city taj mahal. but then his finances took a nose dive. he had immassed debt. they owed billions of dollars to 72 banks. trump's net worth dropped from $1.7 billion to less than $500 million in one year, expelling him from forbe's list of the world's richest people. in the early 1990s, the taj mahal and trump castle all filed for bankruptcy, breaking trump's high stakes monopoly board.
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trump declared a $916 million loss on his income taxes in 1995. and, yet, by 2005, he had managed to build his net worth up to $2.6 billion, making it back on to the forbe's list. trump would have needed big money to fund his comeback. but as the wall street journal has reported, most wall street banks were not offering credit to the famous debtor. trump and his companies repeatedly turned to wealthy russians, many of whom are alleged to have ties to organized crime. as trump himself said in 2013 after a meeting with potential investors in mos kau, i have a great relationship with many russians and almost all of the olagarks with the room. david johnson and roan derell
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w. thank you for being here because you did have this piece in "usa today." what are the big findings you have in terms of how russian to la garks helped to rebuild. >> we found a lot of donald trump's condos were bought my wealthy russians. we also found there was multiple people who were involved in the development of the trump soho properties and some of the other properties that had tied to organized crime and we found that this was a pattern that continued through several of these sales. >> and, david, you have been reporting on this for a long time. donald trump and rebuilding his financial, you know, straits
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through russian mob tied people. how and why did he do that and who are some of the big players in that? >> well, donald has counted by his own account on russians for a great deal of money. the easiest case to understand is one of the russian ol garks who paid donald an extraordinary price, $95 million plus a commission for a piece of property near mar-a-lago donald acquired three and a half years earlier. what made that significant, joy, is that at the time donald trump was arguing he shouldn't have to pay a $40 million loan back because the u.s. real estate market was dead. it was an act of god and he should have been forgiven this $40 million debt and suddenly here comes this guy that overpays by $50 million the value of the property. if donald had been a city council men in florida, the newspapers would have been all
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over this and said is this a pay off. >> and deutsche bank comes up over and over again as the last bank that was willing to lend to donald trump after u.s. banks wouldn't do it anymore. bloomberg had an article where they talked about how much he still owes to deutsche bank. he may have a $300 million debt to them. >> yeah. and the other thing with the relationship with these banks is that he -- that everyone has to remember is that donald trump will take money from anybody. you know, you can replace russians with, you know, your ran yans. any other country. this isn't about russia so much as about who was willing to give him money when he wanted it. i think mark cuban touched on this on twitter over the weekend. he's an opportunist. donald trump has sold several of his friends and "the new york times" reported this, he's so frustrated he can't get out of
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this cloud, t rusa cloud. there is one easy way to do it. release his own tax returns and his company's financial statements. >> that is something he's not going to do, but he continues to pursue business opportunities all around the world, right? and his son very famously said when he was interviewed back in 2008 that in terms of high products influx into the united states russians make up a section of a lot of our assets in due bay and everywhere in new york, we see a lot of money pouring into russia. there is a lot of money coming in from new builds, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. so russians essentially not only as lenders but as buyers. >> a lot of this couldn't be of much interest if donald trump weren't president. i mean, this issue of, you know, money coming in from russia. this is something else part of the report that i wrote, is that
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these olly garks are tied in with the organized crime figures in russia and also with the russian state security services. and they're tied in with -- those are all sort of tied in with the president of russia, vladimir putin. so the issue here isn't, you know, this is a matter of -- of money laundering and money coming in from russia that is obtained in nefarious ways sometimes. >> right. >> and these are -- but the issue is that it's such a large proportion of or potentially large portion of trump's portfolio is tied to these types of people who are beholden possibly to president putin. so you end up with an american president whose finances are under -- possibly under foreign influence. that's why we really care about
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this. >> and not only deutsche bank having ties, but you also have the white house in a yahoo! news article back out of a meeting. canceling a meeting with a russian after learning he had mob ties. this is a problem of the image of that as well. >> well, yes. but let's focus on the real substance of this here. as doran was saying, the russians are a government response sored network of international criminals. donald is deeply in debt to deutsche bank, who has already been fined $20 billion, including $650 million fine. i think that's the number. for laundering $10 billion of russian money. the head of that bank, which was also deeply involved back when i was exposing illegal tax shelters in the united states, they were very deeply involved in financing it, moved to the bank of cyprus where a putin
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appointee where the number two guys on the board there and they chose this fellow. donald continually does business with people who are directly connected back to putin. >> yeah. and that is the reason that this is a huge headline. thank you very much. and coming up, remember the debt ceiling? well, the clock is ticking for congress again. we'll discuss the hold up when we come back. she's got that gorgeous 20-something skin. is it dna or olay?
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>> reporter: there are two freight trains racing toward each other at high speed, the bu budget and the debt ceiling. a document so draconian it likely will go the way of the american health care act, meaning nowhere. but the big task will be raising the legal limit on federal borrowing. that would be the second train and you know it as the debt ceiling. this is where the treasury secretary stands on the debt ceiling. >> we have spent the money. i think everybody understands, whether you're republican or democrat, we need to raise the debt limit and that's something we're going to do. >> but president donald trump doesn't share such clarity. this is what he said on the campaign trail. >> i would be strong on the debt limit and i would be asking for a big pound of flesh if i were the republicans. >> now, here is where those freight training come in.
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the house and senate must devise, debate and pass a new budget before october 2nd. if the debt ceiling isn't raised by the start of the fiscal year, a day will come when the government won't be able to borrow money to pay all of its financial obligations. the policy center calls this the x date and projects it could hit sometime between october and november. to be more specific, the bpc projects that x date could also be october 2nd. but the more important date might be april 18th, tax day. if the treasury takes in less than expected, those two freight trains could slam into each other sooner than anticipated and congress not is not ready for the economic disaster that would follow. you can bet on this, if or when the trains do collide, it will be far messier than this. >> and when we come back, jonathan and my panel will
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discuss. stay with us. remember here at ally, nothing stops us from doing right by our customers. who's with me? we're like a basketball team here at ally. if a basketball team had over 7... i'm in. 7,000 players. our plays are a little unorthodox. but to beat the big boys, you need smarter ways to save people money. we know what you want from a financial company and we'll stop at... nothing to make sure you get it. one, two... and we mean nothing. ♪ ♪ ...one of many pieces in my life. and we mean nothing. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo is specifically designed to open up airways to improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine
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remember the government shut down of 2013? good times. we could be heading in that direction again as battles over the budget and raising the nation's debt ceiling loom. april 28th is the deadline that's currently keeping the government funded. congress is racing to reach an agreement on a spending packet before this deadline. so will they make it. joining me now kath ryan rampell, matt welch and jonathan who voiced that amazing package we just somehow. jonathan, excellent job as i call you my co-host and chief washington correspondent. i will go to you first. >> i like it. >> so what are the issues dividing the republican congress over the raising the debt ceiling? >> it is really the idea of
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raising the debt ceiling. the thing to keep in mind here, joy, is the freedom caucus that helped do in the america health care act are the very people who are dead set against raising the debt ceiling in 2011, who were all about shutting down the government in 2013 and are poised to do the some thing again. here is the key thing to keep in mind. one of the members of the house freedom caucus is now the director of the office of management and budget. the person who is in charge of shepherding the budget through and he has been dead set on raising the debt ceiling. what you have been the trump administration is an omb director on record as saying we don't need to raise the debt ceiling unless we get something for it and a tresh you secretas on record saying without question the debt ceiling must be raised. >> and this is what you wrote
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about him in your op ed on this logic that he was concerned about mulvaney's nomination. he voted against increasing the debt limit four times, calling the potential for u.s. default a fabricated crisis. catherine during that package we were playing during the part when steve said we spent the money, everybody understands we have to raise the debt ceiling you kind of laughed. >> no. the president doesn't agree with this. president trump calls himself the king of debt. remember, a large part of his being able to keep his company, his organization alive, was negotiating down his debt obligations. >> or just not paying it. >> but that was part of it. i mean, the negotiation was i'm just not going to pay it. and even during the campaign he repeatedly said as you may recall something to the effect of, well, if the smi goes south i know we could make a deal on our debt and the financial press
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freaked out. you have trump not completely understand the fact you cannot negotiate down our debt payments without sparking a word crisis. you have mulvaney agreeing with him on all this, being cavalier about defaulting on our debt payments. there has never been a time i have been relieved to have a goldman sachs alumni in the white house. >> when donald trump had huge debts he could negotiate with the bank to keep mar-a-lago by turning it into in a private club and that's what he did. why is there so many people who think you can? >> i kind of dispute that as a notion, right? i think the interest in both brink manship and conservative ship is inversely proportional to the amount of power they hold, which is when they don't have power, they are the biggest fiscal conservatives you will ever see and we have to attach conditions to the debt ceiling
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and reform spiteentitlements. that went away because the republicans took the senate so they waived the magic wand and said we don't have to talk about the debt ceiling. so they are not motivated. mulvaney was sent by trump to crack the freedom caucus's heads. unyou can sesful we are talking thre ining three people here and they are not motivated. they say trump's budget is a nonstarter here anyways. so i think we will see a last-minute must pass thing, support the troops and it will happen. >> i'm not convinced the democrats are going to be adults in this situation either. >> you do have some threats have democrats that say they will be the ones to do some branks manship over cutting planned parenthood and going to the wire. >> let's keep two things
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separate here, that's about the continuing resolution that expires on april 28th and is separate and apart from the debt ceiling. when the house minority leader who you interviewed on the show yesterday, when she had a meeting with opinion writers on monday, i asked her the question, you know, what about the debt ceiling? what is your strategy? and she said a letter was being signed by the democratic caucus that will be going to speaker ryan telling him that they want a clean debt ceiling bill. meaning a bill with no conditions, no attachments, nothing, a bill that raises the debt ceiling. otherwise they are not playing ball. >> and john mccain, listen to what he's had to say as well. he told cnn on wednesday there is only one option. i will not vote for a cr, continuing resolution, no matt whatever the consequences because it destroys the ability of the military to defend the nation. so he's also playing brinks manship, too.
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>> the issue with the budget as well is these are also must-pass bills, which means they get a lot of annoying riders attached to them, whether it's defunding planned parenthood or funding for the mexican wall, et cetera. so you always have this hostage crisis. so the democrats said we want a clean bill or the majority says that and it never happens. >> do you think there will be hostages taken or we will get a clean debt limit increase? >> i think we'll get a clean debt limit in the fall. we don't need to have that happen at the end of april. april will likely see a continuation of what he had last year, but with more money on the military because republicans are interested in cutting military back when they didn't hold power. now they do, everybody wants to throw more money at the military so we will be spending more money under trump than under barack obama. >> one correction is it is over the funding of the wall, i believe. i think that's one of their other must not haves.
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thank you. we'll be back in our next hour. coming up in our next hour, conservatives fighting conservatives. joins us live to talk about america's crumbling infrastructure. more a.m. joy after the break. to do the best for your pet, you should know more about the food you choose. with beyond, you have a natural pet food that goes beyond telling ingredients to showing where they come from. beyond assuming the source is safe... to knowing it is.
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spotlight since the release of "time." broader was detained at the age of 16 under suspicion of taking a backpack. he was denied and charges and was not tried but he spent three years in riker's and spent more than two years of that time in solitary confinement. >> when they sent me, i was 16. i would say it was like hell on earth. sometimes, you know, i feel like i'm never going to be the same. you know, i smile and i joke a lot, but deep down, i'm a mess because, like, i'm 21 and on the inside i feel like i'm 40. >> he took his life at the age of 22, just two years after his release. hopefully, the proposed closing will give his family even a small measure of peace.
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i have a question. what the heck are you thinking? what is in why would you want to give out any of your personal information to a faceless corporation for the sole purpose of them selling it? just last week, i bought underwear on the internet. why should you know what size i take? or the color. or any of that information? >> congressman mike capuano expressed how so many people felt after congressional republicans voted to roll back internet privacy protection set to take effect at the end of this year. the bill which donald trump is expected to sign leaves internet service providers free to sell your online data like your browsing history without your permission. joining me now msnbc chief legal correspondent ari mel bert and
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minion clyburn. commissioner clyburn, i want to start with you on this. this was congressman steve scalise tuesday on the house 42, justifying this vote. take a listen. >> the internet was not broken and did not need the federal government to come in and try to fix it. the bottom line families deserve to be protected online with a set of robust and uniform privacy protections. these ruling simply do not live up to that standard. >> that the case, commissioner? >> the public does expect to be protected. and the privacy protections that the fcc put into place harmonize its protections with what the ftc is doing, and what the confurm privacy bill of rights has done. and so these rules that the public expects, they expect to have role over their personally identifiable information. the fcc sought that, we put that
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in place back in october. we're on the cusp of that being eliminated. most intimate information including medical history. your browsing history. your social security numbers that could be halve vested and sold to the highest bidder. that is what is at risk. >> you know, ari, i want to explain to people what this all means. one of the sponsors of the bill, jeff flake argued that basically the rules put in place unfairly advantaged places like yahoo! and facebook because it treated broadband differently. >> most of the data gather said actually gathered by the so-called edge providers like google and facebook. and they aren't touched by any of the fcc regulations at all. >> can you explain all of that in lay men's terms? >> you want to get into this? >> yes. the ftc and fcc have different legal mandates.
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so it is true broadly that there's differential treatment and if you're starting from scratch, you want it to be uniform. >> right. >> however that is not some privacy protections and what this bill did was completely gut them. think about the world we live in nowadays. you wouldn't say to someone come up in my home, sell the information you that find, you maybe don't take anything out of the underwear drawer to use the congressman's example. you write down the information, leave and then sell it. nobody would make that deal. most people, especially young people, the most important stuff you have is probably digital. who you talk to, how you shop, how you book your web md all of this stuff is inherently individual because of the way we live our lives. this was to gut what was done it's in obama era to rifle through that digitally and sell it. what do you get?
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nothing. yes, if you're starting from scratch you might harmonize fcc and ftc mumbo jumbo. it doesn't look like what anyone would do for key citizens. it looks as legally fairly as i can it looks like a thing you would do only for corporations. >> commissioner, what is the definition of your new chairman for this? how do your fellow commissioners on the other side of this issue justify doing what ari melbourne just said,al allowing people to rifle through your personal data and sell it? >> they are claiming we have not harmonized rules with the ftc and other privacy-oriented entities. and that is simply not true. what i take issue with congressman flake, he said an internet service provider has 100% knowledge over what you do. how you access the internet. what device you use. edge providers those like google
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and facebook, they only have a snapshot of what you do. but your internet service provider knows everything about you. they know where you are when you are on line. when you access the internet. they know what device you used. they know what websites you visit. all of that information lets them into our lives. and if they have access to that information and more about every single digital footprint, everything we do online, everything we search, they can use, they can monitor and harvest that information and sell it to third parties and we're at extreme danger. what if they were to sell that to your insurance company. that if they knew i was checking online at mcdonald's my insurance rates might go up because they might know that i'm not necessarily compliant with my diet. that may seem far-fetched. it totally is not. what if they were to sell that to your employer and they have access to information that you might not want them.
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that could harm your economic standing. so, having access to that information, all of that information online, the history, especially when we're talking about the internet of things when you can literally look into my refrigerator and see what i'm doing, that is going to let people look into your lives and do what they will with that information. >> and people saying we want to by the congressmen's history. they work for us, the congress? >> this would be a fascinating thing. there could be laws to shame family people. yeah, folks online on twitter someone suggesting a fund-raising for it. the idea if this were just a good idea what if you went up into edge's browsing history. to the commissioner's point, yes, i don't think it's anyone's business. >> i want to first of all thank mignon clyburn, the commissioner but tonight, ari, "growing up
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trump." >> dmx said rapping 20 years, you're just 20 years old. that was his explanation for people too young in the game. we want to hear from young people, 20 somethings and new activists. >> so you're going to have basically say live focus group of trump supporters and resisters. >> yeah, the new generation. >> it's going to be fascinating. the point, this is must-see tv. >> thank you, joy. coming up, the trump administration could be on the verge of a civil war with the gop and what the trump family's lavish lifestyle is costing new yorkers and people in palm beach, florida. and we're joined by yvette nicole brown with her new documentary. it was love at firsh and all you wanted to do was surround them in comfort and protection that's why only pampers swaddlers
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do you think that this is -- is this an actual negotiating tactic by the president? or do you think it's a constructive way to do it? >> i mean, it's constructive in fifth grade, but it may allow a child to get his way. but that's not how our government works. >> it was already overcast in washington, d.c. on thursday. but freedom caucus member justin amash had individual shade with those words for donald trump. ammash is responding to trump's earlier attack on the freedom caucus for the essential role they played in tanking one of trump's key campaign promises to repeal and replace bair. on thursday morning, the president tweeted the freak come cause will hurt the entire republican agenda if they don't get on the team and fast. we might fight them in 2018. the declaration of war with the most conservative wing formally known as the tea party prompts
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this response from asmash. it didn't take long for the swamp to drain real donald trump. no name. and then things got really ugly. trump social media director dan ska vino took to twitter to summon the power of the trump train to challenge ammash in a primary challenge. they were the originally anti-government, anti-establishment beloved by the gop base. they specialize in primary and sitting republicans. remember eric cantor? boom. gone. blah better way to show their cred that they're tea parties and voters by publicly thwarting the most powerful person in the d.c. establishments -- the president. that's why ammash responded trump admin and establishment have merged in into #trumpestablishment. same old agenda attack
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conservatives, libertarians and independent thinkers. national republican consultant kate dawson and charlie seitz. all friends of the show. our new friend, kristin, i do find it a bit strange that donald trump and his team, or donald trump is trying to cast the tea party as the establishments? >> it's going to make his life very difficult when it comes to midterms because donald trump was not popular with the conservative base during the primaries. and he had to really win them over and a lot of conservatives felt like they were holding their nose and vote fog donald trump. they said they'll overlook his political leanings and things that he said that they did not appreciate. he's sawing away at his constituency that he worked hard to get. these caucus members are in very safe seats and if donald trump does try to primary or move the
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momentum that way, he's not going to be able to, because the koch brothers and several of their organizations have pledged eight-figure funds to support these guys. and now they're incumbents and the republican national convention, they have to support those men with their dollars. >> caton dawson. you're a good strategist. what could the possible strategic value be, if you're in a republican white house, of going to war with the most conservative republicans in your caucus? >> it's a waste of time, joy. is what it is. these 33 members of the freedom caucus are conservatives. they're from bedrock conservative districts. very, very hard to beat. but you can make them uncomfortable. most of these guys hardly ever get primaried. they're out of the tea party mold. they're the ones that ideologically are looking at debt at all times.
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congressman mulvaney, director, out of that caucus, so very hard to beat them. again, i think donald trump soon is going to be looking at the senate, that's where the action is going to be. that's where the play is going to be. so, we'll see if the rhetoric matches the bully. any president can beat one, two, or three people if they focus. republican or democrat. if they decide you're the guy that has got innocent president's way the donors or infrastructure are going to take one or two out, you're not going to deal with 33. >> i think that's the point, charlie. you have a president that won michigan by 800, or 1,000 votes. on saturday tweeted back at dan ska vino, bring it on. ooulz all stand up for liberty and constitution. he's basically using it for fund-raising. i mean, is going after somebody with that specificity, besides
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the investigation that's involved in it, is that just smart politics? >> no, mark twain once said to a man with a hammer everything looks like a nail. apparently, donald trump is a man with a twitter account who thinks that the answer to everything is a bullying feet. the problem is dot math here. republicans in the house can only lose 22 votes to get anything passed, tax reform, infrastructure or debt ceiling. there are 33 members of the freedom caucus. again, do the math on this. how does this end well. unless donald trump thinks he's going to get democrats to bail him out and cooperate with him, he's basically picks exactly the wrong fight. first of all because he needs the votes but also because this is going to divide the trump conservative base. what are the sean hannities and rush limbaughs and laura ingrahams going to do now? these are groups that have championed for years and year.
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so, i also think that justin amash has come up with an interesting phrase. he talked abo about #trumpestablishment. that's a name that can be very damaging to trump trump. because his entire brand is anti-establishment. and yet he's going up against the genuine anti-establishment members of his own party. if that sticks that could start eroding. >> the idea that donald trump is coming in and cleaning up washington. if now, he allows the tea party to pull the same act on him as they did on eric cantor, saying, no, he's the swamp. we're the ones draining the swamp. doesn't he place himself in a completely untenable position when he wants to do other things like tax cuts? >> yeah, he's put himself in a very difficult position. one of the things we should look at is really who has the leverage and does the freedom caucus have any reason to truly fear donald trump.
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it was donald trump as the negotiations were going on that capitulated and agreed to the approached health care plan that would drop essential benefits as a way to appease the freedom caucus, and the freedom caucus said we're not down with the program. we're not going to vote for this. he showed his cards, they smell blood. the constituency might be feel something buyer's remorse, you know? i think he's garshing and betting on his belief that all of the people who voted for him are going to come out against these people in 2018. but they work for constituents. they do not work for donald trump. their job is to do what their constituents asked them do. >> right now, donald trump after the defeat of his american health care act said he's done, he's not doing health care
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anymore. just this morning, he tweeted that he's back if the game, anybody he says, especially fake news media, hello, who thinks that repeal and replay of obamacare is dead does not know the love and strength in our party. charlie just pointed out 33 members in the freedom caucus. only 18 voted against the bill. if they go back and do health care again, is it the moderate republicans that are the most at risk when they go home in 2018? back with something even more draconi draconian, more cuts to medicaid, that doesn't hurt his tea party members that puts the moderates on the hook, right? >> right. it's really difficult. my favorite line was nobody knew how complex health care would be. we all knew. this is what's concerning to me. i sat on the right, and we have eight years to do this. trying to push republicans come up with a tenable plan, right, let's unify around this. the plan that paul ryan and
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donald trump supported only had about 17% approval rating. so, they really have to go back to the drawing board and take their time. because at the end of the day, people back in their home districts want to know they're covered. this bill sent premiums right back up 15%, 20%. they have to get good results and gop has to prove they can govern well. >> and katon dawson, republican governors including the governor of ohio who got together and said, look, we've got a way to show up medicaid. do they even look at that plan as a starting point to come up with an idea that still kept people covered. >> well, i think they look at everything. but let me give you a political reality, whoever owns health care is probably going to lose. eight years we ran and loaded the deck all over the country on president obama and health care. if you want to look at the political spectrum when you come home, it's really tough and soon the republicans might own health care. and we've got the midterms
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coming up, 2018 which usually decimates a party. so there's your diciness in campaigns and elections, if you own it you better explain it and it better work. >> going back to health care seems like an insane idea. christian tin hellgrunn, charlie sikes up next. my sweethearts gone sayonara. this scarf all thats left to remem...
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♪ the real story the surveillance or what's goes on in the investigation? >> i think all of it needs to be examined. obviously, if there was intentional latent disclosure of names of people who were in the trump campaign, that has to be revealed. but the fact is that we know for a fact the russians tried to
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change the outcouple of our election. attacking the very fundamental of democracy. we know they did that. we need to know how, we need to know why? and most of all we need to know what to do to prevent this activity which they continue to carry on in free nations around the world. >> senator john mccain tried to refocus the investigation on the matter at hand, russia's interference in the 2016 election. meanwhile, trump took to twitter to decry surveillance. joining me the ranking member of the cia subcommittee of the house intelligence committee. thank you so much for being here, representative. let's start back with what mccain had to say. he was asked to comment on the chairman of the committee on which he served, chairman nunes. this is a question whether or not nes is acting properly as committee chair. >> this is obviously a schism
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between republican and democrat let alone the bizarre fashion in which all of this happened. if we're really going to get to the bottom of these things, it's got to be done in a bipartisan fashion. as far as i could tell, congressman nunes killed that. >> do you think, representative falwell, that nunez is now a credible chairman for the house intelligence committee? >> he's not credible, joy, in this investigation, and he should be as far away from it as possible. just to go back, we had a very credible hearing, a very illuminating hearing with fbi director comey monday of last week. then the very next day is where all of this really unraveled. what i think happened, it's pretty clear, the facts were put forward to the american people that there is an sbreegs the president's campaign as to the russia interference. so, the white house sought to work with and use the chairman as a way to try to validate the president's wiretapping claims.
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the only way to get back on track and have a real credible investigation that makes progress is for him to step aside. >> other option we've heard talked about, house speaker nancy pelosi said about, doing a 9/11-style commission that would take it out of either of the committees. this is chris wallace this morning on fox interviewing mitch mcconnell on the senate side as to what he thought about that. take a listen. >> given all of the politics, the continuing controversy, why not appoint an independent 9/11-style commission. or have the justice department appoint a special council, so you have a truly nonpartisan independent investigation that everybody can trust. it's just not necessary. based on what we know now. we've got a bipartisan investigation under way. it's called the senate intelligence committee. senator byrd, senator warner had
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a joint press conference this week. i think they clearly laid out they're going wherever the facts take them. we don't need yet another investigation. >> given the kol lance of information in the house process, is the senate committee good enough or do you agree with mitch mcconnell that there needs to be an independent commission? >> an independent commission is needed more than ever. every democrat supports it. one republican walter jones also supports it. joy, i wrote that legislation partially informed by my experience. i was a capitol hill intern when i was 20 years old when september 11th happened. i saw how democrats and republicans united. came together. did an investigation in the house but also allowed an independent commission to find out what happened. and to make reforms so that we would never find ourselves vulnerable to an attack like that again. we need to do the same thing here. i think it's not only the most
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comprehensive way to find just what happened but it's an insurance policy against a compromised house investigation. zbletsz just say that is not to be. and there there still be house and senate investigations going on. do you think that one of the committees -- right now the senate is the big one. but do you think the house committee to immunize michael flynn, give him immunity to compel his testimony? >> right now, we don't know what he wants to be immunized from. when i was a prosecutor, anytime a witness asked for immunity, we'd say, what do you have right now, joy, generally, incident people don't seek immunity. i would also want to know if the department of justice is okay with this. right now, general flynn, we know he was taking money from essentially russia's intelligence service which they use russia today as a cut-out to disseminate false information as a propaganda tool. i'm going to hold back until we
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know just exactly what he wants to give up. >> you agree with general flynn on that question of whether or not an innocent person seeks immunity. listen, just an interesting piece of sound. vladimir putin aide dmitry peskov was on with george stephanopoulos this morning. he was asked what similarities between donald trump and vladimir putin. interesting to get your reaction. >> you said that president putin and were very much alike in their approach to international relations. how so? >> they both insist on the priority as national interests. and they understand really well that sometimes it is in your national interest to conduct good relationships with a counterpart, ensuring that those relationships are mutually beneficial. >> a lot of trump supporters take that exact same view, interestingly enough. that donald trump's repeated contact with russia are actually a positive for the united states, because it would allow
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us to work with what was an as versus saer, do you confer with that? >> , joy, every time i start to wonder am i chasing ghosts here or going down the rabbit hole with this russia investigation, i take a step back and i remind myself we're talking about team, personal political and financial ties with a foreign adversary. this is not a case of people having such extensive ties to germany or new zealand or mexico. this is a country that even post-cold war continues to underminus in syria. continues to work against the interests of ukraine. and we just learned a general said last week that they may be supplying arms to the taliban who are killing u.s. soldiers. so russia is not our friend. we should look i think with a healthy dose of skepticism at any person who has such tie the with russia as they're interfering with our election. >> congressman, thank you very much. >> my pleasure. coming up, champagne wishes and caviar dreams. lifestyles of the rich and
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play ball! baseball season officially kicks off today, followed by a dozen matchups on monday. including the home opener for the washington nationals, the team that asked donald trump to throw out the ceremonial first pitch. it's tradition, after all. every sitting president has thrown a first pitch at least one major league baseball game since president william howard taft threw out the first ball for the national senators in 1910, trump declined on tuesday to step up to the mound because of, quote, scheduling issues. we can't help to wonder if that's the real reason why. especially because trump actually played baseball. there he is in a yearbook photo of the variety baseball team. according to sources in "the washington post" story he was quite versatile with a bat,
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quote, purpling another boy or smashing a baseball when he made it to the mat. trump talked about it in 2014 interview. >> i was the best baseball player in new york when i was young. >> best baseball player, really? let's do the math. trump was playing baseball in high school at the age of 16 or 17 which was around 1962. he was supposedly the best baseball player in new york when the yankees won the '62 world series boasting a roster that included mickey mantle, roger maris and yogi berra. this is the guy better than those guys. look at those images from the other times trump has throne pitches at major league games. facial expressions. could it be that trump who is clearly no mariano riviera wants to avoid the boos and hiss that could greet him at nationals park. 90% of voters chose hillary clinton over him. trump may not be so popular with
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the players either. close to 30% of the players in the mlb rosters in 2016 were born outside of the united states. perhaps no other sport knows the immigration patterns as well as baseball. starting today, millions will be cle cheering for their favorite flavors. from countries trump has vowed to shut out. thousands are calling on melania trump to vacate trump tower or pay up. stay with us. he's the one. (vo)...it was meant to be. and love always keeps you safe. we're fine. (vo) love is why we built a car you can trust. now and for a long time to come. the all-new subaru impreza sedan and five-door. a car you can love no matter what road you're on. the subaru impreza. more than a car, it's a subaru.
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hi, i'm frank. i take movantik for oic, opioid-induced constipation. had a bad back injury, my doctor prescribed opioids which helped with the chronic pain, but backed me up big-time. tried prunes, laxatives, still constipated... had to talk to my doctor. she said, "how long you been holding this in?" (laughs) that was my movantik moment. my doctor told me that movantik is specifically designed for oic and can help you go more often. don't take movantik if you have a bowel blockage or a history of them. movantik may cause serious side effects, including symptoms of opioid withdrawal, severe stomach pain and/or diarrhea,
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hard to know how much they're spending. recently said that it cost the nypd up to $146,000 a day to protect the first lady and the couple's son bear ron at trump tower. the city is something the federal government to reimburse those expenses. meanwhile the president is currently golfing at his club, his 14th golf trip since president. back with us and i'm going to you, kristin, on the hypocrisy of the golf. donald trump was tweeting madly when president obama was in office, when will obama go on the next vacation after he wins the election the day after. with the tsa falling apart. president obama's vacation is costi ining taxpayers money. he's doing it every weekend. >> it is hard to stomach. this is a political tactic. i think for his image, right, everything that's going on right
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now with the russia investigations with his policy agenda, he should be looking, how does this look to the american people, especially so many of us who weren't wealthy, right. better for him strategically to be back in the white house and to show that he's driving policy and serious about this if he's concerned about it. >> michelle bernard, you look at the calendars, the weekends at mar-a-lago, all through march. i think trump's core base doesn't case. he said he could shoot someone on fifth avenue. i believe that's true. there are republicans who bran for district that came close to carrying and there are independents that exist that voted for donald trump. how does this make them him look to me? >> i think they have quite a quandary on their hands when it comes to donald trump and the money that we as citizens are spending to keep him secure as
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he travels around the country to play golf. it's kind of funny, there's that saying what's good for the goose is good for the gander. these are all of the things that they explained about president obama and quite frankly, other presidents. it's a fair complaint, i believe when it comes to the president. i don't think that the country can do anything about it. and what we really need to be focused on, quite frankly, is the budget, and where the proposing budget cuts. and that sort of thing. when it comes to melania trump, i've got to tell you i really believe that it is inherently anti-feminist and anti-woman for anyone to believe that they should dictate how she decides what is best for her life and what is best for her son. maybe the public complaints will get the trumps to cough up money when it comes to security that the city is spending in taking care of her. but she fully has a right to decide where she wants to live and what is best for her life and how she's going to conduct herself as the first lady. it's no one's business just like
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michelle obama's decision to bare her arms or focus on child obesity and eating healthy. >> we talked about this before, the idea that the first ladies of the united states is refusing to live in the white house. not only that, but her husband's travel is costing not just new york, we talk about new york a lot. but you're down there in florida. just mar-a-lago at all. we talk about the budget, politicals estimate based on the journal accounting office based on reporting of a similar obama trip, every trip that he takes to mar alag goal costs $4 million. palm beach, new york time reports, $200,000 in lost fuel sales at a local airport because they can't use it. 75 no shows at a restaurant. 250 private flightses. you have the right of the trumps to live the lifestyle they want. and cost that we have to bear. >> first and foremost, joy, let's not blame the first lady
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would you want to live in the white house with donald trump? i certainly wouldn't it. the payday loan presidency of donald trump continues just like in any good con. just like in the payday industry, lots of promises of easy money, convenience and happy talk until the sticker shock kicks in. let's look at the numbers, the numbers are rather compelling in my opinion. $150,000 nearly a day which translates to about $50 million a just to keep melania at trump tower at taxpayer expense. and the golf trips. the gull of these billionaires and millionaires who like to brag about how much money they have. yet, the public has to foot the bill for their travel. we've got nearly six trips. we're not even 2 1/2 months into this presidency. hitting on the $20 million mark. at the same time, in his presidency, how many trips did barack obama take -- zero. and donald trump has the stones it to say that obama needs to
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get off the golf course. joy, it's just the con of a presidency. >> the choices that melania makes do impact the taxpayers. michelle obama did let's move which he raised from entities like walmart and nike. the secret service has put in a request for $6 million just next year alone. 28 million of that is just to protect melania and her son. >> i think it gets difficult when you ask someone to reimburse. because the only two required to have secret service protection are the president and vice president. it would be a national security nightmare if a grandchild or child or, you know, a son-in-law of the president was kidnapped or injured or hurt in any way. there should be no concern on the federal side with respect to budget. there should be concern, as far as the trumps are concerned to
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be mindful of what they do and don't do. one thing that michelle obama got a lot of flak for was her foreign travel. it turns out at the end of the term, she did less foreign travel than hillary clinton and laura bush. and she was mindful of those costs. and the trumps should be mindful as well. does he need to go to mar-a-lago every weekend? absolutely no does she need to take a separate plane down to mar-a-lago as opposed to meeting him in washington and taking air force one which is already going down there, yes. >> what do you make of the argument? they're sort of two separate things. there's trump loving to go to golf every weekend and the optics of that and the cost of it. and then there's the melania living situation. your thoughts. >> melania trump i agree with michelle needs to do what she needed to do. i live in new york city just around the corner from trump towers i wouldal agree do for my convenience it would be great
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for her to live down there. i think the american people really want to focus on getting things done, right. everyone can scream politics. we talk about the fact that they're golfing. republicans were so critical of michelle obama and barack obama for playing golf. let's trim the fat here. let's talk about stuff that actually matters. it's those complaints that make americans tune out. they get apathetic about politics, they don't vote and they have this animosity towards washington instead of saying how can we work with our government? let's call our senators. >> michelle, at the same time there is a let them eat cake aspects to that this. this is a family that lives in a literal golden tower and they're asking for our sympathy because they don't want to all be forced to live in the 240-year-old house. there is an inspect that it seems unfair that the taxpayers should have to pay for their lifestyle. even if you feel badly with the situation she has with wanting to keep her son here, we're
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paying for all of this. >> arguments i'd make for the trumps if i were an adviser to melania trump i'd say go back in history and look at what other first ladies have done in order to deal with these types of issues. jackie onassis, she went out and raised money privately to do all of the renovations she wanted to do to the white house. there has to be a way, given donald trump's allegations about his wealth, assuming it's there, to be able to deal with this and reimburse the taxpayers in new york for the security of his wife. and of his son. my only point is simply that no one has the right to tell melania trump that they know better than she does somewhere she should live or how she could raise her son. all of the issues around the fiscal appropriateness of this, i absolutely agree with this. but i think there is a way for the trumps to be able to cake care of this. and if donald trump he would do so. all of the allegations that he constantly made about barack obama are going to be thrown
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back in his face when it comes re-election time if he makes 2 through the following four years he's going to have to contend with how he spent the nation's money. >> is there a discontent at this point with the amount of money they are spending just on their lifestyle? >> oh, absolutely. i mean, look, there is a contempt for the process. a contempt for the people in this flagrant disregard. again, from one side of his mouth he talks about saving the taxpayer money and efficiencies and all of the winning he's going to bring. but the truth of the matter, it's a massive inconvenience. the people of palm beach county are talking not only about the cost involve but the quality of life. this is a conscientious decision made by the president and first lady. i take exception with some of the comments on the panel. these are people that know what they're doing, they know the implications and they do it anyway because they don't care.
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i find that contemptuous of the american people and american taxpayer. >> we just had the financial tax forms that sole ivanka and jared, the daughter and son-in-law, they're beneficiaries of about $740 million in real estate investments. you have the other sons traveling on business with taxpay taxpayer-funded security. this family is living quite well on the taxpayer dime. and donald trump still has not made a commitment to not take his salary that he's going to donate it back. we have no sign that he's going to do that. >> asked the press corps for if he was going to do that? >> yeah. >> this goes back to the mindfulness issue. the trump sons have a right to be in business. they have a right to go do business. but they should be mindful of their travel if they're going to travel with the secret service. because there's an advance teams, lots of expensive hotels. they're not staying in cheap places. >> yep. >> and it costs the taxpayers a
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lot of money. by the way, there's an easy way to calm this down for the white house, admit they were wrong which they're never going to do. but donald trump, you don't know what the job is like until you're in. now he recognizes why he should play golf. >> by the way, camp david running empty. >> $8 million a year. not using it. >> thank you very much. kirstin haglund welcome to the show. and michelle and fernand, thank you. >> yvette nicole brown joins me live to talk about her very timely documentary.
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imagine if the things you bought every day earned you miles to get to the places you really want to go. with the united mileageplus explorer card, you'll get a free checked bag, 2 united club passes... priority boarding... and 50,000 bonus miles. everything you need for an unforgettable vacation. the united mileageplus explorer card. imagine where it will take you. we're doing very well in iraq. our soldiers are fighting and fighting like never before. and the results are very, very good. i just wanted to let everyone know. >> same donald trump who ran for office on his alleged opposition to the iraq war is now boasting
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that american troops are fighting once again in iraq. trump is also working to fulfill his campaign promise to loosen the rules of engagement in american counterterrorism operations. rules intended to minimize civilian deaths. meanwhile, u.s. officials are investigating reports that as many as 200 civilians were killed in mosul, in air strikes conducted by u.s.-led coalitions. they confirmed it would be one of the highest civilian death tolls since the beginning of the iraq war back in 2003. we have to be careful not to forget about america's wars in the deluge of other things in the administration. on tuesday it will be 50 years since the reverend martin luther king jr. delivered his beyond address at riverside church here in new york city. and dr. king criticized the vietnam war as wear on the american poor as well as on the vietnamese people. and urged americans to focus on the battle for social injustice
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still being fought at home. >> the world now demands the maturity of america, that we may not be able to achieve. it demands and we admit that we have been wronged from the beginning of our adventure in vietnam. that we've been detrimental to the life of the vietnamese people. the situation is one in which we must be ready to turn sharply from our present ways. >> our good friend, the reverend dr. william barber is kicking off the ceremony delivering the sermon at riverside church. up next, community star yvette nicole brown will join us to discuss a new documentary on a topic that literally affects each and every one of us. stay with us. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. with it, i earn unlimited 2% cash back on all of my purchasing.
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caused this bridge on i-85 to collapse. >> thank goodness no one got hurt. >> traffic backed up for miles, a standstill overnight. the long-term impact crippling schools and forcing drivers to find alternate rides this morning. >> a really huge mess. >> it's going to take months for them to fix it, which it's going to take a lot of patience. >> the collapse of atlanta's i-85 bridge this week put the infrastructure back into the headlines. the american society of civil engineers has found that 23% of our bridges are either unsound or functionally obsolete. donald trump has said he wants to invest in infrastructure, but he has yet to lay out a plan. in the meantime actress and comedian nicolette brown is doing her part for americans to realize how dangerous this is. >> once upon the state america
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built the greatest system, the interstate highway system, over 46,000 miles of road that connect us and bring us to depend on things every day. those roads absolutely changed our lives and we're absolutely wearing them out. thedesigned 60 years ago was never meant to handle the traffic it does today. think of the highway as your jeans, old, worn, and a real problem. the problem is we've gained weight. we can barely squeeze into our jeans. >> joining us now, nick let brown of "be prepared to stop," and she's host of a show and back with me is co-host jonathan capehart. you know nicolette brown from "community." this is a fabulous documentary.
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congratulations on doing it. people understand a driveover bridge that's not in good shape. the asce which gives a report card to infrastructure has given an overall rate of d-plus to america, poor, at risk, mostly below standard, with elements approaching the end. our roads are literally crumbling under us. think about. a d-plus. would you eat at a restaurant request a d-plus? absolutely not. it's the rating that the roads have been given. we hope people stop and introduce them to infrastructure. our highway trust fund has nts been increased since 1993 which is ridiculous when you think about it. there's been no increase. even is afraid of taxes. but if it keeps the road safe for your baby in a school bus, it's worth it.
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go ahead. >> finish your sentence. finish your sentence. >> it helps you get your things. everything in this room i'm sitting in came off a truck. if the roads don't work, you can't get your stuff. think about it from a personal standpoint. >> let me play a trailer, one little crip. literally everything you have is trucked to you. take a look. >> the bridges are old and just falling apart. >> 200 million times a day motorists in the united states are driving over structurally deficient bridges in urban areas. >> most people do not realize that every tangible object, every piece of food they consumed was most likely in a truck before it got to them. >> the only hope is for the american public to come to grips with the reality that we are 28 in the world on infrastructure investment. >> one of the things you guys did is you talked about what
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would happen five days without a truck being able to get to you. talk about that. >> my favorite show is "walking dead." we're five days away from an apocalypse. i think that when people watch the documentary, they'll see that this is something that greatly impacts them personally. it's the whole -- just in the same way health care got everybody up, it's my appeal, my cancer. this is the road you're driving on. we're trying to give it a personal bent. maybe we can go to town halls and talk about these potholes and bridges, you know. it's a very personal issue. >> jonathan, the reason is this fear of raising taxes. >> yes. >> is there any will in washington to get this done, which is to raise taxes to fix the roads and bridges. >> the short answer is no, and
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i'm so glad yvette brought this up to you at the beginning of her segment. correct me if i'm wrong. since 1993. >> 1993. >> the tax money that goes into the fund is what keeps the roads and bridges in repair. what i'm trying to figure out and maybe you know this, how do we bridge the gap between members of congress here in washington who need to raise taxes in order to refill the trust fund and the american people. >> yeah, absolutely. go on. >> we have to find a way to make people understand this affects them. we're very reactionary instead of proactive. like the bridge in atlanta, we have to get the bridge back up. everyone is scrambling to do that. if we take care of them before they crumble, we'd be in a better position. we have to understand this is a crisis right now. not ten years from now. our roads and bridges are in trouble right now. it's things like that, joy, is getting word out.
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>> absolutely. the documentary is "be prepared to stop" yvette nicolette brown, we happen to love the same show. i know you'll be watching the last show. >> thank you. bye. bye, jonathan. nice to meet you. >> it will be on amazon and itunes later. check it out. that is our show for today. be sure to join us next week for more a.m. joy. keep it on msnbc for the rest of your sunday. you don't let anything keep you sidelined.
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