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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  June 1, 2017 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT

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whether that's desirable or not. >> you don't need to suck up all the room in the room. >> thank you both. this sunday, guess what? you can hear from vladimir putin himself. the russian president has agreed to sit down with megyn kelly for an exclusive one-on-one interview. this is a video of them greeting each other today. you can catch the interview this sunday at 7:00 p.m. eastern for sunday night with megyn kelly. that is all in. rachel maddow starts now. ari in for rachel. >> good evening, chris. one question. why won't you move on? >> here's the thing. i'll move on as soon as i know what the heck happened, which continues to be the thing that makes me not move on. >> i think with journalism, sometimes you keep searching for the actual facts until you're all done. thank you, chris. >> eventually we're going to learn. >> i appreciate it. i want to thank everyone at home for joining us this hour. i want to tell you rachel is still under the weather. we spoke with her tonight. she wants everyone to know that
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she says she is going to be fine. she will be back soon. she wanted me to tell you she is thankful for all the good wishes. now, we have a big show tonight. trump is pulling the u.s. out of the climate accord as you know. tonight we're going to hear directly from the man who plans to stand in his way. california governor jerry brown here for the interview tonight. that is coming up. but we begin with a report that is shedding light on a very dark corner of the trump/russia mystery. the part about what russia might get for all that meddling. this is a story that puts some key facts and named sources on that question. here's the context. there have been many public snal signals the structrump administn has warned to russia. to comments about giving russia back the diplomatic compounds inside the u.s. that the obama administration said were used for russian intel. obama kicking the russians out in late december. that was part of the formal
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punishment for the meddling in the u.s. election. that "washington post" report cited several people with knowledge of the exchanges. that is a loose reporting term. it means people close to the activity who know about it and don't want to speak under their own names. that is how of course a lot of russia reporting has been trickling out. reporters with solid sources vouch for those sources. they verify the information that's coming out. and we all learn a little bit more as we go. at least for those of who aren't moving on. but tonight we have a report that is different. long time investigative reporter michael michael just published how after the campaign and after the transition the new trump administration was rushing to try to ease sanctions on russia right when it walked in the door. by some accounts tonight, this is the most comprehensive detailing of how the trump
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administration in government approached those obama sanctions on russia. the trump white house trying to eliminate the punishment for meddling in the u.s. election. this is according to senior diplomats inside the u.s. federal government. quote, unknown to the public at the time, top trump administration officials almost as soon as they took office tasked state department staffers with developing proposals for the lifting of economic sanctions, the return of diplomatic compounds and other steps to relieve tensions with moscow. i want to note of course that wording reflects what sounds like the trump administration's view because prior administration here, the obama folks, didn't think there were tensions with moscow over sanctions. they thought those were formal punishments over the meddling, a matter of foreign policy accountability, not personal tensions. let me show you one of these named sources. tom who resigned as -- human
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rights for obama. to lobby congress after learning from colleagues the administration was developing a plan to lift sanctions and possibly arrange a summit between trump and russian president vladimir putin as part of an effort to achieve a, quote, grand bargain can moscow. it would have been a, quote, win/win with mouse cow. we have another source. dan freed who coordinated u.s. sanctions policy until stepping down in february describing what he saw happening at the state department when the trump administration took over saying, quote, there was serious consideration by the white house to unilaterally rescind the sanctions. he said in the first few weeks of the administration he received several panicky calls from government officials who told him they had been directed to develop a sanctions lifting package and imploring him, please, my god, can't you stop this. this is really something. some of it is familiar in the broad strokes because it's no
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mystery that russia was of interest to the trump administration. what we have detailed here, though, is now what the trump administration wanted to give russia. when it comes to what the u.s. would get in return, a basic feature of any deal, let alone a major foreign policy reversal after this russian interference, well, on that there's very little detail. so among many other problems with the trump administration right now, that is starting to look like a big one. why the rush towards what diplomats are depicting tonight as this one-sided deal? joining us now to help answer is former ambassador daniel fried. once of the sources quoted in this breaking news. the ambassador spent 40 years working in the service as this nation's longest serving diplomat until his retirement this past february. he was also chief u.s. coordinator for sanctions
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possible. ambassador, i appreciate your time. i will tell you straight up it is an honor to have you here. i'm excited to learn from you. first of all, how can you -- how did you first get this information while you were there, that the trump administration wanted to lift these sanctions and walk us through what you can tell us about all that. >> sure. during the early days and weeks of the trump administration, when i was still in my job before i retired, a number of colleagues came to me and i heard indirectly that still more colleagues were concerned that the trump administration, the incoming team was going to unilaterally rescind the sanctions on russia which had been placed there because of russia's aggression against ukraine. it was further said by these people that there would be no action required from russia. that it would be simply a unilateral american cave. this didn't make a lot of sense.
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i could not -- i never saw an executive order which would have done this, but i had heard from, after a few days and a couple of weeks, i had heard from enough people that i believed that it was at least possible. and that was a great concern to me. >> you say a number of people. can you tell us who? >> i'm not going to mention who it was or where they worked. all i would say is i found the stories sufficiently credible that i was concerned that there might actually be something done quickly. this was a period, you remember, when the early trump administration was issuing a number of executive orders. the first one on immigration was in rather spectacular fashion not thought through. and i was concerned that the trump administration in aush would do something whichould make liars of the american government which is a bad idea
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and prove us to be faithless in supporting ukraine and standing firm with our european allies. so i did -- i did believe that it was possible. i can't say that it was true. but i believed it was possible and i was concerned. >> you use the term unilateral, which i believe is something of a term of art in this diplomatic context. by that, do you mean that there would not be any russian role to play, anything they would have to do? >> well, that's what i understood. now, of course we put on the sanctions on russia in order to put pressure on them to pull out of ukraine. to stop the fighting. to take their troops out and allow the ukrainians to take control of their own territory, especially in the east. if the russians did that, we and
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our european allies agreed we would lift the sanctions or most of them. we would lift the sanctions except for those on crimea and the ones on crimea we would lift when the russians got out. we took the sanctions in order to lift them, but not just to lift them in exchange for russian actions. >> you were former chief u.s. coordinator for sanctions policy among your other many stints at the state. give us a sense of how unusual this approach is for sanctions policy and if you know, were there efforts like this to relieve sanctions in russia on any other country in which you describe as that early period? >> whenever we place sanctions we do so to change behavior. if the behavior changes, we rescind the sanctions. the purpose of sanctions isn't to be about themselves. it's to get the other guy to do something. and in this case what we wanted the other guy to do, that being
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president putin and his government, was to pull out of ukraine and allow the ukrainians to run their own country. what was troubling about these stories is that suddenly i was hearing that we were preparing to rescind sanctions in exchange for, well, nothing. >> for nothing. >> that strikes me -- >> for nothing. just to -- that is the -- >> i don't know that that true. >> go ahead. >> first, i don't know that that's true. i know many people said it was true and i was concerned that it might be. i have to be clear about what i knew at the time and what i didn't know. but unilateral lifting of sanctions in return for nothing is unusual and a bad idea. now, it is possible that if your sanctions are a kplaet failucome and no other country supports you and they haven't achieved anything, you might krg just
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throwi throwing in the towel. but the russia sanctions are not only effective, they're supported by our european allies, the japanese, the canadiens, the south koreans. a lot of other governments support us. so we need to maintain solidarity and the word of the united states needs to mean something. now, of course, if the trump administration made a decision to rescind sanctions, there was nothing that i or anybody else could do. but it struck me as a bad idea. >> i appreciate the measured way you're explaining that to us and that it has to do with basically the sources and other colleagues you had at which you came to that conclusion and the difference between that and whether you had sort of, for example, seen something on paper that said it was something for nothing. i appreciate that. >> that's right. >> i also want to give you the opportunity to respond to some of the criticism that is out there. not explicitly directed at you, but quite frankly directed at
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what we might say career civil servants like yourself. as you know, there has been this argument that there is some kind of, quote, deep stayed or some kind of internal federal government criticism that is somehow unfair to the trump administration and you've detailed here some of the your views and concerns about this given your expertise. i wonder if you have any response to that given that has also been leveled by this administration at people who serve in the state department and other agencies? >> i served 40 years in the foreign service. i work for democratic presidents. i worked for republican presidents. i worked in the nsc four years for president clinton. i worked in the nsc four years for president bush. i'm proud of that service. my oath and the oath of all of my colleagues is to the constitution. and that means we serve the president who's elected. so in expressing concerns about
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what i consider an ill-advised move, if it were truly being considered, i think i was doing my duty as i understood it. and the administration needs to consider all options. that's true. but it needs to do so in light of the facts and to rush something through and to give the russians something for nothing struck me as a terrible idea. still does. >> ambassador daniel fried, we are indebted to your expertise. i appreciate you sharing some of this with us tonight. >> my pleasure. >> as mentioned, he was one of the people quoted in this blockbust blockbuster yahoo niece piece. a person of interest now reportedly part of the investigation, a name you might not have heard as much also as i mentioned we're going to speak with california governor jerry
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march 7. on march 8th, in london where julian assange has lived from charges in his native sweden, over there nigel farage was seen leaving the embassy. that's him in the back in this fo photo. he is a far right polltation from the uk most famous for leading that effort in the uk to do brexit. you may also recognize from his time right there in the gold guilded elevators of trump tower or from his time on the campaign trail with donald trump. yep. and nigel was back in the uk at wikileaks hau wikilea wikileaks headquarters on march 9th in london. a buzz feed news reporter saw him leaving the embassy and asked a basic question. what was he doing there that
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particular day? ni he responded he couldn't remember. more recently he was there, for quote, journalistic reasons. today it reports that nigel farage is a person of interest into the inquiry of russia and the trump campaign. sources with knowledge of the investigation said the former ukip leader had raised the interest of fbi investigators because of his relationships with individuals connected to both the trump campaign and julian assange, the wikileaks founder whom farage visited in march. farage has not been accused of wrongdoing and a not a expect or target, but being a person of interest believes investigates believe he may have information about the acts that are under investigation and he may therefore be subject to their scrutiny. the article goes on that pop of the things the intelligence v t
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investigators have been looking at as point of contact, if you try ang late russia, wikileaks, assange and trump associates, the person who comes up with the most hits is nigil farage. there's a lot of attention being paid to him. he never worked with russian officials and described the guardian's questions about farage's activityies as verging on the hysterical. it means he now joins what is an ever-growing list of people in trump's orbit who are reported or alleged to be of some kind of interest to these investigators like the former campaign advisers roger stone and carter page. of course trump's son-in-law and adviser jared kushner plus those of greater interest, the potential subjects of criminal investigation which reportedly include former national security adviser mike flynn and former campaign chairman paul manafort. although to be clear, we don't
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know if those criminal investigations are tied to the russia probe in the election or some other type of inquiry. still that is a lot. what we do know is that we are four months and change into this administration the trump russia story clearly keeps expanding. watch this space. 60% of women are wearing the wrong size pad and... ...experience leaks. introducing always my fit. find the number that's right for your flow and panty size on the top of any always pack.
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it was 14 years ago that jim comey, then the top federal
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prosecutor in manhattan used a congressional hearing to share his strict view of public service, that it must pride integrity over loyalty because at the end of the line the only thing that matters to him is his integrity and his family. >> i do commit to you that i approach this as a professional and you mentioned integrity and loyalty. there's no choice in my mind that loyalty is a terrific thing, but integrity and the love of my family is all i have left at the end of the this life. so that is paramount in my mind. i can commit to you, though, that because i talk to much about integrity and about this great group behind me, that's what i really care about. i don't care about politics. i don't care about expeedience see. i don't care about friendship. i care about doing the right thing and i would never be part of something that i believe to be fundamentally wrong. obviously we all make policy judgments where people disagree, but i will do the right thing. >> comey's presentation worked. he was confirmed unanimously and those sharply partisan bush
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years he maintained a strong reputation among leaders in both parties, a reputation burnished just three years later in front of that very same committee when comey delivered what has been described as the most riveting 20 minutes of congressional testimony ever. comey had a story to tell and he didn't tell it through newspaper leaks or a tv interview or a speech to some fancy think tank. he used a congressional hearing to recount his unusual effort to stand up against bush administration officials who he thought were breaking the rules on surveillance. comey had determined that a surveillance program was unlawful and so he refused to extend it. at the time he was acting attorney general because john ashcroft was in the hospital and the bush white house tried to go behind comey's back to get ashcroft to extend the program from inside the hospital. quite a dirty trick. chuck schumer questioned comey about that before a hushed senate hearing. >> were you present when albert to gonzales visited attorney
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general ashcroft's bedside? >> yes. >> am i correct that the conduct of mr. gonzales and mr. card on that evening troubled you greatly? >> yes. >> okay. let me go back and take it from the top. you rushed to the hospital that evening. why? >> i'm eonly hesitating becausei need to explain why. >> please. we'll give you all the time you need, sir. >> that pause, that careful tone, that is classic jim comey. if you like him, like his supporters, people say that that is kind of a rare passion for rectitude. if you don't like him, you might say he is melo dramatic in moments that should use a little more measured approach.
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but whichever comey you see, there is certainly no doubt that he wields the civic authority and the storytelling payoff of a congressional hearing like none other. that day his story even had a star other than jim comey. the star was his boss at the time, a bedridden john ashcroft. >> i got out of the car and ran up -- literally ran up the stairs with my security detail. >> what was your concern? you were in obviously a huge hurry. >> i was concerned that given how ill i knew the attorney general was that there might be an effort to ask him to overrule me when he was in no condition to do that. and it was only a matter of minutes that the door opened and in walked mr. gonzales carrying an envelope and mr. card. they came over and stood by the bed. greeted the attorney general very briefly. then mr. gonzales began to
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discuss why they were there, to seek his approval for a matter. and explain what the matter was. >> but he expressed his reluctance or he would not sign the statement that they -- give the authorization they had asked. is that right? >> yes. and as he laid back down, he said but that doesn't matter because i'm not the attorney general. it is the attorney general and he pointed to me and i was just to his left. >> incredible story meets capable story teller. comey's testimony at that hearing was cited by president obama when he nominated him to be fbi director in 2013. he's used other hearings to press his views on everything from urban policing to apple iphone enkripcryption. so the news today, the confirmation that comey will testify before the senate next week, tees up the most anticipated event in the
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american political life since probably 2016 election night. it also sets a one week deadline for the white house to make any formal effort to restrict the testimony based on executive privilege. a lot of anticipation for this hearing, but it does have a witness who can probably live up to it. tonight's guest knows these issues intimately. ron was chief counsel of the senate judiciary committee and has served as a senior white house aide to president obama and vice president gore. you see the footage. if there is an art to congressional testimony, sir, what do you view -- how do you view jim comey's style at it? >> look, i think he has a reputation for being a straight shooter. you mentioned there are comey fans and comey detract or. i don't even think the detractors have questioned his core integrity, his core honesty. that's what donald trump is trying to put at issue in this hearing. he said yesterday on twitter that comey had given false
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testimony to congress and you can bet that's going to be trump's attack when jim comey testifies next week. so it's going to be this man with the reputation for honesty, maybe he's made some bad judgments, but has a reputation for honesty against a president who has a tortured relationship with the truth himself calling him a liar and that's going to add to the drama here. >> you say liar. people who were sympathetic to hillary clinton felt that jim comey took a finding that there was no wrongdoing justifying charges in the clinton matter and turned it into kind of an ongoing saga. but i don't think people at the time said that he was a liar. i think i they said they disagreed with the whole approach and that goes to the drama thing. he is at times dramatic. i think that's just a fact. even those folks would look at him and say yeah, compared to donald trump, if the test is truth and jim comey will be under oath next week, that might be bad for donald trump. >> that's right. i'm one of those people. i was critical of the policy
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decisions that investigative decisions and the public decisions that jim comey made, but i never called him a liar and i don't know rothers who di. you can see that's going to be h his strategy. the most people to watch is going to be the republicans on that intelligence committee. they are going to have to decide are they going to join donald trump in questioning jim comey's integrity, in questioning his honesty? are they going to do trump's bidding or are they go to get off the trump train at that stop? they're the ones who i think in some ways are in the most interesting position next week. >> you've worked as counsel in the senate. you've worked as i mention in the white house. if you were prepping for this from the congressional side and the answers they say they want to get and the white house side of what would be responsible approach, how would you do it? >> well, i think that for the committee, the most important thing is to have as precise questions as possible.
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to illucidate what they can. in parts you showed earlier, he drew clear lines about what he would talk about, what he wouldn't talk about. i don't think he's going to talk about the substance of the russian investigation. i don't think he's going to talk about kind of what the fbi was doing. but he has signaled, he will talk about his one-on-one encounters with the president, whether or not the president said to him go easy on michael flynn. if the president asked him for a loyalty pledge. i think the committee, those are the two areas where they're really going to drill down and where they're going to need precise questions to get from jim comey what happened, how it happened, what the president's attitude and demeanor was, and specifically the one most damming fact for trump that's been reported is the factor the allegation that he cleared the room before he had a one-on-one with comey. asked the attorney general and the vice president of the united states to leave the room. that's a very damming fact.
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i think the committee will really bear down on that. try to see if comey will confirm that. >> briefly, ron, prosecutors look at prosecutions and they say they're not about crimes only. they're about evidence. and who has the evidence. what evidence do you think jam jim comey would be willing to cite? >> there's been reports that comey took contemporaneous notes of these meetings with trump. we don't know if he's willing to make them public and turn them over to the committee. notes of an fbi aegent. they are his recollection but they are used as evidence. if he's prepared to turnover those notes, those really will be block buster evidence in this hearing. >> ron, really appreciate your time and expertise. >> thanks. >> we have much more to come tonight including california governor jerry brown. stay with us.
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if you want a car on the price is right in the 1980s it went a little something like this. >> there we are. now, let's show diane some more prizes. a new car! a chevrolet monte carlo ls coupe. with all the emissions and all these options. deluxe body side moldings, floor mats, air conditioning, twin
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sport mirrors, body pin striping, cruise control, 5.0 v 8 engine. and if you win this car, you will also receive a cart car telephone. >> a car telephone. we're not just playing this to reminisce about the deluxe body side moldings which does sound nice. the very special california detail there was with a car with california emission. that isn't a trendy term that carmakers use to jack up the sticking price. as a state, california has set its own environmental emissions standards for any cars that want to cruise through the golden state and those requirements are greener than federal guidelines showing that california was not only the first in the nation on many environmental policies for the state level, but that it was also willing to set a higher bar even when there was some federal
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action. a california's a long way from washington and paris is even farther away. >> the united states will withdraw from the paris climate accord as of today, the united states will cease all implementation of the nonbinding paris accord and the economic burden es it imposes on our country. >> pulling out of the paris climate accord leaving behind over 190 countries to reduce green house emissions. there are now three countries on the whole planet that don't belong. syria, nicaragua and us, the united states of america. by making good on his campaign promise to get out of the accord the president signaled to the world the u.s. is no longer interested in being any kind of
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lead over climate change. this announcement drew rebukes from around the world and vows to fight on from american businesses, health advocates and environmental leaders. no surprise that california is already leading the pack and it has some muscle as the sixth largest economy in the world. jerry brown is the governor of california, a job he held in the 1970s and which he now holds again. brown signed a bill to slash green house gas emissions, funded a statewide cap and trade program and took california's fight global. working with officials around the world on a pledge to cut green house gas, an interesting framework considering the trump administration's new posture today. >> joining us now for the interview is california governor jerry brown. governor, thanks for joining us on this busy day for you. how are you going to combat this move from president trump? >> stay the course. california has a very aggressive
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climate action policy. we have a goal of 50% renewable electricity by 2030. we're already about 27% now. and we'll even go beyond that. we have zero emission mandates for automobiles. we have energy and appliance regulatory standards. we also have a cap and trade program. we're all in. and of course i have to admit we've got a long, long way to go. but we're moving in that direction and the economy has rewarded these policies with a growth of 40% faster than the national average. 2.3 million jobs just since the last recession. so we're on the move. we'll keep going. and more specific action, i'm leaving tomorrow for china. i'll meet with high officials there to forge new china california climate agreements. i'll also work with new york and washington and several other
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states in what i call the under two coalition, a group of 175 different partners, canada, mexico, quebec, new york, massachusetts, california representing a billion people and almost 30% of the world's economic output. we are agreed on a climate set of goals very similar to the paris agreement. and we are moving forward and we'll continue. and i would say this action very misguided action by president trump will anxiety as a catalyst to galvanize the people of california and i would say of the whole world to do the right thing in getting us on the path of sustainability. >> you lay out there a lot of things and you have passed laws and programs that have made california the leader here o. that sort of international collaboration front, as you know, the senate democrats have
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a new letter out in your state. they're asking you to consider convening a special climate summit to, quote, partner with mexico and canada and invite other states to ensure that you continue charging ahead. is that something specifically you would also do? >> well, it just came out an hour ago and i have talked to the senate leadership on that. so it sounds like a good idea. can we pull it off? if we can, yeah. i want to talk to the prime minister in canada, the president of mexico, and if we can get them and others, that's an idea i will give very serious consideration to. >> very interesting. so that kind of sort of foreign policy or that rule for california as a leader you're open to. >> not just that. we are harmonizing our standards with china. china has a very powerful mandate for zero emission cars. they are developing their own cap and trade program. california is refining our cap
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and trade program. there are areas of collaboration. california right now has as much clean tech capital investment venture capital investment as china and the rest of europe combined. we're doing a lot. we'll do more with china and link closer together. it used to be china and the united states as the pillar. now china is that pillar and california is very much going to be working with them to achieve our mutual goals. >> so governor, given all that you're doing, is this sort of a place holder or a mechanism where you hope that even if the united states under the trump administration is not involved that california as the sixth largest economy is part of basically u.s. participation in these accords or these goals over time so that one day the u.s. might be able to reenter the paris accord? how do you look at the future of this? >> well, i certainly don't think
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trump in his statement today is the last word. far from it. this is a temporary deviation from the norm. the world norm. and it will be correct. how soon i don't know. i can't say that today. but i'm going to do everything i can to correct it. and in the meantime, we're not treading water. we're going to do everything we can to win the minds and hearts of the people of california, of america, of the world. this is not some extra little political game or one issue among many. this is a threat to the long-term future of humanity. this is not a game. millions of people will die if we don't handle climate change in the right way. we have to make the invest mens. we have to make the change of course in the way the economy and the world lives. and does things. and california is prepared to do that. and i would say that trump is
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going to act as the null hypothesis. he's demonstrating that climate denial has no integrity and no future and the opposite, climate act activism and in the coming days and months and hopefully the coming years that we really rise to the occasion and do what is needed to keep humanity on a sustainable and har path with nature. >> as you know the president emphasized in his remarks today that he was doing this for pittsburgh, not paris. what is your view or your response to that, the idea that americans don't want these kind of accords? >> i've never seen any survey that would substantiate that. that is truly a junk fact. the majority of people support the paris agreements in deal with climate change. number two, the whole premise that somehow the paris agreement
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loses jobs. the exact opposite. mr. trump is wrong on jobs. wrong on the facts. wrong on science. wrong on public opinion. so with all that on our side, i believe we will overcome. >> california governor jerry brown, i know you've been working on these issues a long time. i appreciate you joining us on this busy day. >> my pleasure. >> thank you very much. we have much more ahead on this very busy news night. stay with us. if you're told you have cancer, explore your treatment options with specialists who treat only cancer.
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take a look at the cover of tomorrow's "new york daily news." trump to world, drop dead. today's announcement by the president that the u.s. will withdraw from the paris accord. just the latest example of the u.s. pulling back from any kind of leadership on the world stage. a point made clear during last year's nato and g7 summits, and also drilled home in an op-ed this week from national security adviser hr mcmaster and gary cohen from the national economic council, writing, quote, the president embarked on his first foreign trip with clear-eyed look that the world is not a global community but an arena where we bring to this form unmatched military, political, economic, and moral strength. rather than deny this, we embrace it. the world described as an arena where everyone competes for an advantage. it would seem by those lights that the u.s. no longer relishes leading a free or interdependent
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world. general mcmaster in particular has played a key role on all of this. brought on as a well regarded national security adviser after mike flynn had to go. he has been forced lately to defend everything from trump's embrace of autocrats to jared kushner's supposed alleged attempt to have a secret back channel with russia. and that sense that this highly respected adult in the room is now towing the line for the trump administration led to an op-ed of its own. and it is a doozy entitled general mcmaster, step down and let trump be trump. save your reputation while you still can. the country will be fine. here is an important passage. quote, i think mcmaster should step down not just for his own good, but for the good of the country. what if he is replaced by a right wing extremist who operates on an alternative set of facts? so much the better, i say. and here is why, the author writes. the saving grace of donald trump as president is his incompetence. he knows almost nothing of how the federal government works.
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joining me now is the man behind that op-ed, thomas ricks, the pulitzer prize winning former reporter for "the wall street journal" and "the washington post," and we should note the author of the book "churchill & orwell: the fight for freedom." great to have you here this evening. >> thank you. >> you wrote this op-ed. it is somewhat unusual in its advice on substance and certainly in its style. what are you trying to get across? >> well, i agree with everything you said in your introduction except for one word, forced. and that's key. general mcmaster was not forced to stand up and do these things. it is not his job as national security adviser to be the advocate for the president, the spokesman for the president. his job is not to protect donald trump. it's to protect the country. remember, this is a guy who is still on active duty, in uniform. he is subject to the uniform code of military justice. and he is not behaving as the very good national security
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advisers of the past have. for example, brent scowcroft. you didn't see him go out and speak on behalf of the presidents he worked for. he did his job as national security adviser. so i think -- i used to believe in the adults in the room theory because i thought it was good to have good people around to contain trump. i've stopped believing that really from watching general mcmaster over the last couple of weeks. we hasn't improved trump particularly. trump is being trump. what has happened is that trump has degraded mcmaster, and used mcmaster's credibility. i've come to see trump as incompetent in most things. but one thing he is very good at, borrowing other people's credibility. and he has strip mined hr mcmaster's credibility. >> you make such an important point there. it is obviously the opposite of the conventional wisdom in so much of washington. before we let you goes, have to talk about the godfather.
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because in explaining your logic you say think of it this way. which would be a more dangerous, a mafia family overseen by the cruel and incompetent michael corleone, or one let by his ineffectual brother fredo. so i say let donald be donald. explain. >> i mean, donald trump is a lot more like fredo than he is like michael corleone. and i want competent people elsewhere in the government. let me be clear about that. i think it's good to have general mattis over at the pentagon. but i think the white house is basically a sinkhole where trump flails around. where he pretends to be president and he acts president on tv and in twitter, but really not much happens. and i don't want the enable him to be more effective. i want him to be as ineffective as possible. so i think that people should stop enabling trump and just let him descend into his own abyss. >> it's fascinating. and it's so different than what we've heard. and if the godfather is instructive, of course, i also
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remember it taught us never go against the family, which may or may not be relevant in this white house. thomas risk, pulitzer prize winning reporter and author, appreciate your time tonight. >> you're welcome. >> and we will be right back. when you booked this trip, you didn't know we had over 26,000 local activities listed on our app. or that you could book them right from your phone. a few weeks ago, you still didn't know if you were gonna go. now the only thing you don't know, is why it took you so long to come here.
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it delivers a gentle mist experience to help block six key inflammatory substances. most allergy pills only block one. new flonase sensimist changes everything. that does it for the show tonight. we'll see you again tomorrow. i am ari melber. you can always catch my show "the point" sundays at 5:00 p.m. eastern. a brief programing note for tonight, though. on the subject of this big presidential decision on climate change, dan rather stop join my
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colleague lawrence o'donnell in the next hour. dan rather of course has been one of the sharpest critics of this white house on so many issues. so you may want to hear his first-time reaction to this big decision on paris and where we go from here. now it is time for "the last word with lawrence o'donnell." it is great to see you. >> i think we need someone like dan rather who has that wider perspective of what a day like today means for the united states position in the world. >> and for history. >> yeah. >> yes, sir. >> thanks, ari. >> thank you. well, it was another very good day in the white house rose garden for russia and for saudi arabia. two of president trump's favorite countries. pulling out of the paris climate accord was exactly what russia and saudi arabia wanted to see the president of the united states do today. also today, vladimir putin admitted something that donald trump still refuses to