Skip to main content

tv   To Be Announced  MSNBC  March 10, 2018 6:00pm-7:01pm PST

6:00 pm
track record than that of a nuclear stakes case of beginners luck. then again, what normal person isn't hoping it works. that's had for now. thanks for being with us. tonight, the weekend started with this man, sam nunberg, appearing before mueller's grand jury. trump's lawyers hope to use a presidential interview to end the russia investigation. the reporter who broke the story with us here live. plus, news on the stormy daniels front including michael cohn using his trump company e-mail to conduct business with the important star. and trump tonight says the deal with north korea is very much in the making, ending a day of mixed messages from the white house about whether his meeting with kim jong-un will actually happen. "the 11th hour" on a friday night begins now. good evening once again from the
6:01 pm
nbc headquarter here in new york. this was day 414 of the trump administration. and there's new reporting tonight about negotiations to set up a possible interview between the president and robert mueller, the special counsel in all of this. this comes to us from the wall street journal correspondented rebecca ballhouse and peter nicholas report that trump's legal team is trying to work out a deal with mueller. we'll be i joined by peter nicholas in a moment. they note that a person familiar with the discussions are, quote, seeking to negotiate a deal with special counsel robert mueller that uses an interview with the president as leverage to spur a conclusion to the russia investigation. the president's legal team is considering telling mr. mueller that mr. trump would agree to a a sit-down interview based on multiple considerations, including that the special counsel commit to a date for concluding at least the trump-related portion of the investigation. last night here on this broadcast we learned from the
6:02 pm
new york times' jeremy peters that the president continues to be dismissive of the russia investigation, even as he remains concerned about it. times has also reported that mr. trump did try to fire robert mueller but backed off. and he's been asking other witnesses about their interviews with mueller's team. here is what trump said earlier this year when he was asked about a possible sit-down with mueller. >> are you open to meeting with him? would you be willing to meet with him, without condition or would you demand -- >> certainly, i'll see what happens, but when they have no collusion and nobody's found any collusion at any level, it seems up likely that you would even have an interview. also tonight, there's new reporting from the "washington post" about a letter from donald trump to vladimir putin dating back to 2013. the post reports that, quote,
6:03 pm
donald trump was so eager to have vladimir putin attend the 2013 miss universe pageant in moscow that he wrote a personal let tore the russian president inviting him to the event, according to multiple people familiar with the document. at the bottom of the typed letter, trump scrawled a postscript adding that he looked forward to seeing beautiful women during his trip. the real estate magnate who owned the miss universe pageant wrote the note at a time when he was looking to expand his brand to russia. the letter the first known attempt at direct outreach by trump to putin has been turned over to investigators probing russia's interference in the 2016 campaign. it's unclear whether trump's missive was ever delivered to the russian president, and if so, whether putin responded. investigators for special counsel robert s. mueller iii
6:04 pm
have asked witnesses questions about the miss universe pageant and trump's interest in having putin attend the event according to people particular with the inquiry. as president donald trump has been nothing less than complimentary to mr. putin, in fact, has bent backward time after time to give putin the benefit of the doubt at very minimum. in fact, megyn kelly asked the russian leader part about that as part of her primetime special on nbc tonight called "confronting putin." >> let me ask you about president trump. any time he says anything about you it is supremely deferential, never a harsh word for you, although if you look at the way he speaks about members of his own party, members of his staff, nevermind other leaders, he personally insults them. why do you think he's so nice to you? >> translator: i don't believe he treats me personally with reference. i believe he's an experienced person, he's a businessman with vast experience. and he understands that if you need to, if it is necessary to establish a cooperative relationship with someone, then
6:05 pm
you have to treat your current or potential partner with respect. otherwise nothing will come of it. i think this is a purely pragmatic approach. >> let's bring in our lead-off panel on a friday night. the afore mentioned peter nicholas, white house reporter for "the wall street journal," new york times reporter and pulitzer prize winner mata puzzo, and the eastern district attorney of michigan, these days a law professor at her alma mater, the university of michigan. welcome to you all. peter, because it is your reporting starting us off, i would like to begin with you. talk about how advanced these conversations might be. and from lay people to reporters, a lot of people reacted to this today thinking, well, this fits a pattern of telling the boss that your clnt optimistic things to keep him optistic. >> well, they are in the early stages of these negotiations, but what we learned is that the interview with the president is a bargaining trip. and there could be some leverage here that mueller wants an interview and is trying to get
6:06 pm
one. and trump might agree to do this, provided that he can get certain conditions to be met. one of the conditions is that the scope of the interview might be limited. it wouldn't just be a wide-ranging no holds barred question and answer session, but strictly defined topics. and second might be mueller agrees to bring the investigation to a speedy conclusion, perhaps 60 days from the day of the interview. obviously, trump has long said he believes this interview, this investigation is invalid, it's a witchhunt. and he thinks it's harming the country. so the trump legal team believes this could be a way to bring it to a quick end. >> his attorneys, mr. dowd and mr. codd are veterans of washington. this is not their first rodeo. did you pick up in their reporting real optimism on their
6:07 pm
part toward this? >> i think there are factions within the legal team. and i think there are some members of the team that are more skeptical of the idea of an interview. they believe an interview could pose a perjury trial for trump, it would expose him to legal jeopardy. and it could set a bad precedent if trump gives a bad interview, the presidents, 10, 20, 30 years from now might be obligated to do the same because the precedent has been set. but there are others who are more sanguine about an interview and say it could have value in the sense that it could shut down this investigation, could bring it to a close. and this is the missing piece in the puzzle that mueller sees. and if they provide trump to speak to the investigators, that might be all that is necessary for mueller to go away. >> i know enough at this point in the conversation to call in a lawyer. all right, counselor, it's your turn. is there anything in robert mueller's category, in his
6:08 pm
character or background, that you think would agree to this kind of ground rule? >> you know, he might agree to some ground rules but i don't see him agreeing to the ones that have been reported. he does hold all the cards here and doesn't really need to give a lot of concessions. the idea he would agree to a time limit, for example, i just don't see that happening at all. in cases like this, there's always potential follow-up from any witness that you interview, and you just never know how much time that might take. so that concession i don't see at all. he really holds all the cards here, there's the general concept that the grand jury is entitled to all the evidence, that includes the president. if he had to push it to a court, robert mueller could get a court order directing president trump to testify before a grand jury. he may not want to go through all of the hassle of that and the time and the delay that might cause, so there's some value in negotiating an agreement to getting this done. but i don't see that robert mueller has to make serious concessions tooed that. >> barbara, it also seems that if they tie it to a date certain, yes, the investigation has to end at some point, but what about late discovery of evidence that comes in that
6:09 pm
would be cutoff from the mueller investigation because they agreed to a ground rule like this? >> yeah, and that's why i think they would never agree to such a rule. because you just never know what evidence, any time you interview a witness, you might learn something incredibly important. and then you might have to do follow-up investigation to chase that down. so i also think that they would want to interview president trump at the very end of the investigation, after they've educated themselves about all the things other witnesses are going to say, they have reviewed every document they can get their hands on, i think they will get one bite at the apple here and i think they will want to do it at a point in time where they feel they are as informed as they are going to be about the rest of the case. >> matt, your colleague was on cable tonight and i'll paraphrase her, staff around the boss the worried about north korea because they fear what he can say, how he can give away
6:10 pm
the story. they are woried that mueller could perjure himself. talk, matt, about the degree of preoccupation on the president's part about this investigation. your newspaper having reported this week that he's asking some of the people who have gone before mueller, hey, how was it? how were that to you? what were the questions? >> look, he's made no secret of the fact that the president wants to be out from under this. you can certainly get that from the journal story. they want to be out from under this. the lawyers have been signaling for months and months that this thing is weeks away from ending. it doesn't appear that it's anywhere near close. i don't know how, as other people on the panel have said, how mueller could even make a promise. i mean, how would you ever hold him to a promise to end this in a certain amount of time. the president wants to be out from under this and i think he's
6:11 pm
very eager to figure out the best route to get out from under it. and obviously many people around him are very concerned that if you put a president in a room with a team of experienced prosecutors, this is a president who is, has a reputation for hyperbole and false and misleading statements. and this special counsel has made it clear that's not something he's going to tolerate. you know, he took a plea deal from somebody for -- from rickgates for lying in a proffer where he came into cooperate and lied. so they're not going to accept, they're not going to accept any -- i screwed this up or i wasn't totally accurate on that one. you know, so there's a lot of risk here. >> hey, barbara, this letter to putin, does it -- does it loom large in terms of real evidence? we were reminded tonight that donald trump also tweeted wondering if putin was going to come to his pageant, wondering if putin could be his new best friend. that was back in june of 2013. does any of this kind of stuff
6:12 pm
matter? >> i don't know that it looms large. it's sort of interesting. it probably raises more questions than it answers. i mean, it sounds almost like more of a fan boy kind of letter that wouldn't enhance my pageant if the leader of russia showed up. it seems more like that was the motive there. but i suppose you might want to learn a little more about it to see if, why he was seeking to develop a relationship with putin. was it just for the pageant? or was it for other business deals and other opportunities? did they meet, in fact, and did they have further discussions either through person or through immediate areas. i suppose it has interest to the investigators but don't know it looms large. >> matt, what are the chances that the remaining west wing aides are locking up their five-point harnesses in preparation for this weekend? we have the president flying to a friendly crowd in pennsylvania right after this tariff decision, kind of a red meat audience after the week he's had. >> you know, in the president
6:13 pm
kicking off the week by saying there's no chaos in the white house. you know, look, i'm not here to give the white house, you know, communications strategy here. but in a normal white house, in a normal year, when the president does something like issues these tariffs, which is obviously something that plays very well with his base, and then there is this potential for a breakthrough diplomatic breakthrough with north korea. this should be something the entire white house and the administration as a whole is messaging and driving home and is organizing around. and that, whether you want to call it chaos or disorder or whatever, that has really hung over the white house. just really makes it harder for him to drive those messages home. and so, you know, here we are on a friday night and we're talking about, you know, will the president interview with bob mueller who went to the grand jury? we're going to talk about stormy
6:14 pm
daniels or the miss universe pageant. this is all -- this is all very unusual. >> we really appreciate the three of you coming on the broadcast to start us off on a friday night. peter nicholas, matt apuzzo and barbara, thank you. key e-mails in regard to stormy daniels. and later, is the meeting between president trump and kim jong-un on or off exactly? some confusion today at the white house. the president himself tried to clean it up just tonight. "the 11th hour" on a friday night getting under way now. you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from any one else. so why accept it from your allergy pills? most pills don't finish the job because they don't relieve nasal congestion. flonase allergy relief is different. flonase relieves sneezing, itchy, watery eyes and a runny nose, plus nasal congestion, which pills don't. flonase helps block 6 key inflammatory substances. most pills only block one.
6:15 pm
and 6 is greater than 1. start your day with flonase for more complete allergy relief. flonase. this changes everything. coming at you with my brand-new vlog. just making some ice in my freezer here. so check back for that follow-up vid. this is my cashew guy bruno. holler at 'em, brun. kicking it live and direct here at the fountain. should i go habanero or maui onion? should i buy a chinchilla? comment below. did i mention i save people $620 for switching? chinchilla update -- got that chinchilla after all. say what up, rocco. ♪ say what up, rocco. was a success for lastchoicehotels.comign badda book. badda boom. this year, we're taking it up a notch. so in this commercial we see two travelers at a comfort inn with a glow around them, so people watching will be like, "wow, maybe i'll glow too if i book direct at choicehotels.com". who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom.
6:16 pm
nobody glows. he gets it. always the lowest price, guaranteed. book now at choicehotels.com
6:17 pm
you know what's not awesome? gig-speed internet. when only certain people can get it. let's fix that. let's give this guy gig- really? and these kids, and these guys, him, ah. oh hello. that lady, these houses! yes, yes and yes. and don't forget about them. uh huh, sure. still yes! xfinity delivers gig speed to more homes than anyone. now you can get it, too. welcome to the party.
6:18 pm
new revelations in the stormy daniels case could mean more legal trouble for president trump. nbc news first reported today that, quote, president donald trump's personal attorney uses his trump organization e-mail to transfer money into an account in a manhattan bank before wiring $130,000 to adult film star stormy daniels to buy her silence. it goes on to say michael cohen used the regular e-mail during 2016 negotiations with the actress whose legal name is stephanie clifford before she signed a nondisclosure agreement. michael cohen has maintained that he facilitated the payment using his own money and that then candidate donald trump was not privy to the settlement. cohen reportedly told abc news today the funds were taken from his home equity line of credit. the white house says trump
6:19 pm
denies allegations of a 2016 extra-marital affair, although he has not publicly addressed the allegations. the questions continue to swirl in the white house briefing room where again today the press secretary declined to elaborate. >> when did president trump, after that photo, see stormy daniels? did he text, e-mail, do you have any other information? >> i don't. we have addressed this extensively and don't have anything else to add. >> stephanie, you acknowledged that the president, to follow-up on april's question, knows about the arbitrary involving stormy daniels. does he remember speaking with his lawyer about that? does he remember meeting with daniels? >> i have addressed this extensively and don't have anything else to add. >> in the last paragraph we said 2016 and made 2006. copies provided by stormy daniels attorney bring renewed scrutiny to the campaign's handling of its finances. "the washington post" reporting today, quote, those two things together, that a trump organization e-mail address was used to facilitate the payment and that the payment was linked to the campaign, would constitute a legal violence. stormy daniels' attorney
6:20 pm
appeared on this network earlier today to refute trump's claims of ignorance. >> michael cohen is a licensed attorney under the new york state bar rules. and attorneys in every state have very specific rules they have to live by. there is a requirement, meaning it's not optional. an attorney inform his or her client at all times of all material facts relating to a negotiation, a case, et cetera. so in this instance, if, in fact, mr. trump was mr. cohen's client, then there's no question that mr. trump knew all about this. >> and here to talk more about all of this, we have convinced barbara mcquaid, the former u.s. attorney for the eastern district of michigan to stick around as we need a lawyer yet
6:21 pm
again. and jonathan allen is joining us, the nbc news national political reporter. so barbara, i want to show you something. preet berrara, one of the few people fired since donald trump was president, former u.s. attorney for the southern district of new york, a man of equally keen intellect and humor, tweeted this tonight. sometimes my personal lawyer will just pay my mortgage off. without asking. such a good guy. i'm lucky. obviously, barbara, the former u.s. attorney's having fun there, but it does cut to the heart of this, doesn't it? >> yep, preet has a keen wit honing in on this, lawyers don't give you $130,000 for nothing. and they have a duty to keep you apprised of what they are doing on your behalf. so as the lawyer for ms. daniels said, lawyers communicate with their clients. they have a duty to communicate with their clients. the idea that michael cohen did something and up didn't communicate that information to donald trump would be a lapse of his ethical duty. so it doesn't seem plausible.
6:22 pm
>> let's talk for a minute about this new attorney for stormy daniels as a motor racing fan, a lot of us know his name from the endurance car circuit. he has many starts under his belt as a race car driver. he has raced at daytona and seabring in florida in endurance races. to the legal side of his life, tonight he went on cnn and unveiled another new e-mail. it's an e-mail that happens to make mention of the yom kippur break. he went on in the interview about why it is far from ordinary. >> now, why is this important to reference yom kippur in the office? it appears to be rather innocuous when you look at it. and we assert that it is not innocuous. if, in fact, the payment was being made personally by attorney cohen, he wouldn't need his office open in order to
6:23 pm
affectuate the payment. >> your thoughts, barbara? >> the corporate funds are being used for this payment. and the reason that would be significant, also, the e-mail, coming from the trump organization, you know, suggests yet another link to a corporate entity. and the campaign finance laws prohibit donations from corporate entities. they only allow donations from individuals. and so if the funds were either paid for by the trump organization or reimbursed michael cohen, that would be a violence of campaign finance laws and a criminal violence. >> jonathan, now we need a journalist. to sarah huckabee sanders, she introduced this notion of arbitration from the podium this week. the questions continue to pile up today.
6:24 pm
she's continuing to deflect. does this cycle just remain the same in your view? >> yeah, i think this is a story that's going to keep going for quite a while, because of the political nature of it. on the legal side, the federal election commission is essentially impotent and has been for years, to the extent they ever were interested in recommending prosecution of criminal, potential criminal violations of campaign finance laws. they essentially have not done that very often in the past. and prosecutors and juries don't seem particularly interested in that. however, you to have a story with an adult film star alleging she had an affair with the president of the united states and that she was paid hush money in order to make sure he won the presidency. i can't believe all those words just came out of my mouth. much like i can't believe that i used to work computer to put the words stormy daniels into a google search to read some of the stories. i think this is incredible and will continue for some time. you're starting to see pressure from democrats talking about
6:25 pm
this on capitol hill a lot more, because i think they are frankly surprised there are not more republicans concerned about this issue. >> jonathan, it's new territory for you, for me, for barbara, for everybody who has a role in covering this. and i have to ask you, though, is this a new standard of measurement? this is our president in the post "access hollywood" world. >> certainly it's a new standard, it's unprecedented. we keep using that word for this presidency. i'm not sure that it is a standard that other presidents will be able to have applied to them. i think donald trump is a unique, unique figure in american politics. >> we'll leave that right where it is for this part of our conversation. barbara mcquade, jonathan allen, our thanks, appreciate it. tonight, coming up, high stakes and high expectations ahead of this meeting between donald trump and ken jong-un. "the 11th hour" back after this.
6:26 pm
♪ ♪ ♪ the smoother the skin, the more comfortable you are in it. and now there's a new way to smooth. introducing new venus platinum. a premium metal handle boosts control... to reveal up to 100% smooth skin. venus
6:27 pm
burning, pins-and-needles of beforediabetic nerve pain, these feet... grew into a free-wheeling a kid... loved every step of fatherhood... and made old cars good as new. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer, so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda approved to treat this pain, from moderate to even severe diabetic nerve pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions, suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these,
6:28 pm
new or worse depression, unusual changes in mood or behavior, swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects: dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain, swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. and i love smoothing the road ahead for others.
6:29 pm
one day after the surprise announcement that donald trump would meet with north korean dictator kim jong-un, the white house today adding to the confusion today saying the meeting, in effect, might not happen after all. >> the united states has made zero concessions, but north korea has made some promises. and again, these -- this meeting won't take place without concrete actions that match the promises that have been made by
6:30 pm
north korea. >> senior administration officials later clarified saying there have been no new conditions added. and the timeframe has not changed. and then just this evening, another confirmation in the form of a tweet from donald trump writing, quote, the deal with north korea is very much in the making and will be, if completed, a very good one for the world. time and place to be determined. let's talk about it tonight, susan glasser is with us, chief international affairs columnist nor politico, and jeremy bash, former chief of staff for the cia and pentagon, an msnbc national security analyst. jeremy, we have yet to speak to either of you since this happened. where do you think this actually stands? and what do you think of the whole idea of it? >> well, the white house said that north korea had undertaken concrete actions. and then a few moments later the white house had a walk that back because kim jong-un has undertaken no concrete actions. this is a major concession to the north korea dictator to put
6:31 pm
him on the same stage as the dictator. normally you end for the end of the process to swoop the big boss in to kind of seal the deal. here we are putting our president forward first. i think diplomacy is good, it is certainly preferable to military consolation, but i'm not sure we have gotten anything in return. >> jeremy, we have discussed and talked about it on any broadcast, they crave relevance, they crave attention, they crave being taken seriously. and certainly this goes a long way toward that. >> yeah, and i think the lesson that the north korean leader has drawn from this whole year of confrontation is, the more i test my missiles, the more i test my nuclear weapons, the more i'll be received by the white house and president trump as an equal, someone they have to take very seriously. >> there you go. susan, i want to read you some of the reporting from the wall
6:32 pm
street journal on how this went down. and then we'll talk about it. inside the oval office late thursday, president donald trump interrupted a trio of south korean officials as they analyzed an offer to meet from north korean kim jong-un and outlined possible diplomatic options, okay, okay, mr. trump said, cutting short the discussion. tell them i'll do it. the south korean officials looked at each other as if in disbelief. susan, this is hardly the crowd linden johnson used to call the striped pants crowd from foggy bottom, the chin strokers, the diplomats of old, even the west wing staffers of old, this puts us in a new territory. >> well, first of all, it's notable there are not state department staffers at the senior level who appear to be read into this at the time this surprising decision was being made. but i guess i have to say, on the one hand, it really actually tends to confirm everything we
6:33 pm
already know about how president trump is running things in the white house, increasingly he's untethered and unconstrained by the senior staff he has remaining to him. of course, there are no real senior figures in the state department charged with diplomacy in korea. you had the senior envoy leaving a week ago. you never had an ambassador to south korea appointed. so it is unclear who would undertake the talks except for president trump himself. but jeremy made a really important point, which is almost like it's the backward summit, in which you're doing the part first that normally comes last or not at all. and, of course, that is a much riskier thing. when you have the summit and don't have the deliverables ready, you haven't had the negotiations first. you know, there's a lot of skepticism and that i'm picking up today and others are as well from the entire kind of north korea expert community that's very skeptical, "the new york times" tonight is quoting somebody saying there's one of
6:34 pm
trump's own advisers saying there's only a 50% or less chance that the meeting actually happens. >> and jeremy, of course, we have to be very weary of everything looking like a shiny object, because the need to distract, and we have to say this, is high. and here's the part that upsets institutionalists. this is the president that 63 million americans voted for. this is the same guy. but jeremy, does he bear a responsibility to listen advisers, listen to the career desk officers at a place like the state department who have devoted their professional lives to the study of this enigmatic dictator in north korea? >> well, look, the president and commander in chief can tell the bureaucracy, hey, i want to go a different way on a policy matter. but we don't want the president of the united states to wing it. we certainly don't want him to wing it when it comes to high
6:35 pm
stakes nuclear diplomacy. he needs the best advice from our military leaders, from our intelligence professionals, our state department diplomats. we're going to be much stronger if the president is armed and equipped with that expertise. and if he goes out there alone without it, i think we're going to ultimately fail in this effort to get north korea to denuclearize. >> susan, i have to say, a lot of veterans have admitted there's an information gap. that's a polite way of saying, they know more about us than we know about them. i don't know who to blame for that, but that's kind of the fact of life, isn't it? >> well, that's right. i did an interesting show of my pockets a couple weeks ago with john pac, the main cia analyst trying to understand kim jong-un since he came to power six years ago, the third generation if his family. think about this, we don't even know the gender of kim's third child born last year. officially listed by the u.s. government as gender unknown. kim up until this point had only ever met with two foreigners in his entire six-year reign as north korea's leader. so to go right from dennis
6:36 pm
rodman having been the only other american he's known to have met with directly to the president of the united states is an extraordinary thing. i think that, you know, we spend a lot of time and effort trying to understand north korea, but the reality, pretty extraordinary to me, that we know very little by design about kim, about his family, about the power structures, and the decision-making therefore that will be feeding into the summit when, at a time as you said, they have been carefully, carefully studying president trump. and from what we can tell, they have read our president pretty accurate will so far. >> and excellent point about deputy secretary of state rodman. jeremy, you get the last word, when they hear denuclearize, aren't they -- isn't that a nonstarter?
6:37 pm
>> well, i think it's got to be the u.s. objective here. and i think another objective has to be to stay close to south korea. and i think part of what happened here in the last few weeks is north korea was sort of able to drive a seam between the united states and our south korean allies. that drove those envoys from seoul up north and now here we are with the president saying, i'm not playing hard to get anymore, i'm yours. >> you guys are the best, thank you so much. susan glasser, jeremy bash, really appreciate the conversation tonight. and coming up, staff exodus, high-stakes negotiations, a trade war, a lawsuit from a porn star. our historian and author will talk about another week that was in the life of this administration. copd makes it hard to breathe.
6:38 pm
so to breathe better, i go with anoro. ♪go your own way copd tries to say, "go this way." i say, "i'll go my own way" with anoro. ♪go your own way once-daily anoro contains two medicines called bronchodilators, that work together to significantly improve lung function all day and all night. anoro is not for asthma . it contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. the risk is unknown in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, high blood pressure,
6:39 pm
glaucoma, prostate, bladder, or urinary problems. these may worsen with anoro. call your doctor if you have worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain while taking anoro. ask your doctor about anoro. ♪go your own way get your first prescription free at anoro.com. there's so much goodness it makes us feel alive. it illuminates our world and connects us to each other. with transitions® adaptive lenses® you'll live the good light. they block uv rays. plus they help protect from harmful blue light. both indoors... and out. enjoy life more comfortably. enjoy life more richly. live the good light. find an eyecare professional at transitions.com hello. give me an hour in tanning room 3. cheers! that's confident. but it's not kayak confident. kayak searches hundreds of travel sites to help me plan the best trip. so i'm more than confident.
6:40 pm
forgot me goggles. kayak. search one and done. [thud] [screaming & crying] ♪ [screaming & crying] ♪ [screaming & crying] [phone ping] with esurance photo claims, you could have money for repairs within a day... wow! that was really fast. huh. ...so it doesn't have to hurt for long. hmm. that's insurance for the modern world. esurance. an allstate company. click or call. the white house has tremendous energy, has tremendous spirit, it is a great place to be working. many, many people want every single job. i read, oh, gee, maybe people don't want to work for trump. believe me, everybody wants to work in the white house.
6:41 pm
>> this is gary cohn's last meeting in the cabinet and of the cabinet. and he's been terrific. he may be a globalist, but i still like him. i'm delivering on a promise i made during the campaign and have been making it for a good part of my life. if i ever did this, i never really thought i would, i said, let's run for president and look what happened. >> small sampling of a week at the white house. a week that saw the republican party revolt over the possibility of a trade war, the resignation of the chief economic adviser and a surprise announcement that the president may sit with his counterpart in north korea. the presidential historian michael beshloss. i'm going to read for you a piece from the associated president trump, donald trump has told confidants recently that he wants to be less reliant on his staff, believing they often give bad advice and he follows his own instincts which he credits with his stunning
6:42 pm
election, according to two people who requested anonymity because they are not allowed to speak of the conversations. and two men, in particular, i'm going to put on the screen right now. on the left may be the most powerful white house aide in history, harry hopkins. on the right, maybe the most serious, mcgeorge bundy. what would the two make of a moderate west wing where there's a president but then a steep falloff after that? >> these two men would say probably four words, god help us all. because they knew that, you could have the most brilliant genius, i'm not going to say stable genius, but you could have a leader of a kind we have never seen in history, a president needs an awful lot of help. and an awful lot of expertise. for instance, we now know that donald trump is talking about going to a summit with the leader of north korea.
6:43 pm
he needs people who know the history of north korea, who have dealt with this issue for a long time, and as you were saying earlier on the broadcast, brian, they are not there. >> but then you ask him and he says, in effect, i'm the one that got me to the dance. i'm the one the 63, 62 million people, i'm sure he knows the exact number, voted for. how do you then as a staffer, as a historian, as an institutionalist convince a guy like that, no, it's really important that you know history, culture, the biography of this ineggmatic guy? >> i think that's right. you know, at his age, he's 71 years old. i don't think he's going to change. and it's a real problem, because what you were talking about this week, these are all signs that he wanted to let trump be trump. and he wants to be surrounded by people who will not give him that kind of expertise. there's reporatage that gary cohn is leaving. and he will leave to donald trump's impulse much more on things like tower riffs.
6:44 pm
this is all to my mind ominous. >> i also want to read you a quote from peggy noonan's column of the wall street journal this week. it's kind of the "what if" clause of her article. sooner or later something bad will happen, an international crisis, or damaging findings from the special counsel. if the president is the way he is on a good day, what will he be like on a bad day? it all feels so dangerous. and michael, that puts a lump in your throat. >> it does. and i think she's absolutely right. because my bet is years from now when we start to read about this administration from the outside, from people who have actually been in it, we will probably find a lot of times when some of the people we have been talking about, like mcmaster, perhaps john kelly, have restrained
6:45 pm
donald trump from doing things that could be very dangerous, both in the foreign policy and economic arenas. now we are in a situation where the voices of restraint may not be there anymore. >> and what do you say as people probably ask you on a near daily basis, is there permanent damage being done to the republic? >> i would say that this is a country that always revives itself. if you go all the way back to the 18th century, this is a country that has a phenomenal ability to rebound from mistakes that our leaders make, and in some cases, mistakes that our members of congress and supreme court and citizens make, too. >> it's always a pleasure to have you on the broadcast. you know you're welcome any time. michael beschloss, thanks. coming up on a friday night for a president who likes to fly south to florida for the weekend, who wouldn't, what's important enough to make him fly to pittsburgh instead this weekend? that story when we come back.
6:46 pm
6:47 pm
6:48 pm
6:49 pm
rick is a great guy and special, he's a special person. >> you won this district by 20 points. >> right. >> can he do as well as you? >> i hope so. i just said to him, i hope you do as well, but we'll be here to help him. i'll be back for rick. and we're going to fill up the stadium and we're going to do something really special for
6:50 pm
rick, i look forward to it. >> that was earlier this year president trump promising to return to pennsylvania's 18th district to campaign for house candidate rick saccone. the time is now. tomorrow night the president is scheduled to make good on that promise ahead of tuesday's special election. for starters, this is where the district is. starters, this is district is. it's the southern suburbs thereabouts of pittsburgh. trump did carry the district by 20 points in 2016. recent polls show the democrat, conor lamb narrowing the gap. politico wrote "with trump set to campaign with saccone on saturday evening, some white house officials have questioned whether the president should scrap the trip fearful that a saccone loss would be seen as more of a rebuke to the president but trump has told aides in recent days he's going anyways, convinced he'd likely be blamed regardless.
6:51 pm
we've asked jonathan allen to join us. let's do it as a lightning round. first off, why is the seat vacant? >> congressman tim murphy resigned amid a scandal involving extra marital affairs. one of the headlines was tax me -- text messages asking her to have an abortion and he was pro-life and that was tantamount of running him out of office. >> isn't everything in pennsylvania about to get jumbled um on all the districts changed around as they redistrict? >> it's a mid term of the mid terms basically, brian. this will be an opportunity for folks to see where people -- where voters are, how it compares to last year. it doesn't have any real significance beyond the one district. however, there is an election there so we're all going to
6:52 pm
cover it and try to gauge what we can and judge what we can coming out of it and see if that's applicable to the mid terms later this year. you're absolutely right. basically the pennsylvania maps have been thrown out. they're going to be probably new maps and it could be both of these guys are in congress in different disabilities come january or that one is and the other isn't. this is a short-term stint for somebody. it will be basically until january of next year and then this district will be gone. >> help me fill in the blanks on a bio of conor lamb. he is a u.s. marine corps captain. he is considered a pro gun rights democrat who is personally opposed to abortion and what else should we know about him? >> i mean, that's the basics, brian. i mean, this is a candidate who is trying to show that a democrat who fits the cultural values of western pennsylvania can still win in that part of
6:53 pm
the country, somebody with the prosecutorial background as well. that's who conor lamb is. he's sort of the type of candidate that democrats who centrist democrats believe they need to have to not only retake the house of representatives in the fall but also be competitive in 2020. >> i'll tell you, both parties are spending a lot of money. you'd think this kind of thing was important to them. jonathan allen, you and your reporting are important to us. always a treat to you have on. thank you so much for joining us on a friday night. another break for us. coming up, what it might look like when the president orders up a military parade. we learned more about that today. we'll have it when we come right back. does this map show the
6:54 pm
peninsula trail? you won't find that on a map. i'll take you there. take this left. if you listen real hard you can hear the whales. oop. you hear that? (vo) our subaru outback lets us see the world. sometimes in ways we never imagined. (avo) get 0% apr financing on all-new 2018 subaru outback models. now through april 2nd. on the only bed that adjusts on both sides to your ideal comfort, your sleep number setting. does your bed do that? it's the last chance for clearance savings up to $600 on our most popular beds. ends soon. visit sleepnumber.com for a store near you.
6:55 pm
there's so much goodness it makes us feel alive.
6:56 pm
it illuminates our world and connects us to each other. with transitions® adaptive lenses® you'll live the good light. they block uv rays. plus they help protect from harmful blue light. both indoors... and out. enjoy life more comfortably. enjoy life more richly. live the good light. find an eyecare professional at transitions.com 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. two united club passes. priority boarding. and earn fifty thousand bonus miles after you spend
6:57 pm
three thousand dollars on purchases in the first three months from account opening plus, zero-dollar intro annual fee for the first year, then ninety-five dollars. learn more at theexplorercard.com last thing before we go tonight, this was the event that got donald trump to thinking. that was the bastille day parade in paris. one of the correspondents seated behind the president that day said she'd never seen his attention so riveted, and he loved every minute of that parade and that's where he got the idea to have a parade of his own back here at home. now the "new york times" has got i don't kn gotten its hands on a planning memo written by a navy captain on the staff of the defense secretary, former general mattis, a memo to the joint
6:58 pm
chiefs of staff. the first thing we learn from it, the planned date, november 11, 2018, so same length as the inaugural parade only in reverse. the president will review the parade, it is written here, from the capitol, surrounded by veterans, including medal of honor recipients, it will include women, is says in-period costume and this potential disappointment to the president. it says wheeled vehicles only, no tanks. it says consideration must be given to minimize damage to local infrastructure. put another way, an abrams tank weighs just over 60 tons and constitution avenue perhaps
6:59 pm
wasn't built for that. on the up side, the memo calls for a heavy air component at the end of the parade. a big flyover to include older aircraft as available. again, this can all change. these are planning considerations and it's a good bet that just about all of it is subject to change. before we go this evening, we have some reminders for you. especially for our time-shifting viewers. you can watch us any time you please by downloading the msnbc app on your phone and just press play on or broadcast. if you're on the move, listen on sirius xm radio and we're also available as a podcast. there's no reason why you would ever need to miss a single broadcast of "the 11th hour." with that, that is our broadcast for this friday night and, while we're at it, for this week.
7:00 pm
thank you so very much for being here with us. good night from nbc news headquarters here in new york. hi, everyone. it's 4:00 in new york. donald trump is now officially mired in a full-scale sex scandal. the best indication of his understanding of this new reality, maybe his announcement with direct talks with north korea and his declaration of a trade war but neither bold move can erase the mounting evidence that the hush money wired to porn star stormy daniels may have been done with his knowledge. nbc news breaking the story this afternoon that the president's personal attorney michael cohen used hru

48 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on