tv First Look MSNBC September 12, 2018 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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we don't need take chances. we don't need take personal oon the line. we need go. >> reporter: and that's the point. what officials are saying if you decide to leave, you do that at your own parl. we're not going to send first responders out during the storm to help you. hopefully people are getting the message. time's running out. >> indeed it is. live for us in north carolina. from that perspective. from the perspective of the weather and its path, let's bring in bill karnz. we're inching closer and closer by the hour. >> see destructive impacts at the coast. did drop down to 130 mile-per-hour winds. a category three four. we think it will be a category
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three as it approaches the coast. again we care what the intensity when it's near the coast for the wind and surge. sethe path, the new one. this is friday at 2:00 a.m. could be just off the south carolina coast and then look at this, 24 hours. this thing lingers, drift, loops, stalls, right near wilmington as it sits in the same spot of the friction of the land. we'll have a dying storm over about a three-day period over the north carolina/south carolina boarder and then it drifts through south carolina as it weakens. we're talking 48 hours of a major hurricane and hurricane forced winds. the forecast has improved for raleigh, but it's gotten much worse for areas in especially the northern half of south carolina.
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>> i know you probably know that terrain better than i do. are the cities along the coast canline in the carolinas generally prepared in terms of infrastructure, drainage system? >> all of the communities in the south carolina and north carolina, they get hit by hurricanes once every four years. so they are prepared. structurally for a category 2, 3, maybe even 4, 5 nobody is prepared for. maybe a low-end four. my biggest concern is what happened with all the water. a hurricane that stalled by the coast. you get multiple high tide cycles and you're going to get an incred canabible amount of r. and a stalling hurricane like this is just a nightmare for this area from myrtle beach to
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wilmington, our friends in that emeral isle area, that's where my biggest concerns are. president trump says his administration is totally prepared for hurricane florence. saying the government is sparing no expense. at one point he was asked what lessons they learned from the federal response to hurricane maria that left puerto rico devastated. >> i think puerto rico was incredibly successful. it was our toughest of all because it was an island. i think it was one of the best jobs that has ever been done with respect to what this sl about. everybody working along with the governor is tremendous. i think puerto rico is an incredible unsung success.
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>> estimated nearly 3,000 people died in the first five months after the storm hit. they updated the death toll after the findings were published. senator chris murphy tweeted "i mean this seriously, not as a political dig, if you're in florence's path and considering riding it out, your president just said a hurricane response where 3,000 die is his measure of success. get out of there." now bob woodward's explosive new book, fear was released as an instant best seller. and advanced sales apparently depleted stock. meanwhile, several key figures pushing back. you've heard about the former white house advisor apparently swiping a letter off the president's desk tee end a trade agreement with south korea. and told them to print money to
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lower the national debt. just run the presses, print money to which cohen responded you don't get to do it that way. he was astounded of trump's lack of basic understanding. and the book does not accurately portray his experience at the white house. so he declined to dispute any specific accounts and there's push back from staff secretary rob porter who was undermined for what he said was the good of the country and told him quote this is no longer a presidency, this is no long arwhite house. this is a man being who he is. "like cohen did not mention exactly what woodward had gotten wrong. he's woodward in an interview with the new york times. after the information then fear started breaking last week. one key person who's in office
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called me and said everyone knows what you've said here is true. it's 1,000% correct. and then this person has said public things that contradict that and i'm not happy but i have a smile on my face because the truth in all of this is going to emerge. there's too much evidence -- too many witnesses. >> and they're gearing up for what looks to be an excruciatingly close race. senator majority leader mitch mcconnell expressed his own concerned in kentucky. >> we know this is going to be a challenging election oon the senate side. i'll just list you a bunch of places that are dead even.
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arizona, nevada, tennessee, montana, north dakota, missouri, indiana, west virginia and florida. all of them too close to call and everyone of them like knife fight in an alley. just a brawl. and everyone of those places. >> joining us from washington, white house reporter. great to have you with us this morning. are they genuinely concerned about the comments the leader is now sounding on these raiser thin midterm races? >> reporter: i think so. i think there is concern in the senate. is it likely democrats will take over the senate? no. but is it possible? i think that's too close for comfort. i think he's saying don't think this is just going to be a done deal that we're going to keep the senate.
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i think he wants to motivate the base to get out there because it is possible if there's a huge blue wave, that senate could be in play and if that happens, it's kind of a done deal for republicans and for president trump. >> which states would likely be up for grabs for the democrats from those nine that mitch mcconnell listed for them in order to flip and take control of the senate? >> reporter: i think each of them is going to kind of play out in their own way. you have a lot of democrats who are kind of in red states. claire mccaskill and others trying to hold on which is not easy to do when president trump is relatively popular. but when you have someone like ted cruz who's getting a bit nervous, then you can tell
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things aren't going as well as the republicans would hope because when you have to talk about texas for republicans >> the fact that texas is up for grabs says it all. let's switch gears for a moment. because the nation gearing up for potential catastrophic storm and president trump touting the u.s.'s response in puerto rico as an unsung success. >> i don't think they're playing real well. apparently the governor of puerto rico has responded and talked about the relationship between washington d.c., basically between the leaders of the u.s. and puerto rico and said that it's unfair. this is a storm where the death toll is now at nearly 3,000. so -- and people were without power for months and months. see it kind of call this is a success. it's tone deaf on the part of the president. >> certainly not going to go
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anger over the shooting death in his own apartment. court documents painting a picture of a confused police officer, amber guyger coming to what she thought was her apartment. instead she was one floor above her own unit. she alleged the door was already fully ajar. inside the dark apartment, she saw a large silhouette. believing she encountered a burglar, gave verbal commands that were ignored and fired twice, hitting him twice. but that story contradicts what a neighbor heard. >> they heard her pounding at the door, demanding to be let in. >> she posted a $300,000 bond ahead of her hearing. >> accord thing to witness she heard a man call out oh, my god, why did you do that?
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>> reporter: now a question so many here want answered. with less than two monthess until the mid-term elections, the trump administration is -- president trump plans to sign an executive order authorizing sanctions on any foreign company or person found interfering in u.s. elections and saying the order will require any agency aware of federal interference including the nsa and department of homeland security to report to the office of director of national intelligence siting a foreign interference occurred. they say congress has been left out of the executive order drafting process on purpose and reportedly wants the executive order, at least in part because it wants to get ahead of much harsher legislation being considered in both chambers. a worker accused of sexually
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abusing seven teen age boys, some more than one occasion at a migrant shelter for children. found guilty of seven counts abusive sexual contact and six counts of sexual abuse of minors. the abuse ooccurred at southwest key, one of the largest operators of housing of migrants on the southern boarder. the company responded saying it was greaved to learn about the abuse and it continues to cooperate with investigators. and another employee has been charged with sexually abusing a 14-year-old girl in june, at according to authorities. baseball history is made right here in new york city and they may have extra pep in their step this morning as the best team in baseball becomes the first to clinch a post season birth.
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some welcome relief... or a cause for celebration. the help you've been looking for. what's inside? possibilities. what we deliver by delivering. welcome back everyone. time now for sports and we begin with major league baseball with last night's 7-2 victory against the blue jays, the leading boston red sox become the first team poised for a second -- heading to the championships. they're garntded no worst than
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the wild card game. and a game tieing double in cooco's 6 hadf 3 loss against arizona. y is now the first short stop with 40 doubles, 30 home runs 25 steals. in a single season. and in queens, mets/a's, adds for his case for a siyuj award breaking a mlb record in the 5-3 loss last night. he will allow two runs in seven innings of work. posted 26th consecutive start, all to break the record set in 1910 by chicago cubs pitcher, leslie king coal. star running back, lave yawn bell's holdout is still looming over the pittsburgh steelers, they appear to have removed the player from the depth chart, where it was revealed he was a first stringer.
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running back james conor rushed for 200 yards against inbrowns. still ahead senator susan colins is facing increasing pressure over the fight for brit kavanaugh's is supreme court nomination. plus we're continuing to track hurricane florence and we go live once again to north carolina where residents have been told to evacuate. ♪ hungry eyes ♪ one look at you and i can't disguise ♪ ♪ i've got hungry eyes ♪ i feel the magic between you and i ♪ ♪ i've got hungry eyes ♪ now i've got you in my sights ♪ applebee's new 3-course meal starting at $11.99. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. brushing only reaches 25% of your mouth. listerine® cleans virtually 100%.
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it's tremendously big and tremendously wet. tremendous amounts of water. >> welcome back everyone. this morning hurricane florence is inching closer as more than 1 million americans rushed to evacuate the coastline. fema is warning it could be the strongest storm to targ that carolinas and virginia in decades. bringing with it a possible life-threatening storm surge, destructive winds and potential catastrophic rainfall as well as inland flooding. for the very latest on the storm, let's bring in meteorologist, bill karins. how far away is it from making land fall and the immediate 24 hours afterwards? >> there's a chance it doesn't even make land fall until saturday. we are expecting the stall. it could stall on the coast or off the coast. so i'm not going to focus too
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much on the actual land fall. this is going to be a major hurricane that is going to literally stall for 46 to 48 hours over myrtle beach and willeming stn. and the effects of that and the shift has gone further to the south means this forecast has improved northward, virginia beach, hampton roads area to richmond, raleigh. the forecast is much better for you today than it was 24 hours ago. but that means bad news for areas further to the south. myrtle beach has gotten worse, from florence to dillen. fayette vill. and now we're starting to talk about charleston dealing with heavy rainfall and a little bit of a storm surge too. the element of the storm, the surge, then we'll get the wind and then we'll have the rainfall. so for the surge, the worst will be north of the center.
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so if it come cans up here and sits and spins to the south of wilmington, jacksonville, all the way through emeral isle, this where the worst storm surge will be down the carolina beach, 9 to 13 feet. that's the best chance for destruction from the storm surge that's throughout friday, thursday night, all day friday and a little bit into saturday morning. notice high tide times at 11:46 p.m. and we have to deal with the winds as it gets closer. the forecast has gotten a little bit lower so we're talking category two and three. and so the strongest wind as we go throughout the clock will be coming as we go through thursday night and friday morning. the one i know for sure is going to cause a ton of damage will be the historic rainfall. someone could get four feet of rain from the storm by the time it's all said and done.
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that's what happens regardless of its category. >> interesting. so that was the perspective from both the radars the maps. let's get the perspective from the ground. msnbc's jay grey is there. what's itting like there this morning? in terms of the scale. >> reporter: the opportunity, that window to get ready or get out quickly closing. we've had a spiting rain. it's going to intensify. then things go from bad to worse pretty quickly here. . >> reporter: time is running out along the south atlantic oes. florence, a category 4 hurricane gathering momentum and growing. >> the waves and wind this storm may bring is nothing like you've ever seen. even if you've ridden out storms
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before, this one is different. don't bet your life on riding out a monster. >> reporter: evacuations started tuesday and will continue today. more than a million from virginia through the carolinas. gathering sand bags, boarding up, pang up pulling out. many wered about what they may find when they come back. >> just hope everything's still standing and not too much damage. but again this is a very significant storm. >> reporter: still lorraine and mike taylor say they'll tried out. a home like so many in the strike zone in the path of what forecasters are calling a catastrophic storm now closing in. wie expect land fall be early friday morning. that means really historic
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flooding, not only here on the coast but inland as well. a lot geing on here in the next couple of days. >> our thoughts for everyone as they prepare. president trump says his administration is prepared to deal with the aftermath of hurricane florence. now it comes as he faces new criticismf over his fresh comments of his administration's response on hurricane maria. nearly 3,000 people died as a reswrault of that system, according to one report. >> reporter: good morning. president trump is insisting his administration is as ready as anyone has ever been to deal with hurricane florence. describe thing storm as tremendously big and wet and when asked about lessons learned from the storms that devastated puerto rico last year president trump praised results and given
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3,000 people died as a result of hurricane maria. mr. trump started his day tuesday commemorate thing 17th anniversary of the september 11th terrorist attacks, greeting people by pumping his fists. >> thanks to kristen welker for that report. and nounced he will not be supporting supreme court nominee, kavanaugh. tweeting i would have liked to meet with judge kavanaugh personally before deciding how to vote. but fortunately the white house never responded. so i'm just going to say it. i'll be voting no. he sited his roe v wade as his reezing. and sit on the court of appeals
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for the district of columbia. durbin released emails from kavanaugh's time working in the bush administration, detailing on theination of william hanes to fill a vacancy. they allege kavanaugh knowingly misled senators in hanz' nomination. he was involved in the administration's detention policy after the september 11th, 2001, terrorist attacks. he preefbiately admitted to being involved in discussions leading to hanz' nomination but did not handle the nomination itself. and shah hit back in a series of tweets calling them quote a complete total smear with no basis. republican senator is facing increase pressure. collins is facing a high dollar
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fund raising drive against her that her office has likened to extortion. she's also received profanity laced voice mails over kavanaugh's nomination. according to recordings obtained by nbc news, they're precing the republican senator over concerns that if confirmed, kavanaugh may help to undue roe v wade. once again white house reporter for npr. great to have you back with us. in the past these kinds of extreme measures, like what senator susan colins is experiencing, have they hurt or helped the chances of a conformation going through? >> reporter: it's pretty unusual, i think at this stage. sometimes earlier on when a nominee is announced, there have been efforts to get that
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candidate basically to get the white house to pull that nominee for the supreme court. it has happened. in the past. it happened during the second bush administration. but at this point it does seem like cavanaugh has the votes. she's not said that she's going to do it but it seems unlikely that republicans won't be able to convince her and even if they did, even if collins didn't vote for him, they still need another republican are to actually bring down -- to actually bring down kavanaugh's nomination and that seems unlikely. >> with all the republicans towing the party line, it's unlikely that the democrats are going to be able to derail kavanaugh's conformation. is there any other recourse left for them or is this a done deal for brett kavanaugh? >> reporter: pretty much at this point it seems like a done deal.
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there's very little now that democrats can do to stop this from going forward. they can -- they can raise their concerns, they can certainly make a case to the public and kavanaugh's polling is not very high. but as far as what they can do to actually stop the nomination, since republicans only need 51 votes, there's not much that democrats can do. >> let me ask you real quickly about the midterm, the sentiments. we heard mitch mcconnell saying it's like a knife fight in the alley for senate seats. what's the sentiment to the house? is that pretty much assumed it's not going to remain in republican hands come the midterms? >> reporter: it'sing to be really tough because typically when the party in power loses seats in the house and in the past as many as 30. so the odds are stacked against the republicans there in the house and even if president
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trump was popular, the odds are stacked against him and he's not very popular and seems like he would be a drag. so i think house is something where it's not a forgone conclusion but people realize that it's going to be a tough challenge to keep that. >> a lot of people are saying it depends who energizes their base more. thanks for joining us this morning. so democratic voters in new hampshire back the establishment candidate in yesterday's primary. expected to win the first district democratic nomination. thee support of nearly every democrat in the state and defeated his opponent, muresullivan and levi sanders. on the republican side, former pleets chief and navy veteran, eddie edwards. the trump-backed candidate defeated state senator, andy
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sandborn. either candidate would make history. the first openly lgbt member of congress or the first african american representative. and voting was moved from tuesday to wednesday to avoid the raugs shauna holiday. flrs last time rhode island held an election on wednesday was 1988. they'll hold a primary where first-term democrat face as serious primary challenge from former rhode island secretary of state brown, he faces the latest threat challenging establishment incumbents. on the republican allan fung is the early favorite in today's vote. rngts and an nbc news exclusive report on attacks in diplomats
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in china. and the very latest on hurricane florence and where the storm will likely make. ♪ this is a story about mail and packages. and it's also a story about people. people who rely on us every day to deliver their dreams they're handing us more than mail they're handing us their business and while we make more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country, we never forget... that your business is our business the united states postal service.
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come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. welcome back everyone. we want to get the very latest on hurricane florence. let's bring back nbc meteorologist, bill karins. >> in terms of of the track of the storm. here's the latest, 130 mile-per-hour winds, still a category 4. and it's still moving quickly at 17 miles per hour. it's going to move towards the north carolina coast quickly it hits the breaks and stalls and moves extremely slowly and that's the problem. so here's the force cast point. as we go throughout thursday afternoon, that's where we are 2:00 p.m., then friday at 2:00 p.m. and off the coast, saturday at 2:00 a.m. this is going to linger from 36
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to 48 hours, either over the top of wilmington or myrtle beach or off the coast. high tide cycle after high tide cycle. the winds continue to stay high. more wind damage and then the incredible rainfall amount. you can't ask for a worst forecast for jacksonville, north carolina, aunz low county area down to wilmington. it continues to get worse myrtle beach. all of these lines on our computers. this is at 8:00 p.m. thursday. then we take the storm and notice some of the lines linger and drift here? a couple move over areas of south carolina. the forecast has improved from raleigh northward, dramatically improved. gotten worse myrtle beach, georgetown, charleston and areas around hilton head island have gotten worse.
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now let's talk about our main computer models, the european model and american model. they're in pretty good agreement. trrs this is 11:00 p.m. friday lingering off the coast of south carolina. this is the european computer model path. it takes up towards wilmington and then off the coast all through the weekend the rainfall amounts would be up to a foot on the south carolina coast as far a south as savannah if the european model is correct. with the -- all day friday and into saturday. the forecast path with our american model similar up towards the wilmington area brings it down through south carolina. it would be weakening by the time it got closer to a land fall say it does happen in myrtle beach or georgetown, a category one or two. still in north carolina but the fact that this is going to linger and maybe drift down the
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southeast coastline into south carolina, even more problemat it includes more people. very happy they took precautions when they could two days ago and told everybody in coates canal south carolina to get out of the way friendship for a while taking georgetown southwards. now they could have quite storm to talk about when they're done. >> i was going to ask really quickly. no stranger to hurricanes historically but the cities, are they built for what they're about to see in terms of walls, drainage, how vulnerable are some of these cities? >> you think of the areas hit the most by hurricanes, florida, north carolina has a hurricane once every four years. so the building codes are strict. if we get 120 to 130 mile-per-hour you'll get minor structural damage but not see
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things blown apart hurricane andrew scenario extreme winds. i would be most concerned with the stall. just water. just too much water. when the storm is here, it's throwing walter and rainfall inland and then we have the storm surge on top of that. all the rain falling in the rivers, falls in north carolina and then it flows to the coast. so at the same time we have the water pushing it in and they're wangs out and that water levels -- even inland areas, like the nuse river here new newburn area, there's so many implications for a stalling storm. it's all water issues too much of it. >> praying for the best. the trump administration is responding to nbc news's eexclusive report on u.s. and canadian diplomats in cuba and china. not exactly a denial that
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intelligence agencies investigate thing incidents consider russia to be the primary suspect based on intercepted communications. >> we have seen sort of a fire storm of reports throughout today assigning blame to the russian government, according to some unnamed u.s. government officials. as you should be aware the investigation continues. into what has caused what we have called health attacks on our state department employee whose have been working in cuba. there is no known cause, no known individual or group believed to be responsible at this time. we are looking into it. our position has not changed. the investigation is ongoing. we have not assigned any blame and we continue to look into this so i want to be very clear about this. >> the report that msnbc put out and noted that the evidence is not yet conclusive enough to formally assign blame on moscow.
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the fight to reclaim key territory appears to be nearing an end. members say they have initiated a final push to rid to rid isis the haitian border. it's said to be the very latest area under control. the spokesman says she expect a long and hard fight that could last two to three months. it comes more than four years since the terror group seized area and declared a so-called caliphate. yesterday the united nations secretary general called on syria, iran, turkey and russia to avoid a, quote, brood bath and humanitarian nightmare in a city of civilians reportedly one-third of which are children. still ahead, the federal
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deficit surges towards $1 trillion. plus, fear and loathing, add chris christie to a list of people pushing against claims in bob woodward's new book. simple goodness is ahhhmazing! meaty morsels. a tender texture. with real meat and a blend of peas and carrots i can see. a totally new kind of awesome going on here! (avo) beneful simple goodness. tender, meaty morsels with real ingredients you can see. to take care of yourself. but nature's bounty has innovative ways to help you maintain balance
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hit $1 trillion sooner than expected. that brings the total figure to $895 billion. the cbo says the surge is due to the new republican tax law and an increase in government spending. officials say the figures were somewhat inflated due to a timing shift for some payments by the government. earlier analysis from the cbo said deficits wouldn't nearly the $1 trillion the mark until about 2019 and surpass it the following year. amid the new deficit figures from the ceo, house republicans are proposing even more tax cuts pushing further into the red. the republicans tax reform 2.0 would make the individual tax cuts signed into last last year permanent. those cuts were set to expire by 2025. and the move would add more than $570 billion to the deficit over a decade on top of the $1.5 trillion the cuts passed last year are expected to add. some critics have argued the
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move by republican sess aimed at locking in votes ahead of the midterm elections. house tax committee chairman kevin brady plans to put the bill to a committee level vote on thursday with a full house vote expected by october 1st. the bill would likely be dead on arrival in the senate where democrats have the votes to shoot it down. several key figures mentioned in bob woodward's explosive new book, "fear," are pushing back while chris christie is upset claiming woodward never reached out to him to fact checkbooks involving the former governor. the book claims during the campaign trump lashed out at his then transition chief saying where the "f" is the money. i need money for my campaign. i'm putting money in my campaign and you're f'ing stealing from me. christie issued a series of tweets including this one blaming steve bannon for fanning
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the flames. if mr. woodward would have performed rudimentary intelligence gathering he would have had a better book. coming up on "morning joe," hailing the hurricane maria response as one of the best. more on the fresh backlash president trump is facing for his self-assessment on the federal government's efforts in the wake of that massive storm as parts of the east coast brace for impact from hurricane florence. and former independent counsel ken starr joins the conversation to discuss his new book regarding the investigation into president clinton and his subsequent impeachment. r a live, it could cost you your life. it's time to get out of line with upmc. at upmc, living-donor transplants put you first.
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i think puerto rico was incredibly successful. puerto rico was actually our toughest one of our because it's an island. you can't truck things on to it. everything is by boat. we moved a hospital into puerto rico, a tremendous military hospital in the form of a ship. you know that. and i actually think the
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governor has been very nice and if you ask the governor, he'll tell you what a great job. i think probably the hardest one we had by far was puerto rico because of the island nature and i actually think it was one of the best jobs that's ever been done with respect to what this is all about. the job that fema and law enforcement and everybody did working along with the governor in puerto rico, i think, was tremendous. i think that puerto rico was an incredible, unsung success. >> an unsung success. that's president president citing the government's storm response in puerto rico where nearly 3,000 americans died, where electricity and clean water was so hard to find for so long and where -- >> still is --. >> donald trump picked fights with leaders in puerto rico. and he cites that as
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