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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  March 15, 2019 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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happy friday. this has been a very, very newsy week and it is a very newsy friday. this is going to be a big show. we've got a lot to get to tonight, including somebody who is here for the interview you are very much going to want to see here with me on set later on this hour. of course the dominant news story in our country and around the world is what happened in new zealand, where new zealand is still reeling, and i think much of the world is still reeling today after yesterday's shootings at two mosques in the city of christchurch. as of tonight, the death toll from the shootings stands at 49 people killed. over 40 people were injured, including a dozen people who were described this evening by christchurch hospital as, quote,
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critically ill. initially there had been four people in custody in conjunction with these killings. one of those in custody is believed to be the gunman. he's already showed up in court in new zealand today. interestingly, new zealand authorities announced that his court proceedings today and presumably his future court proceedings as well will be closed. they will not be open to the public. nobody will be allowed to observe them. they're describing that as a security decision. that may also have implications in terms of how much this guy wants to continue to try to be a propagandist for his terrorististic ideas that led him to do this as he's done in his online writings as well. of the other people who were arrested besides him, police had said originally that it was two men and one woman who were arrested in addition to the guy who is believed to be the gunman. police initially said they were picked up because at least some, if not all of them, had firearms near the scene of the crime. authorities are now no longer characterizing those three people in any way, except to say
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that one of those people has since been released from police custody after it became clear that that person was actually trying to help police in stopping the event and he was not part of committing it. but these other two people who were arrested besides the guy who is believed to be the gunman, those other two people as of right now remain in custody. now we know nothing about them and we know nothing about their potential complicity in this act. we also really don't have a clear timeline as yet. the vast majority of those killed, 41 people were killed at the al-nur mosque in christchurch, but seven other people were also killed at a different mosque, the linwood mosque, about three miles away. another person later died at the hospital. we do know from what law enforcement has described that happened, the man in custody, the gunman, the man who is in court today, he drove to the al-nur mosque first and killed those 41 people there and then we know from the way police have
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described what happened that after the killings at the al-nur mochk, mosque, he got back into his vehicle and drove away. it is possible when he drove away, he drove to the other mosque three miles away and committed the other killings there. it has not been explicitly laid out that way by police. they haven't given us that level of detail. so that sort of hole in the timeline thus far. that in combination with the fact that other people are still in custody without police saying what their potential involvement in this might have been just means that some of the basics here remain unsaid and we still have a lot to learn about what happened. but as of tonight, a lot of people are still being treated for injuries. as i said, christchurch hospital just said that as many as a dozen people are viewed as critically ill, which means, you know, the death toll may yet rise above the almost unbelievably high number of 49 people already known to have died. so we will have more ahead on
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this still unfolding story tonight. this in part is going to be the subject of the interview that we're going to do here on set tonight. but before we get to that, we're actually going to start tonight with an exclusive. with a bit of a scoop. at the beginning of the trump administration, there were a lot of somewhat strange personnel choices made by the incoming president. i mean, even in the cabinet. rick perry for energy secretary, right? rick perry had not only proposed abolishing the energy department, he also appeared to believe that the energy department was the oil and gas part of the government and not the part that deals with, like, nuclear weapons. he didn't even appear to understand that once he had been named the secretary of energy. so that was a weird choice. also remember the party planner for eric trump's wedding was put in charge of housing in the northeastern united states. that was a weird choice. also, the president's personal bankruptcy lawyer, his bankruptcy lawyer was named ambassador to israel for the united states.
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also, the president really did make an effort to try to make his personal pilot the head of the faa. so there were some weird choices right off the bat. one less high profile but equally weird choice came when president trump picked a man named scott loyd to be the director of the office of refugee resettlement. that was a weird choice, too, because scott lloyd had never worked with refugees ever. he had never worked with resettling anyone, so the idea that he would be in charge of resettling refugees was odd. what scott lloyd had done in his life is he had been a conservative activist lawyer from a catholic group called the knights of columbus. he basically was an activist anti-abortion guy. his body of public writings included stuff like this. quote, facts about abortion, why you can't be pro-life and pro-contraception. this was all about how birth control is the same thing as abortion and women shouldn't be
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allowed access to either in this country. all abortions should be illegal for american women and birth control should be illegal for american women, too. so that was his public profile before he got put in charge of the office of refugee resettlement. if you want to know what happens when you put somebody with that pedigree and that experience in charge of randomly refugee resettlement in this country, well, now we've done that as a country. so now we know how that works out. here is a headline from the "l.a. times," december 2017, trump official sought to block abortion for 17-year-old rape victim. scott lloyd is the trump official in question. part of this scandal was him writing a memo outlining his reasoning for blocking a teenage rape victim from accessing abortion. quote, i'm convinced that assisting with an abortion in this case is not in her best interest. i am mindful that abortion is offered by some as a solution to a rape. i disagree. and then he tried to block her
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from getting an abortion, using his status as a federal official in charge of this refugee resettlement agency in order to do it. the 17-year-old in that case, the 17-year-old girl who had been raped, she was one of many kids who arrived in the u.s. applying for refugee status. she was sent alone to a shelter operated by the trump administration. at some point along the way she found out that she was pregnant as a result of that rape. in america, it does not matter whether you are an immigrant or not. it doesn't matter your age. it doesn't matter where you're from. in america, you have a constitutionally protected right to get an abortion if you want one. the government is not allowed to stop you from getting one if you want one. that is a decision that you are allowed to make for yourself. it is protected by the constitution. but when scott lloyd took over the office of refugee resettlement, he became the guy who was in charge of all of those kids. and he decided he would make it his first priority in that job
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to block any girl who came into the clutches of that agency he was running, he would block any girl under his purview at that agency from getting an abortion. the only reason that 17-year-old rape victim from that 2017 case, the only reason she eventually was allowed to get an abortion, and the only reason we know about her plight is because she found her way to lawyers at the aclu who took her case, who sued the government on her behalf and won. she was the first jane doe in the case. she decided she wanted an abortion. it's interesting, in her case, she had raised the funds needed to pay for it herself. she had gotten a judge in texas to explicitly grant her permission to get the abortion, despite the fact that she had no way of getting parental consent for it. she had arranged for travel at her own expense to and from her doctors appointments necessary for her to get the abortion. but still, scott lloyd's agency, the federal government agency he was running wouldn't let her leave the shelter to go to the doctor. that is what ultimately became a
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class action lawsuit led by that pregnant teenage girl who has literally being forced to continue this pregnancy against her will by the u.s. government until the aclu intervened to take her case and won it. bridget amiri is the aclu attorney who sued on her behalf and we talked to her about it at the time. >> they were literally holding her hostage, blocking the door, preventing her from obtaining an abortion. and i do believe that that was their goal, to hold her hostage until she carried this pregnancy to term against her will. >> bridget amiri talking about her client who had the name in court of jane doe. as that case made its way through the courts, the aclu kept turning up more janes, more girls who were being held in shelters overseen by this guy, scott lloyd, who were being blocked from getting an abortion. and it soon became very clear why. this was not just some fluke thing where somebody, like, wasn't properly trained or
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something, this was an official policy of this agency under this trump administration official, scott lloyd. bridget amiri, the aclu attorney, got to depose scott lloyd as part of that aclu lawsuit. here's how part of that went. >> you're personally opposed to abortion, correct? >> yes. >> you've written on the subject? >> yes. >> you're personally opposed to contraception, correct? >> um, depends. >> you wrote an article that said not to be pro-life you needed to be anti-contraception? >> um, that was the title of the article. something along those lines. >> something along those lines. something like the title of the article "why you can't be pro-life and procontraception." something along those lines. so those are his views. bridget amiri from the aclu goes on to ask him about how it is when he's running this agency that essentially controls the fate and controls the physical movement of all of these girls who are in this country because they're asking for asylum, how
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it is that all of these girls in that agency that he's running keep getting blocked from accessing abortions. and watch what she gets him to admit. >> have you ever approved an abortion request in your time as orr director? >> no. >> are there any circumstances under which you would approve an abortion request? >> objection. calls for speculation. >> i'm not going to answer that. >> you can still answer it even though -- >> i don't know. >> you've denied abortion requests, correct? >> yes. >> you've denied abortion requests even in the context where the pregnancy is a result of rape, right? >> um, yes. >> so the way the system was working under the trump administration is that scott lloyd was in charge of this agency. when a teenage girl who was a rape victim made her way to the
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united states seeking help in this country, she has to get permission from scott lloyd personally to get an abortion. because he's weighing in on all of these cases, blocking these girls from getting it. and so scott lloyd has appointed himself the gatekeeper about whether or not the girls are allowed to access the thing they're supposed to have a constitutional right to get. he's appointed himself a gate keeper and it turns out he's never granted that permission any time someone has come to that gate. so this was starting to look like a de facto u.s. government trump administration policy. that deposition with scott lloyd was released in february of last year as the lawsuit was still ongoing. then in april, "the new york times" reported something that began to shed a little bit of light on how that policy was carried out. "the new york times" reported that scott lloyd, quote, has instructed his staff to give him a spreadsheet each week that tells him about any unaccompanied minors who have
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asked for an abortion and how far along they are in their pregnancy. in at least one case, he directed staff to read to one girl a discrimination of what happens during an abortion. and when there is a need for counselling, mr. lloyd's office calls on someone from its list of preferred life affirming pregnancy resource centers. so he was keeping a spreadsheet with details that amount to a record of pregnant teens' menstrual cycles and he was using that information individualized to these individualized girls, teenagers, and some of them younger, to block them from accessing abortions that they wanted to get. after "the new york times" reported that that spreadsheet existed somewhere inside the federal government, a progressive super pac called american bridge filed a freedom of information act request asking the government to hand over that spreadsheet, since that's apparently federal government property and federal government employees are doing that, tracking these individual girls' menstrual cycles and how far along they are in their
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pregnancies as federal employees, as people who are working at a federal agency for the purpose of controlling what happens to those girls' pregnancies. well, this week, much to the surprise of the people at american bridge, as far as we can tell, the trump administration did hand that spreadsheet over, and tonight we have obtained it. and it's -- it is a -- it is a remarkable thing to look at. here it is. it is 28 pages long. let me just show you what we're looking at here, as best as we can tell. when the government released this document because of the freedom of information request, they sent it as a pdf document. so they didn't send it as a spreadsheet you could look at as a spreadsheet. that just means the titles of the columns are collapsed in some cases, but we think we know what each of these things means. the first column is the date where the pregnancy was reported. second column is we think how the pregnancy was reported. how government officials found out about it.
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the next column contains an alien identification number, which is a unique identifying number for each of these kids who has come over to ask for asylum. the government has redacted those here because that would identify these specific girls in this document. but scott lloyd had access to that unique identifying information for each girl. next is each girl's age on this document, the girls' ages range from 12 to 17. next is the name of the shelter where each girl is being held. then we think this next column is the day each girl was admitted to the shelter. we've partially redacted this column ourselves because it seems like this kind of information could be used in some bank shot if somebody was trying to identify some of these women so we've redacted some of that ourselves. and then you have in this u.s. government document the results of their pregnancy tests. they all say positive, positive, positive. then you have the u.s. government's calculation of the estimated gestation age, how far along these pregnancies are, tracking them for each of these
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girls. then the next line is whether the pregnancy is believed to be the result of consensual sex or not. u.s. government keeping track of that for each of these girls on this federal government employee-provided spreadsheet. then whether or not it was reported as a sexual assault, all those column lines, either reported, not reported. reported, not reported. then the second to lamb column is t.o.p. requested. t.o.p. in this context we think means termination of pregnancy. so the question of whether or not this girl has asked for an abortion. they're keeping track of that with each of these girls, including their age, how far along they are in their pregnancy, the gestational age of the fetus as believed by the federal government. the circumstances under which the girl may have become impregnated. whether or not it was reported as a sexual assault. is she asking for an abortion? the federal government is tracking all of this for each individual girls, down to age 12. finally the last column is
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reserved to notes on each case. you can zoom in on that notes case. in one case they're talking specifically about the timeline of the girl's last menstrual cycle as being tracked by the trump administration, except they spell menstrual wrong. this is literally the federal government tracking a 15-year-old's period because of what the federal government plans to do about it. let's look at one entry and detail here. one at random. just so you can see the kind of data they were collecting. this is a case from march of last year, march of 2018. a 14-year-old girl being held in a shelter in illinois. she's believed to be about one month pregnant from nonconsensual sex. 14-year-old girl. as you can see in the notes column, it says assaulted by unknown assailant in coo, which we believes country of origin here. so this is the federal government with your tax dollars keeping an individualized record
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of pregnant teenage girls' menstrual cycles, whether they've had a positive pregnancy test, what the government knows about how they believe the girls got pregnant, how they believe this individual girl got pregnant and whether this girl has requested an abortion and then the last column, the last column supports what the federal government is doing about it. and this record was being kept for the express purpose of subverting any of these girls' ability to get an abortion. this was essentially a spreadsheet designed to facilitate federal government action to block these girls from getting any abortion they might want. can't imagine why any of them would want that given the circumstances described in the cold, hard spreadsheet cells. when you look through this 28-page document, i mean, it's full of teenagers, in some cases girls who aren't yet teenagers who report being raped and being pregnant as a result. and here is scott lloyd, trump administration appointee, compiling this information about these girls and using it so he can intervene as a government
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official to block each after these girls individually from being able to get the abortion they have asked for. all the while he was tracking in an ongoing way how far along each girl in her pregnancy was. how long he could delay it until it was illegal, right? how much he had to keep blocking her from leaving the shelter that he controlled until she'd be legally forced to give birth thanks to the u.s. federal government. so this document has never been seen before. this is not the sort of thing we're used to seeing. this is not the sort of thing we expect our government to be keeping tabs on in the modern era. but there is one other element of this that i think is, for me, part of this that made me want to sort of close the door and yell at this story a little bit. the part, to me, that is actually the most shocking part of it, because, remember, the aclu had sued to stop scott lloyd from blocking these girls'
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access to abortion, right? they did very well in that suit. on march 30th of last year, they won a major victory in that case. not only had the original jane doe been allowed finally to get the abortion that she had been seeking, on march 30th, a federal judge granted class action status to that case and ordered scott lloyd and anybody else in charge at the trump administration's office of refugee resettlement that they needed to by court order stop interfering with or obstructing any class member's access to a judicial bypass, to a medical appointment related to pregnancy dating, nonbiased counselling, abortion counselling or any pregnancy-related care. as of march 30th last year, the courts have stepped in and stopped this. the court march 30th tells scott lloyd, this trump administration appointee, that as a federal official he needs to stop interfering with these girls' decisions about whether or not they're going to get an abortion. march 30th was that order from the court.
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so we called up bridget amiri today when we obtained access to this document, this aclu lawyer who had fought this case, and one of the things she told us is that among the things that was most shocking about this document, which she had never previously seen, was that the dates on the spreadsheet show that scott lloyd kept tracking all the girls' pregnancies and their menstrual cycles for months after that court ruling. that court ruling ordering him to stop interfering with access to abortion. i mean, all of these dates on the first page are from june of last year. he was supposed to stop this stuff in march. he just kept doing it. and we don't know if scott lloyd continued to physically block girls from access to abortion services the way he was before the court ruling after he was ordered not to by a federal judge, but we do know thanks to this document uncovered this week, which we are making public for the first time, we do know he kept on tracking them regardless of what the court
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told him. why would he want to keep a detailed record of individual girls' menstrual cycles and the pregnancy status of girls and the means by which they became pregnant and the desires whether or not they wanted to have an abortion? week by week for all of these girls if he had pledged that he wasn't going to do anything else to block them from getting what they wanted? i mean, we don't know. we put in a request to hhs to speak to mr. lloyd or get a response from the department tonight. an hhs spokesperson told us, quote, we can't comment because of ongoing litigation on the matter. but the fact that this spreadsheet is being produced on your dime, this is what the federal government does now with individual girls in this circumstance, well, that's where we are. joining us now is bridget amiri. she's deputy director of the aclu's reproductive freedom project. she's the lawyer fighting this case in court. bridget, thank you for being here. i appreciate you helping to validate this document.
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>> thanks for having me. >> i'm right you had not seen this document before we obtained it today. >> i had not. >> there had been reporting that the trump administration was tracking girls at this level of detail in this one agency. seeing the document, to me, first of all, has a visceral effect. but it's also -- it struck me when i read that earlier reporting, i had no idea it was going to be this detailed. did you know that this was the level of information the government was tracking? >> i had a sense it was. i asked scott lloyd at his deposition in february about what kind of reports he was getting. we knew at that point through e-mails we had obtained that he was getting weekly reports. i had a sense it was at least this level of detail. you're right, seeing it together and all of these young women and their specific requests for abortion was really quite surprising. >> as you told us today when we called you to get your take on this and before we asked you to come on the air tonight, you said that it seems shocking or it at least surprising that this
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level of tracking information about all of these individual girls continued, even after the court order in your case, which blocked lloyd from intervening, blocked the trump administration from intervening to stop these girls from getting abortions. is there any reason that you know of or that hhs might have put forward in your litigation that would explain why they'd need to track this information about these girls, up to and including the date of their last menstrual period? >> there is no legitimate government reason to track this information at all. we don't know that there has been any attempt to block any of these young women, but it's curious and i would say creepy that scott lloyd was continuing to get this level of information about these young women and their pregnancies, even after we got the court order, and i think you're right, for what purpose? we are not aware of any obstruction attempts, but it is concerning and kind of bizarre. >> mmm-hmm. yeah, i mean, seeing this -- seeing -- the other thing, to me, that i think was visceral.
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you first look at it, it takes awhile to figure out what you're looking at. then you realize the level of personal information that they're getting here and then you realize you're looking at 28 pages of it. >> right. >> part of it is also the volume that there was this many girls that they were tracking at this level of detail. did you know that it was this many girls who they sort of had their eyes on in this way. >> i didn't know it was this level of girls they had information on. we knew there were hundreds of young women who were pregnant in custody. a number of them, some subset of them were seeking access to abortion, but i did not know there was this level of detail for this many women. >> bridget, as i mention, the hhs spokesperson late tonight contacted us, returned our call when we had asked for comment and they just said they can't comment because of ongoing litigation. what is the status of the litigation here? >> so our injunction is still in place and the government appealed it. we're wait for a decision from the court of appeals, but in the meantime, the government is prohibited from obstructing or
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interfering with access to abortion for all unaccompanied pregnant minors in their custody. and if anyone has any issues, any concerns, any witness to any problems they should give the aclu a call. >> do you anticipate on privacy grounds or on any other ground -- i don't think you can sue for creepiness, maybe margaret atwood can sue for copyright infringement. do you anticipate there will be further legal action simply on the basis of the fact that the federal government has been tracking this level of personal information on uniquely identified girls at such -- to such an extent and for so long. might this be a cause for additional action on its own? >> it's a good question. i just saw the document a little bit ago. certainly i'll be talking to my team and we'll discuss it further. >> all right. bridget amiri, again, thank you for helping us today. >> thank you. >> all right.
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yeah, as i mentioned, that is an exclusive here you won't have heard that story anywhere else. that document was not obtained by my staff, it was obtained by this super pac american bridge. we are being transparent about that sourcing. they provided it to us so that we could make it public but, again, we expect because it was handed over by hhs as a result of a foia request that this is now fair game for reporting by any other news organization. all right. much more to get to tonight. stay with us. l right. much more to get to tonight. stay with us -i'm not calling him "dad." -oh, n-no. -look, [sighs] i get it. some new guy comes in helping your mom bundle and save with progressive, but hey, we're all in this together. right, champ? -i'm getting more nuggets. -how about some carrots? you don't want to ruin your dinner. -you're not my dad! -that's fair. overstepped. -that's fair. mthat i'm 19% native american,d specifically from the chihuahua people.
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today at the white house, the president expressed condolences for the people who were killed and injured in the horrific terror attack in new zealand, where at least 49 people worshipping at two mosques in christchurch, new zealand were shot dead by a man who appears at this point to be a white supremacist anti-immigrant gunman who apparently proclaimed his intentions and his motives in a rambling online manifesto where he ranted about how immigrants were a terrible invasion and how someone needed to stop these invaders, and how he was going to be the one to do it. so president trump expressed condolences for that attack today. when he chose his setting for
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expressing those condolences, he chose to make those remarks at the white house photo-op where he was set to make a big show of vetoing the bill just passed by congress that would stop him from using an emergency declaration as a way to try to build a wall between the united states and mexico. so he is using the veto photo-op to talk about new zealand. the way this goes in order is that he starts off by expressing his upset over the new zealand massacre carried out by the anti-immigrant zealot who wrote his manifesto about stopping his invasion. then the president immediately went on to his next thought which was saying about his border wall, quote, it is definitely a national emergency. rarely have we had such a national emergency. quote, it is a tremendous national emergency. it is a tremendous crisis. we are on track for a million illegal aliens to rush our borders. quote, people hate the word invasion, but that is what it is. it's an invasion. these immigrants. it's an emergency. we have to stop them.
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the president says today. moments after expressing his condolences for what happened in new zealand less than 24 hours ago. right now, the largest state in the country, the largest state in our country is pretty much openly confronting the president on his position on the border and on immigration. california governor gavin newsom has already announced the withdrawal of some california national guard troops from the southern border. he said that troop withdrawal was intended to, quote, refocus on the real threats facing the state. to prepare for the upcoming fire season in california. i should tell you, california is also one of the 16 states suing the president over his emergency declaration to try to build his wall. joining us now for the interview here in studio is california governor gavin newsom. governor, thanks very much for being here. >> it's great to be here. thank you, rachel. >> so when i asked you to come in and be on the show tonight, i didn't exactly know what was going on in the news. >> yeah, tough.
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>> i have to ask you in the wake of what we believe has happened in new zealand. i mean, we know about the extent of the violence and the terrorist attack that was committed. we are learning more about what the gunman may have intended. what's your reaction? >> it's interesting. i mean, the way you just set this up, invaders. it's just an interesting fact last week when we opened an asylum center for people that are coming through the border legally, coming through the border, san ysidro border, the busiest border in the western hemisphere, legalliy surrounded during my announcement were all these trump supporters with signs saying invaders. >> wow. >> that language is real. it's out there. it's part of the body politic. it is intentional. to hear him say that tonight in light of what happened in new zealand is an outrage and people should be, i think, more, well, more intense about that than pretty much anything else that they heard today. >> let me ask you about -- i have interviewed you a few times. you've had different jobs in public service. as mayor of san francisco and as
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lieutenant governor in california. now as governor of california, and california is such an important state in terms of size of its population, the size of its economy, its influence in the country and around the world. >> yeah. >> you obviously have a totally different take on the issue of immigration. >> yeah. >> and asylum and the border than the president. >> yep. >> but there is a question about governing differently when it comes to those issues that is different than how you win the argument, how you win the fight with somebody who is using those issues for the kinds of ways the president -- this president is using it. do you see those as two different things? is it the same challenge? >> no. i think they're very distinctive challenges. i love what you just said. look, let me sort of set this up. california is the most diverse state in the world's most diverse democracy. we are actively engaged in diversity. meaning we are celebrating not just tolerating our diversity. we're a universal state also in this respect, we brought in 112,000 refugees just in the last 15 years.
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where the federal government walks away, we step up and step in. as i said, we were dumping people out on the streets and sidewalks. 60 to 180 families every single night legally coming through our border were being dumped off in the bus stations. dumped off on the streets and sidewalks. the federal government doing nothing for them. the state of california put 25 million up to create a first of its kind migrant shelter. and we did it because of our human capacity to empathize and also because we're a welcoming people and we believe in the american dream and we believe it should be afforded to anyone who seeks it legally. the trump administration does not feel the same. they are making this a national emergency. legal migrants seeking asylum. last year, here are the facts, last year we had the fifth lowest illegal border crossings since 1973 in 46 years. the fifth lowest in 46 years. the crisis is nothing more than legal asylum seekers coming
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through the border. a crisis that is not just manufactured in the context of the larger issue, but is substantively manufactured with intentionality by the trump administration that is metering those crossings, doing nothing to help support these people and actually creating the conditions that they're condemning. this is a farce. it's political theater. and the fact is california is not going to play part of that. now, how do i make that an argument that can attach itself -- >> leading by example in a different way is one thing. confronting them, defeating them in argument, winning the battle, winning the war of ideas around this stuff is -- >> harder. >> something in addition to that. >> that's it. look, so that's the separate question. it's a more challenging question. you can intelectize it. then you've got a guy who uses emotion. he knows the vulnerabilities of his base and he exploits them every single day. and the politics is, you know, it's pretty -- it's not particularly novel. it's about fear, anger, fear, anger. it's a golden oldie. >> mmm-hmm. >> and it's an old saw and he
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plays it very, very well. we've got to push back with facts, but we also have to push back with positive alternatives and i'd like to think our state's that. >> governor, i have a bunch of other stuff to ask you about, will you stay there? >> let's do it. >> california governor gavin newsome is our guest. stay with us. newsome is our guest stay with us but what if your psoriasis symptoms didn't follow you around? that's why there's ilumya. with just 2 doses, a majority of people were clear or almost clear. and over time, even more people were clear or almost clear. all with dosing 4 times a year... after 2 initial doses. plus, ilumya was shown to have similar risks of infections compared to placebo. don't use if you are allergic to ilumya or any of its ingredients. before starting treatment, your doctor should check for tuberculosis and infections. after checking there is no need for routine lab monitoring unless your doctor advises it. ilumya may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them.
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back with us in studio for the interview tonight is governor gavin newsom. democrat of california. governor, thanks for being with us. you made national news within
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the last few days by making an executive decision in your authority as government to basically stop the implementation of the death penalty in your state. >> yep. >> you have made executive decisions in other leadership roles in the past. you made a very controversial decision around gay marriage within your powers as mayor in san francisco. in this one, though, i'm struck by the fact that california voters have been asked if they want to get rid of the death penalty and they've said no, as recently as 2016. you nevertheless decided that this was the right thing to do, not just for yourself, but for your state. >> prop 22 in california said marriage is between a man and a woman as well. >> and that passed in 2008. >> so there is right and wrong and there are the whims of the majority. with respect, we've had 164 people in this country since 1973 that have been exonerated from death row. five in california. one since the voters approved a measure to fast-track the death penalty. we have the largest death penalty, interestingly, again, in the western hemisphere, not just in the united states. 737 people. >> california has 700 -- more
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than 700 people -- >> 737 human beings on death row. the largest in the united states. 120 have died on death row. >> without being executed. >> without being executed. suicides or natural causes, including someone just a week or so ago. what's remarkable, we spend $5 billion. we've executed 13 people. spent $5 billion. and yet we're still in a debate, for good reason, because we know that we're putting people death that are innocent. we don't think that. we know that. we estimate by conservative estimates 4% of people on death row today or innocent. do the math on the 737 in california. that means i'm being tasked to literally exercise my authority to execute someone every single day for two years knowing that it's likely 30 of them are innocent. and with respect, that's not an intellectual exercise, that's an exercise the governor has the power to execute or reprieve. i chose reprieve. i choose not to do this for
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another reason. the racial skew is overwhelming. 2/3 on death row are people of color. 1/3 have severe mental illness. many of them are there for crimes that are more modest, as horrendous as they are, than folks that are out on parole in california, based upon as a judge said, lightning, it strikes some defendants, the death penalty and others it does not. but it strikes those people of color and those that commit crimes against whites more than others, and those without wealth are more likely to end up on death row. i cannot support that system. >> i was surprised this year when you went out early with an endorsement in the democratic presidential primary. i tell you i was surprised for a couple of reasons. one is because i think a lot of people looking at this race and the way it's going to shape up think that you're a potential vice presidential choice even if you choose not to run yourself. and so somebody who is in that -- i know you're not hot for it. nobody ever says they do.
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as somebody who wasn't talking to you about it and was thinking about you in the abstract. >> sweet. >> i thought you're somebody somebody might consider. given that active possibility, i wouldn't expect you to endorse. two, california is going to be very, very important in terms of picking a nominee. >> yeah. >> it's going to put the spotlight on you and on democrats in your state in a way that is going to burn hot in the national perspective. for you early on to come out and say that you support senator harris was not a not expected bold choice. why did you choose to do that? >> because i think she's the right person at the right time. i've had an up-close opportunity to get to know her over the course of decades. i saw her firsthand as district attorney in san francisco. i saw her stand up weeks after we both were elected on principle against the death penalty and against the overwhelming majority of people that wanted an individual executed. and she said i cannot in good conscience do that. that was a profile in courage early on. i saw her as attorney general when i was lieutenant governor first hand doing work on mortgage settlements. on issues of implicit bias.
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on the issue of overt bias. on issues of independent police investigations. i saw the work she did when she got into the senate and aggressively engaging in some of the national debate. i think she's impressive. i think she can take on not only those that are in the primary but she is the right person to take on one-on-one donald trump. i have great confidence in her and i could not be more enthusiastic and supportive. >> are you going to campaign for her around the country? >> i am. i think i'm doing it right here. >> you did. govern gavin newsom of california. nice to see you. >> great to be with you. >> all right. more ahead tonight. stay with us. stay with us
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♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ when the president's campaign chairman paul manafort was sentenced to federal prison for the second time this week, that led to a lot of expectations that maybe everything related to the special counsel's office was wrapping up now, too. i will say i hope that by now everybody's learned to be at least a little bit humble about predicting what's going on with the special counsel's office, since you've all been wrong, we've all been wrong, right? but when manafort's federal criminal cases came to a close this week, it at least, even if you were being humble, it at least seemed safe to guess that, okay, at least we now know the rick gates case will come to an end now, too, right? i mean, these were linked. gates was the deputy campaign chair when manafort was the campaign chair. gates was initially charged alongside manafort in the first indictments that were handed down by mueller after initially pleading not guilty alongside manafort, gates was the one who first took the plunge, changed
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his mind, pled guilty, became a cooperating witness. that included a couple of awkward weeks with him serving as the star witness against paul manafort in manafort's trial in the eastern district of virginia. now over the long duration of manafort's trials, gates' sentencing has been delayed again and again and again. and that made sense. he was being used as a cooperator and a prosecution witness against manafort in the manafort trial as long as the manafort case was still alive, it made sense that prosecutors might want to keep their claws in rick gates. keep him from cooperating. stop him from going through with this sentencing and moving on with the rest of his life. when the manafort case finally came to a close in court with the sentencing on wednesday, it seemed like, okay, gates will now finally wrap up, too. gates' case scheduled for a status update in federal court today. and i think it's fair to say it was widely assumed that everybody thought today that
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we'd learn that gates was finally coming to the end of the line. they'd finally be ready to move forward with sentencing him, too. nope. nope. nope. wrong again. prosecutors today asked for another delay in rick gates' sentencing. they asked for four separate delays in gates' sentencing over the course of the manafort trials. now that the manafort trials are over, today they just asked for an extension in gates' sentencing for a fifth time. mr. gates, quote, continues to cooperate with respect to several ongoing investigations, says the special counsel's office. and so at least another 60 days, at least until mid-may now before gates' case will be back in court after yet another extension. gates is still an actively cooperating witness in several ongoing investigations. no, we still don't know what those investigations are, but, again, trying to stay humble here, given everybody's record on predicting stuff in these cases. we might surmise it has something to do with gates was number two in the trump inaugural. trump inaugural didn't appear to be under law enforcement
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scrutiny at the outset of the case against manafort and gates, but it's clearly under scrutiny now. trump inaugural was a subject of subpoena from the southern district of new york recently. and by the d.c. attorney general. it's also the subject of extensive document requests from the judiciary committee in congress and rick gates was the number two guy -- number two guy in the trump inaugural committee. so it's possible that that's some of what he is still cooperating on and why they can't move forward with his sentencing. but given how good everybody's been at predicting things from here on out and guessing how things are going with mueller, it's also possible it has something to do with the moon and green cheese, and don't hold me to it. we'll see when we see. watch this space. mini was born to do the only thing we ever wanted to do. drive. to hit start and just go. fast and far. around town and around hairpins.
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it is not uncommon for kids to cut class, especially on fridays, but it is uncommon for them to do it on this kind of a scale. today, kids and teenagers in over 100 countries and 1,700 cities skipped out of school to demand that adults finally do something about climate change. this was in london. "i bet the dinosaurs thought they had time, too." this was lisbon, portugal. "you are killing your mother." in berlin, germany, "our house is on fire." children marched in bogota,
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in seoul and dublin with signs that say "there is no planet b," as in no plan b. in italy, kids painted their hands to say "our future is in your hands." in cape town, south africa, school kids chanted outside the parliament, "we need change, we need change, we need change." there were crowds in new zealand. yes, even today in new zealand. in prague, ukraine, uganda, also here at home in washington, d.c. this was paris. "you are never too small to make a difference." more ahead tonight. stay with us. the matters.ar... introducing the all-new 2019 ford ranger, it's the right gear. with a terrain management system for... this. a bash plate for... that. an electronic locking rear differential for...
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they are all, all 81 of them, facing the same deadline this monday for getting those records up to capitol hill. judiciary chairman jerrold nadler is asking these 81 people and entities for information issues, everything from the president's hush money payments to the trump tower meeting with the russians to details about the inaugural committee. it's a ton of stuff. some people who were targeted with these document requests have apparently said they're not going to comply, but nadler's office tells us they actually think they're getting a good response so far. they say they've also been working with people who might need a little bit more time, if not potentially a friendly subpoena. but, again, deadline for all of them is on monday. we shall see as of monday what they get. have a good weekend. that does it for us now. we will see you again monday night. now it's time for "the last word" with ali velshi sitting in for lawrence tonight. >> i'm alley velshi in for lawrence o'donnell. the president is condemning the horrific terrorist attack in new zealand, where a white