tv The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC May 21, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
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think between the sort of group of theorists, idelogs and then the grass roots action. the grass roots mobilization is what happens because of abortion, that is what gives it its fuel in this entire thing and the thing leo has so usefully married. >> and the thing that makes donald trump so integral in this. leonard leo and donald trump do not see eye to eye. this is marriage of convenience, exactly that. donald trump is simply the vessel in which the federal society can make these dreams a reality. >> thank you for being here. that is "all in" for this evening. rachel maddow show starts right now. do you know i had a whole show planned for tonight? a whole show that you can now find on the floor of my office. off to cable news show heaven as usual. that's okay. that is the nature of the news
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these days. you must change course when newsbreaks and news has broken. "the washington post" has just reported on something that is sort of astonishing, but honestly now that i see this story, now that "the washington post" has broken this news and posted this document, honestly i can tell we probably should have seen this coming. you see the headline there. confidential draft irs memo says tax returns must be given to congress. oh, okay. this is going to be interesting. the broader context here, of course, is that we are in this whole universe of conflict ever since the mueller investigation was ended, right? 60 days ago. it has been 60 days since mueller turned up -- since mueller turned in his report and the justice department announced his investigation was done. in that 60-day period we have seen neither hide nor hair of robert mueller himself. what happened to him? his investigation is done.
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there are findings, there were conclusions. there were many, many questions raised as to what he looked at and concluded. but he in this 60-day period has not said a word. we've not heard anything from him since his report was submitted apart from this release of this one page short letter from him to attorney general william barr complaining to barr angrily and directly that barr was misrepresenting the findings of mueller's investigation, and he was giving the american people a mistaken impression as to what exactly mueller and his team found. that's it. that's the only thing we've heard from mueller. so they appear to have robert mueller bound and gagged and tied up in a proverbial closet somewhere for the past 60 days since his investigation was ended. even 60 days on we still have no idea whether and when we'll be allowed to hear from him and his team about their findings. congress is nevertheless
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pressing ahead trying to get documents from the most important witness tuesday the investigation. which led to among other things this fairly dramatic scene today where the former white house counsel who described to mueller myriad instances of the president attempting to obstruct justice, and trying to fire the investigators and inducing anybody he could to not cooperate with the fbi or mueller's question, that witness former white house counsel don mcgahn today was the no star show witness from a committee that was convened to hear his testimony. but he didn't show up and they setup an empty chair for him. don mcgahn didn't just decide to stand up the committee for scheduled testimony, he defied a subpoena that legally required him to be there today. he defied that subpoena from orders from the white house. the judiciary rejects that. they now say they'll take every action regardless of what the
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white house says. also tonight announcing two new subpoenas, former white house communications director hope hicks, also annie donaldson. those subpoenas have gone out to hicks and now presumably the white house will try to block those subpoenas as well, to block those subpoenas from testifying as well. presumably the judiciary committee will hold those witnesses in contempt as well. they will pursue legal remedies against hope hicks and mrs. donaldson and just as they did for mr. mcgahn and as they will do for the rest of them as they continue subpoena mueller's witnesses and they try to enforce those legally binding subpoenas while the white house orders those witnesses to not peep. the justice department meanwhile is scrambling itself to try to hold off the prospect that attorney general william barr is himself going to be held in
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contempt again tomorrow for again defying a subpoena. this one issued by the intelligence committee to hand over materials related to mueller's investigation. so it sort of feels like i think now because we're 60 days into it, oh, this must have been the way it's always been. it's not. this is the new universe that we live in now that is a 60-day old universe. ever since mueller had his investigation ended and had his report submitted 60 days ago, that was the start of this new conflict zone we're in where mueller can't be heard from. where mueller's full report can't be released. where mueller's evidence can't be released. where the full intelligence behind mueller's investigation can't be released. where mueller witnesses are not allowed to testify. where documents related to mueller's investigation can't be handed over, where all those things are blocked. all those fights are joined now. this is the 60-day fight we are
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in since mueller wrapped up. and on top of all that is the financial front. part of what we learned is mueller apparently didn't look at trump finances at all. for whatever reason he does not appear to have followed the money as part of his investigation. that has led congressional committees to prioritize that avenue of inquiry as they try to flush out and follow up that investigation themselves. now, the president's absolutely palpable des precision to prevent his financial history and tax history to be reviewed by anyone, i think that provides a lot of the frenetic energy bordering on panic on the white house side of these confrontations, right? i think that's in part the president seems concerned above all else that his financial hilsry, his tax history might make it into circulation or it might be looked at by investigators or prosecutors. i think that's part of what drives the sort of frenetic
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energy and panic on the white house side of this, is the president's priority on making sure that information is not exposed. but i think that energy on the part of the white house and that panic and desperation is also driven by the fact the white house is clearly losing the fights right now over the president's finances and taxes. and the president has already lost the first lawsuit he filed to try to stop financial firms including his banks and accountants from handing over his financial documents in response subpoenas. trump's lawyers filed an appeal in that first case they already lost. but those efforts look pretty hopeless for the white house and the courts are moving through these things quickly. we'll get to that a little later on in the show tonight. but even with all of these conflicts in this 60-day universe we've been in now, no you can't have any documents, no it doesn't matter if you issue subpoenas, we'll defy the
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subpoenas. we'll fight them in court. we'll hire whole new fleets of lawyers. even with that whole universe sort of within our grasp you have to know that the irs thing specifically is different. the irs thing is not just another one of those fights like all the others. because when the chairman of the ways and means committee tells the irs he wants to look at someone's tax returns it's not a run of the mill request. it's not a congressional request like any other. this irs thing is different because there is a law, a statute, an overt clear simple law that has been on the books since the 1920s which makes it clear in no uncertain terms when the chairman of the ways and means committee wants to see a tax return, he gets it. no questions asked. the law just bluntly says hand it over, right? well, now the chairman in question here is richard neal. he's a veteran massachusetts
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congressman. incidentally he's my congressman. even though he's my congressman, i would have a hard time picking him out of a line-up at a distance. he's just a low profile dude. he doesn't go on tv a lot. he doesn't make a big stake about this fight he's waging now. but he's been plugging away and pursuing this in his own one foot in front of the other careful way. and whether or not you like that about him statistically -- i mean stylistically, whether or not you are in tune with the way he's been pursuing this, richard neal having a different approach than all of the other members of congress and all the other combatants who are fighting all these other fights with the white house richard neal having a different approach is to be expected given that his fight is the effort to get the president's tax returns on a totally different basis than all
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the other fights in washington are taking place on right now. i mean, he's got this law he's trying to have enforced. he's simply telling the treasury department and irs to follow the clear law and do what the law says they must do. now, how do you win a fight like that if you're richard neal the chairman of the ways and means committee, i think we can surmise his strategy is to keep it simple. he knows the law is on his side, a clear and simple thing here. he just has to press that point until some court compels the trump administration to follow the law. how do you try to win this fight if you're the other side, if you're the trump white house and you will do anything to stop the president's tax returns from being released law or no law, well, that is what we're now seeing reported out tonight. as you know in the two plus years he's been in office president trump has not been the most diligent chief executive
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when it comes to actually hiring people to important jobs in the federal government. when it comes to actually filling out senior jobs in the administration. he hasn't bothered, you know, to make sure all the jobs are filled. look at the cabinet right now. it's like half acting secretaries or something. he doesn't care. but he has taken particular care to install his own hand picked leadership at the top of the irs. and incidentally at the treasury. i mean the irs is part of the treasury department. the president installed his chief fund-raiser from his campaign as head of the treasury. that itself is little unusual. but then beneath him as head of the irs the president installed a somewhat obscure california tax lawyer who just happened to have written an op-ed in forbes during the 2016 presidential campaign that argued that donald trump definitely shouldn't ever show anyone his tax returns. that was sort of a fringe view during the 2016 presidential campaign from either party. there's decades of precedent
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from every president and every presidential candidate in the post watergate era they release their taxes, and everyone knows the good reasons for it. all the other candidates in 2016 on both sides of the aisle all released their tax returns. trump even felt compelled to say during the campaign even if he didn't mean it, he felt compelled to say at one point of course he's release his tax returns. everybody knows that a presidential candidate has to release his tax return. but this random tax lawyer in southern california published this op-ed in forbes saying he didn't think trump should release his tax returns. and wouldn't you know it donald trump gets elected and donald trump picks that guy out of everybody to be the new commissioner of the irs. i wonder why. this is the point i should also mention that same guy also happens to own some nice trump condos. he owns multiple trump properties at rental units in hawaii. while serving as trump's irs
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commissioner. right, how did he get the job? he publicly opined during the campaign that trump shouldn't have to show his tax returns. yeah, i wonder how he got the irs job. the number two job at the irs is chief counsel, top lawyer at the agency. "the new york times" reported last month that president trump became unusually and personally involved. he became personally insistent that his choice for the top lawyer at the irs should be advanced through the senate, should be prioritized as an administration personnel move and that that person should be confirmed as quickly as humanly possible. and this guy doesn't even want a defense secretary, but he wants to make sure the top lawyer at the irs who he chose personally is in the job and fast. when "the new york times" reported last month that president trump personally interceded with the top republican in the senate, mitch mcconnell to tell mcconnell as
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far as he was concerned, as far as president trump was concerned, confirming this guy to be the top lawyer at the irs was a bigger priority to the president than confirming william barr to be the new attorney general. get on it. get the chief counsel into the irs. i've picked the guy for you. his name is michael desmond. and after the president personally interceded with mitch mcconnell mr. desmond was in fact confirmed by the senate to be the number two guy in the irs. he's been there since february of this year. no republicans voted against him when he was confirmed in the senate. now, desmond was partners at a d.c. law firm with president trump's current tax attorneys. desmond also admitted during his confirmation process that, yes, maybe it was possible that at one point in his career he had advised the trump organization on tax matters. but he insisted really that was no big deal and there would be no conflict. he said during his confirmation process that if any tax matter
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concerning the president himself arose during his time as irs chief counsel he would seek advice from ethics officials as to whether or not he should recuse himself on such matters. that guy has been in there since february. now here it is may. and now the irs is definitely dealing with a specific matter related to the president's taxes, right? the irs is confronted with this legally binding demand from congress that they need to -- they shall hand over the president's tax returns to congressman richie neal. now, who's making the decision on that the irs in terms of how to respond to that legally binding demand? we have been trying for a long time now on this show to find out whether the irs chief counsel who the president personally insisted should be expedited through the senate so he could be installed in that job quickly, we have been trying for weeks now to find out from the irs whether in fact mr. desmond consulted with irs
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ethics officials whether he should recuse given the fact he worked with the president's tax attorneys and he personally advised the president's businesses on tax matters before taking this irs gig. the irs will not say whether desmond was recused from any of that decision making. they just will not say. but now "the washington post" reports that before desmond got there, before he was installed in february at president trump's personal insistence, turns out the previous chief counsel at the irs had put down in black and white, had put down in a legal memo the bad news for the trump white house or any white house seeking to defy or wriggle out of the legal requirement to hand over a president's tax returns. quote, a confidential irs legal memo says that tax returns must be given to congress unless congress takes the step of exerting executive privilege.
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the memo contradicts the trump administration's justification for denying lawmakers request for president trump's tax returns. trump has refused to turn over his tax returns but has not invoked executive privilege. treasury secretary steven mnuchin has denied the returns saying there's no legislative purpose for denying them. but according to the memo the disclosure of tax return tuesday the committee is, quote, mandatory. requiring the secretary to disclose the returns and return information requested by the tax writing chairs in congress. the ten page document says the law does not allow the treasury secretary to exercise discretion in disclosing the information provided the statutory conditions are met. the memo directly rejects the reasons steven mnuchin has cited for withholding the information from congress. this is new. this is something we had no idea
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of before. it's an internal memo at the irs that says there's no discretion here. hey, irs, hey treasury department you have to hand over the president's tax returns. there's really no wiggle room. and the trump administration has defied a subpoena on this. not only did they defy the legally binding demand, they defied a subpoena. they said no, we question your motives for wanting this information. well, the irs' own legal analysis of this law and their responsibilities under the law say it doesn't matter why congress wants the tax returns. they don't even have to state any reason at all. they've just got to hand it over. that's what the law says. now, the one theoretical silver lining here for president trump trying to block his tax returns from being handed over, the memo says the only basis that the agencies could refuse to comply with the committee subpoena would be to invoke the doctrine of executive privilege.
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you could just imagine the trump administration being like, okay, okay, we'll exert executive privilege here. will that get out of jail here? but even in this irs legal memo itself according to "the washington post" this memo says this law which requires them to hand over the tax returns, quote, might be read to preclude a claim of executive privilege. meaning this law itself could also be interpreted to say, yeah, you might try to invoke executive privilege here, but you can't invoke executive privilege to deny a subpoena. so this is new. according to the irs' own legal reasoning the trump administration must hand over trump's tax returns to congressman richard neal of massachusetts. they must. they can try to exert executive privilege to block it, but good luck. that's not going to work either. the law might even block that. basically you got to do it. it's mandatory. says the irs.
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no wonder the president wanted to install a new chief lawyer at the irs who might look at these matters differently. i mean, there is a fist to brick wall conflict right now on everything. over these past 60 days since mueller finished his investigation, turned in his report, fist to brick wall. as the trump administration and the trump white house try to block investigators and try to block congress from accessing absolutely anything having to do with this president or anything that might derive from mueller's investigation or anything that might fill in the gaps as to what mueller did or didn't look at. on the financial stuff in particular, on the president's accounting information, the president's banking information and now the president's tax information, that fist to brick wall conflict is looking to be more one-sided than you might expect. the wall's crumbling faster than all the rest of it, and i think the president cares more about
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that part of the fight. i think he cares more about keeping his finances and taxes secret than he cares about all the rest of this stuff. in which case, watch out here we go. joining me now a member of the house ways and means committee. it's a pleasure to have you here. >> thank you, rachel. you've got it just right. >> that's what i wanted to ask you. i wanted to get your reaction to this "the washington post" reporting tonight and what it means for this effort your committee has been fighting. >> it's just another amazing development. it means when secretary mnuchin told me in the committee hearing on march 7th that he couldn't answer my questions and he needed more legal advice he already had legal advice and he had it when he made these multiple subsequent excuses in responding or not responding to the committee. i believe that there's no legal advice that will stop the lawlessness and the lies of this administration. and that's why congress needs to act firmly now to use every tool it has available to get this
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information that trump so fears that the public will see and to -- to take action, i believe, it's going to require fines or confinement under our power of inherent contempt to get the information we need and to get all these other people that under what seems to be gang rule are told don't say anything and don't provide anything. total silence, total obstruction. >> who would you expect would need to be fined or confined in your words there in order to compel respect for this subpoena? >> well, this subpoena is directed to the irs commissioner who you've mentioned has extensive experience on this matter. but secretary mnuchin has never let him answer the question. he responds with all the answers. i think that both of them could be subject to fines or confinement. i think, you know, there are so many people out there from
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mcgahn to barr and others who are refusing to disclose and respond to the congress, it's probably a matter of selecting one of them and moving forward to show how this power of inherent contempt could work. but here we are, you know, approaching memorial day, june is approaching. and this congress has not filed any action concerning any of these matters. and i think we've got to take action and take it promptly or the white house will conclude we don't really mean it, we're just going to talk and write letters. >> congressman, let me ask you about one specific aspect of this. i have been interested or it's been sort of stuck in my craw this issue of the number two official at the irs. chief counsel at the irs. we now know that the chief counsel appears to have drafted this memo that law makes it mandatory. we know from "the new york times" reporting that the precedent interceded directly to
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install a new chief counsel of the irs as soon as democrats took control of the house and were sworn in. he was sort of rushed through the senate right away in february at the president's personal insistence. he had previously advised trump businesses on tax matters. he said during his confirmation process he'd seek ethics advice whether he'd need to be recused from any decision making involving the president's own taxes once he was at the irs. we haven't been able to get any word from the irs as to whether he actually did that or whether this person personally chosen by the president who has previous experience working for the president might himself have been involved with this decision making process at the irs. is that something we should have a right to figure out, that you think we might be able to chase down somehow? >> absolutely. and recusal seems to have gone out of fashion in this session with jeff sessions. but there certainly should have been a recusal with this individual here.
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we can't find out whether trump is under audit, has ever been under audit but to determine whether the audit actually ever occurred or is under audit now. that's other information that he could provide and has not provided. but it's consistent as you pointed out with what he's written in the past, the position he's taken of acting not on behalf of the public trust but on behalf of trump as his personal assistant much in the way that attorney general barr has become his personal attorney. >> congressman lloyd, great to have you here. come back soon. it's all moving very, very fast. the vice chair of the judiciary committee is going to be here live in just a moment. stay with us. to be here live in just a moment. stay with us but sometimes life gets in the way, and that stubborn fat just won't go away. coolsculpting takes you further. a non-surgical treatment that targets, freezes, and eliminates treated fat cells, for good.
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when this committee issues a subpoena even to a senior presidential advisor, a witness must show up. our subpoenas are not optional. mr. mcgahn has a legal obligation to be here for this scheduled appearance. if he does not immediately correct his mistake this committee will have no choice but to enforce the subpoena
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against him. president trump may think he can hide behind his lawyers as he launches a series of baseless legal arguments designed to obstruct our work. he cannot think these legal arguments will prevail in court, but he can think he can slow us down and run out the clock on the american people. let me be clear, this committee will hear mr. mcgahn's testimony even if we have to go to court to secure it. >> that was the judiciary committee today. now, what will happen if and when they go to court to secure don mcgahn's testimony now that mcgahn is defying a subpoena to testify about the mueller investigation, i don't know. that committee also today subpoenaed don mcgahn's chief of staff. they also subpoenaed former white house communications director hope hicks today as well. those two were also both important witnesses for mueller as was don mcgahn. what will happen if hicks and
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donaldson defy their subpoenas as well just as don mcgahn has? i don't know. what happens when the house finds attorney general william barr in contempt, possibly now twice for him refusing to hand over subpoenas demanding that he give congress mueller's full report? what will happen when he's found in contempt again probably twice, i don't know. and honestly now at 60 days since mueller's report was submitted where's mueller? what's the actual hangup with getting his schedule for testimony so he can explain what happened with his investigation, what he looked at and what he didn't? joining us now is congresswoman mary gay scanlen of pennsylvania. she also spearheaded the effort to read the mueller report cover to cover out loud to congress. congresswoman scanlen thank you for being here. i really appreciate it. >> thank you for having me on. >> let me ask you about that
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last point first. tell me about that rationale in having yourself and others in congress read that report out loud. >> there was this increasing frustration, the report had been out for over a month and we kept hearing this drum beat of no obstruction, no collusion. anyone who's read the mueller report knows it doesn't say no obstruction, no collusion. it says yeah, there's a lot of evidence of cooperation and there's a lot of evidence of obstruction of justice. so we thought it was important since we had been unable so far to get in the witnesses or be able to start producing the underlying evidence because of mr. barr's defiance of our subpoena. we thought at least we could start reading the mueller report so that people heard what was in it. >> in terms of mueller's report and what's in it the one thing we've heard from robert mueller since his investigation was wrapped up and that report was submitted is we got access to that short little somewhat angry
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letter from mueller to william barr just after barr had started making public statements about mueller's findings. and we know that mueller wrote to him basically to complain that barr was misrepresenting his findings and the nature of his investigation to the american public. that little letter is the only thing we've heard from mueller himself since his investigation was wrapped up and his report was submitted. do you believe we are ever going to hear from him? can you give us any sort of update as to why he's disappeared for the past 60 days? >> i know he's been here and his representatives have been in contact with the judiciary committee. there have been ongoing discussions when he would come in to testify. of course from the judiciary committee's point of view we would like to have the full report and the underlying evidence before we start questioning him because it makes for a much better hearing if you have the base material there before you. now, that doesn't mean that we'll have the wait forever to
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get the material first, but it would be the preferable way to proceed. >> in terms of getting mr. mueller in the witness chair we've had sort of conflicting or at least fuzzy reports as to whether or not he wants to testify. it's not clear to me that's the most important issue. plenty of people don't want to testify and end up testifying. it's also not clear to me despite mr. mueller's wishes one way or the other whether or not it's the justice department interceding here to stop him from testifying or whether it's mueller himself. do you have any clarity on that? >> i'm afraid i don't. certainly we've heard the president say now he intends to obstruct all investigation here, that he doesn't think there should be any further investigation. but i think that really belies what the mueller report said. the mueller report said i can't make a prosecutorial recommendation of an indictment of a sitting president but i'm going to preserve the evidence and congress should do something about this.
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>> i wonder because it got me thinking when attorney general barr was testifying to the senate, he was asked about that letter i just mentioned in which we see mr. mueller angrily expressing his displeasure to barr, that barr has been misrepresenting his investigation. and in response to questions about that william barr said effectively he believed that wasn't mueller's own writing, that that had been mueller's staff that had been writing it. it was a snitty letter in his words, and he believed this was mueller's team not mueller himself. once mueller's team, the prosecutors who worked with him and the agents who worked with him had been sort of denigrated that way by the attorney general and denigrated of what seems to be an important point that raised the question for me as to whether or not not just mueller should be testifying but whether his team, the prosecutors and agents who worked on his
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investigation might also be asked to come in and talk either on their own or with mueller together. do you have any thoughts on that? >> i mean, it sounds like a great idea although it seems a little bit shocking the attorney general is saying that members of the special counsel's team are drafting letters and signing his name to them. i think that sounds a little ridiculous. >> congresswoman mary gay sc scanlon of pennsylvania. keep us surprised. i know this is fast moving thing at this point. keep us surprised. we've got much more ahead tonight. stay with us. we've got much more ahead tonight. stay with us
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here's a story. or here's at least a series of events that may or may not be connected but i'm trying to wrap my head around them. starts a little over a year ago. the u.s. government puts sanctions on a kremlin connected russian oligarch, a close ally of russian president vladimir putin, a guy by the name of oleg deripaska. used to do a bunch of work with paul manafort. ever heard of him? anyway, the new sanctions were punishment by the u.s. government in part for russia's attack on our 2016 election. those sanctions on him also included sanctions on deripaska's giant aluminum company. well, after the sanctions were put on deripaska there followed a robust and very expensive campaign by lobbyists for deripaska. deripaska got what he paid for
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in that lob bying campaign. and then something remarkable kind of happened. a big bipartisan majority in the house of representatives said, actually, no. the u.s. government should not lift those sanctions. are you kidding? oleg deripaska was sanctioned for a reason, for a good reason. why is the trump treasury department lifting those sanctions. it wasn't just democrats in the house, it was 70% of republicans in the house who voted with democrats to block the trump administration from getting rid of those sanctions on deripaska's aluminum company. so big bipartisan vote in the house to tell the trump administration, no, don't lift those sanctions. those sanctions should stay. then it goes over to the senate. senate turns out to be a different story. there were a whole bunch of republican senators who wanted to join the house in making sure those sanctions stayed on deripaska's company.
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but the senate republican leader mitch mcconnell made sure that measure met a swift death on his side of the capitol. and so the trump administration was allowed to, in fact, lift those sanctions on oleg deripaska's aluminum company earlier this year. kaching. first oleg deripaska's company announced last month they have made a surprise decision to spend $200 million opening a new plant in mitch mcconnell's home state of kentucky. it's a project they'll say will bring billions of dollars and thousands of jobs to mitch mcconnell's state. secondly, just before that deal, that present to mitch mcconnell was publicly announced one of his lobbyists was dispatched to give mitch mcconnell a heads up about this big present he was getting from oleg. this heads up they'd be building a brand spanking new plant in his state after all the good
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work mitch mcconnell did to make sure it would have its sanctions lifted. the lobbyist who delivered that good news to mitch mcconnell, the guy who personally made the call is a guy named david vitter. you may have recognized him. used to be a republican senator from louisiana. kind of famous for a sex scandal that never really resolved cleanly. what we've since learned is within five weeks of david vitter calling mitch mcconnell to tell him that rosolwas going to put this plan in kentucky, going to dump hundreds of millions of dollars, within five weeks of that call the nomination of david vitter's wife to be a federal judge, a nomination that had been languishing for a year and a half because she was so humiliatingly, embarrassingly unqualified for the job, whose confirmation hearing went so badly it went viral and got her nomination baroie
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nomination buried. within five weeks of that call thanks from oleg, within five weeks of that call wendy vitter's nomination got pulled off the trash heap by mitch mcconnell, and mitch mcconnell expedited it, put it at the top of the list and now she is a federal judge for life. must be nice. we contacted david vitter's fancy lobbying firm today. they do not dispute mitch mcconnell mcconnell the one -- when we asked david vitter tonight whether there was any connection between that and his wife''s subsequent surprise confirmation he said, quote, absolutely not. we put the same question to mitch mcconnell's office tonight but we got no answer. mcconnell's office says lifting sanctions had nothing to do with the investment in kentucky by
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the firm that he lifted the sanctions on. but as for the lobbyist's wife who's now a federal judge, no response from mcconnell. i will tell you we are not the only ones asking questions about this sequence of events. hold that thought. e of events. hold that thought. of all time. lease the 2019 rx 350 for $399 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. this is a commercial and i know you're thinking. i don't want to hear about insurance. 'cause let's be honest... nobody likes dealing with insurance. right? see, esurance knows it's expensive. i feel like i'm giving my money away. so they're making it affordable. thank you, dennis quaid. you're welcome, guy in kitchen. i named my character walter. that's great. i'd tell you more but i only have thirty seconds so here's a dramatic shot of their tagline so you'll remember it. when insurance is affordable, it's surprisingly painless. (kickstart my heart by motley crue))
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every curve, every innovation, every feeling. a product of mastery. lease the 2019 es 350 for $379 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. several prominent house and senate democrats have just started raising alarms about a $200 million investment in a kentucky aluminum plant from a russian company. that was announced right after
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kentucky's senior senator mitch mcconnell green lit the trump administration lifting sanctions on that company and on the kremlin connected sanctioned oligarch who controls it. joining us now is one of the senators who's raised the red flag on this and calling for are erevi review of that sequence of events. >> good to be back. thanks, rachel. >> so you're one of the senators who's written a letter to the treasury asking a review of this deal, asking the committee on foreign investment in the united states to review this. what are your concerns about it? >> whenever particularly the russians and chinese make investments in this country, we strengthed a law about a year ago, bipartisan overwhelming vote to make sure we look at these investments and what it means to national security, what it means if they come in and buy steel or aluminum plants and who knows what their ultimate plans
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are. clearly they're buying influence, cleary whether it's the chinese buying rail cars or the new york bus system or on investment like that. so we know it's potentially a national security issue. it's always a local jobs issue. we want this investigated because in the end we know why these companies -- these countries often come in. this is more complicated because deripaska, oleg deripaska as you pointed out was an oligarch that we sanctioned because of the elections, his closeness to putin and all that. and he's had significant interest in rusol. that's why the house overwhelmingly did what you talked about in the senate. >> i want to ask you about that part in particular. watching from the outside, seeing that huge vote in the house, i mean that was a remarkable thing. 70% of republicans in the house voted to defy the trump administration and tell them, no, you shouldn't lift these sanctions on deripaska and his company. those sanctions are there for a
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reason. you don't see house republicans to flout their trump administration very often, but it was an overwhelming vote in the house. you're saying in the senate the vote would have gone the same way, there would have also been another rebuke in the senate which effectively stopped them from lifting those sanctions but mcconnell is the one, he was the decider who, in fact, tilted the balance on this, himself? >> well, i think in the house, i don't know for sure, but in the house, it looked like because it was going to be such an overwhelming vote, more and more republicans thought it looked good to vote that way in the senate. when trump and mcconnell are on the same side and when trump is protecting mcconnell and mcconnell is protecting trump, which it looks to be both ways here, a lot of -- most of the republicans went with him and i was the floor leader, if i recall, on this, i think because they came out, it was our committee and the banking committee, and we saw what happened in the house. we knew we were in trouble in the senate because mcconnell weighed in like this. and then other things began to
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happen. whether it was our deutsche bank hearing today, or whether it's rusal investing in the u.s. and the u.s. lifting sanctions, the u.s. treasury department lifting sanctions, we know that the russians and trump and mcconnell are quite a, i guess to use the russian word, quick a -- three way, i guess a slave, ultimately, takes us in a bad place. >> i want to ask you about that deutsche bank hearing, sir. if you wouldn't mind sticking with us for one more second, i wanted to ask you that, too. >> of course. >> senator sherrod brown of ohio is our guest. we'll be right back. stay with us. is our guest we'll be right back. stay with us ♪ and here comes the wacky new maid ♪ -maid? uh, i'm not the... -♪ is she an alien, is she a spy? ♪ ♪ she's always here, someone tell us why ♪ -♪ why, oh, why -♪ she's not the maid we wanted ♪ -because i'm not the maid! -♪ but she's the maid we got -again, i'm not the maid. i protect your home and auto.
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nart sherrod brown of ohio is back with us. thank you, again, sewer. ank you. >> of course. >> we got the report in "the new york times" deutsche bank anti-money laundering staff reported multiple instances of suspicious activity in accounts associated with the president and jared kushner. but the "times" says the bank didn't submit those suspicious activity reports to the government, they essentially sat on them despite their own employees throwing these red flags. you're the top democrat on the banking committee. i saw you today asking treasury officials about this. it made me just wonder if this was -- was this news to you? had you known about any of this before? does this seem like an important development for you? >> well, we didn't know it because apparently the powers that be at deutsche bank didn't file anything which they should have done if the "times'" reports are correct.
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what we do know is trump regulators, the trump financial regulators all across the board from the federal reserve and occ and fdic and all the trump pro-wall street regulators, i mean, i've said on the show before the white house looks like a retreat for wall street executives and they're paying off these days by helping -- by weakening the regulations on foreign banks in the united states. and many of these banks headed up by doieutsche bank seem to b the worst offender have broken all kinds of american laws in addition to what they've done around the world on mn laundering and other things so you got the trump problem with deutsche bank, which seems very, very real, although the regulators wouldn't tell us anything today from treasury, coupled with the deregulation they've done with the foreign banks in the united states, pretty much after they promised the committee they wouldn't do it, and it's a serious, serious problem. we need to know more. >> do you have confidence that your committee or that any of the other committees that are
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now starting to look at this stuff may be able to get to any of this? >> well, i have confidence that the house will find more because they have subpoena power. i have great faith in the media with most, much of the media, believes, as you know, and afflicting the comforting, comforting the afflicted. i think their aggressiveness on this, having a free media and a free press matter a great deal in this country, and i'm hopeful because of that. and we will keep pushing and asking questions and watching. we don't have subpoena power in the minority, but we will keep raising this issue and a special shout-out to chris van hollen from maryland who has really stood strong on this issue, too. >> senator sherrod brown. top democrat on the -- >> thanks, rachel. >> -- banking committee. thank you. we'll be right back. stay with us. we'll be right back. stay with us
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one thing to watch for in tomorrow's news, 2:30 p.m., federal court in new york, a judge is going to hear arguments as to whether or not deutsche bank has to comply with a subpoena to hand over the president's financial information. his own and his business'. it includes a lot of his federal tax returns. this is the twin lawsuit to the other lawsuit involving the president's accounting firm that he lost in federal court yesterday. 2:30 p.m. tomorrow a judge will hear those arguments about the deutsche bank part of this. i cannot wait to hear those arguments. that does it for us tonight. now it's time for "the last word with lawrence o'donnell." >> good evening, rachel. if you really can't wait to hear the arguments, w
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