tv MSNBC Live MSNBC February 23, 2020 3:00am-4:00am PST
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first up on msnbc, a projected win for bernie sanders in nevada but it's not over. other candidates are leaving las vegas vowing to stale in the fight. the battle between perception' reality. when it comes to the coronavirus. one country claims it's under control while cases are surging around the world. and new images from nasa reveals dramatic melting in antarctica. >> good morning. it is sunday, february 23rd. i'm kendis gibson. >> i'm cori coffin. lindsey reiser is live in las vegas and covering all things first half this morning on the first half caucus. what do you know? >> reporter: good morning to you on a rainy early las vegas morning. many of the candidates have already left. they left before caucus results came in last night, but we are going to hear from many of them
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as bernie sanders is surging and hear from them as they are trying to get some momentum in their campaigns heading into south carolina and super tuesday. i'm also going to talk with a "the new york times" reporting about bloomberg's performance after that debate performance we saw this week. >> we have nearly 50%% of the results in from nevada. bernie sanders is leading so far. >> here is how the other candidates stack up. joe biden in second place. he has 19%. pete buttigieg 15% and elizabeth warren 10% and amy klobuchar with 8%. >> bernie sanders spoke last night about his volunteers helping him get to this toy. >> in first half and in new
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hampshire and nevada, we have to show that our volunteers are prepared to knock on hundreds and hundreds and thousands of doors, that no campaign has a grassroots movement like we do. which is another reason why we are going to win this election. >> he is fired up. the other candidates are rallying with supporters around the country as they prepare for the next races. >> understand this. 2020 is the moment in history that you have been called to. the moment in history that will not determine the next four years or the next eight years. but will determine the direction of this country. >> we can reestablish our place in the world, we can reestablish our place for ordinary hard working people in this country. i think it's time we step up. i think it's time we unite the
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party first. >> i think what we will see as we get into diverse america we do better and better and better. and that is where we are going. >> i am here to make the case for a politics that aims higher than just placing one form of divisiveness with another, but, rather, unifies this country before it is too late. that's what we could do. >> empathy, humility, decency matter and that we have that in spades and also the toughness to beat donald trump. >> all right. today they are spread all over the country covering eight states in a blitz ahead of next weekend's south carolina primary and super tuesday in march. mike bloomberg is off the campaign trail this weekend. >> lindsey, a big question here is how are each of the candidates using the results from nevada to move ahead? good or bad you have to keep
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forging ahead. >> reporter: it's really interesting because many of them are already left the state by the time those caucus results came in so they are really focused on the next race and the next race. we heard from jonathan allen the last hour that many of these candidates have the funds they need to push them through super tuesday. it's kind of looking at that next prize. as we look at the results so far with bernie sanders, the projected winner of all the delegates here. the rest of the democratic field moving on, setting their sights on super tuesday. let's listen to some of them and what they have to say. >> tonight is the start. next saturday is the next step. then super tuesday is when we prove it. >> not only is south carolina an important state and where we will have the next debate but from there we go to super tuesday and one-third of america is going to be voting. >> em proud of the momentum of this campaign, but we are just a few votes away from senator
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sanders, whom i respect, and whose ideals we share but who has a very different approach, getting insurmountable lead. >> you know, the press is ready to declare people dead quickly. but we are alive and we are coming back and we are going to win. >> reporter: i should also mention that elizabeth warren congratulated bernie sanders on his anticipated victory. then went right back to aiming her sights on mike bloomberg. >> he argues that he is the safest bet to beat donald trump. he is not safe. he is just rich. and here's the problem. he is hiding his taxes. he doesn't want you to see them until after the election. who knows what lurks there. he has a history now of
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harassing women and of gender discrimination, and he has defended racist policies like red lining and stop and frisk. >> reporter: joining me now is ozzie paybarr, a "the new york times" reporter. you spent much of your career following mike bloomberg. what is your reaction to warren calling him a threat? >> i think this is the kind of thing they are preparing for and clearly got a message at the last debate that warren is not treating him the way previous appoin opponents did when he was running for new york city mayor. she not only pressed him on things they were expecting but she followed up and pressed and pressed and very notably, she translated his spot answers into something voters can really understand. when he said that he had these -- agreements, two-party agreements, she turned to the audience and explained to them
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what that meant and what was being left out of his answer. i think they got a wake-up call that they cannot take for granted that the opponents that they are meeting on the presidential trail are similar to the ones they met when he was running for new york city mayor. >> well, how do you think that the nevada caucus will impact bloomberg's campaign? he wasn't on the ballot here so seeing the results coming in. the debate performance as well. how is that all factoring into his momentum. >> they made their initial argument that bernie sanders should not be the democratic nominee and he is the alternative to that. it was unclear if joe biden, how much longer he was going to stay in the race, if buttigieg would catch up. it is clear now that bernie sanders is the front-runner to get the nomination as it stands right now. so bloomberg's argument is coming into starker relief. so he has a little bit more wind behind his argument that if democrats do not want to elect somebody who is as far left as bernie sanders he is now one of
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the -- that bloomberg is presenting himself as one of those alternatives and he can look at the stage and say that joe biden hasn't gotten it done and buttigieg hasn't caught up and klobuchar is not getting the kind of votes she needs. he has not been on the ballot and not lost to any votes for bernie sanders. by not participating he is letting the other candidates catch up with bernie sanders and not match and he stands there in the alternative saying i'm the alternative and look how far short the other people have come. >> reporter: sort of waiting in the wings? >> right. >> reporter: we saw bloomberg in his first debate last week. a lot of people were extremely critical of his performance like he wasn't prepared for the questions that maybe one could have been prepared for and seen them coming. he spoke about his performance with reverend al sharpton that is airing today later on msnbc.
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let's look at that. >> reporter: you tell me about your performance. >> it wasn't my best night. i blame nobody but me. in the end i get advice to people but it's up to me to decide what to do. what i found, they were all yelling at each other and they weren't focusing on donald trump, which is what we should be focusing on in the democratic party. and i didn't have a chance to really say what i wanted to say. i have another debate coming up on tuesday. >> reporter: it's interesting because after that debate performance, some people were saying kind of analyzing bloomberg probably never heard criticism from people in his team before, so maybe he wasn't as well prepared because he was kind of out there doing his own thing. he just said in that interview he only has himself to blame. do you agree with that? do you think his advisers should have better prepared him? >> i don't know how you can prepare a successful businessman turned three-time elected mayor
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for such a level of criticism and sustained attack. it wasn't the questions that he got thrown were ones he wasn't expecting. it was the sustained follow-up, follow-up, follow-up. you get those type of question and answer back and forth in interviews which usually a candidate says i'll agree to be interviewed by this particular person. it is rare for a political opponent or even a reporter at a press conference to have the opportunity to really muscle through and ask and press and keep on going. i think that is a hard thing to tell your boss, this is what you're going to expect. >> reporter: so knowing that and knowing that he is kind of coming in at maybe not as competitive a level debate wise as his competitors, how do you feel going into the next debate, of course, ahead of south carolina? how do you think his performance will stack up? >> i think he is going to be able to answer some of the
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questions that were posed at the last debate. it's pretty typically that campaigns often are fighting the last war and not the one in front of them. so now that elizabeth warren pushed so strongly on these agreements that bloomberg said he will release three women from them, you saw in her latest remarks that there are other questions to be asked about his taxes, about his finances, about his very complicated business holdings. remember, his company does business in the united states and around the world. what does that mean for an active candidate? if there are questions he cannot answer, elizabeth warren is clearly going to seize on that because she needs an opportunity to sort of push forward. she is in a similar space as bernie sanders on a lot of issues and not attacking him. there is not a lot of gain to be had by attacking joe biden and the other candidates, so her focus is clearly going to be michael bloomberg.
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does he have answers for what she says? and is he able to turn this into a conversation about donald trump which is clearly what he wants to do. >> reporter: ozzie paybar from "the new york times," thank you for joining me this morning. we are watching this as well as the recent development that bloomberg is going to be releasing. three women from the nondisclosure agreement so they will be able to freely talk about their treatment at his company so we might expect to hear from them soon as well. >> bloomberg in the meantime, has been off the campaign trail today as we mentioned. >> no events scheduled. >> perhaps he is doing a little bit of training ahead of tuesday's big debate. >> he better be prepared to answer questions about nda and why he chose three and how many more there are and how he is going to follow-up from it. >> and why those three. >> exactly. we will check back with you in a second. new criticism coming from established democrats after sanders' win in nevada. here is what democratic
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strategist james carville told msnbc nicolle wallace last night. >> if you vote for him because you think he'll win the election and galvanize sleepy part of the electorate you're a fool. >> reporter: sounds like political suicide. >> it is. >> joining us now is bishop garriso garrison. do you agree with the hard-line stance there between the conversation between carville and wallace? >> i think it's problematic. this is part of what you see flt electorate voters have issues what they conceive to be politically elite individuals like mr. carville, having these types of hyperbolic reactions what we are seeing happening in the primaries and electorate overall. they don't want to be talked down to, to be quite frank. they want an opportunity to see the debates and listen to what the candidates have to say and
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go out and vote. people don't want to vote because it's politically convenient. they want to vote based on both their heads and their hearts and what we are seeing. i think this type of rhetoric continuous to be problematic. if you don't want people to vote in this way, in an emotional way, then don't speak to them in emotional ways like this on national television. >> take a look at the results from last night or what we have so far. bernie sanders, 46%. if you combine biden, klobuchar and buttigieg's percentages, it adds up to 39%. that is a resounding projected victory there. having three candidates with the moderate vote. how much does that help sanders? >> first and foremost, where credit is due, senator sanders and his team ran a very competitive, very strong campaign within nevada and we should all commend him for that. but, at the same time, we have
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to peds this was one primary. there are a lot of votes that -- a lot of delegates needed to get to the magic 1991 number. while i do see and particularly our first truly diverse primary has gone through in nevada and he did well, let's see what south carolina brings us. let's see what super tuesday brings us. you have somewhere along the lines of one-third of the electorate voting on super tuesday. that is a lot of delegates still to come. >> on friday, bernie tweeted, quote, i got news for the republican establishment and the democratic establishment. they can't stop us. this anti-establishment strategy is fruitful for gaining supporters for sanders but when it comes to winning the election doesn't he need the so-called democratic establishment? >> true. he is going to need, quite frankly, independents and some conservatives.
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again, i worry about this type of rhetoric and this is kind of to the point of nicole and james earlier in the clip. the idea you think you'll just be able to get your base out in pure turnout for an election like this is a fool's error. like you're going to have to be a candidate to unify a lot of different ideologies across the board and that type of rhetoric is not going to help but help in his base in the primary, clearly. in the long run we need a leader who is focused on really trying to bring us together as a country. >> that's the most important message there with the democratic primaries coming up' for the democratic party to beat donald trump. bishop garrison, thank you. >> thank you. president trump will be taking tak taking off in a few hours for india. >> hans nichols is at the white house for us. before we get to the president's trip, i know he can help himself
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but not to react to the nevada caucuses? >> reporter: reaction is one word and congratulations to bernie sanders is another. the president took to twitter and cheered bernie sanders on suggesting that don't let them take it away from you. it's yet another example of the president intervening and meddling, what jerverb you want use in the democratic primary. he likes to mix it up. the president, by hi own admission, doesn't quite know who he wants to run against, at least he says that and mentions that at rallies all the time. if you take to his outside advisers they think bernie sanders is the easier and weakest opponent among the democrats. see if that changes when they look at the turnout and broad coalition that sanders appears to have assembled in nevada. but as of a couple of days ago, his outside advisers, republicans around town, they like the idea of bernie sanders getting the nomination and you see the president congratulating
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him. >> about his trip to india? any idea of the agenda? >> this is partly about his friendship with president there. the president is crowded by 6 million people potentially cheering him along in a big stadium along the motorcade. a little bit of business and economy to go with it as well. the president has talked about a free trade deal. here is his latest comments on that. >> we are going to interest and we may make a tremendous deal there. maybe we will slowly it down and we will do it after the election. i think that could happen too. so we will see what happens. we are only making deals if they are good deals. >> reporter: part of having a free-trade deal with indiana is a way to counter china and bind the u.s. closer to indiana. the world's largest democracy up against china and to box china in. that is part of a broader strategy. you know, the u.s. and indiana
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have been working on their relationship for some time now. one way to formalize that would be some sort of trade agreement. guys? >> it will be a two-day visit to india, a state dinner as well. hans nichols, thank you. an entire housing duplex is a huge quarantine center and this morning, another dramatic image showing the dramatic impact of climate change. as a , i need all the breaks that i can get. at liberty butchumal- cut. liberty biberty- cut. we'll dub it. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ whether your beauty routine is 3or 57,... make nature's bounty hair skin and nails step one. it's the number one brand uniquely formulated for silky hair, glowing skin and healthy nails. nature's bounty, because you're better off healthy.
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welcome back to msnbc. you are looking live at the arch in st. louis. i foal you have some information about that. what i know about the arch i feel even though it looks object belong it's the same amount of distance between the width and the height. >> wow. good words. 6:25 eastern time on a sunday
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morning. good morning, st. louis. we have serious news about the coronavirus and concerns this morning after several countries are reporting a surge of confirmed cases without any direct links to china. the epi center of the outbreak. >> we are talking about south korea, iran, italy all reporting a jump in confirmed cases and deaths. it's alarming for the communities there and, so far, more than 2400 have died around the world. >> in china, the government there saying they are finally getting a handle on the outbreak. nbc chief correspondent richard engel reports from hong kong where entire neighborhoods are on lockdown. >> reporter: chinese officials say they have beaten back the coronavirus, that the country's forced containment of millions is working and that factories are back up-to-speed and food supplies improving. one 17 detailed treated and treated and discharged from the hospital but china has revised
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how it counts those infected repeatedly. and the coronavirus is quickly spreading ouleds of ma ining ou china. in south korea the number of cases is growing by the hundreds each day. most cases linked to a church group and local christians describe as a secretive cult. cities closed and food hauled up to hospital patients. new fatalities as far as away as italy and iran. in hong kong, an entire sprawling public housing complex has been converted into a quarantine center. police making sure no one goes in or out. if i look at this building and there are only a hundred people in there, it's pretty clear that there are expecting more cases? >> yeah. >> reporter: a local council member told me the congress honk government doesn't telling residents how many will go in the complex or what is being done to protect the community. virus victims have become a political hot potato, often subjected to repeated
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quarantines. richard engel, nbc, hong kong. >> let's get tour morning headlines now. a deadly accident in the west. three people were killed. 18 were hurt. a charter bus crashed in southern california on saturday. the bus went over an embankment and landed on a roof. >> given the weather conditions, the slope and the terrain, this simply adds to the difficulty of such incidents. thankfully, heavy rescue systems, you know, ropes and those types of things were not required in order to extricate the victims. >> reporter: investigators are working to determine the cause of the crash. new jersey governor phil murphy has revealed he may have skaerns. he has a tumor in his kidney is likely to be cancerous. he will undergo surgery and we wish him a speedy recovery.
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here is video of the boy that went viral. it's difficult to watch. his mother posted it online after him talking about suicide after being bullied at school. we warn you you may find this video disturbing. >> just from school and witnessed a bullying episode and -- principal. i want people to know, parents, educators, teachers, this is the affect that bullying has. >> i want to kill myself! i want someone to kill me! >> this is the impact bullying has. >> this is awful. on top of the donations, he led the all-stars rugby team on the field on saturday. everybody rallied around him after this. >> great to see the smile on his face in the meantime after all of that. the next presidential
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primary next stop is south carolina. >> bernie sanders is closing in on joe biden. how much of an impact will nevada's impact have on south carolina? plus lindy is live in las vegas. lindsey? >> reporter: that is a big question. will what happened in vegas stay in vegas? we are bringing in jonathan allen coming up to talk about what happened here and what that means moving forward to south carolina and to super tuesday. when you shop with wayfair, you spend less and get way more. so you can bring your vision to life and save in more ways than one. for small prices, you can build big dreams, spend less, get way more. shop everything home at wayfair.com tit's great actually, i've been listening to audible.
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we are back this morning with the latest results from nevada. the numbers still coming in but senator bernie sanders is the projected winner. >> a big winner, indeed. lin lindsey reiser is monitoring the results in las vegas and she joins us again. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. now that we do have a clear front-runner, now we can really focus on the next steps because, boy, is this process far from over. we are looking ahead to south carolina and we are also looking
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ahead, of course, to super tuesday. many of the candidates already on the road looking at that next contest. also, believe it or not in just two days, candidates will be back on stage for another debate. this time in south carolina. then four days later, voters will make their pick in south carolina in their primary march 3rd, three days after the south carolina primary is super tuesday. 14 states and one u.s. territory will hold nominating contests. joining me is jonathan allen. joe biden leading in the latest poll in south carolina with 24%. sanders behind him 19%. biden all along has been confident saying i'm waiting for south carolina. that is going to be my state. do you think the results from nevada will have an impact? >> i think biden is hoping they will have an impact that allows him to reseparate from sanders because what we had seen before the last few weeks is biden had a much bigger lead for months and months and it's closed town
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to the three-point gap for a long time, it was double digits for biden, 20 points, 25 points. and he's got to get some energy, some momentum because bernie sanders has huge momentum. >> super tuesday nine days away. we know 1,300 delegates up for grab. who is in the best position in those contests? >> i don't think any question that bernie sanders is in the best position in those contests and one of the reasons you see democratic party elite kinds of freaking out right now. perhaps a little bit too late. >> reporter: would you have said he is clearly going to likely have the best results prior to nevada or because of the results that you saw yesterday, you're confident in saying that? >> i think even before nevada. in part, because you could get a sense on the ground here that sanders was going to do well, that the excitement and energy around here was for him. but, really, when you see the results in particular, how he did with latinos here, you can
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kind of start to project that forward a little bit to some of the super tuesday states, particularly california which is the state with the most delegates and it has very significant latino population and perhaps also in texas. bernie sanders in really good position to pick up a lot of delegates on super tuesday. >> we are looking ahead to another debate on tuesday. debate is not something that candidates can coast on. voters are watching. we also know in the last debate, bloomberg did not have a good night. warren had a good night. we saw biden try to get in there. a lot of people saying where he is for the first half? we saw butte buttigieg and slow ba shar going at it. >> i think we should have msnbc or nbc debates. >> of course. >> that means whether another debate in south carolina to watch, it would be an nbc debate. you know? since there is going to be another debate, i think what you got to watch for is more
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aggressiveness from these candidates. time is running out for them to make their cases. i think you're going to see a lot more attacks on bernie sanders and the 50s -- you know what? forget the fight metaphor. i just think that folks are going to try to make the case that bernie sanders shouldn't be the democratic nominee. >> reporter: is it a good look for the candidates to go out attacking one another to go out aggressive at the get-go? >> i think democratic voters want to know who can take on donald trump, who is the toughest' who hat best arguments and for a long time they watch the democratic primary in which candidates were afraid to really make their case, to really distinguish from each other. so, you know, i think we are going to see it. >> jonathan allen, thank you so much for joining us this morning. we saw here there were some undecides and a lot of them going to bernie sanders so we will have to see. maybe some voters in south carolina on super tuesday states. still don't know who to support so they are watching closely on tuesday and this next week, as the candidates continue to travel and make their case.
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>> if we have learned one thing the polls are not perfectly correct going into these contests. let's get what is trending. barney's department store will close for good today. the retail giant stood as a new york city icon for 97 years! it filed for bankruptcy in august. barney's may live on in the form of licensing to another new york retail institution saks fifth avenue. nasa earth observatory have released what they say is shocking satellite images after a heat wave in antarctica. here is the image from february 4th. you can see the content necontin ice. then on the right you can see melting ice. temperatures in the time period between these two photos reached as high as 65 degrees there. which is believed to be the
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hottest day ever for antarctica. great news for fans of the hit tv show "friends." 16 years after the show ended, the cast is reuniting for an untitled and unscripted special on hbo max. it's set to premiere in may and they will return to their original sound stage at warner brothers studios. they will not reprise their roles but all of them will be in the stadium place. >> a reunion? sitting around talking? >> talking, yes. which they have probably done behind the scenes a lot. >> it's called one of jennifer aniston's many weddings. >> or one of her instagram busting pictures. >> yes. amazing. >> we will still watch it! the bonfire of the buorough is one description of the campaign but what does that mean? >> the question that bernie sanders is not electable. is anyone buying that any more. coming up tonight is "what's eating america."
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it explores how the climate crisis is affecting the food you each. it's a must watch tonight at 9:00 on msnbc. (sensei) a live bookkeeper is helping customize quickbooks for me. (live bookkeeper) okay, you're all set up. (sensei) thanks! that was my business gi, this one's casual. (vo) get set up right with a live bookkeeper with intuit quickbooks.
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all three have to go the distance wallets either their own or online supporters that other contenders cannot match. joining us now is nicholas wu a politics report for "usa today." good morning to you, nicholas. bernie sanders does appear, by many accounts, to be unstoppable at this point. give me a sense at this point. is there a parallel between the evolution of sanders' 2020 campaign and donald trump's 2016 campaign? >> well, good morning. i think what we are seeing with the sanders campaign right now is that he is building up this lead in early states that could give him momentum going into super tuesday. that is when we are really going to see more of the race come into focus since more than a third of the delegates for the -- will be decided in a little over a week. if sanders locks it up then he
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could be the nom kneel finee fo democratic party very soon. >> three contests into the 2010 race it -- 2020 race it is time to bury -- how much longer can the sanders opponents use that attack if they continue to do so? >> if we could predict who exactly the voters would elect and what electability was i wouldn't be sitting here today. we have some pulling out in the field what voters think and most head-to-head matchups between trump and sanders, sanders wins. that said, most democrats win in those head-to-head matchups too. so it speaks to the weakness of the president going into the general election right now. >> let's talk. howard fineman's report. he is referring to sanders and
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bloomberg and trump. are these three names you expect to dominate the conversation going forward? >> it really speaks to me as to how much trump tore up the playbook of traditional politics in the 2016 election. trump's allegiance has shifted over the years. bloomberg a former republican and spent time to heavily elect republicans in the past. sanders, himself, was not a democrat until relative recently. so it goes to show how, you know, trump tore up the playbook and voters seem to be looking for a new kind of politics. >> clearly what sanders is doing. though, is it, you know, behoofing the democratic party to, you know, or at least establishment people to continue to push back against that instead of just letting the voters have their will? >> well, i think what we saw in nevada was the kind of coalition that sanders can turn out, which is this kind of multigenerational and
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multiethnic group that splits across many of the democratic parties former core constituencies. if he is able to mobilize that, that is probably something the party should take a harder look at. >> just want to let everybody know, in case you weren't familiar with what this means. it is a person from 70 to 79 years old. nicholas wu, thank you. >> thank you. the jury in the harvey weinstein case appears to be deadlocked over two of the most serious charges. >> the whole case could be in big jeopardy. up next what could unfold tomorrow when the jury resumes deliberations. mr. peanut. he spent his life bringing people together. i know he'd be happy that we are all together now. (crying) what is happening? [what is that?] (baby noises) is that a baby nut? (baby noises) (dolphin noises) just kidding, i'm back.
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>> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ the fifth day of jury deliberations begins tomorrow in the harvey weinstein trial. jurors indicated they were deadlocked on friday on the two most serious counts. >> we know that decisions have been made in only three out of the five charges leveled against weinstein. according to notes sent to the
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judge, that is the very latest we have and weinstein has pleaded not guilty on all of those charges. he denies all allegations of nonconsensual sex. joining us this morning, attorney and msnbc legal analyst. what does this deadlock mean? >> well, in criminal trials, the verdict has to be a unanimous one meaning that each member of the jury has to be in agreement as to guilt or the acquittal. you want us to read the tea leaves when we try to figure out what's going on in the minds of the jurors in the harvey weinstein trial. day five of deliberations begins tomorrow morning and the bottom line is this, they say that they have kind of come to an agreement on three of the five counts but the verdict form is really complicated in this case. the predatory sexual assault charge which is the strongest and most serious one in terms of exposure for harvey weinstein, that's a minimum of 25 years to life in prison, the charge
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includes annabella sciorra. she's alleged she's a victim of sexual assault. predatory sexual assault in the state of new york is basically that the defendant, harvey weinstein, committed more than one sexual crime. there's two victims that are being focused on in this case. but annabelle scorria has been brought in. the three counts are actually the ones that deal exclusively only with jessicaman and mariam haley. the verdict form is if you find him this, you go to this count. so it's a lot of if then going on. i suspect we will get a verdict tomorrow in the harvey weinstein trial. >> interesting take right there.
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annabelle is well known for the "sopranos." these questions that were sent from the jury to the judge, what would they suggest as how they're leaning? >> well, several questions and notes were requested from the court, but they were focusing mainly on annabelle's testimony. the idea that she may be that link that gets the jury to a guilty verdict on the stronger predatory sexual assault charges or maybe it was the weakest link for the prosecution and will result in the lesser offenses. >> very interesting take. thank you so much. we appreciate you being here this morning to break it down. >> same goal, different playbook. >> why russia would support trump and sanders both. we'll talk about this headline in the "new york times" in our next hour. >> we're going to check in with lindsay who is in vegas.
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>> we're going to be taking a look at the local headlines that people in nevada will wake up to now that there's a front-runner in the nevada caucus and we're going to talk to a senior political reporter from the guardian about his takeaways from the caucuses and where the other candidates stand. arkdownst save up to 65% off top mattress brands. now through february 24th. score extra savings on mattresses from tempurpedic, serta, beautyrest and sealy, starting at just $399! kick back and relax while we do all the heavy lifting. because every single mattress ships free! you don't want to snooze on these deals. shop now through february 24th. only at wayfair.com. i need all the breaks as athat i can get.or, at liberty butchemel... cut. liberty mu... line? cut. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need.
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