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tv   Andrea Mitchell Reports  MSNBC  March 6, 2020 9:00am-10:00am PST

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president and keep mechanic of the task force say there is a serious lack of test kits in the u.s. we don't have enough tests to meet what we anticipate will be the demand going forward. >> i think what we are doing is propose. i'm not happy about the las of the appropriate number of test kits, that's for sure. >> elizabeth warren opening up to rachel maddow last night, what it means to be the last woman contender to drop out of the race. >> this was the hardest part. all those pinky promises, all those little girls. it's just going to be a little longer before we'll have a woman in the white house.
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good day, everyone. president trump is trying to persuade millions of americans that are worried that the coronavirus will not be a long-term problem, but the dow taking another nose dive at the second straight volatile week, investors seeking a safe haven in bonds, but the benchmark ten-ine seeking beloud 1%. and in many ways he's worse than bernie. he has a lot of people. he's not going to be running anything. >> joining me now, co-host kristin welk. and jonathan la mere. and ashley parker, and chris wheeler, former senior white
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house aide to barack obama. welcome all. >> kristin welker, the president taking on the democrats, but the democrats' campaign has clarified a lot with the departure they changed with what brings -- focusing on the midwest, and it's a two-person race, and it's remarkable we saw those scheduled changes from bernie sanders, essentially saying he's going to focus on the midwest, the fact that he did so well in psychopsycho, and you are seeing president trump really struggle to shift his focus back to joe biden.
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andrea, he's trying to figure out, how for i attack? first it was hunter biding with his business dealings, not to say that won't be an issue 67 but now he's trying to make the argument that joe biden is to the left of bernie sanders. who say, look, that's not necessarily the way to go after joe biden. of course, hi chief argument is the economy, and we know the administration is quite concerned not only by the virus and their response to it and how they are going to navigate but how they're going to , how are they shifting the focus that we see on these rallies. shifting back to biden now, it seems, as kristin was gist
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alluding to, the real questions about his handling of that, we've seen the economy. it would be a real blow they were are even though there is some effect how he could play pretty well, perhaps upper midwest states, they felt like he could be out of the threats, the president using the worse "communist" recently. that's a much harder sell who has a long track record.
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as a trump adviser pointed out this week, get used to hunter biden being brought back. there's worry in the white house, am enboldened biden. the president is trying to win away, even at small margins this time around that biden is someone who is well known, is popul popular, can win back some working-class voters. but then switched to trump in 2016. if biden can combined that increased turnout from 2016 with some of those working-class voters, he will be tough to beat and the white house is indeed a little nervous. >> and this is after they tried
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to stir the pot by suggesting that the democrats were trying to steal it from bernie, trying to create more cases on in the democratic field. ashley parker, elizabeth warren's departure was emotional and striking, a lot of women reacted, and we'll talk about that later in the program, but what she said last night to rachel maddow about biden, both competing for her endorsement. let me hear what she had to say first about joe biden. >> he is exactly -- at least this is my view -- he is exactly who he says he is. he is a decent guy, and i mean that in the good, of decency. it comes through in pretty much everything he does. >> and so despite the policy differences, she ways praising his character basically. this is what she had to say when rachel asked about the bernie-bros, the supporters so
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aggressive in attacking not only her and her campaign, but her supporters. >> i want to say this for all the candidates, because when there were lots of us. we are responsible for the people who claim to be our supporters and do really threatening, ugly, dangerous things to others. >> it's a particular problem with sansers supporters? >> it is. it just is. >> she asked if they had talked about it, and she said yesterday, and she said what was his reaction? and the answer was very short. pretty raw. >> and where her supporters will go. they're trying to read the tea leaves. if you watch senator warning,
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she's very clear about what she wants to do and when she wants to do it. i think if and when she is ready to endorse, we will all know, but for people reading the tea leaves, i do think that's sort of a leaf or two, and when she talked about joe biden and his decency and character, one thing that stood out is she was picking up on something that the voters had picked up on with joe biden. even when he was struggles and people weren't sure he was going to win because there were a lot of -- you would still always hear this sense he was a good guy, a decent times, and at times his campaign felt like group therapy in managing his own grief, and him helping other people manage grief, and i think that was something that senator warren was tapping into in her response last night. >> what about milwaukee, the
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fact that it went -- their relative strength, more likely there will be more combat, surely, and no one clearly far enough head to limit -- you are a super delegate. >> i am, and trust me, i don't want to be the one to make this decision. i not only we have michigan next tuesday, but we have another presidential debate in nine days. they'll jab at each other for the next nine days, but to see them going at it will be critical. we have other important states like arizona and florida in march. you go binto april, battlegroun states.
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and wins authorities key states in november in the primaries i think will be a critical test. >> when we talk about the other states, michigan so important. sanders canceled being in mississippi, which would obviously by in biden's court. he's going to michigan, staying there to try to shore up his base in michigan, which he narrowly won over had be hillary clinton four years ago. >> he said one of the problems i solved is i saved the auto industry in michigan and he'll be riding that while he goes to mississippi trying to pad his lead a by. in florida bernie sanders does have problems with his praise for some aspects of the castro regime, the way he declined the invitation to apec,
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he said something suggesting that their policies toward the palestinians were racist and he would never appear there -- i'm really paraphrasing. it was aggressive, not well and had an impact in florida. >> like all of these states with an aging population, they will argue about who will better save social security. bernie sanders has shown an ability to get a turnout with latino voters, but by the time we getting to that point, just because of the way the delegates are allocated. it's going to be hard for somebody to catch a leader, just given the two-person race right now. >> bent up-sanders' team, jeff weaver, he was part of the transition commission. >> i was as well. >> so that was to remedy the problems where he felt he had
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been robbed by the clinton established forces, the previous cycle. >> right you. >> so now the fix is, super delegates don't get to vote until a second ballot. >> right. >> but he has switched a position as to a simple plurality. >> i would argue frankly whether it's senator sanders or vice president biden in the lead, with a plurality, not a majority, i don't think they automatically clinch it. i think they'll have to make a case to the delegates from other candidates as well, who is the better positioned one in november. >> i always thought you were super, but never a super delegate. very well special. >> thank you. >> we'll be watching you tomorrow kristin, you'll be tomorrow coaveragering user regular gig on saturdays. thank you so much. >> thank you. ashley parker and of course thank to jonathan, and coming
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the coronavirus has liter literally become a sea of uncertainty. a military helicopters dropping off test kits for the virus on the "grand princess" not able to dock in san francisco as some members of the crew and -- they say vice president pence announced the administration is not going to meet the goal of having 1 million coronavirus tests, saying right now there aren't enough test kids to meet the demand.
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dr. anthony fauci, from the nih, was on the "today" show today. >> in the next few weeks we'll have the amount necessary to be prepared, dr. fauci? is that the benchmark you are now setting? >> i can't guarantee that. that would have to go through the fda and the companies to see if that's available. i cannot promise it, but that's what the goal is within the next couple weeks to get the million plus as our goal. >> joining miss is dr. frank esper at cleveland clinic children's and rebecca cast, from georgetown university. good to see you both. dr. fauci in this sea of uncertainty is the credible voice of authority. in that interview today, he was acknowledging where he thought the administration was doing the right thing, but he right on you
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says they don't have the tests and he's not happy about that. >> he's been a credible sort of scientific information since the '80s getting us across the country to where we can actually test everybody who needs or wants a test, we're really probably several weeks away from that. >> the fact that so many have been tested, dr. esper, why did we not have the test kids available when other countries did? >> i think it's a great question. it's certainly one of the things we need to increase or capacity to do all the tests and screen as many people as we feel need to be screened. one of the issues that happened
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initially is everything was centralized through the centers for disease control and through the state and local health department. that part was actually fairly important. the last thing we wanted is people making their own tests up and then being wrong. you can imagine and you have problems if we had false-positives being report ed the fast has reduced some of those restrictions so that we can start doing testing at the institution level, and we can use some of the research that was done by the centers for disease control in order to help us develop our own tests to help increase the capacity initial to the cdc tests coming out. >> rebecca katz, how do we, the average consumer, family members, employers, employees figure out what is the timeline here?
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when will there be an all safe? when will we know if this is a pandemic? this is clearly a pandemic. a lot of people want a specific number. they want to know exactly how many cases there will be? when is this going to be better? i don't think anybody can say with any certainty the answer to any questions. who we can say is our best guess. we have modelers around the world to try to make those predictions. i have seen predictions saying, well, this will peak in mid-april, and then we'll be fine or there will be a seasonal component and we'll be okay by summer. i think that's hopeful. i don't know if that's realistic. >> and it could come back in the fact. >> if there's a seasonal component, if it acts like seasonal flu.
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we don't have enough data to say with any certainly that's actually what's going to happen. >> remember seven weeks ago we were at 150 cases total in the world. we're now over 100,000 cases. we merely have community spread in the united states. it's going to be a while before this is contained. >> dr. esper, there's a lot of people who are so concerned, in areas, not seattle, not, that are saying let's stay home, let's shut schools. is that the right thing? >> i don't think that's the right reaction right flow. it's absolutely true, though, the anxiety level is palpability across the community. people are concerned, paying attention and they want more information. sometimes unfortunately it's information we don't have yet. these are all very good questions.
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>> that's a person deciding, when everyone is talking about spring break. there definitely is restriction on international travel to the hot spotsds, with we're talking about china, south korea, italy. those are well-defined by the centers for disease control. within the country itself, it really is a personal decision as to, are you going to be so scared you can't even enjoy the travel? if so, maybe you shouldn't go. certainly every travel advisory will be up day by day, and you have to stay tuned. >> drink frank esper good advice, rebecca katz, thank for your expertise. we appreciate both of you. be safe. stay health,. elizabeth warren opening up about the glass ceiling
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remaining intact after he drops out of the -- her conversation with rachel maddow, coming up next. r conversation with rachel maddow, coming up next like wild caught lobster, butter poached, creamy and roasted. or try lobster sautéed with crab, shrimp and more. so hurry in and let's lobsterfest. or get it to go at red lobster dot com so hurry in and let's lobsterfest. ♪ here's a razor that works differently. the gillette skinguard it has a guard between the blades that helps protect skin. the gillette skinguard.
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elizabeth warren's departure from the race from the 2020 contest officially ends the chances for a woman to become president in 2020, ensuring that a whiteman in his 70s will occupy the office for at least the next four years. warren spoke about the fight to break the glass ceiling from her home in cambridge, mass, with my colleague rachel maddow. >> a lot of women around the country feel differently about you dropping out. whether or not they were supporting you specifically, you leaving the race feels different. is it that it could be any woman ever? are we just going to run white men in their late 70s against each other. >> oh, god, please no. that could be right. this was the hardest part about this. all those pinky promises, we're going to do this. it's just going to be a little
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longer before we're able to have a woman in the white house t doesn't mean it won't happen, that it won't happen soon, but you stay in the fight until you finally break the thing. we'll know we can have a woman in the white house when we finally elect a woman to the white house. joining me now is alley vitaly. and form ever press secretary to attorney general eric holder. alley, you obviously were around elizabeth warren yesterday, it was emotional, gripping, that gender is a big part of this, as far as she's concerned and as far as a lot of women i have talked to are concerned.
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>> you're probably having a lot of the same conferringing i've been having, because elizabeth warren was the last chance for women this cycle to see a woman potentially get to the white house. it gender has loomed over this race so large. when she was talking to us outside her house, thank you to the people who changed who they thought would be president. all of these women have challenged what america thinking a president looks like. the thing that elizabeth warren used toe say is women win, the thing is americans have to elect them in order for them to seem like a president. that's something she was even saying last night to rachel maddow. that's really striking. in addition to the gender conversation is this parallel conversation that i've been thinking about, which is the politics of this moment. the only consistent thing has been that voters tell me and
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tell all our reporters that they just someone who can beat donald trump. that's the focal point of joe biden's campaign. to a certainly extent that's what bernie sanders has focused on, but elizabeth warren has focused on policies and plans. there is a reality in which gender impacted this race so much, but there's also a reality that maybe her pitch just wasn't the pitch that the electorate wanted right now. >> and the president was asked about elizabeth warren today. this is his response. >> i think lack of talent was her problem. she had a tremendous lack of talent, a very mean person, and people don't like her. people don't like that. they like a person like me that's not mean. >> adora, that's a lay-up here for you. >> why do we care about what this man thinking? 53% of americans are excited about a woman being president, but i think what this shows us,
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what's been transpiring over the last primary cycle is women aren't sure the man that lives next door or the man who lives in another state whom they have never met will vote for a woman. i think men and women equally feel that way. i think that's what's most concerning about this moment, if we just take a moment to acknowledge the feelings that women and men all over america are feeling, that, you know, what will it take for a woman to become president? i really appreciate the sentiment that elizabeth warren gave in that interview last night, when she said we just have to keep fighting. >> in fact there's something so touching about what she did where ali would watch all of this with a also girl saying, promise me you will run, because that's what girls do. it's just changing the psychology, creating a different role model, victoria for what
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individuals can do, what is available to people who happen to be women. >> right. i think the fact that we had so many strong talented viable women throw their hats in the ring for the democratic nomination, should not be ignored. ultimately we did not see any women get to the point where we are at now, but i think that change regrettably is slow, but it is forward moving. getting to the frustration, i feel this frustration very deeply. i study women in politics. the fact that women -- we've been outvoting men for over 30 years. we know that women are the majority in our college classrooms. women are making strides in the c-suites, but we have this stalled-out factor when it comes to politics that only about a quarter of our electioned representatives are women. so my hope is that having they role models, maybe they didn't
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win, but they're throwing the hat in the ring, that we can do it. i think as a sidebar here, that the frustration we saw from the me too movement is mirroring something we saw during the anita hill hearings, where we saw the original year of the woman. i think we're seeing a buildup to the decade of the woman, where women are saying enough is enough. i think it's coming. i'm an optimist here. maybe 2020 wasn't the year, but i think that women will be breaking through in the next couple election cycles. maybe we should end with one woman who is breaking through, negroponte negroponte yesterday. -- nancy pelosi yesterday. >> every time i get introduced as the most powerful woman, i wish that were not true. i think there's a certainly element of misogyny there, but i
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think america is ready for a woman president. let's leave it there. ali, victoria, soto, athank you very much. governor cuomo said 4,000 people are in free cautionary quarantine. in italy officials have announced nearly 50 people have died in the last 24 hours. joining me join is nbc chief global correspondent bill neely in milan. there was a vatican official that was confirmed diagnosed, but the pope has been tested and does not have the disease. what more can you tell us from italy, bill? >> reporter: good afternoon, andrea, the first case confirmed in the vatican, but it is not the pope, as you say.
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the real hot spot is in milan, and once against the figures are horrifying. the death rate and infection rate has almost doubled in the last 48 hours. 49 people died in the last 24 hours here, bringing the total to 197, most of them, the majority in the area around milan here in northern italy. the infection rate spiking as well. 700 more infections, it was 800 more, the total 4,636. a really interesting statistic, andrea, the infection rate is four times higher than china's, where of course this all began. the government is taking lots of measures. it's closed schools, 5 million italian children at home. it announced a financial package for families and businesses yesterday, $8 billion, more
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nurses and yet this doesn't seem to be working, because it is spreading. very briefly, i just talked to an italian professor today, the man who identified the italian strain of the virus. he says those figures in italy are lagging behind the true underlying infection rate. he says the virus will be with us through this year and into next year, but really importantly, he says most people who have died, the average age is 81. so we, you know, we shouldn't exaggerate the fact that actually many, many people have underlying health conditions who die of this virus, andrea. >> bill neeely, thank you very much. why did a major bank loan money to real estate mogul donald trump, when the bank knew he was not a safe bet. stay with us. you're watching msnbc. safe bet. stay with us you're watching msnbc. that has spread breastr
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new questions about president trump's involvement with deutsche bank, including why he the bank had kept loaning millions after president trump had drayer bankruptcy and why he was lined up with wealthy russians. in a new book, david enrich writes, they organized get-togethers to connect donald trump and his partners with wealthy clients who used anonymous shell companies to buy blocks of unit in the sprawling waikiki hotel complex. in both cases, deutsche steered very rich russians into the trump ventures. just a couple years after american regulators had punished the bank for whisking russian
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money into the u.s. financial system via latvia. david enrich joins us, finance editor of numbs number of times. his new book is "dark towers. "first of all, congratulations on the book. we wanted to talk with you before the crisis. so thank for keeping this date with us. why is this something that robert mueller and sdny did not come up with? >> well, i think in mueller's case, he was focused pretty narrowly at the mandate -- trump had warned very loudly and publicly if mueller started digging into trump's personal finances, that the president would consider that crossing the red line i don't know if that
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influenced mueller's thinking, but he did not cross that line. sdny had a ongoing investigation, and one of the things i learned during the reporting for this book, the fbi agents who were running that agent have been talking to some of the people who have direct knowledge of some of the stuff that was going on in donald trump's accounts as well as the kushner company accounts. clearly there are a lot of unanswered questions about the amount of work that deutsche bank was doing for trump that involved russians. i think it still remains to be seen how causal that relationship was. >> understanding that mueller's was probably limited by rosen stein and he couldn't go there, but a lot of people have been asking, and i know it's
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anecdotal, and you've come up with a number of facts about why vladimir putin? why was vladimir putin somebody that trump wanted to meet from the get-go? why the helsinki meeting? the meeting in the oval office with lavrov? all these connections where he's always accepted putin's version of reality. you came to the story of deutsche bank, and tell us about tammy mcfadden who wanted to file a suspicious activity report, and it was killed. >> in the spectrum of outrageous spin, this is kind of near the extreme end of it. tammy mcfadden is a compliance officer -- was a compliance officer with deutsche bank, and she specialized in looking into potentially money-laundering cases. in the summer of 2016, she saw -- this is right in the
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middle of the presidential campaign, she saw some transactions involving the kushner companies in which money was being wired from the kushner company's accounts to individuals in russia. she took one look at this, you know, she's a highly trained expert in this. this raised a lot of red flags for her in the normal protocol is to type of a suspicious activity report, which then gets filed against the federal government. so she started to do that, and when it went to her superiors for them to sign off, which is usually a rubber stamp process, they killed it. when she objected to it being killed and started asking a lot of questions benchly, she was eventually fired by the bank. this is something that tammy mcfadden spoke to me on the report, but i've heard a number of stones from current and former compliance officers down in florida, who have had similar experiences in cases involving the trump and kushner accounts. the book is fascinating, a
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great read. we hope you'll come back and talk more about what you've uncovered. the book is "dark towers." coming up, giving them hell. bill clinton shares about what hillary clinton told him after learning of the affair in a new documentary out today. documentary out today. for only $90 bucks a month. when ourkids, bedtime!her kids moved in with us... ...she was worried we wouldn't be able to keep up. course we can. what couldn't keep up was our bargain detergent. turns out it's mostly water, and that doesn't work as well on stains. so, we switched back to tide. one wash, stains are gone. kind of like our quiet time. [daughter: slurping] what are you doing? don't pay for water. tide is concentrated with three times the active cleaning ingredients.
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you thought you knew it all but now a stunning revelation from bill clinton opening up publicly about what happened when he finally admitted to his wife, hillary, he had been lying about the affair with monica lewinsky all along. stephanie gosk has some of the details from a new hulu documentary. >> we all bring our baggage to life. sometimes we do things we shouldn't do. it was awful, what i did. >> bill clinton opening up about his affair with monica lewinsky, including when he told his wife about it. >> i told her exactly what happened. when it happened. i said i feel terrible about it.
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>> i was so personally just hurt and -- i can't believe this. i can't believe you lied. >> she said well, you have to go tell your daughter. she said that's worse than me. and so i did that. it was awful. >> reporter: the former president blaming anxiety in office for his transgressions. >> you've been in a 15-round press fight that was extended to 30 rounds, and here's something that will take your mind off it for a while. >> the revealing comments, part of the new hulu documentary, hillary. >> i thought the impeachment process was wrong, but that wasn't the necessary answer to what i would do with my
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marriage. >> the clinton's candid revelations following years of scrutiny after bill's actions with monica lewinsky. clinton saying it was unfair her name became synonymous with scandal. >> i feel terrible that her life was defined by it, unfairly, i think. over the years i watched her trying to get her normal life back again. but you got to decide how to define normal. >> joining me now, daily beast columnist margaret carlson. margaret, it's hard to describe how impactful that seems, them talking about it now. >> we covered that administration together. at the time we put an awful lot on hillary. maybe not you, but i remember why didn't she stop this? why are we going through this?
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this is the first time i've seen bill clinton shoulder the blame, and the part about his daughter is heart breaking, because she was 18 years old, and he was having an affair with monica lewinsky on the lower floor of the white house when she was in the residence. and having to sit and tell her. and what strikes me is his excuse, though. he said i did it because i was anxious and i had all these worries. >> that's part of being president of the united states. >> if this is your job, many others have had it. there are pharmaceuticals for that. there's a white house doctor. and i wish he hadn't done that part. >> you know, it reminds what i was thinking about, when he mentioned having to tell chelsea and that being the hardest part, that awful heart breaking picture of them walking to the helicopter to leave for martha's vineya vineyard.
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>> hand in hand. >> with chelsea between them. >> that was after his deposition and his confession. >> yes. i went on that trip and was three weeks in martha's vineyard and went to mass when the first time after bill clinton had done the ken star deposition that i.i'd seen him up close. it was the beginning of his apology. but there wasn't really an apology, and it's taken a long time to get to this point. i wonder if democrats running in 2020 don't wish that chapter would be closed and that the other impeached president wouldn't be in their midst at such a crucial time. >> and hillary clinton, when i was covering her in 2000 and she was running for the senate, as first lady for pat moynihan's seat, a lot of the women i talked to on the road were blaming her for standing by her
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man. blaming the wife. >> that's what i mean. i remember one in poughkeepsie, blue haired ladies at the library, they were saying terrible things like you should keep your dog on the porch. it's her fault. we haven't really gotten away from that if you listened to elizabeth warren yesterday and the trap for women on gender. if you complain, you're whining. in you don't, women say what planet do you live on? >> this is a conversation that will continue. thank you so muching for being here. we'll be right back. ack. a manager here at colonial penn life insurance company, to tell you it is possible. if you're age 50 to 85, you can get life insurance with options starting at just $9.95 a month. okay, jonathan, i'm listening. tell me more.
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and that does it for the edition of andrea mitchel reports. here is chris jansing in new york. hi, chris. >> hi. i am chris jansing. good afternoon. a dramatic milestone in the coronavirus outbreak. the number of cases surpassing 100,000 worldwide. and we just got word there are now 4,000 people under precautionary quarantine across new york state. the director of world health organization says today now is a time for every country to act and act quickly. >> this cannot a drill. this is not the time to give up. this is not a time for excuses. this is