tv The Reid Out MSNBC April 1, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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color. she was honored by president obama and says her work brought meaningfulness in her years. retirement at 100 sounds right. shoutout to her. you can find me online. thanks for spending time with us. a very special edition of "the reidout" starts now with the big interview. good evening, everyone. welcome to a very special edition of "the reidout" here in greenville, mississippi. tonight, we have an exclusive interview with vice president ka -- kamala harris who traveled to greenville today. here she is meeting the small business owner of joyce's alterations after a greeting with bennie thompson and eric simmons. the destination greenville is
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intentional. a town in the heart of the miss misdelta. it's even been called the most southern place on earth. a place that is predominantly black and where during the height of jim crow, the threat of inchings terrorized black peel. it particularly meaningful the first black president came here days after president joe biden signed the emmit till into law. i got to travel with the vice president on air force 2, meaning i am back on the road and just a short time ago, i sat down with vice president harris for a wide ranging interview about her trip and so much more. let's dive on in. vice president harris, thank you for doing this. >> wonderful to be with you joy reid. >> it's wonderful to be with you and be in greenville, mississippi.
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i'm sure you noticed driving in in the motorcade, the children with the balloons and flags. who struck me first is that is wonderful but shows politicians don't come to places like this. is this something you plan to keep doing? >> yes. >> we talked a little bit about why you're here but does it say something about the brokenness of our politics we skip non-swing states, politicians just don't come to places like here? >> the reason i'm here is because there are people here who matter. and when you look at a place like greenville, mississippi with a population of 30,000 people, we're talking about families. we're talking about children. we're talking about people with aspirations and dreams for themselves, for their community and they deserve to be seen and deserve to be heard and we cannot expect people to knock on our door to have to come to us in order for us to be responsive to their needs. so i'm here because this is a
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community in the mississippi delta that has a long history of being part of america's history including having the needs that should be met such as access to capital for small businesses, such as access to high speed internet and so i'm here to speak with folks and to celebrate who they are. >> well, you know, it's interesting that you say that because we are in the midst of a crisis that has disrupted a community that in many ways is no different than what we're familiar with here in the u.s. >> that's right. >> the ukraine crisis is a catastrophe where people with real needs and normal lives are completely disrupted. >> that's right. >> some 4 million ukrainian haves been displaced from their homes. >> yeah. >> because of what russia has decided to do. both yourself and the president were in the region recently. >> yeah. >> when the president was there, he gave a speech in warsaw that
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was well received by many but he also said something that i think was received well by some but kind of surprised others. he said vladimir putin should no longer be the leader of russia. do you agree? >> listen, i think that you frame the point quite accurately and well, which is america's policy has been and will continue to be focused on the real issue at hand, which is one the needs of the ukrainian people, which we will continue to support through humanitarian assistance for security assistance but also, ensuring there is serious consequence for vladimir putin and russian aggression as it relates to ukraine. which is why our policy from the beginning has been about ensuring that there are going to be real costs exacted against russia in the form of severe
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sanctions, which are having a real impact and immediate impact, not to mention the longer term impact, which is about saying there is going to be consequences and accountability when you commit the kinds of atrocities he's committing. i think the president has been an extraordinary leader. to your point, joy, i've been to poland. i've been to romania, i've been to europe three times in the last four months. i was in munich germany where i gave a speech at the munich security conference. i was in france before that speaking with heads of state about this issue among many other issues, but most recently about this issue and i will tell you in sitting down with prime ministers and presidents, often the first thing they would say to me is thank you to the united states and this administration for bringing us together, for bringing the coalition for
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rein reinveigh -- reinvigorating the relationship between the united states and allies and reinvigoraing the relationship and importance of the relationship to the e.u. in terms of a relationship like ukraine, which is ultimately about one of the most important principles we're fighting for, the importance of sovereignty and territorial integrity. >> the world largely agrees with very, very few exceptions that what putin has done is not only destructive to ukraine but destroying ukraine utterly. there are places like mariupol being wiped off the map. he's made russia into a loan -- lone nation like north korea and the way the world deals with countries like that, they don't deal with them as normal nations as long as the dictator is in charge. boris johnson, the british prime minister said that sanctions should continue to be ratcheted up, so long as the russian
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troops are in ukraine. should those sanctions continue as long as vladimir putin is the dictator of russia? >> well, i'm not going to speculate about the future. i'm going to tell you where we are now. they are in tact and we will continue to upgrade them and make them more severe as appropriate and as far as we are concerned, everything is on the table in that regard because we are seeing extreme atrocatrocit. we are seeing maternity hospitals being bombed. a location so clearly designated as being a shelter, a place of safety for children. we are seeing to your point millions of people being displaced potentially permanently in a war that was instigated, unprovoked against a
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whole population of people so yeah, the sanctions are going to be severe and they will last as long as these atrociies and this aggression is continuing. >> so no luck on getting you to weigh in on whether he should remain? >> listen, let me be very clear. we are not into regime change and that is not our policy. period. absolutely. >> let's talk about our democracy here. we're struggling with our democracy. as we all know, there was an insurrection, attempted coup, i don't think there is another way to describe it that took place last year and as we get more information about what happened and who was behind it, we're finding out there were members of congress that were come complacent. what do you think should be the consequences for people like ted cruz, people like josh hawley being named as we learn more about those who were actually putting together the plan to over throw our election?
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>> i think that what is very much at stake, i'm going to make the connection first to the previous discussion and this one. you are absolutely spot on from my perspective that this is about our democracy and attempt to weaken. the strength of it but also the legitimacy of it. and there are foreign actors that try and do it and then we have domestic threats and that's part of what we witnessed on january 6th. and there needs to be, of course, consequence for that. that is occurring in terms of the process that's about seeking the evidence about what actually happened and who are the bad actors because of course, yes, they should pay a consequence and there should be accountability. in terms of elected leaders to the extent they were come police
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-- complacent in a crime, there should be a continuing discussion about the fact what happened on january 6th was a concerted attempt to undermine the integrity of our elections system. to suggest that in any way it lacked legitimacy. and that plays right into the hands of all of those who would attempt to say america does not live its principles and we have to stand up and be clear that does not reflect the majority of us. the majority of us believe in free and fair elections and the integrity of the process and the majority of us will fight for a tax against it, which are both as it relates to what happened on january 6th but around the country in terms of legislation being passed to make it more difficult for people to vote, all that needs to happen. >> and are you concerned at the white house concerned with the speed of the investigation, merrick garland was asked again
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today why the justice department has taken no action on mark meadows found in contempt of crisis. the contempt citations are going to the doj and i think the public is seeing very little action. the doj expanded some invest gages and they say they will look as low or high, they don't care the position people are in. is there frustration about the speed of this investigation given we have another election, presidential election around the corner? >> i will tell you maybe as a point of distinction between our administration and the previous administration, we do not interfere. or attempt to influence the investigation of the process of justice. >> are you concerned that the 2024 election will face the same interference? are you concerned that our democracy won't hold if there is
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no accountability? >> i believe that we are stronger than any of these attempts to undermine us as a nation in terms of our democracy but i believe our democracy is being tested. an context lize it. i for four years in the united states senate was a member of the senate intelligence committee where we conducted an investigation of russia's interference with the 2016 election and then we actually published our findings in an unclassified version. there is no doubt russia attempted to interfere in the election of president of the united states. and we have seen other examples which include the january 6th incident where there have been concerted efforts to undermine our elections process but the
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american people i believe are going to stand up in the face of those attacks and do the right thing. you look at what happened in 2020 and that's after 2016. more people voted in 2020 than had ever voted before and the various courts that reviewed any allegations of misconduct found the integrity of the election in 2020 was in tact. and in large part it's because the american people i think really do know and believe if they want to exercise the freedoms that come with the right of citizenship, voting is the way to go and that is what they did in 2020. >> there is so much more with vice president kamala harris ahead including her thoughts on the supreme court, clearance thomas and the confirmation hearings for judge ketanji brown jackson. "the reidout" continues after this.
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we're back with more of my intervene with kamala harris in greenville, mississippi. >> we started off talking about ukraine. are you concerned having as you said been in these european capitals and promoting the idea as president biden says america is back, we're back in line with the west and promoting the ideas of democracy that it may be difficult for our allies to trust that our democracy will hold if a former president can participate in and foment an attempted coup in this country, and can walk away from it and as this country right now republicans all across the country are severely restricting the right to vote, severely undermining access to the ballot. doesn't that undermine the case that you need to make and that
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the president needs to make about democracy, about american democracy? >> well, it's not new that there will be a tax on our democratic systems from within. that's not new. the point has to be what are we doing to stand up against that, right? so we have been attempting for example in congress to get the john lewis voting rights advancement act passed, the freedom to vote act passed. we need to get those passed because after 2013 and shelby v. holder when the votes acts right was gutted essentially, we need to put back in place the protections. we're going to continue to work on what we need to do to fight back against what's happening in those states including supporting all the folks at the local level who in many other states are actually strengthening the right to vote. essentially what is at issue and i think it's plain as day to see is that people, again, in record numbers voted in 2020 and that
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scared some folks. so now they are in the process of trying to put in place laws around in various states in our country to make it more difficult to vote. with the expectation and intention that if you make it more difficult to vote, certain people won't vote. i think that folks know when they stood in the lines in 2020 for hours when that single mother or father put those kids in the backseat and then drove to drop that ballot off in the drop box they went and voted because they said i want certain things. i want an extension of the child tax credit and they got it. they said i want to see money go to hbcus and they got it. they said i want to see that we're going to have a real commitment to having broadband and high speed internet for all communities including rural communities that is going to be affordable including urban communities. they got that. they said they want to have an administration that fights for affordable child care so nobody should pay more than 7% of
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income in child care. we're fighting for that. the people in 2020 made an order, they put in their order when they voted and said these are the things they want and they got those things and the next election, they're going to know that when they vote that vote matters and it produces results based on what they dictate. >> one of the things we're seeing is nbc news polling and others showing a disconnect between the performance of the economy and as you said, you know, the actual substance of what has been passed and what american voters have received. and people's contentment including with the administration, there is an enthusiasm gap that's north of 10, 12%. republicans are more enthusiastic than democrats and dig down into the numbers because many in the democratic base don't feel they have gotten what they voted for, what they were promised buy the biden harris campaign now that it is the biden harris administration. one of the reasons for that is that senator joe manchin,
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senator kyrsten sinema stood in the way of ex tending the child tax credit and many of the build back better bill, have stood in the way of passing voting rights. are senators manchin and sinema alies of the notion of opponents. >> not one american voted for the american rescue plan that brought $1400 checks to people when they needed it most, when we had millions of people out of work through no fault of their own. not one voted. when we're expecting the tax credit and working with that in terms of helping and satisfied with their children. when we look at what we achieve in terms of putting in place a system around getting vaccines for people so over 200, i think
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15 million people have been vaccinated in our country and as a result, we've been able to reopen our schools 99% of them are reopened. businesses are reopening. these are the achievements that reign possible in spite of the fact that not one republican in so many of these policies voted. so i'm not going to get caught up in when we talk about party politics. you have got a system where you also have an entire group of people who i believe have diverse interests and needs but are for some reason falling in line behind a party instead of behind a policy that actually is in the best interest of their constituents. >> let's do a quick lightning round. let talk about ginni thomas, the
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wife of clarence thomas. >> i don't do lightning rounds. just telling you. before you ask any question, know that. >> i don't mind that at all. i'm looking at the clock for the person who is minding the clock behind you but i'm fine with that. do you believe the revelations about ginni thomas reveal the ethics rules for supreme court justice should be strengthened? should clarence thomas recuse himself from any case involing january 6th? >> i definitely think the court needs to take a critical look at the rules around ethics and that relates to a series of issues that have come up over the years. >> we sat and watched the ketanji brown jackson hearings in which she very calmly sat through what i think a lot of particularly black women, let's be honest, felt was brazen disrespect from senators like lindsey graham, tom cotton, senators like josh hawley. what did you think when you
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watched that hearing? >> i will tell you, joy, i experienced great joy when i watched this brilliant, phenomenal black woman juriest be so smart and just cut through the political gamesmenship they were attempting to insight and she just was composed and as far as i'm concerned was taking a whole lot of people to school and i watched that with incredible joy because it was brilliance being displayed for the entire country to see and i cannot wait to see -- that will only be matched by the joy that
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i experienced when i see her take the oath to be the next justice on the united states supreme court. >> vice president harris, thank you so much. >> thank you, joy. good to be with you. thank you. thank you. up next, we're joined by a distinguished panel of guests to discuss my interview with the vice president. we'll be right back. h the vice president we'll be right back. we need to reduce plastic waste in the environment. that's why at america's beverage companies, our bottles are made to be re-made. not all plastic is the same. we're carefully designing our bottles to be 100% recyclable, including the caps. they're collected and separated from other plastics, so they can be turned back into material that we use to make new bottles. that completes the circle and reduces plastic waste. please help us get every bottle back.
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i will tell you, joy, i experienced great joy when i watched this brilliant, phenomenal black woman jurorest be so smart and just cut through the political gamesmenship they were trying to insight and she was composed and as far as i'm concerned, taking a whole of people to school. >> that's kamala harris telling me how she felt for the supreme court nomination for judge
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ketanji brown jackson and joining me with reaction, democratic strategist juanit and michael beschloss, thank you-all for being here. truly, truly appreciate each and every one of you. juanita, i'll start with you. your reaction to the vice president's reaction because in a way, i guess she was all of us. >> she was all of us and truly reflective what we were feeling watching judge brown jackson taking them to task, one point said senator i'll say what i was going to say and being clear and i think the vice president has the same appreciation we all had but must have been complicated for the vice president as she was a prominent force on the senate judiciary committee and we a only imagine how she would have went to task and defended judge brown jackson in the
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moment and reemphasizes the need for black women to be part of the senate body and senate judiciary as well to have that presence but i appreciate that the vice president watched it with joy and glee like a lot of us. >> yeah, i agree with that. curt, i'll come to you next. part of me thinks that in their own minds, people like tom cotton and judge -- you know, josh hawley and linld lindsey g feels like they won big. qanon loves them now and are the qanon senators but, you know, big picture they showed a side of themselves that reminded everybody who isn't a white man that this is a very new senate where they don't live in a past in the 1950s and '40s but seem to which they did. they were offended that black
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woman was even there and you could tell and they showed everybody that and now, voters who are going to go into the ballot box in november know that about republicans. >> yeah, joy, i really think that for all the prognostics we hear what will happen in 2022, if the republican party shows themselves to be the face of josh hawley, tom cotton, lindsey graham, ted cruz, marsha, if that's the face of this party and that's the way they're going to conduct themselves, they're taking out a big billboard to see the absolute worst of the republican party that will repel voters that is disgusting. i think anybody watching that proceeding who has any common decency in them, watch that shaking their head. watch that feeling what all of us i think felt watching the disrespect, overt sexism, the racism, the dog whistling. i mean, these guys basically took the white hoods off and
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said this is who we are and are proud of it. they're high fiving. they think they won that. they think this is a good thing and i'll tell ya, if that's the way republicans think this country wants and that's the direction they will go, they're not going to have the night in november 2022 they think they are. >> you know, michael, i sat through every day of it and it was painful to watch. i was so angry on judge jackson's behalf, not just because i know her enough to know she's a good, good, good person but also i was angry on behalf of every single black person in america because i felt i was watching senator eastland as i saw lindsey graham snarling and barking into the camera and tom cotton smearing at this woman and the bizarre charges being dropped by josh hawley, it felt like i was watching strom
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thurmond. not their accents but attitude. it is to me ironic that in a way the current republican party is the dixie cat party made more modern. am i way off? that's what i felt when i watched it. what did you feel? >> i felt the same thing. they're not as subtle as the dixiecrat were in 1948 under the banner of strom thurmond and joy, until the day i die i will remember your voice in my ears saying that those republican senators treated her like a black shopper who is going through a store and being followed. that's exactly what this was like in the year 2022. the clock is being turned back. we have to do everything we can to stop that from happening.
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that interview with the vice president i loved because you were talking to her in the state emmitt till gave his life and the three civil rights workers in 1964 gave their lives and centuries of enslaved people suffering and in many cases giving their lives, i'd love for them to come back and see two of them talking that way dr. king said famously the ark of the universe si long but bends towards justice. any of us living through the last five years as much as we love dr. king and honor him may have questioned that but seeing the scene of you two guys today around there in mississippi you think perhaps dr. king was right after all. >> you know, michael, to stay with you for a moment, i have to say when i set foot on air force 2 today, you know, and walked up to the front and this is for all
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of you but i'll leave it with you michael. you're our in house family historian. i felt something in my spirit, you know, that two black women never were ill mag ginned in the way this country was constructed. this panel was not imained but there we were, there she was. this black woman is the second most powerful -- holds the second most powerful office in the country. vice president of the united states. that is her plane. that is her plane. and she had a staff of young and older, she had people of color. she had women, black, white, brown, it was beautiful to me. just give us to wrap this segment up. i know we'll have more. when people say original is m, i cringe because we're not
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included in the original idea of this country. she wasn't included. what do you -- you go ahead and wrap this segment for us. what do you think -- >> well, i think i would say what you would say -- >> demand that someone like -- yeah, yeah. >> it's sickening what we saw with judge jackson. the scene of the two of you down in mississippi and flying down there today how many years did that take? 230. america works, it's much too slow. why did it take all this time, first woman, first black woman, first asian-american woman. that was not supposed to happen. our system is supposed to be a little bit more responsive than that when it works but at the same time, i think we have to say anyone what watched judge jackson or the two of you today, how can you not love what you're seeing and feel for all the things it doesn't do well and wrongs and dangers to democracy all of us are living through at this moment, at least it brings us scenes like that.
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>> absolutely. lindsey graham, tom cotton, josh hawley, look at the screen. this is the future. this is the america you're trying to stop and can't. this is what the future looks like. don't go anywhere. because up next, our panel wonderful panel will address some of today's top stories including the sizzling jobs market. we'll be right back. e sizzling market we'll be right back. ♪ with my hectic life, you'd think retirement would be the last thing on my mind. hey mom, can i go play video games? sure! ...after homework. thankfully, voya provides comprehensive solutions, and shows me how to get the most out of my workplace benefits. what's the wi-fi password again? here... you... go. cool, thanks. no problem. voya helps me feel like i got it all under control. because i do. oh, she is good. voya. well planned. well invested. well protected.
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here's candice... who works from home, and then works from home. but she can handle pickup, even when her bladder makes a little drop-off. because candice has poise, poise under pressure and poise in her pants. it takes poise. some good news on the economy today for the biden administration and for americans, the economy's hot streak is going strong. the labor department reports 431,000 new jobs were added in march with the unemployment rate falling to 3.6%, the lowest in more than two years. with more than 90% of jobs lost to the pandemic now recovered, you would think republicans would be racing to congratulate president biden. like kevin mccarthy and rick scott crowed when it was at this same level in 2019 and there was
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a republican president. yeah, but don't hold your breath. back with me, my panel. i'm going to start with you in the middle. right to the middle, curt. the challenge here is that democrats despite having actually an economy that's working are facing an enthusiasm gap because you used to be on that republican side and they were really good at messaging. why do you think that is? is that something democrats are doing wrong they're not able to get this message across and is there something they could be doing better? >> you know, joy, look at it this way. a republican seizes on this and takes advantage all the time. the media are the biggest partners for the republican party, the most unwitting partners they follow every single republican talking point, every single denounce of everything going wrong republicans put out there and allow them to follow it to the white house briefing room and dog democrats and it's kind of insane at this point.
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biden is presiding over by any historical metric a booming economy putting people back to work in record numbers, producing jobs that are record numbers and creating wages at record numbers and when you turn on the news in general and look at the washington post website, that's not the story you get told every single day despite months of robust job creation, the job is often tilting negative and in part because the republican propaganda machine praise, they pray on the news media and they're bias towards both sides to try and take advantage of it and peddle their propaganda that everything is horrible and there is doom and gloom and america is broken but the data, reality facts say otherwise. the media has to stop falling for this republican game and being played because the facts say otherwise. the economy is doing great. there are things they could do better. there are challenges. there are always challenges.
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what joe biden has done with this economy is nothing short of historic. >> you know, and juanita, the other piece to it. we were in the motorcade and the lady driving us is native to mississippi. we were talking about the fact people don't really come to places like this. you know, part of the issue with our politics is it's like 16 state politics. it's just swing states. so it's 2022 so everybody goes to michigan. everybody goes to pennsylvania. everybody goes, you know, to wisconsin. nobody comes to mississippi but there are so many needs out here and there are so many things that democrats could do that would actually rose voters in places where you have low voter turnout but high percentages of black voters and younger voters in theory could create more swing states. what do you make of the fact our politics are so limited people don't come out and talk to folks like those in greenville because i can tell you right now the
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people here are excited just to have the vice president of the united states here. we were seeing them on the side of the road waving like a holiday. you know, because it's so unusual. your thoughts? >> joy, i think the vice president addressed it in your interview, too because she said these people have needs and we're here to respond whether high speed internet access, whether capital for small businesses and recognizing and responding to that in a 50-state approach i think is what democrats should be doing more of and we saw the benefits of that pay dividends just in georgia in the 2021 senate runoffs where you have democrats now taking control of the senate to be able to advance the confirmation of someone like judge ketanji brown and other pieces of legislation and that i think is the proof that democrats have this in states like mississippi where there is
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this larger block population that could be real marginalized and excluded just waiting to be addressed so that they can provide that playbook. >> i know a lot about history mississippi has instruction because a majority black state. migration, this is a majority black people statewide with the civil war. mississippi was a swing state. did that horrific speech -- >> mississippi. >> when did we get to the point absolutely, when did we get to the point and how did we get to the point where politics became limited to 15, 16 states? >> a lot of it had to do with the fact republicans embraced
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racist and white supremacists as you well know before 1960, the republicans had a better record on civil rights than the democrats did because the democrats were a largely southern white party. the state in 1960about the bigg. you may know this, it was the state that juanita just mentioned. it was georgia. by about something like 65%. and that was not black people saying, we're for kennedy for civil rights. that was a state in which many black people could not vote, the majority could not. these were white voters saying to kennedy, we expect to franklin roosevelt or woodrow wilson, other democrats who stood against civil rights. that was pretty recent. 1964, barry goldwater said, he thought the civil rights act, as you well know joy, was unconstitutional. and ever since then, in ways saddle, and in recent years not so subtle, republicans,
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especially in the south, have sent a message that if racism lurks in your heart, and if you are afraid of black people, now there is hope. more influence on the country has their numbers rise, and their influence rises. we are a party that will keep that from happening. it used to be sit quietly. now, it's that out loud. look at 1964. you're right about contrast oblique construction, when black people voted for black senators and other black officeholders before the middle of the 18 70s, and 1964, mississippi went for barry goldwater over lyndon johnson, the author of the civil rights act, by something like 85% to 15. this was not even a close race, since this was 85%. it's like an election in nazi germany. >> yeah, and we still have a united states senator who said that he would have had been around opposed to civil rights, this battle --
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up for reelection against an african-american challenger. and people in the democratic party, when eta, will write that off. and say, well, that's kentucky, that's a red state. which have somebody who is on the record saying he will be against the civil rights act, running against a movement candidate. and you know, in a case of charles booker. and i wonder if we're just -- oh, i think we're out of time. but very quickly, is that a problem for the party? do they need to start looking at those races and saying those are possible to? >> i think the democratic party needs to get charles booker in the same energy they gave a man mcgrath, and do some major investments in the state of kentucky, so they can pay dividends in the long run. >> amen. everybody's gonna stick around because we love this panel. they're gonna stick around, that is next. don't miss. it don't miss it had a lot of pain. as far as my physical health, my body was telling me you got to do something. and so i came to clearchoice. your mouth is the gateway to your body. joe's treatment plan was replacing the teeth
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♪♪ i'm using xfinity xfi's powerful, reliable connection to stream “conference calls” on every one of these devices. i'm “filing my taxes” early. “wedding planning.” we're streaming uh... “seminars.” are your vows gonna make me cry? yes! babe. (chuckles) look at that! another write off. that's a foul! what kind of call is that!? definitely “not” watching basketball. not us. i wouldn't do that. >> we made it to friday.
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once again, folks, it now it is time to play -- who won the week? there is the sum back when >> juanita tolliver, who won the week? >> nikole hannah-jones won the week for me, joy, with her speech to the united nations general assembly, marking the remembrance of the people harmed by the international slave trade. and see did not miss words in front of this international community, where she called even the former's name nations that were driving the slave
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trade, and driving this conversation globally. and said that the descendants of africans we serve reparations, and it's long past time for it. particularly, i also appreciated her humanity for enslaved africans, and highlighting the fierce resistance that enslaved africans put up globally throughout the slave trade, and slavery at large. >> amen, amen. that's a good one. kurt bardella, gotta give a good, one who won the week? >> i think that the part of the hearings community is the one that -- here you had this amazing moment, a groundbreaking moment, where a committee that has historically struggle to literally be heard, wang the biggest prize at the academy award. it had this amazing opportunity to draw and people who were never even thought to watch a film about deaf people. you know, be awarded the most
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prized and prestigious award an olive film intelligence. and you know, we don't have many moments where we can culturally talk about something like that. so i just think it was just an amazing thing to happen, that this community had this moment on sunday night. >> wonderful answer. michael beschloss, this is a tough night. >> i'm happy to say, zelenskyy and boxy. we were talking six weeks ago, any of us would have imagined that zelenskyy would still be standing there, and ukrainians would be winning a war against the vastly militarily superior russians, for me, it's almost like something out of the bible that tells you important things about human nature. plus two things, donald trump have seen -- >> a man! >> he was discredited as someone who was a war criminal. plus, americans say zelenskyy in ukraine now know what democracy needs.
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they may see things a little differently. >> a man. i cannot be that. this is a rare occasion where i'm gonna let this battle with. all of you on the week. thank you so much for being with me for this wonderful, very special show. juanita tolliver, kurt bardella, michael beschloss, all of you want to wake. that is tonight's readout. all in with chris hayes starts right now. >> tonight, on all in. >> [inaudible] glanced ahmed should resign? >> i don't think she had ever been appointed. >> the wife of the supreme court justice wrapped up in donald trump's coup attempt. tonight, new reporting on the influence ginni thomas petal inside the white house, as her husband ruled on trump cases. then, from ukrainian soldiers liberating the cranium town, to ukrainian attack inside russia, what we know about who is actually winning this war? plus, why they're interparty fight over
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