tv Yasmin Vossoughian Reports MSNBC July 10, 2022 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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good afternoon. i'm yasmin vossoughian. we have major news developments in the capitol riot investigation. this is including the public's first look at a documentary at the center of a subpoena of the january six committee. >> can we talk for minute about january six? >> yeah. >> you said before you did want to talk about the capitol insurrection. >> yeah, let's get the sixth. >> so what's trump and his
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children would and would not say as you saw there about what happened on that fateful day. plus, we're going to get into breaking news on trump die hards deep in and who may now want to talk to the committee. we're also following these wildfires and yosemite. these are threatening historic sequoias there. weeks of go oil and gas prices have people fear in some relief at the pump. more on that ahead as well. we want to start with the january six investigation. two days before the committee's next hearing a, highly anticipated trump documentary on the presidency. you saw a little bit there. officials are now released this. it shows the president on camera, praising those who went to the capitol on january 6th. >> i will tell you that there were angry from the standpoint of what happened in the election. they're smart, they see, they saw what happened. i believe that that was a big
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part of what happened. >> big part of what happened there. bringing in julia jester who's following this for us here on capitol hill. julie, as great to see. you we played some of that sound leading into you trump kind of heard his explanation as to why people showed up on january 6th and subsequently stormed the capitol. we also heard from some key figures including members of his family, his children in particular. what else stands out and the documentary so far? >> good to see you too, yasmin. president trump in interview shortly after the election seem to think that he had still won. he still started that notion. interestingly, his daughter are, ivanka trump, seem to think that her father was still doing the right thing. take a listen to what both had to say in these new documentary clips. >> we won georgia, we won michigan, we won pennsylvania, we won them all. >> as the president has said, every single vote needs to be
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counted and heard. he campaigns for the voiceless. >> as you know, yasmin, president trump often encouraged his supporters to try to stop the count. there were a lot of protests immediately after the election trying to do just that. this is as ballots remain to be counted. president trump also said that his legal challenges weren't going anywhere because of a lack of the judges with, quote, courage, and supreme court that didn't have the, quote, guts to make the right decision. something that might be to the committee, is a specific reference to georgia secretary of state brad raffensperger who, as you know, testified privately and publicly in their hearings. president trump said that raffensperger was, quote, a hardheaded rock. even then in this interviews, in the documentary, he was going hard after the officials
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in georgia, both privately, and publicly, and i think it's noteworthy that this documentary does not just for each of the interviews with the trump family. it has a lot of footage that really emphasizes the violence, and the chaos at the capitol in tandem with trump's rhetoric. yasmin. >> we're going to be talking more about this documentary, unprecedented, with former u.s. attorney a little earlier in the show. it do want to talk about this breaking news we're hearing. when it comes to see bannon, msnbc obtain these letters that show the president leaving his nonexistent, should i say, executive privilege. bannon offered to testify in fact of the january six committee. what is the committee hoping to learn from steve bannon? what are we see as the motive here, the motivation for bannon to in fact testify? >> it's worth noting, yasmin, that steve bannon is about a week away from his trial beginning.
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the jury selection for a trial and his contempt of congress charge. the department of justice charge bannon with that at the house voted to hold him in contempt. this is very, as you said, interesting timing for this lighter. it opens the door for bannon to be with the january six house committee. as several number set on the shows today, they will welcome any and all testimony from bannon. the key though, they have to agree on the terms. i would like to read a portion from the letter that bannon's attorney sense to chairman bennie thompson shortly after president trump waved, as you said, that executive privilege. the letter reads, in part, president trump has decided to be it would be in the best interest of the american people to waive executive privilege for bannon to comply with the subpoena issued by your committee. mr. bannon is willing to, and indeed prefers, to testify at your public hearing. if that's a term for bannon's involvement, that might be a
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little bit back and forth with the committee as their sense to entered the final stretch with the two hearing slated for this week. steve bannon is a key figure, so the committee will likely be interest said, specifically, and hearing his involvements at the willard hotel there the night before the january six insurrection. it has been reported that this is kind of where the war rooms and trump allies for. getting bannon's take of what happened the night before the insurrection as these extremist groups are on a parallel track and planning their own wooden, centrally led to be violence at the capitol. >> and i'm sure there's going to be a lot of back and forth between now when the testimony actually happens. this is especially when they come to a green on some of these terms. we know that steve bannon, possibly as you said, wanted to testify publicly. i'm not sure of the january six committee is going to be on with that. for now, julie just stared, thank you. by the way, as i said, i want
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to reiterate once again, we're going to get more into that documentary. we're going to show a lot of different areas, chunks, pieces of that documentary and talk more about it with former u.s. attorney barbara mcquade later on. you don't wanna miss that. it's simply mind-blowing stuff there. all right, we've got new comments. just a short time ago by way of the president on abortion rights. it is coming a day after protesters gathered in front of the white house calling on him to do more. watch this. >> do you have a president -- do have a message up to protesters out of the white house? >> yes, keep protesting. -- it's critically important. we can do a lot of things to accommodate the rights of women in the meantime, the fundamentally, the only thing that will change as if we have a national law that reinstates roe v. wade. >> all right, we want to bring in laura barrett who's following the president in delaware. were you on your bike to, laura? as you are falling the
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president there? were you biking away, trying to keep up? >> it would've been nice, today -- but i was here, working hard. >> i know you are. >> all right, the president asked's about what it is about the administration is going to do when it comes to abortion rights. oh course we know the executive order signing, but the president did just a few days, ago nevertheless is speaking out once again. their talk to us more about what else he had to say. >> well we saw those protests outside the white house and across the country, right? protesters, women, people who are looking for more reproductive rights, they're disappointed with the executive order that president biden signed on friday. this is one that pushed to protect for the right to get medication, abortion, as well as contraception. this is as well as the ability to travel between states. if you're seeking an abortion. people all over the country are expressing frustration with the president for not doing more.
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the president and the white house are pushing back saying that they were adequately prepared for the decision that overturned roe v. wade. these actions are all that they can do as of now. they're working to do anything else that they can do because it's only the so much the president can do with executive action. the president is reiterating his fear about republicans passing a federal ban on abortion. that's why he says it's so important to codify roe v. wade. i want to hear a little bit more about what he told apple a little earlier today. >> my element -- is to reinstate roe v. wade as a national law by passing it in the united states congress. i will sign at the moment that happens. but i'm going to go on my right, okay. >> one quick follow-up. one of the things that you're asking for is a public health emergency. is that something you're considering? >> that's something i've asked the folks on the medical people and the administration to look at. whether that is, whether i have the authority to do that, and what impact that would have.
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>> now he knew the white house was leaving the door open for that public health emergency declaration. the white house has noted that it doesn't really opened the door for that much legal authority. they said on friday, at a press briefing, progressives have also pushed biden to pack the supreme court with foreign liberal judges and are asking for federal lands to be an option for where abortions can be access. the white house is pushing back against both of those requests saying that that's not something they're willing to do right now. >> i'm going to talk more about the position that biden administration is specifically in right now, especially if you work towards weber term elections in just a couple minutes. the u.s. president secretary under obama also talk to me about this op-ed about this op-ed releasing the president just the last couple hours ago. >> this is talking about our position of our position in the middle east, and kind of defending wide as he's making this trip.
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especially when we think about the involvement of saudi arabia and the killing and murder of jamal jody. >> that's the big criticism. the president has received these criticisms about the trip. ever since this is been announced, this is something he's received a lot of pushback on. the candidate biden, in 2019, said that he would make saudi arabia a pariah because of that assassination. it's also important to point out that this op-ed was published overnight in the washington post, which is the publication that u.s. journalist khashoggi worked for. that's something to highlight for sure. he defended his decision to go abroad. i want to read you some of what was in the op-ed. he said, i know that there are many disagree with my decision to travel to saudi arabia. my views on human rights are clear and long-standing clean, and fundamental freedoms are always on the agenda when i travel abroad as they will be during the stretch, just as they will be in israel and the west bank. these are two other stops the president is making on this trip to the middle east.
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he leads on tuesday. his goals for the trump, he laid out, he says the region is in a more secure and stable place than it was under the trump administration, he says that repairing relationships, and working our relationships over their will help with aggression in russia, as well as the u.s.'s ability to outcompete china. biden maintains that this is something that will be good for the u.s. going forward, but also maintaining that his views on human rights have not changed. >> i also found it interesting addressing the shortcomings he saw from former president trump and his actions in the middle east and why we are where we are today, especially in pulling out of the iran nuclear deal. now he's wanted to get back into it, but urging iran, of course, to comply with the terms under the former jcpoa, which they are currently not doing. lauren barrett for us, get on that bike, my friend. once again, i'll let you get to it. thank you. >> it's my next stop. >> all right, happening right now. secretary of state, blinken is flying to japan where he will pay his respects to shinzo abby
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who was assassinated on friday. -- is before returning to washington d.c.. blinken will be the senior u.s. official to visit japan as part of a condolence visit. the secretary of state is calling for prime minister dodges assassination is a tragedy for the world, and praise the former legal or for his vision. let's talk now about what's happening in florida. one school district voted to notify parents when their students will be and a group of students who identify as gay or gender nonconforming. it is coming after the -- don't say gay law. this went into effect. it's banning instruction around sexual orientation or gender identity from kindergarten to grade three and managed not deemed appropriate, as they put it by state standards. joining me now from st. petersburg is nbc's jeanne
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anderson. a couple questions i have for you, stephanie. please explain to me for some of the lgbtq restrictions that the school districts have now put into effect, including this one that alerts parents of students who are open about their gender identity. how are teachers and students reacting to this? >> yeah, good afternoon. there are still a lot to unpack because this law was passed on july 1st, and school districts across the state are working to incorporates and leon county. this is in the tallahassee area near the florida state capital. that school board had a meeting recently, and they're adapting with the call and lgbtq guide. this includes protections, they say, for students who are open about their gender identity and sexual orientation. but, there is that one provision within the guidelines
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that lgbtq activists say will actually make gay and trans students targets. that is the part where, as you said, parents of street heads will be notified if their child is in a peak class or going out a field trip with a student who is open about the gender identity. a field trip with >> unfortunate but the student and navalny herbal circumstance. i think the premise behind it by that notification is necessary all the way through. the only position why you would want to do that, is there a negative reason, is there something problematic, it's a scarlet letter really. it's inappropriate. >> other school districts again are trying to see how they're dealing with this new law. in fact the teachers association in orange county, florida, said the lgbtq teachers angry eight through
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three were told not to wear rainbow colors, were told not to display photos of their families in palm beach county, the district removed two books that touch upon gender identity. >> we're talking about minor very, very young children and i completely agree that there's no place for that in the classroom. if parents want to talk to other children about those thing, that's their right to do. that i do not believe the school district, teachers, administration has any right to talk to parents. i'm really happy that was part of the bill as well. >> now as part of the new law, parents will be able to sue school districts for alleged violations, damages, are legal fees and the state education department is expected to release more information about some of the parameters of the new law little bit later on this summer. still a lot in fluid right now, yasmin, but understandably a lot of people within the lgbt community say that they are scared. >> i need some clarification on
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this stuff. if you don't have the answers for me, be forthcoming about it i'm a little confused. when i'm hearing is, if you're friends with a second grader you can't wear a rainbow or display your family's picture on your desk, what about kids that do not identify as gay or gender nonconforming, can they wear rainbows but the other kids cannot, and then what permission to the parents than half, what choices of the that have won a parents told, okay there's a gay male in your child's class, with a pair and then be able to yank their kid out of that classroom because of that? >> okay, when we try to give you a bit of clarity here. there's so many different school districts across the state. each one coming up with their own principles. -- so, you have a gay or trans student in your p e class, those parents assume that parents in high school for say, that parent is out. the parents who are the other students, would be notify at
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that point the parents can have a choice, to haveaccommodationse their student pulled out of that pe class, or that field trip, or the gay or trans student is also taking part. as far as the rainbow stuff, this is according to the teachers association in orange county florida, the teachers of the younger kids were told not to display things like rainbow flags, pictures of their families will see how that shakes out. a lot of uncertainty there, this is also being sorted out because there is a lot of confusion. there's still a lot of questions and things are still very fluid. >> all i drew was rainbows when i was in elementary school. that's literally all i drew. and there was nothing political about drying a rainbow back then. it's just what i love to draw. i'm not very artistic to be honest. stephanie stanton, thank you for your coverage of this, i appreciate. it still ahead, the fight to save some of the world's most famous trees, yosemite national park where fires threatening
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the giant sequoias. and signs of hope on gas prices and jobs. can president biden turn the tide of the economy. what would that mean for the midterms and beyond, former press clemency -- robert gives is joining me now, we will be right back. gives is joining me now when you have technology that's easier to control... that can scale across all your clouds... we will be right back. so you can do more incredible things. [whistling]
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and they were waving at me when i was going down. it felt good. >> i saw three 89 and i was like i'm going here. i called my mom. i was like you need to go here and get gas, it's really cheap right now. >> i'd be going there to, i should finally address out to that gas station. the economy beginning to show signs for the gas prices, suddenly dropping for a near a month or so falling before $4 a gallon in some states. the job market also showing some encouraging numbers of the month of june seeing 372,000 new jobs, far exceeded accidents in the unemployment remaining at a low, 3.6%. but despite all of these numbers that we're seeing, these positive numbers, americans are still dealing with of course the high inflation rate on every day items. and top of this moving recession, has persisted in recent weeks, just around the corner gina raimondo addressing those concerns with the press at this meeting. >> if you were to ask me, what
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do i think of the economy, i'd say we have a strong economy. unemployment is down, we recovered all the jobs since the loss of the pandemic, peoples household balance sheets are strong. however, when you go to the grocery store prices are high, when you fill up your car the tag prices are high, so consumers americans are feeling that. >> they are feeling. and robert gibbs, do msnbc contributor is joining us now to talk about this, the messaging coming out of the biden administration with all this. so, robert, great to have you. it seems that the messaging coming out of the biden administration, talking about -- what is the economy is quite strong. nonetheless when you go to the grocery store, you're paying a heck of a lot more today than you are six months ago, or a year ago. you're talking about the approval waiting from the president right now, at record
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low, not a place that he necessarily wants to be, as we march towards the midterm election. how do they turn on around when it comes to the messaging on the economy when you have these positive numbers, gas prices in some places goal below $4 a gallon, nonetheless americans still seeing it as not a good place for him? >> i think secretary ramona hit pretty well in that clip you showed. but it's really important you live where people live. the understanding that the top line of the economy, the jobs are part strong strong friday, but i think underscoring again where people live, is more expensive at the grocery store, it's more expensive to buy a lot of different goods, it's more expensive to go to the gas station and philip. i think politically for the white house and for democrats it's about a line of improvement here. you mentioned gas prices are down, we saw the jobs report which was strong, it's interesting this week will get two different measures,
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consumer price index. once of lay shuns down over the past month, we'll get the numbers on wednesday, and then on friday university of michigan's consumer confidence survey will give us a sense of how do consumers feel about what's coming. i once interesting about that, in june michigan survey hit an all-time low. none of this is gonna get fully saw by the time voters go to the polls in november. but the question is the lineup trajectory one that's improving or one that's declining, that's gonna be really important for democrats. >> i found it interesting, -- basically saying give the president a break. because it seems as if there's a lot of criticism out there when it comes to the president's handling of course the overturn of roe v. wade, gun rights in this country, that he's not necessarily providing the urgency that one needs -- of course when it comes to dealing with these --
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he doesn't miss words, he hasn't said all along the way. he said straight-up after uvalde, there is nobody that needs an ar, he wanted to see an all-out ban on ar, he wanted to codify roe, but his hands are tied, right? he's in a very difficult position right now. >> undoubtedly. look, i spent enough time in the white house and worked hard enough to know the magic wand to fix everything. it's simply doesn't exist. that doesn't mean there isn't frustration from democrats or from the base on this. it's important, first underscore what's been accomplished, the first sensible gun control legislation that was really been passed in three decades, just happened. i think that's important to underscore, for this white house understanding there isn't as much they can do with a 50/50 senate in a filibuster. tone is really important, i think the presidents words were
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right the morning of the supreme court's decision overturning roe. democrats didn't feel that urgency. on friday, with the president spoken signed the executive order, that began to feel a little bit more like he fully understood the moment a 50 years of rights, being washed away. i think whether it's guns, abortion, a lot of these issues that the president doesn't have a legislative solution for at the moment, tone is really gonna matter. >> jimmy tone, immediate reaction or tone in the presidents delivery, cause that's reflective of who he is, and how we communicates he's not a communicator like the former president donald trump, he's not a communicator like obama either. so, are you talking tone when it comes to delivery or actions like signing that executive order, which provides protections but obviously you cannot codify roe, it's impossible for him to do? >> i mean tone in his remarks.
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i think he began to see that a bit more on friday. look, we remember when you heard him after uvalde, you felt it, you could feel the frustration in his voice. i think that's what democrats have to see, is that tone of the understanding of the moment that we're in. i have no doubt the policy is going to be what many democrats want to see even if it's not gonna be fast enough. i think it's really important for the white house to get the tone of his remarks right. you mentioned it, you cannot go out there, you cannot go out there and be there someone he's not. but he's worked on many of these issues for a long time. when we hear and feel the heartfelt joe biden, that comes through, we certainly felt it inherited after uvalde, you could tell that those remarks he was giving they weren't necessarily the ones on the teller prompter, coming directly from his heart. >> yeah, absolutely.
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robert gibbs as always it's great to have you on. thank you sir. >> up next, a new documentary on donald trump and his family, subpoenaed by the january six committee is now officially released. is there anything that moves illegal needle when it comes to prosecution of the former president, that conversation is ahead. we'll be right back. president, that conversation i ahead. ahead. on our jackets? -denied. -can you imagine? i want a new nickname. can you guys start calling me snake? no, bryan. -dwe'ld. -how about we all get quotes to see if we can save with america's number one motorcycle insurer? approved. cool! hey, if bryan's not gonna be snake, can i be snake? -all: no.
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lies, after he lost the now president biden. >> it's mathematically impossible to have lost the election. he didn't get 80 million votes, just so you understand, nor did he come close. all the legal documents and everything else, you still need a judge that has courage, so far we haven't found that judge. it's a disgrace in my opinion to, a country. the supreme court let a lot of people down. the supreme courts to nab the guts to make the right decision. they know at the right decision was. >> one person though, the documentary suggested not by these claims, first daughter of all that trump will of course still played a long while in public. >> a vodka had been trying to convince her father, to concede the election. >> -- with this warrior, my father,
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the peoples president. >> she was uncomfortable with the presidents lie after the election. she would never utter anything yourself to establish that disagreement. >> please vote, thank you, god bless you, god bless georgia, and god bless america. and god bless our president. >> and that president, agreeing to talk january six on the record, in this film, watch this. >> it was a sad day. it was a day were there was great anger in our country. people went to washington primarily because they were angry with an election they think was rigged. the very small portion as you know, one down to the capitol, and a very small portion of them went in. i will tell you what, they were angry from the standpoint of what happened in the election, because they're smart and they see what happened. i believe that was a big part
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of what happened on january six. >> i want to bring in nbc lore legal analyst, barb mcquade, the president there i should say tried to justify the actions of the insurrection. it wasn't a small group of people that went from the ellipse down to the capitol, i was there, i walked with all them, it wasn't a small group of people that stormed the capitol. i saw them storm. that being said, there's a lot of problematic things it seems that were sad within this documentary. what do you make of what you've seen so far, barbara? >> well, donald trump is engaging in disinformation, he's constantly repeating the mantra that he won the election, that the election was stolen. of course, as we learned with cory lewandowski, statements you make in the media that are false are not crimes. and so, he continues to perpetrate this lie on the american people. he's hitting it everywhere you can, including in this documentary. i got 11 find a public
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statement where he concedes laws, i'm not sure it's within his dna. but at some point, i think you can make an argument that when he's hearing it from his own attorney general, from his own director of national security, from all of these other people that he knew that he had lost the election. >> so, i want to take a small clip for you of the former president talking specifically about georgia. i think it's interesting, as we talk about the investigation that's happening in georgia, the subpoenas we heard of lindsey graham, subpoenaed by the county da there. i want to keep to the investigation that that can be more problematic than what the doj decides to bring. let's watch that and we'll talk on the other side. >> you can't have elections that are meaningless. you can't have elections that if somebody controls the state of georgia because we have a governor that the poor guy doesn't know with the house happening, secretary of state this guy's like a hardheaded rock.
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>> so, now we know all the details of what took place. when it came to the phone call to brad raffensperger, when it came to the pressure campaign that was put on the governor of georgia, what do you make of what we just heard from the former president? >> i, ghana think we see donald trump just trying to discredit those people that are in power. trying to undermine their credibility in an effort to push his own narrative. but i think that -- it's gonna get to the bottom of this. she's putting everybody in the grand jury who was involved in this, those facts will ultimately prevail over whatever fiction donald trump is peddling. >> can you tell me about your thoughts on steve bannon, i'm fascinated to hear, what do you think the motive is behind donald trump writing this letter saying, okay, i'm no longer claiming executive privilege, even though that doesn't exist when that comes to steve mott bannon -- to testify? >> this is a last-minute effort
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in my view, a gimmick to create a defense for steve bannon at his trial. i think he's trying to model and confuse the jury by suggesting that the only reason that steve bannon refused to testify in the first place because donald trump had -- a judge felt he had not. as you just suggested, he doesn't have a privilege to assert anyway. the privilege belongs to joe biden. the judge found that it's outweighed by the interest of getting -- january six. there's no executive privilege at all on many levels. but by waiving it now, he is creating an issue for steve bannon to say trump, how could i have violated the law, when donald trump didn't even wavered the privilege until july. the other clever thing about this letter, is what it says it is not that i am waiting privilege, or have waived the privilege, but i will waive the privilege if you can work out an appropriate time with the committee to testify. knowing full well that the committee has moved on, they have seven other witnesses, the moment to have steve bannon testify is over. it's a win-win.
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he's never gonna have to testify, but it can create a little scene of doubt that he can use at the trial. >> certainly, it doesn't seem like they're gonna agree on any of the terms of which bannon would be asking for when it came to testify, to level the public defense of the former president on the stand in front of the country, which we know the january six committee certainly would not agree to. barbara mckay, as always great to talk to you thank you. >> coming up hundreds of giant sequoia trees are in danger from wildfire in yosemite national park. including one that is 3000 years old. we'll be right back. including one that is 3000
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iconic sequoias. it's also fourth hundreds of toppers to evacuate the area, the fires were at 0% containment as of this morning. it has expanded to more than 700 acres. after the break everybody, to kane refugee finding safety with the help of to american women. >> there is some nice -- and i'm happy that i'm here, i'm safe. we >> list our past lives so much. >> richard louis, travel to prague and joins us coming up next. louis, when you have technology that's easier to control... prague that can scale across all your clouds... so you can do more incredible things. [whistling]
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to get to rookie now, rescue efforts underway after a missile struck a five -- donetsk region overnight. at least 15 people were killed, 20 people are believed to be trapped under the rubble, officials say they had to rescue five people from the rubble so far. they've made contact with at least three others still trapped alive beneath the ruins. the rescue efforts ongoing over there. and then some positive news amidst all of this, the war in ukraine to american moms, living in prague have found a deep sense of purpose helping ukrainian families find homes. after fleeing the war -- on to the czech republic, and spoke with that. this is a fascinating story richard, take us through. it >> it really is, yasmin, these two mobs from the midwest make you want to jump out here
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she see and get moving. they're doubling efforts to help refugees, these two ex pats recently taking it upon themselves, to turn one hurts into wet heels by creating not just housing, but homes. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ >> a k-pop inspired youtube video, not from happy-go-lucky teens but from ukrainian war refugees trying to guard their youth. taped after they flatten found new homes and neighboring countries. >> the story begins on the 24th of february. >> this was very scary because we woke up from the bombs, from the sirens. >> kate, daria, anvik are best friends teenagers from odessa, ukraine, they are part of more than 300,000 refugees who found safety in the czech republic from russian troops who ravaged their homes. check support for refugees like
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kate has been tremendous. in part because of the country's history of invasion by soviet forces. duggan caroline -- embody that helping spirit. the michigan aspects open up their modest apartment to these girls. >> we saw the images, the need was obvious, we had an extra room. that's something we can do. >> volunteers connected the heart family with the three girls, now living without their parents in a foreign city for the very first time. >> these girls have been a blessing to us. we like we've had three people to our family. >> [speaking foreign language] >> they found what they lost in the last few months, friendships, coffees, a routine of new normalcy. >> our parents, our second parents, because we don't have
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physically right now our parents. >> it just sort of brings out the mother and me. i felt protective. i also felt just joy, because there's a purpose and i can do this, this is something that i can do. >> another american mom, former us living in prague, kimberly or rankin east colliery, she's also found her purpose of mr. ukrainian refugee crisis. >> i thought i'd be able to help as a nurse, the more people that i came in contact with, the more people i met i found that they really just needed housing. they needed a roof over their head. >> that was a tall order. prague's housing crisis makes it difficult even for locals to find apartments. not for cam, she stepped up and challenged her connections in real estate to start a nonprofit called amity. the result cam says, housing 130 refugees so far. >> we secure the lease, we
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provide the deposit, we provide at least three months free rent for these families. and that's what we collect from donations or we've had a few people that have offered to actually sponsor of family. >> kim isn't the only one thinking of shelter, she's working on getting refugees health insurance, food, education, and schools, jobs and she's forming deep connections with them along the way. >> hi cam. >> like she did with sisters yulia -- from ukraine. >> we want to help these families become self sufficient, they have a place here in prague. >> this could go on for two years says president zelenskyy most recently. are you ready to do this for two years? >> absolutely. absolutely. i'm ready, having five kids i think it may be very strong, resilient, and i'm really looking forward to the next few
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years. i want them to be able to go home. >> many ukrainian refugees in the czech republic dream of line italy safe to return home. for now all they have is this things from home that they grabbed in minutes as they fled. >> this is a gift for my parents, it's really sweet, and i love this mouse so much. i'm happy that i have these girls here, a dog, [inaudible] there are so nice to us, i'm happy that i'm here, i'm safe. >> we miss our past lives so much, in odessa, and my emotions are just exploding in my mind sometimes. >> including new memories, like dancing in the streets of prague. >> during the interview one of the girls read her parents out loud from her birth certificate, before she escaped her parents gave it or so people could see
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her family really is, in reading it she cried, worrying if she herself whatever see them again. yasmin, about cam who finds homes in brag, she said 20 $500 will get a family into a home. >> that's such a great story, richard, thank you for sharing. i can only imagine how much support, that these kids need, and how much it helps them get through a very tough time and be accepted -- waubay lie ahead. thank you. >> they can feel it when they respond. thank you richard. i appreciated. >> in the next hour, preparing for abortion rights protest in washington. president the largest youth voting organization in the country, next-gen america joins me for what she hopes to accomplish with a unique demonstration of anger at the supreme court tomorrow. we'll be right back. demonstration of anger at th
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so many people are overweight now and asking themselves, "why can't i lose weight?" for most, the reason is insulin resistance, and they don't even know they have it. conventional starvation diets don't address insulin resistance. that's why they don't work. now, there's golo. golo helps with insulin resistance, getting rid of sugar cravings, helps control stress and emotional eating, and losing weight. go to golo.com and see how golo can change your life. everybody and i'm yasmin that's g-o-l-o.com.
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vossoughian, if you're just joining us, welcome, if you're still with that stick around, thank you. steve bannon ready to testify to the january six committee, the news coming less than 48 hours before the next committee hearing, were extremists -- capitol hill riot will in fact make up centers stage. ahead of that, a new documentary giving us a new idea of donald trump's view o
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