tv The Reid Out MSNBC September 9, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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problems, and how do you do it with innovation? bill interrogates here tuesday to discuss all of that. i hope you tune in, or you can always dvr "the beat" to make sure you catch it or find it on youtube. wanted to give you that head's up, find me at arimelber.com. connect with me @arimelber. that does it for us. wish you a great weekend. "the reidout" starts now. ♪♪ weekend "the reidout" starts now ♪ ♪♪ tonight on "the reidout" -- >> queen keep was a life well lived, a promise with destiny kept, and she is mourned most deeply in her passing. that promise of lifelong service i renew to all today. >> after 70 years in waiting, the job is now his. tonight, a look at the politics of king charles and how he is likely to change the
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institution. plus, we are just weeks away from the mid-terms, and republicans are feeling the full force of the abortion backlash, and we will take a closer look at the senate race in ohio which republican j.d. vance was supposed to have all sewn up by now. instead, he's losing. we begin tonight across the pond as the world mourns the death of queen elizabeth. today for the first time we heard from the new king of england, king charles iii, pay tribute to his mother paying tribute to his mother and ushering in a new era. >> as the queen herself did with switch unswerving, devotion, i, too, now solemnly pledge myself, throughout the remaining time god grants me, to uphold the constitutional principles at the heart of our nation, and wherever you may live in the united kingdom or in the realms and territories across the world and whatever may be your
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background or beliefs, i shall endeavor to serve of you with loyalty, respect and love. >> earlier in the day the new monarch was greeted at buckingham palace by a crowd gathered to pay their respects with cheers and cries of a phrase most prince aren't used to saying, god save the king. gun salutes took place in hyde park and at thor to of land op. 96 rounds were fired, one for each year of elizabeth's life. while church pels at st. paul's cathedral in westminster abbey rang out at noon. the next ten days of mourning will consist of elaborate plans to honor the queen in accordance with tradition. changes will be made to the country's postage and currency. charles' ascension to the throne comes at a tumultuous time with the country facing spiraling inflation costs, the-at-aftermath of the country's exit from the european union not to mention the king has huge fills to shoe.
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charles thought he's forever been overshadowed first by the queen who dazzled graubt and here in america with her endearing and yet resolute demeanor and then by princess diana, the people's princess, universally beloved and transformed the way the public viewed the british monarchy. now he faces the daunting task as he -- of emerging as his own man at age of 73. that's a moments he's been waiting for for literally his entire life. the question that remains to be seen is what kind of monarch will he be? >> joining me now is nbc international correspondent keir response of nbc news and tim uweather, royal commentator and editorial director and senior director at "people." thank you for being here. keir, i'll start with you. i'm grateful that you're here because you're coverage has been excellent. >> thank you. >> we saw the inaction of charles greeting the public today and sort of, you know, sort of stepping into his open,
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but we still have another, what, ten days of mourning for the queen, and it struck me as i was watching those scenes that he -- he remains in a sense in her shadow. to what extent on the ground are people turning their attention toward him? >> well, you have to pinch yourself, don't you? we certainly felt that way when we saw him outside buckingham palace there, that you're not looking at prince charles, a man that you have seen for decades. you're looking at king charles. it still hasn't really sunk in. he's been waiting for this role for so long, and now it all seems to be happening so fast. i think in that moment, you saw -- well, you saw the public figure doing his duty. doing his public -- determined to do his duty, and then you saw the private man at the same time because he went to see the flowers, a person who is grieving and when he went inside buckingham palace. and that was the first time this a new monarch had walked into buckingham palace for 70 years and record that had
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televised message, you really saw how he felt about his mom in that messaging. as we've said before, when it comes to royals, there is such a mix of different aspects to this, so at the time that he is privately grieving, he's also very much got his eye on the politics because you better believe that the folks in that building behind me there are political, and the political message really of him stepping out of that car today there and stepping into history and then walking over to greet people was to say i want to be a king for the people. i want to connect with the people. i don't want you to think that i am a distant king, and he knows how important that is. his mom managed to achieve it, and that's what he -- he want to follow in her footsteps, not just in terms of being the one who is stable, the one who is a rock the way that she was and the one who brings small amounts of change, change that people can handle, if you like. it's a very conservative institution at the royal family.
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>> yeah. >> but also, i think, you know, just ensuring that he has the consent of the people because in the end that is what royalty is build on. >> and it's interesting. michelle taubert, welcome to the show. >> thank you. >> in the message wherever you live in the world and sort of trying to bring in everybody, et cetera, sort of bring people in. he is different in a sense, right? i mope, he's got to follow his former wife, princess diana, who did just what keir is talking about and did it really brilliantly. >> right. >> and really made the monarchy seem accessible, particularly to americans, and so i wonder how american audiences are perceiving this man who in many ways was the villain in that story, he and his now queen consort. >> absolutely. he's had a real art, quite a dramatic arc, particularly in the eyes of americans who very much remember him from the scandal years with diana and
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remain really devoted to diana and to what she stood for, and we know how overshadowed he felt by diana during those years. i think in that speech as well as when you saw him meeting the public, you real saw the effort to connect and you -- and you heard many more personal notes in that speech than we usually do from had a monarch, including calling camilla his darling wife and saying, you know, officially naming her his queen consort and expressing his love for his son harry and his wife meghan and also officially naming prince william aspirins of wales and princess kate as princess of wales, so those were some very personal touches and very intentional. >> and tim, thank you and welcome to the show as well. talk a little bit about that, because, you know, charles, king charles iii, is presiding over a very different royal family, and he is a liberal in the small "l" sense of the word in the sense that he did push forward and say
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i'm going to marry the woman i would like to marry and we're going to have her be queen. there's not going to be any controversy about that. we're going to do that, and he's presiding over this set of younger royals that his heir, who is a more traditional royal but also harry and meghan who, you know, have -- have had some trauma from the british press, and so embracing all of that, a sort of multi-cultural, multi-racial family, how do you think he ends up managing all of that and not getting overshadowed by them? >> with a lot of difficulty, joy. this is and has been for a long time a divided family. there's been a lot of personal troubles in the royal family as we all know. we've talked about the diana years and so forth. when charles talked tonight and made a reference to harry and meghan, he was extending a very public olive branch to them, express of his own personal love
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because he's been feeling the stress from their departure and the way they have been talking about the royal family and the criticisms of the royal family. now, whether or not what he said today will heal the rift, whether or not over the next few days as we await the queen's funeral and william and harry are living in windsor almost side by side, whether they will actually talk to each other, whether this rift will be healed, we just don't know, but my sense is if there is ever a time for it to happen, if there is ever a time for this family to get together and bury the hatchet, if you like, it's now, and i'm sure that that's going to be a big priority for the new king, and it's important for him, too, to win or the public because we have a skeptical public in this country. you know. he's not the most popular royal figure. he's got a lot of work to do. >> yeah. i mean, not the most popular by far. there are polls he's the least popular royal figure.
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11% of those surveyed in the "new york times," they have a story that 11% have a favorable view, so he has a lot to the deal with here, keir. the andrew business which his mom really kept a lid on but it felt like the sort of things she was able to cover over with her own grace and her own popularity, he now has to confront them all, including the harry and meghan situation, including whether that happens, and including the funeral. i mean, another network was literally suggesting in all seriousness that perhaps president biden might invite donald trump who might be indicted soon for stealing classified documents to go with him because the president gets to invite people to go with him. there's so much that has to be navigated. that would be incredibly awkward, i'm sure. does he show signs, charles, of being somebody that's got this sort of aplomb that his mother did to handle all of this? >> well, when you talk about the
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international politics side and that's what it is when it comes to u.s. presidents, of course, they are past masters. that's not really the difficult part. the hard part, as tim was suggest, he has such long experience with looking at the royal family and being around the royal family. you know, when you're looking at that -- those issues within the family, that's where it gets really difficult. you know, joy, i know so many folks watching your show love politics, and the politics of the royal family really is politics distilled down because they don't have any power. >> yeah. >> all they have is their messaging. think about that moment that happened here outside buckingham palace for the queen's jubilee, when little prince louis game and bounced on charles' lap, and what you saw there was a very personal moment there. he's no question that that was a grandfather enjoying his grandson, but it also sent a message that was useful for prince charles just the same as the message that he was trying to send when he came to greet
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the crowds here, is and that's what being a royal is about, the personal, the political, the public and the private are intermixed. these are people who live in the goldfish bowl. charles has lived in that goldfish bowl all his life. he knows how to navigate it, but, but the trouble is that in the end, as i mentioned, public opinion is everything. they depend on public upon. just as royals have for hundreds of years, and that is where the challenge is, as tim is suggesting. >> indeed. michelle, very quickly to you, because on that point, you know, the family, the younger members of the family have been really close to a lot of american%. you know, the obamas famously hung out with william and the family and little prince george and he's in his little bathrobe and friends, president barack obama's friends with harry and, you know, that went away sort when trump came along and his kids tried to come up and sort of do the same thing and they weren't into it so they have ways of sort of sending messages
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of friendship and everything to the u.s., but talk a little bit about charles in particular because on things like climate change, he has been a little more political. he can't really do that now, right, as king? >> that's right, and we heard him allude to that in his speech today. he said that he now as monarch he will be stepping back from some of the causes and charities that he has held deer up until this point, and i think reading between the lines, the subtext there is something like climate change. you will see him step away from, but he also has already passed the torch on that to the next generation as you mentioned. prince williams has taken up that cause as his own, has launched hires earth shot prize with the goal of affecting climate change action in the next decade so i think this family has worked in particularly the past years to set up the next generation for
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this moment. so knowing that charles would be stepping away from some naff. >> indeed, last point to you, tim, the big sort of elephant in the room has been the question of colonialism. it's sort of hung over all of these events in the last 24 hours, and he did make some references to it sort of subtlety, king charles did, jamaica and other caribbean countries are stepping way back. kenya's minority leader said some things that were pretty rough. how does charles in your view handle some of those questions? even australia making noises about wanting to back out of the commonwealth. what does that look like going forward? >> well, you mentioned australia. they had a referendum back in 1999 and they voted to stick with the monarchy, but things have changed since then. charles is particularly unpopular among a lot of people in australia. the monarchy's view with that it's going to happen. we can't be the head of state of all these countries forever. that's just days gone birks and
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i think charles is pretty pragmatic about that and they can't affect it. they can't stop. it all they can do is go graciously to these countries as the union flag is hauled down and give their best wishes. what is important though is maintaining britain's image abroad, britain's influence abroad. the queen wasn't political but she certainly carried a lot of weight when it came to wooing other foreign leaders, and that's something that charles is going to find more difficult i think than she did. >> yeah. it is a fascinating sort of time as somebody -- my mother was from guyana, british guyana, and she grew up singing god save the queen and it is weird saying god save the king. thank you all very much. you have next on "the reidout," the special master case is not the first time that donald trump has gone shopping for a
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sympathetic judge. it's not the first time that he asked for this specific judge. "the reidout" continues after this. specific judge. "the reidout" continues after this some days, it felt like asthma was holding me back. but asthma has taken enough. so i go triple... with trelegy. with 3 medicines in 1 inhaler,... it's the only once-daily treatment for adults that takes triple action against asthma symptoms. trelegy helps make breathing easier,... improves lung function,... and lasts for 24 hours. go triple... go trelegy. because asthma has taken enough. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler... for sudden breathing problems. trelegy contains a medicine that increases risk of hospitalizations and death from asthma problems when used alone. when this medicine is used with an inhaled corticosteroid,... like in trelegy,... there is not a significant increased risk of these events. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase risk of thrush and infections. get emergency care for serious allergic reactions. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. don't let asthma take another breath.
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attorney general/consignificantly william barr saying the doj is close to having the evidence that they need to indict his former boss. now the problem though at this moment is that the key evidence to make such a case would seem to involve the highly classified documents that the fbi seized from mar-a-lago last month. and those documents are not available to the doj thanks to the unprecedented decision by a judge trump-appointed in the waning months of his presidency, to make those documents inaccessible until a special master can take a look at them for some incoherent claims of executive privilege by trump. the doj appealed that ruling yesterday arguing that they should be allowed to continue to use those documents which are not the property of any president, let alone trump. jung eileen cannon is giving trump's legal team until monday morning to respond to the doj's motion, and today was deadline for both the doj and the trump
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legal team to provide their list of potential candidates for special master. this charade has put an unusual spotlight on judge cannon who trump has tried to get other cases in front of before. apparently she's just the kind of friendly ear on the bench that he thinks he needs. last night another florida judge, donald middlebrook, dismissed a separate trump lawsuit that claimed hillary clinton and other perceived political enemies of trump engaged in a racketeering conspiracy to falsely accuse him of can a hooting with russia, russia, russia to gain support in the 2016 presidential election. back in april, trump asked the judge to recuse himself because the judge was appointed by president bill clinton. in his response denying that request the judge wrote, quote, i note that plaintiff filed this lawsuit in the ft. pierce division of this district where only one federal judge sits, judge eileen cannon, who plaintiff appointed in 2020. despite the odds, this case landed with me instead and when
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plaintiff is a litigant before a judge that he himself appointed he does not tend to advance these same sorts of bias concerns, you be quote. joining me now glen kirschner and friend of the show. forgive me if i'm incredibly skeptical of this judge. it's weird for me that she was appointed when trump had already lost the election, lame duck at this point, appoints her. apparently marco rubio was one of her big supporters to get on the bench. her, of course, is laying down on the tracks for dump on this document, what he did call it, storage of having other country's nuclear secrets and now she seems to be the only judge he wants to get cases in front of. are you as suspicious as i am? >> it seems like a pretty transparent attempt to find a friendly job, and you're right, joy. judge cannon was confirmed by mitch mcconnell's senate after donald trump lost the election
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and it sure feels like he picked her to do precisely what she's doing because the ruling that she issued, i actually think legal scholars left, right and center look at it and shake their head because it's so poorly reasoned and so unsupported by the law and the facts and, you know, the department of justice in its most recent filing gave her an off ramp and tried split the baby and not embarrass her too much but they said we will be appealing everything, and we need you to suspend your ruling that says we cannot investigate these stolen classified documents that have the capacity to do real national security damage, so i have to say, joy, if she cares about her reputation. i mean, she's been appointed
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with life tenure. she have's going to be on the bench a long time, we can assume, and if she's an honest broker of the law she has to be persuaded by that blockbuster filing that doj just provided to her. let's see if she thinks better about her earlier decision and reverses course >> you know, let's talk about, because even barr is coming out and being, like, well, he might go down for this stuff. it's looking bad for him. i've always been suspicious of barr. there's never any time when he's not the villain and i wonder why is he suddenly all trying to be on the right side of history when it comes to trump, when it comes to january 6th, whether he lost the election, saying it's bullshit, of course he lost the election and now coming out saying, hey, he might get indicted this. new berman book is damning. looks like it's going to be damning just per the "new york times" reporting. he was fixing stuff to go after trump's enemies.
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trump wanted everyone including john kerry and anyone who was perceived to be a problem for him and it feels like barr was willing to do it. do you feel like this is reputation maintenance in advance? >> bill barr is onries each are youtation rehabilitation tour, and quite frankly when i have someone who committed a whole bunch of crimes and they have never been accountable for those crimes and then they start to say a whole lot of good stuff about the crimes of others and they are all about accountability, i'll tell you, as a prosecutor i never wanted to hear anything that they had to say unless and until they took responsibility for their own crimes. typically what that looked like is needing guilty and becoming a cooperating witness. and then i'm prepared to listen to you, but before bill barr is held accountable -- until he's held accountable for his crimes, i'm not that interested or persuaded in anything he now says, you know, that seems to be damaging to donald trump, and i do think that jeffrey berman
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book confirms what we all know, that donald trump and bill barr weaponized and corrupted the department of justice to punish donald trump's critics. nobody knows that better than a guy like michael cohen who he said he was about to criticize the president, he was put back into prison by bill barr's department of justice and he successfully filed the great writ, the writ of habeas corpus and a federal judge in new york said you were just burnished by your government for your first amendment free speech rights. that is horrific. >> and there's all these concentric circles of chicanery around trump so you have barr who auditioned in a memo said please, sir, put me in, coach and i'll take care of you as a.g., and then you've got bannon, stealing people's money
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to fake build a walled and then you've got trump doing the same thing. this is a "new york times" piece, a federal grand jury in washington is examining the formation of and spending by a fund-raising operation created by donald j. trump after his loss in the 2020 election as he was soliciting millions of dollars by baselessly asserting that the election was fraud by widespread spread. this was a giant grist like everything bannon did and everything trump did. does trump go the way of bannon for doing the same thing? >> maybe joy, and this may sound surprising coming from a career prosecutor. sometimes i want to scream with enough with the new investigations. yes, we have to investigate all of the crimes of donald trump, but this new investigation, the big rip-off as representative lofgren labeled it, with respect to basically stealing money courtesy of his pact, is that going to distract us from the investigation into his theft of classified documents? >> there you go. >> which seems to have
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distracted us from his launching an armed insurrection against the capitol which seems to have distracted us from his election fraud in georgia, find me the 11,787 votes, joy, and all that have certainly distracted us from the bribery and extortion of president volodymyr zelenskyy, his ten counts of obstruction of justies in as documented in the trump/russia report and his campaign finance crimes with michael cohen at the beginning of it all that he used to steal the presidency. at some point, joy, can we tell the department of justice to just finish what you started. just return one indictment against somebody who has been criming in the harsh light of day, so is there frustration that donald trump has had not one minute of accountability? you bet there is. >> he's like a russian nesting doll of crime and corruption. at this point pick something, doj, pick jig. glen, you speak for so many of us right now, including me. thanks so much, my friend. have a great weekend.
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still ahead, republicans messed around with women's reproductive rights and now they are about to find out. reproductive rights and now they are about to find out. it's time for the biggest sale of the year, on the sleep number 360 smart bed. it senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. our smart sleepers get 28 minutes more restful sleep per night. don't miss the final days where all smart beds are on sale. save 50% on the sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. ends monday.
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consequences of trying to eradicate women's autonomy as rage looms over the mid-term elections where abortion is literally on the ballot. in november, michigan voters will decide whether to ensideline abortion rights in their state's constitution after the michigan supreme court ruled that an abortion action initiative must be included on that ballot. meanwhile, in south carolina, senators rejected a ban on nearly all abortions after five republicans, including all, all of the chamber's women, refused to support it. one of those women state senator katrina sheely, a republican, was previously opposing anti- -- proposed anti-abortion legislation as well had this to say for her republican colleagues that would eliminate exceptions for rape and incest. >> yes, i'm pro-life. i'm also pro-life of the mother, the life she has with her children who are already born. i care about the children who are forced into adulthood that
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was made up by a legislature full of men so they can make -- take a victory lap and feel good about it. you want children raising children who will most likely suffer domestic violence and live in poverty, but you don't care because you've done your job and you will forget about them once they are born. you will fight my legislation on foster homes and adoption. you will not support legislation to stop sex trafficking and pornography. you will not support my legislation for free meals for all children in schools. you're not going to help me on that. if you want to believe that god is wanting you to push a bill through with no exception that kills mothers and ruins the lives of children, let's mothers bring home babies to bury them, then i think you're miscommunicating with god or maybe you're not communicating with him at all. >> hmm. wow. joining me now is michelle goldberg, "new york times" columnist and msnbc political
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analyst and i rarely, rarely want to give a -- a politician an amen and a hallelujah, let alone a republican politician an amen and hallelujah but amen and hallelujah. she said all the words. what do you make of the fact that that is a woman anti-abortion republican legislator speaking, and she said all of those things? >> well, i don't think she speaks for most republican women, but i think she speaks for a slice of them. that's why you have things like the really lopsided and surprising referendum results in kansas recently. i mean, one of the things that's interesting is according to pollsters i was talking to in kansas, most kansans approved of the dobbs decision, right, so there's some sliver of people who approved of the dobbs decision but nevertheless have been repelled by -- frankly by the consequences that have decision, right? they have seen what some of these total abortion bans look like in practice, and they are horrified.
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>> i mean, you look at a state like michigan where republicans literally went to court to stop a referendum that had been approved by petition which is the way you get a referendum in to try to kill it because they knew that it would doom them because once people are voting there, that might draw more people who would vote for democrats. they understand i think finally belatedly, republicans, at least the ones who have to get elected and re-elect that had this is doom for them, this is bad, and i wonder if you think that that ends up changing the way they legislate, because they have been real aggressive about trying to make forced birth even as harsh as they can all across this country. >> well, i think they are in something of a predicament because there is you know a significant part of their base and of the anti-abortion movement that won't accept any exceptions, and that has been waiting for this day to pass all of this legislation and that will be outraged that they are not able to do that, but i
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think, that you know -- i feel like i feel like a broken record on this, but what this points to in this realm as in so many others is that because the republican agenda is so unpopular, the republican -- the conservatives can basically change their policies or they can change who is allowed to vote, and they have been trying the heart, so you see, you know, the kind of right wing subversion of democracy that's been an ongoing story, one place where it's really important for them in reproductive rights. it's the only way that they can pass the agenda that many of them are so dedicated to. you know, one of the reasons that -- or the reasons that the court in michigan had to decide on whether or not this -- this initiative was going to be on the ballot is because a board tossed it out because of some spacing issues, right. >> yeah. >> so you see already the way that these kind of -- that these trumpist figures who are
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determined to subvert the electoral process are already working against -- against abortion rights and against women's rights. >> and i believe there are some things on that -- on that ballot initiative that are also going to make it easier to vote which makes your point, that they want to make it as hard as possible to vote so they can impose this on women. let me play what the vice president of the united states kamala hires had to say. she was interviewed by chuck todd and here's what she had to say about the supreme court that has made all of this possible. >> how much confidence do you have in the supreme court? >> i think this is an activist court. >> what does that mean? >> it means that we had an established right for almost half a century which is the right of women to make decisions about their own body as an extension of what we have decided to be the privacy rights
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to which all people are entitled, and this court took this constitutional right away, and we are suffering as a nation because of it. >> just to make the vice president's point n.south carolina a raped 12-year-old, a south carolina representative said, well, they could just take an ambulance to walmart for plan "b." she had choices. the morning after pill was available. that's available at walmart so there's no compassion and then there's compulsion by the supreme court of the united states. does that wind up being a voting issue for women voters in november? >> i think that we're already seeing that it is. i can't remember who said this, but it was so smart. they said that, you know, there's typically a thermostatic reaction against the party in power, but right now what we're seeing is that the party in power in the united states is the conservative supreme court, right? they are making real substantial
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changes against the will of the american people to the fabric of american life. >> absolutely. that's brilliantly stitt, michele goldberg, have a great weekend. thank you next. is right wing j.d. vance quietly quitting his own campaign? a lot of people would like to ask him if they could only find him. to ask him if they could only find him. it's time for the biggest sale of the year, on the sleep number 360 smart bed. snoring? it can gently raise your partner's head to help. our smart sleepers get 28 minutes more restful sleep per night. all smart beds are on sale. save 50% on the sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. ends monday. ♪♪ my relationship with my credit cards wasn't good. i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. between the high interest, the fees...
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president biden is leaning hard into the mid terms. today he made his third visit to a battleground state just this week. biden was in columbus, ohio where he celebrated the ground breaking of a new semiconductor plant made possible by legislation that he signed into law. ohio, which has turned more red in recent years, voting overwhelmingly for the republican in the past two presidential elections, is now host to a surprisingly close senate race to fill the vacancy left by retiring republican senator rob portman. j.d. vance, the venture capitalist with a law degree from yale has rub one of the more bizarre campaigns and has been largely missing in action. when he does emerge, he's telling women that things were betty for the family when they stuck it out in violence and unhappy marriages. the associated press also recently report that had a charity organization vance set up to combat the opioid epidemic hired a drug consultant with ties to purdue pharma, a company reviled for its role in fueling
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america's opioid addiction. vance's democratic challenger tim ryan has taken vance to task for that in in new ad. >> right after joe had turned 15, that's when he was prescribed oxycontin. months later he was addicted. we used his college savings to pay for treatment, but the oxy had such a hold on him it was devastating. it was crushing. it's not just that j.d. vance pretended to help kids like joe, he brought in a woman funded by the drug companies. you can't know how betrayed i am. >> i'm bringing in a former republican congressman, a political analyst. j.d. vance could sell his soul to trump for a nickel because he's so rich. this messaging to me is damning,
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that he got in bed with a big pharma company that was responsible for the opioid epidemic and then made a pac. what do you make of his campaign? >> joy, this is just another example of the train wreck that senate republicans are facing ahead of the november election and the train wreck that's been this whole primary cycle with so many poor quality candidates and j.d. vance is part of that. he was a major critic of donald trump and now he wants to be a u.s. senator and win a republican primary and sold his soul for maybe a nickel. maybe that might be too much, but, yeah, this is just another example of why democrats are poised, at least in the senate, to defy political gravity this cycle because republicans have some ever some pretty challenged candidates. >> ohio used to be a swing
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state. they do have a democratic senator, sherrod brown and tim ryan is running a wise campaign and j.d. vance is saying something like this. this is not new video but this is a clip of vance saying the following. i mentioned it in the setup about -- when women were better off. take a look. >> which is this idea that we'll, okay, these marriages were fundamentally -- there were maybe even violent but they were certainly unhappy. so getting rid of them and making it easier for people to shift spouses like they change their underwear, that's gonna make people happier in the long term. and maybe worked up for the moms and dads, but i'm skeptical. it really didn't work out for the kids. >> do they teach something at hedge fund school to say something that's duke it out loud and think that you're going to be elected by any woman? i don't understand his whole campaign.
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do you? >> the challenge is if you read his biography, he actually tackles all these issues from opioid epidemic to broken homes, it's like he's divorced himself from his own routes and has now gone completely to the maga republicans for short times -- for short time little soundbites. and as a result, the culture war that he's trying to promote is actually part of the problem. the fact that he doesn't want to provide and actually talk to individuals who are part of the opioid epidemic, for example, that's painful because we know that ohio is having one of the hardest times in the country. the same thing what comes to this idea that a woman cannot choose what -- who she can marry is right along with the choice of abortion, agency of your body. so one of the things that we are seeing in the trump candidates is that michael trumps are not doing well. there are even republicans who recognize that that is not the country they want. they want their old party back
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where they can talk more about fiscal issues in a culture wars that are taking away the rights of women. i think j d vance, one of the reasons why he's on my, he does want to talk about the issues -- he's too afraid to divorce himself from donald trump. >> i don't understand why they just don't do it, carlos. you have got doctor oz who is a joke at this point, who's talking about crudités. you have herschel walker who, i had no idea what he was talking about, we have too many trees or whatever he is saying at any given moment. it does feel like republicans latch themselves to maga candidates because they're terrified of their base. but they must know when they talk -- maybe to you, that this is madness. that the people they have picked are inadequate. do they say behind the scenes, oh we've picked a bunch of losers? >> yes, joy. and i wish all americans could hear what many republicans say quietly or privately about donald trump, about republican primaries.
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about all of the really challenging things that have happened in our country over the last few years. and i think this is one of the reasons why this movement, this maga movement, is unsustainable. because most of the people leading it are fake. they don't believe in it. they know it's untrue, they know it's a fraud. that kind of comes through eventually. so people can sniff out someone who is being hypocritical or not telling the truth. and i think that's what happened to a lot of candidates. >> it's embarrassing. we what did lindsey graham said, if you nominate -- one true think that that man has a first. i don't go away, y'all. because who won the week is coming up next. coming up next hly prepared with clean ingredients... spark an explosion of the senses. so when you finally taste it, it just confirms... this. is. fantastic. and only at panera. $0 delivery fee for a limited time. i just always thought, “dog food is dog food” i didn't really piece together that dogs eat food.
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devices in and out of the home. i mean, can i have a bite? only from xfinity. nah. unbeatable internet. made to do anything so you can do anything. to finally lose 80 pounds and keep it off with golo is amazing. i've been maintaining. the weight is gone and it's never coming back. with golo, i've not only kept off the weight but i'm happier, i'm healthier, and i have a new lease on life. golo is the only thing that will let you lose weight and keep it off. who loses 138 pounds in nine months? i did! golo's a lifestyle change and you make the change and it stays off. >> it was a week so monumental (soft music)
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there is now a new king! and that's not the only thing, it's now time to play who won the week. i said it too early. who won the week? carlos, who won the week? >> joy, i'm gonna give someone a little credit on your show who never gets any credit, and that's mitch mcconnell, by inviting donald trump to invest in the horrible senator candidates, he's going to expose them as one of the most selfish people -- know no, the most selfish person ever to participate in american politics because i guarantee you donald trump will not give any of these candidates a penny of his money. >> a dime.
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and he's begging him to give them $1. just give us $1, just give us $1. maria, who won the week? >> president biden. i would say that he's delivering on the american people, and he's bringing jobs back to america. he was in ohio today and he was able to break ground with intel, saying manufacturing is, back in tell us back, so he's actually delivering on his campaign promises. >> he's also got his cool rainbands back. he's biden again. biden's best when he's fully biden-ing. when the rain bands. on come on man! come on man! grandpa finnegan when like that, man! i'm gonna play two back-to-back clips of who won the week. roll them. >> i want to thank sharon sprung for capturing everything i love about michelle. her grace, her intelligence, and the fact that she is fine. >> because as barack said, that
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the two of us can end up on the walls of the most famous address in the world, then again, it is so important for every young kid who is doubting themselves to believe that they can to. >> braids, dress, compliment from your man, portraits. michelle obama, boom, she won the week. maria teresa kumar, carlos cobiella, thank you my friends. she won the week, y'all, big-time. all in with chris hayes starts now. >> tonight on "all in" -- >> not only was there the big lie, there was the big rip off. >> doj picks up where the january six committee left off. >> we found evidence that the trump campaign and its surrogates misled donors as to where their funds would go and what they would be used for. >> tonight, congressman jamie raskin on e
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