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tv   Yasmin Vossoughian Reports  MSNBC  September 10, 2022 1:00pm-2:00pm PDT

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through london that will end at windsor castle. king charles was proclaimed the official monarch. he did on the roll immediately upon his mother's passing. camilla and king charles greeting well-wishers this morning officially as he was declared the monarch. and came moments after his two sons made that surprise visit with their wives. i want to talk to lindsay -- is in front of becky buckingham palace. lindsay, we've been talking to yield over the last couple of hours as you've been interviewing folks there and i know that people are continuing to gather. what is the mood there on the ground admits the well-wishers? >> so just an incredible crowd out here, yasmin. as people continue to gather. earlier in the day was a bit celebratory. the king was here and as he left, with the queen concerts, as he left for the first time after being declared king, he
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was greeted with a ton of applause and cheers in the crowd. now it is more somber. very respectable tone here and when we heard from the king today, he promised to renew the queen's vow of lifelong service. he also said that he sympathized really with the whole world. and he mentioned that the queens selfless service was unequaled induration, but also in dedication and in devotion. and i want to bring into people who really feel that she did in body that. first jeremy, and then pays a. and jeremy, you actually -- tell me about what this moment means to you, and what you almost remember about. >> it is an important day for the country. and you can see that many tens of thousands of people we have this evening the little feeling that the people of the uk have got towards the new king, and also the level feeling to wards the late queen. i think for all of us, this is a moving moment and for my me
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and my family to come out this morning in to see it all is an important part. >> you spent a lot of time with the royal family to talk about the generosity. the queen is also known for humor. side did you see glimpses of? that >> i saw plenty that, yes. i served as the commander or the final 18 months of the service in 1996 1997. so i -- at the end of the day. the queen was -- several times and we did the western islands crews and things like that. it was about the nearest that the queen never got to the whole thing. they're always very generous to all of the -- officers in the yacht and yes we saw plenty of the humorous side to the -- . >> it's a, what does the queen symbolize to you. >> i think it is that unwavering sense of duty that you referred to earlier. for me, that has been the key message that is coming up from people here. but also a broad. it is an example that we can
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all take in our daily lives. so a great message and it should be something embodied by the new king, as well. >> thank you, papa and thank you jeremy so much. yasmin, i want to tell you a little bit about what people can expect as this period morning really just begins. so we do know that tomorrow the queen's coffin will go from balmoral to edinburgh, and we know monday her body will rest at rust for 24 hours starting monday. tuesday her body will travel from edinburgh to london. wednesday that will be a gun carriage carrying her cough into westminster hall. her family will follow behind that. that is when the line and state will begin here in london. her funeral via westminster abby on monday the 19th. we know that big ben is going to strike wants to mark a two minute moment of silence on that day. we also know that eventually her coffin will be transferred to a hearse taken to windsor castle. so, yasmin, i can tell you acid sun has set, people are really
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just taking a moment to take it all in. of course it is a moment of mourning, but also a moment of history for people have only lived knowing a queen in their lives, yasmin. >> lindsay, i want to give champ of are so with you and if they are i would love you to grab that for just one moment. because i've been act skiing our royal experts over the last few hours, and their reaction to harry and meghan and william and kate. gathering and speaking with well-wishers, and walking together kind of showing this unity amidst the loss of the queen. and i'm wondering for both jeremy and pepper, as they saw those images or if they have heard of that gathering and what their reaction was sensing that, and what it does for the country in this loss of the queen? >> sorry, anchor yasmin the seam is asking what you make of these images seeing these four together obviously knowing that there has been a rift but
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seeing their union in such a time of morning. is there anything out of you would like to add? >> well, i think it is great. because i think that the queen was always one for forgiveness and understanding of all people. so i think that it is nice to see the whole family together on this occasion. >> yes, it is appropriate. this is a time of morning to remember that they have lost their grandmother here. and so they need to pull together as a family. >> yeah, yasmin, one of the written during comments that we heard from so many people, we have been speaking with when asking what their thoughts are on the nuking they say that they really empathize with him that truly he is a son mourning the loss of his mother. the same goes for other members of the father, mourning the loss of their loved one as well, yasmin. >> we often forget that in this coverage of this incredibly difficult moment for the uk and the world, really watching the loss of this queen and that yes she was a queen but she was
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also a grandma. and a mom. and an incredibly important part of that family for so long. lindsay riser, as always thank you lindsay. appreciate it. for more on this moment from the uk and all of its allies as well, i want to bring in suzannah lips comb. a professor at the university of road hampton and msnbc royal contributor. suzanne, it is good to talk to you. thanks for joining us on this. let's pick up where i just left off with a few the people that lindsey was in fact interviewing in talking about the unity of this family coming together once again and that's the loss. and, it is often during a loss in any family whether it is a royal family or just a regular old family that any rift are kind of put aside to mourn together. right, because that is what that person would have wanted. and we know for sure and for certain this is exactly what the queen would have wanted. do you sense that, amidst all of this, a possible shift in the role that harry and meghan may play going forward?
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>> that is a really interesting question. i think you are really right in that age up in the family just helps us see things in perspective. it helps any small worldly distances to seem minor by comparison to the loss of a loved one. and so, i think that this is a potential moment for reconciliation. and it is very interesting that prince william, the new prince of wales, asked his brother to go with him. because actually i was thinking it might have come from the new king. and he was urging this reconciliation. but if it has come from one brother to another, that seems to me even more promising. because it feels like it has been between the two of them. i mean, obviously this is very difficult. to be on show when your morning must be incredibly hard. i don't, it takes such great resources, inner resources to do it. to be composed. and compose in the face of
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peoples kindness to them must be even harder. and you can sort of see moments where one spouse is encouraging another. you know, saying it is okay we're going to get through this. the wives catherine and -- saying, put your hand on the -- and saying it's going to be okay. so i think it's going to be difficult. an interesting thing about a shift in the monarchy, i think that we certainly see a shift in terms of an approach. that there is very much a sense that the monarchy is to be more open, to be last reserved. we have seen that in everything that that king has done, and we've seen that in this approach. what does it mean for harry meghan's role? so far the messages are unclear. that the king mentioned in his address that the, he loved them and they are making their lives elsewhere. but this has opened the door, the possibility i think of seeing them on more important occasions. so, i think we'll have to wait and see. >> it is interesting you bring
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up the point of having to be kind of on display. and out in the open. while you are in mourning, how difficult that must be. and also to carry on the responsibility being the prince of england and amidst all of it. providing others with comfort while you and yourself are morning. but it is also sad to say that these two brothers have been through this before, as young children. and sadly, this is something they are in a way used to. having lost their mother, princess diana at such a young age. we spoke, suzanne, out earlier. we heard from a woman earlier our correspondent on the ground there, emily spoke to someone who talked about canada's future of the monarchy. and what people of the uk want to see when it comes to the future the monarchy. and she said specifically that there were some people who felt as if me, i'm not quite sure remember exactly how she put it but the monarchy, this may be time for it to kind of fade away or phase out with the
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death of queen elizabeth. especially considering the popularity issue king charles then prince charles, and now king charles, may have going forward. what do you make of that? do you think that that is a popular opinion in the uk? i think that has always been the question. it is clear and the times put it in something this weekend that actually, the queen probably saved the monarchy in the 20th century. at times when it could very much have gone away, when it was deeply unpopular. and in the end, she carried it through and it was her greatest hope that charles would do the same. and we saw that in her jubilee letter where she says, i hope that in the fullness of time you'll offer the same support to him and camilla that you have given to. me so she is attaching that sense of loyalty to her, to how he can we continue to treat
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him. but you're absolutely right. the thing about a monarchy is that it completely depends on public consent. and that relationship between the public and the monarch is crucial. and, if we think of a parallel situation, after the death of queen victoria edward the seventh had to take the throne. her son had to take thrown against a sort of big great tide of feeling of mourning of a tory. and yet, he did it because he seemed to have the common touch. he had enormous charm and dignity, and he was the first truly constitutional monarch. he seemed very modern. so what we see there is it is about the innovation of monarchy, and the personality of the monarch that are the key to its continued success. and i imagine that that is true now. i think it is possible to charles, as king, i think he's already doing this in fact. it's going to charm us. that we are going to feel that he is actually really rather taking on the mantoloking ship.
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as if you were born to it, and i think that if he manages to do that in these coming days, that actually the monarchy might be safe for a while longer. >> we will all certainly be long watching, that is for. sure suzanne lips go, thank you so much. appreciate it. coming up everybody, new clashes in the legal battle between former president trump and the justice department over the special master candidates. each side is proposing. and later on, how can charles taking the throne paved the way for prince william and harry to reconcile? we will take a closer look at that royal rough, as well as an all of branch that was extended ahead of their appearance together today. stay with us. together today stay with us stay with us any questions, chris? all good, thanks maura! there you go, one new inhaler! nice did you get my refill too? maybe healthier is auto refills and delivery made easy. you're a lifesaver. have a nice day.
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country that has gone through different periods of time where the unthinkable have happened. and where there has been a call for justice, and justice has been served. and i think that is potentially, going to always be the case in our country that people are going to demand justice. >> that was vice president harris speaking exclusively with nbc's check -- about a potential prosecution
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of president trump. their entire conversations get aired more morning. you don't wanna miss. that the vice president's comments coming out of the justice department and trump lawyers gear up for a monday or to. appearance involving an appointment of the special master to reveal the documents seized in mar-a-lago. in filings friday, the government trump lawyers were split on almost all of the questions about the role of the special master, not to mention the doj plans to file these separate appeal that would challenge judge cans ruling that a special master be appointed in the first place. i want to bring in nbc senior politics reporter jonathan allen, also legal analyst glenn kirschner. i know that the two of you have a lot to say on all of this. jonathan let me start with you and kind of the abc's of all of it which is all of the disagreements leading up to monday and what we saw of these filings. >> that is so sharper you to put all that out, yasmin. they disagree on almost everything. for instance, the justice department like to see the special master review wrapped
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it buys the 17th which would be looking at a date of about 90 days in the future. so about three times as long. the justice department wants to be able to continue to investigate the classified documents in that discussion limited to looking at nine classified documents and specifically looking at attorney-client privilege rather than executive privilege. but the trump scene says wait a second. we think of the special master should look at all of these documents including classified information. they contend that it is not classified because former president trump says it is declassified. it is also that there is an executive privilege claim of the former president from the doj that says they disagree that the government should pay for this with the doj saying the trump team should play for pay for it, and the trump teams and the two sides should support the tap. >> let's talk about the pickle first. the pickled at judge aileen cannon is in.
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you come up with these things after you've been on tv for three hours or so. the pickle that judge cannon is in come monday, and especially when it comes to now learning of the pause in reviewing the damage done by these documents being exposed to mar-a-lago. >> yeah, yasmin, it almost feels like all of this discussion about the different special masters that are being offered by the two sides, and whether to be done promptly or pushed into the future as not surprisingly the trump team is requesting, is all a little beside the point. because let's remember that the department of justice has announced that it will be appealing the entirety of judge canada ruling. they filed a notice of appeal and, what they said was of most consequence right now was the judges stock market order. because she said, stop
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criminally investigating classified materials recovered from mar-a-lago. and she went on to say, but you can continue to have the intelligence community conduct a risk assessment to our national security and the department of justice very firmly but very politely said judge, let us explain to you how it works. if we can conduct the criminal investigations to see how donald trump may have exposed these documents to others, that it is impossible for us to move forward with the assist threat assessment or national security. so yes, in the meantime got this kind of competing slates of special master candidates. but i have a feeling it is all going to take a backseat to the appeal once it is filed in the 11th circuit. >> so here's what you tweeted out about this appeal and i just want to say as a side note that, as i spoke to mark parma
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lock was in the last hour who's a former cia case officer, there is a real possibility that there could still be damage done, or there is currently damage being done as a result of the exposure of these documents in mar-a-lago. the intelligence community just does not know. and there goes the cursor, i'm not quite sure where he goes but hopefully we'll get him back. we would rather see his face then that little blue line. glenn, we got you back. there you go. >> sorry about. that >> it's okay, it's technology. so you tweeted this thing out about the 11th circuit. i want to read it for folks. doj has appealed judge aileen cannon's absurd special master ruling. here's hoping the appellate court gets this right and reverses her unstoppable mess of a ruling because, hashtag justice. matters >> talk to me about this. >> yeah, indeed it does. and i think you put your finger
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on. it we have to acknowledge that there could be ongoing damage to our national security right now courtesy of judge cannons stop work order. and just put it in a sort of hypothetical. everybody can understand. if donald trump took a classified document from the white house, unlawfully concealed it at mar-a-lago, and never showed it or expose it to anybody, then the intelligence community might assess that the risk to our national security is low. but if you check out same classified document to mar-a-lago, showed it to everybody, let visitors snap pictures of, it copied it, maybe he sold it to somebody, and maybe those people did not have the best interest of the united states at heart, and the intelligence community would potentially assess that the threat to our national security is extraordinarily high. without the fda b.e.i. being able to investigate which one of those two things is true, the intelligence community can't do what it's needs to do to assess the risk and protect
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our national interest. that is why we are at a very dangerous spot right now, and hopefully the judge will reconsider her earlier ruling. >> so then, jonathan allen, to sum it all out there is this little legate that the doj kind of dropped. the injunction could impede efforts to identify the existence of any additional classified records that are not being properly stored. and we knew there were clues to this possibly being that case, considering all of those empty folders that were seized at mar-a-lago. but talk about kind of how that could feasibly play out, what that means. >> glenn, somebody can obviously speak to this to you. but when you tie the hands of investigators, and tell them what they are allowed to look at and what they are not allowed to look at, you limit their ability to find out what is out there and particularly in the case of these documents, as you mentioned, they're empty folders. it is not clear whether the documents were in boxes or came from those anti folders. there are documents that are
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simply missing from those empty folders. there are all kinds of things that could happen once the classified documents get out there could compromise national security law united states. so you are trying to do a threat assessment, it is not just that specific document, but what also happens is intelligence gatherings things that can be exposed include, the sources and methods by which intelligence is gathered which could compromise other operations and other sorts of ways in which the united states collects and uses information. so, the possibilities are endless and it appears the judge is limiting the ability to give us a game. >> glenn kershner, jonathan allen, thank you all wait. much better to see your face, glenn, than that which are the popped up for that little second or so. i appreciate it, guys. still ahead everybody. the remarkable reign of queen elizabeth the second. standing 14 white house administrations. how president biden plans to pay tribute and so many around the world reflects on her legacy. >> she is a role model of what
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(dad) we have to tell everyone that we just switched to verizon's new welcome unlimited plan, for just $30. (daughter) i've already told everyone! (cool guy) $30...that's awesome. (mom) it's their best unlimited price ever. (woman) for $30 a line, i'm switching now. (vo) the network you want. the price you love. only from verizon. all right, live pictures from buckingham palace. even into the night people there are continuing to arrive in droves bringing in a mountain of flowers to the site. so attached to the memory of their now lost queen. some reminded another of another royal death. >> oh it reminded us of diana's. there's no doubt about. that i came down when it was diana, this and i went to paris and saw the flowers. it was quite an amazing experience. the smell of ours was intense. looking at the size of the flowers they've got now, already the number of people
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here, what is it half past nine this morning? it is going to grow. i would imagine it would take up the entire section. it wouldn't surprise me they had to expand the barriers. >> it is so ingrained in our families. it's my mother, my grandmother, my children, my grandchildren. you are talking about five or six generations who have only known this queen. and she is queen of the world, she is not just we know britain. >> and flowers are not the only way that those morning remembering the queen a bakery and in south africa has been making a colorful case to honor the monarch, as well. and house officials confirm this afternoon that the queen the queen's funeral in fact we held in monday september 19th at westminster abbey, and president biden says that he will be in attendance. nbc's josh -- is joining me now from washington with more on this. josh, it is good to talk to you. so the president, he was the 13th i believe sitting u.s. president to meet the queen. they initially met back when he was a senator in 1982. how has the president more into
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the queen over the last couple of days? what has he said about her? >> the last time that the president had a chance to meet that queen in personal, yasmin, was last year when he was in the uk during his first year in office. he had a chance to have tea with the queen at windsor castle, and afterwards, he said something really poignant about his relationship with queen elizabeth. he said that she reminded him of his own mother, and that was something that really defined the way that president biden prosecute his relationship with the queen over the years, which is as you point out, turn started out back in the 80s when he was visiting as a u.s. senator. and in his statement, issued after the death of queen elizabeth, president biden called or someone who defines an era. and he particularly noted the fact the queen elizabeth had shown such solidarity with the united states in the days after the 9/11 terrorist attack. that she had said something
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that stuck with him, which is that grief is the price you pay for love. and i want you to hear some of what president biden said on thursday, just hours after we learned about the death of queen elizabeth. take a listen. i had the opportunity to meet her before she passed, and she was incredibly decent and gracious. with thoughts and prayers to the american people, and the people the united kingdom in the commonwealth in their grief. >> president biden has said that he intends to attend the funeral of queen elizabeth, although he is still waiting to hear some of the details and logistics of how that is going to work. some of those details, we have gotten just in the last few hours. in the meantime, president biden says that he is has not yet spoken with the new king, but he just know the king and we do expect that at some point in time he will have a chance to speak with the king as well, yasmin. >> all right, thank you josh. appreciate it. want to bring out msnbc
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contributor jonathan alter to talk more about this. and the relationship really, between past u.s. presidents and the queen spanning 70 years. it is astounding, jonathan, as you look at list of presidents that she has met over time. i believe 13 in total. serving presidents. and also as presidents, as princess elizabeth she met president truman in washington d.c. back in 1951. and also, the images. look at this images, jonathan this is astounding. so this was 1982, i believe. president reagan staying with queen elizabeth at windsor castle. and they went for a horseback ride. >> yeah, i think they really connected. they also were together at santa barbara at ronald reagan's ranch there. she went to a baseball game with george bush. she met with all other presidents, except lyndon johnson, since harry truman.
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and some she got along with all of them some, she connected with a little better than others. so i was interested to learn for instance that president obama, who had first maybe, you know, it didn't seem totally in sync with the queen in 2009, he gave her and ipod as one of his gifts. apparently it didn't go over all that well but then they developed this really quite unusual bond to the extent that after he left the presidency, obama was the only former president whom queen elizabeth ii are invited to come see her which she did a few years ago. >> wow. do you think her meeting all of these presidents overtime was integral to the friendship, some would argue the strongest
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allied ship that the united states has with the uk? to that relationship? >> no question about its. when her father came to the united states to visit, franklin roosevelt at hyde park in 1939, famously they had hot dogs there. that was the first time any british monarch had been to the united states. remember, we fought a war against them. so after that point, in order to cement what is now called the special relationship, these contacts were very consistent. so the queen came in 1976 in honor of the bicentennial. she came in both 1957 and 1987 on the anniversary of the first british settlement at jamestown virginia. and, the same kind of reciprocation when u.s.
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presidents would go to great britain, which happened more often when she came to the united states. they consistently won their except for, as i mentioned, lyndon johnson. so all of the contacts had a way of reinforcing this partnership, which has been very central to what they call the alliance. nato, and the rest. and the only time there was any kind of tension, tension would be too strong. but when president trump went to good great britain and he at that time was being critical of nato, in her speech queen elizabeth said, we believe in these structures, she was talking about nato, that we share. and we want to strengthen those structures, not undermine them. and that was seen i think rightly as a little bit of pushback, gentle pushback at the idea of president trump
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disrespecting nato. >> we all certainly remember watching every move of that visit. and it still is astounding to me to watch these images of these presidents sitting beside queen elizabeth overtime. and again, i saw this earlier but i'll say it again, leaders of the free world kind of smiling ear to ear as if they are ten-year-old boys meeting the queen of england. jonathan alter, thank you. coming up next everybody, those strong words for vice president harris on abortion rights. and nbc news of exclusive interview. and new signs that abortions are swinging more mid term momentum in democrat's direction. d term memontum in democrat's direction. stealth mode? yeah. [cricket sounds] shh! shh! [light switch clicks] don't pta meetings end at nine? -it ran... late. -oh got lost. the lexus rx built for modern families. ♪ ♪
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body as an extension of what we have decided to be. the privacy rights to which all people are entitled. and this court took that constitutional right away. and we are suffering as a nation because of it. >> all right, that was part of vice president kamala harris's exclusive interview with check todd. it is going to air until tomorrow morning and nbc's meet the press. but what you just heard where some pretty strong words from the vice president discussing the supreme court's reversal of roe decision that has left women's bodily autonomy at the mercy of state governments. there are at least 2.6 million women in the city of south carolina, more than half of its population. but by the way, you wouldn't know that looking at the palmetto state senate were 41 of 46 senators are men. and you couldn't ignore that dynamic as the chamber held a special session debating a healths passed bill banning nearly all abortions from the moment of fertilization. no exceptions for rape or
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incest. that ban failed to rally a filibuster majority and there were forceful condemnations from some of the senate republican women. take a listen to what republican state senator sandy seng told the senate chamber. >> we are about to you suffer a setback at the hands of a lot of white males in here. but, we are going to live to fight another day. >> all right, let's talk about this. here to discuss, daniel moody is host of the woke af podcast, angela walsh is a former republican congressman out of illinois. danielle, let me start with you on this one. it was essentially republican women, as we just learned that rejected a ban without rape or incest exceptions. with something essentially, okay, here is the solution. here is our, here is what should actually be happening. and saying, a way to reduce abortions is comprehensive sex education.
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and expanded contraceptive availability. is that now the new reality that we are heading into especially when it comes to republican women in more conservative states that are looking to all out ban abortion? >> i mean, the reality is, yasmin, that these republican women have stood by white republican man for their entire careers. they have promoted these quote unquote pro-life antichoice stances, and now it is coming home to roost. now they recognized that the men that they have been standing by, and the men that they have been supporting, don't care about their lives. don't care about whether or not they have been raped, whether or not they have been subject to incest, whether or not they are getting around half formed fetuses inside of them. and so now to them it is a shock. we have been talking about comprehensive sex education on the left since the beginning of time. if they care so much about
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childbirth, right, then why aren't they provided to me? something that is very easy to do and easily reversed. why don't we talk about men when we talk about reproductive rights, and how they take control over women's bodies. and so, i look at these republican women and yeah, i give them half of applause. because, they have been the reason why these men have been able to do what they have done because they stood by them for the entirety of time. >> joe, congressman, could you react to what danielle just had to say. >> look, i tend to agree with, yasmin i-10 to agree with her. the reality is that most republicans who call themselves pro-life are in a place they never wanted to be. and look, i count myself among them. for years we said. >> what can you define, i know you're about to define that but.
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expand on that for me because i don't need to step in but, okay so you are calling for a ban on abortions. but now that the reality is clear, and it is happened, and roe has been overturned, and you are seeing reactions of the ballot box, is that now and why republicans are staying away to minute, maybe we didn't want this? >> yasmin, yes. a lot of people say the dog caught the car. for years many on my side said overturn roe, overturn roe. never expecting it to happen, and many never wanting it to happen. well it happened. in politically most republicans who call themselves pro life know that this has unleashed a storm on them politically because even most people who call themselves pro oppose these extreme abortion measures along abortion from the moment of fertilization. look what happened in kansas.
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returning it to the people, yasmin, is not exactly what these republicans expected it to be. >> congressman, how is that okay? how is it okay to advocate on behalf of any issue, take grow out of the picture, how is that okay to advocate on behalf of any issue without having it really without wanting it to be passed? when you see the fruits of what you are advocating for and saying, oh wait a minute i didn't really want that to happen. for anything, how is that okay? how is that called governing? >> it is not okay. it is sending a political weapon on my side for years and republicans did it to get elected and did it to raise money and they promised once we got here, all will be good. again, we are here now and it is going to hurt republicans politically. >> danielle, here's a proposal that the senate did in fact pass. and this is a standing as. well shortening the timeframe that victims of rape or incest
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can receive an abortion, requiring doctors to provide law enforcement with these patients names, contact information, and dna of the aborted fetus and saying that a woman must obtain confirmation from two physicians before aborting a fetus that cannot survive outside the womb. you think about what these women have likely already been through, and then having to jump through all of these hoops to get an abortion. what this is, about yasmin is control and cruelty. that is where the republican party has turned into. they are a party that is about oppressing women. oppressing people with uterus is about controlling bodies. this had nothing to do with life, this has nothing to do with livelihood. it has everything to do with brutalization and control. and so when you look at this, you are saying to myself my god we have a ten year old girl that had to flee her state in
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order to receive an abortion because she was a victim of rape. we are hearing stories about women, that have a 50/50 chance of losing their uterus because they have an viable fetuses that are inside of them. they cannot receive the abortion care that they need in order to survive. this is brutality. we look at other countries and we, say oh my goodness look how terrible they are two women. look at america, look at what these man who know nothing about women's bodies. who know nothing about the burden of childbirth and labor. making the decisions, on the outside of doctors. it is outrageous and it will come home to roost at the polls. >> i have to say, i always dislike when a man says we are pregnant. i'm like you are not pregnant. danielle mooney, thank you and joe walsh thank you as well. when we come back everybody,
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anything else i can help you with? like what? visionworks. see the difference. all right, grief has a wave reuniting families through shared hardships. as the death of queen elizabeth prompts global headlines, it also begin mending some of the refs within the royal family that have been reported. harry and, meghan the duke of duchess of sussex accompanied the prince and princess of
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whales to greet mourners outside of windsor castle earlier today. that couple took the world by storm after relinquishing their royal titles, moving to the u.s. and coming forward with allegations of racism within the royal family last year. in his first address after the queen's death, controls with or singled the potential for healing. i want to bring in nbc news correspondent host of the overview on peacock, get the top two. you have we seen any signals amidst all of this? the comfort that we've been seeing of the morning and passing of the queen at this rift might actually heel in the wake of her death? >> yes, the biggest signal of all that we just witnessed was this morning. it came as a shock, that moment when prince william and kate emerge from the car with prince harry and meghan. enough for than making that incredible show of solidarity as they pay tribute to the queen, all of them together and those two brothers also together in their grief.
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>> from a king somber speech. >> i want also to express my love for harry and meghan. as they continue to build their lives overseas. >> a moment of relief action from a father to his son, prince harry. and most seen publicly in years. >> when king charles mentioned harry and meghan and the speech, it really was monumental. it was a big olive branch. >> for so much of a, lives prince harry and his brother william and their father live side by side through the joys of childhood and shared pain upon the death of princess diana. and while there was warmth in the pictures of the fairytale weddings, the brothers grew apart as they began their own families. and behind the royal, curtain a rift was growing between prince harry and his family. the british tabloids attacking harry's wife meghan markle. the couple eventually relinquishing their titles, stepping away and moving to montecito, california. then opening up to oprah and free was shocking allegations
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about oil conversations over their sons skin tone. >> that conversation, i am never going to share. at the time those, awkward i was a bit shocked. >> the bombshell interview deepening the family divide, queen elizabeth maintaining a warm relationship with her grandson until the end. on thursday, harry rushing to balmoral castle without meghan arriving an hour after the announcement of his grandmother's passing. >> she was standing quite some time together, which all of the events going forward. and i think that can open up the opportunity to have some real conversations. >> as a line of succession was forward, prince harry now becomes fit in line to the throne while his children become prints archie and princess lilibet. titles that many of can help bring the family back into the royal fold. >> now, we don't know the exact particulars about how the reunion this morning came about. aerial spokesperson confirms that it was prince harry that reached out to prince william that reached out to prince harry to see if you wanted to
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join them as they made their way to windsor castle. prince harry than accepting and the two bragging that remarkable moment of hope. to an understandably, somber moment in the history of the uk. >> and bc shorts for, us thank you and go talk to you. upset for everybody, i'm yasmin and i'll be back on the show tomorrow. at a special time 4 pm eastern. politicsnation -- starts after a very good break. a very good break riders! let your queries be known. yeah, hi. instead of letting passengers wrap their arms around us, could we put little handles on our jackets? -denied. -can you imagine? i want a new nickname. can you guys start calling me snake? no, bryan. -denied. -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. good, evening welcome to
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politicsnation. tonight's lead, turning points. it right now, while england is mourning the late queen elizabeth, much of the rest of the world reflecting on what her passing represents. here in america, another potential c change is looming. and mid term election taking place amid the growing concerned that our democracy is legit lee at stake. because one segment of the political party is wedded to the idea that one man should remain above the law. and that man donald trump, appears to have done as much as possible while president to ensure that he would remain legally untouchable, even once out of office. his

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