tv Morning Joe MSNBC September 13, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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because she had family support, but she also said she knows so many other people across the country don't have that same support and are in situations none of us can imagine. she says she feels betrayed by the republican party, a party she's been a part of her whole life. she's voting democrat for the first time. democrats in michigan and across the country are hoping there are many more women like clesz jesz ka who turn out in big numbers in november, catty. >> yamiche, jessica is the post poster child for what democrats hope happens in the midterm elections. what kind of polling is there in michigan? before the ohio referendum, the polls put it closer than it ended up being. do we have any sense of the numbers of how many people there are like jessica who might be voting democrat because of this issue? >> it's a great question. we know the numbers are that there's a hotly contested and very tight governor's race and that the heart of that governor's race is the issue of abortion. you have tudor dixon saying she
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thinks abortion should be in any case, no matter rape or incest, then you have governor whitmer, who's been traveling around the state, we had images of her holding a roundtable saying this is a human right, abortion rights sh and she sees it as a civil right. will's a lawsuit to stop abortion to go into effect in that state. the feeling is that kansas, a red state, if they can vote to keep abortion rightings in their constitution, a battleground state like michigan, the people who are of course the others, they feel like this issue will be a one that will g get a big turnout and michigananders will vote the rights into the constitution. >> yamiche alcindor, thank you so much for your reporting. greatly appreciate it. willie, it is fascinating to see how this issue will shape the
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2022 election. we really don't know how it's going to end up moving voters, but you look at that kansas race, all the polls beforehand showed it too close to call, but a lot of them had pro-life forces up one or two points. pro-life forces ended up being beaten by pro-choice forces by 19%. again in the state of kansas, a state much more conservative than michigan. then you look at what's happening with tudor dixon. when you hear her talk there, she sounds like a main street republican. she's talking about, you know, regulations, talking about getting the kids back in school, how they were impacted by being out too long on covid. those are issues that actually helped republicans win the governorship in the state of virginia. her problem and the problem for so many republican candidates,
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same with blake master in arizona, is they have so far out and so extreme in the primaries, it's going to be really hard for them to come back. you have blake masters and other republicans scrubbing their websites of some of the more extreme abortion language. tudor dixon, she's going to have a real hard time getting a way from what she said about a 14-year-old girl getting raped by her uncle being a perfect example of why the state has to have forced births of rapists ibe byes. it's hard to talk about regulations and other issues that would help republicans win easily this year when you put yourself so far out there on this issue in the primary race. >> in the primary, if you've made central to your case you want no exceptions for rape or
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incest, how do you walk that back? no scrubbing of the website will change that position. people like grichin whitmer, congresswoman slotkin are happy this initiative is on the ballot for close races. that's one of six states, michigan, where abortion will be on the ballot in a couple months here. we have crossed into our 1940s hour now, four minutes after the hour. a busy one ahead. the inflation report released just moments ago showing inflation slowed slightly last month, but still some worrying signs in there. cnbc's andrew ross sorkin stands big what that number means for economy. and former ukrainian president petra poroshenko will join us. and from squid game to "ted lasso" to "white lotus," we'll take a look at the winners from last night's awards.
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first, the expanding criminal investigation into efforts to overturn the 2020 election. nbc news has confirmed about 40 subpoenas were issued over the past week to people associated with former president donald trump. "the new york times" was the first to report the story. joining us, washington correspondent for "the times," michael schmidt. good to see you this morning. what more can you tell our viewers about this group of 40, a couple of search warrants for telephones, who are these people and why this sudden wave of subpoenas? >> so, they took the cell phones using a search warrant of two close aides to trump, two people that were involved in the campaign, in the efforts to overturn the election, and there were subpoenas that went out to these dozens and dozens of other trump advisers, people like dan scavino, who oversaw the president's twitter account. when we look at the depth and breadth of this, the amount of
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subpoenas that went out, and the fact they got search warrants to actually take the phones from these aides, we saw it as one of the most aggressive moves that the government has taken as part of the january 6th investigation. look, in terms of the mar-a-lago documents, the government took the ultimate aggressive move in getting the search warrant to go in and literally take the documents, but here we see the january 6th federal investigators going to court, getting a warrant in a similar way that they had when they got john eastman, the little-known conservative lawyer's cell phone, the guy who was advising trump that he could essentially tell pence who to pick for who should be president next. and it just shows that several months ago there were major questions about whether merrick garland and the justice department were going to do anything. people were sitting around saying why is it that we have
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these january 6th hearings? we're hearing all those developments. what is the justice department doing? well, here we are, seeing some pretty aggressive moves by the justice department in a wide-ranging january 6th investigation. that's looking at the fake elector scheme, the money that was raised. so, you know, not insignificant at all. >> basic housekeeping question, maybe you know the answer, maybe you don't. 40 subpoenas, 40 different individuals. 40 different sets of lawyers. some of these people, i would assume, don't have a lot of money. i mean, some of them might be out of work. who is paying for the lawyers? does it go back to all this money that trump himself has raised perhaps under false pretenses to raise money for the defense? >> i don't even know if that's the question. i think the question is who are the lawyers. because as we've seen, as trump has become increasingly toxic to many people in this country,
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lawyers are shying a way from not just representing him but representing other folks related to january 6th and people that advised the president. so, where are they finding these lawyers? because i think that a lot of lawyers, people on the left that really believe in being defense lawyers and probably defended very violent criminals over the years, look at this issue differently than they have in the past in terms of representing people. and some lawyers that i've talked to have said january 6th defendants reached out to me or trump aides reached out to me and they were looking for a lawyer, and i wasn't going to represent them. so, where are the lawyers and who are these -- i mean, there's lot of lawyers in the country so you could probably firnd -- find someone, but a top-tier washington lawyer doesn't represent these people. >> a remake of "my cousin
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vinny." >> the forwards-facing attorney is from up the street in bedminster in new jersey and who raced her hand and said i'll hem you out. i have experience in this area. as we talk act these subpoenas, also in the justice department's investigation into these classified documents trump took with him to mar-a-lago, we can tell you lawyer for the former president filed a new request yesterday arguing while ta appeal for a special master is being krds, the doj should be blocked from the material. charl yay savage has more on that. charlie, what is the latest here? what is the group of candidates to be the special master? does it look like they'll be able to settle on one? >> the justice department has asked to scale down the investigation so -- sorry, the order blocking their investigation so that it can resume using the classified documentings they took out of
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mar-a-lago. and they've acquiesced to a special master who would look at the other 11,000 records that were not classified and keep them from the fbi in the meantime. the justice department has put forward two retired judges as potential special masters it could live with. the trump administration put together one judge, a kinds of a former judge, which i'll get to, as well as a former florida state official. yesterday the justice department said they were fine with the judge that the justice department put forward in the abstract, ray deary, who took senior status from the eastern district of virginia, used to be on the fisa court. but they flagged that, even though the trump administration said he was retired, he's not, he's a senior status judge, which means he still actively hears cases, just at a reduced caseload. judges cannot generally take outside employment, so they flagged that. it means that even though judge
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deary is acceptable to them, he may not be able to do it. so there's less that meetss the eye this perhaps in the justice department saying he would be all right because the trump legal team screwed up in saying he was retired. >> charlie, as a retired fisa judge, can we assume he would are the necessary clearances to look at these documents? and even if he does end up looking at these documents, obviously, the justice department has the appeal so he'd only be looking i guess at attorney/client privilege questions, right? and not questions of presidential privilege? >> so it's unresolved yet whether the justice department will persuade either the judge who imposed the special master or an appeals court to roll back the part of her order that is preventing the justice department from using these classified documents. we don't know if that'll happen or not.
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neither does the justice department. so it remains possible that a special master will need to have security cleempbs because they'll also be looking at those 100 or so documents that were marked up to top secret. that said, judge deary, as i mentioned, he had been a fisa court judge. i think any sitting judge doesn't need a security clearance to look at classified material, so i think the justice department would be fine with him seeing this sensitive stuff, and he wouldn't need a security clearance because he's an active senior status judge. but that probably disqualifies him from taking this position because he can't have outside employment or may not be able to. >> a lot going on here, including the senate judiciary committee now saying lit investigate claims former president trump tried to force the justice department to prosecute his political enemies and to help his allies. the "new york times" was first to report dick durbin of illinois sent a letter to attorney general merrick garland
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requesting documents related to accusations made by geoffrey berman in his new book. he was the u.s. attorney in the southern district of new york for more than half of trump's presidency. the trump appointee claims he was fired by then attorney general bill barr because his work threatened trump's re-election campaign. earlier on "morning joe," berman told us of one example of how the trump justice department pressured prosecutors to go after the then-president's political opponents. >> so, was it ever verbal to you from bill barr or a deputy attorney general under him saying let's look at john kerry? >> oh, let me tell you what happened with john kerry. you know, president trump attacks john kerry in two tweets saying that kerry engaged in possible illegal conversations with iranian officials regarding the iran nuclear deal. the very next day, the trump justice department refers to the southern district of new york, the john kerry criminal case.
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two tweets from the president and the john kerry criminal case becomes a priority. so, we investigated. john kerry was entirely innocent. but yet the justice department pushed us and pushed us and pushed us. and when i declined -- bill barr did not take no for an answer. he referred the case to another district. fortunately, that district didn't charge john kerry either. >> so geoffrey berman is an experienced and seasoned prosecutor and he said what he experienced under bill barr and under donald trump is unprecedented. he's never seen anything like it, never heard of anything like it, never felt that kinds of top-down pressure. what have you taken away from what he's accused of bill barr doing here? >> here's why this is significant. when barr was attorney general, there were -- even before barr was attorney general, there were deep concerns about the
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political v politicization of the justice department. you had a president of the united states who was out there talking about ongoing criminal investigations, identifying publicly people he thought should be investigated. that was very concerning to a lot of people at the time. it was something that we closely watched. we tried to get inside the justice department as much as possible to understand what was going on. a lot of this stuff was laid out in the muller report about trump's attempts to weaponize the justice department. but we didn't have a full picture. what berman's book does is its confirms many people's worst fears about what was going on inside the justice department, that it was as bad as people thought it feels, that there was the pressure not only to protect the president but to go after his enemies. i think that's an important distinction, because it's one thing to sort of try and block
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and interfere with an investigation into yourself. it raises questions about whether you're breaking the law. it's not how the system is supposed to work. but what he describes in kerry and he describes about in greg craig appeared to be the justice department trying to proactively go out and use its power to target the president's rivals, which is a different type of politicization and abuse of the justice department than simply trying to fire robert mueller, trying to throw people into the gears of an investigation. what this book does is it basically says that, yes, public, you were worried about this, it was worse than you thought it was, and here's how it unfolded in dramatic fashion. >> it was worse than you thought it was. charlie, can we go back to the mar-a-lago papers? we're sort of playing in a
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spaghetti loop with all of the different investigations at the moment. i don't quite see why trump asking the doj not to be allowed to review these papers or the fbi not to be allowed to review these papers would have any material impact because we knew there were weeks they had already presumably reviewed the papers. >> that's right. it's not just that they can't read them a second time, it's that they are forbidden from using the papers for any investigative purpose. so if they read something in the papers that they would like to then subpoena someone and ask them questions about, they can't do that because that would be making use of the papers for an investigative purpose. and so, especially now when we think the investigation is moving towards how did these particular papers stay at
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mar-a-lago, when trump's representatives falsely told the justice department in june that they had complied with the subpoena for all documents marked as classified in his possession, and what happened to the documents that were in the 48 empty folders the fbi seized in it august raid? they can't ask questions about that that are premised on what they found in the raid. they can't ask questions about why were there empty folders and what was in them because they only know that because of the raid, and those folders also counted as documents are now banned for temporary -- temporarily for investigative use. that's how this has an impact beyond we can't go back and reread the thing we already read. >> "new york times" reporters charlie savage and michael smidt, thank you. andrew ross sorkin is standing by and the former president of
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we have breaking news on inflation and the economy. according to the latest consumer price index report, the year over year of inflation slowed. this comes ahead of a key federal reserve meeting next week where policymakers are expected to announce another interest rate hike. with us now to break things down, co-anchor of cnbc's "squawk box," andrew ross sorkin. as the number crossed, i said wait a second. gas prices are way down. >> yep. >> interest rates are up. i know it slowed a little bit, but this seems like still high. really it's a high number. and obviously the markets agree. i mean, futures down about 2%, right? >> joe, if you are the white house this morning, if you're
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the fern this morning, if you're an american this morning, these are not good numbers at all. looking at the stock market down over 500 points on the dow right now, so we are looking a little over 2% down. and what's so interesting is, you just said it, everybody goes to the gas pump, you see the signs, and those signs were for inflation. that was actually a billboard for inflation for a long time. prices are now down about 26%. but there's almost a silent inflation going on or at least one not as visible to folks which is to say what we actually saw was that inflation has continued or at least persisted if you will in large part seeing it somewhat in food but definitely seeing it in health care and you're seeing it in shelter. not so much necessarily because the price of homes has risen, but you're seeing it in rent across the board and in wages. and you think the wages that would be good, but in certain cases that becomes its own conundrum. what does this all mean?
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one thing -- the federal reserve is going to continue to raise interest rates. before today there was an expectation maybe a 50 basis points or maybe 75. now i think it's almost baked in the cake it's got to be 75 basis points, maybe even 100 basis points, and that's why you're seeing the stock market falling because the only instrument the fed really has is to make things more expensive. and the hope is if you make it more expensive, maybe you can tamp down inflation. >> so andrew, i'm just curious. you talk to the smartest business people, smartest economists every day. help us out with something. this economy, it's breaking in so many different ways. these inflation numbers still high. yesterday, the "wall street journal," the u.s. dollar, a once in a generation dominance over the rest of the world. our economy much better than the rest of the world for the most part.
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like child poverty, down 59% over the past three decades. job growth over the past year, year and a half. i mean, it's been really explosive. more people working now than before the pandemic. and then you have inflation. the crosscurrents have to be for you and people that cover this every day just -- they have to be creating vertigo. >> it's extraordinary because in so many ways you'd think we're doing so, so well, and in truth on a relative basis, if the world and life is relative, there is no question, looking at the dollar. by the way, when you get a higher dollar, it becomes harder to what extent port, right, because it becomes more expensive. so, there are these, again, other types of cross currents that are happening here. and i think it's very hard to try to make sense of what is really happening. i'll give you a good piece of news though, joe. one is that you're looking at
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supply chains starting to ease. we kept saying to ourselves, can the fed do anything about supply chains? not really. what they can do is raise interest rates, and that's all they can do. there is an argument to be made that as shelter, as rent and homes become the issue, if that is one of the now central issues, that is something the fed can actually impact, and as the blunt instrument that the fed is, that maybe they have a better shot at fixing that component of it than some of these other pieces that we've been looking at. >> all right. cnbc's andrew ross sorkin, thank you so much. greatly appreciate it. willie, it really is crazy. in regular times, if i were to tell you that yesterday i read in the "wall street journal" and "the new york times" that the dollar is experiencing a once in a generation dominance over the rest of the world, that our currency is stronger than it has been, well over a generation, then we're dominating the rest
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of the world as far as the strength of the dollar, the strength of our economy, if i told you we had record job growth, and andrew is even saying that the supply chain is getting better, child poverty at record lows, in most cases you'd say it's fantastic. but inflation, stubborn, 8.5%. interest rates are going to go up again. >> yeah. they'll have to raise them again. add to that list, 11 million jobs open in this economy. >> record high. >> inflation will be a subject at the white house today. president biden is hosting an event to celebrate the passage of the inflation reduction act. joining us, "morning joe" senior contributor eugene daniel. the president will be touting the inflation reduction act today. gas prices will come down. they have been coming down for some time now. they will tout that. this report again this morning gets at prices for housing, prices at food, prices for a lot
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of things people are paying right now still stubbornly high. >> reporter: this is something that has continued to dog this white house for months. it's continued to make life harder for the american people, which makes their work harder here. i will say the spin you're likely to hear and wep've started to hear from white house officials, and even possibly the president today, that what we saw today with these numbers is kind of hot inflation numbers, is exactly why they needed to pass things like the inflation reduction act. this is proof positive that our theory of the case is correct, that we said he want to make sure we find the ways to, if we can't completely get rid of inflation, figure out a way to make things, prices lower for the american people, and more importantly for middle-class families. the white house, we'll see thousands of folks here today. that's climate activists because there's billions of dollars in
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climate funds here. there is billions of dollars -- there's also things for health care. you'll see health care about vipss here, members of congress, cabinet secretaries, all with the kind of same message, especially for democrats, saying, you know, inflation is bad, we hear you, american people, but we are trying to figure out ways to make your life a lot easier. i will say people will see an immediate change in their bottom line when it comes to especially those health care costs, some of that is going to take years. we're also going to see president biden going on the offensive for republicans, talking about this could have been a bipartisan bill if they signed on and therefore they had to do it through reconciliation and most importantly the key here is that $35 cap for insulin that could have been in this bill for everyone but didn't make it in because republicans weren't on board.
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coming up next, ukrainian forces have been making dramatic gains over the last week. we'll have an update on where things stand this morning from the former president of ukraine, petro poroshenko. subway series menu. twelve irresistible new subs. the most epic sandwich roster ever created. ♪♪ it's subway's biggest refresh yet!
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ukrainian forces continue to make significant gains in the northeast of the country. megan fitzgerald has the latest. >> reporter: this morning, ukraine's fast-moving counterattacks pushing forward, pushing russians back from the front line. they say the special forces are ambushing a russian patrol. military experts say these images of weapons left behind suggest the russians didn't regroup but were forced to flee. ukraine's president zelenskyy says more than 2,300 square miles have been recaptured in less than two weeks, bigger than the entire state of delaware. ukraine's troops and civilians
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emotional. but for ukrainian soldiers the work of securing and protecting liberated towns has just begun, like these troops clearing mines. >> if they start pushing themselves too thin, that's a recipe for the russians to surround them and really take back a large part of land. >> reporter: it's a back-and-forth war that may be far from over. recent russian attacks on ukraine's power station in kharkiv hitting civilian infrastructure, plunging millions into the dark. the police chief says russia conducted a rocket strike against a peaceful city. but military strategists warn ukraine hasn't seen what russia and putin are capable of. >> when they start getting pressed like this, we can't forget about chemical weapons coming in, tactical nukes coming into play. >> megan fitzgerald from ukraine. joining us from kyiv the former
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president of ukraine, petro poroshenko. thanks for being with us this morning. you were there on the ground. you were in touch with the president. you know what these troop movements look like. why has ukraine, why has the military made such significant gains in the last few days? >> now i'm in kyiv, but i am just returned from the east where ukraine demonstrate a miracle, surprise the world. with that situation, i want to deliver you the last news. up to date, we liberate more than 8,000 square kilometers. up to date, we deliver from the beginning of september only on the north more than 400,000 villages. only today on the south we liberate 500 square kilometers. and since september on the
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south, we liberate 12 towns. and i think that's taught to be possible, first of all, because we have an absolute efficient and great army in the world, the greatest soldiers in the world. and i am proud that me as a supreme commander have created together with our partners new armed forces, which is based on the major standard and russian troops fighting with us despite having more artillery, more ammunition, being based on their former soviet system. point number two, that's thought to be possible because of their assistance of parter ins and alliances. first of all, united states, united kingdom, nato member states which quipped us with the most modern weapons. especially i want to thank you
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for the super accurate long-range and russia don't know what to do with these weapons because they're anti-missile technology is not working, and the fact we need more. for the additional attack, for the additional offensive operation as commander in chief of ukraine and armed forces and his general said that we need additional bring grades. we have volunteers. we have our soldiers. we have a motivated people. but we definitely need the weapons. and this counterattack just demonstrate that the victory of ukraine is definitely possible. >> mr. president, the pace of the assault on the russians by the ukrainian army is beyond impressive. but my question to you is, given the distance you've traveled and
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as quick as you've traveled, is there an issue of the resupply of the supply line? you done want to be too far out not frontd without gasoline or plies and get caught like that. what is the plan? >> first of all, i want to tell you that this is the biggest group of the ukrainian soldiers, and artillery we collect in the beginning, we have a very well calculated operation thanks to the generals, and with that situation, i don't disclose your information, but we prepared to supply the -- all necessary things, especially not only the oil and gas but definitely we need ammunition. with that situation, now i can tell you that we are fighting on the north of our country, just
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15 kilometers to the ukrainian/russian border, and our brigade is now fighting already not in kharkiv but in lieu lugansk region. it is extremely important to keep our eye on the supply chain, and we definitely we have eight years of experience. this is the new army, and this is the very highly motivated soldiers, volunteers. and you will see -- you already saw how the people who was lib rated from the occupation welcoming ukrainian soldiers in every single house. the ukrainian soldier -- >> looks like we have -- his feed is frozen. but obviously, willie, great progress is being made right now by ukrainian troops.
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you know, the question i wanted to ask him, and it's a question really that -- well, i understand we have him back here, so instead of telling you the question that i will ask the president, i'll ask the president himself. mr. president, i'm curious, with the success that you've had over the past week, remarkable success, leads to the question, define victory. what does it look like? how does ukraine move forward with russia as its neighbor? >> first of all, victory for us is to liberate every piece of ukrainian soil. that is possible because in the year 2014 me as supreme commander in chief liberate two thf third of the occupied donbas, including mario pole, severodonetsk, all the now where we see the fight.
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i'm absolutely confident that that all ukrainian land will be free. we will be ready to launch a special negotiation about the future security of the world. the future security of the world, we need two things. first is to deweaponize the world, europe, and russia, and second, grant to ukraine membership in nato. there is not any other thing that can guarantee security in europe. but we will be absolutely ready to launch the negotiation to stop the war and keep the peace. in the shorter -- how to make it shorter, our way to the peace, is just to supply to ukraine more weapons. more weapons, then peace.
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no doubt. >> the former president of ukraine pet row poroshenko. mr. president, thanks so much for your time this morning. we appreciate it. we'll talk to you again soon. coming up next here, from "succession" to "abbott elementary," we'll break down the awards. is going through ”. but seriously we need a reliable way to help keep everyone connected from wherever we go. well at at&t we'll help you find the right wireless plan for you. so, you can stay connected to all your drivers and stores on america's most reliable 5g network. that sounds just paw-fect. terrier-iffic i labra-dore you round of a-paws at&t 5g is fast, reliable and secure for your business. the sun is up in los angeles. the 74th emmy awards were last
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night. jason kennedy takes us through the winners and the big moments from the show. >> reporter: taking the top floor at this year's emmys, hbo's hotel dromedy "the white lotus," winning ten awards. jennifer coolidge refused to be played off stage. >> hold on. hold on. >> "ted lasso"! >> also scoring big, apple tv plus's "ted lasso" with four awards including repeat wins for best comedy series, lead actor and supporting actor. >> this show is about good and evil. this show is about, like, the truth and lies. this show is about all that stuff. >> "succession". >> hbo's hit "succession" winning best drama for the second time. other emmy repeats include gene smart's lead actress win.
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julia gardener's third win for "ozark," and zendaya her second lead actress for "euphoria." at 26, she's the youngest two-time winner ever. >> every night i sit down and make the list of things i'm grateful for. >> kenan thompson hosted the fun-filled show which returned to a prepandemic format with nominees closely seated at tables. >> tv's all we have from netflix to parallel plus and eating dinner alone. >> reporter: there were also plenty of firsts. li jung-jae won lead actor. and lizzo for "watch out for the big girls." >> when i was a little girl, all i wanted to see was me in the media, someone fat like me, black like me, beautiful like me. >> cheryl lee brown.
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>> reporter: but perhaps the most moving movement came from cheryl lee. ♪ and i know where my voice belongs ♪ >> reporter: who broke into song and earned a standing ovation after winning her very first emmy, best supporting actress for "abbott elementary." >> i am here to tell you that this is what believing looks like. >> good night for "abbott elementary" last night. jason kennedy reporting there. joining us, the founding partner of pop, matthew bellamy. what jumped out at you last night? what are the headlines? >> good morning. i think the headlines for hbo's dominance. last year we had netflix take the lead over hbo for the first time in wins, but on the show
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last night, 12 wins for hbo, dominant on the broadcast. netflix only got three on the live broadcast. >> any surprises here among those who didn't win anything, like, you know, "better call saul," stuff like that? >> i think that show not win tong show is a big deal. "only murders in the building," a lot of people thought that could win several times. didn't get anything last night. i think that was a surprise. but mostly the academy adhered to their favorites, "ted lasso," "succession," "hacks." the shows that the academy likes they tend to vote for over and over again. >> and michael keaton winning for "dope sick," great to see him rewarded for that extraordinary series. the thing is, matthew, there's so much good content out there, so many good shows that, yeah, some great performances and great actors are not going to
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win like bob odenkirk. it's oscar winners and bateman and guys from "succession" and all those. it's just tough out there. >> and i think that's what made the win by "squid game," that was a tremendous move because not only is he the first actor from a non-english-language show to win the award, he beat out some of the most honored actors in hollywood, if you look at that list. and it's a pretty impressive feat. i think that speaks to the popularity of that show on netflix and really the global footprint that television has today. >> and matthew, so right. these are sort of mainstream picks. my favorites, "only murders," "severance," didn't do too well. matthew, thank you so much for being with us. we're out of time. we greatly appreciate you being here today. willie, just a reminder, all we
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have is paramount plus and -- a great plot from kenan. >> that was funny. now, king charles is on his way to saint ann's cathedral. keir simmons will join us next from london as the world continues to honor the life and legacy of queen elizabeth ii. we'll be right back. elizabeth ii we'll be right back. do you want some more? wait till you see me on the downhill. see you at home. enjoy it. with the advanced safety features of a lexus es. a pool floatie is like whooping cough, it's not just for kids. whoong cough is highly contagious for people of any age. and it can cause violent uncontrollable coughing fits. ask your doctor or pharmacist about whooping cough vaccination because it's not just for kids. time. it's life's most precious commodity,
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react to fast-moving markets with dynamic charting and a futures ladder that lets you place, flatten, or reverse orders so you won't miss an opportunity king can charles arrived to a welcome of well wishers. this a live look as the king arrives at the cathedral for a memorial service there. let's bring in senior international spopt keir simmons. he's live in london. what does the day look like? >> reporter: these pictures from northern ireland are somewhat extraordinary honestly. those live pitures of the new king arriving at the cathedral for a community service. a community service are words carefully chosen because of the history in northern ireland, the
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violent history between ireland and the british. we talk about bloody sunday. we talk about the fact that king charles' uncle died in a bomb on a boat there in 1972. and then we think a little bit about that moment when the queen herself met with martin mcginnis and shook his hand. all of those things are part of the history of what we're now looking at. those cheering crowds, pretty extraordinary scenes, some people shouting "god save the king." others will not feel that way and won't be part of those crowds, but still, goodness me, it does seem to reflect northern ireland has come a long way. the king there not just as a king, but also for people to pay their respects to the queen, the late queen. i'm looking down because i want to read a little bit of what king charles said about the feelings. through all those years, she
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never ceased to pray for the best of times, for people whose sorrows our families had felt and for whom she had great affection and regard. another moment in these many, many moments through this week and soon the queen will be here at buckingham palace for the final stage of all of this where he body will lie in state for four days. >> before the funeral next monday, keir simmons, thank you. that does it for us this morning. we'll see you back here tomorrow morning. jose diaz-balart picks up msnbc's live coverage after a quick final break. psst psst. [sfx: monster roaring and people screaming] allergies don't have to be scary. flonase sensimist stops your body from overreacting to allergens with a non-drowsy, ultra-lightweight mist. psst psst...flonase. all good!
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good morning, 10:00 a.m. eastern. 3:00 p.m. in the united kingdom where the long farewell for queen elizabeth ii continues. i'm jose diaz-balart. we're following two big events at this hour. king charles and camilla are attending a service in honor of the late queen at saint ann's cathedral in ireland. while in scotland, the queen is laying in rest just ended. the scottish government says tens of thousands of people filed past the casket. the queen's body will soon leave
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