tv The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC July 16, 2013 4:00am-5:00am EDT
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you are now sorted into the pile of people that are suspicious from there on. jelani cobb from the university of connecticut. civil rights attorney barry scheck. that's "all in" for this evening. the "rachel maddow show" starts right now. thank you, chris. thank you at home for joining us this hour. nearly two years ago a prisoner in texas made a request to the prison where he lived. it was a request for what his last meal should be before he was going to be executed. the man said that this was what he wanted to be his last meal. two chicken fried steaks. each with gravy and sliced onions. also a bacon cheeseburger, but he wanted it to be a triple with three hamburger patties in addition to the bacon. also an omelet that had cheese and more ground beef in it and tomatoes and onions and bell peppers and jalapeno peppers. he wanted a bowl of fried okra with ketchup on the side. a pound of barbecue, presumably pork or beef or something. a pound of barbecue with half a loaf of white bread to eat the barbecue with.
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remember, this is texas. also he wanted three fajitas. he also wanted a whole pizza. he requested a meat lover's pizza, which as far as i can tell is a pizza hut branded pizza that has pepperoni and ham and more ground beef and bacon and sausage on it. he also requested a pint of blue bell ice cream, vanilla flavor, and he asked for a slab of peanut butter fudge with crushed peanuts on top. he then also asked for three root beers to wash it all down. that was his requested last meal before he was executed by the state of texas. he requested the meal. the prison obtained the meal for him. and then he said he was not hungry and did not eat any of it. and that was why texas got rid of the practice of granting prisoners their chosen final meal before their execution. because of what lawrence russell brewer did for his last meal before texas killed him. just before his execution,
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lawrence brewer, the same guy, told khou in houston that he had no regrets, the crime for which he was being executed, he would do it all over again tomorrow. >> as far as any regrets, no, i'm still -- i had no regrets. no, i would do it all over again, to tell you the truth. >> i'd do it all over again to tell you the truth. what he did not regret, what he said he would do all over again, to tell you the truth, was the murder in 1998 in jasper, texas, of 49-year-old james byrd jr. mr. byrd accepted a ride from three young men, one of whom you saw speak from prison there a moment ago before he was executed. lawrence russell brewer. also sean barry and john king. those three young men picked up mr. byrd in jasper, texas, in a june day in 1998. they beat him nearly to death. they tortured him. urinated on him. they used a chain to tie him to the rear bumper of their pickup truck.
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they put the chain around his ankles and they started driving with him dragging behind the truck on this country road. he was alive when they tied him to the truck then they drove down that road for three miles. and that was how james byrd jr. died in jasper, texas. the forensic evidence, you see it circled there in spray paint and marked there on the side of the road. the forensic evidence of james byrd's death stretched for three miles down that road. now, the men who killed james byrd were covered in white supremacist and neonazi tattoos. including one of the suspects having a tattoo that showed a black man lynched hanging from a tree, as well as nazi tattoos. that defendant, john king, wrote a jailhouse letter to his co-defendant, lawrence brewer, a letter that was intercepted by prison authorities. it read in part "regardless of the outcome of this, we have made history. death before dishonor. sieg heil." lawrence brewer had given himself the title exhorted cyclops in a white supremacist gang.
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james byrd died in jasper, texas, in june 1998. four months after james byrd died, two young men named aaron mckinney and russell henderson went to the fireside lounge in downtown laramie, wyoming, and in that bar they picked up a 21-year-old college student named matthew. they drove him out of town in their pickup truck. they tied him to the fence in a middle of a field and tortured him to death. 18 hours after he was left there, he was found by a passing cyclist who initially thought he was a scare crow. he was a young man in a coma by then who would never regain consciousness and died in the hospital five days later. >> it was a gruesome discovery at this fence late wednesday afternoon as the sun was setting, two bicyclists approached and at first they said they looked like a scarecrow had been tied to the fence. the lifeless body of 21-year-old matthew shepard, a university of miami freshman, a gay man barely alive tonight, in a coma, on
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life support. shepard, a small man was allegedly beaten with the butt of a pistol, burned with cigarette butts and tied spread eagle to the fence left to die. >> that was part of nbc's "nightly news" coverage in october of 1998. that happened four months after the murder of james byrd in texas. it would take more than a decade after that, but in 2009, more than 10 years after those two predatory pact murders, it would take until 2009 for president obama to sign into law the matthew shepard and james byrd jr. hate crime prevention act. when president obama signed that into law and spoke about what that law meant, he stood with dennis and judy, the parents of matthew shepard, you can see to the president's right on the left side of your screen there and also betty and luvonne, the sisters of james byrd, on the right side of your screen there. he stood with them while the president explained this law.
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>> imagine the mindset of someone who would kidnap a young man and beat him to within an inch of his life, tie him to a fence and leave him for dead. it's hard for any of us to imagine the twisted mentality of those who would offer a neighbor a ride home, attack him, chain him to the back of a truck and drag him for miles until he finally died. but we sense where such rule cruelty begins. the moment we fail to see in another our common humanity. >> that was 2009, the first year president obama was in office. and that bill was one of the signature achievements of his first term. see, that bill had been fought for for a long time, but the previous president, george w. bush, killed an earlier version of the hate crimes law named for james byrd and matthew shepard. he killed it by threatening to veto it. president obama signed it. and the basic idea is to assert that there is a national interest beyond the standard interest we have against crime. there is a national interest in
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american minority groups not being terrorized by violence that is meant to harm not only direct victim, but to menace and intimidate the minority group they belong to. furthermore, the idea of a federal hate crimes statute is to provide resources, persecutory resources and investigatory resources to local authorities to make sure crimes like this get prosecuted and get prosecuted successfully. and lastly, a federal hate crimes statute can be used to bring cases directly for the federal government to bring cases directly in crimes that otherwise would have handled at the state or local level. the justice department can try these crimes. and that is what the justice department is deciding right now about the trayvon martin case in florida after the acquittal this weekend of the man who shot trayvon martin, george zimmerman. one of the changes in that law that is named for james byrd and matthew shepard, it used to be the feds could only get involved on civil rights grounds like this if the victim was participating in an activity that was considered to be
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federally protected while he or she was attacked. it was a weird jurisdictional quirk in the law that meant unless you were voting or something, trying to vote, going to school or some other specific thing that had been adjudicated, that the federal government had a role in protecting, unless you were doing something like that when you were attacked or killed, the law could not be applied to your case. well, james byrd was walking down a country road when his attackers found him. matthew shepard was at a bar when his attackers found him. under the law, that changed in 2009 in their names, that fact about each of those cases would not be a barrier to federal assistance with those cases. it would not be a barrier to the federal opportunity, for the federal government having an opportunity to step in, to bring a case if local prosecutors had refused to do so on their own. because of that change in the law, so it no longer has to be a federally protected activity that you're doing when the crime happens, because of that change in the law, the justice
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department can now decide and is now deciding if it wants to bring a federal civil rights case, likely a hate crimes case, to try to convict george zimmerman, even though that jury and that florida state court found him not guilty. the justice department has put out a statement saying "experienced federal prosecutors will determine whether the evidence reveals a prosecutable violation of any of the limited federal criminal civil rights statutes within our jurisdiction. and whether federal prosecution is appropriate in accordance with department's policy governing successive federal prosecution following a state trial." successive federal prosecution after the state trial. a lot of the commentary on this today assumes that this would be a radical step or unusual step for the u.s. justice department to take. you know, the federal hate crimes statute named for matthew shepard and james byrd, it is not a dead letter. it gets used all the time. last month a seattle man pled guilty to a federal hate crime under the act.
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he pled guilty for assaulting a sikh taxi driver, prosecuted by a federal prosecutor. guilty plea in that case. on the same day the fbi made that announcement, they announced a federal hate crimes indictment under the matthew shepard and james byrd act, for two people who attacked a gay couple on the street in hillsborough, oregon. two people in kentucky sentenced to 8 to 30 years in prison for luring a gay man into their vehicle, driving him to a remote location and beating him nearly to death before he escaped. brought as a federal prosecution under the hate crimes prevention act. nobody knows that the justice department is going to bring a federal prosecution in this case, too. really nobody knows. there aren't good educated guesses out there. anybody who says they know what the justice department is going to do here and isn't actually the justice department, is making it up. if the justice department did decide to act here, if they did
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decide to bring charges in this case under that hate crimes law, it would put the issue of race and specifically alleged racial motivation for the killing at the very center of the case. that issue was central, of course, to the national furor and the national discussion about this case, but it was almost entirely absent as a formal legal issue in the formal legal proceedings that just concluded in seminole county. everything connected to race and the defendant's state of mind that was excluded from the state-level court proceedings would be at the center, at the center, would be the heart of any federal court case on this issue if there ever will be one. joining us now is benjamin jealous, president and ceo of the naacp, advocating for the justice department to take up federal charges in this case. the naacp is having its annual convention in florida this week. mr. jealous, ben, thank you for being with us tonight. >> thank you, rachel. >> your organization is asking doj to file civil rights charges against mr. zimmerman in this case.
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what kind of feedback have you had from your call for that? how are people responding to that as an idea? >> first of all, the country has responded in a ways that's just incredible. we have almost 1 million signatures just since the verdict, and that includes the fact that our servers were down for over 12 hours because they were, the traffic, the volume was too much for them to handle. at one point, we were getting about 100 signatures per second. and this just tells, and these are people of all colors from across the country who just believe our country can do better than what happened in sanford.
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and who believe that the u.s. doj has a role to play in protecting all our children. from people who would track them and taunt them and confront them and kill them on the street. and ultimately choose to engage because of their color. and there's a lot of disturbing information. let's not forget witness number 9. george zimmerman's own cousin who just a few days after this killing called the cops and said, i think he did this because of race. and let's not forget about the boys who live in that neighborhood. boys of color who say they felt like he targeted them because of their race. and let's not forget him saying that, you know, these people, these punks always get away with this. and then looking and seeing that he had called the police dozens and dozens and dozens of times disproportionately about young men of color that he thought were suspect. and the reality is that there was no reason to think that trayvon martin was doing anything other than what he was doing. which was walking down the street with a can of soda and a bag of skittles. can of iced tea and a bag of skittles trying get away from a man who he thought was creepy. that man kept tracking him. got out of the car, taunted him.
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ultimately pulled out a gun he had intentionally purchased because it didn't have a safety, and shot him through the heart. we believe in this country, you do that to one of our boys of any color, that you deserve to be held accountable. >> ben, the issues that you're raising there, the factual issues and the witness statements that you're raising there, a lot of them were not covered in great detail in the seminole county courthouse in terms of the proceedings that ended on saturday with that verdict. do you think that if federal
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prosecutors did bring a federal case against mr. zimmerman that there is sufficient, i guess sufficient direct evidence to bring the charges here under the kinds of narrow concerns that you need to be able to prove under hate crimes law? i mean, the hate crimes statute is fairly narrowly drawn. >> it's fairly narrowly drawn. what it says, is, look, you have to show race is a factor and bodily harm was done. we believe there's enough evidence to satisfy that standard. and the reality is that, you know, the issue has been kind of muddled because we have a judge who seems to be a wonderful person in a bunch of ways but we think made a very -- she made a very serious choice to exclude any discussion of racial profiling. and the reality is is, look, we don't permit our officers to use race as grounds for suspicion and kill somebody after they taunt and confront them and not be held accountable. and we shouldn't let citizens not be held accountable for doing that, either. >> ben, let me ask you in terms of response to the verdict, obviously there's been spontaneous reaction across the country. a lot of well-organized reaction, too. people just turning out in the streets and expressing themselves in reaction to this verdict. i know that you've been in touch with the martin family.
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and i just want to ask you how they are doing following this verdict, if you can tell us, and how they feel about the way the country has responded. >> i think it would be better to let their lawyers speak for them. i've been in touch with their lawyers. we've actually given them great space. we are here in orlando, but they're back home in miami. and, you know, from what we understood, they were exhausted. they wanted time to go to church and to heal as a family. and we've respected that. but i think, you know, all of us, certainly all of us who have children can really i think empathize with what they must be going through. you know, i -- when i heard the verdict, i picked up my young son, jack, and i just held him and listened to him breathe and there was a moment as i was just kind of swirling in the aftermath of this decision that i just -- it just occurred to me that tracy martin will never be able to hold his son, trayvon, in his arms again and just hear him breathe. and that's because george zimmerman tracked him, taunted him, disregarded the request of police to stay in his car and engaged him and killed him. and, you know, again, there's
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enough evidence here, evidence the judge excluded suggesting that race may have factored in, including the testimony of his own cousin of george zimmerman's own cousin to suggest that, yes, charges should be brought. now, once charges are brought, justice system will run its course. we from the beginning urged people to put their faith in the justice system, but you can't put, you know -- you can't say put your faith in the justice system but stop with a comma. no, you've got to let it run to the end on the sentence, and in our country, that includes state-level options and federal-level options as well.
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the city of sanford, florida, population 54,000, has never seen anything like the george zimmerman trial in terms of the international attention, the unrelenting media coverage. so in anticipation of a verdict, and the outpouring of emotion and interest in this case, the entire sanford, florida, police department has been on standby for over six weeks since before the trial even began. the police chief suspended all vacations and suspended all furloughs. police officers were given special training to prepare for when a verdict was announced. a special command center was set up in case things got out of control. but that is not what happened. saturday night when the court announced that a jury had found mr. zimmerman not guilty of second-degree murder or manslaughter in the death of trayvon martin, instead the city of sanford looked like this. outside the courthouse, there was a strong reaction to be sure, but
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like this will keep pressure on the justice department. >> hundreds of people took to the streets of atlanta tonight to protest the not guilty verdict in the george zimmerman trial. >> more than a dozen people took to the streets in dallas to protest this verdict. they were holding signs saying "no justice, no peace." >> it's about more than guilt or innocence at this gathering, but what the case, again, exposes. a deep racial divide alive and well in america. >> so there are more than two dozen organized protests around the country including in los angeles where people gathered in front of the cnn building in hollywood. police officers in riot gear were called in to disperse the crowd there. about a half dozen people were arrested. some protesters blocked a major freeway for about 25 minutes in los angeles. in new york city, pro lik help >> those participants throwing skittles up in the air. the gesture meant to send a message, mainly to federal prosecutors. protesters are hoping gatherings like this will keep pressure on the justice department. >> hundreds of people took to the streets of atlanta tonight to protest the not guilty verdict in the george zimmerman trial. >> more than a dozen people took to the streets in dallas to protest this verdict. they were holding signs saying "no justice, no peace." >> it's about more than guilt or innocence at this gathering, but what the case, again, exposes. a deep racial divide alive and well in america. >> so there are more than two dozen organized protests around the country including in los angeles where people gathered in front of the cnn building in hollywood. police officers in riot gear were called in to disperse the crowd there. about a half dozen people were arrested.
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evening in times square. about a dozen people were arrested overall. in newark, new jersey, hundreds of people braved 95-degree heat to wave signs high above their heads and chant "no justice, no peace." they marched to the frat courthouse. this was outside the justice department. a few people with a lit sign, "justice for trayvon." in chicago, hundreds of people gathered for a moment of silence. before the verdict, there was a fairly concerted effort, i should say, to terrify the country about what kind of horrible reaction there would be to the verdict. there was a verdict, indeed, this weekend. people responded with demonstration. they were almost entirely peaceful, emotional protests all around the country.
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just 11 days after he was sworn into office, january 27th, 2010, virginia's brand spanking new governor bob mcdonnell got a gig on the main stage. he was chosen by the national republican party to give the party's official response to the president's state of the union address. those were very heady times. >> it's not easy to follow the president of the united states.
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my 18-year-old twin boys have added pressure to me tonight by giving me exactly ten minutes to finish before they leave to go watch "sports center." >> the governor responded to the very real pressure of that post state of the union assignment by delivering an unremarkable official looking 12-minute speech that was notable mostly for not being a disaster. like some of the other state of the union responses have been if your moisturizer leaves an oily finish behind imagine what it's doing to your pores. [ female announcer ] neutrogena® oil free moisture hydrates without clogging pores. 100% free of oil, fragrance and dyes. oil free. worry free. [ female announcer ] oil free moisture. neutrogena®.
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before she came to washington, elizabeth warren taught law school. specifically she studied and taught at the law and economic lives of ordinary american families. she wrote readable, popular books about how the system was stacked in favor of people who were already rich. and the system left ordinary families going broke. she did not become elizabeth warren force in washington until the great recession, and the worst of the panic, she was appointed to be the leading watchdog for the $700 billion bank bailout and she was rather ruthless at it. that was part one. part two of elizabeth warren versus wall street begins here in july 2010 with the passage of wall street reform.
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that reform started to rein in the banks. which protects middle class and working class american families. regular plain jane consumers from the predatory fine print that wall street uses to scam people. elizabeth warren seemed like an obvious bet to lead that watchdog agency and did the work in washington to get the agency going. elizabeth warren did not get picked to run agency. two years ago this week with elizabeth warren standing by on his right, president obama announced that he was instead picking the guy on his left. ohio attorney general richard
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cordray. it was a mild political earthquake at the time. elizabeth warren not getting the job of running the agency that she created. of course now we know why. elizabeth warren instead went on to get a better job in washington. last year, she ran for senate against wall street's favorite senator. she ran against scott brown of massachusetts. she ousted the incumbent scott brown, so scott brown could take a job working for a law firm that has wall street clients, naturally. now elizabeth warren is in the senate. she's gone on to become a powerhouse in the senate banking committee. meanwhile, the other guy in this story, richard cordray has been running that consumer watchdog agency. he has been doing the job that the president picked him to do. even though two years later he still has not been confirmed for the job. because republicans in the senate are blocking his nomination. senate republicans interestingly say they actually have no objections to richard cordray, the guy. they just hate his job. they just hate this new agency that he's supposed to be running. nipping at wall street's heels. they say they will on the to oppose any nomination to lead that agency, no matter who it is. they do not care what the nominee is. it could probably be scott brown for all they care. they're just saying no to the
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idea that anybody will be allowed to run that agency. they think if they can keep the agency from getting a confirmed director, they can keep the agency from doing its job which, of course, is defined by law. but, you know, easier to block one guy than try to change the law, right? well now senate majority leader harry reid says he's not going to wait any longer. today he demanded richard cordray and six other presidential nominees start getting votes in the senate tomorrow or else the democrats will change the rules in the senate so the republicans can't
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block this stuff anymore. so the republicans just cannot block nominations from the minority anymore. in washington terms, if that happened, that would be a very big deal. that's the thing they call nuclear option. and it's harry reid's finger on the button. tonight the senate is just finishing up a meeting in the agust old senate chamber. they met in the old senate chamber tonight in way they almost never do. republicans and democrats met together there, all 100 of them in a chamber that crucially has no c-span cameras in it. in this meeting of 100, they are reportedly trying to find a solution to this stand yuf over nominees. maybe they're going to find a solution and maybe they will not. on the senate floor today before this big meeting tonight, elizabeth warren said she was still new in washington but couldn't understand why senate would accept a political stalemate that ends, as she put it, not in more government or in less government, but just in bad government. then she made one more argument
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for the agency she created, and for the nomination of the person chosen by president obama to run it. >> so let me be clear to those who think this filibuster will shut down the work of the new agency. let me be crystal clear. the consumer financial protection bureau is the law, and it's here to stay. do your dirtiest in obstructing the confirmation of the new director, but the agency will keep on doing what it does best. fighting for the american people. >> joining us now from washington is john stanton, he's washington bureau chief at "buzz feed." john, thanks for being here tonight. good to see you. >> good to see you. >> we hear this meeting in the old senate chamber is wrapping up. do we have early reports of what might have happened? what the stakes are in there? >> there's a lot of talk. the older senators have been around a long time. the ones who are least comfortable with the idea of changing the rules spoke first. senator rand paul came out and said there is no deal tonight. he said they could, in theory, have a deal some time between now and tomorrow when they have these cloture vot are l rules to >> h t v whether it's to allow committees to meet or decide what time they're going to meet the next morning. republicans can then filibuster all of those things and can force 60-vote votes and debate and cloture time and everything else.
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even if they change this rule, that doesn't necessarily mean these people are going to get votes quickly. they can come as a lot of headaches, they can slow things down if they want to. there has certainly been some talk amongst republicans about doing that. >> john stanton, washington bureau chief for "buzzfeed" raising the prospect of things getting worse in the congress. when that's really hard to manage. i have a feeling we're about to see it all go. john, thank you. appreciate it. >> any time. >> you've heard all of this rending of garments and upset over the last few years when the republicans have been in
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minority in the senate about them requiring 60 votes to do everything, right? though the majority is 50 votes, they require 60 votes to do everything. what harry reid is wants to change the voting thresholds for nominees. not legislation like passing dream act or whatever, but specifically for presidential nominees. that's what he's firing at. this is going to be fascinating to watch over the next 24 hours. we'll be right back. being the governor of virginia has its perks. its legal, on the books, go ahead governor, you're entitled to these perks perks. this 2,000 square foot beach house at camp pendleton. built in virginia, as a state rifle range in 1912. it has 100 buildings including classrooms, barracks, dining halls, and a chapel. the official gubernatorial beach cottage, the property you see here, it was built in 1915.
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it was owned by the state of virginia and the official vacation home for the first family. the perks, one reason it might be better to be a coastal governor than an inland governor if you had the choice. no offense meant to the land locked. bob mcdonnell is governor of a coastal state that has an official governor's beach house. as he's been him, he ca governor th vacation land in virgini around the state. it started in earnest last week post." an editorial that included blistering shot. "mr. mcdonn hypocrisy has s reputatio m credible." t mcdon auste life and e the "post" governor's r course with the ceo of a troubled virginia company from whom he accepted in the g mag ceo's company. and he set up meetings for the officials. the governor's wife also traveled around the country touting the virtues of the company's magic pill. the "washington post" has so far come down just shy of asking for bob mcdonnell's resignation, but they call what he has been up to "the state's most toxic scandal in in charlottesville, virginia it's the "daily progress" newspaper who's calling the fia "a nightmare now of the stat "governor >> john stanton, washington bureau chief for "buzzfeed" raising the prospect of things getting worse in the congress. when that's really hard to manage. i have a feeling we're about to see it all go. john, thank you. appreciate it. >> any time. >> you've heard all of this rending of garments and upset over the last few years when the republicans have been in minority in the senate about them requiring 60 votes to do everything, right? though the majority is 50 votes, they require 60 votes to do everything. what harry reid is wants to change the voting thresholds for nominees. not legislation like passing dream act or whatever, but
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specifically for presidential nominees. that's what he's firing at. this is going to be fascinating to watch over the next 24 hours. we'll be right back. eligible fo? that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement plans, they pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay. and save you up to thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs. call today to request a free decision guide to help you better understand what medicare is all about. and which aarp medicare supplement plan works best for you. with these types of plans, you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital
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ahead governor, you're entitled to these perks perks. this 2,000 square foot beach house at camp pendleton. built in virginia, as a state rifle range in 1912. it has 100 buildings including classrooms, barracks, dining halls, and a chapel. the official gubernatorial beach cottage, the property you see here, it was built in 1915. it was owned by the state of virginia and the official vacation home for the first family. the perks, one reason it might be better to be a coastal governor than an inland governor if you had the choice. no offense meant to the land locked. bob mcdonnell is governor of a coastal state that has an official governor's beach house. as he's been dealing with the expanding scandal that surrounds him, he can take a vacation, legal vacation with his family for free at virginia's awesome gubernatorial beach cottage. finally a getaway for the governor that even seems legal.
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the bad news for virginia governor bob mcdonnell, of course, is that while he is relaxing on a hammock or playing scrabble or whatever he does on vacation, back in not on vacation land in virginia he is being pilloried by newspapers around the state. it started in earnest last week with one in the "washington post." an editorial that included this blistering shot. "mr. mcdonnell's head-spinning hypocrisy has stained his reputation and shredded the bonds of trust that any governor must maintain with the public if he wishes to be effective and credible." the editorial slammed governor mcdonnell for touting the virtues of public sector austerity while his personal life was a counter-example of profligacy, irresponsibility, and entitlement. the "post" is talking about the governor's relationship of course with the ceo of a troubled virginia company from whom he accepted over $140,000 in cash plus expensive gifts. he then held a launch party at the governor's mansion for a
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magic tobacco pill made by the ceo's company. and he set up meetings for the ceo with virginia's health officials. the governor's wife also traveled around the country touting the virtues of the company's magic pill. the "washington post" has so far come down just shy of asking for bob mcdonnell's resignation, but they call what he has been up to "the state's most toxic scandal in years." saying "the governor may hope to continue stonewalling and ride out this scandal. if so he's piling a fresh miscalculation atop older misjudgments." so that was the "washington post." ow. you want to hear what 245 sounds like in a roanoke accent? the "roanoke times" in virginia is demanding that governor mcdonnell "must clear the air. as the water around him gets deeper, governor mcdonnell cannot wait for a lifeboat to rescue him from a swirling cesspool of scandal." get this. look at this line. "no amount of lysol can contain the stink emanating from capitol square this week and virginians shouldn't be asked to hold their noses any longer.
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only lawmakers can clean up the system and restore public confidence after this season of scandal." in charlottesville, virginia it's the "daily progress" newspaper who's calling the fiasco with the governor now a nightmare. "a nightmare now being lived out of the state's highest office." "governor mcdonnell is a man under siege. every day's another in a seamless stretch of ethical horrors. he talks the talk of a man of conviction but walks the walk of one whose inner compass is shattered." that's "the daily progress" in charlottesville. in richmond, the state capital, it's the "times dispatch" newspaper. "the drip drip drip of embarrassing stories resembles a flood. virginians ask what's next?" then in the "staunton virginia news leader" they say they are losing faith in mcdonnell. "his rising star has fallen with alarming sad speed. and for what? has he really become virginia's first governor to endure parallel state and federal investigations just so he can drive big donor johnny williams's ferrari from smith mountain lake to the executive
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mansion, wearing a williams purchased rolex and get assistance paying for his daughter's weddings and get loans to pay mortgages he couldn't cover himself?" if the reporting on the scandal is correct, the "news leader" says, "bob mcdonnell's political career is in shambles because he wants nice things." this is not the bob mcdonnell many of us thought we knew. even if mcdonnell keeps his office and does not face charges in the end, any truth in the allegations against him reveals a serious disconnect with ethical reality. for now at least, they say, "we have lost faith in the governor. in the end we hope he proves to be more like the man we thought he was." so this is what bob mcdonnell is missing in his state's newspapers while he's away on his beach vacation right now. it's even terrible inside the beltway press where anonymous "downcast mcdonnell allies" are privately expressing their doubts to politico.com that the governor will be able to serve out his term. an unnamed senior virginia
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republican saying this is a "colossal fall from grace." there's disappointment and outrage all around, right? browse the virginia paper editorials any day sometime soon. it will curl your hair, some of this stuff. even larry sabada, the dean of virginia electoral politics, is piling on, saying what mcdonnell took while he was in office is "unprecedented and not the norm and he shouldn't be trying to pass it off as business as usual." so a, bob mcdonnell's ears are burning, even if he is at the beach and using sunscreen." and b, naturally virginia is abound right now with rumors of the next thing that's going to happen in this case. will bob mcdonnell resign? is he negotiating his exit? does he even make it to the end of his vacation? tick-tock. watch this space. the dairy you love. lactaid®. for 25 years, easy to digest. easy to love.
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strategy. before the new anti-abortion trap law designed to close clinics there were 20 facilities where virginia women could go for abortion services. now there are 19, and of those 19 another 15 are considered to be in jeopardy of closing as well because of this new republican-passed law. so in virginia, which is about 200 miles tall and about 430 miles wide, this new trap law is designed to leave women with access to just four clinics across the state. the first of 20 has just closed. in texas, where republican state legislators pushed through new abortion restrictions on friday, 37 of the 42 facilities providing abortion services in the state are expected to shut down once republican governor rick perry signs the bill into law. the law will require facilities to retrofit themselves essentially into mini hospitals. changes designed to be so expensive that it will be impossible for most of the clinics to stay open. facilities that can pay for all those upgrades in texas will still have to clear another hurdle that is designed to be impossible to clear.
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all doctors working at clinics that provide abortions will have to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, many of which are increasingly reluctant to provide those privileges. a few facilities operating in south texas on the rio grande valley near the mexico border local officials say the restrictions will create a perfect storm they expect to lead to the closure of all abortion-providing facilities in that whole huge area of the state. health care providers in the rio grande valley are predicting that many of the thousands of women who seek abortion services there every year will instead start going to mexico, to illegally buy an abortion pill to try to figure out how to personally induce what they're calling self-abortion. those pills are less effective and potentially more dangerous when taken without medical supervision, of course. before texas republican passed their new anti-abortion pill, the pills were legal and available from texas clinics, along with medical supervision. but now, well.
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republican governor rick perry, who's about to sign the bill into law, denies that the new law will force all 37 of 42 clinics to close. but while texas waits for his signature, abortion providers in the state are starting to tell local newspapers that they promise to somehow find a way to continue providing services to texas women once the clinics all start closing. whether that means "under the cover of a mesquite tree or on a shrimp boat or going to mexico." in north carolina last week republican state legislators there passed a bill that's expected to shut down 15 of the 16 facilities left in the state. when he was running for office, north carolina's republican governor pat mccrory promised he would not sign any new anti-abortion laws if he were elected governor. now he says, well, he thinks he'd veto the senate version of the anti-abortion bill but he's pretty sure he would sign the house version. despite the promise that he would sign no bills restricting access to abortion. today, though, is monday. monday in north carolina is protest day, where hundreds come out to protest the republican legislature's policy agenda. and today protesters in north
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