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tv   Face the Nation  CBS  September 19, 2016 2:00am-2:30am CDT

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days because the defendant went there on thursdays. isn't that right? no! it-- you went every thursday for six months. isn't that correct? yes, but you're making-- you stalked him, didn't you? (jane) objection. argumentative. (judge) sustained. you approached him as a brunette, and then, when he didn't respond, you changed your hair color so he would notice you. no, he hurt me! (crying) he pinned me down. he-- (judge) ms. fisher, stick to the questions. you were obsessed. (whimpers) you follow travis around... so you could seduce him. you went home with him, you had consensual sex with him, and then you set him up, set all of us up. (exhales)
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they're destroying that girl in there. travis is gonna be just fine. i signed him up for everything when he was a kid-- hockey, soccer, lacrosse. i figured, if i couldn't be around, at least he'd stay busy, maybe he wouldn't notice. he was great at everything, made every all-star team. in ten years, i never made it to a single game. he hurt someone, liv. he held her down and he... my son did that. he's a... what should i do? tell me. there's nothing you can do. who he is, what he is,
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(indistinct conversations) ? here you go. hey. what-- what are you doing here? setting you up. setting me up? virgin margaritas for the lady all night, and whatever her date orders gets a 3-finger pour of booze in it. you got it. put your hair down... wh-- and take that jacket off. flirt just enough, but not too much, and do not let him see you home. i can handle myself, you know? oh, i heard you on the phone. you need to be set up. (indistinct conversations continue) ? (indistinct conversations continue) (exhales) (projector and camera shutter clicking) (orchestra music playing) (camera shutters clicking) (indistinct conversations) (clicking continues)
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lovely to see you. here's the prime minister. (fitz speaks indistinctly) hello. it's wonderful to see you again. hi. what's olivia doing here? i invited her. how are you, bill? good to see you. you two know each other. liv. (chuckles) you look lovely. oh. oh. mm. doesn't she look lovely? of course, yeah. i'm so happy you could come. i wouldn't miss it, mr. president. (mellie laughs) prime minister, delightful to see you. how is the new baby? good to see you. for coming. oh, hi. oh. great to see you. (indistinct conversations continue) (sighs) (camera shutters click) (playing up-tempo jazz) (indistinct conversations) you're better than i expected. oh, they had ballroom dancing at andover. it was the only way i could get near a girl back then, so... i took it twice. glad to see it's working out for you.
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what? i'm trying to figure out how i can sexually harass you and get away with it. billy. what? you don't work here anymore. you could date me. i'm a catch. or... (mellie gasps) is there another guy? (clears throat) i'd like a turn with the best dancer in the west wing. oh. (laughs) no offense, fitz. none taken. (laughs) (laughs) you mind? no. (song ends) (mellie and billy) oh. (indistinct conversations) (playing romantic jazz music) (indistinct conversations) keep 'em coming. yes, sir. (indistinct conversations continue) (music continues) don't look at me. how come? because everyone will know.
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the song will be over in a minute. this is ridiculous. everything is ridiculous. how did it all get so... (sighs) damn it. just look at me. (music continues) (whispers) look at me. (music continues) (normal voice) meet me in our spot in ten minutes. no. i am not spending any more time away from you. (music continues) stop it. we're in public. look away. look... i know... i don't have the right. i know. i know you don't trust me. i... (music continues) i love you. your wife is 10 feet away. i love you. what about amanda? i love... you. (music continues) (song ends) (applause)
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tes. you can't leave your own state dinner. watch me. (indistinct conversations continue) (band playing up-tempo jazz music) generous bartender. i know. i'm so buzzed. so should we get to it? i'm sorry? i know why you called. you do. to find out what i know, dig around, find my weak spots. let me save you some time. i have tried every drug but the needle drugs, but i'm only addicted to "sportscenter" and my blackberry, but the arrest record is still on file--texas-- and in eighth grade, i stuffed the ballot box in an attempt to rig the student council election, but i did it to get closer to jenny marconi, not for the power. still lost. okay. i'm not giving up this story. it's my ticket off of metro and on to national, and don't tell me it's not a story, 'cause that would insult what little intelligence i have, and i wouldn't believe you anyway, 'cause your boss is involved, and you're a terrible liar who's not the least bit buzzed, and i know that because you've had as much as i've had,
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coiled like a cobra 'cause you're so freakin' tense. now that you know everything, let's forget about work for a couple of hours, get you a real drink... (indistinct conversations) why did you break the deal with olivia? what are you talking about? you called amanda. i was there when she got the call. don't get me wrong, i'm digging. i called amanda's college roommate, i called her friends at the white house, but i absolutely, positively did not call amanda. i'm keeping my promise. i want that quote. (indistinct conversations continue) (band playing romantic jazz music) oh, cyrus. hello. i don't know what you think you're playing at, liv, but i don't take kindly to blackmail. uh, i'm sorry. what? i never took you for the "hell hath no fury" type. it's a little trashy, but so is having an affair with a married man. you want to be careful, cyrus, with how you speak to me, because i might forget that we are friends. now if you'll excuse me. what happened,
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(chuckles) he's good. he has you in the palm of his hand. you're being played. you're being played by the best politician in the world. the upside? the tell-all book that you can write when you're old-- "the president's whore"-- it's all very dirty and best seller. these very nice agents are gonna escort you off the white house grounds. and you can tell amanda tanner that the meeting with the president is off. (knocking on door) i was wrong before. livvie, it's late. i was wrong before about it not being your fault. it is your fault. what? you love him. you do. but you can't fix everything for him. you can't. he's playing you because you let him. you give him everything he asks for and you clean up his messes and you believe him even when he lies to you, and that is-- that is not love. love is making him face who he is. the best thing you can do for him
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it's not your fault, what he did, but letting him get away with it, that is your fault. mr. president. cyrus. this is not a good time. olivia's not coming. what? she canceled the meeting with amanda tanner. she was playing you, twisting the knife. i'm sorry, sir. oh...
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great show. here you go. now he's added a new routine. making depositing a check seem so effortless. easy to use chase technology, for whatever you're trying to master. isaac, are you ready? yeah. chase. so you can. e to turn myself in? that's a little drastic. right... mom? you raped that girl, travis. she killed herself. but that wasn't my fault. it wasn't. travis, please. this is hard enough. so i made a couple of payments? they can't put me away for that. there's a rape kit. it's got your d.n.a. all over it. she never pressed charges. they don't even have my name. it happened once. it'll never happen again. i promise. travis-- i'm not talking to you.
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i'll go away. how's that sound? i'll go to europe for a couple of years. and then i'll come back and run the company. that was always the plan anyway. that's a good compromise, right? that's what i thought you'd say. well, good. that takes care of the problem. i've already taken care of it, honey. (door opens) you didn't. mom? (handcuffs jangle) mo--don't do this, mom! (handcuffs click) mom! don't do this. mom, listen to me. please! this is crazy. jane powell, my friend? got transferred to misdemeanors. oh? something about incompetence, didn't research the defendant well. how sad for you. okay, maybe.
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can be friends. maybe. (knocks on door) you okay? why did you invite her to the state dinner? olivia? why would you do that? because you needed to see her. i trust that tonight, you'll sleep like a baby. (door opens) wait. where's amanda? (door closes) change of plan. you're not getting a quote from amanda. screwed by olivia pope. why am i not surprised?
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an interview with sandra harding. have you heard of her? h.d.x., right? her company's worth $300 million. about an hour ago, she turned her son in to the u.s. attorney for rape. tomorrow she's going to resign. she's agreed to tell you and only you her side of the story. not only will your byline be on the front page of your paper, but this story, your exclusive story, will be chased by every major newspaper in the country. and they'll get nothing. i know it's not cherry blossoms, but... thank you. i... thank you. gideon, that was a meeting. you know, i've been meaning to tell you, it's probably nothing, but gideon said this thing at drinks about how he never called amanda, not once, and my gut says to believe him. my gut says he's not lying. reporters lie, quinn. my gut says she's lying. i don't think amanda's telling you everything. (projector and camera shutter clicking) he's mad at me.
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but if i could just have five minutes... alone with him, i know that i could explain. i know how hard this is. i'm sure you do. you're afraid that it was nothing, that he's forgotten it already, tossed you like yesterday's paper, and moved on without another thought, and if he's forgotten, then it's almost as if it never happened, that what you had with him wasn't real, and that makes you feel completely and utterly alone. but i haven't forgotten. i know what happened. i know it was real. and whatever you decide to do here, however you want to play this thing out, i will stand beside you every step of the way if you ask me to, i will make him remember and you will never, ever be alone in this again, but i'm gonna need everything-- every truth, every detail. if i'm gonna stand with you, amanda,
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"face the nation." i'm john dickerson. we continue with the chairman of the republican party, reince priebus. we'll leave the previous issue. you once said that the electoral... the way the electoral college works, democrats need to be good. republicans need to be nearly perfect. is donald trump running a nearly perfect campaign? >> well, let me tell you something. this is a fascinating year for everybody, we all know that, but i have been, and i think people need to get outside this beltway and get on the road. if they were to see what i see, i see one of the game movements, to be ground, meaning people coming to events, 20,000 in middle pennsylvania, 22,000 in seattle. this is probably one of the biggest movements as far as people across this country in modern history. and so while everyone loves to analyze donald trump all day long, 24/7 on cable, i think people have to look at what the facts are, and we're tied today,
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election. and we have a candidate that is capturing the electorate, america. it might not be capturing the pundits, but he's capturing america. >> dickerson: is he capturing reluctant republicans, some of whom are republican officials in the republican party either in the never trump or in the barely trump category? >> well, some of the people ran for president, but you have to look at where we are we at with the voters. and where we're at with the i'm at, nearly 91% of the republicans, 92%. we need to do a couple percentage points better, but people who agreed to support the nominee, that took part in our process, they've used tools from the rnc. they agreed to support the nominee. they took part in our process. we're a private party. we're in the a public entity. those people need to get on board. and if they're thinking they're going to run again some day, i
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nomination process, and i don't think it's going to be that easy for them. >> dickerson: would the party itself penalized someone who does not make good on the pledge they made to support the nominee? >> i think these are things our party will look at in the process. and i think that people who gave us their word, used information from the rnc, should be on board. sure. >> dickerson: governor john kasich, if he w again, he might be out of luck as far as the rnc goes? >> people in our party are talking about what we're going to do about this. there is a ballot access issue in south carolina. in order to be on the ballot in south carolina, you have to pledge your support to the nominee, no matter who that is? what's the penalty for that? it's not a threat. it's just a question that we have a process in place. and if a private entity puts forward a process and has agreement with the participants in that process, then those participants don't follow
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they made in that process, what should a private party do about that if those same people come around in four or eight years? >> dickerson: sounds like a brushback pitch, but let me ask you one last question, at one point donald trump said the debates are rigged. you have been part of this process. has the process been fair? does it feel fair to you at this point? >> well, there are two parts to that. as far as our party is concerne t straight up and fair the whole way through. i think people have evaluated what we've done. i think people understand that i think i played it straight down the middle from the beginning to the end. i do think that the media, especially in the cable 24/7 world, is totally obsessed with negative six-minute segments on donald trump no matter what it is. and i think that part of it is very unfair. >> dickerson: but the debate
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happening, the moderators, all that? >> i think it's square. and i think people are ready to move forward and move on with this. i think that first debate is going to be probably one of the biggest events in the history of presidential politics. >> dickerson: all right. >> dickerson: all right. mr. chairman, thank you so much for being with us. >> you bet. >> you bet. >> dickerson: we'll be right back. ...but they couldn't miss the show. so dad went to the new safelite-dot-com. and in just a few clicks, he scheduled a replacement... ...before the girls even took the stage. anywhere in america! so you don't have to miss a thing. y'all did wonderful! that's another safelite advantage.
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>> dickerson: and we're back with our political panel. ruth marcus is a columnist at
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salamle is an executive director with the national review. mark leibovich is with "the new york times". riewrkt i want the start with you. the response to this explosion in new york overnight. donald trump got off the plane immediately and said, a bought went off. turns out he was right. hillary clinton said we have to wait for the details. is that a frame from which we should look at the two candidates? >> it's pretty telling. he turned out to be right, but might not have. i think that, girl, so i think the response, i'd like to wait for the facts until i comment is always a good idea. i think both of them could have behooved them to express some concern for the victims, which seems to be something that's forgotten in all this. >> dickerson: i want to ask about this op-ed by secretary robert gates. attacked both candidates. not attacked, sorry, criticized both candidates for their
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hillary clinton not trustworthiness. donald trump doesn't have the temperament for the job. does this matter? does he raise important questions about this, and with donald trump calling him a clown, does that matter or is that just what we're used to from donald trump? >> my sense is that donald trump's style, the brag -- brag doash owe is priced in for voters. if you look at the survey, it looks as though hillary clinton's support with the obama coalition is softening. if you look at younger it's softening even drastically. even younger black men, it seems there is some weakness here. whereas if you look at donald trump, there is certainly what folks in many media outlets talk about, the birther controversy, which i'm sure we'll talk more about now. but he's proposed a new social program for working mothers. he went on the dr. oz show, which by the way, is a show that's watched by many of the voters he's seeking to reach, and he praised medicaid. and he suggested that we ought
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further. so when you think about trying to get through one channel, the people who read the "wall street journal" editorial page, and then trying the reach another channel, think about the married white women in a state like pennsylvania, the people that he hasn't been able to reach, the people who have been reluctant to join his campaign. it's not obvious to me that he hasn't done a decent job of doing an end run around certain kinds of media criticism and reaching those people. >> dickerson: and the polls have tightened a little and, mark, picking about those kinds of voters, the reintroduction of the idea that for five years donald trump was the advocate for the idea that barack obama was not born in the united states. does that matter to those kinds of voters? is that why he finally came out and said, yes, he was born here? >> i think it does matter to those kinds of voters. i think the lead that hillary clinton opened up in august was a lot of softening republicans. you mentioned softening of the obama coalition.

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