tv CBS This Morning CBS May 1, 2017 7:00am-8:59am EDT
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but you know you're gonna love it. house.it's mondait. welcowelcome tp welcome wef "cbs this morning." we're at 1600 pennsylvania avenue. we'll take you to the executive mansion where history has been made for more than 200 years. "face the nation's" john dickerson spends the day at the white house and oven the road with president trump and we'll talk with white house insiders including chief of staff reince priebus, sean spicer, gary cohn. ve take a look at this view.
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balcony of the white house. we're thrilled to bring it to you. >> how beautiful. we begin this morning with today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. th it was insane. s ere'a tornado cinrossg the road. >> you can see the dark clouds twisting and it just looked like a scene from twister. >> dyeadlrm stos sweep through the heartland. >> the initial hit was the loudest thing i ever heard. >> it is heartbreaking and upsetting to say the least. >> recovery efforts are under way following a string of severe weekend storms. >> the severe weather threat does push primarily to the east as we go through monday, monday afternoon and evening. >> you said to interviewers and writers you thought it would be easier, why? >> it's a tough job, but i've had a lot of tough jobs. i've had things that were tougher but i'll let you know better at the end of the eight years. >> never thougi'ht d pray for
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again. >> there's been promise after promise that's been either unfulelfil d orbroken. >> they don't have the presidency, they don't have the house, they don't have the senate, and schumer is going around making a fool out of himself. >> gunfire at a swimming pool at an apartment complex. >> a huge explosion following a deadly crash on an interstate in ohio. >> all that -- >> who serves people who don't know? do you thick them? >> yes. >> so your surprise guest actually surprised me. >> the prodigal son has returned. >> -- and all that matters -- >> phenomenal america can a first gen racing indian-american muslim kid get on the stage and make fun of the president. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> sign of unique u.s. patriotism from canada
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his microphone stopped working before the st"the star-spangled banne banner", so he egged on the crowd. ♪ this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." we're in the historic east room of the white house. it has served as a backdrop for many of the most important presidential moments over the last two centuries. >> it really is incredible to be here this morning, isn't it? it really is an honor and we should tell you that the long hallway leading into the room which we see behind us, it is called the cross hall. of course, it's become a very familiar site for announcements, celebrations, and swearing-ins. president trump walked dow
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nominee supreme court justice kneel gorsuch. president obama walked down the cross hall to announce the death of osama bin laden. >> we receive many historic moments. it's just kind of cool knowing the people who have walked down there. as charlie mentioned, there are 132 rooms. we're in the east room. the cross hall cuts to far side connecting to east room and the state dining room. this morning we'll bring you intimate looks to a part of the mansion where every president has lived since the 1800s. >> we're lucky enough to have john dickerson with us throughout the morning. he talked with the president trump about his 100 days in office and the biggest plans ahead. congress agreed to a bipartisan agreement. it will fund the
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through september. >> the domestic spending deal comes amid new threats from north korea. overnight the country warned it will carry out a nuclear test at any time and at any location. margaret brennan is outside the white house down on the north lawn with the escalating tensions. margaret, good morning. >> good morning. well, north korea said it will continue its nuclear weapons program in defiance of the trump administration's warning. kim jong-un carried out a ballistics missile test hours after the trump administration drew a hard line. >> we cannot let what's been going phenomenon-on-for a long period of years continue. >> president trump rarely minces words when speaking of enemies, but instead he expressed empathy for kim jong-un whose nuclear policy remain as big challenge. >> what do you make of kim jong-un?
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>> i really have no comment on him. a lot of people are asking is he insane. i have no idea. i'll say this. he was 26 or 27 when he took over for his father -- or when his father died. obviously he's a really smart cookie. >> to build pressure, a nuclear powered u.s. navy carrier now sits within striking distance of north korea. president trump's strategy appears to sit on public flattery and china to control king jong-un. >> i would not be happy. if he does a nuclear test, i will not be happy. i can tell you also, i don't believe the president of china who is a very respected man will be happy either. >> not happy meaning military action? >> i don't know. we'll see. >> the president decided to put aside tradied with china. >> no. i think
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more important than trade. . massive warfare with potentially millions of people being killed, that, as we would say, trumps trade. >> this weekend president trump also invited the philippines president due dare tay. he's signed off on the extraditions of his own and praguing about shooting some himself. norah? >> that has created some troefrms thacontroversy. thank you. the president told thousands of supporters in harrisburg, pennsylvania, that he will keep that promise and many others. major garrett is outside the west wing of the white house. major, good morning. >> good morning. whatever president sames and it varies from time to time, the
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last week he had his white house team frantically pushing obamacare repeal. this morning there is one of those as a new tv ad touting 100 days of accomplish mntss. >> i'll tell you who doesn't cove pre-exists conditioning. obamacare. you know why? it's dead. >> president trump announced president obama's signature law deceased but said that law would be included in his own health care overhaul. >> pre-existing conditions are in the bill and i mandated it. i said it has to be. >> the latest version of the house bill to repeal on carry does not guarantee coverage from pre-existing conditions. it specifically allows states to opt out of that mandate. he announced another mandate may be coming. >> this has evolved over three or four weeks. >> we really have a good b
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don't worry about this 100-day thing. >> the president spent his 100 day rally in pennsylvania and as a custom tee'd off on the media. >> they're gathered together for white house correspondents dinner without the president. >> presidents traditionally attend the annual function and tolerate a bit of roasting but president trump declined. >> i think he's in pennsylvania because he can't take a joke. >> there's no place i'd rather be than right here in pennsylvania to celebrate. >> supporters were not concerned about his few accomplishments in his first 100 days. >> he stands up for what he believes and follows through. >> i mean it's only 100 days. i mean rome wasn't built in a day. >> the president also said another irs ought it on
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latest tax reforms will force those to be kept under lock and key. they will block all attempts until the tax rurns are publicly released. >> thanks, major. we now have more of john dickerson's conversation with president obama on "face the nation," the president, what he has learned on his first 100 days on the job. >> give me another thing that you've learned that you're going to adapt and change. >> i think things generally go slower than you'd like them to go. >> why? >> the system, it's a very, very, bureaucratic system. i think the rules in congress and in particular the rules are unbelievably archaic and slow moving and in many cases unfair. in many cases you're forced to make deals that are not the deal you'd make. you'd make a much digit kind of a deal. you're forced into situations that you hate to be
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>> john dickerson joins us now at the table. good morning. >> good morning, gayle. >> it's interesting to hear him say he's had tougher jobs. did he elaborate on what that is? >> he said he didn't realize how tough the job would be and that he thought it would be easier, so i think he was balancing out his remarks on that, but he clearly is frustrated by the pace of authentics in the senate. he's not the first president to be frustrated by the pace of things. the founders made it that way. those deals he's talking abouter are compromise the system forces you into, but woodrow wilson said he can be as big of a man as he wants to be. this is a presidential -- >> the biggest takeaway for for u you? >> the
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president wants to move faster. >> john, thank you. i know you'll return to this broadcast at the white house. republicans announced overnight they reached afternoon agreement on a massive spending bill. some of president trump's key policies are not included. the $1 trillion budget would fund the government through september. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. nancy, good morning. >> crowing about the fact that they managed to block sought of president's key demands. for instance, the deal including $1.5 billion but the bill specifically says it cannot be used to build a new border wall. it keeps funding for planned parenthood in place through september and keeps 99% of funding for the epa, an agency that trump vowed to gut.
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there's $14.8 bill. it permanently extended health care coverage and provides $68,000 for accomplishes to reinforce president trump's trips back and forth to florida. we're expecting, charlie, that the house and senate will vote on it early h week. >> nancy, thanks. the plan was planned by steve mnuchin and gary cohn. he's a resident democrat and chief negotiating officer for goldman sachs. good morping. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> do we have the votes for health care? >> i this we do. this is going be a great week we're gong to get health care down to the floor of the house.
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we're convincing we've got the votes. as you said, we got the health care plan rolled out and you should see it soon. >> where are the cuts wranld might the revenue might be released? >> as you said, we rolled out one page for a specific reason. we want to get an enormous amount of input before we draft the final bill. when we deliver the final bill, with 'going to have a bill that is bought into by house and the senate. you've just been talking about how difficult it is to get things through congress. we understand how difficult it is to get things through congress, how it cease designed to be difficult. we understand that. we're going to make the tax bill work. >> right now there seems to be a lot of conversation about it's very helpful to the welty, but
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what about the wealthy, gary? >> this is the many itle class tax bill. i'm really cop fused that people don't understand what we're doing here. if you look at what we've done, we've doubled it to $24,000. the median income many the united states is between $56,000. you take the $24,000 away from the $56,000, you've got taxable income of $32,000. at 10% rate, $3,000 of tax. if you have one to three children, you could end up with a very enlarge nall single-digit tax rate to no taxes whatsoever. >> but you're also eliminating the state tax. >> we are. and the deductions that were legislated over the years to
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the bell think have deductions. middle income people and lower income people don't have deductions. wealthy people have deductions. we're going to have wellier pay much broader taxes. >> will it be revenue-neutral. >> as i said, we're working with the house, with the senate. we had a great meeting with the leadership last week. we're going to go through the tax plan in its entirety. we don't know what it's going to score yet because we're going to work on the details. if we get them all out, i'm pretty positive this is going to score positively. >> you believe you can eliminate deductionsome. >> >> we can broaden the base. we're going to tax a lot
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revenue but at a lower right. instead of taxing at a high rate but taxing a lot to get to taxable income we're going to tax a much bigger number at a smuch smaller rate. yes, we believe it can work. >> what's a nice democrat boy working in a republican administration who worked for goldman sachs? >> i'm working here to drive the president's agenda to make america grts. >> know. but what is it like personally? we've heard it's "game of thrones," "house of cards, them versus us. what is it like for you? >> i came from a team-oriented. this is no different. the president likes lots of different opinions, it's the exact way i have worked my entire life. i am used to working an organization where people are
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>> disagreement is good. >> disagreed is good. the president wants to hear both the pros and cons of every decision and i'm pleased with that. >> first of all, we're pleased to be in white house and we appreciate having you. >> we priesh yaet you getting here. 6. >> we'll talk with more white house insiders including chief of staff reince priebus and speaker sean spicer. an investigation is under way after a gunman killed one person and hurt six others at a ofol party in san diego.
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peter seles. he was holding a beer in one hand and a gun in the other. most were black or hispanic. he was white. up to four tornados tore through east texas over the weekend killing four people there. now that same system is blamed for three deathsmississippi and tennessee. further north. dangerous floodsing in arkansas has killed eight people. national guard has called people in for what's only expected to get worse. ahead, how
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used to be they never had chairs that anybody can remember in front of a desk, but i've always done it this way where i'm at the desk and have people here, but usually they would sit on sofas. but this is the resolute desk. it's a great desk with a phenomenal history. many great presidents were behind this desk and some choose other desks. they have seven desks they can actually choose. i like this. it was fdr's, ronald reagan, kennedy. >> it's something there, john, and you're standing will talking to the president of the united states in the oval auchls i don't care who you are. it's never blase to come to the white house and be
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building and what it represents for the country. >> i believe that's the resolution desk that was in the picture with president john f. kennedy and little john climbing through the opening. >> they would say, i'm going to the president what i think and when they come out, they'd come out and what'd you think? >> he's a great president. >> george bush said the same thing about his fathering. >> john dickerson traveled on "air force one" with mr. trump. mr. trump met with workers at a tool fak tre and spoke at a rally to mark his 100th day. >> asked the president about his next set of
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he plans to work with congress. what about infrastructure? >> we're going to work with inf infrastructu infrastructure. we fweeskt the plan. we'll be filing it in the next few week, maybe sooner. >> you said you were disappointed with republicans in congress. why? >> disappoints because they're friends of mine, special people. whether it's freedom cause was or tuesday or thursday or let's go have a drink, they're fwratd peel rngs i know them all. i can honestly say i don't dislike any of them. i like almost all of them a lot. we have voted that were voted positively. before it didn't matter. president obama would veto everything now we have the senate and the white house. these are great people. i think you're going to see the republican party really come together. >> they're learning what it's like to be
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>> they're governing. now it's not just like saying no. before they could say no and it didn't matter because it wasn't going to get approved anyway, so what difference does it make. now we're governing. i'll tell you what. the republican party, they're great people. frankly a lot of them are not leaders. schumer is not a leader. i've about known him for years. he doesn't know how to lead and he's bringing them so far left. >> what's the difference when negotiating in waus? >> i think what we're talking about here, you need heart. we're talking a lot of people. in business, you don't need so much heart. you want to make a good deal snoocdeal. >> talk about the workers there. >> they're dying to touch him,
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factory. >> this is what we've been covering. they see him fighting. if he's having any difficulties, it doesn't matter to them. he's swinging in washington the waino one has ever been before. >> they wanted leadership. >> they wanted leerp and somebody waking it and that's the bond they have with voters. they think there's a voter in washington pushing against them. that's emotional. >> listen. the polls show 96% of those who voted for hit. thank you, john. president trump's oldest daughter ivanka trump is
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very comfortable in the white house. jan crawford is in the green room with the unique roles that the family plays in hissed a m.i.p. strarlet. in the greenroom, he's sending a clear message he's keeping it in the family. he's not the first president to do that. throughout history dozens of chirm and their spouses have had roles with white house. >> i'm kwaets unfamiliar. it's mu to me. >> teen entan even. ivanka and her husband jared kusher er taking on special service. kushner visited iraq. >> his
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adviser, is many white house with a huge portfolio. >> just 100 days in, he's debt with criminal reform, opioid dry sis. dip moment is and security. >> you know, it can be very dangerous for other advisers to fight with him. we saw that a few weeks ago where they got into a real ideological state. >> australian and author drn. >> when they say they're bringing in his daughter and son-in-law-, that might be surprising to a lot of people, but if you look at heft, should be pi buy surprise. presidents have come to lean on the
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she says he fichbser her honest opinion. >> i speak up and my father agrees with me. >> the first lady an her son barron will move here later this summer after he finishes his school year. that will be the first time that a president has been completely without his spouse. that's because he wasn't married. norah? >> thank you so much. president is getting ready for next face of his ijs. whan it will put the kroers legislation like health care and congress. good morning mr. chief of staff. you're watching "cbs this morning." hi guys. it's great to be here. in the desert. at the mall. on the mountain.
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at the beach. in the big easy. yeah. yeah. today i want to show you guys the next-gen chevy equinox. what do you think? that's pretty. pretty sexy. it's all-wheel drive. look at that. it looks aggressive. but not overbearing. it's not too big. not too small. it looks like it could go off-roading. but at the same time, it looks like a car you could take to a nice event. you can dress it up or dress it down. this part's awesome. the all-new equinox comes with built in 4g lte wi-fi. there's wi-fi? even a bird's-eye surround vision camera. wow, it shows the view from up above? how's it doing that? i really like the sunroof. what? woah! hello, world! i feel like i'm only saying good things. which is annoying. and all it takes to open the chevy equinox liftgate is the motion of your foot. easy peasy. i could definitely get a lot in there. i could put my entire band's equipment... snowboard. surfboards. mountain bike. even a sousaphone would fit in there. what's a sousaphone? (laughter) seems like the perfect car for anybody. i would take it anywhere. i want one. i love it. she's a bad mama-jama. (laughter) chevy stepped their game up.
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ke movantik for oic, opioid-induced constipation. had a bad back injury, my doctor prescribed opioids which helped with the chronic pain, but backed me up big-time. tried prunes, laxatives, still constipated... had to talk to my doctor. she said, "how long you been holding this in?" (laughs) that was my movantik moment. my doctor told me that movantik is specifically designed for oic and can help you go more often. don't take movantik if you have a bowel blockage or a history of them. movantik may cause serious side effects, including symptoms of opioid withdrawal, severe stomach pain and/or diarrhea, and tears in the stomach or intestine. tell your doctor about any side effects and about medicines you take. movantik may interact with them causing side effects. why hold it in? have your movantik moment. talk to your doctor about opioid-induced constipation. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
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advisers. several members of trump's and min staid where in green room. he was previous le the longest sharing of the republican national committee. good morning. great to boo b here. >> it's a cool place to be her , r, doing this show. it's great honor. >> just think. he's watching you right now. >> the pressure's on. >> that's the only artifact since john and abigail, painting. >> let's look down the hall. >> the moment president obama walked down the hall and said they killed osama bin laden. >> the next question is the big legislative victory. are you expecting a
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bill this week? >> i certainly hope so. i'm on cities mystic. >> do you think so? >> i think so. this will be one of the fastest pieces of signature legislation to go through for a president since roosevelt, i believe. so people make so much of the stimulus bill that barack obama put through. but, remember, that was prebaked during october during the financial meltdown and people on both sides of the aisle were writing bill they passed in february. but other than that, bush 3 passed the bill in june, reagan was in august. 41, bush 41 wasn't until a year and a half later, so this would be very quick for president trump to get this thing through. >> following up on that, do you
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have to have tack reform by the end of the year? >> i think we'll have it by the end of the year. i think that's a goal. >> it is said the presidency has been changed by donald trump and the presidency has changed him. how has he changed? >> well, i wouldn't say he's changed. his views are the same and his positions on trade and the kmm and foreign policy are the same. >> he talked about nato in a way -- he talks about it differently. he talks about china differently than he did during the campaign. >> nafta too. >> let's take that for a second. nato, his position is countries need to pay up and pay their fair share. you remember when the secretary-general walked out to the podium right over there, one of the first things that came out of his mouth is it's time the countries pay up. i would say
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but positions he's call um others. look at president xi. what's happening is president xi is using his position. as far as an overall question, i think it's an enormous job. i'm sure you filming, me sitting here taking questions from you, it sort of changes you, right? it sort of makes you think about things a little differently. that changes eve s everybody. >> will has been a lot of tense connen very sags. can you imagine a scenario where they sit face-to-face and
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conversation? >> not right now i can't. unless the person was willing to disarm and give up what he's put in mountainside across this country and give up his drive for a nuclear capability and icbms. i think the answer's probably not and i don't see that happening. but we're going to need a lot of cooperation around the lesion and leaders around the world in order to get this under control. >> would that be a change in tax reform? >> i think you're going to see that. certainly as i said earlier that balloon is going to get pops. >> all right. reince priebusing we'll have to leave it here. thanks go. ahead, the president reveal as what happens when
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ss the years, over several administrations of two different parties. as tiring and as frustrating as it can be, it's become more essential for journalists to provide accountability and transparency that we're seeing less and less of in government. i'm mark mazzetti, journalist for the new york times.
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welcome back to the white house. we have moved where? the white house's red room. why is it called the red room? because it's red. traditionally used for the first lady. over my shoulder, that's a picture of dolley madison. she used to have her salons here. do you know what a salon? that was back in
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it is monday, may 1st, 2017. welcome back to a special edition of "cbs this morning" from inside the white house. we're here connecting. >> there are two cut glass chandeliers lighting this hallway. they date back to about 1775. now, from this hall, you have access to the blue room, the red room, the state dining room, as well as the east room. and portraits line the walls. at the east end you find lyndon johnson and jimmy carter among others and at the west e
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portrait of john f. kennedy. >> so much dignity. so many presidents have taken us to the east room for press conferences. we'll meet up with sean spicer and how he prepares to meet with reporters every single day. >> that's right. first we bring you more of john dickerson's interview with president trump. he talks. it's all coveraged in in this extended interview you'll see only on "cbs this morning." john? >> norah, thanks. on his 100th day, i spoke with the president in his oval office. we spoke about president obama, the magnitude of the office, and how he uses the room. >> every president has made the oval office theirs. what has made it yours? >> a lot of things. there were flags in differ
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they were always being pushed around because there once enough room. i said how beautiful flags are, navy, army, marine corps. so beautiful. so beautiful. coast guard flag over here. i say, let's sigh how they look in the oval office. so the flags were up. the picture of thomas jefferson i put up, the picture of andrew jackson i put up because they said his campaign and my campaign tended to mirror each other. we did a lot of work. it's a much -- it's a much different look than it was previously. >> what would fred trump think? >> that's a picture o my father, my mother. >> what would he think? >> he was a building. he would be very
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>> you say the white house is a cocoon. tell me about that? >> i was very proud. that was a different world. this is something, you are really in your own little world. secret service, they're phenomenal, but they are all over the place. i mean they're the real deal. they're all over the place. if i wanted to get out, drive my car to a certain location and go do something, you can't do that anymore. haven't been able to do that for a long period of time. all of that i understand. i guess i assumes that would happen if you won. ant most importantly, i think we're doing a very good job and i enjoy it. >> you do a lot of work in here. >> a lot. mostly here actually. >> why in here and not other places? >> i feel very warm in the oval office. it's a great symbol. also when i have certain people we want to any goeshs
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-- for instance, we were talking about the introduction of the f 35 con track. it was totally out of control. i will save billions and billions and billions of dollars. and calling here, having meetings on the contract, i think, gives you great additional power if you want to know the truth. big people from big companies have been here 50 times. in one case, i won't say who, you know who very well, the head of a major, major company, has been here 51 times. i said, oh, good. you were brought to the oval officesome he said he's never been brought to the oval office. the person came into the oval office and started to cry. this is a tough person, by the way. came into the oval office and started cry. this is a person with a make nif sanlts office with beautiful glass walls and everything. you understand. you've seen those offices before. there is something very special
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>> if somebody's going to behave like that in here, how do you know they're not telling you what you want to here? >> you mean to cry? >> no. that when they dom in here, they're not going to tell you know. >> we have them all. they all come here. they still take notice at the oval office and they mean it. >> right. that's what i mean. one of the worries about the presidency is everybody tells you yes. nobody helps you figure out where your blind spots are. how do you find that? >> i guess it's one of those things in life you have to figure out. maybe i was figuring it out anyway long before i got here, but some things you have to figure out. this is a special place. the white house is special, oval office, very special. >> any other gadgets y
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gotten installed since you came? >> everyone thinks this is very ominous right here. see this? these are phones. these are very secure phones, but this is very ominous looking because of the red button. >> what does that get you? >> it gets you a coke or a pepsi, one or the other. it would have to be. any other cola companies i have to mention? it gets you something. any time i press it -- people worry. i've changed the way it works. it used to be they never had chairs in front of the desk. but i've always done it this way where i have people at the desk and they sit here, but usually they sit on the sew fast. but this is a resolute desk. a great desk with phenomenal history. many great presidents were behind this deck.
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it like h. this was fdr's, ronald reagan, kennedy. >> george w. bush said the reason the oval office is around, there are no corners to hide in. >> there's truth that. there's a certain openness. nobody use out there. i have never seen anybody out there. >> what he meant was it all comes back to you. >> sure, sure. i think that's true anyway, but there's no question. >> when did that hit you you're the magnitude of the office and that idea that you were -- regardless of what happened, the buck stopped at you. >> it's the attraction, bigness of the deal. if you look at orders of planes, it's bigger than any orders of planes, you look at aircraft carriers and submarines. it's the
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mostly it's the decision. when i made the decision to go with 59 tomahawk missiles, unbelievable technology, unbelievable talent. those are tough decisions. it's a tough decision. >> tough why? >> because you're killing people. you could kill the wrong people too. if you end up in the wrong town or city, you have another tragedy. because it's killing, i hate it, but theys have to be done. >> how do you learn that skill? who do you call? >> there's nobody to call. >> did president obama give you advice? >> well, he did but after that there were
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it doesn't matter to me. you saw how everybody saw what happened, and i think that was inappropriate. >> what does that mean? >> you can figure it out yourself. >> the reason i ask is you qa e qaaled him success and back. >> you can figure it out yourself. he was mad with names and worsend and after that there was no relationship. >> and you take that -- >> i think you can take it any way you want. our side has been proved and everybody is talking about it. i think that's a very big sur valance of our citizens. think it's a very big topic and it should be numb beer one and we should find out what the hell is going on. >> i just wanted to find out. you're the president of the united states. you said he was sick and bad. >> you can take it any
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want. >> i want to know your opinion. you're the president of the united states. >> i gave you my opinion. >> i want to know your opinion. you're the president of the united states. >> that's enough. thank you. thank you very much. >> he talked about the warmth of their relationship. that's no longer the case. he thinks basically what he said before is that president obama as he wrote in that tweet bugged him or tapped his -- not bugged him but tapped him is how he put it. >> it would be interesting to hear but he clearly didn't want to answer if question. i'm curious how you found him. on one, he's very denltd in how he's doing. on the other, he seeming to be wrestling with the confines of this office. >> he's absolutely confident. all presidents wrestle with the constraints, but i
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always in some cases doesn't want to talk about constraints because part of what he's talked about and written about is power of the image and so you want to look in his view of it at least in our conversation like you've gotten the world by the tail. >> when that ended, were you escorted out? did someone lift you out? >> it was pretty clear i should escort myself out or i would be escorted out. >> it was a very good interview. thank you, john. >> we're broadcasting from a room that was wasn't hung for presidential laundry.
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jefferson memorial. that view is just one of the reasons why this room is rece recently host for monarchs and states. the room name is taken from the furnishings. yes, blue couches, blue curtains. it's undergone several renovations, most recently 1995 under former first lady hillary clinton and it cost $350,000. that's in private donations, not taxpayer dollars. it's where you'll find the official white house christmas tree. it's here in the middle. they actually have get rid of the chandelier here. the clock features the famous general hannibal, one of the greatest military commanders in history. 80s been in the blue room since the days of president james
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1817. so this is really one of the ost valuable items inside the white house. now, the room's oval shape was inspired by a similar reception room in george washington's presidential mansion in philadelphia, and his famous portrait hangs down there in the east room where we've been broadcasting from all morning. i'll show you. we can peek right over here. the east room down there. oh, look. she's standing under the famous gilbert portrait of george washington. good morning, elaine. >> good morning, norah. this painting was painted by gilbert stuart at the end of jon john washington's presidency. it was after john adams moved here in 1800. it's significant because so much history continues to be made in the east room. president trump has already talked to the press eight times here.
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room's storied past. >> judge gorsuch has outstanding legal skills. >> for more than 200 years the east room has played host to history. >> it's the largest room in the white house. it has the highest ceiling of any room in the white house. so you see events of all kinds that take place in this room. >> it's where lyndon johnson changed the way u.s. law handles issues of race. >> in 1964 president johnson signed this and had a wonderful warm handshake with dr. king. >> and where president nixon said good-bye to his staff when he resigned in 1974. >> au revoir. we'll see you again. >> it was in the east room when president obama announced to the world that osama bin laden was dead. >> the united states has conducted an operation that has killed osama bin laden. >> it's in stark contract to the way it was first
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abigail adams used it as a laundry room. >> here she hung the clothes from wall to wall to dry. >> and it was held as a music vennier where music was performed sometimes for president. >> you have to look at it as historic. ♪ i'm the soul man >> veteran sam says it's where you have to put presidents and policies ahead. >> where they're checking out each other behind the performance, that's wow. >> the room has been the site of marriages, a high school prom, even presidential funerals. a versatility that makes it one of the most important in world. >> there are billions of people around the world and they know what that house represents. symbol
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and so many events take place right there in the east room. >> when president lincoln was in the white house, they held so many dances they had to prop up the floor with wood in the basement to prevent it from collapsing. >> thank you. think about seven funerals, seven wedding ceremonies. >> and now "cbs this morning" live. i feel really honored seriously. thank you very much, elan. president takes his job to new heights. he had a celebration with the staff on board. air force one captured only by john dickerson and our camera. we'll be right back.
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congratulations to everybody. we all deserved it. this was a tough go and it was really fun. i just want to congratulate everybody. and now we're going to do a great job for the american people. thank you. >> president trump marked his first 100 days in office with what else, cake, on "air force one." cakes at all the celebrations. we were there at the private celebration after the rally in pennsylvania. they're feeling great at the mo
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my nmother and i'moan i'm aa grandmother.'m a 2008 was when all the markets crashed, we lost our retirement. hamilton was losing hope and my husband and i were losing hope. my sister and i we challenged ourselves to help figure out a way to help them. our kids bought us a quilt machine. it was very humble beginnings. we were just this cute little shop, just like everybody else. one day al came in and asked me if i wanted to do
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"sure honey what's a tutorial?" i had not a clue. hi everybody i'm jenny from the missouri star quilt company. youtube gave us the opportunity to really differentiate, we got to a 1,000 subscribers year one and now we're at 300,000 subscribers. we started carrying all the fabrics that mom would use in the tutorials. now we're the world's largest provider of pre-cut quilting fabric. in the beginning we were just shipping 10 orders a day. now we ship 5,000 orders a day. opening a business in hamilton kinda sparked things. we've got 14 quilt shops in town, three restaurants, a little hotel, we had over 100,000 people come to hamilton last year. we love jenny. my whole life i've always wanted to own a business. none of that would have been possible without missouri star quilt company. all i have to do is open my door and bake my goods and missouri star does the rest. youtube has enabled my family and i to bring hope to the town and to the people who live here.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning" inside the white house. you never know who's going to stop by here in the east room. first daughter and assistant to the president. >> i literally crashed your beautiful filming. >> are you sorry you stuck your head in the door? >> you guys are so good though. within seconds i was miked. i just wanted to come by with a cup of coffee to say hello. >> how are you liking washington? >> i love it here actually. it has been an adjustment for our family, but it's actually a really lovely place to live. >> the kids like it. >> there's space, which is nice. i think in new york you lack
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you just feel -- you can be outdoors a little bit more. even last night late at night. >> do you ever see your husband? >> i don't see him as much for sure. so we make the time we're together count. but late last night jared and i went for a walk around the mall and it was so beautiful with the lincoln memorial. >> just the two of you out there walking around the mall? >> yeah. it was great. we had sneakers and baseball caps and it was amazing. so we're really -- we're trying to explore this new environment and new city and really sort of interact with it and enjoy it. >> mrs. bush used to do that. she used to go on the washington mall. she didn't know. you can sneak away at some point. >> and i've been doing a lot of it. i made a date with arbella. we have a standing date. >> how old is she now? >> she's almost 6 in july. so whether it's visiting the supreme court or going to one of the amazing smithsonian um
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there's really a lot to do. and i think there's a hot to do in new york as well, but when you've grown up in a place, you actually take it for your granted a little bit more. so we've been having fun. cookouts in the backyard. >> just the fact that you have a backyard is a big deal. now you're getting a dog. >> very true. it ooh's tiny backyard but it works. >> your biggest fan is speaking around the corner. i think it's your husband. >> come on out, jared. >> the same thing is going to happen to you. >> she just said, jared -- >> you can't walk in and not say anything. >> so, jared, i walked into this room and within 30 seconds i was miked. >> could we please get a microphone for mr. kushner? >> jared, welcome to "cbs this morning." your first interview on "cbs this morning." >> jared, tell us about the walk on the mall last
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wife. >> beautiful. great company. beautiful scenery. >> keep working this way, jared. follow me. >> good work, major. anybody else in family might want to come down? we could place a call to him. are you up there? >> ivanka, if i thought i wouldn't be handcuffed, i'd like to walk up and say, hello, mr. president rn president, we're downstairs, we're downstairs. >> it is pretty special. >> we were saying, the history in the room, no matter who you are, you cannot feel blase. >> no, that's exactly right. and it doesn't wear off. the experience is really no less intense and exhilarating today as it was three months ago. so there's this history. you find yourself standing at a window and thinking how many presidents and first ladies and families had looked through that same piece of glass over the course of this
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fills you with awe and wonder and excitement. >> and a sense of this great nation. >> exactly. >> we were out on the balcony looking at the washington monument and jefferson memorial and said, this is our country. >> it's true. it's heard not to feel pride. >> and now you get to work for it. >> yes. and it's a great honor and a privilege. i never thought i would be in this situation, but i'm humbled by the opportunity to make a positive impact. >> one thing. we want to invite you back here for serious conversations about what you're doing. >> i would love that. >> we sort of coaxed you to sit down. that was very nice of you. >> we wanted to have you talk about washington, but another time we'd love to have you back and have a serious conversation about the country and its future. >> i would love. >> and bring jared kush
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>> he's the greatest. i'm slightly biased that thank you for coming by. >> thank you. >> thank you, mrs. kushner, for joining us aet the table. we appreciate it. jared, you're welcome any time. you still have 32 minutes to make it over here. actually a little less than that. about 20. >> about 20. >> 20 minutes. press secretary sean spicer, he's coming. he's briefed 42 times since inauguration day. before assuming this role he was adviser to the republican national committee, he served in the navy reserve for nearly 20 years and he's called daytime's tv's new star with exchanges with fiery reporters. here's look at sean spicer's ten years so far. >> good evening. thank you guys for coming. >> this was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration period, both in person and around the globe. >> you're equating me addressing the nation here in a tweet? i don't -- iea
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silliest thing i ever heard. if the president puts russian salad dressing on his salad, somehow that's a russian -- >> you told us -- >> please don't put words in my mouth. >> mean don't make me make that podium move. >> are you okay? >> are you kidding me? do you need some help? >> i think i've got this, but thank you. maybe. thanks, man. i'll see you in a minute. >> white house praes secretary sean spicer just slipped into the chair. he joins us in the east room. good morning, mr. spicer. >> i tried to keep ivanka here. she's much better. >> great to have you. >> always good to see
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>> thank you. >> they call you daytime's newest star for your fire are exchanges. i'm wondering what it's like when you're sitting up there? >> it's intense. >> it seems to be intense every day. >> it's only one piece of a day, you know. about 40 minutes of a day. the rest of it is a lost more calmer and a lot more pleasant. i think the tv cameras intensify what goes on there, but most of the exchanges are very pleasant throughout the day. >> you're enjoying the job. there's rye more rumors about e stay or will he not. >> it's truly an honor to have this job in the white house and i feel very humbled. i love what i do and as long as the president wants me around, i'll stick in. >> he said you'll stick around as long as there's great ratings. >> keep tuning in. >> obviously there's tension between the press and t
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president. what's your position in making that position optimal. you want the president to be tough and you want an opportunity to explain your own policies. >> i think that's right. i think that's the fundamental aspect of what we're trying to do. they have a right and a duty to get to the tough questions. i think there's a difference about the tone that occurs sometimes and an attempt to try to get a headline rather than a story. >> you're talking about the press or the president? >> the press. we want to make sure -- i think you saw jeff mason over the weekend how we've fwop to great lengths to become transparent, be accessful, and a lot of the behind the screens is now how we operate. i understand the press is going
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and access. we want to make sure it's their coverage. that's where i think a lot of the coverage comes when you take an issue out of context or try to create a narrative that isn't there that sometimes what you're saying at the podium isn't driving at the facts of what the issue is. i wonder how you're dealing with. >> again, we go out there every day armed with a set of facts. sometimes it's a "gotcha." if that's the game of who can stump the chump, then that's not really an exercise of trying to get to the bottom of the situation. if it's somebody trying o figure out how to get to another person, that's one thing. if it's an attempt to get to the un, we do that every day. if someone is trying to figure out how they can sneak a fast one on us and say, did you know line 78 is -- that's n
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attempt to get the news. e i'm always amazed at times of a member of a press corps who has been sitting on an question for five or six hours only because they want to play a gotcha question. the they're truly interested, i applaud that. you have to ask yourself what's the motive behind the tone and questions. >> are you watching melissa mccarthy movies or are you sick of it? >> i enjoy this job very much, and there's some -- it's north gnat when someone tells you they're praying for you or thinking of you. there's criticism that comes along with it. >> guess what? mike pence has worked hard and he's going to
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making it a reality is the hard part. northrop grumman command and control systems always let you see the complete picture. and we're looking for a few dreamers to join us. we're in the east room having a remarkable day, a special day for us, getting a chance to see this magnificent building. feel the patriotism, the sense of history here, and we're especially glad now to be joined by the vice president of the united states. welcome. >> thank you very much. welcome to the white house.
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>> again, with north korea, you were there. tell me the impact of being there and where you think this conflict is right now because the president -- i talked to john dickerson -- characterized the north korean president. >> it's a very tense time. as the president said again and again, north korea represents the most serious security threat in the world. he wanted me to go there, reafurthermore our commitment to south korea, japan, and our allies there. for me it was -- it was a chilling experience to look into a nation living under the kind of oppress everybody
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the kim family means. >> everybody knows ha the best way o get something done here is through china, with china. the president constantly talked about this relationship he has with xi jinping. what is the chpresident doing? >> the president has made it clear. we seeker a peaceable st. louis, but the key is -- the message he had me make clear, he had the secretary of state make clear and he's made clear is the era of strategic patients is over. now for more than a quarter of a century, the united states has in one way or another negotia d negotiated, had talks, waited patiently all the while. we've seen the regime and its headlong pursuit of weapons and the ballistics missile program. he said, he's over.
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region to diplomatically isolate north korea, but what's really new here, i think it's a great encouragement that you have a president in president trump who's engaging directly with president of china, and we are seeing china do more than they have done before. >> and what is that? >> well, we have word of china turning back coal shipments in north korea. we have word of them beginning to reduce amount of commercial travel that exists between north korea. but as the secretary of state said at the u.n. last week, china needs to do more. we're calling on our allies in the region to reconsider their diplomatic relations with north korea. we're calling on allies in the region to reconsider their worker program. the key here is for the united states and our allies in the region working with china to provide thin
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diplomatic pressure that will result in the regime and pyongyang ending permanently their nuclear and ballistic missile. we also made it clear all options are on the table. in actions the world has seen the president take, in syria and afghanist afghanistan, president trump in a very real way has restored the credibility of american power and they know that -- they know that we are prepared to defend our allies and dae fend ourselvesing but we're going to drive toward a peaceable solution. >> we've made it clear, mr. vice president. to you have a sense of what they want in return from us? >> the north koreans? >> yes, yes. >> i don't think we do at this point. we continue to see one provocation after another. this weekend began with another failed missile launch from north korea, even while the world community was discussing the issue with the
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council. >> how do we get at that to find out what he wants in return? what is the whole purpose here? >> i think north korea knows what the world community wants. world has been united for a century that i want to know ha they want. i'm curious about what they want. >> they want an end to sanctions. >> i think this is a terrific question because one of the things secretary of state secretary tillerson has made clear is that under president donald trump, we're not going to negotiate to get the right to negotiate. we're not going to negotiate to get at the negotiation tachblt north korea knows through u.n. actions in the past, through announcements by the u.n. community, they need to abandon their nuclear program, abandon their ballistics missile program, they need to stand down in a very real sense to engage the right of the community going forward. >> mr. president, can i ask you because congress finally reached
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agreement on this. so there won't be a government shutdown but it does not include money for the wall and it does continue funding for planned parenthood. are you disappointed? >> we couldn't be more pleased that thanks to president trump's leadership and direct engagement, last night the leaders many the white house and both parties signed off on a budget deal. it will avert a government shutdown but more important than that, there's going to be a significant increase in military spending. our armed forces have been hollowed out in recent years. $21 billion in defense spending. i think american people are encouraged to hear since our inauguration that illegal border crossings are down 60-plus percent in this country. and in this bill, there's a down payment on additional border security. i'm also pleased to see as the president was insist t
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that we're providing support for health benefits for coal miners and right here in the district of columbia we're looking at disadvantaged children. this is a budget deal, a bipartisan win for the american people and the president signed off on the parameters early yesterday. republicans and democrats reached a deal with the white house last night. i think that's good. >> there was compromise. there was compromise, yes. >> the president told john dickerson over the weekend it has been a learning curb for the republican partd and for himself as well. do you feel that? >> well, for me, it's been just an incredibly humbling experience o be able to come to this billing every day to sev as vice president to president donald trump. but i think for our colleagues on capitol hill particularly as we continue to drive toward keeping our promise to repeal d
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a foundation for the infrastructure bill. i think the learning process for many on capitol hill about governing has been moving forward. and i think this morning's announce mnts about reaching a bipartisan deal on budgets, i think the american people can be encouraged that washington is works again. thanks to the strong leadership of president trump. thanks to his direct engagement of members of congress. >> thank you, mr. vice president. we're out of time. >> i would like to come to wednesday night dinner ha thank you so much for joining us. we also want to thank everyone at the white house including the communications team and all of the staff who have been so gracious. their help has been crucial in bringing this special broadcast to the east room. our special thanks to
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yes, it feels so good. good morning, my friends. i'm chris leary. >> and i'm markette sheppard. >> and i'm meaghan mooney. chris it's may day as you said. >> may day, may 1st. >> it is actually melanoma monday it's considered. >> that's good to know. >> first monday in may. >> put your sunscreen on right? >> yeah, the whole month of may is skin cancer awareness month. the american academy of dermatology kicks it off with that month of may 1st day. >> that's good awareness, especially as it's getting warmer. you've got to remember all yearlong. >> i just want to give a shoutout this morning to the washington nationals and their 3rd baseman anthony rendon. >> does he wear sunscreen. >> probably so. the nats player was on fire with 5 hits, 3 home runs, 10 rbis in the game against the new york mets. he's only the second player in major league baseball history to achieve that. oh, and the final score 23, yes, that
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>> is this football season? >> for a baseball game. have you ever heard of a score that high. >> i'm missing an extra point in there. >> i'm not talking about major league baseball, any baseball game, t-ball, little league. >> combining the seven games together right? >> isn't there a rule where if you get to a certain point they say that's it, you've got to go home. >> no, not if you're the mets. >> give rendon and his entire family a bonus. all right? he is, yeah. >> pretty awesome. >> sports town, especially right now. if i told you a professional player lost a tooth last night in a game, would you think it was hockey? yes, of course, i would too. however it was actually boston's isaiah thomas who took an inadvertent elbow from otto porter in the first period to produce the new mouth gap. oh, boy. he can't put that thing back, can't grow a
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