homes and offices, so we can save on our utility bills and not waste our hard-earned money heating the outside and cooling the outside with leakage of energy from our homes and offices, so this is a plan built on the recognition that we are a can-do nation. we just need a can-do president and now we have a plan that's built for success. also on the success that identify had as governor doing these exact same things in the state of washington, so i couldn't be more excited about rolling this out today. >> okay. so it's certainly big. it's certainly bold, but how are you going to pay for it? that's always the question especially in this race with candidates and their signature issues. it's how are you going to pay for it? >> well, actually, there's a little different more important question is how much is it going to cost us if we take no action? how much is it going to cost us in cities like paradise, california burned to the ground that i visited. i met a woman named marsha who lost everything in the fire in seminole springs. how much will it cost us for the floods in the midwest which are believe it's davenport underwater. i went to hamburg, iowa, all the farmers lost their grain and how much will it cost in main street where they need to build up main street. otherwise the fish are swimming down main street. this could cost us billions of dollars in the decades to could. the scientists have said the economic losses of the donald trump plan, because the donald trump plan is keep us addicted to oil, keep giving $27 billion to the oil industry and keep letting our towns burn down. it's been projected that the losses from climate change could be twice as large as the economic havoc caused by the last recession. >> okay. >> so i think the question is -- you broke down the costs you believe from climate change, but i didn't hear you say what your plan is to actually pay for it. >> our plan is to require industries to use equity, mostly private equity, to make the investments in new technology that we know can reduce costs over time. look, when you put a solar panel on your roof or make insulation investments in your house, you cut your utility bill dramatically, and over a period of seven years, you've actually saved a heck of a lot of money. we want to enable consumers to be able to do that, and our plan will require utilities just like in my 100% plan we passed in washington to help some consumers get access to the funds it takes to reduce your utility bills and avoid the horrendous costs. look, this is not a single issue. it's a health issue. >> okay. >> we have more americans die because of pollution than car crashes. we need to stop that. >> all right. let's be more specific then on your plan. you say that by 2030 you want to reach zero emissions in all new, loyalty and medium duty vehicles and in all buses. that would make a major commitment from all automakers who last year produced around 17 million cars and trucks in the united states. how do you plan to reach that goal, and what do you plan to do with the hundreds of millions of cars already on the road? >> people who have cars on the road are going to continue to drive them. no one is going have their car taken away from them. you'll have freedom for your cars, but what we will do is do what we did in 1940. in 1940 we faced another existential crisis in the nation, and in 1940 remade exactly 77 jeeps. four years later we had manufactured 640,000 jeeps and we rescued the nation from an existential threat. that is exactly what we can do now. we can greet a demand for our corporations to make those investments. we can create the research and development assistance from the federal government to get that job done. we can finance electric charging stations like we're doing in my state today. that's why people are gobbling up electric cars in my state today. >> are you planning to eliminate all coal jobs then? are you going to eliminate all coal jobs? >> look, here's what we know about coal. the people in the coal industry, they have been great americans. they built the industrial base of this nation, but we know over the next several decades we need a new future for them. we need to embrace them like like we embraced the coal families in centralia, washington, where rather than turning off a coal plant we built a transition plant with $55 billion to help those families find new careers, new businesses, new infrastructure so that their communities can thrive. we need everyone to thrive in this new clean energy economy, and we need to have confidence in our ability to do that. i'm confident we can because we're doing in washington under my governorship. >> and it's one thing to have this big, bold plan. it's another for it to pass through congress. do you think something of this would actually pass through congress? as you know, there was the green new deal proposed by freshman democrat, and republicans largely mocked that idea and she even said that it was sort of a wish list of things. >> well, this is my plan. it is ambitious, but it is my plan, and that plan allows a lot of executive action which today isn't allowed under the law, and as the next president if i'm chosen with that high honor, i'm not going to get up the first morning, i'm going get up every morning to figure out how we can organize the federal government around this principle. >> okay. >> that means we've got to stop using fossil fuels in our public lands. it means we need cleaner cars with clean fuel rules. it means we need to stop the $27 billion going to the oil and gas industry in subsidies. it means that we have to research and development, and we have to use the procurement power of the united states like i am. i'm building or i'm buying 50% of the cars in washington that are all electric now. we need to do the same thing. we can do that through executive order. >> we don't have all the time that we would like for this so i want to get so some of your competitors in the race right now, the democratic race. you have taken issue with fellow candidate beto o'rouke who has also unveiled a massive climate change plan. you've taken a dig at him for basically copying your signature issue. is that the essence of your beef with him? >> well, look, i've been providing leadership on this for over a decade and a half. it has been deep and compelling, and if you'll ask the people who know what they are talking about on energy plans they will tell you that my plan is the boldest. it is the most ambitious, and it's almost the most concrete that really provides specific things that we need to get done. i'm proud of that. there's a lot of talent in the field. i'm honor that had come of them are following and that's a great thing and i hope we'll have a debate to figure out who really has the jobs that can get this job done. i'm confident can i do that. >> let's talk about the debate. fellow candidate cory booker said he's 2,000 donors away from qualifying for the debates. how close are you to the 65,000 donor threshold? >> we're close enough to have confidence we're going to get there, but not close enough where i'm going to stop asking people. >> what does that mean? >> we've good couple 10,000. we need more, but we're on a pace to get there. i do hope people, if they want climate change on the debate stage, you can go to jayinslee.com and send in a buck. just make sure that climate change is debated in the democratic party. i'm up to that. the nation needs it. the democratic party needs a nominee who will lead this nation to a clean energy future. if you agree with mow. get me on that sage. it will make you proud. >> i want to talk about a new cnn poll. president trump is getting high marks for his handling of the economy. 56% saying he is doing -- say he's doing a good job. how do you fight against that, and are you concerned that with these new numbers out today showing that the economy is booming that that is just giving him more momentum heading into 2020? >> no, i'm not concerned because i make it a daily habit of beating donald trump. we've sued him and beat him 21 times in court. we won about 40 seats in the house of representatives which rejected his bonehead chaos and narcissim and divisiveness and lack of tolerance, and importantly, as governor of the democratic governors association, we flipped seven seats from red to blue last year. so i'm confident in our ability to beat donald trump. it is my goal to make him a blip in history. i'm happy to do that. >> but respectfully, governor, you didn't answer the question about the economy specifically. do you disagree the economy is doing well under president trump? >> well, look, some people are making out like bandits. we have more billionaires than we can shake a stick at in the united states, but 50% of americans have not had a raise in 20 years. that's why i've fought and i've put the highest minimum wage in the country. it's why i've done the best paid family leave. that's why i've done the best gender pay equity so women can get paid same as men. that's why i've built up the union movement so that we can increase wages. it's why i'm the guy that's actually increased wages for hard working educators by an average of 12%. look, we need to build an economy that works for everyone. if you want to see how to build that, look west. look to the real washington state that can send someone to washington, d.c. a and start building an economy that works for everyone instead of donald trump's fat cat friends at his country club. >> well, to be fair we had on a immediate analyst earlier who said actually, look, unemployment is at a record low and that it's -- it's across the board, it's not just like you said the fat cats. it's across the board. i just want to make sure that we're representing all side here. governor jay inslee, thank you very much. >> thank very much. see you again. >> see ya. >>> well, she's the freshman democrat in the middle of so many controversies. now the trump administration is blasting ilhan omar for partially blaming the u.s. for venezuela's chaos. >>> plus, the chinese family that paid the ringleader of the massive college sheeting scandal $6.5 million is now speaking out. hear why they gave him the cash. we'll be back. and you want to make sure to aim it. i'm aiming it. ohhhhhhh! i ordered it for everyone. 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it's not really clear. they did discuss venezuela. >> yeah, because sarah sanders didn't make mention that have when she spoke to reporters. she talked about how it's important to give aid to the people of venezuela and so forth. that was part of the discussion, but not what the secretary of state said on our air, that the russians stopped maduro from fleeing, and it's interesting that neither readout makes mention of any sort of warning from the president to the russians on venezuela and what the white house views as russian interference in venezuela on the u.s. efforts. >> well, quite the contrary. you almost get the sense of a very chummy conversation in which two leaders covering the waterfront of global problems. you wonder if this post-mueller phone call was actually the beginning of trump's effort to begin his long-awaited reconciliation with russia. it's very clear both from the mueller report and from everything else that the president never really abandoned his hopes of having a closer relationship with russia, having a reset, if you will, of relations but felt politically he was unable to do so, so the question i have is whether in the post-mueller moment the president now sees an opening to engage in a much closer set of dealings with russia, and was this the first step of doing that? >> and what's interesting though, is yes, the mueller investigation has ended and that creed a -- a certain dynamic for the president, but rush still remains a threat on many fronts to the u.s. according to the president's own administration officials with the fbi director saying it poses a significant counterintelligence threat on interference, burks again, i don't see any mention of that in the readout. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> appreciate it. >>> all right. emotional new comments from otto warmbier's mom. why she says north korea is a cans their will kill us all. plus, he plotted to blow up the new york city subway system, but soon he'll walk free, so how does he goes into witness protection? we'll be back. drivers just wont put their phones down. we need a solution. introducing... smartdogs. the first dogs trained to train humans. stopping drivers from: liking. selfie-ing. and whatever this is. available to the public... never. smartdogs are not the answer. but geico has a simple tip. turn on "do not disturb while driving" mode. brought to you by geico. did you know you can save money by using dish soap to clean grease on more than dishes? 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