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time for a cypher or freestyle rap with fellow mc mano joe joe joe joe joe. exit it was bold statements funny you could still make them to stump up the base the pain is still soft and defunct when people instead expose. your conscience funded civil war smartly into the motor city still think of a specific issue but what it takes makes basic to be a start just a. look you. got to be sick. like you. suggest you keep. good enough especially when. you know what it is who you are so do you. thank you for. the day in cape town is not complete without stopping by the atlantic ocean it's your most favorite way to recharge. is out and we say goodbye from the mother city. so have you ever met a king in your life because i have although you're pretty unlikely to bump into one on the street but did you know that kabera the largest slum in east africa has its own royalty he's not your average king. to help the people in canberra hiv by advocating the use of condoms now that's a difficult task even for a king. the home his majesty the king of confidence. will join him in h
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time for a cipher or freestyle rap with fellow mc mano joe joe joe joe. it said it was bold statements by neglect you could still make them the stump is the say lumpy on the face the pain is still still and the funk plenty o. instead expose ya dick maybe they can say your conscience like it's full of what's not likely if they. still think assisting the soul bottom when it only takes made by sick to be a star just look you got stuck to the big deal suggest you stick to the stage with the wouldn't you like to do it like. died from a side never quite. literally go get the safety joint got to be sick to school what you're going to do you should get riding in prostitution i keep the door don't go crazy like you go oh pick executes it you can find a solution i suggest you keep it cool remain there's a lot of people that feel that the mother tongue is in this seriously good enough especially when it comes to afrikaans but you know what it is all you are so do you and bring the base to take. a day in cape town is not complete without stopping by the atlantic ocea
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joe joe joe joe. x. said it was bold statements fun that let you still make them the stump is the same lumpy on the base the pain is still and the funk plenty loans to expose yet it may take it's a kind of conscience minded folks would smartly gauge the motor city still think associate the soul but only to make basic to be a stock just look you'll take stock picking difficulties to get space to steer the stage with the wouldn't you just. like to get some bagels coast. guard homicide never quite. literally go get the safety joint going to be sick to school what you're going to teach and decried and prostitution like the joe doll making like you go to a perfect execution to find a solution i suggest you keep your cool there's a lot of people that feel that their mother tongue is in the seriously good enough especially when it comes to africans you know 7 what it is who you are so do you and bring the bass this chick. a day in cape town is not complete without stopping by the atlantic ocean it's your most favorite way to recharge. your is out and we say touchiness goodbye from the mother city. so have you ever met a king in your life because i have although you're pretty unlikely to bump into one on the street but did you know that kabera the largest slum in east africa has its own royalty is not your average king its purpose is to help the people in canberra defeat hiv by advocating the use of condoms now that's a difficult task even for a king. be home his majesty the king of condoms. we join him in his kingdom kibera slum in kenya africa's largest appen slum. this is my kingdom his my territory is my pr
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joe joe joe joe. x. said it was bold statements funded like you would still make them to stump the say lumpy on the face of the game is still golf and be fun when people instead expose jadick may think it's a kind of conscience but its focus was moderately good they. still think of the status of bottom when it only takes made basic to be a stock just look you'll take that stock picking up to go to suggest you stick to your schedule if i would just. like to just obey those coast. guard homicide never quite. literally go get the safety joint going to be sick the school was going to inject rioting in prostitution like the joe doll made like you go up it gets a chance and you have to find a solution i suggest you keep your cool there's a lot of people that feel that their mother tongue is in the seriously good enough especially when it comes to afrikaans you know what it is who you are so do you and bring the bass this chick. a day in cape town is not complete without stopping by the atlantic ocean it's your most favorite way to recharge. the owner is out and we say touchiness goodbye from the mother city. so have you ever met a king in your life because i have although you're pretty unlikely to bump into one on the street but did you know that kabera the largest slum in east africa has its own royalty is not your average king his purpose is to help the people in canberra defeat hiv by advocating the use of condoms now that's a difficult task even for a king. behold his majesty the king of condoms. we join him in his kingdom kibera slum in kenya africa's the largest up until now. this is my kingdom does my
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joe to joe biden. i always thought that joe china or china joe and now china ukraine joe are better. in scandal and the media is trying to turn it into a trump scandal and the american people are going to buy it. one person will get $50,000 per month and there's only one person on trump doing the bidding that hunter biden was getting the money from and that's joe biden. it's comical to me. but i want to add one more thing. at the trump family has never enrich themselves. ivanka lost a shoe deal, donald trump lost macy's and he doesn't even draw a salary. he donates it back to the government. you can contrast that very well with the biden's who have gotten rich off of their service. >> a lot of people will be skeptical about any of these bills whether you believe it is, because the media has lost a lot of credibility. >> i think that's the difficult thing about the situation because the truth is, as far as anyone knows right now, there is no there, they are, with the joe biden investigation. i think the most that we can say is that it looks bad that hunter biden was on the board of th
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joe wells. my name's chris mccausland. sarah collins, joe wells. thanks for being amazing, guys. sarah collins, joe wells. cheers, goodnight. sarah collins, joe wells. thank you. sarah collins, joeeather is set to turn more unsettled but at the moment the weather remains quiet through the rest of this weekend. this is the weather front that will bring the change by monday but at the moment high pressure is still around so it is generally fine and dry but it will be cold early on sunday morning, plenty of sunshine away from the north—west but we'll see increasing cloud in western scotland, claudia northern ireland, one 01’ scotland, claudia northern ireland, one or two showers threatening the coastal areas from norfolk down to kent by the rest of england and wales, eastern scotland enjoying sunshine. this weather front, though, brings the change overnight and into monday. it brings rain, it will put eastwards and then it. and at this stage it looks like eastern parts of england generally speaking could be dry and may be brightening up could be dry and may be brightening up with a bit of sunshine. the rain easing off across scotland and northern ireland, north—west england and wal
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joe! we want joe! ♪ >> duffey! [applause] go duffey. bailey. [crowd booing] >> joe duffy. >> donahue. >> al donahue. >> joe duffy. al donahue. >> donahue. .> duffey >> william donahue. >> joseph duffey. duffey.ue for applause]d 20%, he qualifies to challenge at a primary. .he first roll call is over >> they destroy the party this way. >> last -- the dying of a dinosaur. >> you ought to press for it. if you put enough pressure on them, they will have to be a little careful. >> why make a big deal out of it? >> state senator ed marcus, he qualified to challenge in a primary. >> manufactured -- he has done anything -- everything in his power. >> we want joewant joe! [applause] >>[cheers and applause] >> maybe i will see what happens. >> thank you. unfortunately, i will not see you. >> good to meet you. i live abroad and i know the effect it has on the dollar. they have no respect. [indiscernible] >> they just keep on going. primary --ting this >> the first time he has had a primary in the democratic party. >> i think mr. donahue will give me a straight answer to this question. will he accept a limitation of $50,000 on television advertising? >> if we can turn that direction so the banging does not come through on the mic. >> the railroad system does not work. is answer to that question not more money in a failing system. time to bey good speaking to unions because they are important -- they are in trouble. the collective bargaining process is breaking down. i was in bristol last night. with anters are dealing shop. when they went out on strike this year, they are no longer dealing with a local printing shop. they are dealing with a congl
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joe got out onjoe route on 200 as well. —— joe root. got out onjoe route on 200 as well. ——joe root. really got out onjoe route on 200 as well. —— joere a double 100 for australia and put us in the position we are in now. obviously yesterday with the weather and everything like that and then today, we turned up and it was a decent day and it looked —— fairto the was a decent day and it looked —— fair to the play that the way that he played... he got a bit between his teeth and in great form. you got to give him a lot of credit for the way he is playing and scoring the i’ufis way he is playing and scoring the runs he has. northern ireland warmed up for their euro qualifer against germany on monday with a 1—0 win over luxembourg this evening. but the goal did come in some rather bizarre circumstances, which our reporter lydia campbell can explain. with bigger matches on the horizon, he named an experimental team to ta ke he named an experimental team to take on luxembourg. that side included a debut from a man who was playing northern league football 18 months ago. in a first a few chances it was a moment of complete calamity that ope
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joe biden is his greatest threat, understands what joe biden's greatest weakness. he knows hunter biden is a weakness for joe biden. he knows that if he attacks hunter biden, it puts joe biden in a bad position. today joeiden could be if this was about anybody else, could be out on television attacking donald trump. joe biden's not doing that today because he doesn't want to talk about his son who's had various problems, not the kind of problems donald trump has asserted but other problems. and donald trump knows that. this is a hit job on the son, the last surviving son, his brother passed away. this is the last son. part of the reason why joe biden didn't run for president in 2016, because he wanted to take care after his family after he lost beau. this is an achilles hill of joe biden psychically. and donald trump is like where can i go to get the oppo to get at this guy's heart. >> because i have no conscience, i have no morals and i don't care about using the united states government and possibly foreign aid to carry out my campaign. >> correct. and if that's ukraine or if that's utah, donald trump is going to go wherever he needs to go and do whatever he needs to do, no matter how unethical, immo
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joe biden and his family. >> no, i didn't. but joe biden said it about his son. joe biden was very dishonest what he did. >> what? >> joe biden is the one that did a very very bad thing. if a republican ever said what joe biden said, they would be getting the electric chair right now. >> i'm joined by senator chris murphy of connecticut, a member of the senate foreign relations committee, senator, once again you see trump in action making these benghazi comments, this e-mail stuff with no claim of actual information, no claim of guilt on the other side, just throwing crap out there, but let's talk about the president, and what he did admit, he admitted talking to a leader of a foreign country, trying to get dirt from him on a political opponent using his goodwill, generally speaking, it doesn't have to apply, it seems to me, to whether it's the foreign aid he's holding up, freezing at that time, $250 million in foreign aid or a visit to the white house. it's the goodwill of an american president for sale, your thoughts, to get dirt, senator murphy. >> think of it this way, if the mueller report had included evidence of a phone call between donald trump and vladimir putin in which donald trump asked vla
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joe von vich. joe van vich. eat! joe von vich joe van vich well, it does need to be a vehicle. but - i need this out of my house. (vo) with fair, transparent value for every trade-in... enterprise makes it easy. - [woman] with my shark, i deep clean messes like this, this, and even this. but i don't have to clean this, because the self-cleaning brush roll removes hair while i clean. - [announcer] shark, the vacuum that deep cleans now cleans itself. i am royalty of racing, i am the twisting thundercloud. raise your steins to the king of speed. you wanna see something thatamazing?ing. go to hilton instead of a travel site and you'll experience a whole new range of emotions like... the relaxing feeling of knowing you're getting the best price. these'll work. the utter delight of free wi-fi... . oh man this is the best part. isn't that you? yeah. and the magic power of unlocking your room with your phone. i can read minds too. really? book at hilton.com. if you find a lower rate, we match it and give you 25% off that stay. expect better. expect hilton. (classical music playing throughout) quietly running the world. creating jobs and fueling the economy. you're small business owners, and there's nothing small about your business. that's why with dell small business technology advisors. you'll get tailored product solutions, expert tech advice and one-on-one partnership. to help your small business do big things. call an advisor today at 877-buy-dell. ♪ >>> so president trump today on a tweet storm this morning following a contentious whistleblower segment on his favorite tv network fox news coming as several outlets as well as the "new york times" details the on air rift and the behind the scenes drama that is playing out as fox covers the impeachment inquiry. the writer of that piece joins me right now. so it's kind of interesting. i will say the tea has been especially good the last couple of weeks. what makes this different? >> it's an exciting time to be a media reporter these days. as you said, there is always some tension between the primetime commentators and the news reporting side. we had this exchange where you had tucker carlson who is a primetime conservative host basically 234suinsulting shepar smith on his air. >> we actually have that clip. take a look at the exchange. >> partisan guest who supports president trump was asked about judge napolitano's legal assessment. when he was asked, he said unchallenged, judge napolitano is a fool, attacking our colleague who is here to offer legal assessments on our air in our work home is repugnant. >> repugnant. not clear if that was you or me. i'm not very partisan. it doesn't seem honest when a host pretends that the answer is obvious. >> what do you make of that interaction? >> well, i will go out on a limb and say there is some sharp elbows in the cable news world. usually you don't really see it on the air like that. >> it's a picture of an indication of a bigger picture that's going on behind the scenes. >> fox's washington bureau is covering the white house. for months now there has been grumbling that the president will grant the interviews to the sean hannitys of the world but not necessarily spending as much time being willing to talk to chris wallace. >> i think that this impeachment inquiry has really like thrown into relief what's been going on for a long time. you have news reporters putting out details that are quite unflattering to the president about his interactions with ukraine. and then at night from 8:00 to 11:00 p.m. just a nonstop this is a witch-hunt that the democrats have gone mad and the president has done nothing wrong and a real sort of dissidents between what viewers are seeing in the evenings and daytime. >>. >> the long-time chairman who had an iron fist, he would not allow this to happen. but he has been gone for a few years. it feels like the anchors have more autonomy that they can say what they want. this seemed to show that there is not that discipline across time slots. >> we'll see how it plays out. >> thank you. >>> coming up in the next hour with impeachment taking much of the national focus, how can the 2020 candidates try to stand out? the impact of the impeachment inquiry on the race. e impact o quiry on the race. you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from anyone else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist. nothing stronger. nothing gentler. nothing lasts longer. flonase sensimist. 24 hour non-drowsy allergy relief you get more than yourfree shipping.ir, you get everything you need for your home at a great price, the way it works best for you, i'll take that. wait honey, no. when you want it. you get a delivery experience you can always count on. you get your perfect find at a price to match, on your own schedule. you get fast and free shipping on the things that make your home feel like you. that's what you get when you've got wayfair. so shop now! johnsbut we're also a cancer fighting, hiv controlling, joint replacing, and depression relieving company. from the day you're born we never stop taking care of you. i am royalty of racing, i am the twisting thundercloud. raise your steins to the king of speed. red lobster's endless shrimp is back for just $15.99. get all the shrimp you want, any way you want 'em. like new sriracha-honey shrimp, savory grilled teriyaki shrimp, classic shrimp scampi and more! red lobster's endless shrimp is $15.99. hurry in. (door bell rings) it's ohey. this is amazing. with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis, are you okay? even when i was there, i never knew when my symptoms would keep us apart. so i talked to my doctor about humira. i learned humira can help get, and keep uc under control when other medications haven't worked well enough. and it helps people achieve control that lasts. so you can experience few or no symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. be there for you, and them. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. >>> i'm kendis gibson. we are tracking several developments into the impeachment inquiry into president trump. the man in charge of that says the whistleblower has agreed to testify, the timing very soon. why is ukraine at the center of this investigation? look at how the tiny country has been repeatedly been tethered to president trump's orbit. >>> and senate majority leader mitch mcconnell will play a critical role if the impeachment reaches the senate. how the reaction differs from the one that surrounded president trump back in the late 1990s. the president is expecting a tough few weeks ahead. first the chairman confirming earlier today that a deal has now been reached for testimony from the whistleblower and a response to the whistleblower complaint, members of the house intelligence and other key committees are working through recess, skejing new depositions while secretary of state mike pompeo has been subpoenaed for documents. the committee has scheduled a deposition for marie yovanovitch. she was recalled after becoming a political target and left her post the same day ukraine's president met and told a u.s. delegation to increase sanctions on russia. our special envoy to ukraine will be deposed on thursday. kurt volker was reportedly instrumental in organizing rudy giuliani's interactions with top ukrainian politicians including the president. and on friday, secretary of state mike pompeo must turn over requested documents related to trump's interactions with ukraine. will he do it? next week three more state department officials are scheduled to be deposed. for more on all of this, let's go to the white house and kelly o'donnell. >> reporter: what this really gives us is an outline of some of what the committee thinks are the best avenues to learn more information. they have been battling with the department of state for a while to try to get information. so ultimately use the power of subpoena which is serious to be sure to level that against the secretary of state who is in charge of all documents as the head of that department and that is a quest for documents, not a request for him to appear. and so will the white house comply? we don't have an answer yet. so far the white house position has been not to comply with a lot of the requests made by congress. and will they take a different position with this sort of new set of facts and new controversy? we don't yet know. the committee used the whistleblower's complaint as almost a road map of taking names from that complaint that helped to fill out a picture of the allegations that were outlined by the whistleblower in the document that has now worked its way to congress and has been made public and all of us are able to see it. so when you pointed out the long time foreign service officer who had been the u.s. abdommbassado ukraine. kurt volker who just resigned from his position, his interactions with rudy giuliani and so forth. so if these officials are not barred from testifying with some assertion of some kind of privilege which i am not a lawyer so i can't anticipate what the white house position will be, but if they provide these depositions, and these would be interviews behind the scenes, not a big hearing like we often see when televised, but questions and answers often with the committee staff, not necessarily the elected members of the house intelligence committee and other committees that are related to this. it would be important fact finding to try to fill in what some individuals may know because of their interactions in the narrative that was laid out by the whistleblower. can they corroborate and find new insights. a lot of questions still to be answered and the unknowns about will they participate, will they be blocked in any way from participating, that's some of what we will be tracking. >> have we gotten any indication of when we might hear from the state department as to whether they will cooperate with this? >> reporter: just in my experience, they often don't give an answer until right before a scheduled event using all the time available. and often they may be having conversations behind the scenes with lawyers from one agency and a committee talking about this. sometimes we don't find out until a hearing or deadline is imminent to know what the posture of the white house will be. we don't have specifics on that yet, but it is certainly clear what the committee's road map is for how they want to proceed. that is certainly going to fuel a lot of interest when the rest of congress is around for a recess. members of the committee on intelligence will be working and so will the staff members behind the scenes on some of the issues to try to move this forward since they want the impeachment inquiry to move with some speed although they have said move quickly but not in haste. >> and the next imminent deadline is next wednesday, october 2 for the former ambassador who has been deposed. thanks very much. >>> ukraine as you know is a little known eastern europen country, but it is now at the center of major headlines across the country and the world. the trump/ukraine connection may not be as new as many people think. one vox article explores how ukraine has been at the center of president trump's scandals since the start from former campaign manager manafort's work. joining me now is alex ward who is a staff writer for vox and also the writer of the article. thank you fl being here. so one of the first points that stood out for me in your article, it states that trump sold out ukraine to try to cozy up to russia. why did he say that? >> well, we do remember from the republican national convention, basically you might recall that there was a controversy over what happened to language about giving military aid to ukraine. originally, the plan was to say that the trump administration was in support of lethal aid and then got taken out to appropriate assistance. so there was a worry that maybe manafort who was the trump campaign chairman at the time or other people didn't want to commit to offering lethal assistance to ukraine in order to cozy up to russia. >> let's talk about manafort. beyond whatever role he may have played at the convention, of course, he is in lock up here in new york. whatever role he may have played, what sort of connection does he have to ukraine? >> quite a big one. he was for years a lobbiest for the pro russia group political party, was an a adviser to marie yovanovitch. and he helped that party gain power. there was a lot of russia skepticism in ukraine at the time before the rise to power e. hoomaintained a lot of connections with billionaires like oleg deripaska who had connections with the kremlin. it was only natural that ukraine would come to the headlines again just based on manafort's nutrality. >> it is central to this investigation, one of the hottest searched terms in the last ten days is where is ukraine. fascinating. thank you. >>> in the meantime, the state department is now ramping up its investigation into the e-mail records of dozens of current and former officials who sent messages to former secretary of state hillary clinton. joining me now to break down the latest on this reporting. alex, so this is reporting from the washington post. it came out of the blue over the weekend. a lot of officials, more than 130 of them said that they have been targeted by the state department over this. >> these are current and former state department officials who sent e-mails to hillary clinton's private account and the state department is now coming to them several years later and saying that there was information in the e-mails that was not classified at the time but that they now are retroactively classifying and they can put the officials in jeopardy because they potentially mishandle classified information. a lot of people who receive the letters from the state department say this is essentially a witch-hunt against them, a political act by trump's state department to try to drum up this issue that of course was such a major political issue in 2016. they think it's potentially another abuse of power by the trump administration using their official authority to try to enact a political end. it seems like a million years ago that we are talking about hillary clinton's e-mails. if you consume conservative news, this is something you hear about all the time still to this day. so it's very much a live issue for trump's space. they are very much primed to hear messages about it and to think that hillary clinton is still an important political figure who needs to be fought and that they might reward trump for fighting her. this could be potentially another advancement in that strategy. >> it is a strategy that they ahave hung on to for quite some time. appreciate the reporting. coming up, the impeachment inquiry has been at the center of the tension. how will 2020 presidential hopefuls work to get out from under its shadow and try to captivate a national audience? how the investigation is actually impacting 2020. and in the u.k., palace intrigue. the british prime minister pboris johnson forced to apologize to the queen. a live report ahead. apologize to t qheueen. a live report ahead. shrimp yeah! red lobster's endless shrimp is back for just $15.99. get all the shrimp you want, any way you want 'em. like new sriracha-honey shrimp, savory grilled teriyaki shrimp, classic shrimp scampi and more! red lobster's endless shrimp is $15.99. hurry in. what's going on? it's the 3pm slump. should have had a p3. oh yeah. should have had a p3. need energy? get p3. with a mix of meat, cheese and nuts. our because of smoking.ital. but we still had to have a cigarette. had to. but then, we were like. what are we doing? the nicodermcq patch helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. nicodermcq. you know why, we know how. sfx: upbeat music a lot of clothes you normally take to the cleaners aren't dirty dirty. they just need a quick refresh. try new febreze clothing quick dry mist. it eliminates odors and refreshes lightly-worn clothing. breathe happy febreze... la la la la la. >> he's going to be a cop. >> so that clip right there shows part of the reason why the city of houston and the greater harris county texas area are mourning the ten-year veteran who was shot multiple times. he was ambushed. the 41 year old was one of the first sheriff's deputies to where a traditional turbine and beard on duty. >>> the explosive whistleblower complaints that has prompted an impeachment inquiry. as the daily beast puts it, russia's finger prints are all over trump's ukraine whistleblower scandal. it reads elements outlining various laws pursued by the trump administration with respect to ukraine keep connecting right back to russia, always russia, russia, russia, like marsha, marsha marsha. joining me now is julia davis and msnbc legal analyst danny. welcome to both of you. i want to start with you. that article that you wrote there, give me a sense, explain why is rush thaw main benefactor of this controversy? >> well, that's something that president trump would do well to explain why his objectives seem to so closely align with russia's objectives, because if you look at what he has been trying to accomplish in ukraine, it would not serve american national interests at all, but it would definitely serve russia well as he was trying to have the biden investigation undermine the findings of the u.s. intelligence agencies and at the same time undermine his top political rival. >> based on 24 reporting, you know the region, why would putin benefit from all that the president did with ukraine there? >> because it would undermine biden, first of all, and secondly it would clear russia in the dnc hack and election interference because that investigation also aimed to undermine the proven fact that russia interfered in our elections and instead the conspiracy theory about crowd strike would attempt to make it look as though ukraine and not russia interfered in our elections. >> let me turn to you on all of this. legal aspect and ramifications. if it's taking to congress and they find that the white house kind of violated some sort of national security rules -- >> the president has the power unlike almost anybody else in the government to classify and declassify information. so in a sense congress doesn't have a lot of power to control what the president classified and declassifies and arguably maybe even puts within one coded area versus one other. congress's sole remedy for anything bad that the president has always been the impeachment process and virtually nothing else. they can conduct investigations and ultimately if they can get the necessary votes the house of representatives just needs a majority, they can impeach or essentially indict the president and then take that case over to the senate. >> do we have a sense of how the kremlin is responding to all of this? >> the kremlin is convinced that the republicans will prevent trump's impeachment from going through. and they are convinced that he will still prevail and at the same time along with trump, giuliani and the entire camp, they continue pressuring ukraine telling them that they have to investigate the bidens or else give back the u.s. aid funding that they have received. >> and a lot of people of course parsing the nine-page complaintp and trying to find out and figure out legally did the president violate any election laws and s if what is said is t? >> the whistleblower complaint arrived after we received a copy of the transcript and maybe a memo. i think the big question that is still unresolved is what the heck was that summary and how is it created? you want to know about the authenticity of the document. this could be mueller.2 because this is an investigation in a sense of an alleged solicitation from another country of something of value that could benefit a campaign. those kinds of allegations if true are very similar to the same kind of allegations that were made about the infamous trump tower meeting in which it was alleged that there was a request to a foreign power for something of benefit to the campaign. there could be potentially violations of campaign financial laws and violations of the traditional idea of bribery, corruption crimes and extortion. we know the president can't be indicted while he's in office. >> i'm very curious on this. we have this reporting i believe from the "new york times" just a couple days ago saying that the president has had other conversations that have been put in that secret computer server with the saudi royal family and with vladimir putin. based on the whole impeachment inquiry, could the congressional leaders get their hands on that stuff? >> it's difficult to say because the president has the power to classify things including within that power arguably is the power to put it in any box that they want. but we also know from history that congress has very broad subpoena power. we learned that when the nixon administration resisted turning over documents. congress can make the request and battle it out in court. the challenge there is that court battles take a lot of time. >> and the democrats are hoping to speed this through at least before 2020. thank you for your time. still to come, top senate republican mitch mcconnell has been through proceedings like this before, but his process is different this time around. a look at how omcconnell handled bill clinton's impeachment then. d bill clinton's impeachment then. so when my windshield broke... >> woman: what?! >> vo: ...i searched for someone who really knew my car. i found the experts at safelite autoglass. >> woman: hi! >> vo: with their exclusive technology, they fixed my windshield... then recalibrated the camera attached to my glass so my safety systems still work. who knew that was a thing?! >> woman: safelite has service i can trust. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ panera's new warm grain full of flavor, color,. full of- woo! full of good. so you can be too. try our new warm grain bowls today. panera. food as it should be. johnsbut we're also a cancer fighting, hiv controlling, joint replacing, and depression relieving company. from the day you're born we never stop taking care of you. but it's not really something yoyou want to buy.. it's not sexy... oh delicious. or delicious... or fun. ♪ but since you need both car and home insurance, why not bundle them with esurance and save up to 10%. which you can spend on things you really want to buy, like ah well i don't know what you'd wanna buy cause i'm just a guy on your tv. esurance. it's surprisingly painless. 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(food grunting menacingly) when the food you love doesn't love you back, stay smooth and fight heartburn fast with tums smoothies. ♪ tum tum-tum tum tums juul record.ums smoothies. they took $12.8 billion from big tobacco. juul marketed mango, mint, and menthol flavors, addicting kids to nicotine. five million kids now using e-cigarettes. the fda said juul ignored the law with misleading health claims. now juul is pushing prop c, to overturn san francisco's e-cigarette protections. say no to juul, no to big tobacco, no to prop c. that's why xfinity mobile lets you design your own data. you can share 1, 3, or 10 gigs of data between lines, mix in lines of unlimited, and switch it up at any time. all with millions of secure wifi hotspots and the best lte everywhere else. it's a different kind of wireless network, designed to save you money. switch and save up to $400 a year on your wireless bill. plus, get $250 off the latest phones. that's simple. easy. awesome. call, visit, or go to xfinitymobile.com >>> it turns out we are not alone in the political crisis. some critical days ahead for boris johnson, prime minister of the united kingdom for 67 days. so, of course, this is a honeymoon period, right? isn't it? so johnson could become the shortest serving british prime minister ever with the looming possibility of being forced out of office as soon as this week. he is facing widespread calls to resign after lying to the queen and unlawfully suspending parliament. what is next? let's turn to matt bradley joining me from our london bureau and following all the theatrics. we are so happy that y'all are having trouble there. it makes us look better. what's ahead this week? >> that kind of booing and language, you hear that in the halls of parliament as well as on the street. it's not really that unusual. you're going to hear a lot of it coming up this week because on one end there is the political imperative behind the vote that will probably have them try to oust boris johnson. the opposition are trying to do everything they possibly can to avoid what's called a no deal brexit. and if that means removing the prime minister a month before britain is supposed to crash out of the european union with no deal, then members of parliament say that's worth it. there is also a somewhat emotional element. bors johnson tried to knee cap the parliament by suspending them for weeks ahead of the scheduled leaving from the european union, brexit. that was a very bold and risky move, one that looks like now it will back fire spectacularly. this parliament is now out for blood. they are furious at prime minister boris johnson for their attempt to silence them. so i should tell you what is a no deal brexit? it means instead of leaving the european union with a noeegotiad deal, the u.k. would leave falling back on standard rules. lots of leftist politicians worry that this will leave a giant brexit-shaped hole in the u.k.'s dealings with europe. and that would be disastrous for the economy according to a lot of prominent economists and members of parliament. >> props to you for explaining no deal brexit in about 34 seconds. i think we've gotten a lot of practice doing that in the last three years. >> thank you. >>> democratic 2020 candidates who are already struggling to stand out in a crowded field are now face agnew obstacle, impeachment. how the investigation into the president is impacting the presidential race coming up. ie presidential race coming up. 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(food grunting menacingly) when the food you love doesn't love you back, stay smooth and fight heartburn fast with tums smoothies. ♪ tum tum-tum tum tums with tums smoothies. on a scale of one to five? wait... one to five? when it comes to feelings, it's more like five million. there's everything from happy to extremely happy. there's also angry. i'm really angry, clive! actually, really angry. thank you. and seat 36b angry. you're clive owen. and you're barefoot. yeah... there's also apprehension... ...regret... ...relief. oh and there's empathy... ah, i got this in zurich! actually, what's the opposite of empathy? but what if your business could understand what your customers are feeling... and then do something about it. you can turn disappointment into gratitude. clive, you got to try this. i can't i'm working. turn problems into opportunities. thanks drone. change the future of your business. change the whole experience. alright who wants to go again? i do! i do! ♪ i have a really good feeling about this. ♪ (classical music playing throughout) >>> house intelligence committee chair revealing today that the whistleblower will speak to lawmakers and very soon. this morning representative schiff said the whistleblower who filed an anonymous complaint expressing concerns has reached an agreement to testify in front of congress. that complaint, by the way, marked the turning point for democrats who are now charging ahead with their impeachment inkwirpy into the president. the majority of americans apparently now support this decision. we saw this this morning. 55% now supporting or approving an impeachment inquiry. house democrats have scheduled depositions from five senior state department officials. you see them there and the dates. while all this is happening, the trump state department is diving head first into a completely different investigation concerning hillary clinton's e-mails. according to the "washington post" as many as 130 officialvise been contacted by state department investigators, a list that includes senior officials that reported directly to clinton as well as others whose e-mails were at some point relayed to her inbox. of course, we all remember those illusive e-mails, kind of overshadowed the presidential election. could this impeachment inquiry do the same thing for 2020? a lot of people are wondering this. so vox here posting this saying the very real possibility that america or axious will face the theater of house hearings and then a senate trial in d.c. while campaigns unfold has both parties scrambling to recalibrate strategies. here to talk strategy the president of global situation room incorporated who served as global director and. welcome to both of you. a lot of people are wondering how this impeachment proceeding process would represent an opportunity to possibly reunite the democrats? >> without question, it's an issue where the democrats are unanimous storm -- their tropical storm to pursue the inquiry. you had elizabeth warren gaining some serious momentum. now that has been stalled somewhat because you have the introduction of this major impeachment issue. so there is an opportunity for some of those other candidates to try to break through in this race. one thing i think will be key is going low and local while the national attention is focussed on impeachment. >> i want to ask your take on the whole polling that we saw out today. where you saw for the first time 55% of americans approve of this impeachment proceeding. i was looking at the numbers from the previous proceedings. we have never had the numbers that high. could this actually be a turning point for your party? >> well, i think it depends where the story goes from here. you know, there is been tremendous coverage over the last four or five days of this story really going into early last week. and so polling is a lagging indicator. it's not instantaneous. the american public has to basically comprehend and understand and the polling companies have to contact them and get responses. there is always a little bit of a delay. look, i don't think that a majority supporting an inquiry doesn't mean a majority supports impeachment. they are going to want to look at the evidence, look at the facts, look at the history and then make a judgment. and that's what every member of congress and every senator will have to do. >> i should mention the polling that i'm seeing from august back of 1998. 34% of americans supported impeachment against president clinton. even in december, that number was 34%. we are right now at 55% in this polling. we're very early on into this inquiry and into this investigation. >> well, in speaking of delays and lagging indicators, i think you're seeing in the republican ranks on capitol hill a rather significant lag behind where the american public is, clearly where the facts are on this case. and what's interesting is as this inquiry proceeds, it's going to become more and more tenuous for the republican leaders facing difficult reelections to provide cover for president trump. and let's not forget, at the end of the day, this doesn't necessarily end up with trump being removed from office, but if republican senators have to vote on protecting him, that could be a costly vote. >> and let me ask you about joeents ago from sam stein at the daily beast reporting that the biden campaign has now written letters to top executives and hosts at major news networks demanding that they stop booking rudy giuliani. i know you're learning this for the first time. why would the campaign do that? what's at play here? >> i don't know. that's a puzzling campaign tactic at this stage. you know, look, the biden team obviously thinks that rudy is making inaccurate allegations. he was citing sworn depositions this morning on one of the sunday shows. i don't know. rudy giuliani is a key figure here whether you like it or not. i don't think giuliani very much helps trump's case when he geoe on television. clearly he is a participant here. i think the better question is what is this impeachment inquiry going to effect biden's presidential campaign? they have talked about how they have seen a fundraising bump. i suspect he may get a polling bump as democrats unify. i think there will be lots of questions about ho
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joe biden. and joe biden's son. in a way, the president wins again. he got it out there. joe biden, o joe biden's son, ukraine. >> i think he just wants that smear, to be out there again and again, in the discussions because it gets in the mind of voters. >> republicans, "wall street journal" editorial saying conversations with world leaders should be kfconfidential. true or false? >> no. they can be released. they are released overtime. this is a choice about what the administration wants and what the administration and congress demands. >> the most recent polling out of cnn. the gold standard, really. showing elizabeth warren surging. and the margin of error, two points ahead of joeg in the right direction. she keeps getting stronger. if she can pull this off in iowa and new hampshire, i think this would be a momentum-building moment. she has an organization, she has ideas and excitement. >> and hasn't directly gone after biden. that's the strategy. you think that changes? or the slow and steady course continues? >> she will go after him on ideas. i'm about substance and policy. that's what she wants. she won't be vicious. but i think she will say there's a distinct set of offerings in this primary and democrats need to choose her. >> it looks like biden is static there and she is pulling from sanders' support. >> his whole foundation is i'm most electable. if she loses in the fist two races. if he loses, does he claim that? >> nice to see you this morning. >>> 90 heads of stated are in new york for the general assembly. president trump is leading a talk on religious persecution. >> the president will not attend the climate action summit, where the secretary-gene
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joe biden. joe biden is not donald trump. people like joe biden. they may not know enough about joe biden to know the dings in his past.n they find him out they may be disappointed. fundamentally democrats like him. >> democrats are fundamentally horrified and terfired. >> for the same reason they are turned off by president obama. if you're going to come frapresident obama they would defend him. he is on their side fundamentally. i think when you are trying to take out a front runner, youfr don't do it in a way that presumes people don't like this person. i think that was too harsh on his part. i thought beto had a great night. now i can see in him the confidence. he just wants to send a message that i think is authentic. and then my last is that warren, no one touched her. she has been coherent on everything she said. >> did she get enough air time? >> no one did. it's the same number of people. >> i know we have to go. nobody said a word about senator harris. an attack on trump is exactly what they want. >> by the way, mayor pete had a good night, too. it was very strong. >> chris matthews is going to get the honor
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movie joe joe rabbit now this is a black comedy about a young boy in the hitler youth who has an imaginary friend in the form of. first let's see scott just let's see a quick short clip. joe joe my old friend play until 5. and then they call me a scared rabbit people used to say a lot of nasty things about me. hi scott now scott that's sounds quite surreal you've seen it sotelo small. yeah i actually got a bad word for this this is is a quite unusual film has a weird pitch life it is a story about a young german boy who idolizes the nazis set close to the end of the 2nd world war and then he has this imaginary fred who is a version of adult sort of a boyhood childish version of a goofy adult hitler and then the boy himself comes into conflict because he discovers that his mother is actually hiding a jewish girl in their house at the time and so he has to make this issue of whether to turn the girl in and be loyal to his doxie beliefs or or do the right thing a very interesting movie it could have really gone horribly wrong i have to say the premise is so problematic but the director here the new zealand director tuckey what. he's he he also plays hitler and actually in the cl
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joe biden. so why even discuss joe biden, they say. let's be clear. the joe biden reference is seconds in a 30-minute long phone call. joe himself just months earlier was on tape beating his chest on how he leveraged our taxpayer dollars to get a prosecutor fired, the same prosecutor investigating and about to intear gate his son working -- interrogate his son working in an energy company wha bar come . and the democrats use mob boss analogy? >> if the prosecutor is not fired, you are not getting the money. well, son of a pitch, h -- son h he got fired. judge jeanine: that's a quid pro quo. you don't do, you don't get. donald trump said nothing like quid pro quo joeid. let the democrats have the unmitigated gal to say biden didn't mean what he said and trump meant what he didn't say. by the way, since when aren't allegations of corruption worth looking into? in fact, there is a treaty between the united states and ukraine. it calls for mutual assistance in criminal matters signed in fact by bill clinton, which allows the two countries to request and provide evidence to each other. it creates the legal underpinning to share information about corruption. joe biden does not get a pass because he's running for president. there is no such prophylactic because you announce for president. it doesn't give the right to avoid questions. whether you are allowed to ask about corruption shouldn't depend upon whether you are republican or democrat. according to adam schiff, the same guy who tricked himself and anyone else rush together front of the camera to claim he had evidence of russia collusion. we don't need a quid pro quo. why do we need evidence when w
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joe biden? >> joe biden? yeah. if he's going to be the candidate, it's joe biden or donald trump, i'm voting for joe biden. >> i don'treporter: leaving the fairgrounds we traveled north trading this blue county for a red one, luzerne county. arguably the county that gave donald trump pennsylvania in 016, even though they hadn't voted for a republican here since 1988. trump's trade policies and the vote from farmers could determine whether or not it stays that way. over the past year, bankruptcy rep 13% in part rmers nationwide the second year of retaliatory tariffs on u.s. agricultural products. >> this particular farm has been in the family since the 1930s. we've been farming in this valley since the 1850s. >> reporter: curtis voted for trump in the 2016 primary but not in the general election. he explained some of the difficulties that farmers are facing. >> it makes it more challenging to come up with a marketing plan to plan your future sales agreements. if the market is highly volatile it makes you be more emotional in your choices. so that can be difficult. >> what are your concerns? >> my concern is it doesn't
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joe and john vicki on l. joe was a new york city >> to close i want to tell you about two brothers, joe and john. joean nypd detective, john, new york city firefighter, both answered the call on 9/11, both tragically lost their lives. the last words both men sent to their beloved dad was also a new york city police officer, said i love you, dad. today we remember them, their sons, three of the sons are in military government service, one is a member of the nypd, amazing legacy for that family and remember all those who lost their lives that day, learn the right lessons from 9/11, god bless all of them and god bless my friend barbara olson who i think of all the time but especially think of her on this day, one of the most courageous people i knew and always been r
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he approached joe kennedy to buy it because joe offered because joe operative by the hurst publications when they were in trouble and joernard baruch and he said no. everybody in america said no. .. >> he never forgave her. never. she is the only person who did him strong who he never forgave. as you can see there's a very famous new yorker, diana friedman, was at harper's bazaar, talking to carmelo snow, by now carmen his brother, light, is the general manager of all of those companies and he is one of seven people who was bailing out first at the same time. if that weren't bad enough, he gets prostrate cancer. and he has a heart attack. he is the radical process is to me, it's a harbor to say. basically, he is in such poor health he doesn't know what he is going to do. there is this lady who he meets at a cocktail party. he is still married but is now deciding if he is prepared to run this young woman's life. she will build have any more children with him. he's not quite sure what is going to do about it. and this lady into his life and everybody knows who she is? at the time she was claire booth brokaw. he met her at
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joe biden holds a commanding lead over the democratic field. i do think we've talked a lot about joe biden's gaffes. >> joe biden talks about joe biden's gaffes. >> it has been built into his identity because a lot of voters give him a pass. to david's point, he's well liked and part of who he is. some might argue, his campaign argues, nothing to do with age, he was gaffe prone 10 or 20 years ago and sometimes he's gaffe pro now and that's part of the reason people like him. we'll see if he can go toe-to-toe with president trump. >> it did seem at the end of the debate he seemed to be flagging in energy. this is a real issue for biden. you can see it in biden as well. there is a concern, he would be eight years older than any president that has taken office. people are looking carefully to see if he's up to it. he'll either prove he can during the course of the campaign or he won won't. it awkward when someone empbss. he talked about the debate and turned into a commentator. >> that's an interesting take, interesting take. after three hours you sit down for interviews and it's different the position -- >> my guess is he if he to do it over again, he would have phrased it differently. >> there was a lot of substantive discussion on the debate stage, a real discussion about health care. finally another real discussion about foreign policy again. a lot of time spent on gun violence. president obama kind of part of that -- all of those elements of debate. he got a lot of credit and he made out quite well. it did lead to another call out moment, if you will, again between julian castro and joe biden that i thought was an important moment. listen to this. >> he wants to take credit for obama's work but not have to answer any questions. >> i did not say i don't stand -- i stand with barack obama all eight years, good, bad, and indifferent. that's write stand. i did not say i did not stand with him. >> what do you think of this one, david? >> i think that castro caught biden, a mistake, jorge ramos asked a very challenging question about immigration and whether or not he would knowledge the policy of depo deportation was a mistake and biden said i was the vice president. the clear implication was i was not the decisionmaker there. he can't do that. you can't have it both ways, run essentially as the partner of the president and claim credit for his radar and then run away from it. i think when castro made that point biden quickly realized he was in deep water here and swam back to shore and said, no, i embrace the whole record. >> one thing that was clear from kamala harris du
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joe biden out of this. and kamala harris said, leave joe biden alone. are you telling us that the inquiry into joe biden was ethical and moral? even if joe biden did absolutely nothing wrong, was he the best person to send to ukraine to talk about corruption? or should they have found somebody else? >> nikki haley chose that framing so she's not really being supportive outright of the president but she's also not being supportive of the impeachment inquiry. she's sort of taking middle ground here. it was suggested she went after kamala harris on this issue because moet dst democrats are saying the same thing harris is saying. they don't want to go too far in using this to attack biden in any way. it's interesting that she chose harris in particular. >> it's more interesting to me that nikki haley decided at this moment that she wanted to be part of the conversation. ambition and politics are funny things. we'll see how that happens. let's look at some reactions from democrat. massachusetts senator warren suggested that she would consider barring biden's children from serving on boards of foreign companies, the very kind of business arrangement trump has used in unfounded attacks accusing biden and his son hunter of corruption. senator bernie sanders, who in 2016 defended hillary clinton against attacks over her use of a private email server as secretary of state, sidestepped a question about whether the biden controversy makes him a weaker. >> it's about his personal life, about i see had stahis standingy and how it's affected his father's political life at times. it will be interesting to see what democrats do with it going forward. that's really a larger test that we've seen. they struggle to fight against each other, attack each other, but also maintain this clear vision that donald trump is going to be their main opponent, and that's been a balancing act between the two of them and continue clearly to still be one. >> i think what democrats have also learned in just these last few months is that attacking joeeally help them and attacking him for something donald trump is raising really isn't going to help them. that's the calculation they're all making for now as we're seeing senator warren and some of these other candidates pick up some momentum against joe biden if they change that calculation. we saw senator warren just this weekend. she didn't even mention impeachment, the inquiry, at all on the stump this weekend. so if she starts to lean into that at all, whether she brings up joe biden or donald trump more directly on the campaign trail, that will be something to look out for. >> in the debate in a couple weeks, we'll see what that looks like. >>> just ahead in a new interview, hillary clinton says president trump is obsessed with her. find out why she believes that, next. >>> let's close. quick lightning rod. go around the table with our great reporters, including this from hillary clinton. >> i believe he knows he's an illegitimate president. he knows. he knows that there were a b
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joe biden did. >> joe biden and his son are corrupt. if a republican ever did what joe biden did, if a republican ever said what joe biden said, they'd be getting the electric chair by right now. >> all right, that comes as trump continues to defend pressuring the ukrainian president to investigate biden on a phone call, even though, we should be very clear, there's no evidence of any wrongdoing by joemething that has been extensively litigated and covered. "outfront" gloria borger, political, politics editor for "the new york times," patrick heal healey. the electric chair? >> you know, this is trump hyperbole at its best or worst. the reality is president trump has been spreading this what looks like pretty clear misinformation for awhile now in terms of these unsubstantiated allegations about joe biden. and the reality is this is how president trump plans to run his re-election campaign, whether it's joe biden or frankly any other democrat who comes out. what we've seen is the president being willing to basically say whatever he thinks. and use the office of the president, in this case a phone call with a leader of a foreign power, in which he's willing to raise the possibility of investigating one of his chief rivals. this is a presidency, we've said it many times, like none we've seen before. but this particular moment is an instance where president trump at least seems to feel
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joe biden against any kind of. >> good statement. >> against any damage from his gaffes. i really do. in any other time, maybe against anybody else, joe biden's occasional gaffes, joe is joe, would get him in trouble. against donald trump, forget it. it's nothing impaired to donald trump. >> but, i think joeutation for gaffes. misstatements. >> yes. >> yes. >> maybe inventing things. >> he has. and look where he is with the numbers. absolutely so. >> i heard him and he was chosen by president obama to be vice president on his ticket. >> yes, i want to give you the time word on this danielle before we go. what are your thoughts on this is biden is gaffe-free in some ways in terms of processing o paying out of priets. >> he definitely is not gaffe-free. that is evident. >> we no that. >> the most his campaign can do is say joe biden he may mix updates, stumble over words, sure but he is not a compulsive liar that makes it his job and everybody's job around him to lie to the american people on day in day out basis. does he mess things up? sure. but he has been in office holding some type of public service over the past 30 years. if i were them i would lean hard into the fact that donald trump is a liar that has never down anything other than for himself and his fireman. joe biden is a person
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joe biden to believe in this race. and this so, according to polls, is one of the major reasons that people are considering joe biden. supporters of joe biden are excited about joe biden because of his eight years of service to barack obama. this is a critical part of his resume. he wants to have it out front, in the center, constantly in this debate. especially you remember in the last debate some of the democrats started picking apart the obama legacy or saying some things they disagreed with. you will joeally hug barack obama every chance he gets. >> lots of african-american voters in the democratic primary in south carolina but not so much in either iowa or new hampshire, right? >> that is right. he's got to get through two very white states first before he can get to the nevada and south carolina. his campaign, the biden campaign, constantly points to the diversity of his coalition. but you are right to note, those first two states are not that diverse. they're overwhelmingly white states. and so i think you are starting to see the biden campaign try to temper expectations to try to buy him some time. and if he doesn't win those first two contests that he can still go the distance here. but as you know, wolf, once the ball gets going and voters start weighing in. you don't have much time to say why you're not winning contests. you got to win contests. >> david, as usual, thank you very much. >>> to our viewers, an important note, we'll have full debate analysis later tonight starting
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joe biden works on ukraine. >> you are totally right. joe biden wasn't doing great before that. this controversy he was already on the decline and this is the last thing joe biden needs for a couple reasons. joe biden's fundamental brand promise to democrat to the primaries electability, the safe choice. there is no scandals in his closet. the problem is hunter biden has not yet testified. senate republicans can pull testimony, force hunter to testify regardless whether they find hunter and his father guilty of anything it is the appearance of impropriety, the appearance of scandal that will further pull biden down and once you strip biden of the fact that he is the safe choice, what exactly does he present to a democratic electorate looking for not an old white man, someone more progressive with ideas, who doesn't make gaffes all the time. rob: let's look at the poll from quinnipiac, 27%, biden at 25 back to august and look how different those numbers were, 32 in august, 25, 19 for warren in august. that is a bid flip. i listened to ted. talking about the ukraine thing and he said ukraine investigated it and didn't find anything so everything is fine. >> amazing how they can write off their own so easily. >> it is not going to be that easy but we know for the democrats they want to impeach this president before any of this -- 70 democrats in support of impeachment before the mueller report came out. they want to impeach this president but the polling, you watch trend lines. biden is on the decline not just in national polls but in the key state-by-state polls trailing second place. this is terrible news if you are joe the democrat party wants to take trump out and also take biden out with his story which i thought was a really crazy idea. what do you make of that? >> the progressive wing of the democratic party would agree with that sentiment. they don't think biden represents the modern democratic party. i don't know that it is orchestrated that way but now that it is leading the progressives will pylon and beat biden, biden can't make the argument any long. >> will be certain biden more than donald trump? people hate this kind of story. this is why donald trump was elected, you get sick and tired of seeing a politician, who knows nothing, $6000 a year. >> the real casualties joe biden's candidacy. donald trump's side will energize his base, nothing turns out your base more than when you feel your choice for office has been unfairly treated. extended continuation of this witchhunt. this has to do with when the democrats overplay their hand on brett kavanaugh, turning out republicans, it is going t
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joe, they throw him overboard with a brutal takedown of the declining canada. but don't worry, joe 30330 won't have to roll out former doctor to attest to your functioning brain and joe biden -- joe biden will not have to say swallow and -- a woke for you and the ladies on the view have your back. amazing details here. >> i think sometimes if you've been telling this story a long time, it grows. i've done it. i don't know if you've done it but you tell a story, you know what and remember that happen and then suddenly, you are marching up the hill and brought all the kids and had her own baby and delivered yourself. >> what is unfortunate that people are making it an issue of mental clarity as opposed to just someone who is trying to be a good storyteller. >> people know him and they note the guest and that he screwed up with anita hill. and touchy-feely and didn't mean it. everything has been out there already and we are still voting for him in big numbers. >> sean: all right, course, job a heart, one of biden's tiny little sleepy rallies in iowa and then rethink what she just said. biden's campaign events are the political equivalent of melatonin or ambien, bernie sanders really full of screaming and yelling. no one is safe from bernie's rage when that happens, not even a baby or a kid, take a look. >> so i hear you correctly say that you have to cut your pills in half for your son? okay. if we could keep that a little bit, okay, thanks. >> shut that kid up and make that kid be shush. of course the baby is reacting appropriately, think about it too bernie's nightmare socialist plan and every child in america should be crying if that is their future. he wants to remake america to the socialist utopia where the government pretty much runs everything. you know, think of the dmv or obamacare on steroids, keep your dr. plan and save money but in all aspects of your life, and for the privilege of living in your socialist, you will be forced to pay double, triple, may be even more in taxes. so people won't just be leaving california, new york, new jersey and illinois, they will leave america next. bernie sanders is not the only democrat running who wants to massively increase government control over your life. on fake news cnn kamala harris just said she would ban all plastic straws as president. now, there is a great campaign, will come a list for her. eliminate all private health insurance and take away america's straws. take the straws away from americans again. take a look. >> leaders have to lead. and straws are a big thing right now. do you ban plastic straws? i think we should, yeah. look, i'm going to be honest, it is difficult to drink out of a paper straw. if you don't gulp it down immediately, it starts to bend. the little thing catches it and you know, so we have to kind of perfect that one a little bit. [laughter] >> are you banning it and relying on innovation? >> innovation is a process, right? >> sean: process, no straws can locate an important issue. are you surprised? this might as well be on the official democratic party platform. then you have new york city mayor bill de blasio from purchasing plastic straws, and sadly for de blasio, his campaign circling. "the new york times" he may end his presidential campaign next month. if he does not qualify for the next debate. he does have a cushion job as mayor. imagine this from a perfect job for him, seven hours a month, round-the-clock armed protection, great taxpayer-funded pension with free health care. but you can't protect yourself in new york city like he protects himself. and of course, we have marianne williamson still going strong and suggesting the power of the mind to turn away hurricane dorian. hey, at least he's not criminalizing straws come here with reaction fox 12 contributor and first action senior advisor sean spicer, all right, laughing harder which means we go to him. this is the campaign. this is what this has symbol -- evolved into. >> big news with campaigns. we are in the campaign and not every week will have the most excitement policy announcements. i do think the democrats are causing tremendous damage themselves with the idea espousing not just little things like straws and big things like banning private health insurance, allowing people to come over the border illegally this morning to get government sponsor my health insurance this afternoon. these are the things the democrats are hurting themselves with and will come back to bite them in general. i just don't fault the picket things. i've been campaigns a lot and a lot of little things that are inconsequential. >> sean: sean spicer, these are consequential times and what they are talking about here, getting rid of oil and gas and everything is free and eventually planes and cows, that is the life of our economy. if we want to raise the standard of living in america, energy dependent the first time in seven years and i double, triple, quadruple down on energy jobs exporting energy to the free world. so let's see, our european allies no longer dependent onto howell's regime of russia and hostile act of putin. m panic countries and the middle east do before oil when we know they hate our guts. >> look, this whole campaign is based on how much stuff you can't give away, free health care, free education but never looking at the root causes of what causes some of these industries to spiral out of control and owes to pay more. they are not looking at efficiencies. they are not looking at best practices. how do we get the best education system and health care system but worried about giving it away for free. the biden thing one think that trent set about this, the contrast how the press covers biden versus trump. trump is a liar. everybody knows he's a liar. everybody has these intentions of doing evil. when it comes to biden, they are aghast, cute, storytelling and biden's head himself the details don't matter. the idea that we call this funny, when in fact on one side it is a lie and misleading. the other side, funny, hysterical to watch. it is wrong. the way that these guys get away with things. the idea we have a discussion about marianne williamson and talk about moving the storm with your mind power is like congressman johnson in guam. >> sean: facts are irrelevant. we will take fax over truth. ari, does biden survive this? i'm thinking more and more everyday when "the washington post," "new york times" turns on you the way they did in one week, i'm beginning to think it's a message being sent. >> biden, he looks to me like a balloon where if you watch the air come out of it, the balloon just goes -- through the sky on its way to the ground. and the only thing to keep biden's balloon up is the desire to beat donald trump. there is this pressure coming string inside the democratic party attention and those to get as far to the socialist left as possible and those who want to beat trump. we saw that in 2018 and the republican should not ignore it. almost 50% of the majority of america just want to beat trump. and that is a powerful force. it is recommended that the president -- >> sean: he's got more than anybody else. the idea that this guy is already undermining himself and expectations about new hampshire and iowa. unbelievable. >> sean: thank you both, breaking news congressman nunez with a multimillion dollar lawsuit and he joins us next with sara carter do you have concerns about mild memory loss related to aging? prevagen is the number one pharmacist-recommended memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. for big savings on the hunting equipment you need and brands you trust. like cabela's, redhead in true timber camo, and black out. your adventure starts here. >> sean: fox news alert, devin nunes has filed just earlier tonight multimillion dollar federal racketeering lawsuit against fusion gps. the congressman along with fox news contributor sara carter joining me now with more. congressman let's talk about this. we now know that or you are accusing them of literally working with a campaign for accountability to derail your investigation. secondly, are there issues? tell us about it. >> well, thanks, sean. you've done a great job covering this the last two and a half years. as many people know, i was often smeared. and now what we know is there is a link those doing the smearing and fusion gps. fusion gps has a long career in this. they have a long record in this. they work for the russian government all a guard for the russian government to smear bill broward. most people know about the steele dossier working to smear the trump campaign. when we were investigating fusion gps, they were actively involved in working to smear me to obstruct justice. to derail our investigation. and so, i'm going to hold these guys of animal and this is one of many steps to take because we have to go to the courts just like jay sekulow was saying, the third ranch of government we have to rely on them to fix a lot of this mess. >> sean: what did you think when special counsel mueller didn't know who fusion gps was nor did he note jeannie ray that worked for clinton? sarah is laughing in one way but it's not funny in a big way. >> rest. bigelow, the reason why he didn't know, he wasn't engaged in this investigation the whole time. and this is the reason why we have to go to the courts. we know we spent $40 million roughly investigating the trump campaign but at the end of the day, we don't have anything to show for it. we don't know many of the players involved in russian investigation and fusion gps is, give me a break. this is why the courts have to come in and clean this up and this is why people like me who have the ability to do this have to take these cases to court so that we can pull out more information. because ultimately, people have to be held accountable. i don't think we can rely just on the department of justice, individuals who are out there or groups who are out there need to take these cases individually to court. >> sean: sara i saw your piece to date the investigative hearing, top obama officials need to be held accountable and when you couple that with what jay sekulow is saying along with comey who lied, there is no ambiguity here. he verified the dossier was true, the bulk of information to apply for those fisa warrants. he signed off on them three times in the interim between two of them, he told donald trump it was not barrett verified and trump was actually being investigated when he knew better because he was leading the investigation and he also lied when he said he was a spy because that warrant allow spying. >> right, we need the senate to conduct an investigation alongside john durham is doing right now, the u.s. attorney and william barr, sean. it is the way the only the american public will get to the truth. the only place to have a hearing right now is in the senate. i mean senator lindsey graham can hold a hearing with the judiciary, the senate judiciary committee. it is powerful and he can do this now. we can also look at chuck grassley, senator grassley. as far as fusion gps is concerned, sean, they are the epicenter, the epicenter of what i call a soft coup on the president of the united states. absolutely what devin nunes is doing right now what the congressman is doing the right thing by suing them. because they have to give us information. this appears to be the only way is by suing people like this in court and companies, this private entity which was working with the russians. we know they were connected and we know they were connected to the russian attorney, remember that went to go meet with don jr. so we know that all of this was happening. and of course, christopher steele. and we also know that comey isn't telling the truth, like you said, as well as john brennan, james clapper, samantha powers, -- >> sean: susan rice. >> susan rice. >> sean: and barack obama, barack obama. >> they need to be held accountable. >> sean: this would be his counterintelligence investigation. congressman, we are expecting a pfizer report from the inspector general. to me come anything short of these warrants were illegally obtained, free medical fraud, warrant, chronicled it and unverifiable. and to stand behind at the fbi determined themselves it was not true. that was long after they signed the warrant. should have been ahead of time. between that pfizer report, premeditated and the durham report, do you believe that we will see justice under the law and equal -- implication of the law? do these figures that we talk about face indictment and possible convictions? >> well, you know we sent over criminal referrals. i would focus on a conspiracy because i think that is the law. >> sean: the conspiracy and the criminal sense and the legal sense. >> conspiracy and the criminal sense and expected -- they defrauded the u.s. and lied to the fisa court. they have used carter page and his rights. there is lots of laws that were broken that can sit under conspiracy. it's about putting all that together in a package. >> sean: allied and intelligence agencies, were allied and intelligence agencies fight in america on a president-elect or presidential candidate? >> of course, we know that. that was the whole point of us putting out the information when they were spying on carter page. that was used to go after the trump campaign. but i will tell you, it is going to take everyone working together in this come all the american people that want to get to the truth. this is why it is so important that lawsuits are brought to the courts, okay? so you see that with judicial watch. it is what we are doing. it is what jay sekulow was doing. all of this had to happen in order to pull this information out because as you know, the deep state is very good at hiding things. and so in order to get at it you have to work every day to pull back. pieces of this onion. >> sean: last question sara carter commit the warrants illegally obtained and they outsource spying on americans presidential candidates transition to president, then the question is, who's going to be held accountable here? and you know, here it will be devastating. if those warrants were illegally obtained and they were warned, premeditated, lying to a fisa court to obtain those warrants and then we outsource something that would circumvent american law to spy on american citizens, you know, what would happen, as hannity goes to jail or any american citizen goes to jail. >> that is right. anybody would go to jail, sean. what we see and i like the word conspiracy and the legal sense because what we have seen is the network. not over spying overseas but in the white house which aclj is looking into an devin nunes is looking into which as fusion gps and being at the epicenter of all of this. i would like to know what john brennan knew. i would like to know what he knew about that dossier and if he leaked that dossier to the gang of eight. in particular. and how far that went. because once we know those answers, we won't know who to indict and who to charge. i'm sure that's exactly what john durham is doing. >> sean: thank you both i would like to send an invitation, and i will give you the full hour on this show to explain unverified, salacious and verified on top of a fisa warrant both before and after the president. coming up, one of the will and grace doors to backtrack on support of the blacklisting of all trump supporter's. i will tell you who, we will get reaction commit tammy bruce on this busy breaking news night. staylo with us. now, i know how happy i am. there was all the feeling good about myself that i missed. he all about yes. like yes to flexible hours and payment options. yes to free exams and x-rays for new patients without insurance. and yes, whenever you're ready to get started, we are too. call now at 1-800-aspendental. as a doctor, i agree with cdc guidance. i recommend topical pain relievers first... like salonpas patch large. it's powerful, fda-approved to relieve moderate pain, yet non-addictive and gentle on the body. salonpas. it's good medicine. hisamitsu. [ text notification now that you have] new dr. scholl's massaging gel advanced insoles with softer, bouncier gel waves, you'll move over 10% more than before. dr. scholl's. born to move. >> sean: all right, holly would hate towards president trump's more deranged if you can believe it. the latest example comes from actors eric mccormack and debra messing who called on the media to publicly out anyone in hollywood to donate for the trump campaign. eric mccormack well, he denied he supports the black list and still wants to know the name of those trump supporter's and of course rhetoric about trump and supporters nothing new in hollywood, and also tonight take a look at the report, it is now blowing up all over social media, a picture of joe biden fake news cnn may town hall, and appears to have been filled with blood. we will let you know if there is anything to it or if you need to find out go to the website. the hollywood haight, political columnist jeffrey lord, and tammy, i look at that and it's like, oh, lets give out the name of every actor we agree with and blacklist them. there is no other way to interpret what they were doing. why are they doing it and why is it acceptable? this is not the first time we seen anything and we saw joaquin castro do this in texas by releasing the president's major donors in the san antonio area in texas. and that is meant to be of course intimidation tactic. it is a message to everyone else, if you dare to help the president and dare to support him, we are going to put you on a list. we are going t to to expose youo shining, and other hatred. and of course, this bizarre denial, this kind of coy attitude that in this backtracking, saying, i don't support blacklist. well, there is no
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joe: marcus. joe. nice to meet you. lemonis: nice to meet you, joe. right now, the business is struggling. you're a few months in, and you're already $15,000 behind. joe: i understand -- i mean, i have other business interests, as well, so it's kind of tough. lemonis: you have $75,000 on the hook, and you have a lease. do you have the money to take care of this guarantee? joe question of "do i want to go into my retirement account and start liquidating?" lemonis: and honestly, i don't want you to do that. and so we're giving you a lifeline. we're suggesting that, for a very nominal amount, your personal guarantee is gone, all the liability would go away. yes, you would take your losses on everything you've put in thus far, but it at least stops the bleeding. nelson: so, what is that nominal amount that you're talking about? lemonis: $10,000. that'd be probably it. this is a no-brainer. anytime somebody allows you to get off the hook for 10 grand on a $75,000 obligation, it seems like there's not much to think about. this restaurant would become part of gary's business. you would become kind of the chef for the swansons team. we'd be making prepared foods here. and everybody keeps their job. this gives the opportunity for the employees of black rock to keep working and for gary to sell more fish. seems like a win-win to me for everybody. joe: we had a littl
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joe biden and worried that joe biden's not up to it, worried that joe biden's too old, worried that joe biden commits too many gaffs, worried this, worried that. it's all you hear. and we're, you know, now a lot of democrats are saying oh my god, we're going to be stuck with elizabeth warren. which i think a lot of the democratic party would be very excited about having elizabeth warren as their nominee. but right now the overriding fear is that joe the task of running for president. and for weeks people have been talking about this third debate. it is critical that joe biden hits his marks and that he doesn't just sort of trail off on answers and say, my time's run out. >> yeah. remember that was the argument going into the second debate, that he didn't have a great first debate and he better do with the second one or else. he did okay in the second one so now, yeah, people are worried how he will be tonight. we'll see. we have people who want to jump in i can tell you already. joining our conversation, john harwood, and an msnbc political contributor jason johnson, former u.s. senator now an msnbc news and political analyst claire mccaskill. and professor of tulane university, walter isakson. the 2020 democratic candidates are set to take the stage in houston later this evening for the party's third primary debate. unlike previous debates, one will feature them on stage for one night only. here's the order. senator amy klobucha
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joe biden's been in new york. when is he on your show? >> joe biden has offered to send his surrogate. that tells me a lot about what joe biden thinks about our audience. i think joeiden might be suffering from that same white entitlement and privilege and ego where he's just that old school white male who feels like hey, man, they need me, i don't need them. or, i got them already. so, yeah, my surrogate, my black male surrogate, you go talk to them. that's not respect. >> would you like to have him on if he offered? >> yeah, absolutely. >> what's your number one question for him? >> i got questions about the old things. i got questions about the '94 -- '94 crime bill. i got questions about, you know, the '88 crack law. i got questions about given the you'll at thurman's funeral. i want to know why you thought these segregations were great. we all evolve, we all grow and we all can learn from our mistakes, i just haven't heard him say that those things were mistakes yet? why? because that's that white male entitlement privilege and ego that's been the detriment to all of us in this country for a long time, not just black and brown people, women too. >> yeah. >> t
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joe biden? >> so i think it's -- remember david axelrod said after the second debate for joe biden basically the good news is for joe biden this is the best he can do. the bad news is for joe biden this is the best he can do. i think it's sort of the same. he has not had any stellar standout performances in any of these debates. >> brian: right. >> he has kind of glided by. here's the thing he can. because he is tied to the obama legacy. i think you cannot under estimate how important that obama legacy is for him. that is essentially what is propping up his candidacy and what protects him from all these gaffes and mistakes he has made. >> brian: he can't have it both ways and say i was just the vice president and when they like something that president obama did and well i was with him every step of the way. and 100 percent right. >> that's what vice president biden is doing, right? he runs an ad in iowa, basically touting, being tied to the obama administration vice president. he ran a pre-debate ad yesterday also doing that with him and obama hugging. and so but then he divorces himself on the deportations thing and this is what castro had to say about that. >> but my problem with vice president biden and cory pointed this out last time is every time something good about barack obama comes up, he says oh, i was there, i was there, i was there. that's me, too. and then every time somebody questions part of the administration that we were both part of he says well, that was the president. i mean, he wants to take credit for obama's work but thought have to answer to any questions. >> and he is right. so when asked about mass deportations no, i was just the lowly vice president. nothing to do with that however, he also says this. so listen to this. >> by the way, barack and i and president and vice president we provided money for voluntary busing. >> he pulled out of the paris climate accord, which barack and i helped put together. >> that's why barack and i fought so hard to continue to see your funding. >> barack and i agreed we were going to give him the chance. >> he is actively working to undo every bit of the progress president obama and i and our administration did. >> so he is clearly trying to have interest both ways. we need to build upon obama legacy and extension of that when it comes to bad things mass deportations immensely unpopular amongst the left i didn't have anything to do with that you can't have it both ways. castro seems to be the only one calling him out on it. betbiden was asked about reparations comments he made previously about segregation so he talked about the need for more money for schools and teachers and somehow he ended up talking about this. >> play the radio, make sure the television -- excuse me, make sure you have the record player on at night. the phone. make sure the kids hear words. a kid coming from a very poor school -- or a very poor background will hear 4 million words fewer spoken by the time they get. >> there thank you, mr. vice president. >> i'm going to go like the rest of them do twice over. >> criticized comment one showing the age talking about record player and also some of the things he said previously or prior to that because he talks about the fact that parents don't know -- african-american parents don't know what to do with their kids, i'm paraphrasing here. they need help. some on the left saying that's a don't deaf comment and not happy with joeesponse talking about reparations. >> brian: not the first time a politician has not answered a question. >> not going to be the last. >> brian: pair phrased you said 20 or 30 years ago i'm not going to be penalized for my father and my grandfather had done in the past. i'm worried about now. then he went on to say poor kids don't hear enough words. and let's put on the record player. if i am a voter or if i'm a democratic strategist and do you this stuff for a living, or did. i'm worried about the way he loses himself. i'm worried that he gets so confused. he can read a prompter but every single event ends up in a problem. this is a pattern. >> lisa: see, this is where joe biden has been under estimated including by myself is that the support still for president obama and being part of that legacy. look at his support among african-americans, it is so strong. you look at states like south carolina where is he doing so well. particularly because african-americans make up about 60% of t
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joe biden. i have a lot of respect for joe biden and i've disagreed with joe biden on the debate stage with immigration and most recently on health issues and i don't believe for a second that joe biden and his family are anything except honorable and honest and i believe that they are. what's happening here is that donald trump is trying to use the same playbook against joeen that he used against hillary clinton in 2016, someone who was given a lifetime of honorable service and to muddy their reputation with false accusations and get enough voters out there, just enough to not vote for them so that trump can win a near row electoral victory in 2020 the way he did in 2016. the american people should not fall for that. there are different reasons that people should support me or another candidate or joe biden, but i don't think that this should be the reason that people do or don't support joe biden. >> there's been a great fear that among the decthe democrati that heading into the 2020 contest could actually backfire on election day. could this effort help president trump when all is said and done? >> i don't think so because people can hesee with their own eyes and hear with their own ears. support with moving forward for impeachment is rising among both democrats and republicans because people are going to believe the evidence in front of them instead o
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joe biden's son. why joe biden's son? well, for five years joe biden's son, it turns out, was paid hundreds of thousands of dollars per year to serve on the board of the ukrainian gas company. why with joe biden's son be on the board of ukrainian gas company? he had no experience in the energy business. he didn't speak the relevant language. he had apparently no experience whatsoever in the region. turns out at that very moment joeen was president obama's point man for ukraine. oh, so in a certain point during this saga, the company in question was investigated. and then in 2016, the ukrainian prosecutor overseeing that investigation was fired, apparently he was fired under pressure from then vice president joe biden. now, to the layman, that looks a lot like corruption. what does that have to do with the president being impeached in the accusation is the president trump suggested that that sketched investigatiosquelchedinvestigata second look. democrats say that suggestion was an impeachable offense. are you following this? of course they there are plenty of other reasons that the u.s. might not want to send $400 million to ukraine it's a notorious corrupt country for one thing what do we get out of it for another. sending military aid to the ukraine may please neocons on cnn bill crystal is for it. greatly increases the with russia nuclear conflict potentially. what's the point of that exactly. nobody has both
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joe biden? >> the only thing i asked about joe joe biden is get to the bottom of how it was that ewe senco, who was appointed would dismiss the case -- >> so you did ask ukraine to look into joe biden? >> of course, i did. >> you just said you didn't! >> reporter: it's unclear how ukraine fits into this whistleblower's complaint. but it's important to keep in mind that also in that winding interview that rudy giuliani gave last night, he made the argument that it actually would be okay if the president did tell the ukrainian government to, quote, straighten up in order to receive that aid money that they received, that military aid money, which is to protect ukraine from russia. that's an argument he made there last night. we'll see if the president makes a similar argument when he speaks with reporters. we're going to see him in the oval office in just a few minutes from now. >> okay. we're waiting. kaitlan collins, thank for that great reporting. >> for the latest on the whistleblower complaint, cnn national correspondent alex marquardt joins me now. the president this morning without basis alleging that the whistleblower is highly biased. but the inspector general deemed that complaint urgent, by his own judgment. >> that's right. this complaint was filed by someone from the intelligence community on august 12th. and if we look at this timeline, now with this new reporting that this has to do with ukraine, we know that in the final days of july, specifically on july 25th, that there was a phone call between the president of ukraine, zlinski and president trump. that complaint then filed on august 12th. now, this was of such urgent concern, the inspector general found, that he went to the director of national intelligence, the acting director, joseph maguire, who is in theory supposed to forward that then on to the congressional oversight committees. instead, he went to the department of justice, who counseled him that this was not, in fact, part of intelligence activity. it was not part of his jurisdiction. but the inspector general for the intelligence community was so disturbed that he himself went directly to congress. and yesterday, we saw him briefing the house intelligence committee behind closed doors. now, he was very careful -- this is michael atkinson, the inspector general, to not delve into the details in this complaint. he talked about the process, he talked about the law, but what he did say is that there were multiple acts of concern to this whistleblower. now, we know that this centers around communications between the president and a foreign leader. and a promise that was made. "the new york times," "the washington post" saying this has to do with ukraine. we do not know what the promise made was. but, jim, i want to read part of the inspector general's letter to the house intelligence committee that underscores how urgent he felt this complaint was. he writes that the subject matter involved in the complaintant's disclosure not only falls within the dni's jurisdiction, but relates to one of the most significant and important of the dni's responsibilities to the american people. now, the house intelligence committee had subpoenaed joseph maguire to testify yesterday. he declined, but he will now be appearing before the house and senate intel committees next week. you can be assured that they have some very significant questions for him then. jim? >> no question. and the language from the inspector general there, very clear about just how seriously he's taking it. alex marmarquardt, thanks very much. >> let's talk about this with our experts. cnn legal analyst, michael zeldin is with us, former federal prosecutor, and rachael bey, political reporter for "the washington post." good morning to you both. thank you for being here. and michael, let me begin with you. a number of the president's allies are comparing this to president obama. and they're specifically bringing up that sort of hot mic moment when president obama told medvedev essentially, let me get through this and i'll be much more open to negotiate post-election. listen to matt schlapp and his argument on that front. >> he has very wide authority, really, unchecked authority, to talk about to world leaders about anything he deems appropriate, as he's representing the united states of america. if this were able to go forward, any staffer in an agency could constantly hobble a democratic president, duly elected. >> michael zeldin, unchecked authority? is that what the president has? >> he has broad authority, but that authority is checked by his obligation to act on behalf of the united states and not on behalf of himself. and the allegations here, the facts of which we don't know, all seem to imply that the president may have been acting on behalf of his own interests, his own campaign interests. and not the interests of the united states. so were it the case that he was only acting on behalf of the united states, then matt's argume argument, but it's not known yet how the president was acting and what gave rise to the complaint. >> rachael, it strikes me listening to rudy giuliani last night that in a moment, even, his position moved from defending and denying to justifying, frankly. what he did here, which was, you know, go there and try to pursue, pressure the ukrainian government to further investigate someone who happens to be a political opponent of the president. is that where this administration is on this now? >> sort of like foreshadowing what their position would be, should these reports, you know, these suspicions be true, right? i mean, giuliani has done this before with the mueller report where he said, oh, you know, the president didn't do anything wrong. but if he did something, it wasn't illegal. so you know, we've sort of heard that argument before. but it's interesting, because on capitol hill, you know, democrats, they're trying to get a copy of this complaint to see exactly what the allegation is. and we have seen the white house over and over again stonewall congress. and this is just sort of following in that vein. and i talked to a lot of democrats between corey lewandowski's appearance on tuesday, where he was very defiant, talked over members, promoted his own campaign, and was otherwise very disregarding of congressional authority. and this, where the whistleblower complaint, they're not allowing it to come to congress when it should, there's a real frustration. and democrats, they don't know how to hit back right now. and they're in this real pickle where they're having to wait for the courts to rule in. they could take this to the courts, but it could literally be months, if not years until we see what this complaint actually is. >> that seems to be part of the administration's strategy. drag it out. >> michael zeldin, simple question, but i think an important one. if you were the first reporter to get called on in the press conference today, what would you ask the president about all of this? >> what did he say to this foreign leader that may have triggered the determination that this was an urgent matter that required congressional oversight. explain to us, what is at the heart of this complaint to your understanding. >> fair question. simple, will he give a straightforward answer? >> yeah, rachael, to be clear, if you look at past precedent on this, the president has, in the past, said that he would accept, for instance, foreign help in a campaign. he's justified that. well, listen, if they offer, this is something that we would have to look at. so it's possible the president goes that path here, is it not? >> yeah, no, he's really -- it's clear that the white house and the president in particular feel emboldened. i mean, the mueller report, the russia investigation was sort of hovering over his head, his whole presidency so far. after that wrapped up, you know, we've just seen him make comments like that. well, we'll see if a foreign government offers help. we'll see what it would be, instead of saying, absolutely, i wouldn't do this. the g-7, talking about having the g-7 at one of his hotels in florida. you know, people saying that 100% goes against the emoluments clause that said a president cannot be accepting any sort of gifts from a foreign government. and over and over again, he is showing that he doesn't care about defying congress. and you know, it's -- we're getting a sense from the white house that they feel like the democrats aren't going to do anything in the house, and they can pretty much do whatever they want. >> and you know, poppy, the phone call with the ukrainian president came one day after bob mueller's less than exciting testimony on capitol hill. to rachael's point about the possibility of feeling emboldened. >> yeah, absolutely. michael zeldin, just as we go, something that struck both jim and i this morning is the difference between the readouts of that call with the ukrainian president, between the white house's readout and ukraine's readout. this line was not in the white house version, where the ukrainian readout said the ukrainian president is convinced ukraine can improve its image by, quote, complete investigation of corruption cases, which inhibited the interaction between the ukraine and the united states. is there a "there" there. because rudy giuliani last night was talking about corruption, anti-corruption. and the white house didn't include that party. >> right. so if the president of the united states said to the president of the ukraine, look, your country is filled with corruption, if you want to be our ally, if you want to receive our foreign aid, straighten up, clean up your house. that would be, i think, appropriate. if, however, it was more along the lines of, look, i know you're investigating the bidens or hunter biden, if you pursue that more aggressively, then we'll release the foreign aid money, that would be inappropriate. and so the statement boldly is not clear, but the implications are of what one wants to read into it. >> it could have been a positive promise as opposed to a demand. michael zeldin, rachael bade, great to have both of you. >>> other news, senator mitch mcconnell says he will now support an amendment that gives $250,000 for states going into 2020. >> it's good they will have this extra amount of resources, but this is an about-face for the senate majority leader who has resisted for months that additional funding. our congressional correspondent lauren foss joins us on capitol hill and he took a lot of flack for this. i mean, this is what got him that nickname, moscow mitch. >> reporter: right. and i was in kentucky in august and moscow mitch had really caught on, even in the local sphere of politics there. i saw a lot of signs, a lot of buttons, a lot of t-shirts. so obviously, mcconnell announcing yesterday on the floor that he supported this amendment. then they voted on it in committee. it passed out of committee. now the question is, will it go to the senate for a full vote, and how do they conference that with the house? and will the president sign it? but ultimately, this is a substantial amount of money. mcconnell's team is pushing back, saying, this is not a reversal for the majority leader. in fact, he has supported more money for election security in past appropriations bills. and he was simply waiting for the appropriations process to unfold on capitol hill. that's what they're doing right now. that's why he was willing to introduce this amendment right now. but democrats claiming that the majority leader relented. that their pressure over election security, this nickname that he doesn't like, all were too much pressure and that mcconnell ultimately had to change his mind about giving more money for election security. poppy and jim? >> you think it might have been an easy call given how seriously u.s. intelligence agencies are taking the threat to the upcoming election. lauren fox, thanks very much. still to come this hour, we are expecting to hear from the president very soon. will he address the growing whistleblower scandal? >>> plus, new doubts about the political future for canadian prime minister justin trudeau. he has apologized again after those new images of him in blackface surfaced. and he actually admits that he doesn't know how many times he may have worn blackface. >>> and it may be the biggest day of climate demonstrations ever. hundreds of thousands of people joining these marches all around the world. we'll tell you more, ahead. ♪ (dramatic orchestra) performance comes in lots of flavors. there's the amped-up, over-tuned, feeding-frenzy-of sheet-metal-kind. and then there's performance that just leaves you feeling better as a result. that's the kind lincoln's about. ♪ why accept it frompt an incompyour allergy pills?e else. flonase sensimist. nothing stronger. nothing gentler. nothing lasts longer. flonase sensimist. 24 hour non-drowsy allergy relief t-mobile's newest signal reaches farther than ever before. with more engineers. more towers. more coverage! it's a network that gives you ♪freedom from big cities, to small towns, we're with you. because life can take you almost anywhere, t-mobile is with you. no signal goes farther or is more reliable in keeping you connected. introducing a razor that works differently. the gillette skinguard has a guard between the blades that helps protect skin. the gillette skinguard. >>> right now, president trump and the australian prime minister are sitting down for a bilateral meeting at the white house. the two are expected to discuss security and trade, as the president hosts scott morrison and his wife. it is only the second state visit of trump's administration. but a big question, will the president address the growing questions about a whistleblower? joining me now, congressman eric swalwell, democrat from california and a member of both the house intelligence and judiciary committees, who are very much in the middle of it. congressman, thanks so much for taking the time this morning. >> of course, good morning, jim. >> so first question, you were in the room yesterday for testimony from the inspector general of the office of the director of national intelligence. i know this was a closed session, though, not classified. can you tell us, did he reveal anything about the nature of this whistleblower complaint? >> jim, it was so frustrating, because he's been silenced. and you could just sense the frustration that he had, because his job, as the inspector general, is to be a channel that a whistleblower can go to, if they see something wrong. and then he is, you know, to put a report together that ultimately makes its way to congress and his job is being impeded right now by the department of justice, the actiact ing dni, the acting director of national intelligence, and a claim of privilege made by the white house. so it was frustrating. >> i understand. now, as you know, the acting inspector general deemed that the complaint was both urgent and credible. by the whistleblower law, that should then be reported to congress. is -- how is the justice department therefore justifying not allowing you and other members of the relevant committees to get the details on this? >> yeah, there's no wiggle room here. let me walk your viewers through you know, how this works. a whistleblower, if they say, i have an urgent and credible, you know, complaint about something i saw relating to national security, the inspector general receives it. he has 14 days to investigate it, to corroborate it, to see, you know, if it is, in fact, something that is urgent and credible for the congress to know about. and then once he sends that to the director of national intelligence, that's it. congress has to be told within seven days. and here, instead, the department of justice and other entities have become involved. something that stood out, though, because he said, not only was this urgent and credible at the time, he said it's still urgent and credible today, and that's why we should know. it's not like the urgency lapsed. like, the urgency still is here. >> as you know, this is a consistent strategy and approach from this administration, whether it be congressional subpoenas, the demand for the president's tax returns, et cetera. what can congress do? you have a majority, democrats have a majority in the house of representatives, to force the administration's hand here, to force, it seems, to comply with the law. >> reporter: well, first, we can fine anyone who is lawless. and that is something that is stilling considered. we can go to court. something we're not going to do is we're not going to break the law because they're breaking the law. we shouldn't meet lawlessness with lawlessness. as tempting as it is, if that would get us the result that we wants, we're not going to do that. we're not going to get the results that we need as fast as we want. but we're on the court on so many issues here. we're in the courts on the mueller report, in the courts on witnesses who refuse to testify and now we may have to go to the courts for this. there's going to be a cascade of court rulings very soon that are going to go against the president, and the popular opinion, if it hasn't already shifted for this president, who's under 40% of approval rating, it's going to shift even more. >> okay, as we watched the giuliani interview with my colleague, chris cuomo last night, it struck me that what's happening here with trump world and the administration is that they are moving from denying to justify, in effect. giuliani saying proudly, you know, i was going there to pressure them on corruption cases, which you should read as corruption cases related to someone who happens to be the president's possible rival in the upcoming election. is that wrong? >> yes, but if you look at the approach here, this is the play that was run in part in the 2016 election. they embraced russian help. the president said, russia, if you're listening, keep hacking my opponent's e-mails. they didn't really pay a price for it. they won. so why not go to another foreign government and ask them to go after your opponent? that's why we have to make it very clear, if that's indeed what happened, that we're not going to tolerate it. again, we have to learn more about whether that is what happened, but last night, i watched that interview. it was very uncomfortable, it was very alarming, and it looks like they're leaning in. so there's going to have to be consequences. >> i noted the timing of the call with the ukrainian president. it came one day after robert mueller's testimony on the hill, which disappointed many, because he was not as explicitly, as many hoped, to making a judgment on the president's possible wrongdoing here. i wonder if with the end result of this investigation, no charges, mo indictmeno indictme cetera, that the president felt emboldened. felt that in effect that seeking this kind of help is okay. at least, even if it's not okay by the standards of our country, at least you can get away with it. >> that's my fear. my fear is that there's a green light, you know, given to russia and any other country that wants to help the president. here's where he should proceed with caution. there are other countries with similar capabilities who could interfere in our elections. they may not help the president. this is an opportunity for republicans and democrats to unite and say, we don't want this in our democracy. you know, that's why i wrote the protecting our democracy act, to, you know, have a bipartisan commission look at this. i also, jim, have legislation called duty to report. if you get information from a third party foreign agent, you have to tell the fbi. again, there's so much we'll have to do to make sure that this doesn't happen again. but right now, there's an urgency for us to hear from the acting dni, and if the acting dni is listening, i want him to know, you do not have to be a part of a lawless administration. you could send this information right to congress, you would be a patriot, and save us if from a potential national security risk. >> that's quite a call. congressman eric swalwell, we appreciate you coming on. >> thanks, jim, my pleasure. >>> coming up this hour, new images coming into cnn. we are at the site of the saudi oil facility that was attacked last week, covering this story in a way that only cnn can. it's alarming to see the damage that that attack caused. introducing new metamucil premium blend. sweetened with stevia and made with all-natural flavors and colors. it's a delicious way to get your daily dose of fiber. try it today. new align whole food probiotic. a blend of quality probiotics and fermented whole food botanicals. expertly curated to naturally support your gut health every day. go with align whole food blend, from the pros in digestive health. and try align gummies with prebiotics and probiotics to help support digestive health. morning. what are you doing? 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>> and he's repeating that claim that he believes this whistleblower, who made this complaint about this communication the president had, is partisan. but we should note, the president then moments later told reporters he does not know the identity of the whistleblower. those are questions first asked this morning after the president accused the person of being partisan. this person who is an unknown identity. and it's a similar argument to what rudy giuliani said last night, accusing this person of being a democrat who wants to take down the president, though we should note, it is not known who this person is. and the president himself says he doesn't know who he is, although he is accusing him of being partisan. the other thing to consider here is that the inspector general who has been handling this complaint and found it to be considered urgent is a trump appointee, someone the president picked to be in that position as the inspector general for the intelligence community. so that is something to consider here. but overall, what the president was telling reporters moments ago in the oval office, and we'll see him on camera shortly, is that he believes that his conversations he's had with foreign leaders are appropriate. that's going to raise the question, if the president believes that this conversation was above board, why doesn't the administration just release the information, the complaint by this whistleblower, because so far they have blocked it from even going to members of congress. >> well, it's a charge made without any evidence presented by the president. and you said, kaitlan, the inspector general, appointed by the president was unwavering in his own language about the complaint. he called it of urgent concern today. we'll stay on top of the story. >>> another story we're following today, thousands around the world and here in the u.s. protesting, demanding immediate action on climate change. the demonstrations started overnight in protests in sydney, melbourne, seoul, and johannesburg. >> this movement sparked in part by a young woman, greta thunburg who has become the face of the next generation of climate activists. rene marsh is live in washington, but let's begin with melissa bell. she joins us in paris. and the protests are well underway in paris, melissa. >> reporter: that's right, poppy. they made their way here to this park near the sens river. they say the only equation you should remember is that one. this is something that's been inspired by greta thunberg. and what's been so impressive today is to see just how those numbers have tallied up from australian to asian capitals and european capitals. here in paris, we have not seen numbers like this in previous climate change marches. and they say they're going to carry on with this to keep up the momentum, by coming out next friday again until their voices are heard. here in paris, one of the particularities has been a strong message of social equality and social justice, with placards that read things like climate change just one of the symptoms of the real sickness, which is capitalism. and that's something we've seen very strongly in the slogans that were shouted and the placards that were held up. tomorrow, those protesters who have been calling for greater social justice in france will be pack on the streets of paris doing so once again. and you're going to see a lot more protests along this lines. on one hand, the environment, led by the young, they left school in huge numbers to be on the streets again today. and that question of social justice, getting people out on the streets again, as emmanuel macron plows on with his performs. poppy? >> thank you so much, melissa bell live for us in paris. >> well, these are global, of course, rene marsh is there in washington, where we're also seeing big crowds. rene, tell us what you're seeing there. >> reporter: jim, as you know, these are school hours and today is a school day, but take a look at all of these young protesters here. they are out in full force. they've got their chants ready. i spoke to a 12-year-old who said, this is our big shot. the organizers tell me they've been planning this since mid-july. in about 15 minutes, they're going to start their march from here down to the capital and they'll be marching until 2:00. and i'm joined with one of the very impressive organizers here. she's been calling the shots while we've been waiting to go live. nadia nazur, who is from baltimore. what is the primary thing that you all are asking for out here today? >> yeah, so we have five demands that all the youth climate organizations came up with. we all went and met in iowa, with no service, no wi-fi, and came up with the demands of a green new deal, sustainable agriculture, environmental justice, respect of indigenous land, and protection of biodiversity. >> now, you did not go to school a couple of days this week because you were on capitol hill, you were talking to lawmakers. how were you received? do you feel like you made any headway at all? >> yeah. so we met with aoc on monday. we had an hour meeting with nancy pelosi on wednesday, and i think for a lot of it, a lot of the elected officials didn't really listen. they were kind of listening to respond rather than listening to understand. and it was upsetting, because we took time out of our school day to do that. but there were a few congressional members that really listened and didn't talk and they really took in the information and i'm grateful for that. >> thank you so much. again, these students, they are organized, they're passionate, and they're pretty determined. back to you guys. >> we'll see if that is the generation that changes things. rene marsh here in washington and melissa bell in paris, thanks very much. >>> right now, president trump is speaking inside the oval office. he already spoke about the whistleblower and new sanctions on iran. when we get that tape, we're going to turn around and bring it to you live. i didn't have to call 911.help. and i didn't have to come get you. because you didn't have another heart attack. not today. you took our conversation about your chronic coronary artery disease to heart. even with a stent procedure, your condition can get worse over time, and keep you at risk of blood clots. so you added xarelto®, to help keep you protected. xarelto®, when taken with low-dose aspirin, is proven to further reduce the risk of blood clots that can cause heart attack, stroke, or cardiovascular death in people with chronic cad. that's because while aspirin can help, it may not be enough to manage your risk of blood clots. in a clinical trial, almost 96% of people taking xarelto® did not have a cardiovascular event. don't stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of heart attack, stroke, or cardiovascular death. while taking, a spinal injection increases the risk of blood clots which may cause paralysis- the inability to move. you may bruise more easily, or take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. it may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. get help right away for unexpected bleeding or unusual bruising. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. before starting, tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures and any kidney or liver problems. enjoy every moment-and help protect yourself from an unexpected one, like a cardiovascular event. are you doing enough? ask your doctor if it's time for xarelto®. to learn more about cost and how janssen can help, visit xarelto.com. thand find inspiration who win new places.ct... leading them to discover: we're woven together by the moments we share. everything you need, all in one place. expedia. plants capture co2. what if other kinds of plants captured it too? if these industrial plants had technology that captured carbon like trees we could help lower emissions. carbon capture is important technology - and experts agree. that's why we're working on ways to improve it. so plants... can be a little more... like plants. ♪ in the human brain, billions of nefor people with parkinson's, some neurons change their tune, causing uncontrollable tremors. now, abbott technology can target those exact neurons. restoring control and harmony, once thought to belost forever. the most personal technology is technology with the power to change your life. play it cool and escape heartburn fast with new tums chewy bites cooling sensation. ♪ tum tum tum tums >>> nike is now cutting ties with antonio brown. the announcement comes as the patriots' wide receiver speaks out for the first time since he was accused by a former trainer of rape and sexual assault. >> our coy wire has more for us this morning in the bleacher report. he is live in gainesville, florida. good morning, coy. >> good morning, poppy. good morning, jim. antonio brown, he left the locker room without having to face the media after sunday's game down in miami. that broke the nfl's media policy, but he did talk to the media after practice yesterday. he took only four questions. it lasted about a minute and he kept it all about football. listen. >> i'm just here to just focus on ball and look forward to getting out there in the home stadium and being with the team. >> now, brown and his lawyers, they have denied all allegations against him. he is scheduled to make his home debut in new england sunday against the jets. >>> how about thursday night football in jacksonville. and what a night for gardner minchu. the fuminchu. taking over for nick foles and steps up. heaps had five tds in his first three games. a 74% completion rate. that's the highest of any player, in his first three games of his career since the 1970 merger. look out, jags win it, 20-7. now, break out the champagne bottles in the bronx. did you see the yankees clinching their first al east title in the last seven years? they did it with a 9-1 win over the angels. it's their 100th win of the season and it's incredible when you think that they put 30 players on the injured list this year. now, for the reason we're here, the number nine florida gairts taking on their rivals, the phenomenon vols. and we're here on campus in gainesville. this is part of the tums ultimate tailgate and i'm here with former player shannon snell with sonny's barbecue throwing down on the grill for us. you're an all-american gator and an nfl player after that. what's it like in the swamp on game day? >> it doesn't matter, the team, tennessee, they're 1-2 right now. the gairts are 3-0. doesn't matter the time or the place. it's going to be a rivalry game. >> my first time in the swamp. 90,000 people. lauren, what's it like in there on game day? >> cheering in in the swamp is absolutely incredible. i've traveled to so many scc schools and can i truly tell you there is nothing heroic it. >> matt, he's getting his master's degree. we'll get our masters in eating barbecue. let's make jim and poppy real jealous. good luck to thega gat gators. >> always jealous of your job, but i know you'll bring us some barbecue back. have fun, enjoy it. >>> all right, it's a big weekend in television. plenty of star power set for the biggest night in tv. the 71st prime-time emmys. >> stephanie elam reports. >> the emmy question this year, can anyone take the throne from "game of thrones"? last year's winner is once again the drama front-runner with a record number of nominations for its final season. >> even though some of the reactions to "game of thrones" were negative this season, the show is such a juggernaut and changed television in so many ways, voters are going to go for it. >> i just want to be president. >> reporter: also in its final season, hbo's "veep," a favorite for best comedy and actress julia louis-dreyfus. >> it had to take a year off because juleweulia louis-dreyfu undergoing cancer treatment. so there is a lot of goodwill associated with the show. but the nice new shiny thing on the block is fleabag. >> oh, my god, definitely not. that does nothing for you. >> what? >> these are my clothes, boo. i've been wearing these all day. >> reporter: "fleabag," a british comedy is amazon prime newest entry following last year's"the marvelous mrs. maise maisel". >> do you think i'm a bad person? >> bill hader's "barry" is another comedy favorite, overlooked in the category last year, voters could be looking to make amends. >> no, chernobyl is on fire. >> reporter: "chernobyl" makes a list of real-life stories. >> i didn't see a lady or hit anyone. >> including tough competition from ava duvernay's "when they see us" about the central park five. >> there's nothing like it on television. >> this emmy's will be hostless this year, emboldened by the success of the academy awards without a host. >> i personally like having a host. i think it sets a bar and gives you something to look forward to when you tune in. but the oscars had no host, the ratings were up, and the reviews of the show were generally positive. >> without a host, the star power of the emmys will be left to the winners. stephanie elam, cnn, hollywood. >> all right. looking forward to that. meantime, president trump just moments ago making his first comments on camera about that whistleblower scandal. what he said, you'll hear from him in just a minute. stay tuned for that. thank you all for being with us this week. i'm poppy harlow in new york. >> and i'm jim sciutto in washington. "at this hour" will be up right after a quick break. a true match means... no boundaries... ...between my skin and my foundation. true match from l'oreal. seamless, flawless coverage in 45 shades. lightweight, super-blendable... i can't tell where my foundations ends... ...and where my skin begins. true match. from l'oreal paris. yeah...yeah, this is nice. hmm. how did you make the dip so rich and creamy? oh it's a philadelphia-- family recipe. can i see it? no. philadelphia dips. so good, you'll take all the credit. my grandparents that i never knew.ch about i'm a lawyer now, but i had no idea that my grandfather was a federal judge in guatemala. my grandfather used his legal degree and his knowledge to help people that were voiceless in his country. that put a fire in my heart. it made me realize where i got my passion for social justice. bring your family history to life like never before. get started for free at ancestry.com >>> hello, everyone. i'm kate balduan. thank you so much for joining me. any minute now, we will hear president trump's first on-camera comments about the whistleblower complaint that points the finger at him. he spoke to reporters while in the oval office just moments ago. we're actually just waiting for that tape to play back. among the questions that he faced, did he ask the ukrainian president in a phone call to investigate joehis is all before
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joe biden. >> did you ask the ukrainians to investigate joe biden? >> no, i asked them to investigate in the interference of 2016 by the ukrainians -- >> you never asked anything about joe biden? >> the only thing i asked about joe biden is to get to the bottom of how it was that sanko who was appointed dismissed the case. >> you did ask ukraine to look into joe biden. >> of course, i did. >> you just said you didn't. >> the whistle blower hitting the white house against congressional democrats. the president announced new sanctions on iran's central banks and talks aboed about chi. we'll get through all of this. kelly o'donell and our david jolly, anne gerand is onset with me and ken dilanian. >> kelly, let's start with the big news that happened actually before the press conference. it happenes in the oval office, the president being asked about the whistle blower report. kristen welker getting to the heart of this saying did you ever have a conversation with ukrainian president about joe biden? give us the highlights of what the president had to say in the oval today? >> well, it was sort of kristin doing some dentistry and drilling down and she got a lot of new information that helps us understand a little bit more about this. let me begin with where he wanted to begin, calling it a partisan attack and claiming this is fake news, politica
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joe biden tonight. i got three, key democratic insiders here. alexander rojas, issa moodie mills and joe lockhart. joe, i have to tell you, bringing up cancer patients to joe biden was not the best use of ammunition for bernie sanders on an issue he generally owns. >> he has a personal story. i think he told it there. he told it in the end, the resilience question, were strong answers across the board from all of the dand dates. everyone will talk about joehere was a clearer distinction between, there's two schools of thoughts among democrats. bernie sanders and elizabeth warren believe we have to force ourselves into medicare for all, where private insurance is abolished and the rest of the field is not there. the public opinion polls is very popular and very controversial to eliminate private insurance. we saw for the first time, elizabeth warren and bernie sanders a bit on the defensive there. and this is going to be a critical issue. >> they talk about the profits not getting rid of insurance. but elizabeth warren, we had her on the show earlier today. she's talking about 2%, 2%, 2% tax. that will take care of it. she doesn't lean on getting rid of private insurance. is that an adjustment? does it work? >> i think the line of the night around health care was hers. and it does work. she hasn't met one person that actually loves their insurance company. so many of us can talk about the providers that we like and appreciate, doctor so a
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joe biden answer this? or is joe biden confronted on stage by one of highs own peers. his folks are saying don't book joe biden, we'll give you a surrogate. >> i'm happy for them to put joe biden out there. he can answer the questions easily. the republicans who support president trump are trying to do now is change the subject from the president's behavior. they're trying to throw out all these allegations about biden that legitimately there is no evidence for at this time. they are trying to take away attention from the fact that the president is facing the most challenging political and legal issue that he has had to face as president and how he responds, bill. we've seen the tweets he put out calling people tresonous and calling for people to be put to death. it will determine how people on the hill are looking at this situation right now. >> on the politics of it you wonder what the 31 democrats do that won in states that are swing districts. trump territory that flipped a couple years back. marie, thank you so much. i'm well out of time. we'll talk again and welcome back to fox. marie harf thanks in st. louis today. >> julie: meanwhile the chicago police department telling fox news they have been instructed to not cooperate with ice. we'll have details on the memos fox news has obtained. >> bill: check this out. pickup truck slamming right into a cop car. how he is doing today next. 300 miles an hour, that's where i feel normal. having an annuity tells me my retirement is protected. learn more at retire your risk dot org. this fall, book two, separate qualifying stays at choicehotels.com... ...and earn a free night. because when your business is rewarding yourself, our business is you. book direct at choicehotels.com aewith medicare advantage plans designed for the whole you - body, mind and spirit. that means aetna is helping you get ready to be the best grandmother the world has ever known. we simplify medicare by connecting you to the right coverage, resources and care. so you can be ready for what matters most. aetna medicare solutions. >> bill: is that a commercial? >> julie: it's scary. >> bill: how does that do? halloween is a month away. a new study reveals reese's peanut butter cups is america's favorite halloween candy. runner up chocolate m & ms between milk duds and snickers. how do you rate them in the state you live? >> julie: chocolate and peanut butter you can't get better. my kids have reese's in their bags after halloween, the next morning they're gone. i don't know where they go. >> bill: mom has been here. >> julie: while the trump administration ramps up the immigration drakdown, we got a chicago police department memo instructing all officers not to cooperate with the department of homeland security on certain situations. matt finn is there with more. hi, matt. >> chicago has been a sanctuary city for quite some time under rahm emanuel and the current mayor. chicago police are now being instructed in writing not to immediately assist the department of homeland security. now when dhs makes a request for backup or help from chicago police, police officers have to call their supervisor and the new rules indicate that supervisor will likely tell officers to walk away from dhs. fox news obtained a copy of the internal chicago police department memo that reads in part quote. effective immediately a cpd supervisor is required to respond to all requests for assistance from department of homeland security personnel. if the request is to assist with an immigration arrest or detention cbd personnel will leave the scene as directed by the supervisor. historically cbd has assisted dhs but this policy puts officers and dhs agents in possibly dangerous situations. you will not find a single real police officer that would refuse to assist another agency. see what happens if a dhs agent is injured as a lack of response by cpd. this morning the chicago police department says officers will aid a dhs agent if they're in danger. if they ask to assist to arrest the police will leave the scene. here is the mayor last week. >> we will never, ever succumb to the racist rhetoric of ice. we will continue to ban ice from having access to any cpd databases and will not allow any cpd officer to cooperate with anything related the ice and its immigration raids. >> andrew napolitano says they are well within their constitutional rights not to assist dhs. the supreme court ruled state and local agencies don't have to assist federal agents. julie. >> julie: matt finn. thank you so much. >> bill: fox news alert now in the state of new york ramping up security near synagogues and other religious centers, holy day celebrations currently underway. a live report on what the authorities think they're onto in a moment coming up. >> julie: senator marco rubio issuing a new warning about socialism calling it income patable with the american spirit as bernie sanders unveils his new inequality tax proposal. what's in it? maria bartiromo on deck as she joins us straight ahead. t get ay better than this? is that what i think it is? that is an armada of tiny sushi boats. awesome! i forgot to pack lunch. you had one job... chopsticks wasabi and soy! comin' in a little hot. it only gets better when you switch and save with geico. >> bill: here in new york city now the governor of new york andrew cuomo directing state police to increase security near synagogues and religious centers after several recent anti-semitic incidents. david lee miller has the story outside a synagogue here in manhattan. >> good morning from fifth avenue, bill. this is a time for self-reflection as well as celebration. the jewish holiday is associated with something else, that is high security. congregants here at the temple behind me across the street as well as at synagogues across the country, rosh hashanah, the jewish new year, marks the beginning of 10 sacred days until yom kippur. new york city has the highest jewish population at 1.5 million jewish residents and has a growing problem with anti-semitism. so far this year there have been 155 complaints of anti-semitism, hate crimes and that's a 63% increase over the same period last year. new york's governor citing caution has employed state police to protect jewish area. although there are no credible threat they're taking precautions. precinct personnel have been rethe deployed and units protecting jewish neighborhoods and some you'll see, some you won't. the sight of unformed police makes people feel more secure and a deterrent. precautions across the country are taking place. in pittsburgh where 11 members of the tree of life synagogue died last year, the jewish federation raised $100,000 to protect 16 synagogues there during the high holy days. according to the most recent statistics from the anti-defamation league, anti-semitism in the united states is now at near record levels. states with the highest number of anti-semitic incidents correspond with the highest number of jewish residents. new york, california, north dakota, which has only 400 jewish residents reported as many as five cases of anti-semitism. that's compared to the two previous years when there were no such incidents reported. new york city mayor bill deblasio offered this morning. we are watching and there will be consequences. he says we will not accept hatred in new york city. this, bill, marks the start of the year 5078 on the jewish calendar. >> bill: david lee miller here in new york city reporting on that. >> julie: we have a fox business alert as 2020 democrats unveil more progressive proposals. florida senator marco rubio warning about socialism in a new op-ed writing the politicians currently exploiting the socialism label are unwilling to acknowledge the tremendous oxs of their proposals as they one up each other who can provide the most free stuff while they proudly announce new wealth taxes for upper tax brackets they shy away from noting the financial realities such as enormous tax hikes on middle class americans. marie bartiromo is here. you have a new look. we'll talk about that. let's talk about marco rubio. he said socialism is incompatible with american and it's unique entrepreneurial spirit. >> i agree with that. when you look at a country like venezuela there was a time when venezuela was the richest country in latin america. and as time went on and they started adopting socialist practices where it's bigger governments, bigger governments and give free stuff away, at some point somebody has to pay for that. margaret thatcher famously said socialism is great until you run out of other people's money. that's the bottom line. when you have big social programs, green new deal or healthcare for all, somebody has to pay for it. there is no way you can actually get that money just from the top 1%. ultimately you'll have to raise taxes on everybody else. that's basically what is going to happen. if you do this creep and raise taxes on everybody there are unintended consequences. people start trying to hide their money and stop giving away. unintended consequences happen as a result of making some people pay extraordinarily higher than others. >> julie: the politicians exploiting the whole socialism thing aren't forthright how much money it will cost. everything is free but let's talk about it. medicare for all, raising not only taxes on the wealthy but on the middle class. medical care first of all will hurt the middle class more than it will the wealthy with these tax hikes. >> i also think it is important to ask yourself what is rich? a lot of people say well, you know, we're talking about the top 10%. go down the income scale and see what that is. you are talking capturing couples that make $250,000. i have friends one person who is a cop, the other person is a teacher. they're bringing home $250,000 together. after paying the costs that you have for your home, the nanny, whatever, you are left with nothing. so ask yourself what is rich and if the top end is $250,000? i think you have a problem in terms of overall economic growth. then i mention the other unintended consequences where people tried to hide money. they'll move to florida. you see a massive influx into low-tax states from the high-tax states into florida, texas, out of new york and california. >> julie: we want to remind people. people need to save for retirement. just because you make $250,000, what happens when you retire if you spend it now? >> people don't have enough savings. i always advise people save first. pay yourself first. get paid every two weeks, first thing do you is put money in one of your nest egg accounts just for retirement. >> julie: i have to get to bernie sanders inequality tax plan. you have the press release in front of you. >> julie, the press release says it all. sanders related income inequality tax plan. his plan would increase taxes on greedy companies that pay ceos 50 times more than median workers. that's what the press release says. greedy companies. you get a smack in the face on the ceo who may make much more than the average person but that's also misleading. oftentimes that salary includes stock. they're given stock oftentimes the ceo and leadership team will be given stock and that means you will do as well as the stock does. in other words, your performance will be reflected in the stock which will be reflected in your salary. to say greedy keys off the bat you lost me. he is partisan. >> julie: his tweet last week said billionaires should not exist. the number of billionaires is increasing every day to china. to say no billionaires should exist in america, what about the american dream? isn't that the american dream that you can start from nothing and work really hard and get a little luck and achieve great success? >> julie: tell us about fox business refresh. you'll be seeing a much different look. >> good. that's the perfect transition. we've decided that you know what? audiences don't connect with logos. they connect with people. what we're doing is we are introducing our talent once again. the people on the air, behind the camera and telling them our stories. i am living the american dream, julie. i came from modest beginnings, grew up in brooklyn, worked hard, watched my father working hard at the restaurant that he owned. my mother working two jobs. and then that's why it shaped me. it shaped the idea for me that yes, you can work really hard and gain great success. that's what i'm trying to help my viewers do all the time. we are trying to tell our story so that people understand that this is aspirational and you can do it, too. >> julie: we're all going to be watching. who don't like a face-lift? >> it's all cleaner and fresher. i'm loving it. i was playing with the app before i sat down. >> julie: i'll have to check it out myself. maria bartiromo. great to see you. >> bill: thank you, ladies. f5 is refresh on the keyboard. major league baseball ends with a bang and new record. mets third base. he hit 53 home runs in a season as a rookie. he was seen fighting back emotion after that. there is a shot, huh? tremendous accomplishment. young man doigt. some people say baseball is a juice. don't take it away from him. well done. the biggest mets fan you'll ever meet in your life. updates every day on the mets. well done to the rookie. >> julie: my mother-in-law a mets fan and i offer her my condolences. i don't need to. >> bill: f5 is refresh. that's what fox business did. >> julie: moving on now a dangerous inmate on the run. three out of four fugitives caught by police on the hunt for one more. we've got the latest on this manhunt. >> bill: congressman adam schiff says democrats want the transcript of president trump's calls with other world leaders including vladimir putin. what would that mean for national security? general jack keane will answer it next. >> julie: and pickup truck slams into a patrol car with an officer inside. we'll have more on his condition next. look, this isn't my first rodeo... and let me tell you something, i wouldn't be here if i thought reverse mortgages took advantage of any american senior, or worse, that it was some way to take your home. it's just a loan designed for older homeowners, and, it's helped over a million americans. a reverse mortgage loan isn't some kind of trick to take your home. it's a loan, like any other. big difference is how you pay it back. find out how reverse mortgages really work with aag's free, no-obligation reverse mortgage guide. eliminate monthly mortgage payments, pay bills, medical costs, and more. call now and get your free info kit. other mortgages are paid each month, but with a reverse mortgage, you can pay whatever you can, when it works for you, or, you can wait, and pay it off in one lump sum when you leave your home. discover the option that's best for you. call today and find out more in aag's free, no-obligation reverse mortgage loan guide. access tax-free cash and stay in the home you love. you've probably been investing in your home for years... making monthly mortgage payments... doing the right thing... and it's become your family's heart and soul... well, that investment can give you tax-free cash just when you need it. learn how homeowners are strategically using a reverse mortgage loan to cover expenses, pay for healthcare, protect investments, and so much more. look, reverse mortgages aren't for everyone but i think i've been 'round long enough to know what's what. i'm proud to be a part of aag, i trust 'em, i think you can too. trust aag for the best reverse mortgage solutions. so you can... retire better. >> julie: a utah highway patrol officer lucky to be alive this morning. sergeant brian nelson was pulled over on the side of a highway investigating a car accident when all of a sudden a passing pickup hydroplaned, hitting his vehicle. nelson suffered only minor injuries. police say this is a good reminder for drivers to slow down and move over when they see emergency lights. >> bill: fox news alert. over the weekend. al-shabaab extremist attacking a u.s. military base in somalia. a suicide bomber detonating a vehicle packed with explosives at the gate of the airstrip. we're told no american troops are hurt, injured or killed there. jack keane retired four-star general. good morning to you. a couple of things i want to get you. this somalia deal is not on the radar of a lot of americans. we're doing a lot of activity. how much does it concern you about still being a target there. >> al-shabaab and al qaeda are affiliates. this one is in somalia that we're very concerned about. potential threat to the american people. this is an organization that we actually take direct action against routinely. we have a foot on the throat of this organization. when they present themselves as a group they'll go in there to try to kill or capture them routinely. and that is why they're pushing back here. it is not surprising. the five other places are syria, yemen, libya, pakistan, and obviously afghanistan. 40 to 50 movements around the world representing radical islam. only six we take action routinely to protect the american people. that's what this is about. >> bill: the news in washington this is not new to you. here is adam schiff on nbc yesterday what steps he wants to take. >> if those conversations with world leaders are sequestered in the same electronic file. if there is an effort to hide those and cover those up we're determined to find out. >> bill: if you gain access on that. what is the inherent risk there that it would have in terms of privacy today or in the future? >> the constitution gives our presidents really wide latitude in the execution of foreign policy and national security and using their own discretion and their knowledge and experience to protect the american people and u.s. national interests around the world. if the public would have access to the private conversations that our presidents are doing to protect the american people, that would be quite stunning and it would certainly handcuff us in the future not just with this president, but for all future presidents. i would imagine this would produce -- this is going to produce some kind of crisis between the congress of the united states, who does have legitimate oversight of the execution of foreign policy. this appears to be a stretch without some evidence that would contribute to why they need this access. and where it is stored i don't think is enough evidence. >> bill: the reason i bring that up. you travel the world all the time. you talked to these world leaders and those who work directly under them. how would it change the way they were to work with a u.s. president do you believe? >> that would probably confine business between our presidents and other presidents and world leaders to only physical presence. they wouldn't be able to have the kind of impromptu phone conversations that you want to have. world events all come to 1600 pennsylvania avenue of the white house. it is inescapable because the united states is a global leader. so when things happen around the world, the president is very much involved almost spontaneously and quickly dealing with that situation. or for assistance, provide maybe intelligence that we have and he is doing that right on the phone. that i think is just extraordinary in terms of the united states very responsible role that a president is playing in the world. we can't handcuff a president in doing that. >> bill: general, thank you. two different topics handled well. nice to see you, sir. >> good seeing you, bill. >> julie: rudy giuliani saying the investigation into the relationship between the bidens and ukraine is legal and necessary. >> the house of cards is starting to fall on biden. it will be impossible for shiftless schiff to pull this thing on the president when biden actually did what he is claiming the president did and they're trying to ignore it. >> julie: is giuliani right? we put the legal questions to our headliner coming up, ken starr. >> bill: democrats keep pushing medicare for all. are we now learning that 400,000 seniors just got double build? our doctor is on deck to explain next. >> a majority of the american people in one form of another believe in a medicare for all single payer program. [applause] the reason that they do is they can see with their own eyes the cruelty and dysfunctionality of the current healthcare system. >> julie: as some 2020 democrats push for medicare for all we're learning about a nationwide glitch with medicare double billing 411,000 senior citizens. let's bring in fox news medical correspondent dr. marc siegel. among the victims 101-year-old retired fdny battalion chief. how did it happen? >> this happens first of all seniors don't know -- all of them don't know how to use online services and computers. there is something called easy pay. medicare can take your monthly premium automatically. it might not seem like a lot of money, $135 a month, but doubled to $270 and you are living on a fixed income and 101 years old, 44 million people are medicare age and the last thing they need on a fixed income is to suddenly find out that double the amount of money that they were paying on a monthly premium is taken out and they don't know about it. >> julie: here is a part of a statement to medicare subscribers. due to a processing error a small percentage of people who pay medical premiums through easy pay had their premiums deducted twice from their bank account. we're working to reduce the duplicate premium deduction and have it credited back to accounts as soon as possible. it is sad that we are talking about double billing not only to any clients but we're talking senior citizens who most likely -- i don't pay that close attention to my checking account -- that would have had no idea the money was being stolen out from under the rugs. >> it also emphasizes how poor the government healthcare program can work. again 44 million people. when some of our democrat candidates are talking about extending it across the country to all, medicare for all, well, let's look at the current system. by the way, medicare is currently involved in a terrible fraud scandal where $2 billion is being bilked from medicare by 35 defendants. this is alleged now that have a genetic test they're sending to people. take this genetic test. it is a fake test and $2 billion were billed to medicare. that's 100 times more medicare fraud than has occurred over the past 10 years. so with all of our technology i'm not sure that medicare is ready for prime time for the 44 million people that it actually covers. >> julie: you would say that most of america does not actually know what medicare for all would actually look like. >> absolutely. especially at a time of emerging technologies and personalized medicine where medicare is struggling to cover new solutions. as we extend it we may see more like medicaid by the way. we may not get medicare. >> julie: dr. marc siegel. we have to go. i'm getting the wrap. >> bill: president trump getting ready to leave the white house heading for virginia. we'll watch and see if he takes questions as house democrats take a major step in their inquiry. we'll talk to -- we'll see whether or not he talks to reporters on the way out and what this man said about the possibility of war with iran next. ♪ this is the family who wanted to connect... to go where they could explore and experience adventure in unexpected places... ♪ who were inspired by different cultures ♪ and found that the past can create new memories... leading them to discover: we're woven together by the moments we share. for everywhere you go, expedia has everything you need, all in one place. >> 10:00, good morning. president trump heading for virginia. he may take questions on the outside as he leaves. we'll stand by. brand-new hour begins now. i'm bill hemmer live in new york city. hope you had an awesome weekend. a new week begins today. >> julie: let's make it an awesome hour i'm julie banderas in for sandra smith. democrats are gearing up as the house pursues an impeachment inquiry. president trump wants to confront the whistle-blower saying he deserves to meet his accuser. impeachment playing out today on the morning shows. >> politics be damned. we all sore and oath to uphold and defend the constitution. this is going to be something that people look back in history and say what did you do? >> standing with adam schiff. we know he has been lying about most everything from russia to collusion for the last two or three years. this is a ramrod. what i said yesterday, the abuse of power part. they do not want the fairness that is given to someone who is accused. >> there is no way that the democracy can stand if a president can go around the world using the massive power of his office to try to bully foreign nations into destroying his political opponents. >> bill: let's bring in the a-team. a good one now. david avella, mary anne marsh, and liz peake fox news contributor. you've heard a lot of things. where do you think we are or where do you think we're headed? >> every time i see adam schiff on tv -- everything he said was incorrect despite taking the party line. that's what we get out of adam schiff and interesting watching the media coverage this weekend that democratic senators can send a letter to ukraine and say what they said and there is no implication of what they might have said. that somehow funds wouldn't have been withheld, but donald trump says what he says in the transcript that we read and yet the media can imply everything that should have been -- that allegedly was in donald trump's head according to them. it is a double standard that leaves most independent voters shaking their heads what it is all about. typical washington not dealing with what we care about. >> bill: that's david's position. mary anne, number three guys in foxnews.com today. impeachment inquiry so far, trump's days are numbered and never underestimate pelosi. >> nancy pelosi certainly knows exactly what she is doing. she never said she wouldn't do impeachment but when the facts are presented to her, it was necessary. there was widespread support and bipartisan. she got exactly what she needed to do it. look at the polls in one week. already a 10 point jump. 49% of americans support this including independents. look at the abc poll, 64% of people take these charges seriously or seriously. add that to the 69% in the "wall street journal" poll of last week that say trump is disliked and you start to see where this is going. add to it trump's own reaction to this. look at his twitter feed these last few days talking about creating a civil war, meeting with the nra to get money for his impeachment fund in exchange for not doing anything on gun control. you see donald trump acting in a way you haven't seen. >> bill: you believe it's a done deal? >> moving forward with impeachment no question about it. >> bill: liz, where do you think we are? >> i think there will be impeachment in the house. i think it will never pass the senate. with all due respect, all the other things that we could look at. the stock market has basically shrugged it off. money is pouring into the trump campaign and here is why. an awful lot of trump supporters are saying wait a minute, we have been through the russia investigation. too many charges, too many reasons that they are trying to undo the results of the 2016 election. and an awful lot of people in this country are saying it's more of the same. was he stupid to have said this in the call to the ukrainian president, absolutely. but what have democrats done? jumped on board this impeachment train and what is the result of that? everyone is looking at joe. now joe biden is gone and now we'll have elizabeth warren as the candidate. she is never going to win the presidency. >> one thing. this is more than stupid, okay? nancy pelosi put it best. donald trump betrayed his oath of office and national security. >> that's your interpretation and that is not -- i think that's what the democrats are saying for sure. i think a lot of people who support donald trump are saying we were told before that he had betrayed the nation in seeking russia's help in the 2016 election. what did he actually ask the ukraine to do? i'm very interested in the fact "the new york times" today on the front page said nothing to do with ukraine in the 2016 election. that is part of what trump was going back to. the whole crowd strike issue. most americans are kind of like this is so in the weeds i can't keep up with all the details. it sound like more of the same. these guys did something wrong and these other people did something wrong. i'm sick of it. >> julie: you
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joe biden. joe biden is a pompous jackass. host: all right, that is anna. the president about this scrutiny amid this phone call has gotten news organizations to go back and look at joe biden's son's- joe biden's business dealings. ere is the washington times' wrap up about the history of hunter biden and ukraine. hunter biden's plump job in ukraine raised eyes as soon as he landed it in 2014. his work on the board of an energy company was in 2014 during the height of tensions against the russian annexation of crimea. the appointment of the vice president's son to a ukrainian at board looks nepotistic best and nefarious at worst. adam taylor wrote that at the time. the appearance of impropriety worsened in 2018 when the vice president visited tf and threatened to hold -- visited kiev and threatened to withhold -- the prosecutor happened to be investigating the ukrainian gas company where hunter biden sat on the board and ran the company's legal unit. that is the story in today's washington times. lisa out of idaho, independent. you are next. caller: good morning, c-span. all of this is going around in circles. you have trump lying about something else and rudy giuliani, who pops up every three months or so and says what he has been doing or not doing and what irritates me most is that none of these republicans are standing up to this man because they all sound like they are talking from the same script and they are afraid to do anything because they will be voted out in 2020 just like what happened in 2018, the same thing. lasttime we had the shooting, they said they were .oing to talk about gun control everybody who is on trump -- in his administration, nobody has a job, they are all acting. king.acting like a i don't understand why these republicans -- i did vote for trump and i am sorry for that because i thought he would be better than hillary. maybe not. then he invites the taliban. what is that? host: when you talk about your concerns about republicans, you are out west. mitt romney also out west saying if the president asked or pressed the u.k. president to investigate his political rival, it would be troubling in the extreme. critical for the fax to come out. what do you make of that tweet yesterday from mitt romney? caller: i think it is very guys thatbecause our are from here in idaho, they seem to do a lot of okay things for idaho and they are republicans, but then they go to washington and they forget what they are doing. i don't understand it. host: do you think mitt romney has done that? caller: i think everybody should be focusing on it. republicans and everybody else. i don't know how much he can get away with and nobody stands up and says what is wrong with you, why are you doing these things? host: talking about republicans in washington, several of the president's cabinet members and his personal attorneys went on the sunday shows and were asked about this. rudy giuliani was on fox news. steve mnuchin was on meet the press and mike pompeo was on abc news's this week. this is what mike pompeo had to say. [video clip] >> i do think if vice president behaved -- i think we need to get to the bottom of that and i hope we will. i hope if vice president biden engaged in behavior that was inappropriate, -- not have our elections interfered with. america cannot have our elections interfered with. if there was that kind of activity engaged in by vice president biden, we need to know. the conversation was perfectly fine, why not release the transcript or a portion to the public? tothe white house will have -- those are private conversations between world leaders. there is no evidence there would -- that would be appropriate at this point. host: this week, much of the secretary of state's attention is expected to take place in new york. this is a story from today's wall street journal and the focus on his efforts when it comes to responding to iran and concerns about attacks at the key saudi oil facility. we will talk more about the attacks, fallout. we will be joined by michael singh coming up in about 25 coasts here on the east about 8:00 a.m. eastern. president trump will be in new york city as well. he is speaking at a united nations religious freedom event and we will be showing that lives 11:30 you span and you can watch it at c-span.org or on the free c-span radio app. and to your phone calls your calls for impeachment proceedings to begin. mike in maryland, republican, you are next. i am sure you have the clip where biden admits to threatening the ukrainian president that he was going to withhold $1 million if they did not fire the special prosecutor. if you think trump is not playing this for all it is worth, i bet stephen miller linked this info. they think they have something, they never do. play the clip where biden admits he was going to withhold $1 million, i bet you won't. host: i believe that is the clip the president tweeted out last week. i don't have it right in front of me, but i know what you are referring to. did the president tweeted? caller: yes, immediately. it was just like the elijah cummings video. do you think elizabeth warren is going to be president? no. he is going to bury biden in this ukrainian scandal. .he old man admitted to it host: who do you think is the biggest threat to the president in 2020 when it comes to the democratic field? should he be scared of anyone of those folks? caller: not at all. warren will get the nomination and she will choose bernie or someone a little more liberal, warren who got into harvard on a minority scholarship, she was harvard's first minority student and entered the texas bar as an american -- you think that is who scares trump? no, it was biden. you wait until this ukrainian thing unfolds. if you think trump does anything other than -- he has a purpose for this. host: why do you think biden did scare president trump? caller: he was the most electable. they are going to continue to put old white men out of there to fight against president trump. look at beto o'rourke. the guys name is robert francis and he is going by the name beto. cory booker, the corruption in new jersey. you think be -- these people have a chance? that is mike in maryland. independent.an caller: to clarify, looking at the screen, is a today's topic an adam schiff quotation? host: adam schiff saying impeachment, adam schiff saying it may be the only remedy when it comes to this ukraine story. a wall if you built between adam schiff and the camera, the wall would not stand a chance. you are covering a topic of which there is so little information, there should not even be a topic. anu have gone to be msnbcsp and you look like you are trying to act and look like chuck todd. host: what about the whistleblower complaint? you say there is so little information, do you think this should come out and be able to be seen by congress to find information about it? we lost mike. in virginia, good morning. caller: good morning. it looks as if we are going to -- they say the president is lied 12,000 times, this new impeachment probe. i am saying whenever you shut donald trump's twitter down, he cannot communicate to the people and that is what they have been .ushing sheep, they say it would be great -- it would not be great, it would be worse and now they are saying let's keep them from talking to other world leaders because every time he talks to another world's president, then they demand to see the transcripts, we wanted to know what he says and they are trying to shut them off from the world. to try tore going byt them off from the world going after the conversation by female leaders. c-span winlip on biden, during a campaign rally, was actually talking about how tough he is. he was saying how tough is he? biden is a bully and he is a fabricator. donald trump, keep on keeping on. host: bill is next out of georgia, democrat, good morning. good morning. i find this fascinating, this president has been consistent trying to get foreign powers to interfere with our elections. i think that he won't release the transcripts. he says even if i did, who cares. i am very interested in the information. of course, trump has suited them to keep them from releasing their information and that will tofascinating as it begins come around. i don't think this president will be reelected. i think when people -- when folks go to the polls, they will keep to themselves. when they walk in, they are just going to stop this flyer. host: what do you think about nancy pelosi's efforts to conduct of these various oversight probes? we now have efforts by the intelligence committee to try to get access to this whistleblower complaint. how do you view her as the person who has been leading these efforts? caller: i think that she forrstands the need investigation. i believe that, eventually, they are going to begin impeachment .roceedings i think nancy pelosi understands how things work a lot better than a whole lot of folks and i would be interested to see and fascinated to see what happened. host: you are comfortable with the pace at which this has proceeded so far? other democrats have called not comfortable that it is not farther along down the impeachment track in the house. caller: it is ok with me. as more andith me ite information comes out, is going to affect the election. i understand her reasons for not wanting to begin impeachment proceedings. watch. be fun to my favorite saying is you can't fix stupid. host: that is bill in order. --nda in new jersey, also caller: good morning, america, my beautiful country that i love. this whole thing to me is so have ang that we administration that is so corrupt and claiming executive courtsge over all the where we can see the evidence. this is what this president is doing. i think he should be impeached and i think mitch mcconnell should be impeached right alongside him. ,is wife should be impeached the transportation secretary, they are robbing us blind. guys, i am sorry. you trump supporters, he is going to break your heart. this guy is a crook and i for putin is an agent . he is going to be found guilty of treason. watch what i am telling you. host: a few collars back we talked about the video president trump put out calling it the real and only story when it comes to the issue of joeiden and hunter biden. this is that video the president 8:53ed out -- saturday at --alsolking about showing clips of joe biden's comments at the foreign council of the -- about the ukraine. you can see that video. larry, taylorville, illinois. you are next. caller: yes, i would just like to ask all of your viewers if hunter biden is not guilty of thehing, why did he resign gas company board of directors make a million dollars. why did his dad announce he was going to run for president? i would like to tell your last callers, i am proud to be a republican and i will be voting for donald trump in the next election. host: linda, california. good morning. caller: i would like to say something about impeachment. i think they should have started it back in march or april because of all the things he has done, you go back to that first meeting with putin, that was no mistake he said -- he denied he -- he scares me. i don't know how anybody could believe him. .e lies so much i don't care if yo
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joe right now. joe is having a hard time. we will see what happens. steve: there you have got president trump down at our southern border with ed henry taking aim at joe biden as his poll numbers, joe biden's do, hit a new low of 29%. according to the latest fox news poll. bernie sanders now climbing back in to second place. so should joeoll position he? is still at the top. here to weigh in is chairman of the harris poll and former clinton strategist mark penn, mark, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: joe biden is still beating bernie sanders by at least 10. he's down 2 according to our latest poll. >> yeah. i don't think down 2 means a lot with the number of voters in the poll. look, i think clearly biden is ahead. he does he have well with older democrats, african-americans, sanders, you know, does well with younger democrats and latinos and warren is coming on quite strong with elites, the most educated. steve: when you look at this poll, bernie sanders over august has gone up 8. that's a lot. >> some polls have sanders going down. some up. i think it's clear that biden is ahead. the other two are following. the race is taking shape. but i think it's going to be hard for anybody to get a majority of the delegates if this race stays the way it is unless there is a fundamental change between sanders and war
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joe may have involved getting some information aboutjoe biden. why is that significant? joe biden is a leading contenderfor that significant? joe biden is a leading contender for the that significant? joeted to campaign finance electoral law, in other words it seems to be the suggestion that the president was seeking a contribution in kind from the ukrainians to helping with his re—election will stop not money but help, but that might come in the form of dirt onjoe biden. we are showing it on the screen. it is that sentence, there is a lot of talk about biden's son, whatever you can do will be great. that is what eve ryo ne can do will be great. that is what everyone will be focusing on. just after that, it goes on to suggest that the president of ukraine agreed that he would do that, he would look into it. the president here said he would get rudy giuliani, bearing in mind that this is personal lawyer, to get in touch with the ukrainian president. further on down the call, you also see the president saying, we will get to the bottom of this. there is a clear amount of determination on the part of president trump to raise this issue and push it home, if you like. i think it gives rise
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joe denly went forjust 18, —— it is too — one to australia. joe denly went for just 18, caught —— it is too — one to australia. joe denly went forjust 18, caught by steve smith. joe root had two very lucky escapes, because he was dropped twice, but then burns went for 46, caught by mitchell marsh of the valley ofjosh hazlewood, and then stokes, who made a pretty awful decision. mitchell marsh bold, not a particularly great ball, but stokes hooked it when he didn‘t have to, and it was caught by nathan lyon. so england are currently 166—3, joeist abuse. that is because the bulgarian fans have already been punished for racist behaviour in june earlier already been punished for racist behaviour injune earlier this year. so much so, the stadium will be partially closed for the game on 0ctober partially closed for the game on october 14. partially closed for the game on 0ctober14. that is their punishment. i think gareth southgate is also well aware that england‘s black players were subjected to monkey chants the last time they we re monkey chants the last time they were in sofia in bulgaria in 2011. so he has said that we are aware there is history and we want to make sure they are all prepared for what might happen and how we respond. the fa is investigating a complaint of racial risk of a nation against former england women‘s boss mark sampson. his current club stevenage has strongly defended their ca reta ker has strongly defended their caretaker manager, saying the allegations have no foundation. sampson was previously fou
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