necessarily change their vote. tessa, i m sorry. we have to leave it there. we are out of time this sunday. thanks so much. tessa and kevin. that will do it for me. i m dara brown. thanks for watching. at the top of the hour, politics nation with the reverend al sharpton. first, your business up next. ooh, heaven is a place on earth uhp. i didn t believe it. again. ooh, baby, do you know what that s worth? i want to believe it. [ claps hands ] ooh i m not hearing the confidence.
and one that, to test his point, has largely continued and not been impacted by the attack on its credibility from the likes of 1600 approximapennsylvania a tessa, the tweets attacking the mueller investigation under scores part of the problem that republicans are pointing to. the economy is humming, but trump is tweeting that the republicans are worried. congressional leaders say they cannot rely on the booming economy to win over undecided voters. the leaders add this to their it s an obscured by the inflammatory moves on immigration. vladimir putin and on other fronts. tessa, what are republicans focusing on to maintain control or avoid embarrassing losses in these districts? this has always been the struggles for republicans with trump as president. he can be the worst enemy by engaging in twitter battles and
intense core base. real quick, do you think he ll be a primary? he might be. that will be interesting to watch. historically among modern presidents who have been prim y primari primaried, most if not all won a second term because they ve been weakened by their primary challenger. it s an interesting calculus for republicans thinking about taking him on. kevin, i can see you agree. you are shaking your head. absolutely. he will be. kevin and tessa, stay with us. we have more to talk about about the supreme court nominee coming up. next, a closer look at why paul manafort is so important to the mueller probe and why he may be part of the end game.