weathertech. made right, in america i think this was a big loss for them. the bottom line is they went all in on it. they said that their goal was to get over 50%. they came up short. they said on the record that their goal was to win this race. they lost.
when you have an institution that seems to create an environment where that s allowed based on race or gender, soon that institution has to be corrected. reverend al sharpton, thank you for making time. thank you. coming up, why did the esident say armada was headed towards north korea when it was actuallyoing the opposite direction more than 3,000 miles away? sean spicer s creative attempt at answering that question and why it was a deeply dangerous mistake. that s after this two-minute break. guests can earn a how cafree night when theypring book direct on choicehotels.com and stay with us just two times? spring time. badda book. badda boom.
against people who say that they are trying to preserve something based on their race and based on their privilege. i think, you know, i was remembering today as a teenager when i first got involved in civil rights, i was made to read by dr. william jones, moral man in moral society. when you have an institution that seems to create an environment where that s allowed based on race or gender, soon that institution has to be corrected. reverend al sharpton, thank you for making time. thank you. coming up, why did the president say an armada was headed towards north korea when it was actually going the opposite direction more than 3,000 miles away? sean spicer s creative attempt at answering that question and why it was a deeply dangerous mistake. that s after this two-minute break.
they ve known each other for a very long time. here s someone who kind of cut his teeth in new york in the 80s and 90s and the racial politics of that. in many ways, so did bill o reilly, and so did donald trump. there s a kind of continuity of the cauldron of that kind of racial strife in this city that i think defines the world view of both those men. i think it s true. the irony is i marched against mr. trump around the central park jogging case, something you and i have talked about. and i ve had my battles, as you ve said, for all those years with o reilly. we get called the hustlers. we get called the names. we get called all kinds of none complimentary terms for fighting against people who say that they are trying to preserve something based on their race and based on their privilege. i think, you know, i was remembering today as a teenager when i first got involved in civil rights, i was made to read by dr. william jones, moral man in moral society.
and the reaction has somewhat been, you know, that they almost won. no, they lost. the final results in last night s special election on georgia s sixth district. at the top, you ve got democrat jon ossoff with 48% of the vote. then below him a bunch of republicans none of whom managed to crack 20%. it s true ossoff didn t get the 50% necessary to win outright. he fell just short and the race goes to what should be a very competitive june 20th runoff between the top two candidates. so while it wasn t a flat-out win for democrats, it was also, despite sean spicer s spin, pretty far from being a loss. ossoff outperformed the 2016 democratic candidate by ten points and won a higher percentage of the vote than any democrat since the district was established back in 1992. he very nearly walked away with the seat that republican tom price won last year by more than 20 points. in a district that s about 9.5 percentage points more republican than the nation as a whole. president trump, who t