time is out. still ahead, senator jeff sessions was one of the first people to give main stream credible to the trump campaign, now the president is turning on the attorney general in a widespread breath taking new ber view. plus, prayers intoed in for senator john mcdane diagnosed with geoblastoma the same that ted kennedy died from back in 2009. also in the heat of the bedate over the mech mech reform. morning joe is back after this. millies. trick or treat! we re so glad to have you here. what if we treated great female scientists like they were stars? yasss queen! what if millie dresselhaus,
sack official. that s something we work on. here s something i know is not going to happen today. i don t think there s going to be any, any we re going to get any closer to resolving this bedate, but over time perhaps it ll be more a civil discourse. i hope. and i invite that that much. thanks for coming. thanks for having me. we ll be watching and thanks for sharing. thanks so much. fighting president trump s agenda. the deep blue state that s gearing up to take on the white house. in a pretty big way. stay tuned.
of this. stay with us for that. let s talk about the new poll numbers and the changing republican race with who better, larry, at the university of politics in virginia. let s begin with the fact that carly fiorina is the headline of this poll. a month ago she wasn t even going to be on the main debate stage. not only is there she s in second place. on top of that our cn thr nrksc thought she did hands down b, best job at the debate. surprised at all? no. i think that proves she was paying attention. it was a long bedate but thdeba were watching. she won it be a mile. she s got a moment. i think marco rubio has a moment. they have to capitalize on this moment because those moments don t come very often. if you don t capitalize they quickly slip away. i think there s no question
welcome back. tonight we re talking about the governors of texas and maryland, which leads us right to another fire back question on facebook or twitter. would you rather live in texas or maryland right now? 54% say maryland, 46% say texas. and before we close out, i just want to point out one thing. i think i m the only one sitting at this table who has never thought about running for president. am i right? i m right. i don t know whether you ve ever thought about it or not. let s assume the answer is yes. the bedate continues online at cnn.com/crossfire as well as facebook and twitter. from the left, i m stephanie cutter. from the right, i m newt gingrich. join us tomorrow for another edition of crossfire. erin burnett outfront starts right now. outfront next, breaking
particular studies to support what i think. doctor, i always get sort of uncomfortable around this conversation. because it s usually arguments are made against gay marriage saying that it ll harm the children. i just ask myself, if we had research that definitively said, actually, kids of gay parents do better, would we ban heterosexual marriage? no. so are there any particular sort of myths that you would just like to bust right at this moment in this bedate? i would like people to recognize that just because you believe something to be true doesn t make it true. i think that a lot of people just have this belief that based on their own impressions over time that somehow gay parents are not as effective at parenting as parents who are heterosexual, and we clearly again have studies to demonstrate that that is not the case. the other thing is, i think a lot of people think that there s a lot of people who are the families are less stable in gay households. and, in fact, we know