economics and lowering taxes so there will be lots of jobs, the trickle down idea was also just a trojan horse and something that they didn t really believe. yeah, lower taxes for everybody, but all we really care about is lowering taxes for the rich and big business. and the thing about when i started doing my research about evil geniuses, i knew, reagan got elected in 1980, i didn t realize until i did this massive amount of research how much change, what a gigantic shift that was. of course, as we spoke about the other day, it was being built up in the 70s, this alternate paradigm, this conservative counterestablishment was sending people like joe scarborough to congress. but really the before and after in the 80s is so stark in so many ways. really as big a change as the 6 0s or the 30s, which is why i call what happened the raw deal,
again will come up if they can try to get to 50 to at least have this part of the obstruction filibuster reform done on voting rights. here s what he said more broadly about working with manchin. we can no longer go in a definite mode of waiting to find what will please our senators. at some point when people are negotiating things, they need to put forward their positions. something they actually will agree to in a negotiation. i don t think it s appropriate just to keep saying no, no, no. does that apply to manchin on the fill buster? is there a way to convince them that especially as a carveout, this isn t even that big a change? i think sheldon whitehouse who i was proud to serve with makes a very good point. that, you know, i negotiated a lot of bills. you need to tell people where you are at. and what you are willing to do.
repeatedly over the last 20 years and we thought the sense that maybe 9/11 changed americans lives permanently would start to fade. it hasn t happened. it s gotten more intense. and actually, the younger you are, the more firmly you believe that 9/11 has left a permanent stamp on the united states. let me mention one thing that has changed, the sense of domestic terrorism being a bigger threat than international terrorism. that s not a question that occurred to us to ask in the year following 9/11. that s how big a change is. what are the respondents saying to your poll, why did they believe more than a year after or ten years after, that 9/11 changed our lives? when we did call backs it s practical things, tougher
congressman, thank you so much. really appreciate your time tonight. joy, thanks for having me back on. if this report today from axios is accurate that someone inside the white house has leaked documents to the house oversight committee about how jared kushner and ivanka trump got their security clearances, documents the white house has been refusing to hand over to that committee, how big a change is that from the run-of-the-mill leaks to the press that we ve all gotten accustomed to. how worried should the white house be? joining us now is michael besh latch. how unprecedented is it for the white house to hand over documents of this sensitive nature and have someone in the white house leak it to a congressional committee? that s the thing, anyone who s complaining that the trump white house is not full of innovations, here is one of them, which is usually you see someone in the white house leaking something to the press, and if there s an investigation in congress, the
the saudis have been taking advantage of the situation. congressman ro khanna, member of the house oversight committee. thank you so much. really appreciate your time tonight. joy, thank you for having me back on. thank you very much. if this report from axios is accurate that somebody inside the white house has leaked documents to the house oversight committee about how jared kushner and ivanka trump got their skurnt clears clearances, documents the white house has been refusing to hand over to that committee, how big a change is that from the run of the mill leaks to the press that we ve all gotten accustomed to? how worried should the white house be? joining us now is nbc presidential historian michael beschloss. great to have you with us, michael. thanks, joy. so just give us the answer to that question. how unprecedented is it for the white house to refuse to hand over documents of this sensitive nature related to national security and then have someone in the white ho