brian: we begin this hour with a brand new development with jeffrey document dump. steve: another one last night. another 300 documents were dumped or unsealed to the public, putting more scrutiny on former president bill clinton . ainsley: we are learning more about the hollywood stars in epstein s orbit and we expect more document to come out today. peter doocy joins us now live from the white house with the latest. hey, peter. latest accusation was bill clinton was doing some kind of crisis p.r. for jeffrey epstein. one of the epstein accusers virginia giuffre was writing a book and in it she claimed about bill clinton he walked into vanity fair and threatened them not to write sex trafficking articles about his good friend jeffrey epstein. those are disputed in the pages of the telegraph quote there is no evidence to support the claims and strenuously denied by a representative vanity fair s long time former editor who told the telegraph this categorically did not
obviously bill clinton hasn t been accused of any wrongdoing or donald trump or a lot of people. jeffrey epstein web of scandals by being named in these documents. ainsley: you are right. moms said birds of a feather. do you support unsealing the documents. list the name of people, epstein and ghislaine were at chelsea clinton s wedding. you don t want a pedophile at your daughter s wedding. but you are automatically associated with him even if you didn t do anything wrong. do you support the judge documents. her rationale it was kind of most of it was already public anyway and some reason that the public should be able to know about this. court documents are not private. usually they are public unless they need some type of
korea denuclearizes. reporter: does the president believes he s above the law? sarah: the president hasn t done anything wrong. reporter: does he believe the framers envisioned a system where the president could pardon himself, above the law? sarah: the constitution lays out the law. once again, the president hasn t done anything wrong. we feel comfortable. reporter: it s not that clear. simply put, does the president believe he is above the law? sarah: y no one is above the law. i m going to keep going. keep moving. ask if i can. reporter: i think this is important. sarah: i m going to continue to move on. reporter: sarah, what s the status of the tariffs on china? does this administration still plan to move ahead with the june deadline? sarah: president trump is taking steps to continue to
constitutionality? reporter: the president said he s open to bilateral deals as he heads up to canada or see thinking he would like to save nafta? sarah: the president is open to it. reporter: last week missouri governor stepped down. did president trump or anyone at the white house encourage him to step down? sarah: i m not aware of any conversations. reporter: why not considering he s the leader of the party? sarah: certainly we were aware of the issue and felt this was a decision to be made by the people of missouri and a local issue. april? reporter: [indiscernible] he s saying in a tweet that he has the right to pardon himself. does he assume that special counsel will find him guilty of something? sarah: no, because he hasn t done anything wrong.
accomplishments, today is my husband s birthday, happy birthday, brian and thank you for putting up with me. reporter: the president said i have an absolute right to pardon myself. why does he think that and does he agree with rudy giuliani that a pardon for himself would be unthinkable and would lead to immediate impeachment? sarah: the president doesn t have a need for a pardon. reporter: does he rule that out? sarah: the president hasn t done anything wrong and wouldn t need one. reporter: how does the president respond to the criticism about tariffs against the eu, canada and mexico? how do you reassure these senators? sarah: imposing the 232 tariffs protect the steel and aluminum industries. for months the united states had