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The Notorious B.I.G. will become the seventh hip-hop artist to enter the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame | Credit: Clarence Davis/Getty Images
It s been 24 years since Christopher Wallace, known professionally as the Notorious B.I.G., was shot to death in Los Angeles, and his loved ones are no closer to finding justice. As long as I have life there s hope, Biggie s mother Voletta Wallace tells EW exclusively while promoting the Netflix documentary
Biggie: I Have a Story to Tell. I ll never give up. And I hope when I m not in this world anymore, my friends and family will carry on the fight. There is always hope.
basically a doctor would be holding a baby and kill that baby. that s illegal under the law. that is already a crime. i know this. i m a former prosecutor. that is a crime. chris: back to you. are you okay let me ask you. i understand the argument against that. what i m asking you is, are you okay with abortions after 24 weeks? to protect the life and the health of the mother. that is exactly what the supreme court ruling said. and i am okay with that. but i just think it s really important, chris, for your fox viewers to know, because there s so much misinformation out there. that what the laws do is extreme. there are a number of republicans who said they are opposed though them. they are extreme. then you have the president misleading the public and telling them that this is about basically killing a baby after a baby is born. that is not what this is about. that is a crime. so i think what people have to
and as my husband pointed out, it s not an expanding base. i will find a way to win. no one thought a peanut farmer from georgia would win. jimmy carter pointed out he had less support at this point than i do. no one thought a guy named barack obama could become president. this is you know politics, it s a long road. chris: it s forever. listen, it is a snapshot of where we are at this point. i m not counting you out. that s why you re here for the sunday sit-down. thank you for taking my. always good to talk with you. up next, we ll bring in our sunday group to discuss the growing 2020 field and a frontrunner who keeps building his lead. plus, what would you like to ask the panel about alabama s strict new abortion law, just go to facebook or twitter at fox news sunday and we may use your question on the air. as fox news sunday reports live from stevens high school in claremont, new hampshire. xfinity mobile comes with our internet,
pages. that s the only time the i felt like turning around and going home. chris: caro says he has one big rule when interviewing. your notebooks are filled with a notation [laughter] yeah. chris: what does that mean? shut up. [laughter] people have a desire, a need to fill in silences. if you could just make yourself shut up, often they ll tell you what you want to know. chris: then there s writing. caro remembers what a professor at princeton told him. you re never going to achieve what you want to achieve, mr. caro, unless you stop thinking with your fingers. i knew exactly what he meant. it was so easy for me to write. i didn t think things through. chris: which brings us back to his final book on lbj which is about a third written. caro took us into his office. this is the outline to have the rest of my last volume. from here to there to end of the book over there. chris: he writes several drafts
of whether we pass dak a daca right now. we want to make it easier for people to come to country, they re still focused on getting immediate family members into the country. chris: there was no outreach to democrats at a all about this bill, and they have already declared it dead on arrival in this congress. but is it good politics for the president to be able to say it s not just that i m against illegal immigration, here are some things that i m for? i think it s necessary politics for him to change the conversation as it s being had around immigration. you know, we did a poll at our institute not long ago that showed while the american people support his approach to the economy, when it comes to immigration, they actually support congressional democrats over his approach. this is supposed to be his signature issue, and it isn t playing out electorally, politically for him the way he d like beyond his base. and so i think what you re seeing here is the president and his team tryi