reporter covering the story, because we get a lot of pushback saying that there is some sort of aggressive you know full on fight to sort of prove her wrong, while i still feel there are questions we re never going to get answers to the questions are legitimate. well certainly the questions are legitimate. i think the clinton team is eager to turn the page on there and turn the focus back to her leadership skills and the things that harold ford was talking about. i think this means that will be really hard to do. there is going to be a constant. you know the state department want to release all these e-mails in january. the timing would have been right before the iowa caucus. it s not ideal. it would have been one big dump. people would have gotten tired of them. what the judge said is there will be a periodic release of this. that means every six weeks, every month, whatever schedule there will be a new set of stories you know about these e-mails, that s exactly what the clinton c
some democrats say they are surprised they didn t focus on it more earlier. they will acknowledge he could have potentially taken it away. a little late in the game. but at the same time, the clinton campaign was surprised by bernie sanders in the primary. she s going to grand rapids, which i found interesting because it s a very conservative area. they say they have learned a lesson from the primary. they didn t spend a lot of time there. they want to make sure they re not neglecting it. that s tomorrow. because grand rapids is where donald trump s making his last pre-election day stop. that area. you say the clinton campaign doesn t want to be surprised. are they nervous, worried? how do you characterize it. you felt like maybe this wasn t the attitude of a campaign that feels like they are going to win. is there that sense still today about michigan? reporter: i think that there is a sense they are still trying to grind it out. the sense here is that they built a machine that