to which the president is being subjected is totally unprecedented and totally unfair. just when you thought the process couldn t get any more unfair, we found out last night that democrats will now not even allow republicans to have a copy of the respective transcripts from each of the witnesses we have interviewed thus far. republican colleagues are shrewdly not actually talking about what happened because it s completely indefensible. instead they pick a complaint dejour about whatever is going on in terms of process. bret: some of the sound from capitol hill today as the inquiry continues behind closed doors. today, the acting u.s. ambassador to ukraine bill taylor appeared and we have obtained the transcript of his opening statement. in it he says by mid july it was becoming clear to me that the meeting president zelensky wanted was conditioned on the investigations of burisma and the alleged ukrainian interference in the 2016 elections. it was also clear that this condition
intuitive tense of sessions, whether he can do the job he was appointed to do. whether the president s tweets and move forward with the agenda he has with the justice department, he might swallow hard and move forward. if it gets on his nerves too much, he has to quit. what is your take? do you think this is the president s thoughts, dejour and it will blow over or is the president trying to publicly shame sessions to resign? this is too deliberate and it s too open a humiliation of sessions. i think he s trying to force sessions to resign. the president doesn t like to fire people, not withstanding his television background. however, he does have a reputation for trying to get people to resign, voluntarily. i think that s what he s trying to do so he can put a new attorney general in place so eventually, he can fire mueller. that s what he has in the back