threat from the commander-in-chief even if congress does act. right, we do but the thing is, this is an ongoing battle between the coequal branches. presidency a coequal branch with the congress. laws are written by congress. we wrote and passed the sanctions that can only be undone by congress. simply what we pointed out in the letter is what the constitution states and what the law states. laws can only be undone by the congress. bill: there is a deadline in two weeks and they re meeting again today in switzerland and john kerry was quoted over the weekend that an extension is not likely. we ll see whether that is the case or not. topic, number two hillary clinton s emails on sunday her campaign confirmed with fox news about the fact that they personally saw 30,000 emails declaring what was personal and what was not but you made news yesterday saying you clearly believe she broke the law. what law is that, senator? well, here s the thing.
the iran deal so support for the corker deal went up. one senator one democrat signed on after the letter. is that veto-proof? it takes 67 votes to override a presidential veto. there are 54 republicans looks like they have 11 democrats and they are two votes short of saying we have a majority to overturn your veto. if that is the case and you are at 65 and not 67 the president wins. but you believe this could backfire on the commander and chief? so far republicans have been able to enlist more and more democrats in this. if they get to 67 and have a veto-proof majority they can go to the president and say they are passing this bill and don t
when you go high-ranking office, secretary of state, the president himself, they sign a statement when they come in saying all government records will remain with the government. they actually sign an exit statement, i believe, we ll have to find out if she did sign the statement, saying that all government records remain with the government. they haven t scene anything with them. this is a real problem. some people say is that really a law? could that really be prosecuted? it is perjury. general petraeus was recently accused of the same thing, of having classified information in an inappropriate location outside of government security. so i think when she says she needed this for convenience, not to carry two phones i think convenience should never trump national security. i m worried that she left government records in an unsecure site and actually she was still in potential of government records after she left government service. bill: it has been documented what the u.s. ambassador
do what i want? i think american people won t like that. bill: you i cut your comment, she will stonewall to the end and independent investigator is needed but i m not sure who assigns that. thank you for your time senator. in austin texas. republican senator rand paul with us. martha. martha: new chilling video shows the moment two officers were shot in ferguson, missouri. [gunfire] oh. [bleep]. now there is a suspect under arrest in this case. what he is now saying to the police. that plus this. whoa! larry crashes hard right at the finish line. had to think he was thinking a little more than whoa, right? a drag racer s miraculous escape from this.
promised pensioneers i will increase your subsidies and benefits. he told the russian people he will rebuild infrastructure. he can t do any of that he has to start cutting his budget. he has been very popular at the same time because he whipped them up into nationalist fervor. like a sugar high. how long can the sugar high last? at what point do the senior leadership say, the oligarchs you re destroying us. bill: in terms of nationalism he made the russian people feel good about being russian. absolutely. bill: what he said with regard to ukraine. they were in danger. we can not abandon them. russian people live there. he alluded to a year ago he was ready to put his nuclear forces on alert. this ukraine is tipping point for russia a i was in ukraine nine months ago. met ukrainians. talked to people in kiev. got an understanding of the situation, particularly when i came back and talked to russian officials in the united states.