thank you. thank you for watching. our live coverage continues with white house in crisis: the impeachment inquiry with laura coates. we ll try to actually answer some of the questions that people are wanting to know about what is all this mean, where are e we today and the why notes. like why can t you have somebody testify in front of the hill today. why was the person not allowed to do so. why can t there be a full vote. people want to understand what it moo means and where we are in the important moment in history. it s good. i love what you are doing. you break it down. you had jeffrey on and you were breaking down what happens. it seems every single day there s something new. many more new things. and it s sometimes difficult for the public to understand. it comes at us like a fire hose. drinking news from a fire house. whiplash. by the time we get to 11:00 p.m. we have this. the idea of all the developments during the day.
jeffrey on this, is whether the white house will resist and whether they can claim and uphold executive privilege. that s going to be what they want to do. i think they ve waived it. that s what i defer to jeffrey on. listen, we ll get to jeffrey in just a second. a lot more on that clear complaint release. how tough is the white house going to be? can they stop people from the white house from testify? including a quote now from unnamed officials who say the ukrainians were told their president could only have that call with trump in july if he was willing to, quote, play ball, unquote, on investigating the bidens. my grandfather had an amazing life, but ancestry showed me so much more than i could have imagined. my grandfather was born in a shack in pennsylvania, his father was a miner, they were immigrants from italy and somewhere along the way that man changed his name and transformed himself into a successful mid-century american man. he had a whole life that i didn t know anyth
has the right to fill that deputy attorney general job and the job requirement, as far as i can tell, is someone who will not protect robert mueller and his investigation. preet, during an interview for the job of deputy attorney general, could the president ask interview subjects what they think of the mueller investigation? i mean, he can ask anything he wants. i suppose he can. that would be a terrible idea. and the one thing i agree with jeffrey on, you know, what the president probably wants out of somebody who would replace rod rosenstein, but i do think it s the case. i don t know noel francisco personally, he has a decent reputation, and he has a reputation for believing in overleaning executive power. but part of the reason we have robert mueller in the first place is that rod rosenstein cared a lot about his professional relationship in the country, which was very strong, and after he wrote that contextual memo on the basis of which drrp claimed to fire jim comey, i kno
protective of the mueller investigation, so it stands to reason that the person he puts in there, if that person really gets confirmed, or really, you know, takes office, will be someone less protective, as a technical legal matter, it appears to be noel francisco, the solicitor general. and we ll see what his perspective is on this, but he has the right to fill that deputy attorney general job and the job requirement, as far as i can tell, is someone who will not protect robert mueller and his investigation. preet, during an interview for the job of deputy attorney general, could the president ask interview subjects what they think of the mueller investigation? i mean, he can ask anything he wants. i suppose he can. that would be a terrible idea. and the one thing i agree with jeffrey on, you know, what the president probably wants out of somebody who would replace rod rosenstein, but i do think it s the case. i don t know noel francisco personally, he has a decent
your refrigerator to the engines on jet that flew you on your last vacation. it is deeply invested in health care, power, transportation, and much more. ge s long time chairman and ceo jeffrey was a job czar for president obama and part of a job s initiative for president trump. he joins me now. pleasure to have you on. good to see you again. what do you make of the american economy now. all of the soft data, the stock market has been booming since president trump was elected. but all the hard data, the actual numbers for business orders and the like are flat. and the implication of your article physical there s no fundamental reason for this, for this boom in confidence and the stock market, and that eventually it s all going to come down. what i would say, i still