administrati administration. in december 2017, congressman jerry nader will was openly campaigning to be the ranking member on the house judiciary committee, specifically because he was an expert on impeachment. that is the nadler campaign to be the top democratic on judicia judiciary. this week was not even the first time, it was the seventh time. they started less than sixth months after the president was sworn in. they tried to do it for the press. for being mean to professional athletes. for changing president baun s policy on transgender people in the military.
judicia judiciary. there may be. it depends on does the president or minority want to call witnesses that haven t been testified already. i don t know that. it depends. we ll have to see. when you say due process, this has been a contentious term here. it s interesting to me to see the president who once praised police officers for banging the heads of suspects against cop cars get religion on due process. but what do you understand as due process in this context? due process means the opportunity to lay out the evidence for the court, in this case for the committee and for the american people and for the congress if we vote if we end up voting articles of impeachment, the opportunity for the president and people on his behalf, the republicans to present exculpatory evidence to examine all of this, perhaps to call witnesses and to give the opportunity for a fair hearing, fair for all sides. and a hearing that is fair and
are going to say is, wait a minute. no conspiracy. no collusion. how can you accuse him of obstructing something that wasn t going to hold him guilty of doing anything? dana: how much do you think they re looking at public opinion polls? we saw one poll that said who do you trust more to tell the truth on the russia investigation, democrats in congress, 44%, trump administration 33%. it s very hart o pa partisan. people are saying don t do this. then you have elected leaders in washington wanting to do it. we got the big four. jerry nadler, chairman of the judicia judiciary, adam schiff, clyburn. they want to impeach him. they re going to keep driving that. you have others on the hard left of the democratic party. i get an e-mail a day about impeachment. dana: do you think the
stress-testing every single branch of government, whether we re talking about the judicia judiciary, we re talking about legislation works. he s constantly trying to circumvent the traditional processes whether it s opening up the government, actually presenting a bill that can be legislated against, that can be debated against on the house floor, on the senate floor, about this wall, about immigration reform. i think if you were to talk to the majority of members of congress everyone would agree we need to modernize our immigration system. everyone would agree we need to modernize how we have national security at the border. they would agree we have to talk about the individuals that are living here in the shadows, the 11 million, and what future immigration is. but he doesn t want to have that debate because that takes steps, that takes this also idea of political understanding of how condition works, and he has a formidable component individual against him which is nancy pelosi. s
and her husband. the husband recalls his wife using cavanaugh s name but the therapist notes which were reviewed do not mention kavanaugh in them. that s where we are now. i want to get to some of the reaction we re seeing right now from capitol hill. we have seen eight democratic senators calling for the confirmation to be delayed including democratic senator doug jones from the deep red state of alabama. republicans are questioning the timing and why democrats chose to sit on them for so long. judicia judiciary chairman chuck grassley said it s disturbing that these would surface on the eve of a committee vote after democrats sat on them since july. if they took this claim seriously, they should have