you ve got to do something, that s understa that s institutional. if this report shows us what you just said and what some people thought when we talked about the idea that he wasn t motivated by politics but the sense of duty and the fact that he felt like if he had come out with this afterwards, imagine if hillary clinton would have won, people would have we re going to look atta anthony weiner s e-ma. it s hard to figure out. it took them a day to look at the e-mails. they could have looked at the e-mails, realized there was nothing there and not made the announceme announcement. which is consistent with policy. one reason we have policies at institutions is to avoid exactly the situation. that may be all that comes out of it, they make an announcement that after two or three months of investigation, hiring a lot of staff, they come
do you understand the level of anger or frustration on the clinton side? absolutely. i think what you saw reflected in that debate still are the raw emotions all around the country. i speak to people every day in my district. i have received hundreds of e ma mails and calls of people upset. could you see this coming. i remember talking to people who were working on the campaign who were telling me that they couldn t eat, they couldn t sleep. people felt a stake in this election that i have never seen before. now a degree of upset over the results or glee on the other side that i haven t seen before. it s going to take a long time to heal. i wish we had a president-elect that was growing into the job and showing signs of being able to mend that divide. sending out a tweet saying millions of people undocumented immigrants voted, you send out that kind of tweet and it basically a big chunk of the country, maybe most of the country is simply going to say
no republicans have not won the white house without winning ohio. the controversy around the latest fbi investigation of a new batch of e-mails found through an unrelated case is what has all the headlines eight days before the election. joining me now is charles sykes who supported evan mcmullin for president and our former adviser, elise jordan, it is great to have you both with me. your reaction to h in tillary clinton s offense of her e-ma s e-mails. she s trying to make this all about temperament and this is all about donald trump s fundamental temperament and those undecided voters who were
e-ma e-mails. this is from a assen assessmf team of u.s. intelligence community analysts looking at the e-mails from secretary clinton s private server. they referred about 300 to the agencies for further consultation. this figure comes in a court filing today intended to keep a federal judge informed about the lawsuit. this was the one filed to release the clinton e-mails under the freedom of information act request. they say the intelligence team looked at about one fifth of all the e-mails so far and has recommended that 305 be sent back to their agencies for a closer look to see if they should be considered classified. now, the state department in the filing sails that s only that s the state department s word, only 5% of the e-mails reviewed. mid-july the intelligence community raised concerns that a classified document included in an earlier release of part of the clinton e-mails and that s when the other reviewser were added to the process but it s
ed henry joins us live. josh ernst had to clarify that. he implied he had not e-mailed with her during her four years as secretary of state. the president didn t know she had this personal e-mail account. he clarified he did e-mail with her during the four years so what he meant was that he learned from the news that the e ma ills were kept on this other server and weren t kept at the state department. that s what s another interesting facet of all this is that the white house is not tethered to secretary clinton in her potential presidential campaign. the message from the state department just moments before secretary clinton had her news conference, jen was at the podium saying they are getting ready to go through 55,000 pages of e-mails turned over the by secretary. they are saying it might take months because they want to figure out what s sensitive and what s not. they are going to be on the