news national political correspondent steve kornacki is there. good morning again. when we left you yesterday, we had questions about georgia. we have an answer on that. we re going to be here for a little bit longer on that. out west now, the two states that everything hinges on, what are you seeing? georgia is going to be a runoff. you ve got nevada, arizona, republicans needing to take one of those two to make that georgia runoff on december 6th, the thing that would determine senate control, if democrats go 2 two for two in nevada and arizona, and the georgia runoff is determining what the majority size will be. let s take you through both states. we got some votes last night and overnight in both. first in arizona, and you see mark kelly has lead over blake masters in the senate race statewide is 95,000. that s up a little bit more than 10,000 from where it was at the start of the evening last night. the major development in arizona was pima county, where tucson is, they release
it was sort of inevitable they would merge. this culture, it s interesting here with football, too. it s almost as if the president has sided with college football fans over nfl fans by his attack on the nfl. it is part of his base. if you look at his base of voters, they are the sort of the base, the heart and soul of, if you went to any college football game in america, you d have seen a lot of maga hats yesterday. a lot of people are losing interest in the nfl as the protests over the flag and anthem are taking place. a few things struck me on the poll. trump continues to be on the majority size. with all our discussions of populism, democrats tend to view populism through an economic lens. they have to understand there is a cultural lens that has to do with symbols of american patriotism, the american story. trump is effective of seizing on those and rallying his base and some independents to his side.
express their concern about that and they re not only dealing with high water, but they had to deal with devastating winds, destructive force winds. yeah. i was actually speaking with the prime minister, and he was raising what many low-island nation leaders do the extension threats of rising sea levels. but what s so staggering you get so seduced by the beauty of this place, when the sun is shining. you forget this is a very real possibility. it s easy to row majority size the simple life until the wind starts blowing at 100 miles per hour. what worries me about the friends we made there, as well. it s one thing surviving those winds, huddling together in a banyan tree. what now? i mean there is no refrigeration. these are folks who kind of live hand-to-mouth. it s what they can grow the fish they can catch on a given day. add an injury or two to a village, add a swamped-out boat
time soon, if you become a teacher. and the truth is, i don t want to row majority size the job of a good teacher. teaching is hard, hard work. but williams says the hard work of teaching is well worth it, when you see a student like solomon turn his life around and find success. i never thought i would be this successful. and right now, i don t even see it as success. i m still striving, and, you know, i m fighting, i m running, i m crawling, i m dragging, i m flying toward success, doing it all. so what do you think? is placing black men in the classroom the answer to solving some of the problems in the black community, such as gang violence and fatherless homes? here s what some of you wrote to me on our blog. sometimes you have to experience being black to know what it means to be black. this is not about color. one often learns faster from someone who is on the same wave length as you. i don t care if someone is green or purple, as long as they are qualified to do the job. f