laura: steve bannon makes no bones about it. he wants mitch mcconnell to go. i asked mitch mcconnell about that last week and he had choice words, you will recall. and a lot of other establishment republicans as well. steve bannon sees them as the biggest obstacle to passing the trump agenda so he lining up antiestablishment senate candidates like the embattled roy moore in alabama. now mcconnell is fighting back. he s calling his preferred candidates a bunch of losers. we are not going to lose any nominations to the kind of candidates that guy you were talking about endorsed. he s a specialist is nominating people who lose. if this is same element in the party that cost us a bunch of seats in 2010 and 2012. we changed our business model. laura: to start this all out i m joined now by the authors of a soon-to-be huge
bob kscorker and jeff flake. what s going on? there are some republicans worried about potentially losing their seat to a democrat but most of these republicans are worried about being primaried. they look at goodlatte, a district donald trump won by 25 points. it will remain republicans. but what you re seeing in the republican primary system is a rift between the establishment and the antiestablishment. and these longtime career politicians on the republican side understand like bob corker, jeff flake, that they ve gotten on the wrong side of this conversation and they re getting out before they get defeated by their own party. dave, whatever happened to just being in the good fight because you re driven by your conviction and that s why you have so many members of congress who can celebrate multiple terms. but it seems as though the climate is different here particularly when you have goodlatte saying the political
problematic. obviously, lost his job as a judge because of decisions he made in that role. so he was republicans believed he was going to be a flawed candidate from the beginning, and so because he ran as this sort of antiestablishment, anti-mitch mcconnell candidate, many republicans feel he s being attacked here and just bucking those national republicans by staying in the race. so, rebecca, we have daniel dale, a washington correspondent for the toronto star, who says he reached out to a lot of the county gop chairmen in alabama. i want to read just a couple of things that he says they told him, and he tweeted this out. covington county gop chairman tells me he d consider voting moore even if hard proof of sexual abuse emerged saying, there is no option to support doug jones, the democratic nominee. when you do that you re
front anarchy means chaos. why can t we steal this jacket. why do i have to pay for it? why can t they break a window and steal the jacket? juan: i m going to be a cranky old man. the jacket is ridiculous. it s been around since i was a kid. people who want to say i am hip, different, antiestablishment. it s a ridiculous jacket. to me, when i walked down the street and i see these people with pants that are torn. i bet they pay a lot of money. for torn pants. i think it s nuts. but it s fashion. greg: see if they had one with the collar up for you. jesse: i don t like what you said about cage-free eggs. i like cage-free eggs. i think they taste better. they also got the color wrong. if you watch antifa, they are all wearing black.
where the party wants to go, george w. bush is the way of the past, they are leaders of the party dictating direction. they want to run antiestablishment, didn t one to consider himself a new candidate. and in definition is the establishment. i disagree with richard when he says bannon is the leader of the republican party, donald trump is. and going against the establishment. and the president and mister bannon, you see a lot of people the president endorsed in the primaries steve bannon is going to go against, the