okay? i m sorry i m so upset, but, please help president trump. if you can afford $5 or $10, if you can t afford $1, that s fine. just pray. progressive from south carolina. help this man, donald j. trump, they re trying to drain him dry. he s a progressive. if you got any money to give, give it. but he s got some good things, too. go tonight. give the president some money to fight this bull [ bleep ]. lindsey graham the progressive from south carolina. you know, it s like my southern mom, no good deed goes unpunished. i mean if you re a dog trainer and you can make a dog ill that quickly you re a successful dog trainer. you re a genius. he ll be back, by the way. lindsey graham will be back. you scream at him and he s still loyal. willie, i would love to show you the front of the paper of can you believe this? this is a paper of record. it s morning joe. quickly what is this? front page. come on. put that down. i guess it s sports illustrated time
a year before. comes back late perp thinking, well 847 million counts of felonies. has to be something there. right? there was nothing. nothing that he didn t have a year before when he decided not to go forward. have you figured that out yet? all counts related to hush money payments, which i think are hugely problematic. because this was, i guess call it a task force of prillient people including mark pomprantz who wrote a tell-all book. a groundbreaking event. first time a defense attorney like me got a look at inner workings of a task force of really brilliant prosecutors. what did you find? what did i find? in reading it? i found that, according to mark pomerantz that he confirmed something i always thought was true. that prosecutors whether state or federal are subtly or psychologically reluctant to