it does one of the more outspoken critics of donald trump. it is not getting him a lot in terms of polling, though. no. part of that is that there is not a huge appetite in the republican party for a candidate whose primary message is donald trump s bad. that s just not what republican voters are looking for. frankly, even if you are kind of a never trump republican, chris christie is kind of a challenging sale. he was originally one of the establishment figures who stood behind donald trump at the very beginning, when it was possible to stop trump maybe not. i think chris christie has got to really have a low ceiling. will you make a debate stage interesting? potentially. nobody has a clean hand in politics overall, but you are right about that aspect of it. michael? she is right. but the problem is you are running in a republican primary against donald trump. as saline as the point may be that the former governor may, who is listening to this? maybe democrats, maybe some
martyrdom. i think that is something democrats need to be careful about. good point. we will come back for more. we will leave a cliff-hanger because you said laura. we ve gotta standby, we ve gotta come right back. there is much more on our breaking news. we will talk with one of the lead investigators on the january 6th committee, on what surprised him, and michael fanone will also join us for this cnn special live coverage.
electors were not truly contingent on the litigations. they lost the election, they were going to send across the face electors. all this information about them, that s an remorse amount pressure on these people to flip. i do think that is phase two of what is coming. karen, to this point, i don t put too much emphasis on this because i know that there is a wide range of latitude. but these charges bring with them a maximum of 20 years into cases. these are very serious very long times anybody could be spending in prison. the judge, tanya s. chutkan, is known for being very tough on sentencing. the pressure is extraordinary. absolutely extraordinary for them to cooperate if they can tell the truth. because you have to be able to, in order to cooperate, you have to be able to admit to what you did, admit to all of it and do it truthfully, and we will see if people like rudy giuliani are capable of telling the truth at this point. because they have really dug in. so deeply and so e
jay, you are a legacy student at an ivy league school. at the time, it was a point of pride. did anyone say to you i know how you got, and you don t deserve to be here? as a beneficiary of the old kind of affirmative action, where if you had parents going to the school you got in, unfortunately my parents are not the wealthy donor source to the colombian university, my but i was really moved, i think of his joy and read doing a clip, saying she was haunted by the fact that people thought that she was worried people felt like she didn t deserve to be there because she was a beneficiary of affirmative action. i can say for my privilege point of view, as part of it. in fact, there isn t whole elitist fraternity at columbia only for the children of legacies. when people say we should be color blind, it was not a two-way street. this is the kind of extra bonus that people were proud of. it is the opposite of stigma, seen as privilege. absolutely i was a beneficiary. when people think th
my panel is back to discuss. jay. you were a legacy student at an ivy league school. at the time, it was a point of pride. did anybody ever say to you, oh, i know how you got in. you don t deserve to be here. no, i was the beneficiary of the old kind of affirmative action, if you had parents went to school got informant unfortunately for me, my parents were not healthy r wealth donor source, but my father and uncle was graduate. i was moved, you know, i think it was julian reid did a clip where she said she was haunted by fact that people felt like she was we re people feel like she doesn t deserve to be there. because she was a beneficiary. but i can say from my privilege point of view, i was proud of it. there was a whole sort of elitist fraternity for the children of legacies. it people say we should colorblind it should be a two-way street. it was not. this was kind of of extra bonus people were proud of. it was the opposite of sigma.