her. [laughter] she might be surprise to find that it closed. also tells you a few things there is no leadership in the democratic party. the clintons do not see anyone controlling the environment. that s important. they also seem to not mind about going into get money and to, you know, change all of that for these other individuals: it would be sad. but it would be funny. i m sorry. in a pathetic souter of way. but it should tell the american people the chaos. reinforces the chaos that now sits in the democratic party. ainsley: she is like i deserve it i deserve to be the first woman president. i had my chance. i won the popular vote it should be my seat. steve: all that email stuff would continue to come back it has not been solved in a lot of people s minds. brian: kamala harris addressed the 20,000 people yesterday. people think she has a lot of momentum. she is doing a town hall tonight. then bernie sanders going to make a formal thing.
things that outrage people the people who aren t offended by children being tear gassed at the border are offended by this so people need to take a step back and say what is offensive here? and the president s potty mouth is the least of my concerns about him. i wouldn t make my top 100 list of complaints about him. my clients are about his policies and even the p word incident that we had, my issue isn t the use of the word, my issue is him talking about grabbing women so it s not about being clutching the pearls and being upset about potty language. anderson, can yes, go ahead, governor. i wanted to say one quick work about the impeachment question because the swearing is one and the impeachment is another. i don t want to set up an expectation that what the house can do to bring impeachment charges is going to lead to the president s outer. i worry that the call for
amarin thanks the clinicians and patients who participated (man) don t .go.down.oh, no! aaaaballooned your car. call meeeee! (burke) a fly-by ballooning. seen it, covered it. we know a thing or two because we ve seen a thing or two. we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum pete: president donald trump is approaching two years in office. and our next guest says the trump presidency made her a better person. joining us now to discuss is new york post columnist carol mark wits. carol, thank you so much for being here this morning. hi. thanks for having me. pete: it s interesting. i would acknowledge president trump s approach has changed the way i view the world on a lot of issues. you have souter of taken a next step and say he has made you a better personal. why? he has made me less partisan. he is sort of his own thing. he is definitely not a traditional republican he has made me think about certain issues differently in a good and bad way.
people to really see them and take them in. this is confirmation votes of just the modern era. this goes back to bush 41. souter was confirmed 90-9. ginsburg, 96-3. look at roberts. the chief justice, 78-22. what happened to that? because everything is now, as they say, a knife fight. once upon a time there was really pride in being a senator. i mean, i think about 1964 and the senate republicans went along with the northern democrats to pass that civil rights bill because they had pride in the senate. they knew it was important for this institution. you used to be a senator. it was a great thing to be. now you all want to be president, you want to be on television. your partisanship is more important than your colleagues in the senate. they look at one another in tribal ways. they don t play poker together, don t drink together, they don t form friendships together. something happened to these
way, only 11% of the people trust in the congress right now. 78% disapprove of the congress. only 37% of the people approve of the presidency right now. if we don t get a presidency and a congress, an institution and a supreme court now that we can trust in, what happens in a democracy? that s what really worries me. i have some numbers to put on the screen. i d like to leave them up for people to really see them and take them in. this is confirmation votes of just the modern era. this goes back to bush 41. souter was confirmed 90-9. ginsburg, 96-3. look at roberts. the chief justice, 78-22. what happened to that? because everything is now, as they say, a knife fight. once upon a time there was really pride in being a senator. i mean, i think about 1964 and the senate republicans went along with the northern democrats to pass that civil rights bill because they had pride in the senate. they knew it was important for this institution. you used to be a senator. it was a great thing t