re-election campaign ahead through november? and he wants to take advantage of the senate trial on home turf, so to speak, because it s controlled by republicans, to put up a show, to drag hunter biden in asdr a witness, to dra adam schiff in aso a witness, have fiery defenses of the president s conduct. and what you re hearing from senate leaders you heard it there from senator graham, senator thune, the number two republican told our colleagues in the t post today that there much less of an appetite for that a among the senators. they want to get this vote taken care of quickly, turn the page, and move uron. so that s where the tension resides right nowe within the republican ghcoalition. ashley parker, you were in hershey, pa, last night just as a television viewer. there was anger in that arena at the trump rally. talk about how and how often the president incorporated impeachment into his remarks. impeachment was the
television viewer i don t know if we can call it charming but one of the things he does get, he gets the power of television and he got the power of christine blasey ford that morning. this is why i m concerned about the period of time between now and july 17th. i think it s going to get ugly. we already heard people say the hearing s going to get ugly. we re going to see an american hero denigrated by certain members of congress. and that is going to be really, really disgusting to see happening with a man like mueller. but i m predicting it s going to get ugly before that. i don t think the white house can constrain themselves. look what happened with just hope hicks, someone who was a friend to the white house. and look at how many times they asserted bizarre and immunity privileges that don t exist. i think we will see this white house try to constrain mueller as tightly as they can and i think the pressure is going to be very, very strong on this attorney general to try and as
tea parties. that show became week after week, one of the most highly rated shows in america. it showed football was an entertainment experience on par with any prime time show you can imagine. maybe it was better because you didn t know how it was going to end. 60 minutes decided to peer into the electronic future to take a look what may be in store for the television viewer in decades of the 70s. it s television by cable. cable, for a quarter of century there was nothing distension about it. welcome to home box office subscription television. november 8, 1972 and it is not an overnight success. the pennsylvania professional. and the saying was getting people to pay for t.v. would be
i do think in terms of the public at large, they may have misinterpreted a lot of things going on out there. i ll tell you, i ve been gone for ten days, kind of watching this like a normal television viewer, and anyone i talk to, and they ran the spectrum, said what in the world is going on? i cannot believe we re getting into another war. i cannot believe, you know, what good can we do in syria, et cetera, et cetera. there s not a lot of doubt that chemical weapons were used in the public, but there is doubt that the u.s. going in there and, you know, punishing saddam sorry, punishing assad, is the right way to go. as far as congress is concerned, there really are two constituencies here, and i think right now you re hearing them hearing their constituents. when the vote comes, let s see how it pans out. it is very, very tough when your president comes to you and says i need to make a military strike, and here s why. it is tough for republicans and
scene. you understand how you can t place me at the scene sounds cagey? yeah. i mean, i have professed from the very beginning that i didn t do it and no one believed me. i i was screaming at to the prosecutor when they were screaming at me during my interrogation, tell me i had amnesia, i had to know and i told them i didn t do it and i want there, and no one listened to me. it s like i m having to prove my innocence instead of just saying it. my cnn colleague chris cuomo joins me live now from new york. chris, it is one thing as a television viewer to watch over and over again a beautiful, young woman marched in and out of courtrooms and handcuffs and hearing her try to profess her innocence in italian and it s another thing to sit across her interview her and look into her eyes. what struck you about her? what she wanted, ashleigh, the opportunity to deal with the