who will enjoy some level of bipartisan support. do you have someone in mind? i think that sends a signal to the public that maybe, maybe the courts are not as political as the legislative and the executive branch. right now the country is starting to believe they re losing faith in their courts. they re looking at them as nothing more than an adjunct of very partisan. elected bodies because of the partisan nature. demonstrate bipartisan support. everybody that s been mentioned so far is extremely qualified, either one of the three major candidates. they can all do a very good job. they have the background and experience to do it. i was the governor, so i named judges in my tenure as governor. they re very independent. they may not philosophically come where you are on certain issues, but that doesn t make them less qualified.
democrats against it, liz cheney and adam kinzinger. just the day before, president biden returned to one of the major themes of his campaign and his career, bringing americans together at the national prayer breakfast, calling republican senate leader mish mcconnell a friend and calling for americans to put aside their differences. how do we unite us again? unity is illusive, but it s really actually necessary. unity doesn t mean we have to agree on everything, but unity is where enough of us, enough of us believe in a core of basic things. there s so much at stake. the division has become so palpable. not everyone agrees it s possible or even desirable to try to heal those divisions. yet in a 50/50 senate in a bitterly divided country, bipartisanship is necessary for the nation to move forward, in the past several weeks we ve featured bipartisan conversations on the show. this morning we ll take on the very idea of unity in an exclusive interview with two of the most powerful sen
legitimate political discourse and censured liz cheney and adam kinzinger. just the day before, president biden returned to one of the major themes of his campaign and his career, bringing americans together at the national prayer breakfast, calling republican senate leader mish mcconnell a friend and calling for americans to put aside their differences. how do we unite us again? unity is illusive, but it s really actually necessary. unity doesn t mean we have to agree on everything, but unity is where enough of us, enough of us believe in a core of basic things. there s so much at stake. the division has become so palpable. not everyone agrees it s possible or even desirable to try to heal those divisions. yet in a 50/50 senate in a bitterly divided country, bipartisanship is necessary for the nation to move forward, in
they re looking at them as nothing more than an adjunct of very partisan. elected bodies because of the partisan nature. demonstrate bipartisan support. everybody that s been mentioned so far is extremely qualified, either one of the three major candidates. they can all do a very good job. they have the background and experience to do it. i was the governor, so i named judges in my tenure as governor. they re very independent. they may not philosophically come where you are on certain issues, but that doesn t make them less qualified. the bottom line is look for the person that has the upbringing to make them a well-rounded candidate. you look at the makeup of the supreme court, i think justice childs from south carolina, that
makes us human and the battle for the soul of america, unity is greatest strength. unity doesn t mean we have to believe the same thing. we must have a fund mental respect and faith in each other and in this nation. clearly, we lost a lot of unity. when you look back on these 20 years, how did that happen? well, the good news is we reacted to 9/11. we built a homeland security department, and we did tsa and increased at airports and i feel we have better port security. we re able to monitor terrorist groups much better than we did 20 years ago. it s gotten ugly and heinous within. part of it is american xenophobia and nativism.