government has a governing responsibility. that means passing legislation to open up the government. and if the president vee toes it, then the electricity i have branch of the government has a responsibility to overturn that veto. so there are many tools that we have and it s about governing and responsibility and this is as much on mitch mcconnell s shoulders as anyone else. we just heard mitt romney say he doesn t see republicans breaking away. i don t hear a lot of democrats saying they plan to break away. so, again, where does that leave us? chris when the president said, for example and people scoffed, certainly a lot of people on this network scoffed when he said, you know, i m hearing from federal workers who are telling me, stand firm on the wall. i mean, are you seriously hearing from constituents who aren t getting paid and say, stand firm against the wall when you re at a point when that $5.7 billion is being overtaken by the amount of lost income to the gdp? i mean
you have these guys, pod save america guys who some of the listeners may not have heard of. they ve become a phenomenon, incredibly influential, directed by them in some respects. they ve become the talk radio of the left. they are a trio of former obama administration staffers. paul kane? let s not forget, they made their bones working for barack obama, his presidential campaign. claire mccaskill was one of the first, if not the first female senator to buck hillary clinton in that 2007-2008 primary. she was never forgiven by the clinton camp. and endorsed obama. on the republican side, unless a number of members get the clear message that the president would sign the bill that they re talking about, they re not going to vote. to them it s a detriment, not an asset to vote for this reform. and if they think they re going to vote for it and the president vee toes it, they re not playing. paul kane, do you think chuck schumer, how badly did he miss calculate?
for people not in my district. my district, 10 graders who made an app to rent out driveways for parking. the world is their oyster. what about other parts of this country? how are we going to provide the jobs of the future to people across america and they re hungry for it, how are they going to partner with communities for the future? and i think if they do those two things, people are ultimately technology optimists. thank you for taking the time. love to talk to you down the line as well. at 9:00 tonight we are requesting to have cara swisher joining us for revolution. it is a town hall about them changing the world. tune in for that. when we return, a moment with donald trump three years in the making. plus, jonathan swan takes us inside his latest scoops in the week ahead. kasie d.c. is back live from washington after this. grab a seat. woman: okay. moderator: nice to meet you. have you ever had car trouble in a place like this? (roaring of truck) yes and it was like th
they are the ones that promote it. but any time we see this, where we have politicians attacking a u.s. institution falsely, you re going to see russian adversary step in because the best way to do active measures is to do what americans are doing to each other. so, you ve got one party that s, you know, tearing down a u.s. institution, the fbi, and so all you re doing is stepping in, taking that content and reamplifying it into the environment. the other thing we have to remember and why we see a lot of it surging in terms of russian influence networks, is julian assange weighed in on it last week. he stepped in and said that memo should be released. he started talking about that hashtag as well. as we know mr. assange is a proxy of the russian government. we ve even heard cia director pompeo talk about the relationship between russia and wikileaks. when this happens it creates a storm where the russians don t have to create it, they ride the wave. they ve done a great job of
in that narrative is that she, the woman, was moved to a different position. he wasn t moved out. yeah. she was the one who brought the concern and the allegations and others corroborated. and she was put into a different position in the campaign, not him. and that says all you need to know about how even the most sophisticated people in the world deal with this issue. yeah. being heard is only part of it. that s right. i just don t understand. i just don t understand it. she s not disputing any of the facts in that story n that tweet. she s not saying, no, this is a wrong account. the account is pretty damning. he ended up working in the super pac. over the objections of two women who said you should be fired. the idea that she can t say sorry and she made a mistake and gravely regrets it, i just don t understand it. katherine, you mentioned women are so motivated, i want to show our viewers a piece of the new interview from president trump, which may or may not