Brooklyn, how we doing . Im the host and Creative Director of Msnbc Live, and we are so excited to welcome you to our very first and sold out fan focused event. Thank you this is where you get to meet and greet your favorite msnbc personalities live and in person , and i can let you guys in on a little secret. Steve cormacks khakis are just as glorious in real life. Over the course of the day, jen psaki, joy reed, and so many others will give you their take on the state of this wild and crazy election. Are you enjoying it so far . Its only september all right, lets get this kicked off. You may have seen them reporting from the dnc. They are going to tell you what it was like to be there in that electric atmosphere, but first, they are going to dig into what is at stake in november. Please welcome to the stage the host of the reidout , joy reid, and the host of alex tonight, Alex Wagner thank you. I want to do that. Youve got to get the filthy. So smart. Hello thank you all for coming h
who is the pick for trump? don. likely temp scott. okay, all right. he s your friend. all of you, my, friends thank you so much for joining me. that s going to do it on this breaking news coverage with jonathan from washington continues next on this big news day. we begin the 4:00 hour with breaking news from the presidential campaign trail. florida governor ron desantis has officially dropped out of the republican presidential race, following his disappointing and distant second place finish in the iowa caucuses. desantis said, quote, we don t have a clear path to victory. instead, desantis said he will endorse former president donald trump. moments ago, the florida governor released this statement on x. we have prayed and elaborated on the way forward. but if there was anything i could do to produce a favorable outcome, and more campaign stops, more interviews, i would do it. but i can t ask our supporters to volunteer their time and donate their resources. we don
hills very hot summer there in virginia. some great fundraising numbers there, some really good reasons. how do democrats turn that cash into votes for this upcoming election, and also next year s midterm elections. it feels like that money has to go towards turn out right? it s good news, my strongest suspicion zerlina, is that democrats are not going to lose close house races because of money. i think the question is going to be the less there are two of activism, the people who are gonna be writing postcards. organizing dish really, walls will be on cabinet see. and then of course people need to turn out, people who do not have a regular history of turning out, i think will learn quite a bit in this virginia s governor s race about that. i also think vote chair is not going to be the issue, much of the poll showing mcauliffe getting almost 95% of biden, i think terry s gonna get the vote share among swing voters,
romney. latino voters nationwide. i think the number was 29% in nevada. that having been said, donald trump lost the state of nevada by about 2.5 points. if the exit poll is even remotely accurate at 29% latino voters, that s a state that is about 50/50. it s basically a majority/minority state with latino voters playing an overwhelming part of the vote chair. if donald trump were to score 35% to 37%, he wins nevada. on the one hand, it is valuable to hear the perspective of some latino voters in the state who said, yes, we proudly support president trump and still support him. overwhelmingly, if you look at 29% versus 71% who did not, you have to wonder heading to re-election in 2020, if the president needs to build on that existing support that he established in 2012. it s a great question. and yeugene, one of the things you heard me was the caller talking about daca. hey, wait a minute, the way president trump put it in place
would be cut off in case that the communism party would win, to giving very large amounts of covert campaign funding to the christian democratic party to designing a campaign for the christian democrats and other techniques. you say that 81 times in 60 countries between 1946 put it up on the screen of the that s a list. 1946-2000, the u.s. sought to influence the outcome of the election. by the way, are we good at this? are we successful? well, my research finds basically an average in the side we assist gets a bump of 3% to their vote chair, but that is an average effect. in other words, sometimes the effect is much larger and