Transcripts For FBC Cavuto Coast To Coast 20160728 : compare

Transcripts For FBC Cavuto Coast To Coast 20160728



and i married way up. way up. folks, as i stand here tonight i see so many friends and colleagues like my buddy chris dodd in the connecticut delegation, so many people here. i see the faces of those who have placed their beliefs in barack and me, so many faces but one, this is kind of a bittersweet moment for jill and me and our family. in 2008, when he was about to deploy to iraq and again in 2012 , our son beau introduced me to the country and place my name in nomination. [applause] i know i sound like a dad but you got a glimpse of what an incredibly fine young man bo was. [applause] thank you. [applause] thank you. his wife hallie and his two kids are here tonight. [applause] as ernest hemingway once wrote, the world breaks everyone and afterwards many are strong at the broken places. i have been made strong at the broken places by my love jill, my son hunter in the love of my life my ashley and by all of you and i mean this sincerely. you have been through this and you know i mean what i say, by all of you, your love, your prayers and your support but you know what, we talk about, we think about the callous thousands of other people who have suffered so much more than we have with so much less support, so much less reason to go on. but they get up every morning, every day. they put one foot in front of the other. they keep going. that's the unbreakable spirit of the people of america. that is who we are. [cheers and applause] that is who we are. don't forget it. like the people in the neighborhood that jill and i grew up in. wilmington and claymont. the kid and claymont with the most courage always jumped in when you were double teamed for your back was against the wall. he became a cop because he always wanted to help people. the middle daughter of three daughters who always made her mother smile, who was a hero to her sisters now a major in the united states marine corps because mr. president i wanted to serve my country. [applause] the teachers that know and so many of you know who take money out of their own pockets to buy pencils and notebooks for their students who can't afford them. [cheers and applause] why? why? because being a teacher is not what they do, it's who they are. [cheers and applause] you know it, i know for a real, these are the people who are the heart and soul of this country. it's the america that i know, the america that hillary knows and tim kaine knows. [cheers and applause] you know, i have known hillary for well over 30 years. before she was first lady of the united states, when she became first lady we served together in the united states senate and during her years as secretary of state, once a week we had breakfast in my home, the vice president's residence. everybody knows she is smart. everybody knows she is tough, but i know what she is passionate about. i know hillary. [applause] hillary understands, hillary gets it. hillary understands that college loan is about a lot more than getting a qualified student education. it's about saving the mom and the dad from the indignity of how they look at their talented child and say hahne i'm so sorry the bank wouldn't lend me the money. i can help you get to school. i know that about hillary. hillary understood that for years, millions of people went to bed staring at the ceiling, thinking oh, god what if i get breast cancer or or he has a heart attack? i will lose everything. what will be due then? i know about hillary clinton. [applause] ladies and gentlemen, we all understand what it will mean for our daughters and granddaughters when hillary clinton walks into the oval oval office as president of the united states of america. [applause] it will change their lives. [cheers and applause] my daughters and granddaughters can do anything and a son or grandson can do and she will prove it mr. mayor. so let me say as clearly as i can, if you live in neighborhoods like the ones jill and i grew up in, if you worry about your job and getting a decent pay, if you worry about your children's education, if you are taking care of an elderly parent, then there's only one person in this election who will help you. there's only one person in this race who will be there, who has always been there for you and that is hillary benton's life story. it's not just who she is, it's her life story. [applause] she is always there. she has always been there. and so has tim kaine. [cheers and applause] ladies and gentlemen, i state the office and i'm not trying to be wiseguy here. i really mean it. that is not donald trump's story. just look for me -- look at me for a second that ruling are cheering that i mean this sincerely, we should really think about this. his cynicism is unbounded. his lack of empathy and compassion can be summed up in a phrase i suspect he is most proud of and made famous, you are fired. i mean really, not joking. think about that. think about that. think about everything you have learned as a child. no matter where you were raised, how can there be pleasure in saying you are fired? he is trying to tell us he cares about the middle-class? give me a break. that's a bunch of malarkey. [cheers and applause] i'm telling you. [cheers and applause] [chanting] whatever he thinks, whatever he thinks, and i mean this from the bottom of my heart, i know i am called middle-class joe and in washington that's not that is a top limit. it means you are not sophisticated but i know why we are strong. i know why we have come together and i know why we are united. it's because there is noise than a growing middle class. this guy doesn't have a clue about the middle-class, not a clue. [applause] because folks, what the middle-class does well, what the middle-class does well the rich do very well and the poor have hope. they have the way up. he has no clue about what makes america great. actually he has no clue period. but folks,. [applause] [chanting] >> you got it. [chanting] >> folks, let me say, let me say something that has nothing to do with politics. let me talk about something that i am deadly serious about. this is a complicated and uncertain world we live in. the threats are too great, the times are too uncertain to elect donald trump as president of the united states. now let me finish. no major party, no major party nominee in the history of this nation has ever known less or has been less prepared to deal with our national security. [applause] we cannot elect a man who exploits our fears of terrorists who has no plan whatsoever to make us safer, a man who embraces the tactics of our enemies, torture, religious intolerance, you all know and all the republicans know. that's not who we are. it betrays our values. it alienates those who we need in theight against isis. donald trump with all his rhetoric would literally make us less safe. we cannot elect a man who belittles our closest allies while embracing dictators like vladimir putin. no, i mean it. a man who seeks to sow division in america for his own gain and disorder around the world. a man who confuses luster with strength. we simply can't let that happen as americans. period. [cheers and applause] folks, i have -- no one ever doubts me when i say just as sometimes i say all that i mean but folks look me tell you what i literally tell every world leader has met with and i have met them all. it's never, never, never been a good vet to bet against america. [applause] we have the finest fighting force in the world. [chanting] not only do we have the largest economy in the world, we have the strongest economy in the world. we have the most productive workers in the world. and given a fair shot, given a fair chance, americans have never, ever, ever, ever let the country down, never, never! [cheers and applause] ordinary people like us who do extraordinary things. we have had candidates who have attempted to get elected by appealing to our fears but they have never succeeded because we do not scare easily. we never bow. we never bend. we never break in a crisis. no, we into her, we ever, and we always, always, always move forward. that is why i can say with absolute conviction, i am more optimistic about our chances today than when i was elected as a 29-year-old kid to the senate. the 21st century is going to be the american century. [applause] because we lead not only by the example of our power but by the power of our example. that is the history of the journey of america and god willing, god willing hillary clinton will write the next chapter in that journey. we are america, second to none and we own the finish line. don't forget it. god bless you all and may god protect our troops. come on, we are american. [applause] [cheers and applause] >> a pretty tremendous performance there from my vice president joe biden. he's there hugging his wife on stage. a lot of passion in that speech. he really made the case karl and lou for people to fear would not trump -- something we hear over and over and over again from the clinton camp, you must fear the donald trump alternative. lou: for the man the vice president was talking about donald trump trying to charge him with exploiting the fears of americans of a soul as he put it if the islamic state by the way, we can say it here, that the islamic state, he built his entire speech around attempting to instill an exploit the fear and the democratic party of donald trump who is running ahead of hillary clinton in the polls. trish: that's the only way when an environment like this when you have a candidate like her and by the way perhaps that he proved yet again he would have been a much tougher candidate to be. >> and you imagine are giving a speech that connected to the crowd that why? this is uncle joe showed up at the family picnic refuse a little little crazy but he's sincere and honest and you like him. that was a powerful speech but i think lucas said that the democrats can only win this year , if you have hillary clinton and you are trying to get a third term for administration of people have in kits failed and the economy is not good and they are worried about america's interest in the world and deeply concerned about their personal safety the only thing left for them is to -- donald trump. trish: there is also guilt up there as well. he is making you feel guilt if you don't think america is a good enough place right now saying don't. against america. i don't think anybody would. >> people not bet against america but the people who don't bet against america can also say our government is failing, we have a desperate situation being ignored or affectless leader and we need change. tomorrow morning there's going to be a column in "the wall street journal" on this very topic. it's a pretty good column. . >> usual brilliance? >> yeah, usual brilliance. one of the points i was trying to make is 17% of the people last week said they are satisfied with the condition of the country. if you look at all the surveys, abc, nbc, "wall street journal," gallup, pew, they all show american people are at or near all-time lows and confident what the government is doing. trish: lou, are they ignoring that? >> i don't think they can ignore it. we have millions of people. trish: joe biden seems to think so. >> they? trish: they, the behind us. >> people not working for various reasons, we have an economy that is at historically low growth, and we have an economy that is not generating jobs with $2.5 trillion sitting overseas and capital. profits earned by corporate america that are not repatriated because congress and the president have had a lot of imagination how to do it. donald trump knows it has to be done. the fears and the anxieties felt in this country are here precisely. that's what makes joe biden's tough and hillary clinton's tougher. those anxiety and fears have been instilled 7 1/2 years of democratic leader. >> you remember bill clinton said how does this description what i've given you comport with what you heard in cleveland from the republicans? he says it doesn't, i gave you the truth, they gave you a cartoon. if you are concerned about the safety of america, the economy of america. if you're worried about the world, worried about isis, all of these things are a cartoon. don't worry about them. be happy. don't worry. trish: you can say that, but i don't think people are going to feel that. >> no, that's why i think this convention has a fundamental, strategic problem, they're living in an age where there's an enormous desire on the part of the american people for change. the message is we need her because she will follow through with barack obama. i love he kept calling him barack, he kept referring to him by his first name. >> that's another thing, he brings up the middle class joe nonsense, and a lack of sophistication,lage of he should have started 30 years ago. the middle class is what has to expand. it hasn't grown in 40 years. we have to re-enter our policy, thinking and respect for the dignity of work, and make sure we are partnered. full partners in the prosperity trump says he can restore. trish: a very, very important point. as we navigate the challenging times and confronted with the reality of globalization and we want to grow the pie for ourselves and for everyone else, we still need to simultaneously protect and maintain this middle class, because when you look at this, it's become increasingly more like an hourglass figure, something that you might see in a place like brazil, but certainly not in the united states of america, and i don't know if how you can possibly project additional growth as we move out in this landscape. you don't have the foundation of a middle class. someone who may talk about this here tonight, mike bloomberg, the former mayor of new york city, a very successful billionaire businessman in his own right. someone who has been quite outspoken on g samid other topics, like our climate. let's listen in and see what he has to say. >> thank you for that kind introduction, and let me thank all of you for welcoming an outsider here to deliver what -- [ applause ] >> an outsider to deliver what will be an unconventional convention speech. now i am not here as a member of any party or to endorse any party platform. i am here for one reason, to explain why i believe it is imperative that we elect hillary clinton as the next president of the united states. [cheers and applause] and to ask you to join with me in supporting her this november. you know, when the founding fathers arrived here in philadelphia to forge a new nation, they didn't come as democrats or republicans, or to nominate a presidential candidate. they came as patriots who feared party politics, and i know how they felt. i've been a democrat. i've been a republican, and i eventually became an independent because i don't belie that either party has a monopoly on good ideas or strong leadership. when i enter the voting booth each time, i look at the candidate, not the party label. i have supported elected officials from both sides of the aisle and probably not many people in this room can say that, but i know there are many watching at home who can and now they are carefully weighing their choices. i understand their dilemma. i know what it's like to have neither party fully represent my views or values. to many republicans blame immigrants for problems, and they stand in the way of action on climate change and gun violence. meanwhile, many democrats i think wrongly blame the private sector for our problems and they stand in the way of action on education and deficit reduction. there are times when i disagree with hillary clinton, but let me tell you, whatever our disagreements may be, i've come here to say we must put them aside for the good of our country. [applause] and we must unite around the candidate who can defeat a dangerous demagogue. [applause] i believe it's the duty of all american citizens to make our voices heard by voting in this election, and if you're not yet registered to vote, go online and do it now. this is just too fortunate sit out. [applause] now we've heard a lot of talk in this campaign about needing a leader who understands business. i couldn't agree more. i built a business, and i didn't start it with a million-dollar check from my father. [cheers and applause] because of my success in the private sector, i had the chance to run america's largest city for 12 years, governing in the wake of its greatest tragedy. today, as an independent, and an entrepreneur and a former mayor, i believe we need a president who is a problem solver, not a bomb thrower. [cheers and applause] someone who can bring members of congress together to get big things done, and i know hillary can do that because i saw it firsthand. i was elected mayor two months after 9/11, as a republican, and i saw how hillary clinton worked with republicans in washington to ensure that new york got the help it needed to recover and rebuild. throughout her time in the senate -- yes, throughout her time in the senate, we didn't always agree, but hillary clinton always listened, and that's the kind of approach we need in washington today, and it just has to start in the white house. [cheers and applause] given my background, i've often encouraged business leaders to run for office because many of them share the same pragmatic approach to building consensus, but not all. most of us who have created the business know that we're only as good as the way employees, partners and clients view us. most of us don't pretend we're smart enough to make every decision by ourselves. and most of us who have our names on the door know that we are only as good as our word, but not donald trump. [applause] through his career, donald trump has left behind a well-documented record of nkruptcies, and thousands of lawsuits, and angry stockholders and contractors who feel cheated and disillusioned customers who feel they've been ripped off. trump says he wants to run the nation like he's running his business? god help us! [laughter] i'm a new yorker. and i know a con when i see one! [cheers and applause] trump says he'll punish manufacturers that move to mexico or china, but the clothes he sells are made overseas in low-wage factories. he says he wants to put americans back to work, but he games the visa system to hire temporary foreign workers at low wages. [booing] he says he wants to deport 11 million undocumented people, but he seems to have no problem in hiring them. what did i miss here? truth be told, the richest thing about donald trump is his hypocrisy. [cheers] he wants you to believe that we can solve our biggest problems by deporting mexicans and shutting out muslims. he wants you to believe that erecting trade barriers will bring back good jobs. he's wrong on both counts. we can only solve our biggest problems if we come together and embrace the freedoms that our founding fathers established right here in philadelphia, which permitted our ancestors to create the great american exceptionalism that all of us now enjoy. donald trump doesn't understand that. hillary clinton does! [cheers and applause] and we can only create good jobs if we make smarter investments in infrastructure and do more to support small businesses, not stiff them. donald trump doesn't understand that. hillary clinton does! [cheers and applause] i understand the appeal of a businessman president, but trump's business plan is a disaster in the making. he would make it harder for small businesses to compete, do great damage to our economy, threaten the retirement savings of millions of americans, lead to greater debt and more unemployment. erode our influence around the world and make our communities less safe. the bottom line is, trump is a risky, reckless and radical choice and we can't afford to make that choice. [applause] now i know hillary clinton is not flawless, no candidate is, but she is the right choice and the responsible choice in this election. and no matter what you may think about her politics or her record, hillary clinton understands that this is not reality television. this is reality! [cheers and applause] she understands the job of pchlt it involves finding solutions, not pointing fingers. and offering hope, not stoking fear. over the course of our country's proud history, we have faced our share of grave challenges, but we have never retreated in fear. never. not here in philadelphia in 1776. not here at gettysburg in 1863. not through two world wars and a great depression. not at selma or stonewall. not after 9/11, and we must not start now. [cheers and applause] america, america is the greatest country on earth, and when people vote with their feet, they come here. the presidency of the united states is the most powerful office in the world, so i say to my fellow independents, your votes matter now. your vote will determine the future of your job, your business, and our future together as a country. to me, this election is not a choice between a democrat and a republican, it is a choice who is better to lead our country right now. better for our economy, better for our security, better for our freedom, and better for our future. there is no doubt in my mind that hillary clinton is the right choice this november. [cheers and applause] so tonight, as an independent, i am asking you to join with me, not out of party loyalty, but out of love of country, and together, and together let's ect a sane, competent person with international experience -- [cheers] a unifier who is mature enough to reach out for advice, to build consensus and to recognize that we all have something to contribute. so let's elect hillary clinton as the next president of the greatest country of the world, the united states of america! thank you! [cheers and applause] . trish: all right, billionaire mike bloomberg, the former mayor of new york city, who considered running as president as an independent, who would have been up against hillary clinton. giving a speech that in many ways was much more anti-trump than it was actually pro-hillary. we heard him say i'm a new yorker, i know a con man when i see one. we are joined by kennedy and lou dobbs. kennedy, your reaction from what we heard from bloomberg. >> this is what we were waiting for. he despises donald trump. he is the know-it-all billionaire from new york city. he's a statist. this is a nanny stater who wants to tell you what to put in your body, was shut down by the highest court in new york state and wants to take your guns away. in this speech he tried to sound like a business loving freedom embracer, he's not, he's a resentful guy trying to take down donald trump. trish: well, it's fair to say mike bloomberg doesn't like donald trump, lou? >> i have to say, that was such a personal attack. it's unworthy of him. a number of issues, whatever they may be and the mayor's mind. what you really saw was a sour grapes spewed over the course of, what was that? 15, 20 minutes. and it was rancid at points. i don't think independents are going to even listen to him for a moment because he didn't have a rational argument. he did not appeal to reason our higher spirits. all i could think is michelle obama in this very center, when others go low, we go higher. bloomberg didn't get the message. he went lower than any speaker in this convention. trish: what about four years from now, should he try to run? >> he's done, he's done. trish: he's done? >> i think this was the only time he got to shoulder up the grenade launcher and fire at donald trump. he actually attacked democrats in the beginning of his speech and you heard the crowd go silent. it wasn't a ringing endorsement of hillary clinton. he said she's a flawed candidate but she's not donald trump. that was the essence of the high praise for her. >> i don't think he helped them or hillary clinton in any way tonight. trish: all right, we're going to take a quick break. we got a whole lot more coming up. i'm still here with lou and kennedy, we're going to hear from senator tim kaine -- forgive me, the new potential vice president, tim kaine, and president obama, and also coming up next, we'll continue to have reaction from the whole team here from what we just heard there on stage. we're live from philadelphia right after this. see you here. >> how can there be pleasure in saying you're fired? he's trying to tell us he cares about the middle class? give me a break! that's a bunch of malarkey! [cheers and applause] ♪ (ee-e-e-oh-mum-oh-weh) (hush my darling...) (don't fear my darling...) (the lion sleeps tonight.) (hush my darling...) man snoring (don't fear my darling...) (the lion sleeps tonight.) woman snoring take the roar out of snore. yet another innovation only at a sleep number store. you just stuck it in a drawer somewhere and forgot about it. until a dump truck hit your pickup truck and now you need a tow truck. does your policy cover the cost of a tow truck? who knows? you didn't read it. you can't even find it. the liberty mutual app with coverage compass™ makes it easy to know what you're covered for and what you're not. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at coverage compass™ gives you the policy information you need at a glance. available 24/7 on your mobile device. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call that's liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. . >> trump says he wants to run the nation like he's running his business? god help us! [laughter] i'm a new yorker and i know a con when i see one. trish: that was mike bloomberg, the former mayor of new york city. billionaire. taking aim at trump. trump is definitely the target in this room tonight. here alongside with lou and myself week have colorado governor john hickenlooper. what did you think of mike bloomberg's speech? >> certainly direct. no question. no one has any questions what he thinks. i think he took a lot of chances saying he doesn't support all things democrat or all things republican. trish: yeah, he said, look, nobody has a monopoly on all ideas, you know, both parties have an opportunity to bring forward good things. so what other ways? we were saying it didn't seem as though he supported hillary enough, it was just an anti-trump speech? >> it was anti-trump speech. he said a lot of things about hillary. it was a gamble when he said i'm out here as an independent. i'm not speaking to you, i'm speaking to the people at home. i'm talking to the independents. i'm not sure i can remember seeing anyone say that in either party convention. >> he was very careful to point out though he's an independent, he has been a republican and a democrat, and when he was a republican, he really was a democrat. doppler on partisan politics here. trish: is it the appeal they need? this election could very well be decided by independents. it could be decided by people who are in one party now who make a crossover, and so they need, they desperately need a spokesperson, if you would, to help them win over that group as mike bloomberg really is? >> he's part of it. not the whole thing, but mike bloomberg, he went into new york, in 12 years, he didn't worry about politics, he tried to get stuff done and do what's right for the city. trish: he was an outstanding mayor, you're right. >> americans are looking at him as someone who can recognize how you get things done. when he said that's what hillary can do, he's got credibility there. >> he's got credibility as you say, and on the issue of independents, governor hickenlooper is leading a state that really personifies an independent spirit. as we look how liberal the democratic party has become, we look to your state to see how liberal it has become as well, to the point people consider it adventurous and experimental in some of its policies but that is the nature of politics. i think you would make a terrific spokesman to independents and to the liberal constituency of this party rather than michael bloomberg. you have more experience and a greater contest. >> well, i hope to do my part, but i think that michael bloomberg, again, his record of getting stuff done in new york and success as an entrepreneur. he's really, in many ways reinvented a form of media that no one else really recognized. >> in the private sector all but unparalleled in the wealth he's amassed and his success, but also when we look at new york city, i will tell you right now, governor, what he has left in his wake is disastrous. trish: but is that mike bloomberg's fault or bill de blasio's fault, de blasio has been a downgrade. mike bloomberg will tell you that. let me tell you, lou, he inherited all that rudy giuliani did. you can see the crowd is noisy, a lot of stuff going on behind us. lenny kravitz finishing up his song and, of course, we were moments away. >> it was very good. trish: i got to hand it to them, they have wonderful music here, and we're going to be hearing a lot more throughout the night. governor, so good to see you. >> thanks for having me on. trish: a lot more on the way, everyone. vice presidential nominee tim kaine is taking to the podium. lots of questions about him. this is going to be his first big performance, if you would, in front of a pretty hospitable crowd. keep it here. we're back in two. ♪ it's here, but it's going by fast. the opportunity of the year is back: the mercedes-benz summer event. get to your dealer today for incredible once-a-season offers, and start firing up those grilles. lease the c300 for $379 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. what would help is simply being able to recognize a fair price. that's never really been possible. but along comes a radically new way to buy a car, called truecar. now it is. truecar has pricing data on every make and model, so all you have to do is search for the car you want, there it is. now you're an expert in less than a minute. this is how car buying was always meant to be. this is truecar. ♪ . trish: all right, welcome back, everyone to philadelphia. we have a pretty excited crowd here tonight, they got a lot of heavy hitters that they're bringing out to support hillary clinton. we are moments away from tim kaine, vice presidential candidate, tim kaine as well as the president of the united states. president obama is going to speak on hillary clinton's behalf. we just heard from the former mayor of new york city, mike bloomberg as well as vice president joe biden. i'm here alongside lou dobbs and kennedy. and been talking about all these speeches. joe biden, i want to get back to him for a second. >> you like joe biden. trish: i like him, and so does everyone else, and i think elections come down to likability. i think he would have been a much tougher candidate for donald trump to beat, and it comes down to that likability factor. he's a guy that you'd want to go have lunch with or have a beer with, and kennedy, how important is that really in politics? >> i think it's incredibly important. that's why al gore was never president. trish: or john kerry. >> wasn't just the dangling chads and ralph nader. trish: or mitt romney. >> being able to hang out in your backyard for barbecue and beer and that does translate, whether you are republican or democrat, there's something about joe biden people can relate to. he makes plenty of gaffes and that makes him super entertaining. every time i see him i want to scream stand up, chuck! they are giving him this moment, this is the last convention he's going to have. you know joe biden isn't going to speak at too many more democratic national conventions and he's not going to run for president. he's not going to run in four years, he knows he could have run, he made the choice not to. it's an emotional decision for a lot of people and his family because he lost his son. he tried to slow down the standing ovation because i think he was going to get so caught up in the emotionsa the pictures of his son flashed on that screen, and everyone in the crowd was -- trish: such an unfortunate thing for him and his family. again, i think we'd be looking at a different situation had he actually been in the running, lou. when you get back to likability for a moment, hillary clinton's failure to connect frankly with everyday americans, how much of a problem is that going to be for her? >> i think as kennedy suggests, likability is critically important. in this instance, likability within the democratic party overwhelmed the record of the administration in which joe biden service as vice president in foreign policy, it is one failure after another. he didn't mention that. he talked about personal experiences and that is to be expected in these venues and these moments but also didn't talk about doubling the national debt under this administration. he didn't talk about the inability to restore both growth to the economy and prosperity for all americans which is the charge of every president. these are great moments within a political convention, either party. but these are moments that dissipate quickly when you are confronted with the reality, there are 94 million americans who aren't working. trish: clearly the economic policy of the last eight years absolutely, positively has not worked. i want to go out to the floor, connell mcshane talking to some of the delegates out there. hey, connell. >> hey there, trish, talking about key points in the likability of joe biden. we're standing in front of the illinois delegation where there is anticipation for their home state president who will be speaking tonight as they watch the video about senator tim kaine. when joe biden was speaking, everybody was on on their feet. everybody was unified and the room more unified than any time this week with the exception of michelle obama's address. what's interesting the way the room is set up tonight, there are fewer bernie sanders supporters. want to show you behind me, the california delegation where i spent the other night when senator sanders was speak. at the top of the delegation you have few supporters of sanders who made their voices heard when leon panetta was speaking, a no more wars chant was breaking out. that was fed in the hall as i pan over to the oregon delegation and the washington state delegation, they were very vocal earlier this evening. no more war, while leon panetta the former secretary of defense and cia director was addressing the crowd. should be pointed out that was earlier tonight. ever since that happened and especially when joe biden, the vice president, came out, we've seen a more unified room. part of that may have to do with the fact there are fewer bernie sanders supporters in this crowd than two nights ago and maybe last night. lot of anticipation for the president later on. trish: thank you so much. the big question is whether or not that unification is going to stick when we see tim kaine take to the stage here. this is a man supportive of the trans-pacific partnership trade deal, something this room is very much against. we have seen sign after sign with a big x through tpp here, not very popular, and let's also not forget as we wait for him, kennedy and lou, he has really been in favor of deregulation in the banking sector, something that bernie sanders supporters obviously are not in favor of. >> by the way, not to interrupt, a lot of people in the california delegation holding up the no tpp signs. trish: there you go. >> trying to protest right now. splashed all over the crowd right now. trish: there he is, he was considered the safe pick, the pick that bill clinton had, he was supportive from the start. bank deregulation he has pushed as well as globalization and the trade deal in asia. so let's listen in and see what the vice presidential nominee tim kaine in his first big national moment, has to say. ♪ >> thank you, everybody! hello, philadelphia! hello, democratic family! i want to start off by thanking my beautiful wife anne and my three wonderful children, nat, woody and anella. they're sitting right up there. [cheers] you know my son matt deployed with his marine battalion two days ago. [applause] he deployed overseas to protect and defend the very nato allies that donald trump says he now wants to abandon. [booing] semper fi, matt! semper fi! my parents and my in-laws are here, our siblings and their spouses, our nieces and nephews and hundreds of friends from virginia and beyond. i love seeing you front and center. [cheers and applause] including my friend of 37 years, senior senator mark warner. my great governor terry mcauliffe. [cheers and applause] and my great friend and congressman bobby scott! we love you all! [cheers and applause] today, today for my wife anne and every strong woman in this country, for nat, woody and anella and every young person starting out in life to make their own dreams real, for every man and woman serving our country in the military, at home or abroad, for every working family working hard to get ahead and stay ahead. for my parents and in-laws and every senior citizen who hopes for a dignified retirement with health care and research to end diseases like alzheimer's -- [applause] for every american who wants our country to be a beloved community, where people aren't demeaned because of who they are, but rather respected for their contributions to this nation, and for all of us who know that the brightest future for our country is the one that we build together and for my friend hillary clinton, i humbly accept my party's nominationtor vice president of the united states! [cheers and applause] thank you! can i be honest with you about something? can i be honest with you about something? i never expected to be here. but let me tell you how it happened. i was born in minnesota and grew up in kansas city -- [cheers and applause] my folks weren't much into politics. my dad ran a union iron working shop in the stockyards. [cheers and applause] and my mom was his best salesman. my two brothers and i pitched into work during summers and weekends, and, you know, that's how small family businesses do it. my parents, al and cathy here tonight, and going strong, they taught me about hard work and about kindness, and most especially about faith. i went to a jesuit boys high school, rocker's high school. wow, that's a big line for the jesuits. [cheers] we had a motto in my school, men for others. and it was there that my faith became something vital. my north star for orienting my life. and when i left high school, i knew i wanted a battle for social justice. like so many of you. like so many of you. that's why i took a year off from law school to volunteer with jesuit missionaries in honduras, i taught kids how to be welders and carpenters. [speaking spanish] faith, family and work. faith, family and work. [speaking spanish] [cheers and applause] and let me tell you what really struck me there. i got a firsthand look at a different system, a dictatorship. a dictatorship. where a few people at the top had all of the power and everybody else got left out. now that convinced me that we've got to advance opportunity for everybody no matter where you come from, how much money you have, what you look like, how you worship or who you love! [cheers and applause] back in 1970, in virginia, a republican governor named lynwood holton believed exactly the same thing. he integrated virginia's public schools so that black and white kids could finally learn together, and then the family enrolled their own kids, including his daughter anne in the integrated inner city schools. many years later, anne went off to college and brought the lessons from the pivotal time with her, and one day, in a study group, she met this goofy guy who had been off teaching kids in honduras, well, anne and i have now been married almost 32 years, and i am the luckiest husband in the world. [cheers and applause] you know, let me tell you something, anne's parents are here today, 90+ and going strong. 90+ and going strong. lynwood holton is still a republican but voting for a lot of democrats these days. an awful lot of democrats. [applause] and here's why, he's voting for democrats because any party that would nominate donald trump for president has moved too far away from his party of lincoln! [applause] and i tell you, if any of you are looking for that party of lincoln, we've got a home for you right here in the democratic party! [cheers and applause] lynwood's example helped inspire me as a civil rights lawyer. over 17 years i took on banks, landlords, real estate firms, local governments, anybody who treated anybody unfairly. i had a six year case against an insurance company that was discriminating against minority neighborhoods all across the united states in issues home owner's insurance. folks, democratic friends, these are the battles i have fought my entire life. [cheers and applause] and that's the story, and that's the story how i decided to run for office. my city of richmond was divided and discouraged in the early 1990s. we had an epidemic of gun violence that was overwhelming our low income neighborhoods. people were pointing fingers and casting blame instead of finding answers, and i couldn't stand it. so i ran for city council, and i won that first race more than 20 years ago by a landslide margin ever 94 votes! [applause] and i said ever since, if i'm good at anything in politics, it's because i started at the local level listening to people, learning about their lives and trying to get results. i see a mayor here who knows what i'm talking about. later i became mayor of richmond, lieutenant governor and the 70th governor of virginia! [cheers and applause] now, i was a hard times governor. i had to steer my state through the deepest recession since the 1930s, but hey, tough times don't last and tough people do. and i can tell you that virginians are tough people? we are tough people. [cheers and applause] and we're smart, too. we achieved national recognition for our work, best managed state. best state for business. best state for a child to be raised. low unemployment. high median notice. we shed tears along the way. we shed tears especially together in the days after that horrible masshooting at virginia tech that killed 32 people from beautiful 19-year-old students to 70+-year-old romanian born holocaust survivors, and we shed tears and held each other up but afterwards we rolled up our sleeves and fixed the loophole in the background record check system so we can make our commonwealth safer, and we've got to do that in the nation. [applause] we invested in our people, expanding pre-k and higher edbecause we know that education is the key to all we want to be. all we want to be. and now vit honor of representing my commonwealth in the u.s. senate. i worked on the armed services and foreign relations committees to keep us safe at home and strong in the world. [applause] i worked on the budget committee with our great democratic leader of that committee, a spectacular senator who used to be a mayor. vermont's bernie sanders! [cheers and applause] bernie! bernie! bernie! bernie! >> and everybody, we all should feel the bern, and we all should not want to get burned by the other guy. [cheers and applause] on that budget committee under bernie's leadership, we fight for investments in education, health care, research, transportation, and i also serve on the aging committee to make sure that seniors like my folks have a secure retirement and don't get targeted by ripoff artists who will scan them out of their savings or overcharge them for prescription drugs. [applause] can i tell you a funny thing about the senate? i can tell you a funny thing about the senate? >> yes! >> that sounds like a yes. i spend a lot of time with republican senators who, once they have made sure that nobody is listening will tell you how fantastic a senator that hillary clinton was. [cheers and applause] now look, this journey that i've told you about has convinced me over and over again that god has created in our country a beautiful and rich tappestry, an incredible cultural diversity that succeeds, when we embrace everybody and love and battle back against the forces, the dark forces of division. we're all neighbors and we must love our neighbors as ourselves. [cheers and applause] now hillary clinton and i -- [speaking spanish] and we share this basic belief, it's simple, do all the good you can and serve one another. pretty simple. pretty simple. [cheers and applause] that's what i'm about, that's what you're about, that's what bernie sanders is about. that's what joe and jill biden are about. that's what barack and michelle obama are about. and that's what hillary clinton is about! [cheers and applause] now -- [speaking spanish] yes, we can. yes, we can. yes, we can. hey, last week, last week in cleveland, we heard a lot about trust. so let's talk about trust. let's talk about trust. i want to tell you why i trust hillary clinton? [cheers and applause] first, she's consistent. she has battled to put kids and families first since she was a teenager, in good times and bad, in victory and defeat, in and out of office, through hell or high water, fighting for underprivileged kids, working at the children's defense fund, fighting to get health insurance for eight million low income children when she was first lady. fighting for the well-being of women and children around the world. hey, can i offer you a little tip? when you want to know something about the character of somebody in public life, look to see if they have a passion that began long before they were in office and that they have consistently held it throughout their career. [cheers and applause] do they have a passion? did it start before they were in office? have they held onto it consistently? folks, hillary has a passion for kids and families! [cheers and applause] donald trump has a passion, too. it's himself! [applause] and with hillary it's not just words, it's accomplishments. she delivers. as senator after 9/11, i got my new yorkers and virginians right here. [applause] she battled congressional republicans to care for the first responders who went into the towers, who went into the pentagon and saved the victims of those terrorist attacks. as secretary of state, she implemented tough sanctions against iran to pave the way for a diplomatic breakthrough to curtail a nuclear weapons program. [applause] and she wasn't afraid. she wasn't afraid. she wasn't afraid to stand up against thugs and dictators and as a key part of the obama national security team, they decided to go to the ends of the earth to wipe out osama bin laden! [cheers and applause] hey, do y'all remember the little girl we heard from on monday night? [ cheers ] >> who was worried her parents would be deported? carla said she trusts hillary to keep them together. and do you remember the mothers of the movement last night? [cheers] they said they trust hillary to keep other mothers' sons and daughters safe. [applause] and on a personal level, as he's serving our nation abroad, i trust hillary clinton with our son's life. [cheers and applause] now, you know who i don't trust? hmm, i wonder. donald trump! donald trump. trump is a guy who promises a lot but you might have noticed, he's got a way of saying the same two words every time he makes his biggest, hugest promises. believe me, it's going to be great. believe me. [laughter] we're going to build a wall and make mexico pay for it. believe me. we're going to destroy isis so fast. believe me. there's nothing suspicious in my tax returns. believe me. [laughter] by the way, does anybody in this massive auditorium believe that donald trump's been paying his fair share of taxes? >> no! >> does anybody here believe that trump ought to release his tax returns just like every other presidential candidate in modern history? [cheers and applause] of course he should! hey, donald, what are you hiding? and yet, and yet donald still says, believe me. believe me. believe me? believe me? i mean, here's the thing, most people when they run for president, they don't just say believe me, they respect you enough to tell you how they will get things done. that's what most people who run for president do. in fact, can you go on hillary clinton.com right now and find out exactly how she'll make the biggest investment in new jobs in a generation? how she'll defend and build on wall street reform? how she'll reform our immigration system to create a path to citizenship? how she'll make it possible to graduate from college debt free. you can see how she'll protect roe v. wade, guaranteed. equal pay for women, and make paid family leave a reality. [cheers and applause] all it takes is one click! all it takes is one click, and we can see how she'll do it, how she'll pay for it, and how we'll benefit by it. not donald trump. not donald trump. he never tells you how he's going to do anything of the things he says he'll do. he just says, believe me. [laughter] so here's the question. here's the question. do you really believe him? >> no! >> donald trump's whole career says you better not. and thousands of trump university students believed donald trump when he said he would help them succeed. they got stiffed! he says, believe me. well his creditors, his contractors, his laid-off employees and his rippedoff students did just that, and they all got hurt. folks, you cannot believe one word that comes out of donald trump's mouth. not one word. [cheers and applause] not one word.. >> not one word! not one word! . >> not one word. and i'll tell you. and i'll tell you, to me, to me it just seems like our nation, it is just too great to put it in the hands of a slick-talking, empty-promising, self-promoting, one-man wrecking crew! [cheers and applause] but don't take it from me. don't take it from me. take it from former first lady barbara bush. barbara bush said she doesn't know how any woman could vote for him after his offensive comments about women. [cheers and applause] any woman. any woman. or john mccain's chief economic adviser during the 08 race who estimated trump's promises could cause america to lose 3.5 million jobs. taken from a a guy who co-wrote donald trump's autobiography. here's what he said about trump quote lying is second nature to him. so do you believe him? how about on the side you guys believe him? do you guys believe him? is there anyone in this building who believes him? no! c the next president will face many challenges. we had better elect a candidate who has proven she can be trusted with the job. [applause] the candidate who has proven that she is ready for the job and when i say ready i use ready for a very specific reason. when i lived in honduras i learn something, the best compliment that you can pay somebody was to say that they were ready. not smart, not friendly, not rich, but what it means in spanish is as this, it means prepared, it means battle tested, it means rocksolid, up for anything never backing down in friends hillary clinton she is ready. [cheering] she is ready. she is ready. she is ready because of her faith, she is ready because of her heart, she is ready because of her experience and she's ready because she knows in america we are stronger when we are together. [applause] my fellow democrats, this week we start the next chapter in our great and proud story. thomas declared all men were equal and abigail remembered the women. [cheers and applause] woodrow brokered the peace and eleanor broke down the barriers. jack told us what to ask and lyndon answered the call. martin had a dream and harvey gave his life. bill builds a bridge into the 21st century and barack gave us hope and now hillary is ready. she is ready to fight. she is ready to win and she is ready to lead. god bless all of you, on to victory and thank you philadelphia. [cheers and applause] >> tim kaine accepting the vice presidential nomination from hillary clinton. i was the first time we have seen him in such a large venue was such a big spotlight. i will ask you first lou what is a you think that bill clinton who was set to be in at the gate for him, what is the day -- lou: i cannot for the life of me understand why they continue to attack trump on a personal level rather than articulating some greater connection to the folks out there. that is his wife and go holton. >> the point being that this come he kept bringing trump, i mean trump to the statue newsroom to the point that it overwhelms senator kaine and secondly the idea that he was mocking and took it to a level that is a little puerile, a little puerile and i don't think it affects the rhetorical speaking device for him. trish: i was not as impressed as i thought it would. hannity or thoughts. kennedy: this was the speech were yet to come out and while the american public through this one -- as someone who's had a lot of work to do to bounce into a pretty than the present of the united states as hillary is an underwhelming speaker. tim kaine is certainly no alpha mail. trish: did they pick cam cam because he wouldn't upstage her in anyway? kennedy: i think that's part of it. for any candidate you don't need someone who is -- it as speaker is president obama but he didn't offer any solutions. as a small business owner would like to hear what he has to say about things like regulation job creation anything that shows foresight or hope. and fell flat. trish: a lot of people were holding up signs about tpp. there want this trade deal. it's unclear whether or not it's resonating with hillary clinton and tim kaine. i will tell you word is resonating outside on the streets in philadelphia. people are protesting in a lot of these are people that were pro-bernie that don't like tpp. tell us what's going on there. >> would the this was a good speech or a bad speech trish you can see the seen out on the streets. doesn't matter, they are not supporting this ticket. they are not supporting the vice president or the presidential candidate. if you thought this was going away after yesterday you are absolutely wrong. listen to that chance, it is as loud tonight as it was last night. we just had a leader of this rally say we are nonviolent. this is an incredibly loud boisterous and steadfast crowd. it is not a violent crowd that we areunded by bernie sanders supporters that are surrounding the outside of the convention hall and they are just as passionate as they had been and despite the fact that the president's speeches coming up, this crowd does not want to hear it. they are done with hearing from secretary clinton and they're done with hearing from tim kaine and they are done with hearing from bernie sanders. they're moving on. a lot of these people say they will move on -- i can't believe how big and loud this crowd is. trish: i'm here on the set with lou and kennedy and it's incredible to see because in some ways i thought this would be subdued lou because the president is about to speak tonight and there's the reality of streets getting shut down and it's difficult to get around here making it less likely that we would see these kinds of protesters taking to the streets. lou: as i suggested earlier one is outside a once inside and the one outside goes across a society of 300 million people. the democratic hardy has a riff that it is going to have to repair. how deep it is and how sustainable it is from the perspective of those demonstrators and those who feel quite clearly based on all of the evidence for these e-mails revealed by the dnc. they pulled off a -- against the integrity of the party. it's not going to be easily fixed. kennedy: this party has become so anachronistic and out of touch. the democratic hardy is still an horse and buggies and these people out here want flying cars. trish: that's an important point kennedy. the issues we are talking about here the economy, the middle-class should play to their strengths and yet they are allowing that basically to be taken frankly by donald trump who is resonating more with everyday americans who feel as though he, the billionaire understands their problems getting much better -- in a much better way than hillary clinton does. lou: the idea that these folks that represent the can all agree the uppermost regions of the democratic hardy if they are not buying in to what is being sold, there has been grievance after grievance and constituency after construed -- constituency held together by a thread which is really support or barack obama not necessarily hillary intend i mean this party has real trouble represented to them on that stage. i see a problem as you said anybody who thought this thing was over last night is simply an error. trish: what happens from here kennedy? these people will continue to be dissatisfied. do they just not show up to vote or do they vote for trump? where did these voters go. kennedy: all of the above. the smaller margin will go to the trump campaign and many of them are investigating a gettin. many of them are so apathetic to pull the two today really feel the campaign is a slap in the face and that's why you saw some some the delegations that have been relegated to the outskirts of the convention center. the arena rather. the entire time this was a race about issues and the democratic party has continued what they need to do to get back in mine and they are just missing the call. trish: when you think about security how do she run on security and then you think about her positions on things like trade etc., to challenging position to be into the hillary clinton running for for the president of the united states given where we are. lou: given all of those problems faced by barack obama 2012 she better listen carefully to the present of united states because he came up with the magic sauce that allowed him to overcome an economy that was disastrous and the mood in the nation. trish: and don't forget who he was running against, mitt romney. as kennedy said earlier likability matters. it really does. will make him back everyone the president of the united states of america is going to be on this stage to make his case for hillary clinton. is it going to matter to those people outside? probably not but we will see what exactly he has to say. we are back live from philadelphia in a few minutes. you've wished upon it all year, and now it's finally here. the mercedes-benz summer event is back, with incredible offers on the mercedes-benz you've always longed for. but hurry, these shooting stars fly by fast. lease the gle350 for $579 a month >> we are coming back right away. they drove through the fence. the police are now forcing everyone down. the bernie protesters were trying to stay peaceful but a group of people in black came through and tore through the fence. the police have now. restored the fence. several people got through. i know how far they got the the police have put up a line outside the gate and they have received your defense. they have free secure defense. trish: how did they get through? >> it's unclear to me how many people ask a guard inside. the police are now pursuing -- i don't know if they are headed your way or not. at this point we have secured the fence that was broken through. it was an incredible scene there for second. hang on, larry. i just want to make this very clear. this was not the pro-bernie sanders crowd of multiply times that we are not violent, we don't want to do anything violent. they threw a coffin over the fence but that's as bad as it got. these are people from the outset became through. as i said order seems to be restored but i don't know what's going on on the other side of the fence. trish: jeff can i jump in and can you describe the people that broke through? they were wearing masks? >> these were people just in black and through the crowd before this happened bernie sanders organizers said we are here and some people dressed in black may be coming through. if you see them point them out. these people came upon us very quickly running through the crowd very quickly and brought through the fence. the police have been very calm because protesters have been calm. what are you seeing? trish: how is it that the police were unable to stop them? >> we got a high perspective from the camera. lou: jeff we are seeing dozens of police officers running just to your right as you race those police officers in the fence. any idea what that was? >> say that again lou. lou: we saw dozens of loose officers running as you face the fence to your left and i mean dozens behind the fence as well as the ones we can see behind you in front of the fence fence. >> would have been with several people got in in black costumes with coverings over their face. several of those people got through the fence and began running. i don't know what has become of them. police officers on the inside were pursuing them but this was not the bernie sanders support cup i don't know where they came from. >> those were not bernie sanders supporters. they are not part of our organization. there are many factions here for different reasons. we are not trying to fight with the police. >> that is what we have heard on multiple occasions from everybody out here. they went out of their way to say we don't want violence. i don't know who those people were. this gentleman described -- now they're asking everyone to please sit down. please stand down. you want to make it clear to the authorities that they are not desiring to do any damage pray they were never desiring to do any damage. they just wanted their voices heard. you can hear the call for everyone to sit. as you can see most of the people are sitting. trish: kennedy is here with us and she wanted to ask you a question. >> one describes them as anarchists. trish: jeff those are the same people i saw in cleveland i would consider them to be protesters, they go from event to event. they don't really have a cause. it's very different from the sander supporters and all they really want to do is get arrested and create chaos and they made it so much harder for people there who have legitimate complaints. part of our democratic process is people protesting and they have every right to speak freely and demonstrate. that is something that has to be protected that people come in and cause that kind of chaos unfortunately that's what leads to -- and i have to say the protesters in philadelphia have been very well organized. there passionate and they are on message and that is why you are seeing this sit in right now. they are responsible for their cause and not trying to create melee. lou: these demonstrators are showing great discipline. their organizers and leaders, civil disobedience in this fashion is what is -- in our constitution. we are hearing about these anarchists. i think we need to complement these police officers as well. they are maintaining very good discipline and firm order without violence and we send our compliments and thanks to them as well. trish: you have to credit the protesters. >> we have talked to people on a number of occasions and this was very different from what we saw in chicago in 1968 where police waded into the crowd and began beating people. trish: i do want to point out to our viewers that with all of this unfolding will continue live. the president is about to speak. he will be taking the stage here and as he is said over and over again he really has quite a task ahead of them because there is no unification write-down the democratic party. we have only to look at the television screen right there because right outside of this arena we now have i don't know jeff how many people would you estimate are engage and this protest? >> i would guess that we are certainly at least 1000 if not thousands, maybe 2000. a lot of people. trish: thousands of people outside of this arena. >> this has echoes of 1968. i would point out that i might that we had police wading into the crowd. with the scene like that it got crazy in 1968 and these police have shown tremendous restraint. they found the people that were trying to cause a problem and they shot -- the police doing it excellent job of keeping this together. trish: again as you've been saying the present of the united states has quite a scene on his hands tonight as we watch thousands of our testers outside and all of these supporters inside standing up for hillary clinton. he is about to take the stage and talk about the reasons why the secretary of state should take over his job and we will watch the president and continue keeping an eye on these protesters right outside for you. lou dobbs and kennedy, we are here with analysis immediately following his speech. obviously a warm reception. >> very warm as expected and every person in the room is standing their respective as it seems to me as we look across the room. people holding up placards standing and some are not standing in simply holding their signs. trish: this is his last address. [cheers and applause] thank you. thank you! thank you. thank you so much. thank you everybody. [cheers and applause] thank you. thank you so much everybody. thank you. thank you. thank you everybody. [cheers and applause] thank you. thank you so much everybody. [cheers and applause] i love you back. [cheers and applause] hello america. hello democrats. so, 12 years ago tonight, i addressed this convention for the very first time. [cheers and applause] you met my two little girls, malia and sasha and now to amazing young women who just filled me with pride. [cheers and applause] you fell for my brilliant wife and partner, michelle. [cheers and applause] who has made me a better father and a better man, who has gone on to inspire our nation as first lady. [cheers and applause] and to somehow has managed to -- i know, the same cannot be said for me. my girls remind me all the time, wow you have changed so much daddy. and then they try to clean it up. not bad, just more mature. [laughter] and it's true. i was so young that first time in boston. [cheers and applause] and look i will admit maybe i was a little nervous addressing such a big crowd but i was filled with faith, faith in america, the generous, big-hearted hopeful country that made my story, that made all of our stories. a lot has happened over the years. and while this nation has been tested by war and it has been tested by recession and all matter of challenges, i stand before you again tonight after almost two terms as your president to tell you i am more optimistic about the future of america than ever before. [cheers and applause] how could i not be? all that we have achieved together and the worst recession in 80 years, we fight our way back. we have seen deficits come down, 401(k)s were covered and the auto industry set new records, unemployment reached eight year lows and our businesses created 50 million new jobs. [cheers and applause] after century of trying, we declare that health care in america america is not a privilege for a few, it is a right for everybody. [cheers and applause] after decades of talk we finally began to wean ourselves off of foreign oil to be doubled our production of clean energy. we brought more of our troops home to their families and we deliver justice to osama bin laden. [cheers and applause] through diplomacy we shut down iran's nuclear weapons program. we opened up a new chapter with the people of cuba. brought nearly 200 nations together around the climate agreement that can save this planet for our children. [cheers and applause] we put policies in place to help students with loans, protect consumers from fraud, cut veterans homelessness almost in half. [applause] and through countless acts of courage america learned that love has no limits and marriage equality is now a -- across this land. [applause] by so many measures are country is stronger and more prosperous than it was when we started. and through every victo every setback i have insisted that change is never easy, it's never quick and we wouldn't need all of our challenges in one term or one presidency or even in one lifetime. but tonight i'm here to tell you that yes we still have got more work to do, more work to do for every american still in need of a good job or a raise, paid leave for a decent retirement, for every child who needs a sturdier latter out of poverty or a world-class education for everyone who has not yet felt the progress of these last seven and half years. we need to make our streets safer in our criminal justice system fairer, our homeland more secure, our world more peaceful and sustainable for the next generation. [applause] we are not done perfecting our union. or living up to our founding creed that all of us are created equal, all of us are free in the eyes of god. [applause] and that work involves the big choice in november. it's fair to say this is not your typical election. it's not just a choice between parties or policies or usual debates between left and right. this is a more fundamental choice about who we are as a people and whether we stayed true to this great american experiment in self-government. look, we democrats of ours had plenty of differences with the republican party and there is nothing wrong with that. it is precisely this content of idea that pushes this country forward. [applause] but what we heard in cleveland last week wasn't particularly republican. and it sure wasn't conservative. what we heard was a deeply pessimistic vision of the country where we turn against each other and turn away from the rest of the world. there were no serious solutions to solving problems, just the fanning of resentment and flames and anger and hate and that is not the america i know. [applause] the america i know is full of courage and optimism and ingenuity. the america i know is generous. sure we have real anxiety is about paying the bills and caring for a sick parent. we get frustrated with political gridlock and worry about racial division. we are shocked and saddened by the madness of orlando or nice. there are pockets of america that have never recovered from factory closures. a man who took pride in hard work and providing for their families who now feel forgotten. parents wonder whether their kids will have the same opportunities that we had. all of that is real. we are challenged to do better. to be better but as i have traveled this country to all 50 states, as i have rejoiced with you and mourned with you, what i have also seen more than anything is what is right with america. [applause] i see people working hard and starting businesses. i see people teaching kids in serving our country. i see engineers are and doctors coming up with new cures. i see a younger generation full of energy and new ideas not constrained by what is, ready to see what ought to be. [cheers and applause] and most of all i see americans of every party, every background, every faith who believe that we are stronger together. black, white, latino, asian and native american come again the old, straight, men women folks with disabilities all pledging allegiance under the same proud flag, the bold country that we love, that's what we see. that's the america i know and there's only one candidate who believes in that future and has devoted her life to that future, a mother and a grandmother who would do anything to help our children thrive great a leader with real plans to break down barriers and blast through glass ceilings and widen the circle of opportunity to every single american the next president of the united states, hillary clinton. [cheers and applause] [cheers and applause] now eight years ago -- [chanting] that's right. let me tell you, eight years ago you may remember hillary and i were rivals for the democratic nomination. we battled for a year and a half let me tell you it was tough. because hillary was tough. i was worn out. [laughter] she was doing everything i was doing but just like gingers are are -- ginger rogers, it was backwards in heels. [cheers and applause] and every time i thought, every time i thought i might have the rays race one hillary came back stronger. but after it was all over i asked hillary to join my team. [cheers and applause] and she was a little surprised. some of my staff was surprised but ultimately she said yes because she knew that what was at stake was bigger than either of us. [cheers and applause] and for four years, for four years i had the front row seat to her intelligence, her judgment and her discipline. i came to realize that her unbelievable work ethic was in for praise and it wasn't for attention. she was in this for everyone who needs a champion. [cheers and applause] i understood that after all these years, she had never forgotten just who she is fighting for. hillary has still got the tenacity that she had as a young woman working at the children's defense fund going door-to-door to ultimately make sure kids with disabilities could get a quality education. [cheers and applause] she still has the heart she showed us our first lady working with congress to help push through a children's health insurance program that to this day protects millions of kids. [applause] she's still feared with the fear of every american she met who lost loved ones on 9/11 which is why as a defender new york she fought so hard for funding to help first responders, to help the city rebuild and why is secretary of state she sat with me and the situation room and forcefully argued in favor of the mission that took out in lawton. [cheers and applause] bin laden. you know, nothing truly prepares you for the demand of the oval office. you can. about it, you can study it but until you have sat at that desk, you don't know what it's like to manage a global crisis or send young people to war. but hillary has been around. she has been part of those decisions. she knows what is at stake in the decisions our government makes and what is at stake for the working families, for the senior citizen, for the small business owner, for the soldier, for the veteran and even in the midst of crisis, she listens to people and she keeps her cool and she treats everybody with respect. and no matter how daunting the odds, no matter how much people try to knock her down, she never, ever quits. [cheers and applause] that is the hillary i know. that is the hillary i have come to admire and that is why i can say with confidence there has never been a man or a woman, not me, not bill, nobody more qualified than hillary clinton to serve as president of the united states of america. [cheers and applause] [chanting] i hope you don't mind bill, but i was just telling the truth. by the way in case you are wondering about her judgment, take a look at her choice for a running mate. [applause] tim kaine is as good a man, as humble and is committed a public servant as anybody that i know. i know his family, i love anne i love their kids. he will make a great vice president he will make hillary is better resident just like my dear friend and brother joe biden has made me a better president. [cheers and applause] now, hillary has real plans to address the concerns she has heard from you on the campaign trail. she has got specific ideas to invest in new jobs to help workers share in the company's profits, to help put kids in preschool and put students through college without taking on a ton of debt. that's what leaders do. and then there is donald trump. [booing] >> don't boo, vote. [cheers and applause] the donald is not really a plan guy, he's not really a fact guy either. he calls himself a business guy which is true but i have to say i know plenty of disney's men and women who achieve remarkable success without leaving a trail of lawsuits and unpaid workers and people feeling like they got cheated. [cheers and applause] does anyone really believe that a guy who has. >> his 70 years on this earth showing no regard for people is suddenly going to be your champion, your voice? and if so you should vote for him. but if you are someone who is truly concerned about paying your bills, if you are really concerned about pocketbook issues and seeing the economy growing creating opportunity for everybody, then the choice isn't even close. if you want someone with a lifelong track record of fighting for higher wages and better benefits and a fairer tax code and a bigger voice for workers and stronger regulations on wall street, then you should vote for hillary clinton. [cheers and applause] [chanting] hillary, hillary, hillary. and if you are rightly concerned about who is going to keep you and your family safe in the dangers world, the choice is even clearer. hillary clinton is respected around the world. not just by leaders but by the people they serve. i have to say this, people outside of the united states do not understand what's going on in this election. they really don't. cause they know hillary and they have seen her work. she has worked closely with our intelligence people come our diplomats, arm of a terry. she has the judgment and the experience in the temperament to meet the threat of terrorism. it's not new to her. our troops pounded iso without mercy taking back their leaders and hillary won't relent until isil is destroyed. she will finish the job and she will do it without resorting to torture or banning entire religions from entering our country. she is ready to be the next commander in chief. [cheers and applause] meanwhile, donald trump calls called our military disaster. apparently he doesn't know the men and women who make up the strongest force the world has ever known. [applause] he suggests america's weak. he must not hear the billions of men and women and children from the baltics to burma who still look to america to be the light of freedom, dignity and human rights. [applause] he cozies up to putin, plays up to saddam hussein tells her native allies that stood by her side after 9/11 that they have to pay up if they want our protection. america's promises do not come with a price tag. we meet our commitments. we bear our burdens. that is one of the reasons why almost every country on earth sees america as stronger and more respected today than they did eight years ago when i took office. [cheers and applause] america is already great. [cheers and applause] america is 40 strong. and i promise you our strength, our greatness does not depend on donald trump. in fact it doesn't depend on any one person. and that in and maybe the biggest difference in this election. the meaning of our democracy, ronald reagan called america a shining city on a hill. donald trump calls it a divided crime scene that only he can fix. it doesn't matter to him that a legal immigration and the crime rate are as low as they have been in decades. because he is not actually offering any real solutions to those issues. he is just offering slogans and he is offering fear. he is betting that if he scares enough people, he might score just enough votes to win this election. and that is another bet that donald trump will lose. [cheers and applause] and the reason he will lose it is because he is selling the american people short. we are not a fragile people. we are not a spiteful our power doesn't come from some self declared savior promising that he alone can restore order as long as we do things his way. we don't look to be ruled. [cheers and applause] our power, our power comes from those moral declarations first put to paper right here in philadelphia all those years ago. we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that we the people can form a more perfect union. that is who we are. that is our first right the capacity to shape our own destiny. [cheers and applause] that is what drove, that is what drove patriots to choose revolution over tyranny and art g.i.s to liberate a country. it's what gave women the courage to reach for the ballot and troops to cross the bridge in selma and workers to organize and fight for collective bargaining and better wages. [cheers and applause] america has never been about what one person says he will do for us, it is about what can be achieved by us, together. to the hard and slow is sometimes frustrating but ultimately enduring self governing prayed and that's what hillary clinton understands. she knows that this is a big diverse country. she has seen it. she has traveled. she has talked to folks and she understands that most issues are rarely black-and-white. she understands that even when you are 100% right, getting things done requires compromise. that democracy doesn't work if we constantly demonize each other. [cheers and applause] she knows that for progress to happen, we have to listen to each other. and see ourselves in each other and fight for our principles but also fight to find common ground on matter how elusive that may sometimes seem. [applause] hillary knows we can work through racial divides in this country when we realized the way black parent -- parents feel when their son -- that we can honor police and treat every community fairly. we can do that. and she knows that technology in problems that have festered for decades isn't making race relations worse, it is creating the possibility for people of goodwill good will to join and make things better. [applause] hillary knows we can insist on a lawful and orderly immigration system while still seeing striving students and their toiling parents as loving parents, not criminals are. families they came here for the same reason our forebears came, to work and to study and to make a better life in a place where we can talk in worship and love as we please. she knows their dream is quintessentially american and the american dream is something no wall will ever contain. [cheers and applause] these are the things that hillary knows. it can be frustrating. trust me, i know. hillary knows too. when the other side refuses to compromise progress can stall. people are hurt by an action. supporters can grow inpatient and worried that you are not trying hard enough, that you may be sold out but i promise you when we keep at it, when we change enough minds, when we deliver enough votes that progress does happen and if you doubt that just asks tha 20 million more people who have health care today, just ask the marine who proudly served his country without hiding the husband that he loves. [cheers and applause] democracy works, america. but we have got to want it. not just during an election year but all the days in between. [cheers and applause] so if you agree that there is too much inequality in our economy and too much money in our politics we all need to be as vocal and is organized and as persistent as bernie sanders supporters have been in this race. [cheers and applause] we all need to get out and vote for democrats up and down the ticket and then hold them accountable until they get the job done. [cheers and applause] that's right, feel the bern. if you want more justice in the justice system, then we have all got to vote not just for a president but for mayors and sheriffs and state attorneys and state legislators. that is where the criminal law is made and we have got to work with police and protesters until laws and practices are changed. that is how democracy works. if you want to fight climate change, we have got to ring gauge not only young people on college campuses, we have got to reach out to the coalminer who was worried about taking care of his family, the single mom worried about gas prices. [cheers and applause] if you want to protect our kids and our cops from gun violence, we have got to get the vast majority of americans including gun owners who are on things like background checks to be just as vocal and just as determined as the gun lobby that locks changed to every funeral that we hold. that is how change happens. [cheers and applause] look, hillary has got her share of critics. she has been caricatured by the right and by some on the left. she has been accused of everything you can imagine and some things that you cannot. but she knows that's what happens when you are under a microscope for four years. [applause] she knows that sometimes during those four years she has made mistakes just like i have, just like we all do. [applause] that's what happens when we try. that's what happens when you are the kind of citizen teddy roosevelt once described, not the timid souls to criticize from the sidelines for someone who was actually in the arena. who strives valiantly, who airs but to at their best knows in the end the triumph of their achievements. hillary clinton is that woman in the arena. [cheers and applause] she has been there for us even if we haven't always noticed. and if you are serious about our democracy, you can afford to stay home just because she might not align with you on every issue. you have got to get in the arena with her because democracy isn't a spectator sport. america isn't about if he will, it's about yes we can and we are going to carry hillary to victory this fall. [cheers and applause] yes, we can. not yes she can, not yes i can, yes we can. you know, there has been a lot of talk in this campaign about what america has lost. people who tell us that our way of life is being undermined by british's changes and dark forces beyond our control. they tell voters there is a real america out there that must be restored. this is an idea that started with donald trump. spend peddled by politicians for a long time. right from the start of our public and it got me thinking about the story i told you 12 years ago tonight about my kansas grandparents and the things they taught me when i was growing up. see my grandparents came from the heartland. their ancestors began settling there about 200 years ago. i don't know if they had their birth certificates, but they were there. [applause] and they were scotch-irish folks, farmers, teachers, ranch hands, pharmacists, oil rig workers, hardees small-town folks. some were democrats but a lot of them, maybe most of them were republicans, party elected. and my grandparents explained that folks in these parts, they didn't like show offs. they didn't admire braggarts or bullies, they didn't respect mean-spiritedness and folks who are always looking for shortcuts in life. instead what they valued were traits like honesty and hard work, kindness, courtesy, humility, responsibility, helping each other out. that's what they believed in, true things, things that last, the things we try to teach our kids. and what my grandparents understood was that these values weren't limited to kansas, they weren't limited to small towns. these allie's could travel to hawaii. they could travel even to the other side of the world where my mother would end up working to help poor women at a better life, trying to apply those values. my grandparents knew these values weren't reserved for one race. they could be passed down to a half kenyan grandson or a half asian granddaughter. in fact they were the same values michelle's parents the descendents of slaves, taught their own kids living in a bungalow on the southside of chicago. [cheers and applause] they knew that these values were exactly what drew america to the frontier and they believed that the children of those immigrants were just as american as their own, whether they have wore a cowboy hat or a yarmulke, a baseball cap or a sub three. america has changed over the years but these values and my grandparents taught, they haven't gone anywhere. they are as strong as ever, still cherished by people of every party, every race, every faith. they live on in each of us. what makes us american, what takes us patriots is what is in here. that is what matters. [applause] and that is why we can take the food and music and holidays and the styles of other countries and blend it into something uniquely ours. that is why we can attract strivers and entrepreneurs from around the globe to build new factories and create new industries here. that's why our military works the way it does. every shade of humanity forged into common service. that is why anyone who threatens our values whether fascist or communist or jihadists or home-grown demagogues will always fail in the end. [cheers and applause] that is america. that is america, those bonds of affection, that common creed. we don't fear the future, we shape it. we embrace it as one people stronger together than we are on our own. [applause] that is what hillary clinton understands. this fight, this mother and grandmother, this public servant, this patriot, that is the america she is fighting for. [cheers and applause] [chanting] and that is why i have confidence as they leave the stage tonight that the doma credit party is in good hands. [applause] my time in this office, it hasn't fixed everything. as much as we have done and there's still so much i want to do. but for all the tough lessons i have had to learn, for all the places where i have fallen short, i told hillary and i will tell you what pick me back up every single time. it has been you. the american people. [cheers and applause] it's the letter i keep on my wall from the survivor in ohio who twice lost almost everything to cancer but urged me to keep fighting for health care reform even when the battle seemed lost three do not quit. it is the painting i keep in my private office, a big eyed green towel with blue wings made by a 7-year-old girl who was taken from us in newtown. given to me by her parents so i wouldn't forget. a reminder of all the parents who have turned their grief into action. [applause] it's a small-business owner in colorado to cut most of his own salary so he wouldn't have to lay off any of his workers in a recession, because he said that wouldn't have been in the spirit of america. [cheers and applause] it is the conservative in texas who said he disagreed with me on everything but he appreciated that like him, i tried to be a good dad. [cheers and applause] it is the courage of a young soldier from arizona who nearly died on the battlefield in afghanistan, but who has learned to speak again and walk again and earlier this year stepped through the door of the oval office on his own power to salute and shake my hand. [applause] it is every american who believes we can change this country for the better. so many of you who have never been involved in politics picked up bones and hit the streets and use the internet in amazing new ways that i didn't really understand but may change happen. you are the best organizers on the planet and i'm so proud of all the change that you have made. [applause] time and again you picked me up and i hope sometimes i have a few up too. [applause] and tonight i ask you to do for hillary clinton what you did for me. [applause] i ask you to carry her the same way you carried me, because you are who i was talking about 12 years ago when i talked about hope. it has been you who fueled my dogged faith in our future even when the odds were great, even when the road is long. hope in the face of difficulty, hope in the face of uncertainty, the audacity of hope, america you have vindicated that hope these past eight years. and now i am ready to pass the baton and do my part as a private citizen so this year and this election i'm asking you to join me to reject cynicism and reject fear and to summon what is best in us to elect hillary clinton as the next president of the united states and show the world we still believe in the promise of this great nation. [cheers and applause] thank you for this incredible journey. let's keep it going. god bless you, god bless the united states of america. [cheers and applause] [applause] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] a surprise appearance from hillary clinton joining the president on stage. you heard the president urging americans to do for her what they did for him, to rally behind her to support her, and talked a lot about the message of inclusion painting a picture of a strong america, an america with much potential provided it stays on its current path, a path that continues with hillary clinton. his legacy very much on the line. it is critical and it is critical lou for him, for his ego perhaps. that a democrat continues in office. he will take all of october to campaign for her. lou he will have that time available to him. it's going to be -- he is getting quite a sendoff. they cut away to bill clinton and the look on his face when am i going to get my hug? trish: that's an important point because she came into this auditorium last night not actually up on stage. >> she was the floating head in our alien overboard and tonight it was a tightrope that he had to walk and very carefully. how much does the campaign for himself, how much is the fight for that legacy and how much does he build her up like he tried to build her up as everyone has by saying man she's pretty good. his tone hasn't changed when they debated. she's likeable enough. he literally uttered the phrase "the audacity of hope." that was the name of one of his memoirs. he was saying yes we can. he was screaming his own campaign slogan. my lord it was unrelenting drought to speech. supposed to be about her. the best moment of all was when she stepped out on the stage and they did embrace. lou: we may need to cut back to the picture bill clinton. trish: in other words she needed to -- lou: igoing to be interesting tomorrow night to see if she has set up to do battle in the public arena with the same emotion and compassion exhibited here for the president tonight. trish: this is a president who obviously know so much about perception, he is the one that is used the term office -- optics and optics on stage the critical because that has to be the unifying force that brings the serene and this party together. is that enough? i want to go to colin mcshane on the convention floor was some other action we are seeing. >> the same perception about optics but we watched the speech just to the side of the stage and what is they loved everything they heard and there were signs being handed out as the present was wrapping up his speech. people were starting to file out and linger about and say thank you very we didn't even hear chants of four more years and that kind of thing. reverend jesse jackson is passing by. pretty good speech reverend jackson. >> he has healed someone's tonight and leaving on a high note of morals. we are trying to reach it and it's good to reach beyond your grasp and he keeps raising us on battleground to higher ground. >> i know you are being moved along by the perseid incorporated is stopping permanent. by the view when i was looking i could see to the virginia delegation terry oliphant senator mark warner and mayor de blasio and what have you just to my right. getting back to the original point trish i was going to make about reset -- perception. a lot is made about these perception and president obama is acutely aware about the perception. as he was speaking early-3/4 the way through the speech there were protests. one vee inin sit up looking to be the main opposite side of the hall, pink for testers very loud but quickly drowned out by obama supporters. the president didn't even acknowledge that person undoubtedly sure that the cameras at home would be aware of him and knowledge in a percenters into the speech there was a note tpp chants from one person again the president never pause just kept going knowing that we here in the hall side had heard of that at home maybe not so much. back over to you. >> certainly sophisticated when it comes to presenting a really tremendous order and you can see of course the difference between him and tim kaine to looking down apparently at the audience and knowledge in people that looking down repeatedly throughout his speech obviously not the same coaching and conditioning that the president has had over the last eight years being while we have protests of going on outside this convention hall. we had protesters breaking through barriers and another one burning flags. lou you want to say something? >> i want to interject those were group of anarchists as one protester described to him and the bernie sanders folks say were never on early. these folks you see there, those are the folks that jeff is talking about. trish: jeff was going on right now? >> i want to be really clear and lou you brought it up and want to make it clear first on to show you by the way the police presence down here that wasn't before as a result of what happened. sanders people in the we have been with them all week, nonviolent eyes at every meeting preaching nonviolence i will show you what happened come important to see. we didn't see the dramatic pictures that are photographer larry collins got at this break through this fence. people, masks, black clothing sanders people making it clear this is not part of their group and effectively walk over here sanders people trying to take that control of their protests. these people here are saying power to peaceful people, power to the people -- peaceful if their message. in addition my president obama speaking to another group of black masked individuals came out with an american flag and tried to sanctify. they were successful although i will tell you they are not very good at fire setting. i tend to be, that was not at all the bernie sanders folks and in fact the bernie sanders folks tried to stop it. they have all along been about nonviolent protests, civil disobedience. this is their right and this is part of america, what took place here. they want to make very clear it's not what they were about somebody hijacking their protests which they feel his allusion to protest and i leave you with what's going to happen tomorrow. they are going to start the business of trying to have democrats d regr om the democratic party. that is their next push. as i said they feel these protesters that came in tonight pulled focus from what they want to communicate. >> it's interesting you saw the twitter there is something that we have repeatedly talked about this whole cycle this idea that you are seeing a total realignment of the republican and democratic parties and there is the potential comment david asman joining us in new york, there's the potential for donald trump to pull in a lot of previous democrats, people that maybe are dependent on a job and a factory that may be worried that job could go overseas. >> there's absolute that faction and there's a faction that are looking at seen such we are seeing now and that jeff has been reporting on. as small as they may be in comparison to the democratic party as a whole there is perception is key and politics and if there is a perception that another four years of the democratic party running the white house will lead to more for we are seeing on the streets and war of what we have seen an america that people are not happy about like the growing, the growing disparity between people's perceptions about the role of a lease in our society than they may just go over to the other side and of course the main thing is trish it's the one third of the american voters who are independent smacks which will make or break whoever wins and loses this presidential election. trish: i do think david and lou and kennedy here as well we are seeing a change this time around and that people are not as party dependent. there is something else going on pre-people are saying i want to elect an individual trait i'm not collecting a party. it's something that might loom bird kind of touched on come he wanted to run as an attendant. as much as it feels like an election for these people you know bernie sanders isn't exactly -- exactly chiaro. he's an interesting person pays not necessary the most charismatic but he's a liberal idealist and he is someone who is been married to these ideas for so long. >> that will never be reality that the promise we have got so close. this is closer than any candidate who has had a proper micah's. he is a socialist and no one has gotten as close to the presidency. he won 22 primaries and caucuses. it's a mind-blowing number. can you imagine ralph nader? lou: big about that number, 22, socialist against this candidate, this nominee hillary clinton. that speaks volumes as to the weakness of the nominee, not to distract the bernie sanders in my opinion. i do believe you are except they write, this is the campaign of issues and the reason it is as because of donald trump. he put forward the issue of international trade and balance trade and america first and talked first and foremost about a legal immigration and border security and i have to tell you some of the stories that we were regaled with from the stage tonight. these are elitist talking they must think to children. these are people who are demonstrating and risking their personal security and safety to say enough. we want a different way, we wanted different direction and we want to deduce if we may thank you very much for that demagogic speeches from the stage where you personally packed donald trump but we'd like to hear more about cause and effect and consequence of public policy. they are living that consequence across the country. >> this is what a lot of these leftist progressives are really against "the new york times" academics a lead us democrats that don't represent. lou: that was quite a mash-up. >> that is how they are turned by these new leftists who feel like the party has been taken over by people who no longer represent workers in this country which is what many believe the democratic party would do. trish: understand the fears of everyday americans have. you think about isis they still not us -- they still will not say radical extremist. lou: they would even call it with the rest of the world calls it. it's absolutely out of touch. president obama keeps pushing this nonsense of isil. no one else uses it. >> the levant is a larger territory. it's limited to syria. lou: syria and iraq. trish: you heard mary say tim kaine has got a ways to go when it comes to delivering something. kept looking down at the audience as opposed to connecting with people back at home. he had this crowd. he needed to sell america but one of the points he made kaine said you can't t trump kamala and said that. here he is pretty want to get your reaction. >> you cannot believe one word that comes out of donald trump's mouth. not one word. not one word. trish: david asman when we look at the polling data it's very clear that voters, they don't trust hillary clinton. >> not at all and less as time goes on. i'm holding my hand by the way her book hard choices. this is the hardback cover of that book and on page 78 she talks about ttp, what the crowd was shouting about so vociferously during the course of the speeches that they are against now she says she was against it in this book she's talking about what a great thing tbp was. when this book came out in paperback that section was delete it just like the e-mails, she found a way of getting rid of them. that issue of whenever there's a problem with inconsistency she pretends what she once said -- trish: the paperback edition doesn't talk about tpp. >> that's one way to think about it. it's been quite a night and we are expecting big stuff tomorrow. she has to try and really sell america on her candidacy. she has to sell america on lack ability and she has to prove that she can be trusted with america's future. these are all very tall task for her. lou: she got a strong endorsement tonight. trish: she sure did. kennedy: i wouldn't call that a full endorsement. the 2016 democratic national commission. tomorrow, stronger together hillary clinton and her daughter chelsea will be here on the podium on the final night. we are all over it. we are back with coveragete starting at 6:00. and with this standard of luxury... it's an oasis. introducing the completely redesigned e-class. it's everything you need it to be... and more. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria that still exists. polident's unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture every day. new biwhat are we gonna do?ys... how about we pump more into promotions? ♪ nah. what else? what if we hire more sales reps? ♪ nah. what else? what if we digitize the whole supply chain? so people can customize their bike before they buy it. that worked better than expected. i'll dial it back. yeah, dial it back. just a little. live business, powered by sap. when you run live, you run simple. >>president kennedy has been assassinated. it's official now. the president is dead. >> even the most hated man in america... [gunshot ] >> [groans] >>lee oswald has been shot! >> ...gets his name on a headstone. >> the stone clearly shows oswald's date of birth and death. >> but how did it become their strange inheritance? >> i thought, "what on earth was a tombstone doing under my mother's house?" >> only after it's stolen, recovered, hidden, found, fought over, and more. >> we're going to take it back to texas, back home to the good ol' boys where it can have a lone star beer and make a lot of noise. >> you really wanted it back, dave. why? >> maybe they messed with the wrong tombstone owner.

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and i married way up. way up. folks, as i stand here tonight i see so many friends and colleagues like my buddy chris dodd in the connecticut delegation, so many people here. i see the faces of those who have placed their beliefs in barack and me, so many faces but one, this is kind of a bittersweet moment for jill and me and our family. in 2008, when he was about to deploy to iraq and again in 2012 , our son beau introduced me to the country and place my name in nomination. [applause] i know i sound like a dad but you got a glimpse of what an incredibly fine young man bo was. [applause] thank you. [applause] thank you. his wife hallie and his two kids are here tonight. [applause] as ernest hemingway once wrote, the world breaks everyone and afterwards many are strong at the broken places. i have been made strong at the broken places by my love jill, my son hunter in the love of my life my ashley and by all of you and i mean this sincerely. you have been through this and you know i mean what i say, by all of you, your love, your prayers and your support but you know what, we talk about, we think about the callous thousands of other people who have suffered so much more than we have with so much less support, so much less reason to go on. but they get up every morning, every day. they put one foot in front of the other. they keep going. that's the unbreakable spirit of the people of america. that is who we are. [cheers and applause] that is who we are. don't forget it. like the people in the neighborhood that jill and i grew up in. wilmington and claymont. the kid and claymont with the most courage always jumped in when you were double teamed for your back was against the wall. he became a cop because he always wanted to help people. the middle daughter of three daughters who always made her mother smile, who was a hero to her sisters now a major in the united states marine corps because mr. president i wanted to serve my country. [applause] the teachers that know and so many of you know who take money out of their own pockets to buy pencils and notebooks for their students who can't afford them. [cheers and applause] why? why? because being a teacher is not what they do, it's who they are. [cheers and applause] you know it, i know for a real, these are the people who are the heart and soul of this country. it's the america that i know, the america that hillary knows and tim kaine knows. [cheers and applause] you know, i have known hillary for well over 30 years. before she was first lady of the united states, when she became first lady we served together in the united states senate and during her years as secretary of state, once a week we had breakfast in my home, the vice president's residence. everybody knows she is smart. everybody knows she is tough, but i know what she is passionate about. i know hillary. [applause] hillary understands, hillary gets it. hillary understands that college loan is about a lot more than getting a qualified student education. it's about saving the mom and the dad from the indignity of how they look at their talented child and say hahne i'm so sorry the bank wouldn't lend me the money. i can help you get to school. i know that about hillary. hillary understood that for years, millions of people went to bed staring at the ceiling, thinking oh, god what if i get breast cancer or or he has a heart attack? i will lose everything. what will be due then? i know about hillary clinton. [applause] ladies and gentlemen, we all understand what it will mean for our daughters and granddaughters when hillary clinton walks into the oval oval office as president of the united states of america. [applause] it will change their lives. [cheers and applause] my daughters and granddaughters can do anything and a son or grandson can do and she will prove it mr. mayor. so let me say as clearly as i can, if you live in neighborhoods like the ones jill and i grew up in, if you worry about your job and getting a decent pay, if you worry about your children's education, if you are taking care of an elderly parent, then there's only one person in this election who will help you. there's only one person in this race who will be there, who has always been there for you and that is hillary benton's life story. it's not just who she is, it's her life story. [applause] she is always there. she has always been there. and so has tim kaine. [cheers and applause] ladies and gentlemen, i state the office and i'm not trying to be wiseguy here. i really mean it. that is not donald trump's story. just look for me -- look at me for a second that ruling are cheering that i mean this sincerely, we should really think about this. his cynicism is unbounded. his lack of empathy and compassion can be summed up in a phrase i suspect he is most proud of and made famous, you are fired. i mean really, not joking. think about that. think about that. think about everything you have learned as a child. no matter where you were raised, how can there be pleasure in saying you are fired? he is trying to tell us he cares about the middle-class? give me a break. that's a bunch of malarkey. [cheers and applause] i'm telling you. [cheers and applause] [chanting] whatever he thinks, whatever he thinks, and i mean this from the bottom of my heart, i know i am called middle-class joe and in washington that's not that is a top limit. it means you are not sophisticated but i know why we are strong. i know why we have come together and i know why we are united. it's because there is noise than a growing middle class. this guy doesn't have a clue about the middle-class, not a clue. [applause] because folks, what the middle-class does well, what the middle-class does well the rich do very well and the poor have hope. they have the way up. he has no clue about what makes america great. actually he has no clue period. but folks,. [applause] [chanting] >> you got it. [chanting] >> folks, let me say, let me say something that has nothing to do with politics. let me talk about something that i am deadly serious about. this is a complicated and uncertain world we live in. the threats are too great, the times are too uncertain to elect donald trump as president of the united states. now let me finish. no major party, no major party nominee in the history of this nation has ever known less or has been less prepared to deal with our national security. [applause] we cannot elect a man who exploits our fears of terrorists who has no plan whatsoever to make us safer, a man who embraces the tactics of our enemies, torture, religious intolerance, you all know and all the republicans know. that's not who we are. it betrays our values. it alienates those who we need in theight against isis. donald trump with all his rhetoric would literally make us less safe. we cannot elect a man who belittles our closest allies while embracing dictators like vladimir putin. no, i mean it. a man who seeks to sow division in america for his own gain and disorder around the world. a man who confuses luster with strength. we simply can't let that happen as americans. period. [cheers and applause] folks, i have -- no one ever doubts me when i say just as sometimes i say all that i mean but folks look me tell you what i literally tell every world leader has met with and i have met them all. it's never, never, never been a good vet to bet against america. [applause] we have the finest fighting force in the world. [chanting] not only do we have the largest economy in the world, we have the strongest economy in the world. we have the most productive workers in the world. and given a fair shot, given a fair chance, americans have never, ever, ever, ever let the country down, never, never! [cheers and applause] ordinary people like us who do extraordinary things. we have had candidates who have attempted to get elected by appealing to our fears but they have never succeeded because we do not scare easily. we never bow. we never bend. we never break in a crisis. no, we into her, we ever, and we always, always, always move forward. that is why i can say with absolute conviction, i am more optimistic about our chances today than when i was elected as a 29-year-old kid to the senate. the 21st century is going to be the american century. [applause] because we lead not only by the example of our power but by the power of our example. that is the history of the journey of america and god willing, god willing hillary clinton will write the next chapter in that journey. we are america, second to none and we own the finish line. don't forget it. god bless you all and may god protect our troops. come on, we are american. [applause] [cheers and applause] >> a pretty tremendous performance there from my vice president joe biden. he's there hugging his wife on stage. a lot of passion in that speech. he really made the case karl and lou for people to fear would not trump -- something we hear over and over and over again from the clinton camp, you must fear the donald trump alternative. lou: for the man the vice president was talking about donald trump trying to charge him with exploiting the fears of americans of a soul as he put it if the islamic state by the way, we can say it here, that the islamic state, he built his entire speech around attempting to instill an exploit the fear and the democratic party of donald trump who is running ahead of hillary clinton in the polls. trish: that's the only way when an environment like this when you have a candidate like her and by the way perhaps that he proved yet again he would have been a much tougher candidate to be. >> and you imagine are giving a speech that connected to the crowd that why? this is uncle joe showed up at the family picnic refuse a little little crazy but he's sincere and honest and you like him. that was a powerful speech but i think lucas said that the democrats can only win this year , if you have hillary clinton and you are trying to get a third term for administration of people have in kits failed and the economy is not good and they are worried about america's interest in the world and deeply concerned about their personal safety the only thing left for them is to -- donald trump. trish: there is also guilt up there as well. he is making you feel guilt if you don't think america is a good enough place right now saying don't. against america. i don't think anybody would. >> people not bet against america but the people who don't bet against america can also say our government is failing, we have a desperate situation being ignored or affectless leader and we need change. tomorrow morning there's going to be a column in "the wall street journal" on this very topic. it's a pretty good column. . >> usual brilliance? >> yeah, usual brilliance. one of the points i was trying to make is 17% of the people last week said they are satisfied with the condition of the country. if you look at all the surveys, abc, nbc, "wall street journal," gallup, pew, they all show american people are at or near all-time lows and confident what the government is doing. trish: lou, are they ignoring that? >> i don't think they can ignore it. we have millions of people. trish: joe biden seems to think so. >> they? trish: they, the behind us. >> people not working for various reasons, we have an economy that is at historically low growth, and we have an economy that is not generating jobs with $2.5 trillion sitting overseas and capital. profits earned by corporate america that are not repatriated because congress and the president have had a lot of imagination how to do it. donald trump knows it has to be done. the fears and the anxieties felt in this country are here precisely. that's what makes joe biden's tough and hillary clinton's tougher. those anxiety and fears have been instilled 7 1/2 years of democratic leader. >> you remember bill clinton said how does this description what i've given you comport with what you heard in cleveland from the republicans? he says it doesn't, i gave you the truth, they gave you a cartoon. if you are concerned about the safety of america, the economy of america. if you're worried about the world, worried about isis, all of these things are a cartoon. don't worry about them. be happy. don't worry. trish: you can say that, but i don't think people are going to feel that. >> no, that's why i think this convention has a fundamental, strategic problem, they're living in an age where there's an enormous desire on the part of the american people for change. the message is we need her because she will follow through with barack obama. i love he kept calling him barack, he kept referring to him by his first name. >> that's another thing, he brings up the middle class joe nonsense, and a lack of sophistication,lage of he should have started 30 years ago. the middle class is what has to expand. it hasn't grown in 40 years. we have to re-enter our policy, thinking and respect for the dignity of work, and make sure we are partnered. full partners in the prosperity trump says he can restore. trish: a very, very important point. as we navigate the challenging times and confronted with the reality of globalization and we want to grow the pie for ourselves and for everyone else, we still need to simultaneously protect and maintain this middle class, because when you look at this, it's become increasingly more like an hourglass figure, something that you might see in a place like brazil, but certainly not in the united states of america, and i don't know if how you can possibly project additional growth as we move out in this landscape. you don't have the foundation of a middle class. someone who may talk about this here tonight, mike bloomberg, the former mayor of new york city, a very successful billionaire businessman in his own right. someone who has been quite outspoken on g samid other topics, like our climate. let's listen in and see what he has to say. >> thank you for that kind introduction, and let me thank all of you for welcoming an outsider here to deliver what -- [ applause ] >> an outsider to deliver what will be an unconventional convention speech. now i am not here as a member of any party or to endorse any party platform. i am here for one reason, to explain why i believe it is imperative that we elect hillary clinton as the next president of the united states. [cheers and applause] and to ask you to join with me in supporting her this november. you know, when the founding fathers arrived here in philadelphia to forge a new nation, they didn't come as democrats or republicans, or to nominate a presidential candidate. they came as patriots who feared party politics, and i know how they felt. i've been a democrat. i've been a republican, and i eventually became an independent because i don't belie that either party has a monopoly on good ideas or strong leadership. when i enter the voting booth each time, i look at the candidate, not the party label. i have supported elected officials from both sides of the aisle and probably not many people in this room can say that, but i know there are many watching at home who can and now they are carefully weighing their choices. i understand their dilemma. i know what it's like to have neither party fully represent my views or values. to many republicans blame immigrants for problems, and they stand in the way of action on climate change and gun violence. meanwhile, many democrats i think wrongly blame the private sector for our problems and they stand in the way of action on education and deficit reduction. there are times when i disagree with hillary clinton, but let me tell you, whatever our disagreements may be, i've come here to say we must put them aside for the good of our country. [applause] and we must unite around the candidate who can defeat a dangerous demagogue. [applause] i believe it's the duty of all american citizens to make our voices heard by voting in this election, and if you're not yet registered to vote, go online and do it now. this is just too fortunate sit out. [applause] now we've heard a lot of talk in this campaign about needing a leader who understands business. i couldn't agree more. i built a business, and i didn't start it with a million-dollar check from my father. [cheers and applause] because of my success in the private sector, i had the chance to run america's largest city for 12 years, governing in the wake of its greatest tragedy. today, as an independent, and an entrepreneur and a former mayor, i believe we need a president who is a problem solver, not a bomb thrower. [cheers and applause] someone who can bring members of congress together to get big things done, and i know hillary can do that because i saw it firsthand. i was elected mayor two months after 9/11, as a republican, and i saw how hillary clinton worked with republicans in washington to ensure that new york got the help it needed to recover and rebuild. throughout her time in the senate -- yes, throughout her time in the senate, we didn't always agree, but hillary clinton always listened, and that's the kind of approach we need in washington today, and it just has to start in the white house. [cheers and applause] given my background, i've often encouraged business leaders to run for office because many of them share the same pragmatic approach to building consensus, but not all. most of us who have created the business know that we're only as good as the way employees, partners and clients view us. most of us don't pretend we're smart enough to make every decision by ourselves. and most of us who have our names on the door know that we are only as good as our word, but not donald trump. [applause] through his career, donald trump has left behind a well-documented record of nkruptcies, and thousands of lawsuits, and angry stockholders and contractors who feel cheated and disillusioned customers who feel they've been ripped off. trump says he wants to run the nation like he's running his business? god help us! [laughter] i'm a new yorker. and i know a con when i see one! [cheers and applause] trump says he'll punish manufacturers that move to mexico or china, but the clothes he sells are made overseas in low-wage factories. he says he wants to put americans back to work, but he games the visa system to hire temporary foreign workers at low wages. [booing] he says he wants to deport 11 million undocumented people, but he seems to have no problem in hiring them. what did i miss here? truth be told, the richest thing about donald trump is his hypocrisy. [cheers] he wants you to believe that we can solve our biggest problems by deporting mexicans and shutting out muslims. he wants you to believe that erecting trade barriers will bring back good jobs. he's wrong on both counts. we can only solve our biggest problems if we come together and embrace the freedoms that our founding fathers established right here in philadelphia, which permitted our ancestors to create the great american exceptionalism that all of us now enjoy. donald trump doesn't understand that. hillary clinton does! [cheers and applause] and we can only create good jobs if we make smarter investments in infrastructure and do more to support small businesses, not stiff them. donald trump doesn't understand that. hillary clinton does! [cheers and applause] i understand the appeal of a businessman president, but trump's business plan is a disaster in the making. he would make it harder for small businesses to compete, do great damage to our economy, threaten the retirement savings of millions of americans, lead to greater debt and more unemployment. erode our influence around the world and make our communities less safe. the bottom line is, trump is a risky, reckless and radical choice and we can't afford to make that choice. [applause] now i know hillary clinton is not flawless, no candidate is, but she is the right choice and the responsible choice in this election. and no matter what you may think about her politics or her record, hillary clinton understands that this is not reality television. this is reality! [cheers and applause] she understands the job of pchlt it involves finding solutions, not pointing fingers. and offering hope, not stoking fear. over the course of our country's proud history, we have faced our share of grave challenges, but we have never retreated in fear. never. not here in philadelphia in 1776. not here at gettysburg in 1863. not through two world wars and a great depression. not at selma or stonewall. not after 9/11, and we must not start now. [cheers and applause] america, america is the greatest country on earth, and when people vote with their feet, they come here. the presidency of the united states is the most powerful office in the world, so i say to my fellow independents, your votes matter now. your vote will determine the future of your job, your business, and our future together as a country. to me, this election is not a choice between a democrat and a republican, it is a choice who is better to lead our country right now. better for our economy, better for our security, better for our freedom, and better for our future. there is no doubt in my mind that hillary clinton is the right choice this november. [cheers and applause] so tonight, as an independent, i am asking you to join with me, not out of party loyalty, but out of love of country, and together, and together let's ect a sane, competent person with international experience -- [cheers] a unifier who is mature enough to reach out for advice, to build consensus and to recognize that we all have something to contribute. so let's elect hillary clinton as the next president of the greatest country of the world, the united states of america! thank you! [cheers and applause] . trish: all right, billionaire mike bloomberg, the former mayor of new york city, who considered running as president as an independent, who would have been up against hillary clinton. giving a speech that in many ways was much more anti-trump than it was actually pro-hillary. we heard him say i'm a new yorker, i know a con man when i see one. we are joined by kennedy and lou dobbs. kennedy, your reaction from what we heard from bloomberg. >> this is what we were waiting for. he despises donald trump. he is the know-it-all billionaire from new york city. he's a statist. this is a nanny stater who wants to tell you what to put in your body, was shut down by the highest court in new york state and wants to take your guns away. in this speech he tried to sound like a business loving freedom embracer, he's not, he's a resentful guy trying to take down donald trump. trish: well, it's fair to say mike bloomberg doesn't like donald trump, lou? >> i have to say, that was such a personal attack. it's unworthy of him. a number of issues, whatever they may be and the mayor's mind. what you really saw was a sour grapes spewed over the course of, what was that? 15, 20 minutes. and it was rancid at points. i don't think independents are going to even listen to him for a moment because he didn't have a rational argument. he did not appeal to reason our higher spirits. all i could think is michelle obama in this very center, when others go low, we go higher. bloomberg didn't get the message. he went lower than any speaker in this convention. trish: what about four years from now, should he try to run? >> he's done, he's done. trish: he's done? >> i think this was the only time he got to shoulder up the grenade launcher and fire at donald trump. he actually attacked democrats in the beginning of his speech and you heard the crowd go silent. it wasn't a ringing endorsement of hillary clinton. he said she's a flawed candidate but she's not donald trump. that was the essence of the high praise for her. >> i don't think he helped them or hillary clinton in any way tonight. trish: all right, we're going to take a quick break. we got a whole lot more coming up. i'm still here with lou and kennedy, we're going to hear from senator tim kaine -- forgive me, the new potential vice president, tim kaine, and president obama, and also coming up next, we'll continue to have reaction from the whole team here from what we just heard there on stage. we're live from philadelphia right after this. see you here. >> how can there be pleasure in saying you're fired? he's trying to tell us he cares about the middle class? give me a break! that's a bunch of malarkey! 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(the lion sleeps tonight.) woman snoring take the roar out of snore. yet another innovation only at a sleep number store. you just stuck it in a drawer somewhere and forgot about it. until a dump truck hit your pickup truck and now you need a tow truck. does your policy cover the cost of a tow truck? who knows? you didn't read it. you can't even find it. the liberty mutual app with coverage compass™ makes it easy to know what you're covered for and what you're not. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at coverage compass™ gives you the policy information you need at a glance. available 24/7 on your mobile device. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call that's liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. . >> trump says he wants to run the nation like he's running his business? god help us! [laughter] i'm a new yorker and i know a con when i see one. trish: that was mike bloomberg, the former mayor of new york city. billionaire. taking aim at trump. trump is definitely the target in this room tonight. here alongside with lou and myself week have colorado governor john hickenlooper. what did you think of mike bloomberg's speech? >> certainly direct. no question. no one has any questions what he thinks. i think he took a lot of chances saying he doesn't support all things democrat or all things republican. trish: yeah, he said, look, nobody has a monopoly on all ideas, you know, both parties have an opportunity to bring forward good things. so what other ways? we were saying it didn't seem as though he supported hillary enough, it was just an anti-trump speech? >> it was anti-trump speech. he said a lot of things about hillary. it was a gamble when he said i'm out here as an independent. i'm not speaking to you, i'm speaking to the people at home. i'm talking to the independents. i'm not sure i can remember seeing anyone say that in either party convention. >> he was very careful to point out though he's an independent, he has been a republican and a democrat, and when he was a republican, he really was a democrat. doppler on partisan politics here. trish: is it the appeal they need? this election could very well be decided by independents. it could be decided by people who are in one party now who make a crossover, and so they need, they desperately need a spokesperson, if you would, to help them win over that group as mike bloomberg really is? >> he's part of it. not the whole thing, but mike bloomberg, he went into new york, in 12 years, he didn't worry about politics, he tried to get stuff done and do what's right for the city. trish: he was an outstanding mayor, you're right. >> americans are looking at him as someone who can recognize how you get things done. when he said that's what hillary can do, he's got credibility there. >> he's got credibility as you say, and on the issue of independents, governor hickenlooper is leading a state that really personifies an independent spirit. as we look how liberal the democratic party has become, we look to your state to see how liberal it has become as well, to the point people consider it adventurous and experimental in some of its policies but that is the nature of politics. i think you would make a terrific spokesman to independents and to the liberal constituency of this party rather than michael bloomberg. you have more experience and a greater contest. >> well, i hope to do my part, but i think that michael bloomberg, again, his record of getting stuff done in new york and success as an entrepreneur. he's really, in many ways reinvented a form of media that no one else really recognized. >> in the private sector all but unparalleled in the wealth he's amassed and his success, but also when we look at new york city, i will tell you right now, governor, what he has left in his wake is disastrous. trish: but is that mike bloomberg's fault or bill de blasio's fault, de blasio has been a downgrade. mike bloomberg will tell you that. let me tell you, lou, he inherited all that rudy giuliani did. you can see the crowd is noisy, a lot of stuff going on behind us. lenny kravitz finishing up his song and, of course, we were moments away. >> it was very good. trish: i got to hand it to them, they have wonderful music here, and we're going to be hearing a lot more throughout the night. governor, so good to see you. >> thanks for having me on. trish: a lot more on the way, everyone. vice presidential nominee tim kaine is taking to the podium. lots of questions about him. this is going to be his first big performance, if you would, in front of a pretty hospitable crowd. keep it here. we're back in two. ♪ it's here, but it's going by fast. the opportunity of the year is back: the mercedes-benz summer event. get to your dealer today for incredible once-a-season offers, and start firing up those grilles. lease the c300 for $379 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. what would help is simply being able to recognize a fair price. that's never really been possible. but along comes a radically new way to buy a car, called truecar. now it is. truecar has pricing data on every make and model, so all you have to do is search for the car you want, there it is. now you're an expert in less than a minute. this is how car buying was always meant to be. this is truecar. ♪ . trish: all right, welcome back, everyone to philadelphia. we have a pretty excited crowd here tonight, they got a lot of heavy hitters that they're bringing out to support hillary clinton. we are moments away from tim kaine, vice presidential candidate, tim kaine as well as the president of the united states. president obama is going to speak on hillary clinton's behalf. we just heard from the former mayor of new york city, mike bloomberg as well as vice president joe biden. i'm here alongside lou dobbs and kennedy. and been talking about all these speeches. joe biden, i want to get back to him for a second. >> you like joe biden. trish: i like him, and so does everyone else, and i think elections come down to likability. i think he would have been a much tougher candidate for donald trump to beat, and it comes down to that likability factor. he's a guy that you'd want to go have lunch with or have a beer with, and kennedy, how important is that really in politics? >> i think it's incredibly important. that's why al gore was never president. trish: or john kerry. >> wasn't just the dangling chads and ralph nader. trish: or mitt romney. >> being able to hang out in your backyard for barbecue and beer and that does translate, whether you are republican or democrat, there's something about joe biden people can relate to. he makes plenty of gaffes and that makes him super entertaining. every time i see him i want to scream stand up, chuck! they are giving him this moment, this is the last convention he's going to have. you know joe biden isn't going to speak at too many more democratic national conventions and he's not going to run for president. he's not going to run in four years, he knows he could have run, he made the choice not to. it's an emotional decision for a lot of people and his family because he lost his son. he tried to slow down the standing ovation because i think he was going to get so caught up in the emotionsa the pictures of his son flashed on that screen, and everyone in the crowd was -- trish: such an unfortunate thing for him and his family. again, i think we'd be looking at a different situation had he actually been in the running, lou. when you get back to likability for a moment, hillary clinton's failure to connect frankly with everyday americans, how much of a problem is that going to be for her? >> i think as kennedy suggests, likability is critically important. in this instance, likability within the democratic party overwhelmed the record of the administration in which joe biden service as vice president in foreign policy, it is one failure after another. he didn't mention that. he talked about personal experiences and that is to be expected in these venues and these moments but also didn't talk about doubling the national debt under this administration. he didn't talk about the inability to restore both growth to the economy and prosperity for all americans which is the charge of every president. these are great moments within a political convention, either party. but these are moments that dissipate quickly when you are confronted with the reality, there are 94 million americans who aren't working. trish: clearly the economic policy of the last eight years absolutely, positively has not worked. i want to go out to the floor, connell mcshane talking to some of the delegates out there. hey, connell. >> hey there, trish, talking about key points in the likability of joe biden. we're standing in front of the illinois delegation where there is anticipation for their home state president who will be speaking tonight as they watch the video about senator tim kaine. when joe biden was speaking, everybody was on on their feet. everybody was unified and the room more unified than any time this week with the exception of michelle obama's address. what's interesting the way the room is set up tonight, there are fewer bernie sanders supporters. want to show you behind me, the california delegation where i spent the other night when senator sanders was speak. at the top of the delegation you have few supporters of sanders who made their voices heard when leon panetta was speaking, a no more wars chant was breaking out. that was fed in the hall as i pan over to the oregon delegation and the washington state delegation, they were very vocal earlier this evening. no more war, while leon panetta the former secretary of defense and cia director was addressing the crowd. should be pointed out that was earlier tonight. ever since that happened and especially when joe biden, the vice president, came out, we've seen a more unified room. part of that may have to do with the fact there are fewer bernie sanders supporters in this crowd than two nights ago and maybe last night. lot of anticipation for the president later on. trish: thank you so much. the big question is whether or not that unification is going to stick when we see tim kaine take to the stage here. this is a man supportive of the trans-pacific partnership trade deal, something this room is very much against. we have seen sign after sign with a big x through tpp here, not very popular, and let's also not forget as we wait for him, kennedy and lou, he has really been in favor of deregulation in the banking sector, something that bernie sanders supporters obviously are not in favor of. >> by the way, not to interrupt, a lot of people in the california delegation holding up the no tpp signs. trish: there you go. >> trying to protest right now. splashed all over the crowd right now. trish: there he is, he was considered the safe pick, the pick that bill clinton had, he was supportive from the start. bank deregulation he has pushed as well as globalization and the trade deal in asia. so let's listen in and see what the vice presidential nominee tim kaine in his first big national moment, has to say. ♪ >> thank you, everybody! hello, philadelphia! hello, democratic family! i want to start off by thanking my beautiful wife anne and my three wonderful children, nat, woody and anella. they're sitting right up there. [cheers] you know my son matt deployed with his marine battalion two days ago. [applause] he deployed overseas to protect and defend the very nato allies that donald trump says he now wants to abandon. [booing] semper fi, matt! semper fi! my parents and my in-laws are here, our siblings and their spouses, our nieces and nephews and hundreds of friends from virginia and beyond. i love seeing you front and center. [cheers and applause] including my friend of 37 years, senior senator mark warner. my great governor terry mcauliffe. [cheers and applause] and my great friend and congressman bobby scott! we love you all! [cheers and applause] today, today for my wife anne and every strong woman in this country, for nat, woody and anella and every young person starting out in life to make their own dreams real, for every man and woman serving our country in the military, at home or abroad, for every working family working hard to get ahead and stay ahead. for my parents and in-laws and every senior citizen who hopes for a dignified retirement with health care and research to end diseases like alzheimer's -- [applause] for every american who wants our country to be a beloved community, where people aren't demeaned because of who they are, but rather respected for their contributions to this nation, and for all of us who know that the brightest future for our country is the one that we build together and for my friend hillary clinton, i humbly accept my party's nominationtor vice president of the united states! [cheers and applause] thank you! can i be honest with you about something? can i be honest with you about something? i never expected to be here. but let me tell you how it happened. i was born in minnesota and grew up in kansas city -- [cheers and applause] my folks weren't much into politics. my dad ran a union iron working shop in the stockyards. [cheers and applause] and my mom was his best salesman. my two brothers and i pitched into work during summers and weekends, and, you know, that's how small family businesses do it. my parents, al and cathy here tonight, and going strong, they taught me about hard work and about kindness, and most especially about faith. i went to a jesuit boys high school, rocker's high school. wow, that's a big line for the jesuits. [cheers] we had a motto in my school, men for others. and it was there that my faith became something vital. my north star for orienting my life. and when i left high school, i knew i wanted a battle for social justice. like so many of you. like so many of you. that's why i took a year off from law school to volunteer with jesuit missionaries in honduras, i taught kids how to be welders and carpenters. [speaking spanish] faith, family and work. faith, family and work. [speaking spanish] [cheers and applause] and let me tell you what really struck me there. i got a firsthand look at a different system, a dictatorship. a dictatorship. where a few people at the top had all of the power and everybody else got left out. now that convinced me that we've got to advance opportunity for everybody no matter where you come from, how much money you have, what you look like, how you worship or who you love! [cheers and applause] back in 1970, in virginia, a republican governor named lynwood holton believed exactly the same thing. he integrated virginia's public schools so that black and white kids could finally learn together, and then the family enrolled their own kids, including his daughter anne in the integrated inner city schools. many years later, anne went off to college and brought the lessons from the pivotal time with her, and one day, in a study group, she met this goofy guy who had been off teaching kids in honduras, well, anne and i have now been married almost 32 years, and i am the luckiest husband in the world. [cheers and applause] you know, let me tell you something, anne's parents are here today, 90+ and going strong. 90+ and going strong. lynwood holton is still a republican but voting for a lot of democrats these days. an awful lot of democrats. [applause] and here's why, he's voting for democrats because any party that would nominate donald trump for president has moved too far away from his party of lincoln! [applause] and i tell you, if any of you are looking for that party of lincoln, we've got a home for you right here in the democratic party! [cheers and applause] lynwood's example helped inspire me as a civil rights lawyer. over 17 years i took on banks, landlords, real estate firms, local governments, anybody who treated anybody unfairly. i had a six year case against an insurance company that was discriminating against minority neighborhoods all across the united states in issues home owner's insurance. folks, democratic friends, these are the battles i have fought my entire life. [cheers and applause] and that's the story, and that's the story how i decided to run for office. my city of richmond was divided and discouraged in the early 1990s. we had an epidemic of gun violence that was overwhelming our low income neighborhoods. people were pointing fingers and casting blame instead of finding answers, and i couldn't stand it. so i ran for city council, and i won that first race more than 20 years ago by a landslide margin ever 94 votes! [applause] and i said ever since, if i'm good at anything in politics, it's because i started at the local level listening to people, learning about their lives and trying to get results. i see a mayor here who knows what i'm talking about. later i became mayor of richmond, lieutenant governor and the 70th governor of virginia! [cheers and applause] now, i was a hard times governor. i had to steer my state through the deepest recession since the 1930s, but hey, tough times don't last and tough people do. and i can tell you that virginians are tough people? we are tough people. [cheers and applause] and we're smart, too. we achieved national recognition for our work, best managed state. best state for business. best state for a child to be raised. low unemployment. high median notice. we shed tears along the way. we shed tears especially together in the days after that horrible masshooting at virginia tech that killed 32 people from beautiful 19-year-old students to 70+-year-old romanian born holocaust survivors, and we shed tears and held each other up but afterwards we rolled up our sleeves and fixed the loophole in the background record check system so we can make our commonwealth safer, and we've got to do that in the nation. [applause] we invested in our people, expanding pre-k and higher edbecause we know that education is the key to all we want to be. all we want to be. and now vit honor of representing my commonwealth in the u.s. senate. i worked on the armed services and foreign relations committees to keep us safe at home and strong in the world. [applause] i worked on the budget committee with our great democratic leader of that committee, a spectacular senator who used to be a mayor. vermont's bernie sanders! [cheers and applause] bernie! bernie! bernie! bernie! >> and everybody, we all should feel the bern, and we all should not want to get burned by the other guy. [cheers and applause] on that budget committee under bernie's leadership, we fight for investments in education, health care, research, transportation, and i also serve on the aging committee to make sure that seniors like my folks have a secure retirement and don't get targeted by ripoff artists who will scan them out of their savings or overcharge them for prescription drugs. [applause] can i tell you a funny thing about the senate? i can tell you a funny thing about the senate? >> yes! >> that sounds like a yes. i spend a lot of time with republican senators who, once they have made sure that nobody is listening will tell you how fantastic a senator that hillary clinton was. [cheers and applause] now look, this journey that i've told you about has convinced me over and over again that god has created in our country a beautiful and rich tappestry, an incredible cultural diversity that succeeds, when we embrace everybody and love and battle back against the forces, the dark forces of division. we're all neighbors and we must love our neighbors as ourselves. [cheers and applause] now hillary clinton and i -- [speaking spanish] and we share this basic belief, it's simple, do all the good you can and serve one another. pretty simple. pretty simple. [cheers and applause] that's what i'm about, that's what you're about, that's what bernie sanders is about. that's what joe and jill biden are about. that's what barack and michelle obama are about. and that's what hillary clinton is about! [cheers and applause] now -- [speaking spanish] yes, we can. yes, we can. yes, we can. hey, last week, last week in cleveland, we heard a lot about trust. so let's talk about trust. let's talk about trust. i want to tell you why i trust hillary clinton? [cheers and applause] first, she's consistent. she has battled to put kids and families first since she was a teenager, in good times and bad, in victory and defeat, in and out of office, through hell or high water, fighting for underprivileged kids, working at the children's defense fund, fighting to get health insurance for eight million low income children when she was first lady. fighting for the well-being of women and children around the world. hey, can i offer you a little tip? when you want to know something about the character of somebody in public life, look to see if they have a passion that began long before they were in office and that they have consistently held it throughout their career. [cheers and applause] do they have a passion? did it start before they were in office? have they held onto it consistently? folks, hillary has a passion for kids and families! [cheers and applause] donald trump has a passion, too. it's himself! [applause] and with hillary it's not just words, it's accomplishments. she delivers. as senator after 9/11, i got my new yorkers and virginians right here. [applause] she battled congressional republicans to care for the first responders who went into the towers, who went into the pentagon and saved the victims of those terrorist attacks. as secretary of state, she implemented tough sanctions against iran to pave the way for a diplomatic breakthrough to curtail a nuclear weapons program. [applause] and she wasn't afraid. she wasn't afraid. she wasn't afraid to stand up against thugs and dictators and as a key part of the obama national security team, they decided to go to the ends of the earth to wipe out osama bin laden! [cheers and applause] hey, do y'all remember the little girl we heard from on monday night? [ cheers ] >> who was worried her parents would be deported? carla said she trusts hillary to keep them together. and do you remember the mothers of the movement last night? [cheers] they said they trust hillary to keep other mothers' sons and daughters safe. [applause] and on a personal level, as he's serving our nation abroad, i trust hillary clinton with our son's life. [cheers and applause] now, you know who i don't trust? hmm, i wonder. donald trump! donald trump. trump is a guy who promises a lot but you might have noticed, he's got a way of saying the same two words every time he makes his biggest, hugest promises. believe me, it's going to be great. believe me. [laughter] we're going to build a wall and make mexico pay for it. believe me. we're going to destroy isis so fast. believe me. there's nothing suspicious in my tax returns. believe me. [laughter] by the way, does anybody in this massive auditorium believe that donald trump's been paying his fair share of taxes? >> no! >> does anybody here believe that trump ought to release his tax returns just like every other presidential candidate in modern history? [cheers and applause] of course he should! hey, donald, what are you hiding? and yet, and yet donald still says, believe me. believe me. believe me? believe me? i mean, here's the thing, most people when they run for president, they don't just say believe me, they respect you enough to tell you how they will get things done. that's what most people who run for president do. in fact, can you go on hillary clinton.com right now and find out exactly how she'll make the biggest investment in new jobs in a generation? how she'll defend and build on wall street reform? how she'll reform our immigration system to create a path to citizenship? how she'll make it possible to graduate from college debt free. you can see how she'll protect roe v. wade, guaranteed. equal pay for women, and make paid family leave a reality. [cheers and applause] all it takes is one click! all it takes is one click, and we can see how she'll do it, how she'll pay for it, and how we'll benefit by it. not donald trump. not donald trump. he never tells you how he's going to do anything of the things he says he'll do. he just says, believe me. [laughter] so here's the question. here's the question. do you really believe him? >> no! >> donald trump's whole career says you better not. and thousands of trump university students believed donald trump when he said he would help them succeed. they got stiffed! he says, believe me. well his creditors, his contractors, his laid-off employees and his rippedoff students did just that, and they all got hurt. folks, you cannot believe one word that comes out of donald trump's mouth. not one word. [cheers and applause] not one word.. >> not one word! not one word! . >> not one word. and i'll tell you. and i'll tell you, to me, to me it just seems like our nation, it is just too great to put it in the hands of a slick-talking, empty-promising, self-promoting, one-man wrecking crew! [cheers and applause] but don't take it from me. don't take it from me. take it from former first lady barbara bush. barbara bush said she doesn't know how any woman could vote for him after his offensive comments about women. [cheers and applause] any woman. any woman. or john mccain's chief economic adviser during the 08 race who estimated trump's promises could cause america to lose 3.5 million jobs. taken from a a guy who co-wrote donald trump's autobiography. here's what he said about trump quote lying is second nature to him. so do you believe him? how about on the side you guys believe him? do you guys believe him? is there anyone in this building who believes him? no! c the next president will face many challenges. we had better elect a candidate who has proven she can be trusted with the job. [applause] the candidate who has proven that she is ready for the job and when i say ready i use ready for a very specific reason. when i lived in honduras i learn something, the best compliment that you can pay somebody was to say that they were ready. not smart, not friendly, not rich, but what it means in spanish is as this, it means prepared, it means battle tested, it means rocksolid, up for anything never backing down in friends hillary clinton she is ready. [cheering] she is ready. she is ready. she is ready because of her faith, she is ready because of her heart, she is ready because of her experience and she's ready because she knows in america we are stronger when we are together. [applause] my fellow democrats, this week we start the next chapter in our great and proud story. thomas declared all men were equal and abigail remembered the women. [cheers and applause] woodrow brokered the peace and eleanor broke down the barriers. jack told us what to ask and lyndon answered the call. martin had a dream and harvey gave his life. bill builds a bridge into the 21st century and barack gave us hope and now hillary is ready. she is ready to fight. she is ready to win and she is ready to lead. god bless all of you, on to victory and thank you philadelphia. [cheers and applause] >> tim kaine accepting the vice presidential nomination from hillary clinton. i was the first time we have seen him in such a large venue was such a big spotlight. i will ask you first lou what is a you think that bill clinton who was set to be in at the gate for him, what is the day -- lou: i cannot for the life of me understand why they continue to attack trump on a personal level rather than articulating some greater connection to the folks out there. that is his wife and go holton. >> the point being that this come he kept bringing trump, i mean trump to the statue newsroom to the point that it overwhelms senator kaine and secondly the idea that he was mocking and took it to a level that is a little puerile, a little puerile and i don't think it affects the rhetorical speaking device for him. trish: i was not as impressed as i thought it would. hannity or thoughts. kennedy: this was the speech were yet to come out and while the american public through this one -- as someone who's had a lot of work to do to bounce into a pretty than the present of the united states as hillary is an underwhelming speaker. tim kaine is certainly no alpha mail. trish: did they pick cam cam because he wouldn't upstage her in anyway? kennedy: i think that's part of it. for any candidate you don't need someone who is -- it as speaker is president obama but he didn't offer any solutions. as a small business owner would like to hear what he has to say about things like regulation job creation anything that shows foresight or hope. and fell flat. trish: a lot of people were holding up signs about tpp. there want this trade deal. it's unclear whether or not it's resonating with hillary clinton and tim kaine. i will tell you word is resonating outside on the streets in philadelphia. people are protesting in a lot of these are people that were pro-bernie that don't like tpp. tell us what's going on there. >> would the this was a good speech or a bad speech trish you can see the seen out on the streets. doesn't matter, they are not supporting this ticket. they are not supporting the vice president or the presidential candidate. if you thought this was going away after yesterday you are absolutely wrong. listen to that chance, it is as loud tonight as it was last night. we just had a leader of this rally say we are nonviolent. this is an incredibly loud boisterous and steadfast crowd. it is not a violent crowd that we areunded by bernie sanders supporters that are surrounding the outside of the convention hall and they are just as passionate as they had been and despite the fact that the president's speeches coming up, this crowd does not want to hear it. they are done with hearing from secretary clinton and they're done with hearing from tim kaine and they are done with hearing from bernie sanders. they're moving on. a lot of these people say they will move on -- i can't believe how big and loud this crowd is. trish: i'm here on the set with lou and kennedy and it's incredible to see because in some ways i thought this would be subdued lou because the president is about to speak tonight and there's the reality of streets getting shut down and it's difficult to get around here making it less likely that we would see these kinds of protesters taking to the streets. lou: as i suggested earlier one is outside a once inside and the one outside goes across a society of 300 million people. the democratic hardy has a riff that it is going to have to repair. how deep it is and how sustainable it is from the perspective of those demonstrators and those who feel quite clearly based on all of the evidence for these e-mails revealed by the dnc. they pulled off a -- against the integrity of the party. it's not going to be easily fixed. kennedy: this party has become so anachronistic and out of touch. the democratic hardy is still an horse and buggies and these people out here want flying cars. trish: that's an important point kennedy. the issues we are talking about here the economy, the middle-class should play to their strengths and yet they are allowing that basically to be taken frankly by donald trump who is resonating more with everyday americans who feel as though he, the billionaire understands their problems getting much better -- in a much better way than hillary clinton does. lou: the idea that these folks that represent the can all agree the uppermost regions of the democratic hardy if they are not buying in to what is being sold, there has been grievance after grievance and constituency after construed -- constituency held together by a thread which is really support or barack obama not necessarily hillary intend i mean this party has real trouble represented to them on that stage. i see a problem as you said anybody who thought this thing was over last night is simply an error. trish: what happens from here kennedy? these people will continue to be dissatisfied. do they just not show up to vote or do they vote for trump? where did these voters go. kennedy: all of the above. the smaller margin will go to the trump campaign and many of them are investigating a gettin. many of them are so apathetic to pull the two today really feel the campaign is a slap in the face and that's why you saw some some the delegations that have been relegated to the outskirts of the convention center. the arena rather. the entire time this was a race about issues and the democratic party has continued what they need to do to get back in mine and they are just missing the call. trish: when you think about security how do she run on security and then you think about her positions on things like trade etc., to challenging position to be into the hillary clinton running for for the president of the united states given where we are. lou: given all of those problems faced by barack obama 2012 she better listen carefully to the present of united states because he came up with the magic sauce that allowed him to overcome an economy that was disastrous and the mood in the nation. trish: and don't forget who he was running against, mitt romney. as kennedy said earlier likability matters. it really does. will make him back everyone the president of the united states of america is going to be on this stage to make his case for hillary clinton. is it going to matter to those people outside? probably not but we will see what exactly he has to say. we are back live from philadelphia in a few minutes. you've wished upon it all year, and now it's finally here. the mercedes-benz summer event is back, with incredible offers on the mercedes-benz you've always longed for. but hurry, these shooting stars fly by fast. lease the gle350 for $579 a month >> we are coming back right away. they drove through the fence. the police are now forcing everyone down. the bernie protesters were trying to stay peaceful but a group of people in black came through and tore through the fence. the police have now. restored the fence. several people got through. i know how far they got the the police have put up a line outside the gate and they have received your defense. they have free secure defense. trish: how did they get through? >> it's unclear to me how many people ask a guard inside. the police are now pursuing -- i don't know if they are headed your way or not. at this point we have secured the fence that was broken through. it was an incredible scene there for second. hang on, larry. i just want to make this very clear. this was not the pro-bernie sanders crowd of multiply times that we are not violent, we don't want to do anything violent. they threw a coffin over the fence but that's as bad as it got. these are people from the outset became through. as i said order seems to be restored but i don't know what's going on on the other side of the fence. trish: jeff can i jump in and can you describe the people that broke through? they were wearing masks? >> these were people just in black and through the crowd before this happened bernie sanders organizers said we are here and some people dressed in black may be coming through. if you see them point them out. these people came upon us very quickly running through the crowd very quickly and brought through the fence. the police have been very calm because protesters have been calm. what are you seeing? trish: how is it that the police were unable to stop them? >> we got a high perspective from the camera. lou: jeff we are seeing dozens of police officers running just to your right as you race those police officers in the fence. any idea what that was? >> say that again lou. lou: we saw dozens of loose officers running as you face the fence to your left and i mean dozens behind the fence as well as the ones we can see behind you in front of the fence fence. >> would have been with several people got in in black costumes with coverings over their face. several of those people got through the fence and began running. i don't know what has become of them. police officers on the inside were pursuing them but this was not the bernie sanders support cup i don't know where they came from. >> those were not bernie sanders supporters. they are not part of our organization. there are many factions here for different reasons. we are not trying to fight with the police. >> that is what we have heard on multiple occasions from everybody out here. they went out of their way to say we don't want violence. i don't know who those people were. this gentleman described -- now they're asking everyone to please sit down. please stand down. you want to make it clear to the authorities that they are not desiring to do any damage pray they were never desiring to do any damage. they just wanted their voices heard. you can hear the call for everyone to sit. as you can see most of the people are sitting. trish: kennedy is here with us and she wanted to ask you a question. >> one describes them as anarchists. trish: jeff those are the same people i saw in cleveland i would consider them to be protesters, they go from event to event. they don't really have a cause. it's very different from the sander supporters and all they really want to do is get arrested and create chaos and they made it so much harder for people there who have legitimate complaints. part of our democratic process is people protesting and they have every right to speak freely and demonstrate. that is something that has to be protected that people come in and cause that kind of chaos unfortunately that's what leads to -- and i have to say the protesters in philadelphia have been very well organized. there passionate and they are on message and that is why you are seeing this sit in right now. they are responsible for their cause and not trying to create melee. lou: these demonstrators are showing great discipline. their organizers and leaders, civil disobedience in this fashion is what is -- in our constitution. we are hearing about these anarchists. i think we need to complement these police officers as well. they are maintaining very good discipline and firm order without violence and we send our compliments and thanks to them as well. trish: you have to credit the protesters. >> we have talked to people on a number of occasions and this was very different from what we saw in chicago in 1968 where police waded into the crowd and began beating people. trish: i do want to point out to our viewers that with all of this unfolding will continue live. the president is about to speak. he will be taking the stage here and as he is said over and over again he really has quite a task ahead of them because there is no unification write-down the democratic party. we have only to look at the television screen right there because right outside of this arena we now have i don't know jeff how many people would you estimate are engage and this protest? >> i would guess that we are certainly at least 1000 if not thousands, maybe 2000. a lot of people. trish: thousands of people outside of this arena. >> this has echoes of 1968. i would point out that i might that we had police wading into the crowd. with the scene like that it got crazy in 1968 and these police have shown tremendous restraint. they found the people that were trying to cause a problem and they shot -- the police doing it excellent job of keeping this together. trish: again as you've been saying the present of the united states has quite a scene on his hands tonight as we watch thousands of our testers outside and all of these supporters inside standing up for hillary clinton. he is about to take the stage and talk about the reasons why the secretary of state should take over his job and we will watch the president and continue keeping an eye on these protesters right outside for you. lou dobbs and kennedy, we are here with analysis immediately following his speech. obviously a warm reception. >> very warm as expected and every person in the room is standing their respective as it seems to me as we look across the room. people holding up placards standing and some are not standing in simply holding their signs. trish: this is his last address. [cheers and applause] thank you. thank you! thank you. thank you so much. thank you everybody. [cheers and applause] thank you. thank you so much everybody. thank you. thank you. thank you everybody. [cheers and applause] thank you. thank you so much everybody. [cheers and applause] i love you back. [cheers and applause] hello america. hello democrats. so, 12 years ago tonight, i addressed this convention for the very first time. [cheers and applause] you met my two little girls, malia and sasha and now to amazing young women who just filled me with pride. [cheers and applause] you fell for my brilliant wife and partner, michelle. [cheers and applause] who has made me a better father and a better man, who has gone on to inspire our nation as first lady. [cheers and applause] and to somehow has managed to -- i know, the same cannot be said for me. my girls remind me all the time, wow you have changed so much daddy. and then they try to clean it up. not bad, just more mature. [laughter] and it's true. i was so young that first time in boston. [cheers and applause] and look i will admit maybe i was a little nervous addressing such a big crowd but i was filled with faith, faith in america, the generous, big-hearted hopeful country that made my story, that made all of our stories. a lot has happened over the years. and while this nation has been tested by war and it has been tested by recession and all matter of challenges, i stand before you again tonight after almost two terms as your president to tell you i am more optimistic about the future of america than ever before. [cheers and applause] how could i not be? all that we have achieved together and the worst recession in 80 years, we fight our way back. we have seen deficits come down, 401(k)s were covered and the auto industry set new records, unemployment reached eight year lows and our businesses created 50 million new jobs. [cheers and applause] after century of trying, we declare that health care in america america is not a privilege for a few, it is a right for everybody. [cheers and applause] after decades of talk we finally began to wean ourselves off of foreign oil to be doubled our production of clean energy. we brought more of our troops home to their families and we deliver justice to osama bin laden. [cheers and applause] through diplomacy we shut down iran's nuclear weapons program. we opened up a new chapter with the people of cuba. brought nearly 200 nations together around the climate agreement that can save this planet for our children. [cheers and applause] we put policies in place to help students with loans, protect consumers from fraud, cut veterans homelessness almost in half. [applause] and through countless acts of courage america learned that love has no limits and marriage equality is now a -- across this land. [applause] by so many measures are country is stronger and more prosperous than it was when we started. and through every victo every setback i have insisted that change is never easy, it's never quick and we wouldn't need all of our challenges in one term or one presidency or even in one lifetime. but tonight i'm here to tell you that yes we still have got more work to do, more work to do for every american still in need of a good job or a raise, paid leave for a decent retirement, for every child who needs a sturdier latter out of poverty or a world-class education for everyone who has not yet felt the progress of these last seven and half years. we need to make our streets safer in our criminal justice system fairer, our homeland more secure, our world more peaceful and sustainable for the next generation. [applause] we are not done perfecting our union. or living up to our founding creed that all of us are created equal, all of us are free in the eyes of god. [applause] and that work involves the big choice in november. it's fair to say this is not your typical election. it's not just a choice between parties or policies or usual debates between left and right. this is a more fundamental choice about who we are as a people and whether we stayed true to this great american experiment in self-government. look, we democrats of ours had plenty of differences with the republican party and there is nothing wrong with that. it is precisely this content of idea that pushes this country forward. [applause] but what we heard in cleveland last week wasn't particularly republican. and it sure wasn't conservative. what we heard was a deeply pessimistic vision of the country where we turn against each other and turn away from the rest of the world. there were no serious solutions to solving problems, just the fanning of resentment and flames and anger and hate and that is not the america i know. [applause] the america i know is full of courage and optimism and ingenuity. the america i know is generous. sure we have real anxiety is about paying the bills and caring for a sick parent. we get frustrated with political gridlock and worry about racial division. we are shocked and saddened by the madness of orlando or nice. there are pockets of america that have never recovered from factory closures. a man who took pride in hard work and providing for their families who now feel forgotten. parents wonder whether their kids will have the same opportunities that we had. all of that is real. we are challenged to do better. to be better but as i have traveled this country to all 50 states, as i have rejoiced with you and mourned with you, what i have also seen more than anything is what is right with america. [applause] i see people working hard and starting businesses. i see people teaching kids in serving our country. i see engineers are and doctors coming up with new cures. i see a younger generation full of energy and new ideas not constrained by what is, ready to see what ought to be. [cheers and applause] and most of all i see americans of every party, every background, every faith who believe that we are stronger together. black, white, latino, asian and native american come again the old, straight, men women folks with disabilities all pledging allegiance under the same proud flag, the bold country that we love, that's what we see. that's the america i know and there's only one candidate who believes in that future and has devoted her life to that future, a mother and a grandmother who would do anything to help our children thrive great a leader with real plans to break down barriers and blast through glass ceilings and widen the circle of opportunity to every single american the next president of the united states, hillary clinton. [cheers and applause] [cheers and applause] now eight years ago -- [chanting] that's right. let me tell you, eight years ago you may remember hillary and i were rivals for the democratic nomination. we battled for a year and a half let me tell you it was tough. because hillary was tough. i was worn out. [laughter] she was doing everything i was doing but just like gingers are are -- ginger rogers, it was backwards in heels. [cheers and applause] and every time i thought, every time i thought i might have the rays race one hillary came back stronger. but after it was all over i asked hillary to join my team. [cheers and applause] and she was a little surprised. some of my staff was surprised but ultimately she said yes because she knew that what was at stake was bigger than either of us. [cheers and applause] and for four years, for four years i had the front row seat to her intelligence, her judgment and her discipline. i came to realize that her unbelievable work ethic was in for praise and it wasn't for attention. she was in this for everyone who needs a champion. [cheers and applause] i understood that after all these years, she had never forgotten just who she is fighting for. hillary has still got the tenacity that she had as a young woman working at the children's defense fund going door-to-door to ultimately make sure kids with disabilities could get a quality education. [cheers and applause] she still has the heart she showed us our first lady working with congress to help push through a children's health insurance program that to this day protects millions of kids. [applause] she's still feared with the fear of every american she met who lost loved ones on 9/11 which is why as a defender new york she fought so hard for funding to help first responders, to help the city rebuild and why is secretary of state she sat with me and the situation room and forcefully argued in favor of the mission that took out in lawton. [cheers and applause] bin laden. you know, nothing truly prepares you for the demand of the oval office. you can. about it, you can study it but until you have sat at that desk, you don't know what it's like to manage a global crisis or send young people to war. but hillary has been around. she has been part of those decisions. she knows what is at stake in the decisions our government makes and what is at stake for the working families, for the senior citizen, for the small business owner, for the soldier, for the veteran and even in the midst of crisis, she listens to people and she keeps her cool and she treats everybody with respect. and no matter how daunting the odds, no matter how much people try to knock her down, she never, ever quits. [cheers and applause] that is the hillary i know. that is the hillary i have come to admire and that is why i can say with confidence there has never been a man or a woman, not me, not bill, nobody more qualified than hillary clinton to serve as president of the united states of america. [cheers and applause] [chanting] i hope you don't mind bill, but i was just telling the truth. by the way in case you are wondering about her judgment, take a look at her choice for a running mate. [applause] tim kaine is as good a man, as humble and is committed a public servant as anybody that i know. i know his family, i love anne i love their kids. he will make a great vice president he will make hillary is better resident just like my dear friend and brother joe biden has made me a better president. [cheers and applause] now, hillary has real plans to address the concerns she has heard from you on the campaign trail. she has got specific ideas to invest in new jobs to help workers share in the company's profits, to help put kids in preschool and put students through college without taking on a ton of debt. that's what leaders do. and then there is donald trump. [booing] >> don't boo, vote. [cheers and applause] the donald is not really a plan guy, he's not really a fact guy either. he calls himself a business guy which is true but i have to say i know plenty of disney's men and women who achieve remarkable success without leaving a trail of lawsuits and unpaid workers and people feeling like they got cheated. [cheers and applause] does anyone really believe that a guy who has. >> his 70 years on this earth showing no regard for people is suddenly going to be your champion, your voice? and if so you should vote for him. but if you are someone who is truly concerned about paying your bills, if you are really concerned about pocketbook issues and seeing the economy growing creating opportunity for everybody, then the choice isn't even close. if you want someone with a lifelong track record of fighting for higher wages and better benefits and a fairer tax code and a bigger voice for workers and stronger regulations on wall street, then you should vote for hillary clinton. [cheers and applause] [chanting] hillary, hillary, hillary. and if you are rightly concerned about who is going to keep you and your family safe in the dangers world, the choice is even clearer. hillary clinton is respected around the world. not just by leaders but by the people they serve. i have to say this, people outside of the united states do not understand what's going on in this election. they really don't. cause they know hillary and they have seen her work. she has worked closely with our intelligence people come our diplomats, arm of a terry. she has the judgment and the experience in the temperament to meet the threat of terrorism. it's not new to her. our troops pounded iso without mercy taking back their leaders and hillary won't relent until isil is destroyed. she will finish the job and she will do it without resorting to torture or banning entire religions from entering our country. she is ready to be the next commander in chief. [cheers and applause] meanwhile, donald trump calls called our military disaster. apparently he doesn't know the men and women who make up the strongest force the world has ever known. [applause] he suggests america's weak. he must not hear the billions of men and women and children from the baltics to burma who still look to america to be the light of freedom, dignity and human rights. [applause] he cozies up to putin, plays up to saddam hussein tells her native allies that stood by her side after 9/11 that they have to pay up if they want our protection. america's promises do not come with a price tag. we meet our commitments. we bear our burdens. that is one of the reasons why almost every country on earth sees america as stronger and more respected today than they did eight years ago when i took office. [cheers and applause] america is already great. [cheers and applause] america is 40 strong. and i promise you our strength, our greatness does not depend on donald trump. in fact it doesn't depend on any one person. and that in and maybe the biggest difference in this election. the meaning of our democracy, ronald reagan called america a shining city on a hill. donald trump calls it a divided crime scene that only he can fix. it doesn't matter to him that a legal immigration and the crime rate are as low as they have been in decades. because he is not actually offering any real solutions to those issues. he is just offering slogans and he is offering fear. he is betting that if he scares enough people, he might score just enough votes to win this election. and that is another bet that donald trump will lose. [cheers and applause] and the reason he will lose it is because he is selling the american people short. we are not a fragile people. we are not a spiteful our power doesn't come from some self declared savior promising that he alone can restore order as long as we do things his way. we don't look to be ruled. [cheers and applause] our power, our power comes from those moral declarations first put to paper right here in philadelphia all those years ago. we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that we the people can form a more perfect union. that is who we are. that is our first right the capacity to shape our own destiny. [cheers and applause] that is what drove, that is what drove patriots to choose revolution over tyranny and art g.i.s to liberate a country. it's what gave women the courage to reach for the ballot and troops to cross the bridge in selma and workers to organize and fight for collective bargaining and better wages. [cheers and applause] america has never been about what one person says he will do for us, it is about what can be achieved by us, together. to the hard and slow is sometimes frustrating but ultimately enduring self governing prayed and that's what hillary clinton understands. she knows that this is a big diverse country. she has seen it. she has traveled. she has talked to folks and she understands that most issues are rarely black-and-white. she understands that even when you are 100% right, getting things done requires compromise. that democracy doesn't work if we constantly demonize each other. [cheers and applause] she knows that for progress to happen, we have to listen to each other. and see ourselves in each other and fight for our principles but also fight to find common ground on matter how elusive that may sometimes seem. [applause] hillary knows we can work through racial divides in this country when we realized the way black parent -- parents feel when their son -- that we can honor police and treat every community fairly. we can do that. and she knows that technology in problems that have festered for decades isn't making race relations worse, it is creating the possibility for people of goodwill good will to join and make things better. [applause] hillary knows we can insist on a lawful and orderly immigration system while still seeing striving students and their toiling parents as loving parents, not criminals are. families they came here for the same reason our forebears came, to work and to study and to make a better life in a place where we can talk in worship and love as we please. she knows their dream is quintessentially american and the american dream is something no wall will ever contain. [cheers and applause] these are the things that hillary knows. it can be frustrating. trust me, i know. hillary knows too. when the other side refuses to compromise progress can stall. people are hurt by an action. supporters can grow inpatient and worried that you are not trying hard enough, that you may be sold out but i promise you when we keep at it, when we change enough minds, when we deliver enough votes that progress does happen and if you doubt that just asks tha 20 million more people who have health care today, just ask the marine who proudly served his country without hiding the husband that he loves. [cheers and applause] democracy works, america. but we have got to want it. not just during an election year but all the days in between. [cheers and applause] so if you agree that there is too much inequality in our economy and too much money in our politics we all need to be as vocal and is organized and as persistent as bernie sanders supporters have been in this race. [cheers and applause] we all need to get out and vote for democrats up and down the ticket and then hold them accountable until they get the job done. [cheers and applause] that's right, feel the bern. if you want more justice in the justice system, then we have all got to vote not just for a president but for mayors and sheriffs and state attorneys and state legislators. that is where the criminal law is made and we have got to work with police and protesters until laws and practices are changed. that is how democracy works. if you want to fight climate change, we have got to ring gauge not only young people on college campuses, we have got to reach out to the coalminer who was worried about taking care of his family, the single mom worried about gas prices. [cheers and applause] if you want to protect our kids and our cops from gun violence, we have got to get the vast majority of americans including gun owners who are on things like background checks to be just as vocal and just as determined as the gun lobby that locks changed to every funeral that we hold. that is how change happens. [cheers and applause] look, hillary has got her share of critics. she has been caricatured by the right and by some on the left. she has been accused of everything you can imagine and some things that you cannot. but she knows that's what happens when you are under a microscope for four years. [applause] she knows that sometimes during those four years she has made mistakes just like i have, just like we all do. [applause] that's what happens when we try. that's what happens when you are the kind of citizen teddy roosevelt once described, not the timid souls to criticize from the sidelines for someone who was actually in the arena. who strives valiantly, who airs but to at their best knows in the end the triumph of their achievements. hillary clinton is that woman in the arena. [cheers and applause] she has been there for us even if we haven't always noticed. and if you are serious about our democracy, you can afford to stay home just because she might not align with you on every issue. you have got to get in the arena with her because democracy isn't a spectator sport. america isn't about if he will, it's about yes we can and we are going to carry hillary to victory this fall. [cheers and applause] yes, we can. not yes she can, not yes i can, yes we can. you know, there has been a lot of talk in this campaign about what america has lost. people who tell us that our way of life is being undermined by british's changes and dark forces beyond our control. they tell voters there is a real america out there that must be restored. this is an idea that started with donald trump. spend peddled by politicians for a long time. right from the start of our public and it got me thinking about the story i told you 12 years ago tonight about my kansas grandparents and the things they taught me when i was growing up. see my grandparents came from the heartland. their ancestors began settling there about 200 years ago. i don't know if they had their birth certificates, but they were there. [applause] and they were scotch-irish folks, farmers, teachers, ranch hands, pharmacists, oil rig workers, hardees small-town folks. some were democrats but a lot of them, maybe most of them were republicans, party elected. and my grandparents explained that folks in these parts, they didn't like show offs. they didn't admire braggarts or bullies, they didn't respect mean-spiritedness and folks who are always looking for shortcuts in life. instead what they valued were traits like honesty and hard work, kindness, courtesy, humility, responsibility, helping each other out. that's what they believed in, true things, things that last, the things we try to teach our kids. and what my grandparents understood was that these values weren't limited to kansas, they weren't limited to small towns. these allie's could travel to hawaii. they could travel even to the other side of the world where my mother would end up working to help poor women at a better life, trying to apply those values. my grandparents knew these values weren't reserved for one race. they could be passed down to a half kenyan grandson or a half asian granddaughter. in fact they were the same values michelle's parents the descendents of slaves, taught their own kids living in a bungalow on the southside of chicago. [cheers and applause] they knew that these values were exactly what drew america to the frontier and they believed that the children of those immigrants were just as american as their own, whether they have wore a cowboy hat or a yarmulke, a baseball cap or a sub three. america has changed over the years but these values and my grandparents taught, they haven't gone anywhere. they are as strong as ever, still cherished by people of every party, every race, every faith. they live on in each of us. what makes us american, what takes us patriots is what is in here. that is what matters. [applause] and that is why we can take the food and music and holidays and the styles of other countries and blend it into something uniquely ours. that is why we can attract strivers and entrepreneurs from around the globe to build new factories and create new industries here. that's why our military works the way it does. every shade of humanity forged into common service. that is why anyone who threatens our values whether fascist or communist or jihadists or home-grown demagogues will always fail in the end. [cheers and applause] that is america. that is america, those bonds of affection, that common creed. we don't fear the future, we shape it. we embrace it as one people stronger together than we are on our own. [applause] that is what hillary clinton understands. this fight, this mother and grandmother, this public servant, this patriot, that is the america she is fighting for. [cheers and applause] [chanting] and that is why i have confidence as they leave the stage tonight that the doma credit party is in good hands. [applause] my time in this office, it hasn't fixed everything. as much as we have done and there's still so much i want to do. but for all the tough lessons i have had to learn, for all the places where i have fallen short, i told hillary and i will tell you what pick me back up every single time. it has been you. the american people. [cheers and applause] it's the letter i keep on my wall from the survivor in ohio who twice lost almost everything to cancer but urged me to keep fighting for health care reform even when the battle seemed lost three do not quit. it is the painting i keep in my private office, a big eyed green towel with blue wings made by a 7-year-old girl who was taken from us in newtown. given to me by her parents so i wouldn't forget. a reminder of all the parents who have turned their grief into action. [applause] it's a small-business owner in colorado to cut most of his own salary so he wouldn't have to lay off any of his workers in a recession, because he said that wouldn't have been in the spirit of america. [cheers and applause] it is the conservative in texas who said he disagreed with me on everything but he appreciated that like him, i tried to be a good dad. [cheers and applause] it is the courage of a young soldier from arizona who nearly died on the battlefield in afghanistan, but who has learned to speak again and walk again and earlier this year stepped through the door of the oval office on his own power to salute and shake my hand. [applause] it is every american who believes we can change this country for the better. so many of you who have never been involved in politics picked up bones and hit the streets and use the internet in amazing new ways that i didn't really understand but may change happen. you are the best organizers on the planet and i'm so proud of all the change that you have made. [applause] time and again you picked me up and i hope sometimes i have a few up too. [applause] and tonight i ask you to do for hillary clinton what you did for me. [applause] i ask you to carry her the same way you carried me, because you are who i was talking about 12 years ago when i talked about hope. it has been you who fueled my dogged faith in our future even when the odds were great, even when the road is long. hope in the face of difficulty, hope in the face of uncertainty, the audacity of hope, america you have vindicated that hope these past eight years. and now i am ready to pass the baton and do my part as a private citizen so this year and this election i'm asking you to join me to reject cynicism and reject fear and to summon what is best in us to elect hillary clinton as the next president of the united states and show the world we still believe in the promise of this great nation. [cheers and applause] thank you for this incredible journey. let's keep it going. god bless you, god bless the united states of america. [cheers and applause] [applause] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] a surprise appearance from hillary clinton joining the president on stage. you heard the president urging americans to do for her what they did for him, to rally behind her to support her, and talked a lot about the message of inclusion painting a picture of a strong america, an america with much potential provided it stays on its current path, a path that continues with hillary clinton. his legacy very much on the line. it is critical and it is critical lou for him, for his ego perhaps. that a democrat continues in office. he will take all of october to campaign for her. lou he will have that time available to him. it's going to be -- he is getting quite a sendoff. they cut away to bill clinton and the look on his face when am i going to get my hug? trish: that's an important point because she came into this auditorium last night not actually up on stage. >> she was the floating head in our alien overboard and tonight it was a tightrope that he had to walk and very carefully. how much does the campaign for himself, how much is the fight for that legacy and how much does he build her up like he tried to build her up as everyone has by saying man she's pretty good. his tone hasn't changed when they debated. she's likeable enough. he literally uttered the phrase "the audacity of hope." that was the name of one of his memoirs. he was saying yes we can. he was screaming his own campaign slogan. my lord it was unrelenting drought to speech. supposed to be about her. the best moment of all was when she stepped out on the stage and they did embrace. lou: we may need to cut back to the picture bill clinton. trish: in other words she needed to -- lou: igoing to be interesting tomorrow night to see if she has set up to do battle in the public arena with the same emotion and compassion exhibited here for the president tonight. trish: this is a president who obviously know so much about perception, he is the one that is used the term office -- optics and optics on stage the critical because that has to be the unifying force that brings the serene and this party together. is that enough? i want to go to colin mcshane on the convention floor was some other action we are seeing. >> the same perception about optics but we watched the speech just to the side of the stage and what is they loved everything they heard and there were signs being handed out as the present was wrapping up his speech. people were starting to file out and linger about and say thank you very we didn't even hear chants of four more years and that kind of thing. reverend jesse jackson is passing by. pretty good speech reverend jackson. >> he has healed someone's tonight and leaving on a high note of morals. we are trying to reach it and it's good to reach beyond your grasp and he keeps raising us on battleground to higher ground. >> i know you are being moved along by the perseid incorporated is stopping permanent. by the view when i was looking i could see to the virginia delegation terry oliphant senator mark warner and mayor de blasio and what have you just to my right. getting back to the original point trish i was going to make about reset -- perception. a lot is made about these perception and president obama is acutely aware about the perception. as he was speaking early-3/4 the way through the speech there were protests. one vee inin sit up looking to be the main opposite side of the hall, pink for testers very loud but quickly drowned out by obama supporters. the president didn't even acknowledge that person undoubtedly sure that the cameras at home would be aware of him and knowledge in a percenters into the speech there was a note tpp chants from one person again the president never pause just kept going knowing that we here in the hall side had heard of that at home maybe not so much. back over to you. >> certainly sophisticated when it comes to presenting a really tremendous order and you can see of course the difference between him and tim kaine to looking down apparently at the audience and knowledge in people that looking down repeatedly throughout his speech obviously not the same coaching and conditioning that the president has had over the last eight years being while we have protests of going on outside this convention hall. we had protesters breaking through barriers and another one burning flags. lou you want to say something? >> i want to interject those were group of anarchists as one protester described to him and the bernie sanders folks say were never on early. these folks you see there, those are the folks that jeff is talking about. trish: jeff was going on right now? >> i want to be really clear and lou you brought it up and want to make it clear first on to show you by the way the police presence down here that wasn't before as a result of what happened. sanders people in the we have been with them all week, nonviolent eyes at every meeting preaching nonviolence i will show you what happened come important to see. we didn't see the dramatic pictures that are photographer larry collins got at this break through this fence. people, masks, black clothing sanders people making it clear this is not part of their group and effectively walk over here sanders people trying to take that control of their protests. these people here are saying power to peaceful people, power to the people -- peaceful if their message. in addition my president obama speaking to another group of black masked individuals came out with an american flag and tried to sanctify. they were successful although i will tell you they are not very good at fire setting. i tend to be, that was not at all the bernie sanders folks and in fact the bernie sanders folks tried to stop it. they have all along been about nonviolent protests, civil disobedience. this is their right and this is part of america, what took place here. they want to make very clear it's not what they were about somebody hijacking their protests which they feel his allusion to protest and i leave you with what's going to happen tomorrow. they are going to start the business of trying to have democrats d regr om the democratic party. that is their next push. as i said they feel these protesters that came in tonight pulled focus from what they want to communicate. >> it's interesting you saw the twitter there is something that we have repeatedly talked about this whole cycle this idea that you are seeing a total realignment of the republican and democratic parties and there is the potential comment david asman joining us in new york, there's the potential for donald trump to pull in a lot of previous democrats, people that maybe are dependent on a job and a factory that may be worried that job could go overseas. >> there's absolute that faction and there's a faction that are looking at seen such we are seeing now and that jeff has been reporting on. as small as they may be in comparison to the democratic party as a whole there is perception is key and politics and if there is a perception that another four years of the democratic party running the white house will lead to more for we are seeing on the streets and war of what we have seen an america that people are not happy about like the growing, the growing disparity between people's perceptions about the role of a lease in our society than they may just go over to the other side and of course the main thing is trish it's the one third of the american voters who are independent smacks which will make or break whoever wins and loses this presidential election. trish: i do think david and lou and kennedy here as well we are seeing a change this time around and that people are not as party dependent. there is something else going on pre-people are saying i want to elect an individual trait i'm not collecting a party. it's something that might loom bird kind of touched on come he wanted to run as an attendant. as much as it feels like an election for these people you know bernie sanders isn't exactly -- exactly chiaro. he's an interesting person pays not necessary the most charismatic but he's a liberal idealist and he is someone who is been married to these ideas for so long. >> that will never be reality that the promise we have got so close. this is closer than any candidate who has had a proper micah's. he is a socialist and no one has gotten as close to the presidency. he won 22 primaries and caucuses. it's a mind-blowing number. can you imagine ralph nader? lou: big about that number, 22, socialist against this candidate, this nominee hillary clinton. that speaks volumes as to the weakness of the nominee, not to distract the bernie sanders in my opinion. i do believe you are except they write, this is the campaign of issues and the reason it is as because of donald trump. he put forward the issue of international trade and balance trade and america first and talked first and foremost about a legal immigration and border security and i have to tell you some of the stories that we were regaled with from the stage tonight. these are elitist talking they must think to children. these are people who are demonstrating and risking their personal security and safety to say enough. we want a different way, we wanted different direction and we want to deduce if we may thank you very much for that demagogic speeches from the stage where you personally packed donald trump but we'd like to hear more about cause and effect and consequence of public policy. they are living that consequence across the country. >> this is what a lot of these leftist progressives are really against "the new york times" academics a lead us democrats that don't represent. lou: that was quite a mash-up. >> that is how they are turned by these new leftists who feel like the party has been taken over by people who no longer represent workers in this country which is what many believe the democratic party would do. trish: understand the fears of everyday americans have. you think about isis they still not us -- they still will not say radical extremist. lou: they would even call it with the rest of the world calls it. it's absolutely out of touch. president obama keeps pushing this nonsense of isil. no one else uses it. >> the levant is a larger territory. it's limited to syria. lou: syria and iraq. trish: you heard mary say tim kaine has got a ways to go when it comes to delivering something. kept looking down at the audience as opposed to connecting with people back at home. he had this crowd. he needed to sell america but one of the points he made kaine said you can't t trump kamala and said that. here he is pretty want to get your reaction. >> you cannot believe one word that comes out of donald trump's mouth. not one word. not one word. trish: david asman when we look at the polling data it's very clear that voters, they don't trust hillary clinton. >> not at all and less as time goes on. i'm holding my hand by the way her book hard choices. this is the hardback cover of that book and on page 78 she talks about ttp, what the crowd was shouting about so vociferously during the course of the speeches that they are against now she says she was against it in this book she's talking about what a great thing tbp was. when this book came out in paperback that section was delete it just like the e-mails, she found a way of getting rid of them. that issue of whenever there's a problem with inconsistency she pretends what she once said -- trish: the paperback edition doesn't talk about tpp. >> that's one way to think about it. it's been quite a night and we are expecting big stuff tomorrow. she has to try and really sell america on her candidacy. she has to sell america on lack ability and she has to prove that she can be trusted with america's future. these are all very tall task for her. lou: she got a strong endorsement tonight. trish: she sure did. kennedy: i wouldn't call that a full endorsement. the 2016 democratic national commission. tomorrow, stronger together hillary clinton and her daughter chelsea will be here on the podium on the final night. we are all over it. we are back with coveragete starting at 6:00. and with this standard of luxury... it's an oasis. introducing the completely redesigned e-class. it's everything you need it to be... and more. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria that still exists. polident's unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture every day. new biwhat are we gonna do?ys... how about we pump more into promotions? ♪ nah. what else? what if we hire more sales reps? ♪ nah. what else? what if we digitize the whole supply chain? so people can customize their bike before they buy it. that worked better than expected. i'll dial it back. yeah, dial it back. just a little. live business, powered by sap. when you run live, you run simple. >>president kennedy has been assassinated. it's official now. the president is dead. >> even the most hated man in america... [gunshot ] >> [groans] >>lee oswald has been shot! >> ...gets his name on a headstone. >> the stone clearly shows oswald's date of birth and death. >> but how did it become their strange inheritance? >> i thought, "what on earth was a tombstone doing under my mother's house?" >> only after it's stolen, recovered, hidden, found, fought over, and more. >> we're going to take it back to texas, back home to the good ol' boys where it can have a lone star beer and make a lot of noise. >> you really wanted it back, dave. why? >> maybe they messed with the wrong tombstone owner.

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