Transcripts For MSNBC All In With Chris Hayes 20131113 : com

Transcripts For MSNBC All In With Chris Hayes 20131113



>> they believed him when he said if you like your insurance, you can keep it. >> one woman quoted in the los angeles times put it this way. what we've heard for three years is if you like your policy, you can keep it. i'm infuriated because we were lied to. it's not fair. it's not right. >> republicans have settled on their latest anti-obama care message. if you like your health plan, you can keep it. and today they got a big boost from bill clinton. >> i personally believe even if it takes a change in the law, the president should honor the commitment the federal government made to those people. >> drudge immediately seized on the comments. john boehner applauded the statement saying that democrats concerned about the president's broken promise should join republicans in voting to pass the keep your health plan act. that bill would allow insurance companies to continue try and sell that policy in the media, now the roles have been completely reversed. republican lawmakers now take their own legislative agenda straight from the conservative media talking point of the day. it's a legislative meth perfected during the shutdown. when republicans voted based solely on whatever was on fox the previous day. remember, it was the right wing media -- >> according to the daily caller, they say this is the first time in history that things have been totally offlimits to visitors during shutdown. >> then house republicans quickly wrote a bill. >> put up barricades to keep them away from their greater accomplishments -- >> how to use cancer patients to bash democrats. >> why would we want to help one kid with cancer? do i even have to begin to answer that? >> reporter: and like clock work--how do you know the republican party is acting in bad faith? because if it was the position of the republican party that memorials should be open and cancer trials should be funded, they shouldn't have shut down the government in the first place and if they's now their position that people shouldn't have their health insurance plans cancelled, well then, they're a little late to the party. >> this is lee ioner, if they weren't able to weed you out in the application process, and somehow ended up paying for the operation, they send in lee, their hit man. his job is to get the company's money back any way he can. all he has to do is find one slipup on your application. or preexisting condition you didn't know you had. >> we're going to go of this like it's a murder case. and i mean the whole unit dedicated to going through your health history for the last five years, looking for anything that would indicate that you concealed something, you misrepresented something. so that they can cancel the policy. >> when robin baiten isn't selling antiques, she's fighting a battle on two fronts, one against breast cancer, and the other against her insurance company, just three days before she was scheduled to undergo a double mastectomy last year, she got this letter from blue cross blue shield of texas. i'm sure that robin would have loved your keep that you are health plan act in 2009, but alas, republicans weren't offering it back then. joining me now is norm ormstein. it has always been the case that legislators try to creates votes on issues, particularly for the opposing party that are going to be uncurveball. but the entirety of the letting tiff agenda particularly right now is simply legislating via press release. >> absolutely, what was also the case, chris, is, before you put a bill out there, you would at least hold a couple of hearings on it to see what the consequences, intended and unintended might be. but this is clearly a press release bill, and if you want to look at whether it's a good thing or a bad thing, all you need to know is the club endorsed it. this is not an attempt to find a constructive way to make sure that people can keep their health insurance and that we aren't going to screw up the entire insurance process by raising rates on folks along the way. that is just a talking point. >> one of the dangers of this kind of legislating is that sometimes these things actually become law, one of the best examples of this is the chuck grassley amendment, grassley came up with an idea, it was going to be a move in which members of congress and their staffs would have to go into exchanges, and he thought, aha, they'll vote against it. and members of congress said, okay, fine we'll go on the exchanges. and now congress has the status that was totally different than any employer in the country. and there were real consequences. there are consequences to legislating based on what you think will score you a debate point. >> and in this case, what fred upton has done with this bill, is not to order that insurance companies reinstate all of these plans, but to give them the option of doing it. . it makes it even worse, because the plans that the insurers will bring back is the ones insuring the healthiest people and leave the others who will going to go on the exchanges which is going to raise the costs of the exchanges, just like the grassley amendment, you'll have a number of democrats who are hearing from skon stitch wents and this is something that the president should not have said what he said repeatedly, it's blowing up in his face, it's going to pass the house and it's going to be a question of whether harry reid can keep something that is not a good idea right now from being enacted into law. >> we got word that senator andrews is going one step farther is that you actually mandate that insurance companies can't cancel plans. is other thing about this that i think is key, and norm, i want to have you on to talk about this from a historical perspective. i don't think appreciate the difference between the gingrich congress and the boehner congress. the gingrich congress, say what you will about it, it had a proactive legislative agenda. they actually passed a bunch of stuff that clinton signed. this congress is barely working. they're barely coming to work, and when they are, there is nothing that john boehner is actually trying to pass. all he's trying to do is stop stuff from passing. >> and if you look at the important policy issues and areas out there that need resolution, and the fact that the house has scheduled 13 more days and not full days for the rest of the year, and it's basically thrown it in, we're going to do nothing else except find away to keep the government operating. that tells you as well that we have a great difference here. >> the house has scheduled 13 years? >> for the rest of the year. they have pretty much said, we're done, we're not going to do anything else for the rest of the year. >> it is november 12, we'll be working far, far more than 13 days, as will the vast majority of hard working americans across this great land. >> and they'll be working at least eight hours a day and that's not what we're going to see with congress in session. this is just not a good thing. but of course if you look at all the votes we have seen in the house on the affordable care act, this is actually the first time you have seen something that's trying to a amend it and not just to end it. but it's an amend in order to end it. >> for john boehner, half of life is making sure you don't show up. joining me now, obick roy, author of quote how medicaid fails the poor. i wanted to have you on because you wrote a piece for "the huffington post" about debate after the debate we're having about plan cancellations, and you said there's a lot les here than it appears. what do you mean by that? >> you try to put some meaning into this, okay, president obama said you can keep your plan. what do you think he meant? did he mean that insurers could not drop plans? i don't think people could have thought that, because it makes no sense. he also said you could keep your doctor, does that mean he's going to keep doctors from retiring or dying? presumably what he meant that the affordable care act would not directly cancel plans that were in effect. and it doesn't cancel plans that are in effect. it grandfathers all the plans that were in effect at the time the bill was passed. a lot of people running around, saying oh, my god, plans are being cancelled. okay, well, plans that were put in place after the aca was passed, the fact checker pointed out. the vast majority of these plans were just issued in the last year. so didn't the insurance companies tell them when they -- i just didn't see much of a story here. >> that question strikes me as a pretty fair one. you're humana, you're selling a policy to someone in early 2013, you know there's a whole regulatory frame work working its way through, and you have informed people talking to the people in hhs about what those plans are going to be. if you have a plan that might not meet the obama care requirements, shouldn't you have said, hey, just so you know, this may not be around next year? >> i think there was awareness among everyone who follow this is very closely, what was going to happen in 2014. but i think the afternoon person took president obama's promise to mean a plan that was in effect for those regulations kicked in on january 1, 2014, that i would be able to keep my plan, and my physician network as is. >> that is an answer to a different question. i think you're right about why people are angry, the question is, should the insurer, who's selling you a plan, they know the provision of which is contingent upon a regulatory process, they are following very closely, shouldn't they tell you, hey, buddy check it out, we're going to sell you this, but we're going to be there. >> we should mandate that every american read my blog. i think the more important thing is, look, i think if people's plans were being cancelled and they were being replaced by aca plans that were truly better and truly more affordable, i think 24 wouldn't be the issue. for a lotle of people, the middle class and the upper middle class people who are going to have higher premiums, they didn't think they were free loading on the old system. they didn't think they were getting a free ride, they thought their health insurance were getting pretty expensive. >> and we should be clear, we just don't know what the numbers are on that. but your point, dean, there's no way the president could have promised you could keep your doctor. but any health reform worthy of the name that would have kept every one of the health insurance plans existing in american when it was passed stay in effect? >> you literally have to have president obama nationalize the insurance industry. a and i know a lot of republicans have accused him of that, but the reality is, he's not done that. so what that means is, insurance companies drop plans, we have had our plans dropped, nothing to do with obama care, this happened years ago, before it was even legislation. insurance companies changed plans all the time. i don't know what someone could have thought if president obama was guaranteeing them their plan would stay in effect in perpetuity. he couldn't do that unless he took over the market. >> one point i'll make in the president's defense is this, any conservative reform of the health care system would also result in changes in the health insurance market. and republicans in being so vigorous in defending the status quo preaca, that if they -- >> one of the biggest ones, white and bennett that got a tremendous amount of traction in the right wing circles, which i think is about four people, that would have gotten rid of the deferred tax treatment that employer based health care has right now. that would be a huge change. you want to see some nightly news packages about that happening, you would see them, right? >> the cadillac tax in the aca does that, so any contest form that happenings now post-aca probably wouldn't be as disruptive on that specific point. but it would be disruptive in a lot of other areas. thank you both. coming up, we all went to our own cars and got out our self-defense tools or firearms or whatever you want to call them. so we strapped on and a couple of people wanted to take pictures of us right away. >> that was from our interview earlier today with one of the men from this group, well for the first time anywhere, we'll get a response from one of the four moms who was at a private meeting talking about gun safety over lunch when those armed protesters showed up, ahead. mic. mic. and we own the per cottage. it's a stationery and gifts store. anything we purchase for the paper cottage goes on our ink card. so you can manage your business expenses and access them online instantly with the game changing app from ink. we didn't get into business to spend time managing receipts, that's why we have ink. we like being in business because we like being creative, we like interacting with people. so you have time to focus on the things you love. ink from chase. so you can. customer erin swenson ordebut they didn't fit.line customer's not happy, i'm not happy. sales go down, i'm not happy. merch comes back, i'm not happy. use ups. they make returns easy. unhappy customer becomes happy customer. then, repeat customer. easy returns, i'm happy. repeat customers, i'm happy. sales go up, i'm happy. i ordered another ir. i'm happy. (both) i'm happy. i'm happy. happy. happy. happy. happy. happy happy. i love logistics. . i know you never want to miss a show, and to be perfectly clear, you should never, ever miss a show, ever. but if you ever do miss a show, there are now some very appealing options for you, starting today you can watch "all in with chris hayes" on your iphone. it's a pretty excellent feature. back to never missing a show, and i'm being totally serious now, you actually never have to misa show, because the new msnbc app allows you to watch any show live. you want to go and download the msnbc app for your ios device now. and that gelling helps to lower some cholesterol. metamucil. 3 amazing benefits in 1 super fiber. i hear all this, you know, well this is class war fare, whatever, no, there is nobody in this country who got rich on his own. nobody. you built a factory out there, good for you. but i want to be clear, you moved your goods to market on the roads the rest of us paid for. you hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. >> there's a reason why liberals love beth warren, i count myself among them. it's moments just like that one you just saw and moments like this from her very first senate year. >> tell me a little bit about the last few times you have taken the biggest financial institutions on wall street all the way to a trial? anybody? >> elizabeth warren is by no means -- what distinguishes her at this moment, is she has gone on this remarkable journey from being an outsider, to a yoouls senator who still talks like someone on the outside. she is willing to state the obvious truth that all of us know, but you almost never hear from the people in positions of power, that the system is rigged. >> today, the four biggest banks are 30% larger than they were just five years ago. and five largest banks hold more than half of all the total bank assets in the country. who would have thought five years after the crisis that we witnessed firsthand, the dangers of an overly concentrated financial system, that the too big to fail problem would only have gotten worse. >> that was warren giving a major speech today. the continues battle over wall street regulation is the policy area i think where the division between the establishment wing of the party and the raw anger of the liberal grass roots is at its most intense. there are people inside the democratic party, many of them in power who think the system can be managed. and there are people inside the democratic party who know that it is broken in some fundamental way. elizabeth warren is one of those people. and the biggest question that faces -- whether to adopt warren's populous message as a governing philosophy, or perhaps more acutely. alexis, this is my feeling about elizabeth warren. you start talking about elizabeth warren and hillary clinton in 2016. that doesn't interest me that much. if you look through the polling, issue after issue, democrats on economic issues of inequality -- democrats dissatisfied with the size and infwluns of the the major corporations. you look through your issue of the day and you think, oh, financial reform. this is going to be a little bit of a tough haul, we're going to push this rock uphill. and here's warren who's going out and getting two million youtube views in a speech on financial reform. she's tapping into the fact that no one has really spoken to the resentment and frustration that americans have of what happened five years ago. small donations to finance their campaign so there's a real gap here. and there is an open for republicans and some republicans are starting to take that seriously. you have people like david vitter who i disagree with vehemently on most issues, but he has worked with sherry brown on some very important pro reform things like raising capital requirements, which is basically saying that things can't operate on so much borrowed money. >> in the world or regulatory news, today was actually a big important day, because the president named a new chair for the commodities trading commission, which is just a jumble of letters, but basically is the relatively small entities that stands between us and the precipice, i mean really, if there's one regulator who's going to keep us from plunging into something as horrifying, destructive and terrible as what we went through, this is that body. >> that's right and i think we have a real danger here, because we have gary ginsler and i like to liken him as the superman of the financial reform. and all we're going to be left with at the cftc is like aqua man, gary ginsler is the savor of kittens, he came from wall street, but he has used that knowledge for good. >> i wrote a column in the -- this golden sack stooge, what the heck, he's retrade from wall street. the guy has been incredible, he's been the best regulator we have had. i was completely wrong. i'm sorry gary ginsler. coming up next -- >> the flyers said he was endorsed by ron wilson. no not the former state representative. the fine print said ron wilson is dave wilson's cousin. >> that's correct, we are. >> did they really endorse you? 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worsening prostate symptoms; decreased sperm count; ankle, feet or body swelling; enlarged or painful breasts; problems breathing while sleeping; and blood clots in the legs. common side effes include skin redness or irritation where applied, increased red blood cell count, headache, diarrhea, vomiting and increase in psa. ask your doctor about axiron. you might have seen the images making the rounds, dozens of armed demonstrators and a -- today we got the chance to talk to one of those armed demonstrators and for the first time with one of the moms from the lunch meeting. >> there's a new fight brewing over gun control in texas, this time it's pitting a group of moms over a group of gun rights activists. >> it happened this weekend in suburban dallas, four moms met for lunch at a tex-mex restaurant to plan activities for their local chapter of moms demand action for gun sense in america. it's a national organization created after a lone gunman murdered 20 children at an elementary school in connecticut a little less than a year ago. these texas moms want fewer guns on the streets. but they were greeted in the parking lot by a whole bunch of them. >> they showed up with firepower, they showed up with it strapped on. >> we talked to one of the moms. >> it was very unsettling, it was very disturbing and at the beginning, they just con greg gaited and just kind of stood afternoon and about 30 minutes into it, that's when they all strapped on their weapons. they strapped on rifles and i can't speak to exactly what kind they were, but it was various types of rifles and every single adult that was out there was armed. >> the armed protest was staged by a gun activist group. they came armed with hunting rifles, ar-15s and ak-47s. dozens of men, women and children turned out to show those gun moms what's what. all of this is legal in texas where you're allowed to open carry guns. but open carry texas insists that wasn't their goal. this was merely a family friendly photo-op. today i spoke with one of the group's organizers by phone. >> i got word where it was and i was like, hey, let's go peacefully asemable in that area. >> we went to our cars and got out our self-defense tools or whatever you want to call them. so we strapped on and a couple of people wanted to take pictures of us right away. >> the two groups clashed since mothers -- saturday's sandoff played out on social media. the moms demand action facebook page showing their perspective of the armed stake out at the blue mesa grill. by satander photos make this a - as one dallas news columnist puts it, no matter the camera angle, there's just not a -- >> at no point in time did i go out there when they were there with their guns. i was too afraid to do that. the idea of that was terrifying to me. we noticed that they started marching towards the football stadium and then thwe took advantage of the fact that they were going to leave. >> no shots were fired, no laws were broken. the tactics used by open carry groups in texas, brandishing weapons at people who disagree with them politically is inspiring intense backlash, last month there was an open carry demonstration in dallas's deally plaza. and just yesterday, one open carry group had a run in with texas police. >> here they are at the capitol in a veterans day confrontation with state troopers. >> we're not breaking any laws. >> they were arrested for trespassing. >> turn around. >> the man by hyped the camera was corrie watkins. >> you guys are kidnappers. >> walt kins is running for congress, hoping to unseat republican joe barton because he's not conservative enough and says the second amendment needs to be defended. >> an armed society is a polite society. we were not protesting, they were demonstrating our right to keep and bear arms. >> if mr. watt kichbs wins, good luck getting an assault weapon inside the capitol. inside the gun totalling throng the fact that there were four moms in suburban dallas getting together to talk about gun safety legislation in the first place. it's a glimpse at a grass roots movement the media has missed. we'll talk to people on the ground in that movement when we come back. ♪ or getting a better seat? ♪ or let's say there's an accident. if you have esurance, you can use their mobile app to start a claim... upload a few photos... and get your money fast. maybe that doesn't make you a control freak. more like a control enthusiast. esurance. insurance for the modern world. now backed by allstate. click or call. because you can't beat zero heartburn. woo hoo! 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>> after the sandy hook shooting in december, i was looking for a mother's against drunk -- it was amazing how much it grew so quickly. here we are, just a year later, we have over 100,000 members, we have a chapter in every single state and we are a powerful force to be reckoned with, and we attacking this at all levels. what you saw in dallas is really a microchasm of what we face all over the country all the time. it's very rare that we don't have a rally and that we are surrounded by armed, open carry activists. and you know, i would disagree with cory watson, i don't think an armed society is a polite society, i think it's a dangerous situation. there are 100,000 victims of gun violence every year, and now that moms are involved, we are going to fix this problem in america. >> leah, if you look at the traction on this issue, and i know you worked on this for some time, there was a kind of high water mark in the '90s. with clinton you had assault weapon plans. the democratic candidate was leading with ads just about gun safety in suburban chicago districts for instance. and some of it dropped off the table. was there a period where it was like hard to raise money, it was hard to get volunteers, it was hard to get speakers at conferences? >> george w. bush had the nra working out of his office when he was selected by the supreme court back in 2000. and a lot of my friends were in d.c. with gun safety groups and they found it very disspiriting, it was hard to get anything done with a republican president and the republican governor, the movement hadn't really developed the way it probably should have and it was going to emulate mothers with drunk driving. so we went awol, we really did as a movement. if you look at the map, in 1981, none of the states had stand your grouped laws, today -- every single state has a concealed carry law. so the battlegrounds is the state. there's a grass roots movement growing and growing. i think the more energized we become. >> there's two factors here, as someone who's covered the politics of this, there's the horror of the tragedies we have seen, over and over and over. and there's also the fact that, in some ways the people on the other side of this issue have to keep winning things, the more they win, the more extreme they get, because there's nothing else to win, but the most max mallist thing. >> the extremism that is burgeons on the right now, it's not just in the tea party, it's certainly been in the gun movement for a long time, the gun rights movement as they call themselves. what's interesting to me is if you look back at the history of the '94 law, the reason that the clintons succeeded in getting that law passed, broad as it was, was that he managed to put himself on the site of law enforcement, against the extremism of the gun laws. he managed to get cops around him as a symbol of a safe society, order, all these themes that the right and conservatives had appropriated for so long. now these gun rights guys are the symbol of disorder. they are attacking cops. they are going up to the capitol and getting in the face of the state police, that is disorder. and that ought to be a theme's emphasized. >> sandy hook was this kind of breaking point, the president made a speech, there was a push at the national level, which we haven't seen in years and then it failed. just as if you tried to roll the rock down the hill, it crushed him, okay, we go back to our other issues. >> the legislators that we had the day after sandy hook, were the same legislators we had the day before. and while we wish this tragedy would have changed their heartses and minds, it clearly didn't. so we're going to have to wait until the midterms and the elections and beyond to get the right congressmen placed to do the right thing. but in the meantime, this is about grass roots, this is about going after municipalities and states and making sure they do the right thing. we have had huge wins in colorado, connecticut, delaware, montana, new york. we had smaller wins in california and energy new jersey. we were able to block bad legislation in the state of missouri. we are winning this, we are rolling it back. >> i think the biggest difference is more people are dieing from guns because they're more pervasive and the gun laws have become more extreme. i think most americans are sensible and absolutely horrified by the actions of these thugs. there's no other words for them. he doesn't believe that you need to have a rifle with 30 rounds to go huchblting. if you need that, you need to -- >> as the democrats come around on the politics for

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