selah get mate investigation is a legitimate investigation. 50.3% support impeaching president trump. so, again, joe, the president can t call one poll or another an outlier, that s the average of 500 or so polls that show a majority of americans support this inquiry. and you know, ed, it wasn t so long ago, maybe three weeks ago that the president said he was going to get worried if those numbers ever got over 50%. all of the fear and loathing, all of the weeping and mashing of teeth of democrats and whether they should start an impeachment inquiry, i think it s gone away. and it s gone away look at these poll numbers. they re overwhelming supportive of an inquiry. this is where the analogies with the clinton impeachment break down. right. because these polls have been so dramatic and so pronounced and so constant in the last three weeks. i think really this morning for the first time i was thinking
mmm-hmm. and, of course, lowering costs in prescription drugs. right. so he s shown himself to be out of the step with the district and he barely won this district in right. 2018. right. so he won it with 50.3%. chip roy, who is your opponent, who is the incumbent. you mentioned jobs. you mentioned health care. you mentioned bipartisanship. you didn t mention a woman s right to choose. now, you what you were known for yes. when you first burst on to the national scene was that you held this 11-hour filibuster. we re now seeing a record number of states going after women s liberty, going after women s right to choose. is this something that you re going to run into? is this something you re going to mention in your campaign? are you because you didn t mention it as an important thing of why you should be elected? yes, of course, joy. you know, i think looking at the polls nationally and in texas as well, it s very clear where americans stand on this issue.
right. so he s shown himself to be out of the step with the district and he barely won this district in right. 2018. right. so he won it with 50.3%. chip roy, who is your opponent, who is the incumbent. you mentioned jobs. you mentioned health care. you mentioned bipartisanship. you didn t mention a woman s right to choose. now, you what you were known for yes. when you first burst on to the national scene was that you held this 11-hour filibuster. we re now seeing a record number of states going after women s liberty, going after women s right to choose. is this something that you re going to run into? is this something you re going to mention in your campaign? are you because you didn t mention it as an important thing of why you should be elected? yes, of course, joy. you know, i think looking at the polls nationally and in texas as well, it s very clear where americans stand on this issue. the vast majority of people believe that roe v. wade should stand.
one of the cases was in north carolina. the gop won barely half of vote. 50.3% yet holds 10 of 13 districts. the court also ruling the trump administration cannot add a citizenship question to the 2020 census, at least not yet. jessica snider has more from washington. dave and christine, two major supreme court decisions dropping on the last day of the term and they are sure to impact who s representing all of us in congress. first, partisan gerrymandering. the conservative justices led by chief justice john roberts ruling that courts cannot decide when politicians have drawn congressional or state district lines to gain political advantage. roberts in the opinion put it this way saying partisan gerrymandering claims present political questions beyond the reach of the federal courts. now that decision will leave all of the contested maps across the
i m urging, because of the highly public nature of this case, to ramp down the rhetoric. with all that, let s go back to the big board because the midterms will never end. our national correspondent steve kornacki back with us tonight, and steve, i understand since we ve been talking we have breaking news on the georgia governor front. yeah, you got the florida senate situation here, but i am going to jump over and tell you what we know in georgia right now. here is the situation. brian kemp, the republican, right now he s declared victory, but the question is does that 50.3%, his share of the vote, does that go under 50%? that would trigger a runoff, that could trigger a recount. the atlanta journal constitution is reporting just in the last few minutes that a federal judge has ordered the state of georgia to delay certifying this