Minutes because thats theyll be focusing not only 17 victims in parkland, but the 13 victims in columbine that were killed in that 1999 shooting that really sparked this sort of awareness across the country. Andrea. Thank you, steve paterson. And the students at North High School in denver. We go to chicago, which is an hour earlier, rather an hour later, so they have already been out for an hour. Ron mott, a city rocked almost every day by violence in various neighborhoods but all reacting to what happened in florida. Ron . Reporter yeah, absolutely, andrea, good day to you. Im with young man from Leo High School here on the south side. You mention this is a daily problem here in chicago, gun violence. So these students who came out today, this rally wrapped up 10 minutes ago, those rally not just for those folks lost at parkland but all the people lost
daily basis in chicago to gun violence. Cash a, senior, what brought you out today and whats your message . I wanted to promote peace
has actually tweeted about hillary clinton 91 times sips he defeated her. 91 times. now go back and count how many times she has spoken about donald trump since he defeated her. you want her to go away actually it s a joke. ainsley: jehmu, it s not just republicans saying that patty solace doyle, she works on the campaign as well. i know patty. she is saying hillary clinton by making these comments in india is putting democrats in a tough position that now democrats have to distance themselves from her remarks and from her. do you agree with that? i think democrats are going to have to run extremely local races. exactly like we saw conor lamb run in pennsylvania. why he is now currently on top. and it is not going to be about hillary clinton. it shouldn t be about donald trump. it is going to have to be very localized messages to
from my assessment having done this dance in 2010 and various other times. midterms are tricky. midterms are tricky, that s a very key point to make. and the thing about last night, the two lessons i think the republican neither meads to it be aware of. one is republican voted against the republican nominee for the office. that attributes to the 20 point swing you are talking about. what does that say when base republicans are voting against the president s choice? the president himself maybe his agenda, whatever their political narrative may be, that clearly is something that needs to get addressed. and i don t think they are in a position to address it very clearly between now and november because of all the variables, firing of secretary of states, dis-rupp shuns here and there, all of that muddles the conversation. the second thing was how the democrats stayed out of their own way. they let conor lamb run the
republicans tried to nationalize this race in so much different ways. whether it was pelosi or taxes and at the end it was trump and democrats let conor lamb run his own race which in an environment like this you would want to do the exact opposite. but they had twin forces where they didn t have to maybe it was the lack of the primary, but they didn t have to do a lot to energize the democratic base. they were already energized so they gave conor lamb the running room to go back to the pro-union working class voters and if you look at the district, it was represented by a democrat before tim murphy. a lot of those people are still registered as democrats. they re just coming home on an economy populous message that they allowed conor lamb to run on. and i thought one of the things also about this that is potentially a huge problem for republicans, is the way in which they retreated from the tax cut message. a big part of the urgency in getting the tax cuts done was to