happening tomorrow in new york city. that is going to do it for us tonight. i ll see you again tomorrow. now it s time for the last word with lawrence o donnell. good evening, lawrence. good evening, rachel. that is such a well-deserved parade, and it is simply the beginning of thanks that should be going on for years. yeah, exactly, and you know what? the heroes is such a fascinating history. it s a national honor but it is such a new york thing, and i think it s going to be a big deal and a very moving thing tomorrow. so ticker tape? the stuff doesn t actually exist anymore. are they going to be throwing any kinds of paper out the window? if my experience going to like the, you know, like the women s world cup team coming home for their ticker tape parade, if my experience like that is anything to go by tomorrow, it is a huge, glorious mess with all kinds of stuff that is unidentifiable as anything other than confetti but then part of the process is it all gets cl
of things that should be going on for years. exactly. you know it? the candidate heroes is such a fascinating history but it s a national honor and such a new york thing and i think it s going to be a big deal and very moving. ticker tape? the stuff doesn t actually exist anymore. are they going to be throwing any kinds of paper out the windows? if my experience going to the women s world cup team coming home for their decorative parade of mics brands like that is anything to go by tomorrow it is a huge glorious mess with all kinds of stuff that s an identifiable as anything of any confetti. part of the process is it gets cleaned up. it s a well oiled machine. we are still going to quote ticker tape? there s no reason to change that. exactly. that s right. thank you, rachel. it is going to happen again. republicans are going to try to steal a presidential election again. that s what they re basically telling us they re going to do. that s what they re publicly pla
eric swalwell. very good. and andrew weissmann because, as you know and as you were describing in your hour, so much of this testimony was about the mueller investigation and donald trump s attempts to block the mueller investigation, fire mueller. andrew weissmann was on the other end of that stuff and wondering exactly what the president was up to. they documented a lot of it in the mueller report, but andrew weissmann has actually learned some things about don mcgahn as a result of this testimony. so that s going to be really interesting. and i noted that mr. weisman was invoked by name during the testimony himself, which i m sure is not a comfortable situation for him. but, yes, he is right in the middle of all of this stuff. yes. we re going to get right to that, rachel. all right, lawrence. thank you. thank you. well, as i said, it was two years, two years ago the house judiciary committee subpoenaed trump white house counsel don mcgahn to testify about wh
not the disease that is placing us most at risk. and we are, our way of lifes at risk. we told you when trump was voted out of office, seven months ago tomorrow, that he was just a symptom. the big lie would not just disappear. divide and conquer will not just disappear, because it works too well. and sure enough, things are getting worse. today, lawmakers from two states held a meeting of conspiratorial minds to swap notes on how to make the big stolen election lie true. these are elected officials i m talking to you about. pennsylvania retrumplicanss fle across the country to observe a sham audit, a fraud-it, in arizona s largest county to see if they could bring the chaos back home. yep, cyber ninja s bamboo paper chase is still under way, carried out by a group with no experience, funded by an organization that is run by an abject conspiracist. and they may only grow in influence. the arizona secretary of state has found confidential manuals left un ataunattended, quali
he literally in may said, sure. just a couple of weeks ago in mid-december he told a california news outlet that he had nothing to hide, that he wouldn t hide from the committee, that he s been very public. but now, of course, he s not. the committee s going to have to decide if they re going to start subpoenaing members of congress. yeah, and that s the toughest in many ways the toughest decision of all. because there are precedents there that are difficult for them to have to consider. and, you know, in the past, the house ethics committee would handle investigations of members of congress. but the house ethics committee has recently become an ineffectual vehicle for any of this. and so they are really in a jam on how to handle this. yeah, and i mean, meanwhile, sort of looming over all of this, is to the extent the committee has used the compulsory process, it s resulted in federal criminal charges against steve bannon already for defying them. and the justice depa