protecting our democracy. the president is expected to address threats from maga republican election deniers to not accept the result thofs year s vote. and the growing embrace of political violence in the aftermath of the hammer attack on house speaker pelosi s 82-year-old husband. joining me for the hour are jen saki, matthew dowd and david plus. jen i start with you. you ve been talking to white house officials. what should we expect to hear from the president? joy, it s six days until the election and this is the big closing argument for the president. there he s doing this because at this point it sless about convincing people that you have a better plan. it s about lighting a fire under those democrats and people who are going to support democratic candidates to get them out. the other piece they are focused on is saying to democratics and other people voting for candidates hang with us. it may be a long week. it may take time to count the votes but stick with us and
ask you about. we know that when president biden is doing anything in public he bidening. he s doing bipartisan things. it s what he does. it s innate in him. he has been over the past since this summer. he s talked about the maga movement pointedly. he s named them and named them as what s endangering our republic. are you surprised that he didn t do that tonight? we re so close to this election but the message he was giving was to essentially give a lot of grace to the republican party and say i know this is not the majority of the party and to say we need to come together. we need to unify around these ideas. america is an idea. this was a call for unity. were you surprised he didn t make some of the points you heard congressman raskin make. look, if you want to empower the people in d.c. who don t have a vote you need democrats to win. if you want to give women rights