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tv   Inside Politics With Manu Raju  CNN  March 3, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PST

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stand we won a landslide. >> pressure mounts before >> super tuesday. haley makes a last push. >> none of this is normal trump and biden look toward november plus family feud. >> i've kind of brought back the nickname house of hypocrites, exclusive details on speaker johnson an aid for ukraine >> it's existential, it's time sensitive. >> i'm going to be one. but if that's ok. she usually get their way new reporting on the race to lead senate republicans i am not mitch mcconnell. i'm my own person and state of his union, instead of playing politics with the issue, why don't we just get together and get it done? >> a major address biden faces warning sign >> please understand. listen to us inside politics, the best reporting from inside the corridors of power starts now
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>> good morning. >> welcome to inside politics sunday on a raj, a raft of new polling out this morning gives us a snapshot of where the race for the white house stands eight months before election day. it's clear though momentum is with donald trump and joe biden has his work cut out for him. now we're going to dig into those numbers in just a moment. but trump has his own issues one of them is named nikki haley, who is still in the gop primary and is suing trump, is the gop nominee a major question now, looms how many of haley's supporters will actually come back to trump in november? will they sit out or will they vote for biden? and with super tuesday, just two days away, we'll get a clear sense of trump's strength within the gop and his weaknesses as a general election candidate and for now, trump is moving closer to clinching the nomination just yesterday, he swept three gop contest held in missouri, idaho, in michigan he now has 247 delegates to nikki haley's
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24, 854 more delegates are up for grabs. tuesday in 15 states and trump needs 1,215 delegates to clinch the nomination altogether. so yesterday's he tried to rally the base and focused on biden, north carolina. trump made some baseless accusations against the president biden's conduct on our border is by any definition a conspiracy to >> overthrow the united states of america. you know, he talks about democracy he is a danger to democracy >> now, lets out go live to the campaign trail in vermont. one of the state's voting on super tuesday, cnn's eva mckend is in south burlington. were nikki haley's holding a rally this afternoon. so eva is haley giving any signs at this may be the end of the road for her mano. she is >> continuing to keep up the fight here with more than a dozen states up for grabs on super tuesday, she's busy crisscrossing the state the country, rather continuing to
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campaign. she'll be here in vermont later this afternoon. and really key to her argument is electability she continues to argue that in a general election, she would be more competitive against president biden, then former president donald trump. she's citing that new york times poll that just came out that has her beating biden in november by ten points. but you know, i was just with her in michigan and i asked her which state he thought that she could outright win and she did not give me a definitive response still, she says that republican primary voters that they deserve a real choice and that they should not be a coronation. let's listen >> i've always said this needs to be competitive as long as we are competitive. additive, as long as we are showing that there is a place for us, i'm going to continue to fight. that's always been the case. would you see yourself as competitive if you didn't win on super tuesday, any state, or usually you all are the ones that decide what's competitive
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and what's not. we're going to continue to just keep pushing through now also, in that interview, she suggested that she was no longer bound by that rnc pledge. that was a pledge to get on the debate stage that said that whoever won the primary would go on to support and endorse the eventual nominee. >> she >> seems to be squiggling out of that a little so interesting point there, but listen the rnc has all but abandoned her the establishment is now squarely behind trump, so that is perhaps why she feels no longer bound to the rnc. she says that the rnc was not the same rnc that they were a year ago. now, after she campaigns here vermont, she heads to mean and then she's on to texas tomorrow. mono. >> yeah. and she also didn't say if she would stay as a candidate all the way to the election or do convention, or if she'll decide to drop out after midweek, there'll be a key question. eva mckend. thank you. from the report from the
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campaign trail. and now let's break this all down with my great panel this morning. amy walter of the cook political report. laura barron lopez from pbs newshour. newshour. and cnn's lauren fox. good morning to all of you guys as lots of did digest and a lot of polls out this morning, which we'll get into urine a second, but i just wanted the questions that we're going to see and super tuesday, trump is you know, if past is prologue, he's probably going to run the table that 15 states that are voting. but haley continues to get a sizable amount of votes, 28%, 26%. you've gotten michigan, 39%. she got in south carolina. the question is does voters ultimately they come back home to trump in november or do they not argue they set out that's the multi-billion-dollar question that we'll be talking about a lot during this campaign season one of the polls that came out this weekend was the new york times sienna poll, which was a national poll not about these individual states, but what they found when they actually
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drilled down into haley voters first is that half of her voters voted for biden in 2020. in other words, a lot of these people who are showing up in the polls they are were never interested in voting for trump. but a third of them said they voted for trump in the previous election. and so that's the question is how many do those 30% represent in the key swing state? the balance, then between maybe some of those voters, many of whom were going to see on super tuesday are sitting in the kinds of swing suburban areas in and around burlington, vermont, or in the swings tropos had probably right. richmond, virginia, or in texas in and around the suburbs of dallas, et cetera. but can he he can't afford to lose more support from those types of voters at the same time, what we're seeing in a lot of these polls is that biden himself is losing some of his 2020 vote, especially among voters of color. and so do those just ultimately balanced
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themselves out or 5,000 votes, 10,000 votes here, or there, that in a court will determine the election that's in every close race. that is everything. and as we get into so much is going to be about the enthusiasm gap and whether or not biden can reverse this. the polls just show time and time again. biden has significant work to do just this weekend's pull from new york times sienna poll 48% of trump voters are enthusiastic of his as the nominee, just 23% of biden voters such a significant gap. and then just how people view the trump presidency versus the biden present. there has been several polls that have been similar to this as one out this morning from cbs news, yougov saying, how would you rate their presidencies? 46%, say, excellent and good for trump, 53% say fair or poor, just 33% for joe biden. those if you're in the biden campaign headquarters right now, what are you thinking about those
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and what do you gotta do differently? >> well, i mean, there's those numbers clearly aren't good for president biden. but what the campaign will tell us over and over again and what they're saying despite those numbers is that they really are clean to this theory of the case. that essentially once voters realize that it is definitely a rematch, there's no more nikki haley, and it is donald trump versus joe biden. they believe that they can swing voters towards joe biden because of that contrast, they're going to draw a contrast on immigration, on democracy, on abortion, on reproductive rights all of that, and that voters just aren't tuned in yet. and then what's there once they're able to do that you know, that they can bring people home. i mean, that being said, a lot of the democrats that i talked to you, i was talking to adam schiff this week as i was in california for the senate primary and he said one of his biggest concerns is young voters. so in addition to black and brown voters, which are showing low enthusiasm for president biden, a lot of democrats are really concerned about young voters not helmed. >> as we dig into that little
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bit further here, he's just performed biden is performing worse in the polls than he did in 2020 with those key demographics was black voters, latino voters, young voters. and just in the sienna times sienna poll, voters of color without a college degree, 72% supported biden in 20 47% now, in trump has a 15 point percent increase since then and then women voters 57% of women voters back in 2020, backed biden. that is down 11 points. now, if you believe the polls trump up slightly, that's got to be alarming to, for the democrat. so you're talking to all the time? yeah. exactly. and these democrats view this not just as a referendum on the presidential race. they want joe biden to be re-elected for a myriad of reasons, but also for their own races. i mean, when you're talking to adam schiff, he's concerned because he also wants to ensure that he can turn people out, right. and so that is the difficult part of this for so many democrats and why so many of them may
quote
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say, well, i'm competent. biden will be able to survive this once it becomes it's very clear, it's him versus trump, but in this moment they're also arguing, what if people just stay home? and that is the biggest fear because people stay home a couple of votes here, a couple of votes there. it starts to really add up and make a difference. >> everyone voter apathy, third party candidates least so much uncertainty, but you're right. they, they hope that the focus because it will be more the biden team does and trump the things that he says at the rallies that could change how people viewed trump. they believe change, perhaps get people energized and the democratic side, there was last yesterday at one of his rallies in donald trump talked about obama. first, he said that sometimes confuses obama and biden on purpose. he does not intentionally. >> and then >> he's sort of confused, biden and obama putin has so little respect for obama that he's starting to throw around the nuclear war terror. you heard that nuclear, he started to
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talk nuclear weapons today i was waiting for that to happen but we have a full a full as a precedent >> he said he said obama versus biden, and that will bring back the age question and there has been a lot of questions we could focus on biden's age. he's only four years older than donald trump. there's a pull up this morning for the wall street journal, r. biden he didn't in trump too old for president, 73%. such a huge number, but it's been consistent since august of last year, february this year, but this is an interesting 0.5% more now from then until now, believed that donald trump is too old, that is growing. >> yeah. but i still think the biggest challenge for the biden campaign right now one of the numbers you put up earlier bad. do you think the economy was better under donald trump? you think do you think his policies were better? so that nostalgia for the trump economy is really the biggest challenge right now. for biden, look, even in 2020, biden didn't win on the
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issue of the economy. trump was seen as better able to handle it, but it was by a handful of points. now, it's double-digit points. when i was talking to democratic strategist who work, especially with latino constituencies and trying to motivate those voters to go and vote for democrats said they are seeing it's not just that they're staying home. that is one worry that they have been they do say over and over again in these polls and focus groups, yeah. >> yeah. >> i had more in my bank account when trump was president, i had more security in my jane that's gonna be the challenge for the biden team, right? they have to be able to find their terms, what the biden of the trump economy was once ice and we'll hear more about that. >> all >> right, coming up, speaker johnson's under pressure from all sides about what to do about ukraine. >> my >> new reporting on the private conversations he's having in the house vegas, the story of sin city, in 98 ten on cnn
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>> eliot spitzer crusading governor by day, wanted to be present in united states client number nine by night's this guy who is a crusader against human sex trafficking is actually a customer, united states daniel with jake tapper, new episode tonight at nine on cnn >> speaker mike johnson has derailed the senate's bipartisan package that included billions in aid to ukraine. but he's leaving the door open for efforts emerging in the house. my new reporting this morning reveals how senior republicans in favor of aid to ukraine, like house foreign affairs chairman michael mccaul and congressman brian fitzpatrick are crafting a new package and have engaged in private talks with the speaker. they believe johnson can be convinced to put that measure on the floor this month or in april they say the speaker has not shut them down >> i think first speaker wants to get through the normal appropriations process, which is not easy. and then after that is done, that we tackle this supplemental. i think
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he's been very deliberate to try to move forward on both ukraine, but also israel, which is very important. i don't think he's trying to kill it. i think he understands the need to get support for israel, for ukraine, for taiwan. >> what is the level of support? being from the leadership on this effort right now >> whether you would think do you how confident you that this could come to get something done? >> but johnson's facing blunt warnings from his right flank, including many who don't want to spend a dime more to help ukraine in its war against russia >> the speaker endorses the fitzpatrick plan. >> i should do that. i don't think you will. but i know that there's obviously an interest to try to move forward on some of that, and the defense i'm going to be blunt, but if that's hox usually get their way, that's just the way this town works. >> now this package is being drafted in the house is different than what came out of the senate in part of it includes less money for ukraine, israel, and taiwan,
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about 660 billion $66 billion worth. it does not include humanitarian assistance that's a big red line for democrats also has some border policies, including them so-called remain in mexico policy. lauren you're covering the hill every day with me. you're talking to all these members reporting this out. >> this is still >> going to be incredibly complicated. get anything done because of johnson's decision to essentially scuttle the senate's bill, even if they get a bipartisan bill here in the house, getting it approved into the presidency desk in a timely fashion is a high hurdle to say the leak. >> absolutely. let's pretend for a minute that speaker johnson does put some compromise bill on the floor where are the votes coming from? your story gets at this reality, you're going to lose some folks on the left if they can't get through the rules committee, you have a problem of perhaps needing a two-thirds majority for this path package. >> i >> understand that there is probably a large number of republicans who may support it if it's drafted in this way, if it's put on the floor, but you're losing democrats. and i
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do wonder where those numbers actually shake out. if you have a bill that comes to the floor that has remained in mexico, still in inside of it. i think that that makes it oh difficult for them to even get this out of the house. and then that's before you get to the next step of whether or not the senate is going to take that up. i just think that there's so many hurdles for this. and when johnson made the decision to scuttle the senate package, i just don't know if there's really any going back at this yeah. >> look, there's an effort underway to try to circumvent johnson altogether, force a vote on the house floor. rarely succeeds, is known on capitol hill is a discharge petition that effort will begin this week, but even efforts organizers of that? no, that's such a long shot thing. to successfully accomplish. but they're talking about that because of the opposition on the right flank, there are people who are dead set against any more money for ukraine. and frankly, some of them are warning that it could cause mike johnson his job so i think it's pretty foolish to bring
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up funding bill to the floor on something that the american people just don't support. and our job title is representative. our job title is not fund the cija's war against you craig that's that's not what were elected to do. >> crane divides the republican conference. so if it doesn't have republican majority support, it should not be brought if it's not paid for it should not be brought and it shouldn't be combined with something else like israel, which has overwhelming support, republican conference, including from myself to try to sort of hijack one concern for the other it's a johnson would have to roll these hardliners in order to get ukraine to the president's desk. and that leaves a lot of people concerned that it may never get to the president's desk. >> yeah. there are a lot of people very concerned and what stunning though is that we all know that if this bill, the senate deal that has ukraine aid, that has the border deal that happen as aid for humanitarian aid. and it would get more votes on the house floor than the one that fitzpatrick is talking about,
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then the other deal that the house may be considering because there are a lot of republicans that would vote for the senate bill. there are a lot of democrats that would vote for the senate bill in the house and so the reason that johnson isn't bringing it up is because of those hard-line republicans, which are basically controlling him the way they control kevin mccarthy and essentially saying if you bring this to the floor, then they may very well challenge again. all is he's trying to make sure the government doesn't shut down. >> and mitch mcconnell frankly warned, pass the senate bill. he said because if you change anything in in the senate bill, then it gets a back-and-forth to mean both chambers delayed things even further. russia could make gains in ukraine. now, there's also more numbers out this morning about how the american public views the issue of ukraine the question from a fox poll well, should us continue to provide financial aid? ukraine 56% mean that is a clear majority when you break down party affiliation, 76% of those democrats support just 40% of republicans and about 47% >> not surprising at all.
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>> i have been watching a >> lot of campaign ads because super tuesday also has a lot of concrete rational primaries. and if you've watched the republican primary ads, every single one of them mentions the border. i mean, every single one. and that is where the energy is right now, there are a couple of races where supporting ukraine is actually seen as a negative going after an opponent, for example, who supports more aid for ukrainian in republican primary, it is not something that is supportive. one is supported by the republican primary base. one thing i am curious about that if he brings into the floor, it also puts doesn't have put democrats and sort of a tough spot to have to vote against some of these issues, especially on the border. >> yeah. who are in swing districts? yeah. >> look that is why that it's what is the path as lauren was saying, there's no path necessarily to it passing, but it's terms of a political vehicle. it certainly could, you could argue that his
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republicans a chance to say, well, we put something on the floor and democrats voted against it. we aren't the ones that are being problematic. >> the politics are so complicated and this all comes as there's just so much frustration still within the house gop, anger within the ranks, so much of it has to do with the aftermath of the ouster of kevin mccarthy. we've seen them lords from possible government shutdown, a possible government shutdown, they kick the can down the road for another couple of weeks and then another couple of weeks and the deadlines to keep the government open. there's another deadline coming up on this friday. and as you can imagine, there are a lot of republicans and say, what are we doing with the majority that we have? >> i just >> your time and the majority here we are fighting each other over x, y, or z. you think china's doing that, you think russia is doing that, you think ron's doing that. and so we need to get back to put an above everything else. what about us? what about our schools, our bridges, our taxpayer dollars? what about us? it's time for the squabbling. what about us? >> and the frustration is not
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just in the house, in the senate too. >> this hundred and 18 combs, i'm ashamed to end my career. and the absolute worst performing congress in the history of united states of america when we came off 117, which will go down as one of the most productive congresses. >> lot of angry people. >> there's a lot of frustration right now on the haeil people know how much time they are spending, commuting back and forth, trying to make this work in their lives and they're kind of wondering like, what is the reason for all of this that's probably why you're seeing such a number. hi, number of republican retirements. yeah. >> yeah. let's say republican and democratic retirements. all right. up next the race to replace mitch mcconnell taking shape behind the scenes. what senator john cornyn told me about his bid for geo there'll be leader in this conversation with donald trump >> tonight. >> van jones. it's home find out what is driving the divide in tennessee politics.
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to deal dash.com right now and see how much you can save. >> i'm evan perez in washington and this is cnn mitch mcconnell may have stunned his colleagues with the timing of his announcement that he will not run again for gop leader >> a position he's held for nearly two decades and longer than any senate leader in history. but gop sources told me that the 82 year-old told members he had decided at the beginning of this congress that this would be his last term as leader, while mcconnell's private comments suggest his decision to step aside have little to do with his icy relationship with donald trump, the former president is already playing a role in the race to replace him. this week, i caught up with one of the senators already throwing his hat in the ring. senator john cornyn i am going to be talking to my republican colleagues. i've already been touch base with them on the phone and now
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be having meetings, but i expect to to be rather an extended process. >> and are you a total break from mitch mcconnell >> i am not mitch mcconnell. >> so i'm >> my my own person and i have my ideas about what we can do to get the senate working against the centered completely broken i think that's a source of frustration for a lot of people, including me. >> we don't maybe concerned about the bipartisan deals you cut and what do you say to them about that, about guns and chips and science? >> last time i checked that's my job. >> and you said you told reporters when you want in these spoke to trump. why did you feel it was necessary to reach out to him before he made the announcement? >> i've talked to the former president couple of times, just to let him know. first, after i endorsed him after the new hampshire primary but then to let him know of my intention to run. if he appreciated the call. i told him that i thought we worked very well together.
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for the four years he was president when i was the whip and did a lot of good things and i look forward to working with him again, is this thing we're going to be on the scale on this >> like i said, this is a race among republican senator indeed a race between republican senators, lauren, as you know, these are the likely potential candidates who may run, >> expect the birzeit center jumper asos or john thune to join corn. and we'll see about steve daines, rick scott, and others jump in the race. but how do you see this race plane? >> yeah, i think the trump factor is something to keep an eye on, but i think in cornyn's case, he's trying to manage the relationship he wants to not surprise the former president. he wants to make it clear that they can work together because that's important for getting some conservative votes in the senate in this election. but we should just remind people back home. this is a closed door vote this is a secret ballot. so donald trump cannot just vote count like he could watching the senate floor play out on a regular vote. he can't go after people on twitter because he may not
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know. ultimately how someone is actually vote and he could do it, but he could do it before you get deck oman social media. but if >> you vote, if you say i'm voting for cornyn and then you turn around and vote for thune. >> yeah >> no, no, no, no, no. it's a beauty of a secret ballot election. but still these members are talking of their traumatized john thune, the number two republican who's running, expected to run in the race, told our colleague, ted barrett, i worked closely with him, referring to trump. he said we got a record of accomplishment of getting things done for the american people. i've now talked about the race with them. now, doing in trump, i've had been a rocky relationship. that's a whole nother segment of but well, this morning, one of his supporters, senator markwayne mullin, was on cnn, state of the union talking about how trump should stay out of it. >> my advice to present trump, which present trump's his own man. he's going to make it as decision and he does a good job in that. is kind of stay out of the race because it's a lose-lose situation. he needs to work for with whatever
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leaders there. and let me tell you whatever leaders there understands that they're going to have to work with president trump to before you jump in, i want to give just dive a little bit deeper into the voting records of these three >> main three contenders here, john barrasso, john cornyn, and john third, it's interesting too, about how were they come down on some of the key issues. there's a gun safety bill that john cornyn was involved with barrasso but at node through inversion, no, the foreign aid package which we discussed in the last segment, brasil, the one of the three who voted no, brass also voted against the debt ceiling law that was approved last year. >> there's a bit >> of a difference between the three. how do you see this playing out? >> well, john barrasso, clearly based on that voting record, is the one that's most in line with trump for the one that seems to follow trump whenever trump says that he opposes one of these bills, bipartisan bills that comes to the floor. >> i >> think that they're all trying to maintain this relationship with trump because trump still controls the party. and if we've learned anything over the year or so, especially as the house republican
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majority has tried to navigate their majority is that they all follow whatever trump says and it ends up making them twist in the win. i mean, one thing that i think is stunning about this race is that to replace mcconnell is that a lot of those at least a few of those ones that are in contention voted for ukraine aid. and a lot of these republicans support ukraine aid. and it just shows how far the party has gone when the fact that they can't even get that passed and it's one of mitch mcconnell's biggest legacy items. he can't convince his party to support it and he says it's because donald trump has turned the basic is just about how much the party has changed at conferences, genes, the issues have changed really for the first time ever as leader has mcconnell's seen this outspoken faction of people publicly criticizing colony going up to go that natiq and then not happen in really until this year. i accomplish several of those members who had voted for another candidate or wanted
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him out in this what they said they wanted the new leader. >> how >> much do you want to see a break from mitch mcconnell? >> total break. >> they need to show a commitment to a certain mission statement, to certain goals, and to a different governing model for the conference. >> it's about a personality it's about how do we want to be managed different people are going to have different ideas of how we are demanding >> so this is all really speaks as i was saying, the change within the gop more trump aligned members, just a sense. look at your screen here about the changing makeup of the center so much different in their personality, their demeanor, how they cut deals on like from bob corker, marsha blackburn, lamar alexander, bill hagerty, rob portman to jd vance, who's so close to donald trump. the list goes on and with roy blunt and richard burja, please literally wrote the same names >> yeah, exactly. it's it really speaks so what's happening on the different gop and how different it could look. look, if if donald trump
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wins in november, the senate is going to be republican because if we take west virginia where manchin is retiring, that's almost a certain republican pickup. that means the senate's 50-50, no matter what else happens. so what does it look like with trump and a 50-50 senate trump in a bigger if democrats have been worse night, republicans have a better night versus what if biden wins. and it's a republican senate. do they want different leaders for these different moments of 50, 50, a 53 senate or a biden presidency that's a, that's a big question mark in my mind >> such a you in such an interesting dynamic shift and will the senate gbb, like more like the house gop, depending on the kind of members that come in, we'll see such an a turning of the tide if you will, coming up new warning signs for biden. but first, snl hats some fun last night with inside politics
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>> good afternoon and i, dana bash and welcome to inside politics >> mr. president >> hi, hold on. i was going to turn off the wrong. >> she got to >> find a button. >> there we go. >> wow >> it looks like he hung up >> his weekdays. that's seven kate missing out on before you were presenting migraine with q. liptak, you remember the pain? so pre the canceled plans and lucky me now, you'll never truly forget migrate the q live to reduces attacks, making zero migraine days possible if the only pill of its kind, the block cgrp and is approved to prevent migraine of any frequency to help give you that forget you get migraine feeling, don't take if allergic to q liptak most common side effects are nausea, constipation, sleepiness. learn
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store in knighted states of scandal with jake tapper tonight at nine on cnn >> president biden is at camp david this morning preparing for his date of the union address, which you deliver just four days from now. now, we got to clear sign at one of his greatest reelection challenge is just this past week in michigan where more than 100,000 people cast a protest vote, in large part because of his handling of the israel hamas war. and has shifted his tone in recent days, sending planes to airdrop aid into gaza just yesterday, and expressing support for quote, an immediate ceasefire but some muslim members of congress want him to do more >> community has spoken chills that the community has leveraged. >> i am incredibly, incredibly scared of a second term of turret trump. and i think it's really important to emphasize this right now. our democracy is at stake. i'm asking the president and i think many of us are saying, you know, change
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course, you vote in november. >> thank you very much. y'all. thank you >> not answer. gift should vote for trump in november, rashida tlaib, this is just more numbers this morning from the fox news, paul, but how democratic voters view this conflict there's more who side among democrats with the palestinians over the israelis more have shifted towards the palestinians, i should say since october when the attack a car, 25% of the time were more sympathetic to the palestinians concern among democratic voters, 42%, a big jump. and then among just the ways they view his handling of the war, all registered voters, 65% approve of his handling the war inside the white house. how do you address this? and the state of the union >> again, the president and his campaign have repeatedly, well, the president aides inside the white house and his campaign keeps saying that they think that once voters face him and donald trump, that he's, they still think that these young voters are going to come home despite the fact that michigan is a warning sign, despite the fact that there's a lot of
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young voters that i've talked to you. there's young voters that talked to pollsters across the board that are really upset and disillusion in addition to muslim and arab voters and you hear them saying that they just don't know if they can in vote for president biden at this point. how he closes that gap. a lot of them say that they aren't going to come home unless he starts shifting his policy on israel and gaza and so he right now, we don't know how far he's going to go in the state of the state of the union address, but it's certainly a space for him to actually reach them and speak speak to them in some >> democrats, including some from michigan, say that the president should be more forceful with and then you who president i think could be more should be more forceful with mr. netanyahu. >> i'm deeply concerned about this election and about holding together a coalition because there are a lot of issues that need to be addressed to make sure that we're unified and we you can take nothing for granted, no matter how
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accomplished you are if they don't like either not going to vote for you. and if you lost trust with someone, you better go back and earn so when he speaks to the, nation, does he speak to his base dizzy, try to go to the middle does he address these concerns? >> i mean, it seems like again, just putting the polls in there, everything we've just talked about, his problem right now is with the middles, with swing voters. and that is his biggest concern going into the general election. but i think where donald trump has really moved the bar on terms of expectations of presidents, is that what i hear from younger voters? a lot is he should be doing more at least donald trump i don't agree with what he did, but he delivered stuff for his people. he told people how it was or he would take on these x. so people that i think what the frustration is exactly that, that even though we know that whatever biden says in the state of the union address or
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whatever he says to netanyahu, isn't going to change the course of this war. it is going to send a signal that he takes this seriously. so there's a difference between actually being able to move policy and being able to tell voters across the board where you're sort of focus and what your interest is, even if it doesn't turn into something somebody that progressives that you talked to one him to be well, i'd spoken about what's happening in the middle east and they think that he waited way too long because he really, his rhetoric has shifted dramatically over the course of the last month and-a-half. but he waited too long is the argument that you hear from them and some of them want him to take action. i mean, one of the areas that senators were working on for a long time was trying kind of some guardrails around how israel could use funding that the us was going to send to them. the administration ended up doing some things around the fringes, but i think they did it because there was pressure coming from
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the hill and they would rather do it themselves, then have congress actually implement a new law forcing their hand so i think that that's the issue for a lot of progressives, even if he does something now, hasn't been too long. yeah. >> that's the question. hasn't been too long. will voters be the differently in all of this when it comes time to vote, we shall see. all right. coming up. i caught up with the republican at the center of the border deal that trump killed the surprising feedback he says, he's hearing from his constituents via headline the launch vegas. that's what i want to do >> it's unlike anywhere else in the world. >> vegas, the story of sin city to 9810 on cnn for nearly a decade, i served in the navy supporting seal teams. today, i run sabo outdoors with fellow special operations veterans. our mobile app connects customers with hunting fishing,
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and other outdoor experiences. american technology has been essential to our growth but some in washington want to stifle that small businesses like ours, dependent this misguided agenda will empower foreign adversaries, threaten national security, and destroy jobs. are leaders need to strengthen, not weaken american technology what does he know >> she didn't need me to share with them. so throwing did they the why? you >> don't. even mean so we've got all. that the interpretation johnnie cochran you to bernie, given them. what do i you more than a captain is how do hands to another she multiple it's got their mothers noise toe, not as nitric feel my staff amelina say, okay what
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this election is about who shares your values. let me share mine. i'm the only candidate with a record of taking on maga republicans, and winning. when they overturned roe, i secured abortion rights in our state constitution. when trump attacked our lgbtq and asian neighbors, i strengthened our hate crime laws. i fought for all of us struggling to keep up with the rising cost of living. i'm evan low, and i approve this message for all of our shared values. so if you've got a special photo on your phone install the free keepsake app. we would love a chance to frame it for you >> the whole story with anderson cooper tonight, it eight on cnn >> closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com our firm
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has offered a free book about mesothelioma for over ten years mesothelioma is really all we do. >> 80087 to 4901 when president biden visited the southern border this past week, he called on the former president, was making a dueling stop up the river to join him >> and supporting the senate's bipartisan border security deal. now, you'll recall that trump played a pivotal role in killing that bill before it was even released, he labeled it a quote, death wish for the republican party now we ended up stalling in the senate after republicans said it would be dead on arrival in the house. so it's been a rough few weeks to say the least for the republican senator who spent nearly five months negotiating that deal with democrats, senator james lankford. lankford of oklahoma. at the time, trump's at the bill would be quote, very bad ed, for lankford's career. now i caught up with a senator or a few days ago to talk about the fallout >> so much time, months and months and months. >> and then within hours, this was dead. i mean, how did you
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feel that moment? >> yeah, i'm not sure it was within hours. within minutes actually, for people to be able to say, i want some mean different, great should why there's more than i wanted. but i'm just not willing to sit back and do nothing giving trump tried to kill this just a campaign on it. >> you'd have to ask him on that when clearly there were folks and saying, hey, we should resolve this during an election year, we should resolve it with the election. to me that since the wrong signal, you resolve it when you have a chance to resolve it because we've got other hard problems behind it. >> and despite all the criticism from within his own party lankford says he heard something very different back home in oklahoma was interesting for me, was last week being in the state as i traveled all over the state on it, i was overwhelmed when i was at a gas station or grocery store when just after a restaurant with my wife. however, folks would just come up to me in just be very encouraging, quite frankly, understand some people are still mad and they want everything. i get it, i want everything as well. but i'm not willing to sit back and do nothing. >> and yes, congress is still stalled on any legislative
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action on the border, right? that's it for inside politics sunday, you can follow me on x, formerly known as twitter at mk raju could follow the show at inside politics of course, if you ever, ms an episode, you can catch it wherever you get your podcasts, just search for inside politics up next state of the union with jake tapper and dana bash. dana as guests include homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas, and center as dick durbin and markwayne mullin. thanks again for sharing your sunday morning with us. we'll see you next time >> elliott spitzer crusading governor by day, wanted to be present in the united states. client number nine by night's this guy who is a crusader against human sex trafficking king is actually a customer, united states of scandal with jake tapper. new episode tonight at nine on cnn. >> i was stuck unresolved depression symptoms were in my way. i needed more from my antidepressant very large helped give it a lift adding
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