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tv   Inside Politics With Dana Bash  CNN  April 17, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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does not represent all of usc but she's the valedictorian and there are other vowels usually usually speak at these commencements appearances, but again, if you violate the values of the institution, you have to face the consequences. she's entitled to her views. she's not entitled to a stage let her give her speech, standing on a soapbox on the corner of the street. that's where she can exercise her her rights to free expression. jonathan greenblatt are the adl. thanks very much for joining us, easley, a sensitive subject indeed. and to our viewers. thanks very much for joining me here in the cnn newsroom. i'm wolf blitzer. i'll be back later tonight's 6:00 p.m. eastern. in the situation room stay with us inside politics with dana bash starts right now today on
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inside politics, history on the hill for the first time, nearly 150 years at cabinet member will be tried in the senate for high crimes. >> and mr. demeanors, we're minutes away from the start of homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas, impeachment trial, which could be over soon after it starts, since the real gop target is the president's board, border policies plus a salesman, a teacher, and a nurse walk into a courtroom we have new details on the seven people pick so far to be durer's in the matter of the people of the state of new york versus donald j. trump. >> and israel makes it own decisions. that's prime minister benjamin netanyahu's message to the world and his own political coalition. >> as we wait for his war cabinet to decide how to respond to iran massive aerial assault what i've. >> in tel aviv this our dana bash, let's go behind the headlines and inside politics
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you're looking at live pictures of the senate floor where senators will soon be sworn in as jurors to hear the impeachment case against president biden's homeland security secretary. >> now after that, we don't quite know how this is going to play out. >> democrats may call for a quick vote to dismiss the charges, even as republicans demand a full trial, conviction and removal requires 67 votes. so there's pretty much no question here about the eventual outcome cnn's manu raju is on capitol hill motto, you've been talking to senators. what's your sense of how this is going to play? hi out you know, it, it could end quickly as you mentioned, there has been negotiations that have been happening for several days among the republican and democratic leadership to try to have some structure on the senate floor. >> remember the senate operates on a principle known as unanimous consent. that means all 100 senators have to agree to how a debate could happen. that includes during an
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impeachment trial. but there is no agreement yet and how this could play out. republicans, democrats had proposed, and republicans have came back with potentially having a couple of votes to try to call for a full-blown trial. those those votes would have gone down along party lines. we'll see that eventually happens. and then ultimately, there'll be a move to dismiss the charges altogether. but there hasn't been an agreement on that, even though the eventual outcome is certain, alejandro mayorkas will be essentially acquitted here in the united states senate. and there'll be just these charges will be dismissed by this democratic lead majority. but since there's no agreement, dana april could be that they open up the floor and they can quickly moved to end the proceedings almost italy, we'll see if that happens is a little uncertain at this moment. now, the question two how will this play out on the campaign trail there are number of vulnerable democratic senators who will vote most likely to vote to dismiss the charges altogether and republicans say they're going to make them pay for this at the poles maybe a rare moment of accountability and that's i
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think maybe an opportunity here. i don't think there'll be able to work run and hide from there complicity in aiding and abetting the biden border crisis. >> it's a partisan exercise. and i think it's a waste of people's time, but we have to go through it and kasie is not bob casey there. you just heard from it's not the only vulnerable democrat who will cast is key vote others to watch going senator jon tester of montana, he had indicated previously that you vote to dismiss this and they suggest that he would look at this a little further. we'll see how he ultimately votes sherrod brown of ohio. another one to watch jacky rosen of bad among those democrats, but expect most of them, if not all of them voted dismiss, will they pick up any republicans who oppose this as well? what another senator to watch on the republicans sayyed senator lisa murkowski of alaska, who is blasted these proceedings suggest that this is there's no reason to charge 100 americans with high crimes misdemeanor
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over a essentially a policy disputes. so that's going to be the debate. but then the outcome we know hundred america's will be acquitted here. a matter of minutes okay. my honor. thank you so much. and the politics are very interesting at despite the outcome that we know, i wanted to talk more about that with pbs newshour is laura varone susan glasser of the new yorker, and our very own kristen holmes. thank you so much, everybody. i want to just kinda pick. up where. manu left off, which is the notion of of why this is happening. and what it really means this is happening because republicans are trying to find every avenue that they can to highlight and politicize the very real border problems. but put it on joe biden's play and this is a way that they have done it in the house by actually impeaching the homeland security secretary. but now that the
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question is, how the trial will happen, how quickly it will happen? is whether or not they can use it against these vulnerable democrats in the senate you know, dana, i mean, donald trump sees immigration as the reason he won the white house in 2016. it is at the core of what he's trying to say. he has. in fact used the house controlled very tenuously by republicans as almost an extension and an arm of his campaign. so i would see this in the context of the 2024 presidential campaign, but there's a reason that this has only happened once before in our history that a cabinet secretary has been impeached and hasn't been tried since then it's going and it come and go very quickly and up until the sort of transformation of impeachment into a really partisan tool in the last few years, there was a sense that both parties, both parties have an incentive not to an effect criminalize their
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arguments over policy by putting cabinet secretaries like this in the hot seat. i think it's going to come and go so quickly. it will be seen ultimately as a not very successful political gambit by the house republican. >> and it is political. i mean, that is sort of objectives, true. and even listening to republican senator talking about the way that they are going to use this knowing that it ultimately either will be dismissed quickly or eventually will be he will be acquitted. listen to some of those republican senators if they take a weaselly way out of this, if they betray our constitutional obligation to the senate, i think we have an obligation on are sayyed to make clear that that's not okay. >> i think all of us should stand up and say if we're not going to get trial, then everything's on the table. by the way, he may regret this lot sooner than he thinks he i believe he was talking about chuck schumer i agree.
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>> i mean, look, i think there's a couple things we don't hear. one is just to reiterate what his donald trump not only believes that immigration helped propel the white house in 2016, he also thinks is going to bring him back to the white house in 2024. and they want to double down on all this and republicans are following suit, not just because it's donald trump, but because they see the poll numbers coming out, that immigration as a top issue right now for voters and the people that you just heard from the senators that you just heard from, those are not necessarily moderate senators who were coming up to the microphone to talk about this. but i do think that overall this is a way for republicans they're viewing this as a way to highlight the border crisis, a way to put that forward. maybe people don't actually care about the impeachment of mayorkas. maybe people aren't really even paying attention to what is going on in the senate right now, what they are paying attention to is what's happening at the border. >> let's look at one of the examples that minute gave about one of the most vulnerable incumbent democratic senators. it's jon tester of montana. this is the kind of thing he's
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facing from his opponents at home. >> hi elder surging the border after test your voted to let president biden stop building trump's wall and fully repeatedly to fund sanctuary cities like new york, tell senator tester stop supporting biden's border disaster. >> yeah, immigration is certainly going to be something that republicans go after vulnerable senate democrats on like that. you'll notice they weren't talking about mayorkas impeachment in that ad. and i think that the white house right now is feeling pretty confident. they feel like the american public isn't really really paying attention to this impeachment proceeding. and they also look towards that new york special election the democrats won that tom suozzi won back that see where he used immigration and talked about immigration saying that republicans want willing to vote for a border deal killed the bipartisan border deal, and that democrats are willing to sign on to one of the most conservative immigration bills in decades. and that republicans are ultimately the ones that tanked it. so you may
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very well see some candidates like tester and other vulnerable democrats tried to use that argument. >> immigration has for months and months and months played into what the house speaker was grappling with how he would deal with funding for ukraine and israel ukraine now, it looks like he is going to move several bills that will finally give, let's just really focus on ukraine right now ukraine, the money that it says a desperately needs in order to to stay in the game and to fight back against, against russia what is your sense of just the pulp we're going to get to the policy in a bit. >> but the politics of this for mike johnson. >> yeah. well, i mean, it might be the thing that ends is very short tenure as speaker right now, i think that's not likely, but he is under threat not only from marjorie taylor greene, but remember that it takes only one or two republicans at this point to
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potentially take down the speaker, the fragility the narrowness of this house. majority of courses. one thing that's been powering the dysfunction that's how they took out already one republican speaker, kevin mccarthy. it took weeks for them to settle on this obscure, almost unknown candidate, mike johnson. i think there's a lot of incentive in both the republican and the democratic caucus is right now, none to have another costly internal fight, but i think it's important, dana, that you started this conversation about ukraine by talking about the border because republicans had this kind of extraordinary strategy. they've delayed a vote on this for essentially nearly six months now, in this period of time, ukrainians have run out of crucial ammunition and they've run out of air defense supplies at a time when russia is launching incredible barrages against the civilian population and energy infrastructure of ukraine and all. because mike johnson essentially couldn't assemble
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a governing majority in his own house. so his bluff is being called right now. remember, senate republicans bluff was called. they said we want a border deal in order to move ukraine. it didn't happen. he is saying the speaker is saying that along with the other measures for all of this international funding, he will do a version and of the original border, but we'll see what it looks like. >> we don't know yet. >> but as that's happening, are great team on capitol hill. >> they are reporting effectively that the sharks are circling and that there are other republicans, tom emmer, for example, who is trying to see if maybe this time, if my johnson is ousted, he can get the gavel what do you think the chances are that mike johnson survives i think that if this motion to vacate is ultimately raised and i know that there are a handful of republicans now saying that they're going to bring it forward, that it would be very difficult for him to survive without the help of democrats so and then
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ultimately, does he actually want the help of democrats because for so long, others before him have said that they wouldn't want democrats to help them effectively feeling as though it would make them a week or speaker within their party so he may ultimately decide that it's better to go down rather than have democratic help. >> and then again, at that point, who typically gets the votes to become speaker? >> it's hard to imagine being democratic support or not. it's hard to imagine having a weaker hand then he does now, just because slim majority, everybody standby, seven down, 11 to go. jury selection is moving rapidly in the criminal case against donald trump what do we know about the jurors so far? that's next there's new ally in the fight against climate change. >> this is blue car business, blue carbon week me to protect nature will do the rest plus cnn filled sunday at nine
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itchy eyes up to 50% of people with graves could develop a different condition called thyroid eye disease, which should be treated by a different doctor see an expert, find a ted is specialist at is-it ted i'm natasha bertrand at the pentagon and this is cnn we could be just a few days away from opening statements in the new york criminal trial of donald trump, jury selection is moving at a brisk pace with seven seated already. >> they need 11 more, which includes six alternate. >> here's what we know. >> der number one will be the foreman. >> he's originally from ireland, works in sales, has some college education and is married with no children. during juror number two is an oncology nurse and native new yorker. she lives with her fiance and says, she reads the new york times and watch a scene then juror number three is a corporate lawyer originally from oregon. he says
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he gets his news from the new york times wall street journal, and google juror number four is puerto rican and runs and it business for training and consulting. he told the court he finds trump quote fascinating juror number five is an african english teacher who says she wasn't aware trump is facing charges in other criminal cases. juror number six is a recent college grad cheese working as a software engineer at a large broadcast company juror number seven is a lawyer who's married with two kids and lives on the upper east side in manhattan cnn legal analysts, pericardial arrow joins me now, carrie, thanks so much for being here. what's your sense of the jury makeup? so far? >> well, it's a cross-section of new yorkers, a variety of backgrounds, a variety of professional affiliations, family situations and so that represents the jury system that
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represents new york and really, the court has i think in this early part of the week, moved pretty hey expeditiously in this process to get the jury seated no doubt, obviously, this is very high-profile. >> the individual jurors, we obviously don't know they're their names or anything more of what we did fact that we have a sense of who they are means that there will be a lot of attention i chen on them eventually. now, again, anonymously, but eventually, how will that play into how this is going to go down? do you think, well, hopefully the identities of these juries will remain confidential and that's so important for their impartiality, for their security, for their ability to serve out the course of this trial, which will go on for several weeks. we expect. so we have this sort of background information about them. i do think one of the challenges
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that the lawyers on both sides will be facing in selecting the remaining jurors and in going into selecting these already seated jurors, is that they want to make sure that everybody is being truthful, that nobody sneaks into the jury with views that they are not expressing the entire integrity of the system relies on truthfulness and so it just will be so important that the lawyers continue to try to delve into private views the individuals might have got that is such an important point. we do at a certain point just as americans have to take a leap of faith, that everybody agrees that the jury system in the justice system is so important thank you so much. appreciate that. carrie. thanks. >> so what does our trump think of his jury so far here he is last night at a campaign stop in harlem after the court day ended your mind is an ideal.
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>> anybody that's fair, do you believe that the jury you know, after after my panel is back. >> i mean, classic are they are they fair? i'll let you know after the trial and something tells me if he's convicted, the answer will be no. yeah. i think you could probably say there's 100% true i think donald trump was surprised yesterday during the actual jury selection that there were people who see to read his books or who said that they were fascinated by him, or actually said that they leaned republican because he has been so convinced privately and publicly that he was not going to be able to find anyone in new york city who liked him at all. >> but again, i think what carries point was, and this is something that i i have heard from sources both in the prosecution and defense both sides are really worried about the fact that because donald trump is so polarizing that there is potential for people to be dishonest because they want their support him in this
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trial, trying to possibly get a hung jury that's really the best outcome that the trump team thinks that they're going to get out of this case or on the other side, sneaking and because they don't like him and they want to convict him. and it is interesting to me in this particular case, how aware everybody is of the fact that just because donald trump is so polarizing it has become a concern on both sides. it really is. >> you were with him in new york, not just at the core house, but when he went to harlem for an impromptu campaign stop of sorts, i want you to listen to what he said i've, never thought i'd see it's time when i'm going through that was joe biden, obviously not donald trump. >> now we'll play donald trump. >> alvin bragg does nothing. he goes, you have to guys like trump did nothing wrong. violent criminals, murderers, they know they're there are a hundreds of murders all over the city they know who they are. they don't pick them up. they go after trump. this trial
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that i have now, that's a biden trump. they want to keep me off the campaign trail. but based show what i'm doing i think there's no press here then there is. if i went a nice location, okay. >> we'll make a little truth open face sandwich here it's not a biden trial obviously. and new york city murders are down 24% this year, right? >> but this is a really good preview of what donald trump is going to spend the next several weeks. do i mean? because it clear political stuff, this wasn't just a bodega in harlem. this was the bodega in harlem is that center of an alvin bragg controversy in 2022, when bragg's office decided to charge the clerk there, who ended up killing a man who had jumped behind the counter and assaulted him. this lead to enormous backlash throughout the state of new york, throughout the city against bragg for bringing these charges. this was a very calculated move and this is really what we're going to see from donald trump. he can come out here and you can say over and over again that the trial is unfair, that these are the biden trials and we can continue to say it's obviously not true. this is a trial
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brought in new york state by district attorney in new york. we can fact check it but he's going to continue to try to utilize the public and these trials in order to get attention, i want to switch gears to president biden, who is on the campaign trail. he is in pennsylvania, saw a little bit of it. i want to if we can't go back to some of what he said in scranton i've never thought i'd see this time when i'm going through a neighborhood or rural town in the west sea, big science that's have a trump sign the middle of says f biden and having a little kid standing with his middle finger seven years old, eight years old i promise it happens all the time it's not who we are yeah. i think we saw in the swing that the president is making this week through pennsylvania that he's really just trying to draw as many contrast as possible, whether it's they're
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saying that he's trying to appeal the better angels to try to appeal to civility, to decency. that's something that he talks a lot about on the campaign trail. and that former president trump does the opposite, where he encourages violence in some cases normalizes talking in very degrading terms about anyone that he opposes to the point where sometimes that can result in death threats against those people. but can you also saw on these campaign stops that he's really trying to create this image of scranton, pennsylvania versus mar-a-lago. and that actually it's donald trump, that is the elitist and is the person that is out of touch with america. and that president biden comes from a town like scranton that is much more in touch with every day working people's needs and desires. >> and on that note, he's also today going to talk some populist themes a lot. donald trump talking about tariffs. and before we go, i just want you and our viewers to see a
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brand new ad from the biden campaign and the name of the ad is sharp loved to tell the story about meeting president biden, because when you meet him, this guys is sharp was a month. they have nothing else to attack because they can attack the things that he's doing better, so good for this country. joe biden gets things done. that's just who he is. >> i mean, that says it all again, that is from the biden campaign and the name of the ad is sharp. we're gonna have to leave this part of the discussion where it is. thank you so much. you stick around susan israel is weighing a response to iran's weekend attack, the us plans brand new sanctions against tehran. we're gonna go five to tel aviv after a quick break i wanted 24
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necessary to defend itself cnn's jeremy diamond is live in tel aviv. jeremy, good to see you. the way i saw and read and interpreted those comments was that they were more directed for domestic political consumption in israel. maybe then people abroad. >> what are you hearing from your sources? there yeah, no doubt about it, dana, that is kind of netanyahu's bread and butter, that signature defiance that he employs at moments where he is coming under enormous pressure both internationally as well as domestically. >> and this is certainly in part at least intended for for a domestic political audience, for the right wing of his governing coalition, who has been putting enormous pressure on him to carry out a very significant retaliatory strike against iran for that unprecedented attack that iran carried out over the weekend it is also of course a message to allies to a certain extent that he would phil ultimately make his own decisions. but at the
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same time, netanyahu is mindful of the fact that the united states, that so many of these other countries in the region assisted israel in this aerial defense effort over the weekend. that succeeded in taking out 99% of those drones and missiles that were fired against israel. and so it's certainly is part of the calculus for the israeli prime minister, despite the bluster that he is talking about here, about israel making his own, its own decisions. there's certainly part of the calculus and part of the discussions in the war cabinet over the course of the last week has centered around how much does israel need to take the united states and other allies concerns into account? and there's no question that israel has been coming under significant pressure from the united states and those other countries, including the united kingdom and germany, whose foreign ministers are in israel today to get if they do carry out a retaliatory strike to ensure that it is measured and to ensure that it does not lead to an all-out war between iran and israel, something that would be very de-stabilizing, of course, for the entire region. >> so you mentioned the prime
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minister's cabinet and his political allies. what about the people on the ground? his constituents broadly and israel, what's the sentiment there? >> well, it ties into what we're hearing from the united states too. i mean, president biden's message to netanyahu has been look, take the win and there is certainly a feeling of a win here in israel in terms of that successful aerial defense effort. and because of the success of that, and how much the united states role really has been touted in israeli media over the course of the last several days. the latest poll which was conducted over the last couple of days by hebrew university, finds that 74% of those polled believe that a retaliatory strike against iran should not take place if it undermines israel security alliances with its allies, 20 6% were in favor of an attack, even if it were to damage ties with allies. so it's less about whether or not israel should respond, but how that response should be framed
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within the context of those concerns by allies. and certainly in terms of the concerns being voiced by the united states okay, jeremy, thank you so much for that reporting. susan glasser of the new yorker is still with me the other dynamic that we didn't even mentioned in my conversation with jeremy, of course, is that israel is still very much at war in gaza. how much is that playing into? what, it's dealing with as it grapples with how to respond. if to respond to iran. >> well, that's right. look, i think for israel, first of all, it's been a welcome respite for months and months of increasingly negative coverage, increasingly negative headlines and great concerns from it out. well, never mind, it's adversaries about the way in which israel is conducting the war in gaza. that scrutiny has temporarily ebbed as people have focused more on the question of this bruyne conflict with iran. one of the focuses of the vitamin striations diplomacy over the
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last few months, much of it not necessarily visible to us has been avoided feeding what they view as a really catastrophic outcome of a broader regional conflict around would be at the center of that. they've pointed out that it's really different to have around orchestrate strikes from its own territory. even then to operate through proxies like hamas and has belong, susan, we talked earlier in the program about ukraine and about the desperate sense of need for help from the us for months and months and months, perhaps. the house is on the cusp of passing some aid. you were talking in the break about the connection there from the view? inside ukraine. >> well, that's right. i mean, first of all, politically here in washington, i do think these strike by ran over the weekend. it increase the pressure on republicans to bring this national security bills. now, plural, to the floor, one will be on israel, one will be on ukraine for ukrainian, these conflicts are linked and i think that's something that
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doesn't always break through here in washington. first of all, for many ukrainians who are under daily assault by russian missile barrages of exactly the kind that these drones that were launched and ballistic missiles that were launched from iran. these are the same things that are russians are using to attack ukrainians every day and you don't have us fighter jets in the air. you don't have us air defense. and because of the republican delay on capitol hill for more than six months, really, the result has been ukraine running out of ammunition or air defense that they could use themselves really interesting. thank you so much. always good to see you soon. thank you. appreciate it. >> ahead. a new level of dysfunction, if you can believe that on capitol hill hardline republicans are threatening to take down another speaker if he doesn't bend to their will question at this point is, we'll democrats step in to save him. >> we're going to talk to a democratic congressman coming out live from the nation's
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very happy yeah, those are the members of the hard right. that members of the house freedom caucus i just caught up what number of them they are angry and some of them are suggesting that they could be opened to pushing out by johnson supporting the effort led by marjorie taylor greene to oust him from the speakership over these bills that have just been released. and the last matter of minutes to provide this key aide us allies. now, one of them center the congressman chip roy, now meeting with mike johnson, i asked him about whether he's ready to oust mike johnson from the job and he said he's got need some more time to think about it. let's that for hours last night and proposed different paths for the speaker that would have avoided the abject surrender represented by his his strategic choice. >> here. there's no other way to describe it. it's surrender, it's disappointing. i won't support it. >> it's disappointing it's completely detached from what our base once what what are motors want? this strategy is
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not to try. >> i think to strategy is to fall on a sword so when i asked a congressmen chip roy about whether or not it was time for him to oust mike johnson from the speakership. said that this he said he went right up to the line, dana and didn't go across there that line perhaps because he needs to talk with the speaker, which is happening right now. now the question is, will the numbers add up to oust him from the speakership because democrats, as you mentioned, could step in to save him because of what he's doing here on ukraine. so this is a different situation than the fall when myocardial was ousted from the speakership. but no doubt about it. mike johnson, opening up of revolt on the far right with his conference. but this move here yeah. >> yeah. i mean, we just saw right there what you played for us, minor. thanks so much always great to have you on joining me now, here in the studio is new jersey democratic congressman josh god homer, thank you for coming in. thank santa react to what you just
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heard from your fellow congress people across the aisle, abject, surrender you know how narrow the republicans the majority is. >> it's going to mean that democrats are going to have to help pass this support for israel, the support for ukraine and beyond do you think. it's going to happen? well, a lot of this is more of the same, right? this is the same group of people that no matter what happens, they throw bombs, right? the same foreign extremist. and that's why democrats, republicans group have had to work together consistently to actually legislate, right? to keep the government open, to prevent a debt ceiling problem over and over again. that's what we've been focused on in right now. we know that we have several crises going on in the world that we've got to deal with, right? and the easiest thing would be to take the bill that the senate sent us with 70 votes and put it on the floor and pass it. you've democrats, republicans coming together to make sure there's resources for ukraine for israel humanitarian aid, taiwan, you saw why at this time the speaker is not doing it, right? but he keeps trying all these other machinations and guess what? the bomb throwers keep throwing bombs no matter what he tries to give them, you're
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back in the same place, so we'll these bills i know we haven't seen them yet, but assuming we will soon actually pass this saturday, which is the current plan. well, so the first thing you got to see them, and if they're can i'll say this. if they are consistent and the language that the senate sent over was 70 votes democrats and republicans but the broken up in pieces of course, i could see that actually passing. you could see an overwhelming number of democrats or coming together to get it done. the thing i worry about between now and then is it's open to amendments. so what amendments well, some of the folks who just saw at tried to add to the bills, will they pass? because if you put a poison pill in, write the whole thing blows up and that's that's what we're all worried about. >> why do you listen to what some of your fellow democrats have said about the increasingly prospect that republicans will try to oust mike johnson from the speaker's chair i will vote to keep johnson as speaker. >> just do your job and put it on the floor. and let's get this thing done already.
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>> i think it's unlikely i would support vacating and have marjorie taylor greene, someone who wants to want states to secede from the union, brings up a motion to vacate. i will not support her doing that there are any circumstance democrats don't even let her renamed post offices. i'm not going to let her i don't make a motion to vacate will you join them? >> will you effectively sayyed with it looks like the majority of republicans and support mike johnson to stay in this baker share right now, i'm not making that commitment until i actually think it's putting the cart before the horse i got to see how this actually plays out. does it get done? does he do the right thing? part of my frustration now is we've waited two months. he's had the senate bill. >> he couldn't be helping ukraine. >> he could be helping getting matairie aid and help israel, which is critically important, especially after iran's attack this weekend or we know that ukraine is literally out, outgun five two, one. they don't have defensive measures are being depleted. >> so we have a huge crisis going on multiple fronts plus in taiwan, huge challenge from our number one, it's not giving him your support for friday i
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want to actually see something get done here. >> he could have brought this to the floor. will this proposal work that he's trying like if he did it the right way, i guarantee he would have a lot of people supporting them. the question is, will he get this done? and then you can ask me that question. >> okay. but you're obviously open to it. >> i want to see what happens i don't put the cart before the horse you yesterday were a cosponsor of a resolution that passed that condemned the chant from the river to the sea as blatantly anti-semitic. >> it passed overwhelmingly in the house of representatives. >> today, there are representatives from columbia university, other administrators on capitol hill, there being asked questions about what they view as anti-semitic. >> i'm way to listen to some of what's happening this calling for the genocide of jews violate colombia's code of conduct. >> mr. greenwald yes, it does
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ms shipman? >> yes, it does. dr. sheffield? >> yes, it does and professor scissor? yes. yes reaction well, that's obviously given that i have to offer that resolution, i thought that calling for the destruction of israel from the river to the sea and elimination of the jewish people is antisymmetric. i think there's never been a question about that. and yesterday, congress, overwhelmingly affirmed it, and now you see today the columbia university, all these representative in columbia also said this is a violation of our code of conduct and unacceptable. >> it's quite different from a few months ago when it was yes, when people are equivocating and unsure whether or not it was and i thought that was outrageous, then i'm glad they followed up today we are in a to enter a command commencement season. >> you saw what happened at the usc that the hello dick torreon was asked not to speak. they said it was security concerns. she did post allegedly some some statements on her social media page saying talking about
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the abolition of israel, just quickly, are you concerned? about these kinds of speeches that we're going to see over and over i'm not close and i haven't spoken to, so i put a colon to the university to find out more details and obviously to understand more about security issues because that's always my number one concern. volition. i think we're entering a time where we have to make it clear that calls for genocide and elimination of people, by the way. islamophobia putts antisemitism, which numbers have spiked off the chart, right in in my home state of new jersey, huge problem, like one of the largest problems in the country right now, we've got to make sure we come together again. we've got to tamp this down and we've got to focus on what, what brings us together, not on all this hatred congressman. thanks so much appreciate it we'll be right back dry skin is sensitive skin two, end its natural treated that way vino daily moisture with prebiotic is proven to moisturized dry skin all day. you'll love our formula for hey, it's to a
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