tv CNN Tonight With Don Lemon CNN March 12, 2018 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
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before you buy, at any west elm. or go to buyleesa.com and get $100 off. and free shipping too. that's all time we have. thanks for watching "360." time to hand it over to don lemon. "cnn tonight" starts right now. this is "cnn tonight." i'm don lemon. breaking news tonight on another busy day in washington. first up, major developments in the russia investigation. republicans on the house intelligence committee tonight handing the president exactly what he wanted, saying they found no evidence that the trump campaign colluded with russia. and that they're shutting down their investigation. the president reacting just the way you'd expect, tweeting in all caps, quote, the house intelligence committee has after a 14-month-long in-depth investigation found no evidence of collusion or coordination between the trump campaign and russia to influence the 2016 presidential election. again, in all caps. the president failing to note that it was the republicans on the committee who reached that conclusion, ignoring the
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intelligence community's assessment that putin was trying to help the trump campaign over hillary clinton. the intel community could not have been clearer. and this is a quote. russia's goals were to undermine public faith in the u.s. democratic process, denigrate secretary clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency. we further assess putin and the russian government developed a clear preference for president-elect trump. we have high confidence in these judgments. high confidence in these judgments. high confidence. that from the very people charged with protecting our democracy. and there's more. the office of the director of national intelligence putting out a statement tonight, standing by their assessment. so are republicans on the house intel committee more concerned with protecting the president than protecting our democracy? in a moment, i'm going to talk to a top democrat on that committee. and i'll get the former director of national intelligence to weigh in on all of this, as well. plus, we'll have the latest in
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the saga of the president and the porn star. president trump really seems to have met his match with stephanie clifford, aka, stormy daniels. cnn hearing that a source believes the situation is a bigger threat to trump's presidency than the russia investigation. but not only is stormy daniels not backing down, in a movie that could have come straight out of the trump playbook, she is doubling down. saying she'll give back $130,000 in hush money so she can talk about her alleged affair with donald trump. but she says she'll wire the money directly to an account designated by the president, not to his attorney, michael cohen, who says he paid daniels out of his own pocket. also tonight, new questions about the validity of the hush agreement. in just a few minutes, i'm going to ask stormy daniels' attorney the key question. did the porn star have a relationship with the president? i want to get right now to the latest on the russia investigation, though. joining me now is cnn's chief political correspondent, dana bash, and cnn's senior congressional correspondent, manu raju. good evening to both of you.
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manu, you're up first. who is making the decision to shut down the house investigation and what's the basis? >> well, the republicans are united behind this. republicans on the house intelligence committee. you have heard republican after republican for weeks now telling me, telling other reporters and making it very clear, very publicly that they don't believe that this investigation can go on. they believe that they have reached the essential conclusion, that there was no collusion between the trump associates and the russians. and they feel that they have reached a dead end, they have gone every which way and that's the conclusion they've reached. and they're getting support not just from the rank and file members on that committee, but also the republican who's running the russian investigation, mike conway, and the republican chairman, devin nunes, who even though he temporarily stepped aside amid controversy last year, has kept a foot in this investigation. has been very influential behind the scenes, and certainly wants to see this investigation come to an end.
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but in addition to that, don, the house speaker, paul ryan, has been very supportive of the republicans on this committee and of their decision to shut down this investigation. they believe they've done what they could, they've concluded that russia interfered with the elections, but they have not come to the consensus that there was any sort of effort to help president trump become president trump. that's something that the intelligence community has concluded, but not the republicans on this very committee, a significant break and democrats, of course, don, saying tonight, there is just so many areas that they have not investigated in order to come to a real -- do a thorough investigation, but republicans tonight rejecting that, don. >> dana bash, i want to bring you in now. good evening to you. does this report have much credibility, given how partisan this committee has been, basically from the beginning? >> you know, the answer to that would and should come when we actually see the report. because what we have now are topline conclusions, initial conclusions, that the republicans on the committee
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briefed reporters like manu on and then have since put out a press release on. but the underlying report, we have not yet seen. and so, look, i think your point is exactly right. this has been the most partisan, the most dysfunctional, frankly, just disappointing for anybody who wants to really know what happened vis-a-vis russia, and more importantly, how it can be stopped in the future. and so, there are a lot of people around town, republicans and democrats, saying, good riddance. let's get this out. let's move on, and let's focus on the senate intelligence report and more importantly, perhaps the bob mueller investigation. >> right. >> but just to sort of hone in on one thing that manu said. the idea that the republicans said that they didn't find conclusion. you know, maybe bob mueller won't find collusion. the thing that is most surprising is the fact that this republican report explicitly says, according to these topline
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conclusions that they have released, that the primary goal that the russians had. in 2016 was to sow discord. fine, but also, that they saw -- that they do not believe that putin was trying to tip the scale in favor of donald trump. that explicitly flies in the face of what the intelligence community said in their report in january of 2017. and still right now, today, say that they stand by, done by not political people, but career professionals. and that is going to be the very, very interesting thing to see how, when we see the full report, these republicans on the committee back that up. >> manu, do we know why that is their finding? >> well, i actually pushed mike conway on this in a briefing with reporters earlier, trying to understand why, how they came up with this assessment. all they would say right now, conway would say is that the evidence that they have seen in a classified setting, poring over the documents, the underlying assessment, they said
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that the underlying intelligence backing up that assessment just does not support the conclusion that was drawn in january of 2017. they contended that they need a more thorough investigation about this than the intelligence community, because they said the intelligence community did it in a short window, right after the elections, but they spent months and months and months poring over the documents. now, we'll have to see if that's actually the case, as dana said, when this report eventually comes out. because this is classified right now, it has to go through a declassification process. and we'll see what exactly they're referring to, because the intelligence community tonight, president trump's intelligence community tonight, is still standing by that assessment. the house republicans just are not. >> and can i just add one thing, don? i spoke to a republican member of this committee who has seen all the intelligence tonight. and this member insists that based on, just like manu was saying, based on what he has seen, it's a lot more gray than what the intelligence community
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put out in their report in january of 2017. however, this republican member did not dispute the notion that vladimir putin, that the russians were trying to hurt hillary clinton. so, you know, perhaps it's just phrasing. if you hurt hillary clinton during a contested presidential election, that effectively helps donald trump. so whether or not they were trying to make donald trump president or trying to make sure that hillary clinton wasn't, it has the same result. >> dana, manu, thank you very much. appreciate it. >> thanks, don. >> joining me now is the former director of national intelligence. director clapper, thank you so much for joining us. the president just tweeted in all caps, "the house intelligence committee has after a 14-month-long in-depth investigation found no evidence of collusion or coordination between the trump campaign and russia to influence the 2016 presidential election." is that the conclusion you would draw? >> well, first of all, on collusion, in our intelligence
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community assessment, we had nothing in there about any collusion. and as i've said before, at the time i left on january 20th of 2016, i didn't see any direct evidence of collusion. and i really can't comment on what's been turned up, if anything, since then. so i guess i don't know. i guess i could argue that as a candidate trump, when he exhorted the russians to go find hillary clinton's 30,000 e-mails or praised wikileaks, which cia director pompeo was aptly called a hostile non-nation state intelligence service, i guess that is a form of collusion. i think collusion is kind of a nebulous term. and it doesn't have any real legal implications. >> i want you to respond to this. this is congressman chris stewart, who is on the house
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intel and told cnn a short time ago, the intelligence community, quote, misinterpreted key intelligence when it concluded that putin had a clear preference for trump. he also said this about your earlier comments today, about how the russians had animus for clinton and favored trump as a better option. watch this. >> i agree and then i disagree with the former dni. i agree that they initially were just trying to sow discord, to break down the foundations of trust. no questions about that. but i have done something know that he has note done. and that is, i have spent a couple of days out to the cia actually reading the raw intelligence. actually reading what we were basing this on. and when we released that report, we're going to be able to show, you know what, the cia just got it wrong. >> what's your response, director? >> well, first, i have great respect for congressman stewart. he's an air force veteran as i am. and i think this is a case where reasonable men can agree to disagree reasonably.
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i did not -- it's true. i didn't troop over to the cia and sit down and read the reports. what i did do, though, is review with john brennan, the director of cia, in great detail, the veracity of that reporting. moreover, there was a lot of other evidence of putin's active direction over this. if you look at the aggressive and the magnitude of the propaganda campaign on the rt, a network that's controlled by putin, if you read the indictment of the 13 russians, and if you understand the nation of the internet research agency getting $1,250,000 a month, well, these things don't happen, particularly when they're amount -- mounting what is essentially warfare against the united states. that's not going on against the
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knowledge and blessing of vladimir putin. >> mm-hmm. i want to ask you about these reports out of conservative media about you -- about the president, that you leaked that the president had been briefed on the dossier. do you want to respond to that? >> well, i'm figuring it out, frankly. it's a little nonsensical to me. what happened here, the sequence of events is, on the 6th of january is when the four of us, it was director brennan, then the director of cia, director comey, then director of the fbi, admiral mike rogers, still director of nsa and i went to trump tower to brief the president-elect on our findings in the intelligence community assessment. which we then put out publicly that afternoon. the following tuesday, the 10th, the president-elect had a news conference in which he berated the intelligence community for -- as nazis, for putting out
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or issuing this dossier, which we didn't. it's absurd. we didn't do anything of the kind. it was already out there. it wasn't an intelligence document. it was already held by the media. i didn't have any contact with the media until after i left the government on the 20th of january. so i don't quite understand at least what i've read that somehow i leaked about the dossier. >> so let me get -- so you didn't leak anything about the dossier to any media? >> no, not -- i mean, i talked about it after i left the government. but not during that period. and certainly not between the 6th of january and the 10th when the president-elect himself talked about it. >> so you're saying that president-elect himself is the one who put it out there? >> well, it was publicized, if i remember the sequence, it came out after our trump tower briefing. and you know, all our purpose there was to inform him that it was out there.
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and i've often wondered, because it's kind of controversial, now, that we brought this up, that had we not told him about it, and then he learned about it and he learned that the intelligence community knew about it and didn't tell him, well, there probably would have been -- we would have gotten tweets for that, too. so i don't understand this -- you know, i leaked it to cnn. >> yeah. director clapper, you say now the only game in town is robert mueller. what about the senate intelligence committee? >> well, i have great hope for the senate intelligence committee, which has sustained its -- at least, the optic, if not the substance. and i guess there is substance there, to bipartisan. and that is really the only way that in my opinion, and i've been around since these two committees were stood up in 1976 and '77. i was in the intelligence community then.
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and the only way that oversight is ever effective is when it's bipartisan. and so far, the senate intelligence committee has sustained that. i hope they can see that through and complete their report on a bipartisan basis, unlike the house intelligence committee. >> does this finding today give the president political cover to get rid of mueller in some form or fashion? >> well, i don't know about that. it certainly does play to the president's narrative and the president's tweets about, you know, this being a witch hunt and all that sort of thing. so, yeah, it certainly buttresses his narrative. >> the deputy attorney general, rod rosenstein, just gave an interview in which he defended robert mueller's investigation. he says, i don't believe there's any justification at this point for terminating the special counsel. what do you think is behind rosenstein's public backing of mueller at this time? >> well, i don't know, but i guess, perhaps there's a correlation between that and the revelation about the ending the house intelligence committee investigation.
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i don't know. but i think for whatever reason, is a timely and appropriate statement and i'm glad he made it. >> director clapper, thank you. >> thanks, don. when we come back, more on the house intel committee. republicans announcing the end of their russia investigation without consulting democrats on the committee. congressman adam schiff, the ranking member, weighs in, next. we took legendary... and made it liberating. we took safe... and made it daring. we took intelligent, and made it utterly irresistible. we took the most advanced e-class ever and made the most exciting e-class ever. the 2018 e-class coupe and sedan. from mercedes-benz. the best or nothing.
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i found out by reading in the newspaper. the republicans leaked it to the press before even informing us. but don, it doesn't come as a complete surprise. the republicans have said for some time they're under immense pressure to shut down the investigation. and it was apparent, really, from the very beginning, from last march when our chairman went on that midnight run to the white house, that their real object was protecting the president. it wasn't doing a credible investigation. and so they went through the motions of bringing witnesses in, and we learned a great deal through those witnesses. but when we needed to compel them to answer questions, when people like steve bannon would stonewall or corey lewandowski or others, all too often, they are willing to accept no for an answer. they would ask very conclusive questions like, did you conspire, did you collude? and if they said no, the republicans were content to leave it at that. that's not conducting an investigation. that's going through the motions.
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so the fundamental problem from the beginning was that my colleagues viewed their job as protecting their client, the president, rather than getting to the truth and i think that's a grave disservice to the country. >> so what happens? i'm sure you voiced your concerns about that. democrats on that committee, did they not voice their concerns? did you voice your concerns? and how was it received? >> of course, we voiced our concerns. we've given the majority the names of witnesses that were key individuals that were never brought before the committee that we needed to bring in. we gave them a list of documents that we should be subpoenaing. records, for example -- >> do you have any examples of any of what you just said, what you needed to bring in? >> yes, no, absolutely. there are witnesses, for example, who are aware of the trump tower meeting before it took place. that would be natural to bring in before the committee. what did you know? how did you find out about it? who communicated to you what the purpose of the meeting was? there were phone records associated with that meeting that would identify potentially whether the president's son
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talked to the president about that meeting. there are contradictions between witnesses. just this week, for example, it was revealed that george nader had informed the special counsel that he facilitated this meeting or these meetings in the seychelles that erik prince had. with this russian banker as a way of setting up a back channel. that contradicts the sworn testimony of erik prince before our committee. but the republicans have decided they would just rather not know who is telling the truth. they don't want to pursue any further this investigation, if it may lead to something that would harm the president and their party. and that's, you know, i think deeply regrettable. and we'll continue to do the investigation to the best that we can. we continue to have people cooperating with us who want to share information with our committee. but, obviously, it's going to be a great impediment to our learning the full facts that they're trying to shut this down this way. >> let's talk a little bit more about what you have been saying. because when this first started, almost from the beginning, devin
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nunes has been working to undermine the investigation. characterize what his role has been. do you think that he scuttled this investigation? was he the one behind this or was it a group effort? >> well, the short history of this is almost one year ago, march 20th, we had the first open hearing of our investigation. that hearing was with james comey. i laid out in my opening statement all of the allegations that needed to be investigated. and i posed the question, could we do this in a bipartisan way? and i pointed out that the national interests really called upon us to do this in a bipartisan way. in that hearing, james comey dropped the bombshell that the trump campaign had been under investigation since july of the election year for possible collusion with russia, for counterintelligence purposes. and the republicans found that hearing, they told me thereafter, was a -- was a -- was a tragedy for them, was a terrible development for them.
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and i'm sure the white house came down hard on the chairman of our committee, because it was the very next day after that hearing that the chairman went on that midnight run. >> you think that -- you think that nunes was acting at the behest of the president? >> well, he was certainly acting in the interest of the president. and has all along. even when he was forced to step aside from the committee, he continued to do the bidding of the white house, by attempting to impugn the credibility of the department of justice and the fbi, but taking up basically the story line, the narrative that the president wanted to tell. and that continued through the release of that partisan nunes memo and it's been a continuing problem. the only tool that democrats have had, the only tool that i have had to force the majority to bring any witnesses in, to seek any information, is be by pointing the public spotlight on how they were conducting the investigation. that was the only tool we had.
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we, i think, used it effectively at times, but it's no substitute for having a subpoena. >> i've got to ask you a quick thing. one of our intelligence experts here on cnn said that both you and republicans said you spent too much time on cnn and that devin nunes spent too much time at the white house and that this investigation, as it relates to congress really had no chance, because it was partisan from all along, from the beginning. how do you respond to that? >> you know, there's always a tendency in the interest of appearing to be non-partisan to say "a pox on both houses," but really, i think that just avoids the hard work of assigning responsibility. yes, we have gone on television to say the republicans need to bring steve bannon back in or don junior made a false claim of privilege, because it was the only way to hold the majority accountable. it was the only way to force them, at times, to do the work that needed to be done. and i think that's important for us to do. it's how the country learned
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where the administration was stonewalling the committee and where the majority was really not living up to its constitutional obligation. so i think it really is all too easy and a bit of a copout to say "a pox on both their houses." the reality is, the mission of the chairman from the beginning was to protect the president, not follow the facts wherever they would lead. and that was a fundamental problem that we had to deal with. and it left us in the position of either going along with essentially a whitewash, or calling out the majority every step of the way. and that's the course i think we were forced to take. >> congressman adam schiff, we appreciate your time. thank you so much. >> thanks, don. when we come back, who is a bigger threat to donald trump's presidency? a source close to the president thinks it's stormy. i'm going to ask her attorney what he thinks about that, next. mom? dad? hi! i had a very minor fender bender tonight in an unreasonably narrow fast food drive thru lane.
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quiet about an alleged affair with donald trump. and there are new questions tonight about the validity of that hush agreement. i want to talk about it now and other developments with michael ebbenati, the attorney representing daniels. good to see you. thank you for coming in. >> thanks for having me. >> there's a lot of new developments here, and also, you sent something to the president, right? and you have not heard back from them? >> correct. >> we'll get into that. let me ask you, we've learned that the president has asked in confidence how he should handle this stormy daniels situation. he's being told to keep quiet and according to a source close to the president, he is being told he should not fight breaking the confidentiality agreement because it would make him look guilty. what's your reaction to that news? >> quite honestly, i think that my reaction is, they can run, they can hide, but we're not going home, don. sooner or later, the president is going to have to answer three very basically questions. and it's -- they are the same questions we've been asking for a week now. and i don't care if it takes a
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week, a month, or a year. we're going to get answers eventually to the following questions. and the white house, they say they've answered the questions, they haven't answered the questions. >> what are the three questions? >> the three questions are, did he know of the agreement around the time it was being negotiated, in the waning days of the 2016 election? did he sign the agreement? and what was his involvement, if any, in the payment to miss daniels? these are three very simple questions. we've asked them repeatedly. we can't get answers to them. and quite honestly, i don't know what they're hiding. what is the complication? >> let me ask you these three questions. do you think he knew? >> there's no doubt in my mind that he knew. >> and he didn't sign, obviously, it's not there. >> correct. and i think that there's a reason why he did not sign. and i think that it was so he would have the deniability that we're now seeing from the white house. >> so what was his involvement, do you believe? >> i think that he knew exactly what was going on, at all times,
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this was a critical point in time in connection with the 2016 presidential election. it's a couple weeks to go in the election. i find it incredible that he did not know. i find this explanation from attorney cohen to be laughable. i've run out of superlatives to describe this explanation that we've heard from mr. cohen, who now expects the american people to believe that he took a home equity loan out on one of his homes in order to pay $130,000 on behalf of a billionaire running for president. >> okay, so let me ask you this. and i want to be clear. was there a sexual relationship between donald trump and miss clifford? >> yes. >> there was? >> yes. >> and you have proof of that and so does she? >> well, i think the american people, if she's permitted to talk, if they don't restrain her from speaking, and again, this is remarkable to me that now we have reports that perhaps they are considering bringing an injunction and a motion for an
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injunction against "60 minutes" to prevent an american citizen from coming forward and exercising her first amendment rights to talk about her recollection of events. our position, don, has been very simple and very straightforward. and it's not complicated. we want her to be able to tell her version of events. to the extent that president trump or mr. cohen have separate version of events, they can come on your show, they can go on "60 minutes," they can hold press conferences, they can do whatever they want to do. they can describe their version of events and then we're going to let the american people decide who's being honest, who's not being forthright, and who's covering up facts and evidence. >> you're talking about the interview, of course, with my colleague, our colleague here at cnn, anderson cooper on "60 minutes." obviously, he works there, as well. and they have held the interview, pending that -- figuring out what they're going to do with it. but you would like that interview to be able to air. >> i want my client to have the
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ability to speak to the american people. i have trust and she has trust in the ability of the american people to make decisions after they have full and complete information. >> let me ask you about the texas secretary of state's office, opening an investigation on the notary who handled the hush agreement. according to a spokesman, secretary of state's office, the notary, erica jackson, did not sign and date the 2016 agreement. she also didn't provide a certificate reflecting the signatures being witnessed. i know you weren't stormy's attorney then, but does that mean -- what does that mean to you in this case now? anything? >> don, it means nothing. it's a red herring. look, there's a tendency in a case like this for individuals to do what i call getting over the tips of your skis, okay? you take it a step too far. and right now there's a tendency on the left to take it a step too far and get over the tips of your skis. this notary issue is a red herring.
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it means nothing from our perspective. we are not arguing that the agreement is invalid because of the notary signature. my client is not disputing the fact that she signed the document. the notary has nothing to do with the arguments that we're making. our argument is really simple. paragraph 8.6 of the agreement and california law -- not texas law, not new york law, not some of these other state's laws, 8.6 of the agreement makes it clear all parties had to sign. donald trump did not sign. there's no notary issue relating to donald trump. therefore, there was no valid agreement. >> so let me ask you, i want to be clear about this as well. you're asking for the opportunity for your client to be able to tell her story. and you say you want your client to be able to talk about the alleged affair, and publish any texts, photos, or videos that exist. do texts, photos, and videos exist? >> i'm not going to comment on that. >> why not? >> because i think that's my client's position to comment on. and it's not for me to say one
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way or the other. i'm not going to confirm or deny it. but what i will say, don, is this. here's what i will say. when and if the white house and the president and mr. cohen have to face the american people and actually answer these questions. and eventually, it's going to happen. because lake i said, we're not just going to pack up and go home. when that day comes, they better be truthful and they better be honest. that's what i'm going to say. >> so speaking of michael cohen, you have given -- you have set a deadline for noon tomorrow, for either michael cohen or the president. what happens if they do nothing? >> i mean, if they do nothing, we're going to march forward in this case like we would any other case. and that's going to involve discovery, we're going to be aggressive, we're going to be prepared, we're going to be diligent, and we're going to get to the bottom of this. so that is why i am urging mr. cohen and the president to agree to the offer that we've put forward. let my client tell her story to
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the extent that they have a contrary version of events that they wish to tell, so be it. let the chips fall where they may. >> so have you spoken or communicated at all with michael cohen? >> not directly, no. >> but through -- >> through his counsel. >> intermediaries. >> through his counsel. >> yes. >> because it's easy to get michael cohen. just call him up. you can ask any journalist in this building, they have michael cohen's cell phone. you can call him up and speak to him or send him a text. you have not done that? is that not appropriate to do when you're an attorney? >> well, maybe what i should do is, it appears to be far easier when you're a journalist as opposed to when you're opposing party or counsel. maybe what i should do is call up and identify myself as a journalist and then maybe i'll be able to get through. because thus far, we haven't been able to get any response whatsoever. and what we're hearing, don, is that they're going to allow this offer to lapse without any response whatsoever, which effectively means that they will reject the offer. the offer of a settlement.
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and we believe the offer of a settlement, right down the middle of the road, is very reasonable. it basically, it basically, don, what it does is, it puts the parties back in the position that's called status quo. it puts them back in the position that they were in in october of 2016, to the extent the president and mr. cohen have a version of events, let it take -- let them take it to the american people and we're going to do the same. >> one more question for you, unless something arises in your answer. why? does she want to take the president down? does she want money from the president? what does -- why do it? just so she can tell her story? why? >> yes. and i know that it's rather remarkable, but i think that when my client is ultimately provided an opportunity to speak to the american people, the american people will believe that she's being sincere. when she talks about the fact that she wants to set the record straight, there's been a lot of misinformation peddled out there
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by a lot of different sources, including mr. cohen and, in fact, the administration directly and indirectly. my client wants the ability to speak to the american people. she believes in the american people. and she believes in their ability to call a ball or a strike. >> people think she may not have any credibility because of her profession. what do you say to that? or she doesn't have much. >> what i will say is this. i've been practicing law a long time. i've had the good fortune and i've been blessed to have a tremendous amount of success, long before i ever met stormy daniels. i would not have lended my reputation and my work and the resources of me and my law firm to miss daniels if i did not 100% believe in her and find her to be credible. i will tell you this. the veracity of this woman and her credibility is going to shock people when and if she's
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able to tell her story, there is no doubt in my mind that the american people will believe her. >> thank you, michael. i appreciate it. >> thank you. >> we'll be right back. ♪ most people come to la with big dreams... we came with big appetites. with expedia one click gives you access to discounts on thousands of hotels, cars and things to do. like the avalon hotel beverly hills for 40% off. everything you need to go. ♪ expedia. -ahh. -the new guy. -whoa, he looks -- -he looks exactly like me. -no. -separated at birth much? we should switch name tags, and no one would know who was who. jamie, you seriously think you look like him? uh, i'm pretty good with comparisons. like how progressive helps people save money
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breaking news, president trump asking confidants for advice on how to handle the stormy daniels situation. and he's being advised to keep quiet about it. daniels now wants to return the $130,000 she got to silence her with her alleged affair about trump. here to discuss, cnn political commentators charles blow, scott jennings and ana navarro. so much to get through, so let's go through these topics quickly. what's your reaction you heard from the attorney, ana? session, you know, i think he comes across as frankly a very good attorney. committed to his client, committed to getting this done. and i think the trump administration, i think, trump, i think, cohen should take him very seriously. because this guy does not look like he's joking around. she got herself a good attorney. >> scott, is there anything the president could do to make this story go away? >> yeah, you could tell the truth. the reality is, given the level of investigations that are going on on multiple fronts and given the facts that these folks are clearly not going anywhere, it
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strikes me that it's highly likely that all the facts are going to come out some day anyway. so the only question is, do you want them to come out sooner rather than later. because it's going to come out. as a public relations person, i might say, getting them out soon and on your terms would be advisable. but i don't know all the facts and there may be things that they can't legally talk about right now. but just as a purely pr matter, it strikes me getting on top of this and not letting it drip out over the next several months would be wise. >> i want to talk to you about this, but also in the context of your latest column, which is called "melania knew," you write about that and say, melania knew exactly the kind of man she was getting, adding that that's their marriage, they clearly have some sort of understanding, some sort of emotional elasticity or financial dependency that is beyond any comprehension. how do you know that? why do you say that? >> well, donald trump is on the record for about 45 years of his life outlining how he thinks about women, including the period of time when he meets melania. in fact, when he meets her, he's on a date with another woman who
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he sends off to the bathroom so he can talk to melania and get her number. and at that time, he's in the middle of divorcing marla maples, his second wife, who he cheated on his first wife with. so that's who he is. she knew it at that moment, and she refused to give him her number because she says she knew his reputation. so i was just establishing a fact to say, that part of it doesn't really interest me. because who knows what goes on in a marriage. you have your own relationship. you have your own rules, you play by it, stay together, or at least tolerate on some level. what's more important to me, over that 45 years, his view of women is incredibly problematic and does not change over that period. he seems to look at women as kind of opportunities and also what we've learned through these last reports, he seems to want to rob them of voice. in every occasion. and that is through
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nondisclosures, which also, ivana, his first wife, had to sign. in her sworn deposition, she says, he raped me. after the nda, she said, well, not literal -- not in the criminal sense of -- i don't know how you slice the rape up. but that's what she says. so all of a sudden that is shut down. and we now realize that he is using nondisclosures not only on her, but on other women who he has been with. and that says a lot about whether or not you believe that women should have a voice in america. should they -- do they own that part of their life that they spent with you? or do you believe that because you have wealth and power, that you own it? and that is what he has been exercising. using money as power and exercising that power over women. that's problematic. >> and scott, we'll get your reaction right after the break. we'll be right back. we took legendary...
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i think people knew what they were getting with him in the sense that they heard him boasting about his sexual pursuits on tape. they heard him. they heard him in his own voice. they still voted for him. i agree with scott. i think he should just let this go. i think he should talk about it, tell the truth, and i think he should leave stormy daniels alone. and the reason is simple. listen, his base doesn't care. we know that he was having an affair with a porn actress and a playboy bunny at the same time. and his base are saying, let's give him a mulligan, let's give him another mulligan. republicans in congress are not going to investigate. there are legalish ones, that are campaign issues which might be ver serious here. but while republicans are in congress we know they're going to look the 0 reserve other way and they're not going to investigate. the rest of us who are not cult members or kool-aid drinkers, we already know this is who he is.
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i don't understand why he is spending so much effort, so much time, you know, in trying to silence this woman. it is making this a much bigger story and giving it much more oxygen because of how far he is fighting. >> why he's spending so much time pretending it didn't happen, when most people believe it did? >> right. his base shrugs and the rest of us say, we already know he's a dog, tell me something i didn't know. >> one big difference, in the nba, they say there are text messages and pictures. that is a big difference. that makes a whole lot of difference. when al franken got in trouble, his indiscretion with women, it was the picture that made the biggest difference. donald trump himself was on twitter commenting about how powerful the picture was and that franken had to go. that changes things. in a kind of visual social media world. if there's actual evidence of him saying salacious things to
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this women or them in some compromising photograph, it is a big difference. >> we heard him say salacious things. we have seen pictures, november of him naked, but we've seen pictures of him with stormy daniels, we've seen pictures of him with the playboy bunny. i mean, i really -- it's like, you know, again, where is the news in this? >> the difference between franken and this case is this is a consensual relationship. so that is a core difference here. >> and the other one was not a sexual relationship. >> right. the issue here, i think anna's right, there's no price to pay. people have already priced into his image, his candidacy at the time, who he is. his history with women, that's priced in. where he was able to beat the politicians in 2016 was by saying, i'm not one of them because i'm always going to tell you the truth, they're liars, i'm authentic, no matter what it is, i'll tell you the truth. on this one, they're bleeding a little credibility. because they're trying to
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maintain the facade that maybe the relationship didn't happen. look. being honest and maintaining that nonpolitician authenticity he has cultivated during his whole rise to me is paramount to him winning re-election, which is why being honest here is probably better than trying to dodge it. >> he's one of the least honest people, probably the least honest -- >> donald trump is not going to win re-election based on honesty. that much i can tell you. let me just say, in the last two months we have seen him on live tv -- >> he's made himself look like a nonpolitician by not handling things the way a politician would handle it, these handling this the way a politician would handle it. >> it is the timeline. melania is pregnant. i mean, there's a tawdriness here that is different on another level. she's pregnant. if those time lines show him doing things while she's preparing to give birth, it's
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to have a partner that is so skilled at what they do is indispensable, and i couldn't ask for a better partner. this is "cnn tonight," i'm don lemon live with major developments in the russia investigation. republicans on the house intelligence committee tonight handing the president exactly what he wanted saying they found no evidence that the trump campaign colludes with russia and they're shutting down their investigation. the president tweeting, the house intelligence committee has, after a 14-month-long, in-depth investigation, found no evidence of collusion or coordination between the trump campaign and russia to influence the 2016 presidential election. the president failing to note that it was the republicans on the committee who reached that conclusion, ignoring the
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