is very clear in the house. the judiciary chair as the power along with the speaker to open an impeachment inquiry. they ve done that in the case of judges and when it can comes to actual can impeachment we are go having to a vote. i think the speaker wants tuse have the vote once we ve made the case so members can cast that vote after we ve had a chance to make the case to the public. is one of the drawbacks the house is not going to hold a vote because it might open in the opportunity for republicans to have subpoena power. it really isn t. that isn t the it calculation. the calculation is the speaker wants members to go on the it record once after a full case has been made after we have collected whatever evidence we can and i think that s reasonable. they ll go on the record once they re referred but we re not going to do can it people arema
fired his gun in the align of duty, and i know a lot of guns. in fact guns are so rare and tightly regulated here that even mobsters avoid using guns. known as the yakuza and often recognized for their full body tattoos, japanese organized crime doesn t lack for muscle. they have enormous reach in business and politics. one is described as the largest private equity group in japan by morgan stanley but many don t like business with a gun. translator: guns are like nuclear weapons. weapons that the yakuza has but won t use. a former yakuza boss sat down to tell us. he showed us his tattoos and his
weapons ban that beat democrats. it was about the health care law, an unpopular president. i don t think it s as powerful as they make it out to be. but that perception of their power is what s at issue. and a lot of republicans that knew they were taking a risk now are just asking questions to whether the nra is going to have their back and throws the kind of questions that ultimately may lead tuse get over the finish line. this is tough to do with a president backed by the nra and mitch mcconnell. but i ve got to stay at this because every eday we allow for all these guns to be sold, lives are being lost. thank you. thanks. the guns are one issue. hateful rhetoric is another. we re going to look at hateful
the white house, thanks. we are going to get reaction out from two lawmakers, one democrat, one republican, who are both on committees involved in today s hearings. first up from a republican john ratcliffe. thanks for being here. great to be with you. bret: i want to ask you generally your thoughts of today and what you took away from it. i think the main take away today is the impeachment balloon got popped completely today. you can t impeach a president on obstruction charges when the special counsel admits that they applied a legal standard to the president that has never been applied to anyone in the history of american jurisprudence before, which is something that bob mueller admitted today. bret: we heard that sound bite in catherine s peace. you really went after level exoneration standard and the presumption of innocence. i did, because i hadn t seen it before. it s just something that prosecutors don t use. when i read the special counsel s report and he talked abou
matcho world is fading. he literally has a cult of people who you can t to about reality. it use today be hip pockeracy was the unforgivable sin in politics. and now it seems you can t play politics unless you re a hip hypocrite. where is steve bannon, right? where are all of the men who brought four of those women as political props. do they believe this woman who has the same allegations is equally as credible? we also found out as you were talking about fox news, that the new york post spikes the story because of the politics. they asked me to be on fox news today to talk about my client who s caused a democratic