do whit eling down the field is so important. i frankly didn t hear enough candidates really drawing a contrast with the principals of the democratic party last night versus the policies of the trump administration. i think that her simple message of basically saying, hey, guys, we need to focus on donald trump as opposed to having these interparty squabbles think there that makes a lot of sense. one of the most interesting things auld always about the debates for me is how wrong we turn out to be when we say what we think is going to happen. but here s one thing that i will say. and that is, jason, that before the debates, early in this campaign we heard a lot of people saying, well before the first debate. right. long before the first vote was cast, maybe kamala harris could be the vp. maybe elizabeth warren could be the vp. those two women arguably won those two debates. right. and while that doesn t necessarily mean they re going
to win the presidency, should those people, well i wonder what they re saying now? i ll tell you, i all along have been saying on this air and writing and radio everything else, kamala harris isn t running for vp. that was something that a bunch of men and media people created because they couldn t imagine this biracial woman who s a prosecutor and married to a white husband thinks that s crazy. she s not running for vp and there s a simple reason why. neither is elizabeth warren. you re not guaranteed to get that job. both of them have to actually try. now look, i hear some people saying now it should be a harris a harris/warren ticket. i don t know if i think that s going to work either. but think the biggest takeaway i got from these two nights, this is a 2012. y you don t have a her man kane out there. i think you got a good eight people who want this job. they re competing for this job. they re not just trying to get on television. that s good for american
clarified that response this morning on morning joe. do you believe that private insurance should be eliminated in this country? no. you don t? no, i do not. but you raised your hand last night. but the question was would you give up your private insurance for that option. and i said yes. i think you heard it differently than others then. probably. this, jennifer, is an issue with a clear dividing line, medicare for all, no medicare for all, should private insurance continue, something that by the way is very popular with the vast majority of people who actually have private insurance. so on an issue standpoint i wonder what your take was. well, first of all, this has been a problem in the past and i think it s still a problem for senator harris which we don t really know whether she s gone the full bernie, elizabeth warren route which is for all intents and purposes except for cosmetic surgery or supplemental plan you re not going to have a choice, you re going t
often better nan being the puncher. i think joe biden is going to we ll see if he rises to the occasion. one interesting thing last night is elizabeth warren showed us you can be effective contrast to the president without mentioning his name np joe biden opened his entire campaign on president trump and contrasting president trump by name expressly. we ll see if he does that ton or if he tries to take more of the elizabeth warren route, sew us what you are for not against. it s hard who needs a breakout moment the most? you look at kamala harris certainly in the top group of polls, right. but there hasn t been the growth dsh, the surge story like with elizabeth warren. tonight would seem to be a chance to turn that around for her. i think so. but, you know, it s what i think we see from the ten tonight is what manufactured moment can they place into tonight s debate. ? we saw with. i love you call it manufactured. it is. that s what they are oft sfwloon 10 oh%. you see.