with dee dee. by the way, our own andrea mitchell will sit down for her exit interview with secretary clinton. going to watch that entire interview tomorrow on andrea mitchell reports at 1:00, right here on msnbc. trivia, though, we asked who was the most recent chairman of the senate foreign relations committee to become secretary of state? i missed this. i assumed it was muskie. i was wrong. john sherman! president mckinley s secretary of state was chairman of the foreign relations committee from 1886 to 1893. if kerry is confirmed, he ll be the first to hold both jobs in 115 years. how about that? got a taririvia question for us e-mail us at dailyrundown@msnbc.com. we ll be right back. the audacie your financial advisor should focus on your long-term goals, not their short-term agenda. [ woman ] if you have the nerve to believe that cookie cutters should be for cookies, not your investment strategy. if you believe in the sheer brilliance
about the situation in north africa and i think that s one core part of the legacy of the first administration s foreign policy and hillary clinton s tenure at state and i think the defining external event to the administration of foreign policy has been the arab spring, obviously, and all that uncorked and how to manage that. but before we get to that, we still have robin on satellite. i want to talk about the relationship between the president and hillary clinton and the degree to which the legacy of foreign policy in the first term has been hillary clinton s legacy and the degree to which it really has been the shots have been called from the white house because a lot of reporting on this has been very interesting. tonight there s going to be an interview on 60 minutes that s a joint interview between the president and hillary clinton, a joint exit interview, and this is what the president had to say about hillary clinton s legacy. hillary will go down as one of the finest sec
do they protect freedom and privacy in letting women make the decision, or do they want politicians to make it? and that s the million dollar question. who gets to decide? politician or women and her family. we ve talked a number of time, you and i, nancy, on this show about overall strategy, about the connection of this, the issue politics of this as an issue and how it relates to electoral politics between the two parties. i know you are stepping down from naral very soon. your successor has already been named. what would you tell the movement that you have been a part of? what would you tell the abortion rights movement in this country as a sort of exit interview? what do you think is the most important strategic thing for the movement to focus on moving forward? that we have an enormous opportunity in this next generation. they share our pro-choice values. they re the millennials. by 2020, they re going to be 40% of the voting population. they will have enormous political power
the decision, or do they want politicians to make it? and that s the million dollar question. who gets to decide? politician or women and her family. we ve talked a number of time, you and i, nancy, on this show about overall strategy, about the connection of this, the issue politics of this as an issue and how it relates to electoral politics between the two parties. i know you are stepping down from naral very soon. your successor has already been named. what would you tell the movement that you have been a part of? what would you tell the abortion rights movement in this country as a sort of exit interview? what do you think is the most important strategic thing for the movement to focus on moving forward? that we have an enormous opportunity in this next generation. they share our pro-choice values. they re the millennials. by 2020, they re going to be 40% of the voting population. they will have enormous political power, either running themselves or helping candidates run. and
the decision, or do they want politicians to make it? and that s the million dollar question. who gets to decide? politician or women and her family. we ve talked a number of time, you and i, nancy, on this show about overall strategy, about the connection of this, the issue politics of this as an issue and how it relates to electoral politics between the two parties. i know you are stepping down from naral very soon. your successor has already been named. what would you tell the movement that you have been a part of? what would you tell the abortion rights movement in this country as a sort of exit interview? what do you think is the most important strategic thing for the movement to focus on moving forward? that we have an enormous opportunity in this next generation. they share our pro-choice values. they re the millennials. by 2020, they re going to be 40% of the voting population. they will have enormous political power, either running themselves or helping candidates run. and