Transcripts for MSNBC Stephanie Ruhle Reports 20220117 14:25:45 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
beat because of their news value. we interviewed miss ellis at the time. this is after the november 2020 election. our strategy is to make sure that we continue to challenge all of these false and fraudulent results. what is the point of all this? well, the point of this of course is to get to fair and accurate results because the election was stolen and president trump won by a landslide. that was false, that was late november, and it was precursor to what earned her and others a subpoena today. we begin with melissa murray and with an eye on washington, juanita tolliver. melissa, your thoughts on the focus of the legal team, including people that definitely played more than one role, the president like any citizen has right to counsel and private legal advice, but they were also in public spewing as the committee puts it lies. what do you see as import to the
provisions from the build back better act and more, i think the president thinks he s on good standing to deliver big changes for the american public but the emphasis is delivering it. people are going to be looking for what he and democrats can deliver. the qualms last year is he doesn t run congress but the reality is he runs the democratic party and needs to step up and broker the deals to deliver for what americans need. juanita toll liver with the breakdown, we come to you for the eye on washington. thanks for spending time with us. thank you. i want to make sure you know where to keep it locked because joy reid is coming up and then we have the special msnbc coverage featuring joy, rachel, nicole and steve kornacki. that prespeech coverage begins at 8:00 p.m. eastern here on msnbc and after this quick break, the reidout with joy reid is up next. the reidout wi
the question is, what kind of an impact and how much of an impact would it have on protection that s induced by vaccination. the only way to know that is to do what we re doing. so let s get right to it. dr. emmanuel is here, vice provost of global initiatives at the university of pennsylvania and nbc analyst with an eye on washington and an evolving response. doctor, how bad is it and when will we know how bad it is? we don t know how bad it is. it does appear to be more transmissible. whether it s more virulent, putting more people in the hospital who get the omicron variant, making more die, we don t know. it s mainly infected young people at the moment, not older people. it will probably take two to three more weeks to really figure that out. in addition, it s probably going to take that, if not more, to figure out whether the current vaccines really do how much
a narcissist, a bully who cannot tell the truth, whether it s about the president or his own personal life. liar, liar, pants on fire. reporter: they accused him of trying to cash in on his infamy, calling him a man scorned when the president didn t bring him to washington. you said all these bad things about the president there in that last 30 minutes, and yet you worked for him for ten years? mr. cohen, how long did you work in the white house? i never worked in the white house. that s the point, isn t it, mr. cohen? no, sir. yes, it is. no, it s not, sir. you wanted to work in the white house. no, sir. you didn t get brought to the dance. reporter: but as cohen himself pointed out, republicans did not spend much time defending the president s actions. all i wanted to say is i just find it interesting, sir, that between yourself and your colleagues that not one question so far since i m here has been asked about president trump. reporter: the disbarred l