marriage hasn t slowed her down. because they did so much wrong, eventually they won t be able t comment on anything that remind us of their wrongness heard pretty soon all you re going to hear from cnn is crickets. of the current. it is easy to track all of their mistakes, you just look a the stories not being reported. those are the big stories they got wrong before. they intentionally know they ca get away with a break just to check that you re all listening i leave you with a final question. does the media intentionally avoid big stories because it exposes their incompetence and corruption? ache him he has, b, of course, see, a and b, d, all of the above. that question is not a joke. let s welcome tonight s guests.
the concept of impeachment is such a terrible thing. i think that it is terrible. and probably it is good politically because i see the poll numbers how good they are, i see the fundraising how good it is and all of the things. but it is not a good thing for our country, i can tell you that. good thing politically. joining me now is congressman mack hartright of pennsylvania. thanks for coming in. my pleasure. thank you. what do you think of what president trump told voters in kentucky last night when he said that this is good politics for him? i ask this knowing that you represent a district that voted for trump in 16. do you think the impeachment inquiry is good for his re-election? i really can t comment. i don t know about that. and i have a confession to make, kate. i haven t really been focused on impeachment. i m coming to you from liuzerne
we can t comment. [inaudible] i m not going to get into those specifics just yet. we ll release, i know everyone here that s local knows that we re, we provide very detailed information on critical incidents, and we ll do the same here. it s, obviously, going to take a little bit of time to get some of that detail. [inaudible] i think i got a text around 2:40. yeah, i think around that time. i wanted to clarify something on the sidelines. is that less than a minute from when you first got a call about it or less than a minute after the shooting begansome. less than a minute after the shooting fest began. they were right there they were there. they were in the immediate vicinity correct, they were there. uniformed officers, do you have officers that they were uniformed officers
dayton s 250 this year. surveillance cameras [inaudible] in the oregon district [inaudible] many business business busine security cameras and video and, obviously, we re checking to see what is available and use that as part of our investigation. so some of that has already been done, some of that is to be done. do you have any idea how many people may have been in the district haas last night? oh, it was thousands. it s a saturday night in the district in the summer, you know? i mean, it was thousands. initial reports had to do with the shooter being denied access to the club. is there any truth to that? i m not aware of that information. but like i said, it s still early in the investigation. but i have not heard. that. and we know [inaudible] i m not going to comment
do you believe that constitutional rights of parents, specifically fundamental due process rights are i78 pmplicated in such fami separations? senator, that is a matter of pending litigation i believe and as a sitting judge on the d.c. circuit or as a nominee i of course can t comment. have you watched the coverage of any of these cases on television or have you read about the experience those parents and those children have had? i have seen some television. in the 1889 chinese exclusion case the government banned chinese people from entering the united states. they said the chinese people are impossible to assimilate with our people, end quote, and said they were immigrating in numbers, quote, approaching an invasion. this case has never been explicitly overruled. you ve said you d be willing to talk about older cases so can