welcome to our viewers in the united states and watching around the world. i m jake tapper. the fact she grew up as an immigrant child. her parents emigrated to the united states from india. she grew up in a situation where she did face challenges because she was different in her words in a video she will put out yesterday and talk about her time leading this state of south carolina as the first female governor, two-time governor in this state, what she did to bring people together after the awful shooting at mother emmanuel ame church that happened in 2014 while she was governor. that s just blocks from here. she will likely talk about her time as ambassador to the united nations and told that in the context of having worked with trump in the trump administration, she will raise the former president, but what she s not expected to do is really take him on or criticize him in this speech. that is in line with what we ve seen from her in recent comments where she s talked abou
people. one of the advantages of getting in you test him early on. donald trump has a problem with strong women. we watched it play out throughout his career. if she handles it right it could be an asset and get her more attention. you get in early. his only statement to kaitlan collins, i wish her well. that won t last long. the big challenge she has a message and map question. the message question is, margaret scott can understand this better, we don t know what republican presidential electorate looks like because donald trump ran in 2016, eviscerated a field of accomplished politicians, you might not like them watching at home, but people with elective experience, 144 years of total elected experience. donald trump wiped them out, bush, cruz, rubio, the list goes on. what does the electorate want? he was unopposed in 2020. got a taste of what the electorate wanted in 2022 but is that the same. can nikki haley create a lane. number two the map. iowa, can she survive iowa go to
supporting the ukrainians and standing up against russian aggression. howard: let me circle back, to coin a phrase, to the message question. i mow your standard answer is biden takes lots and lots of questions, let s just agree to disagree that that s a good level of media access. with the president holding so few news conferences and doing very rarely sit-down interviews, isn t he surrendering a key part of the bully pulpit? i would say the president speaks to the american people nearly every day do, sometimes twice a day howard: not talking to journalists. well, but i think our objective and and our role and our focus is speaking to the public and certainly engaging in and valuing a free press which is something we do and the president does nearly every day by taking questions from the media and speaking out about how we should protect the media as he did last weekend at the white house correspondents dinner. howard: i have covered joe biden on and off since the 1980s includin
where i want them to be or where you want them to be. they re not that much better than they were four years ago but they re getting better thanks to my policies. one fits on a bumper sticker, one barely fits in a 60-second ad. that s the difficult message question and complication the team faces. clearly they re aware of it because they re going at it with that first ad. $25 million, they are not messing around. not messing around at all. chris cillizza and than $25 million ad buy is in nine states where the president and the campaign believe the election will be fought. spending a lot of money to reintroduce the president to voters. meanwhile, two new battleground state polls show mitt romney has closed the gap with the president in key swing states. stephanie cutter, deputy campaign manager for the president s campaign joining us from chicago. thanks so much. that is a lot of money. $25 million, nine key states. but as chris was just pointing
with us the names of the people you message question or speak out no i would not choose to share that publicly. this is about your right to privacy, the limits of your right to privacy, and how much you give away in modern america to maintain connecting people around the world. the question basically is what information facebook is collecting, who they are sending it to, whether they ve ever ask in advance permission to do that. is that a fair thing for a user of facebook to expect? yes, senator. i think everyone should have control over what information they use. martha: that s still going on today. senate judiciary chair chuck grassley will join us in a minute. david kirkpatrick, who literally wrote the book on the facebook