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View in browser JULY 19, 2019 It's only been five days since President Trump said four Democratic congresswomen should "go back" and fix the places they originally came from. From there it was off to a whirlwind week of rhetoric excessive even for this president.
By Friday, he had reconsidered his opinion of the crowd, calling them "incredible patriots."
As Brian Williams points out, today is day 911 of the Trump presidency.
The lineups for the second round of Democratic presidential debates were released Thursday night, with Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Bernie Sanders of Vermont appearing on the first night and former Vice President Joe Biden and California Sen. Kamala Harris, who butted heads in the last debate, facing off on the second night.
According to the newly-released NBC News|SurveyMonkey online poll, former Vice President Joe Biden is leading the pack of 2020 Democratic presidential candidates, with Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren tied behind him.
The poll, conducted after the first Democratic debate in late June, shows 25 percent of respondents would vote for Biden if a primary or caucus was held today, while Sanders, I-Vt., and Warren of Massachusetts each garnered 16 percent.
In Case You Missed It: Report exposes data, unconscionable business of opioid epidemic Rachel Maddow shares the details of a new report from the Washington Post and West Virginia's Charleston Gazette-Mail detailing the number and distribution of opioids around the United States and offering the public easy, searchable access to the database to see how the drugs are distributed in their own counties. (Rachel Maddow)
Child sex trafficking charges added against Trumpworld figure Rachel Maddow reports on new child sex trafficking charges added against unsettling Trumpworld figure George Nader, whose name features prominently in Robert Mueller's Trump-Russia report. (Rachel Maddow)
Rand Paul is a master of avoiding reporters' questions Senator Rand Paul is a rare politician, dexterous enough to use both the "run away" and "keep repeating yourself" strategies to avoid reporters' tough questions. (All In)
More Videos The 'profound heaviness' of this week (Morning Joe) Trump 'already started' working with Sweden for release of A$AP Rocky (MSNBC Live) Tehran refutes Trump's claim of U.S. destroying Iranian drone (Andrea Mitchell) Trump’s walk back of the walk back shows his true colors (Deadline: White House) Charlotte Observer says 'send her back' chants are a dark reminder of who we are (The Last Word) Pressure already building around Kamala Harris’ second debate performance (Deadline: White House) Rep. Haaland: As a Native American, I'd never tell anyone to leave this country (11th Hour) Is Hope Hicks telling the truth? (Chris Jansing) Will Mueller say anything beyond what’s in his report to Congress? (Velshi & Ruhle) Fallback Friday with Margaret Cho and Howard Dean (The Beat) Former NASA astronaut Mike Massimino: Apollo 11 is humanity's greatest achievement (11th Hour)
Quote of the Day “This is going to be a white nationalist re-election campaign, full stop.” — Joy Reid (Video)
Analysis and Opinion ANALYSIS. How Trump could lose by 5 million votes and still win in 2020. It's tempting for Democrats to believe the president's comments will backfire with an increasingly diverse electorate and seriously damage his re-election prospects. But the cold reality for Democrats? The bulk of the nation's demographic transformation is taking place in states that matter the least in deciding the Electoral College. The nation's two most populous states, California and Texas, are at the heart of Democrats' geography problem. by David Wasserman, House editor of the Cook Political Report.
OPINION. Trump's racist words and the 'Send her back' cheers were shocking, but only if you'd never accepted who he is. Donald Trump rose to power by fueling a consistent narrative that you’re either for America and for him, or you're against him and against America. He came to office with a consistent narrative of racial divisiveness, and he never stopped. by Ashley Pratte.
What to watch this weekend Ari Melber hosts an MSNBC Special on Sunday, "The Mueller Report What You Need to Know," at 9.m. ET.
It will be followed by a special "Headliners" episode on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortes.
This newsletter was prepped for you by Stephanie Haberman and Sam Go.
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