URGENT!! Latest Trump News [12PM] 10_2_23 _ Breaking News Oct 2, 2023
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00:00 on a multi-million dollar civil fraud case that has his business empire on the line.
00:05 The New York Attorney General may call him as a witness.
00:08 My message is simple. No matter how powerful you are, no matter how much money you think you may have, no one is above the law.
00:19 Also deeper dysfunctions, Speaker Kevin McCarthy had to turn to Democrats to avoid a shutdown just hours before the midnight Saturday deadline.
00:29 Well, Democrats rescued him from a hard right wing move to punish him by taking away his gavel.
00:35 If somebody wants to make a motion against me, bring it. There has to be an adult in the room.
00:41 I am going to govern with what is best for this country.
00:45 The latest on the effort to end his speakership with Congressman Matt Gaetz set to take the House floor at any moment.
00:53 Plus, the back story of just how that last minute deal came together at the last minute to keep the government open and the crisis it is creating for Ukraine.
01:01 And the new Democrat in town, California's Governor appointing Emily's List President, Bufanza Butler, is only the third black woman Senator in history, as she temporarily fills Senator Dianne Feinstein's seat.
01:14 What that means for the growing list of Democrats already competing for that prize.
01:20 Hey everyone, I'm Andrea Mitchell in Washington. Former President Donald Trump is inside a Manhattan courthouse on trial in that civil case along with his two adult sons and his business on charges that he wildly inflated his assets for years and years to gain favorable financial deals.
01:36 The judges already found Trump and his sons liable of fraud, claiming Trump's real estate valuations were a "fantasy world".
01:44 Now the future of the entire Trump organization in New York is on the line with more allegations of persistent fraud still to be decided along with the size of the penalty that he will have to pay.
01:55 Before walking into the courtroom today, Trump denounced the case as election interference and insisted his financial returns were "phenomenal".
02:05 This is a continuation of the single greatest witch hunt of all time. It was never a default. It was never a problem. Everything was perfect. There was no crime. The crime is against me because we have a corrupt district attorney, but we have a corrupt attorney general.
02:26 Trump also lashed out on social media overnight against the judge and the New York Attorney General Letitia James, as you just called her, calling them both "democratic operatives".
02:36 The former president is expected to be in court tomorrow as well, spending the night in his Trump Tower apartment, an asset he is accused of reporting as nearly three times its actual size, and that added $200 million to its claimed value.
02:52 Joining me now is NBC News correspondent Vaughn Hilliard, outside the courthouse, the New York Times Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Michael Schmidt, author of "Donald Trump vs. the United States", and former FBI General Counsel and senior member of the Mueller probe Andrew Weissman.
03:07 Vaughn, what's happening inside the court? Explain what penalties Trump might be facing, and the fact that he's spoken out already outside in the hallway is extraordinary because he's attacking the attorney general and the judge again, only, you know, yards away from them.
03:25 This repeats history for Donald Trump here, attacking not only the prosecutor bringing this lawsuit against him, but also the judge, who is sitting there directly in front of him.
03:35 For Donald Trump, he doesn't have to be here in court today, but he chose to attend the proceedings, the first day of his trial here in lower Manhattan, after the staying the night in Trump Tower and motorcading down.
03:46 Currently, the courtroom is in a 10 minute break. We believe that the defense has wrapped up its opening statement, they were allotted two hours. The amount of time that his lead attorney, Chris Keis, actually took was substantially less here.
03:58 Potentially, we could even hear from our first witness today, the former accountant for Donald Trump himself, who had put together his tax returns in the past year.
04:08 Donald Trump, he is looking at a witness list to go before the judge in this lawsuit against him and his children and the Trump organization that includes the likes of Don Jr. and Eric, but also his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, who is, who's own testimony in cooperation with the New York Attorney General's office, Letitia James.
04:28 She is credited to him for providing the testimony that allowed her to start this investigation more than three and a half years ago in March of 2019.
04:35 But we should also expect to hear from Alan Weisselberg, the long time chief financial officer, dating back to 1973, when he was first brought on board to work with Donald Trump's father, Fred Trump.
04:46 For Donald Trump here, this is a moment in which he is looking at potentially not only the ten entities that have already been determined by the judge in this case to be turned over to a receiver and be dissolved here, but he is also looking at potentially a $250 million financial penalty that could have severe repercussions to the Trump organization at large and his properties outside of New York.
05:14 He and his children could also be barred from ever doing business in New York.
05:19 They could also face a real estate suspension here in the state of New York.
05:25 So this is a civil trial, not a criminal trial, like the four others that Trump is facing.
05:54 But it's really striking a chord with Trump.
05:56 It's getting him maybe where he lives, his finances, his business.
06:03 This case cuts to the heart of perhaps the most important thing to him, and that is what he thinks his worth is.
06:13 This is something that has come under question for many decades.
06:19 It was the subject of a book that was written about how much he actually had.
06:26 Donald Trump sued the author of the book at the time, trying to refute that to prove that he was worth more.
06:34 And I think that this also cuts to probably what struck so many Americans across the country when he was running in 2016.
06:45 If you lived in New York City, you knew that Donald Trump was a showman who did overstate a lot of different things.
06:52 But to many people in the country, he was the person from The Apprentice, the person in the boardroom, the person who was worth all of this money.
07:00 And what this trial does is it essentially says that was all a fraud.
07:05 That was all made up. That was all smoke and mirrors.
07:08 And look, who knows what type of impact this will have on Trump's standing.
07:14 We've obviously seen so many different things over the past, what is it, six, seven, eight years now.
07:19 But this does cut to the heart of that notion of him as an extraordinary businessman.
07:25 That is on trial here, and he is taking some big blows on it.
07:29 It could affect whether he can get insurance or bank loans for any of his other businesses, even outside New York.
07:38 I want to play another portion of the former president entering the courtroom this morning and going after both the judge and the whole system.
07:47 Now I have to go before a rogue judge as a continuation of Russia, Russia, Russia, as a continuation of the greatest witch hunt of all time.
08:00 And I don't think the people of this country are going to stand for it.
08:05 It's a disgrace. And you ought to go after this attorney general because she's turning off everybody from coming in.
08:11 So, he's gone after Letitia James repeatedly. Could these comments be interpreted as something far more serious?
08:22 And then I want to ask you about something Merrick Garland said on 60 Minutes last night.
08:28 Andrea, absolutely. I think that the former president unfortunately has a habit of using language like that that has an unfortunate call and response effect.
08:42 You just have to look at January 6th and his comments there and the government's allegations with respect to the call and response effect that it had.
08:54 And a whole series of others, most recently involving General Milley, now saying that the attorney general should be stopped.
09:03 These are the kinds of things that are going to certainly be raised and addressed by the D.C. federal judge.
09:14 She now has before her all of the papers. Both sides have put in all of their submissions with respect to restrictions that should be placed on or not placed on Donald Trump because he is out on bail on four criminal cases.
09:30 And so, this is exactly the kind of language that the government is very concerned about because they don't want to see any further violence.
09:41 And Merrick Garland, whom you know well, has not been speaking out very, very carefully when he does.
09:48 But he gave an extensive interview to 60 Minutes defending himself and the Justice Department against charges of politics.
09:55 But also speaking emotionally about what's at stake here, the democracy, the constitution, and how he feels as a family, as someone who came from a Holocaust family, lost relatives,
10:08 about the protections under our constitution. Take a look at this.
10:13 That we pass on a justice department that continues to pursue the rule of law and protect it.
10:22 It's the same thing that every generation has to hope.
10:27 That we can pass our democracy on in working order to the next generation that picks up the torch and is responsible when we're finished to continue that job.
10:41 Merrick Garland, he was emotional throughout that section of the interview, an extraordinary interview with Scott Pelley on 60 Minutes. Andrew?
10:53 Yeah, he was similarly emotional when he spoke at his confirmation, when he spoke at Ellis Island, talking about what the country means to him,
11:05 and particularly given his background and what it meant to his family coming here.
11:12 Whatever one thinks about Merrick Garland in terms of whether he should have acted faster or not in connection with any of these investigations and particular decisions,
11:23 I think it's very notable that he is understanding that it's so important for the Attorney General to be speaking out and for the public to get to know him,
11:36 because there really is a void in otherwise where you only hear from detractors, you only hear people talking about the weaponization and politicization of the Department of Justice.
11:47 And so he is clearly trying to counter that.
11:50 And he's been getting it from both sides, a lot of tension with the White House as well.
11:54 Vaughn Hilliard, Michael Schmidt, Andrew Weissman, thanks to all of you.
11:59 And Speaker Challenge, the House Speaker, striking early last night, late Saturday night, with Congress passing a 45-day funding extension.
12:06 But only after House Speaker Kevin McCarthy had to cave in and turn to Democrats to get it over the finish line, eliminating money for Ukraine as well,
12:14 and breaking his repeated commitment to a group of hard-right conservatives who said that that would trigger a move to force him out of his job,
12:22 led of course by Florida's Republican Matt Gaetz.
12:26 I do intend to file a motion to vacate against Speaker McCarthy this week.
12:30 I think we need to rip off the band-aid. I think we need to move on with new leadership that can be trustworthy.
12:36 He says he's coming for you. Can you survive?
12:38 Yes, I'll survive. You know, this is personal with Matt. Bring it on, let's get over with it, and let's start governing.
12:44 Joining me now is NBC News senior Capitol correspondent Garrett Haake.
12:50 Garrett, classic Congress, last-minute deal, but this one was even more perils of Pauline right up until the last second.
12:57 And how did they pull it off?
12:59 Well, Andrea, the main reason they were able to pull it off is because the Speaker totally changed course.
13:05 You described it as a cave. He basically changed strategies between Friday night and Saturday morning
13:11 after trying and failing several times to move a more conservative effort to keep the border open,
13:17 pair it with border security funding, or keep the government open rather, pair it with border security funding, make other changes.
13:22 On Saturday he said, you know what, forget it, basically.
13:25 We'll do what amounted to a clean extension of government funding for 45 days,
13:29 and we'll pass it under a type of rule called suspension where they don't have to do a rule vote,
13:34 they don't have to do a lot of these other procedural steps, but they do need a big number of crossover votes,
13:39 which he got from Democrats, more Democrats than Republicans supporting this bill,
13:45 and that would have been the final trigger here for Matt Gaetz.
13:47 We expect to come to the floor any minute now to potentially file that motion to vacate the Speakership
13:54 and essentially toss McCarthy over the side.
13:56 McCarthy spoke to reporters on his way in this morning.
13:59 He had a much more conciliatory tone and suggested he's very comfortable with the decision he made
14:05 to make a responsible governing choice and that he's ready to see what's going to happen with Gaetz and these other hardliners.
14:12 Here's a little bit of what he told reporters on his way in this morning.
14:15 Do you expect that Democrats will be needed to help you in the motion to vacate the vote?
14:22 And if you don't win that vote, will you put yourself up for the Speakership again in the new Speakership?
14:28 You'd have to ask them, I don't know. I'm just going to focus on doing the work I'm supposed to do.
14:33 I think this is a question to the institution itself.
14:39 I know in the past the other leaders together believed that this should never be in play, but I'm not worried about it.
14:45 If you win a motion to vacate, do you think that silences this block of people who held up the floor and frustrated the conference?
14:51 Do you want to win that vote to prove it's for you?
14:54 Look, I want to win the vote so we can finish the job for the American people.
14:59 So, Andrew, this has been a Republican on Republican melee for weeks now,
15:05 Democrats have a very interesting opportunity in their hands here if Gates does really push for McCarthy's ouster here.
15:11 Somebody's going to need Democratic votes to get out of this.
15:14 Either Democrats going with Gates and throwing McCarthy over the side, whom they know but don't trust,
15:20 or Democrats perhaps trying to extract concessions from the Speaker in exchange for their support.
15:25 There's really no math here to put a Democrat in the Speaker's chair,
15:29 but Democrats could approach this from a variety of different strategic directions.
15:34 Right now the operative cliche among Democrats is, "Let's keep our powder dry here,
15:38 let's wait and see a little bit about how this plays out," and it could take several days to play out according to the House rules.
15:43 So everyone is really watching the floor quite closely now and waiting to see exactly what Gates decides to do
15:49 and then what McCarthy asks, if anything, for Democratic support to keep his job.
15:55 Garrett Haig, thank you so much. Stay close by, we're going to come back to you once we hear from Matt Gates on the House floor.
16:03 Joining us now is Republican Congressman Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota, a key player in averting a shutdown.
16:09 Congressman, thank you very much for being with us, because there are reports from the Washington Post, for instance,
16:14 that you were part of a small group of Republicans working behind the scenes for a couple of days
16:18 on a sort of a break-glass Plan B to make sure the funding extension passed,
16:23 to get it done before midnight, get it to the Senate in time. How did you pull that off?
16:29 Well, I was also a group of small Republicans working to get the most conservative CR on the floor that could get 218 votes.
16:36 We started, you know, three weeks ago with the largest spending cuts in Congressional history and the most robust border security.
16:43 And our goal was always, for the vast majority of the Congress, is what is the most conservative CR that can get 218 votes?
16:49 And I think, unfortunately, we saw what that was on Saturday, because we just couldn't get our party to coalesce
16:58 into a really conservative package. So, the vast majority of Republicans wanted, did not want the government to shut down,
17:04 and we got through it on Saturday.
17:06 And I want to get back to you, if I could, if you could just listen with me while Matt Gaetz speaks.
17:11 He's speaking now on the House floor.
17:13 With President Biden and House Democrats. So, let me get this straight.
17:20 To extend Joe Biden's spending and Joe Biden's policy priorities, the Speaker of the House gave away to Joe Biden the money for Ukraine that Joe Biden wanted?
17:34 It is going to be difficult for my Republican friends to keep calling President Biden feeble while he continues to take Speaker McCarthy's lunch money in every negotiation.
17:48 The Speaker of the House has responded to these reports of a secret side deal on money for Ukraine, opaquely stating that he still wants to fund Ukraine and our border.
18:01 I have a few replies to this statement.
18:05 First, the Speaker's statement confirms the existence of a secret deal.
18:11 And I have talked to members of our own leadership who have said they didn't even know that Speaker McCarthy was negotiating a secret side deal outside of our conference, outside of his own leadership team, for the sake of Ukraine.
18:24 Second, Ukraine has lost the support of a majority of the majority.
18:29 The last time there was a free-standing Ukraine vote on this floor, it was last week, 101 Republicans voted for it, 117 Republicans voted against it.
18:39 According to the Hastert Rule, which Speaker McCarthy agreed to in January, you cannot use Democrats to roll a majority of the majority, certainly on something as consequential as Ukraine.
18:51 So for all the crocodile tears about what may happen later this week, about a motion to vacate, working with the Democrats is a yellow brick road that has been paved by Speaker McCarthy.
19:03 Whether it was the debt limit deal, the CR, or now the secret deal on Ukraine.
19:08 Third, this is swampy log rolling. The American people deserve single-subject bills.
19:14 I get that a lot of folks might disagree with my perspectives on the border or on Ukraine, but can we at least agree that no matter how you feel about Ukraine or the southern border,
19:24 they each deserve the dignity of their own consideration and should not be rolled together where they might pass, where each individually wouldn't?
19:33 This is what we're trying to get away from. This is the spirit of the January agreement we made with the Speaker.
19:38 No more lashing these disparate issues together so that the American people's interests are subjugated here on the floor of the House.
19:46 You know how we should stand up for our border? Demand that the United States Senate take up our single-subject appropriation bill that funded the border.
19:56 We voted for it. It has the policy demands that the continuing resolution that Speaker McCarthy advocated for on this floor did not.
20:06 Our DHS funding bill requires e-verify. And then hours later after we passed that, the Speaker wanted us to vote for a continuing resolution that didn't include e-verify.
20:17 Retreat is never a strategy to win anything.
20:22 So Mr. Speaker, just tell us. Just tell us. What was in the secret Ukraine side deal?
20:30 What commitments were made to President Biden to continue the spending of President Biden in exchange for doing things for President Biden?
20:41 It is becoming increasingly clear who the Speaker of the House already works for. And it's not the Republican conference.
20:50 Mr. Speaker, I would ask that these questions be answered soon because there may be other votes coming today or later this week that could be implicated by the answers to these questions.
21:05 Members of the Republican party might vote differently on a motion to vacate if they heard what the Speaker had to share with us about his secret side deal with Joe Biden on Ukraine.
21:18 I'll be listening. Stay tuned. And I yield back.
21:21 The gentleman yields back. Members are reminded to refrain from engaging in...
21:25 And back with us now is Republican Congressman Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota, a key player in averting a shutdown.
21:31 Congressman, thanks for waiting and it gave us the opportunity to have you listen as well to Matt Gaetz. What is your response?
21:38 Well, we passed H.R. 2 earlier in this Congress. The Senate hasn't taken it up.
21:43 We put it in the continuing resolution along with the most significant spending cuts in history to put the conservative side of the House position in the best position possible.
21:51 We didn't get that across. We knew Democrats weren't going to vote for it.
21:54 But if you have a group of Republicans in our conference that will not vote for anything and for wanting to see government function,
22:00 and if we're going to do the majority of the majority, then a motion to vacate seems a little silly because Kevin McCarthy has the majority or has the support of the vast majority of our conference.
22:10 And then lastly, I would just say we left a motion to vacate in the bathroom last week.
22:13 We teased it all weekend. We come to the floor of the House at noon as soon as it opens.
22:18 There's a little bit of Lucy pulling away the football here and we'll wait and see what happens.
22:22 You're calling his bluff?
22:25 Well, we'll see what happens. Kevin McCarthy, I mean, in order for Kevin McCarthy to be thrown out as Speaker,
22:31 Congressman Gaetz is going to need the support of the vast majority of Democrats.
22:34 So essentially, he's going to need exactly what he just spent five minutes railing against.
22:39 There's also a commitment from the leaders of both houses and the White House for Ukraine funding in either a stand-alone or something,
22:49 which the White House is acknowledging privately will have to include border security.
22:54 Will you vote for Ukraine funding with whatever is added to it as a separate legislation?
23:01 Well, I want to see some oversight. I want to see some accountability. And I want to see a plan.
23:07 That has been the biggest frustration with the vast majority of Republicans, but it's also why we tried the CR three weeks ago.
23:12 We knew that was never going to be law. Nobody thought the Senate was going to accept it.
23:16 But we were going to deal with the three most important issues, I think, to most Americans.
23:20 How to control government spending, the border, and what is the long-term strategy for the Ukraine.
23:25 Again, we put a CR together so conservative that we knew no Democrat would vote for it.
23:30 So, one has to ask the question of why it didn't get across the finish line.
23:34 It wasn't because of the vast majority of the Republican conference. It was because of a few in the minority of the Republican conference.
23:40 Congressman Kelly Armstrong, North Dakota, thank you very much for being with us.
23:45 And joining me now, Democratic Congressman Greg Lansman of Ohio and Brendan Boyle of Pennsylvania,
23:52 who is the ranking member of the House Budget Committee.
23:54 Gentlemen, would you just also stand by while we see what Matt Gaetz has to say now that he's come out on the steps.
24:01 CNN and on ABC this past weekend, Kevin McCarthy's true coalition partner on all things of substance has been the Democrats this Congress.
24:08 He worked with Democrats on the debt limit bill and only Democrats are really campaigning on that bill.
24:13 Republicans aren't campaigning on the debt limit bill. That was a Democrat bill, passed with mostly Democrat votes.
24:18 Then we get to the appropriations process and Speaker McCarthy purposefully delayed us.
24:23 He tried to back us up against shutdown politics. He tried to not pass single subject spending bills.
24:29 And at the end of the day, he had to utilize Democrats to pass a continuing resolution.
24:33 So if Kevin McCarthy works for Democrats and utilizes Democrats in order to keep power, that would be consistent with everything we've seen from him.
24:41 What do you say when he says that this is personal for you?
24:44 For some people, policy failures are recast as personal because their own failures are personally embarrassing to them.
24:55 This isn't personal. I can cite to you the specific elements of House rules that have been violated.
25:00 Kevin McCarthy agreed to a rule that we would have 72 hours to read an agenda so that it couldn't be amended. He blew past that.
25:06 Kevin McCarthy agreed to the Hastert rule, which is that you would never use the Democrats to roll a majority of the majority.
25:13 On the last Ukraine supplemental, 101 Republicans voted for it. 117 Republicans voted against it.
25:21 Does this sound personal to you? I'm pointing to specific things that Kevin agreed to that he hasn't complied with.
25:27 He's just trying to subjugate his real and significant breaches of our agreement as some sort of personal dispute.
25:35 But that says more about him than it says about what we're trying to do to change Washington.
25:39 Have you spoken to him?
25:41 How many people do you believe share your sentiment among House Republicans or in the House overall?
25:45 I think tens of millions of Americans share my sentiment.
25:49 And if you go look at Newt Gingrich and Mark Levin trying to attack me online, it is an avalanche of criticism from their own supporters and their own followers and listeners where those folks are standing with me, not some of these folks who are with McCarthy.
26:03 Can you get more than five or six Republicans to sign on to this?
26:06 Well, we'll see. And we'll see where the votes lie. That's the great thing about House.
26:11 If you lose this vote, will you continue to do this? And are you worried about throwing this institution into chaos, paralyzing an institution that your party runs?
26:19 You know what I think paralyzes us? Continuing to govern by continuing resolution and omnibus.
26:24 You know what I think throws this institution into chaos? Marching us toward the dollar not being the global reserve currency anymore.
26:31 You talk about chaos as if it's me forcing a few votes and filing a few motions.
26:38 Real chaos is when the American people have to go through the austerity that is coming if we continue to have $2 trillion annual deficits.
26:45 You don't know chaos until you've seen where this Congress and this Uniparty is bringing us.
26:50 Who would you want to see as Speaker instead?
26:55 We have a lot of talented people in our conference. There's probably a hundred Republicans in Congress that I would vote for for a Speaker, and maybe a hundred Republicans throughout the country that I would vote for.
27:04 Remember, the Speaker doesn't have to be... Excuse me, I'm finishing answering your question, but if you interrupt it, then the other people can't use my answer.
27:11 Then they just get you asking questions and they don't want to put you on because you're not a reporter for their network.
27:16 So the answer to your question is that we have a lot of folks in Congress who I think would be very capable to serve as Speaker.
27:21 We need to rebuild trust, and so I think we need someone who can connect the most conservative features of our conference to the most moderate features of our conference.
27:30 Congressman Lanzman, your reaction to Matt Gaetz, who aside from being rude to Ali Vitale, our correspondent, our network correspondent, I should point out, is also misstating the facts about the finances of what happens when there is a government shutdown.
27:44 Yeah, I mean he's not just being rude. Matt Gaetz wants to be on TV. This is what this is about. Matt Gaetz wants the attention.
27:54 The attention was pulled away from Matt Gaetz on Saturday when the vast majority of us passed the CR. It was pulled away from Matt Gaetz when we got the bipartisan budget agreement done in May and June.
28:05 And he's schooling her on how to do TV. That's his thing. He does TV. He's a total fraud. He is a fringe guy who starts fires.
28:21 He's a conflict entrepreneur. That's what he does. It's chaos and conflict so that he can be on TV when the vast majority of us want to govern.
28:29 And my hope is that we'll see some changes this week so that we can govern and govern effectively every day.
28:38 Congressman Lanzman, I'm going to ask Congressman Boyle as well who's with us, will Democrats vote to keep him in the Speaker's chair even though he's someone who has not been, you know, not only not been working with Democrats but who has gone against an agreement with the President himself and with the Republicans in the Senate and the Democrats in the Senate after the debt ceiling.
29:00 I mean he's played it both ways several times.
29:05 Yeah, I don't know how the votes will play out but I do, I will say this.
29:11 One, the vast majority of us want to govern. If you put a bipartisan bill in front of this Congress, we're going to pass it.
29:18 And we've shown that with the bipartisan budget agreement, with the CR on Saturday.
29:24 And number two, there will need to be some changes including marginalizing folks like Matt Gaetz who just want to burn the whole place down so that we can govern.
29:35 And if there's a path where we can govern effectively together, I think a lot of us will want to take that path.
29:42 Congressman Boyle, what price might you Democrats ask for? How about suspending action from the Oversight Committee on impeachment?
29:53 Well, first I think it's worth taking a step back and recognizing this is actually not just Matt Gaetz.
29:58 There are about 20 or so very hardline, firebrand, self-described MAGA conservatives who really have caused a great deal of dysfunction and have turned the House of Representatives under Republican rule into a circus.
30:14 And Kevin McCarthy has done nothing but enable them.
30:18 I mean, we saw this going back to January, the very first day of this House Republican leadership.
30:24 What did we see? The first time a speaker's vote lasted more than one round in over a century.
30:30 And now we might have the first motion to vacate vote.
30:34 Vote.
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34:34 oh,
34:36 oh,
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35:01 oh,
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35:50 oh,
35:52 oh,
35:54 oh,
35:55 oh,
35:57 oh,
35:59 oh,
36:01 oh,
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37:01 oh,
37:03 oh,
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37:09 oh,
37:11 oh,
37:13 oh,
37:15 oh,
37:17 oh,