Deadline: White House MSNBC
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Drawing on years of experience as communications chief for President George W. Bush and senior advisor for the McCain-Palin campaign, Nicolle Wallace provides political insight and clarity on where the decision-makers stand on complex issues. Join her for analysis and discussion with the key newsmakers every weekday.
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“Sometimes-icky, frequently-uncomfortable, always-compelling”
Nicolle Wallace is joined by Andrew Weissmann, John Heilemann, Yasmin Vossoughian, Kate Christobek, Ruth Ben-Ghiat, Mini Timmaraju, Charlie Sykes, Paul Rieckhoff, Ali Vitali, and Susanne Craig.
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“It was about today”
Nicolle Wallace is joined by: Lachlan Cartwright, Andrew Weissmann, Kristy Greenberg, Vaughn Hillyard, Rachel Maddow, Harry Litman, Claire McCaskill, Ben Freuerherd, and Sarah Longwell.
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“A last resort”
Nicolle Wallace is joined by Andrew Weissmann, Vaughn Hillyard, Susanne Craig, Melissa Murray, Donny Deutsch, Devlin Barrett, Harry Litman, Anne Applebaum, and Joy Reid.
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“Deny, deny, deny”
Nicolle Wallace is joined by Kristy Greenberg, Susanne Craig, Basil Smikle, Vaughn Hillyard, Sarah Matthews, Lisa Rubin, Tim Heaphy, Lachlan Cartwright, and Jeff Daniels.
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BONUS: The Stakes of Immigration with Aaron Reichlin-Melnick
As a bonus for listeners, we’re sharing the first episode of a special series from “Why Is This Happening? The Chris Hayes Podcast,” called “WITHpod 2024: The Stakes.” For the first time since 1892, we have an election in which both candidates have presidential records. It’s a unique chance to take a hard look at what both Joe Biden and Donald Trump have actually done as president. Chris Hayes talks to experts about both candidates’ records on specific policy areas. This week, Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, policy director at the American Immigration Council, joins to unpack immigration policies under Trump vs. Biden, the state of the asylum system, and more. Follow and listen to the whole series: https://link.chtbl.com/withpod_tsfd
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BONUS: Ep. 1 of Into America presents: Uncounted Millions
In a new Black History Month series, MSNBC’s Trymaine Lee discovers a surprising story on reparations that could shift the way this key debate is understood across the country.