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Amanpour

A Warning from Hillary Clinton; Crisis in Democracy and Rule of Law; Feminism and The Me Too Movement; How American History Influenced Polarizing Issues Today. Aired. Aired 1-2p ET

Aired December 27, 2018 - 13:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


[13:00:00] CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR, CHIEF INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Hello, everyone, and welcome to "Amanpour."

During the Christmas holidays, we're dipping into the archive and looking back at some of these years' highlights. So, here's what's coming up.

An urgent warning from Hillary Clinton in my exclusive interview at Oxford University.

And with comedy hit broad city and a new memoir in her pocket, I talk love, vulnerability and all the rest with the millennial superstar, Abbi

Jacobson.

And then, Historian Jill Lepore on the roots of political tribalism. Can political stability return to rescue our democracies?

Welcome to the program, everyone. I'm Christian Amanpour in London.

America's role in the world is back in the spotlight after the resignation of Nikki Haley as U.N. Ambassador. But after the bitter Brett Kavanaugh

appointment to the Supreme Court, the spotlight is also on rule of law and democratic institutions at home. The president appeared uninterested in

judicial impartiality on the nation's highest court at an unprecedented event at the White House last night.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

DONALD TRUMP, U.S. PRESIDENT: On behalf of our nation, I want to apologize to Brett and the entire Kavanaugh family for the terrible pain and

suffering who have been force to endure. Those who step forward to serve our country deserve a fair and dignified evaluation.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

AMANPOUR: When Donald Trump won the 2016 election, his opponent, Hillary Clinton, called on all Americans to give the new president a chance to

lead. Since then, she has become more and more alarmed at what she calls an attack on America's democratic institutions.

Clinton is at Oxford University to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the universal declaration of human rights, which was negotiated for the United

States by her personal hero, Eleanor Roosevelt.

When I spoke with her there, we discussed the crisis in democracy, what Kavanaugh means for the rule of law, and for the midterm elections.

Hillary Rodham Clinton, welcome to the program.

HILLARY CLINTON, FORMER U.S. DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE: Thank you very much.

AMANPOUR: You're here to talk about the crisis in democracy, not just in the United States but also around the world.

Let me just take you back to election night 2016 when you said we have to give him a chance, we have to let him prove himself and lead, talking about

then President-Elect Trump. Now, you say you think you were overly hopeful.

What, precisely about democracy has you worried?

CLINTON: Well, really five things. And I started worrying at his inauguration, both because of what he said in his speech, which I thought

was defiant, defensive, dystopian, it wasn't a speed to bring together people who had not supported him. But instead, it was aimed, as I say in

my book, what happened at the, you know, white-nationalist gut.

And then, over the course of now two years, nearly, since the election, we have seen him degrading the rule of law, we have seen him delegitimizing

our elections, we have seen him spreading corruption, both him personally, his family business, others in his administration. We have seen him also

attacking truth and facts, even reason itself. And fundamentally trying to undermine our national unity.

So, I was hopeful. I wanted to give him a chance. I think every new president deserves a chance. But every month that's gone by, I've become

more and more worried about how he governs and how he treats people.

AMANPOUR: Well, we've obviously gone through an incredibly divisive confirmation hearing and now appointment to Supreme Court. I'm going to

get to that in a moment.

But specifically, because midterms are coming up.

CLINTON: Right.

AMANPOUR: I mean, it is an election season in the United States. Everybody says elections have consequences. What are your solutions,

proposals? How can one get out of this crisis that you identified?

CLINTON: Well, the first step is for Democrats to win the House and hopefully the Senate in November, in these midterms. That's a tall order.

It's looking positive. But one never knows in an election, as I know from personal experience.

So, we have to convince people that whatever they care about is on the ballot. It doesn't matter. Do they care about the climate, do they care

about the economy, do they care about health care and pre-existing conditions, do they care about our foreign policy, whatever they care

about, it is on the ballot?

We have seen the unpredictable behavior of this president. And if he wants not only to change direction, but to hold him and his administration

accountable, you have to vote.

AMANPOUR: Can I ask you what you mean by accountable? I think it's quite important because many people even here, I'm sure they've asked you, is the

president going to get impeached? If the Democrats win, will they impeach him? The Minority Leader, Nancy Pelosi, told me last month, that was not

was not her goal, to go for impeachment. What do you think?

CLINTON: Well, what I think is there are many ways for a Congress to hold a president accountable. Some of them, frankly, should have been exercised

by the Republican majorities in both the House and the Senate.

The investigation into Russia's interference in our election. The Senate Intelligence Committee has tried to work in a bipartisan way. The House

Intelligence Committee has been turned into a circus.

So, a really focused deliberative effort to not only look at what this administration has done and that's in every area, whether it's in how

they're regulating or deregulating the economy or the tax cuts, the ballooning of the deficit and the debt, what they're doing to the

environment, education. There is so much to be concerned about.

So, the first order of business for Democratic House and Senate should be to get back to regular order and try to impose discipline and

accountability on this administration.

The question about impeachment, you know, that will be left to others to decide. I want to stop the degrading of the rule of law, the

delegitimizing of elections. One of their priorities should be, let's protect our elections. Let's make sure that we have electoral security.

Let's end the suppression of voters. So, there's a big agenda if the Democrats take over.

AMANPOUR: I want to get rule of law given what just happened in the Kavanagh hearings and appointment. But first, I want to ask you about

women, about -- you have said women's rights to human rights and human rights are women's rights.

What do you think the Kavanaugh hearings, what kind of impact will they have on the midterms? Because at first, the Democrats were happy that it

might galvanize, now the Republicans are happy that it will galvanize their base. What do you think is going to happen?

CLINTON: I think that both sides will be galvanized, it's just a question of who actually takes those feelings and shows up to vote, and it always

comes down to that.

We have more voters who favor Democratic candidates. One of the tragedies of what's happened in our electoral system is the Republicans have

systematically suppressed voters, probably as many, Christiane, as 12 million voters were purged by Republican governments in states between 2012

and 2016. We have all kinds of questions about the security of our voting machines.

So, we know that Democrats have to turn out in even bigger numbers and a lot of congressional districts and states to be successful because they're

being, you know, pushed back by a headwind that is trying to prevent them or discourage them from voting.

But if Democrats -- and I only include Democrats, I include Republicans who are worried about the direction of this administration, independence who

want to see more accountability, if they show up, we should win.

AMANPOUR: Last night, President Trump had a sort of ceremony for now Justice Kavanaugh at the White House, and he apologized on behalf the

American people for the immense amount of pain and harm that he said that the judge had been put through by this system.

What do you make of that and what message, including the president's mocking of Christine Blasey Ford for her allegations, what message does

that send to women? And remember, went for President Trump in 2016.

CLINTON: White women.

AMANPOUR: White women.

CLINTON: White women. All women went for me. And look, White women have been voting against Democratic presidential candidates for decades now.

The White vote has only then won twice in the last 60 years. My husband being one of the two. Lyndon Johnson being the other. So, it's not a

surprise. It's a disappointment but it's not a surprise.

What was done last night in the White House was a political rally. It further undermined the image and integrity of the court. And that troubles

me greatly, it saddens me, because our judicial system has been viewed as one of the main pillars of our constitutional government.

So, I don't know how people are going to react to it. I think given our divides, it will pretty much fall predictably between those who are for and

those who are against. But the president's been true to form. He has insulted, attacked, demeaned women throughout the campaign really for many

years leading up to the campaign, and he's continued to do that inside the White House.

Kellyanne Conway, the Presidential Adviser, talked about this process, and she said, "It looks very much like a vast left-wing conspiracy." It echoes

what you said about when your husband was being perused by the investigation back in the '90s, a vast right-wing conspiracy.

First of all, your comment on that mirrored language. And secondly, do you see any way, even a conservative who I was speaking of yesterday said the

only way to repair America is try to get back to some civility and to try to make it that even if we have political disagreements, we're not going to

war with each other, we're not trying to destroy each other.

CLINTON: Well, certainly, I would love to see us return to civility. Listening to one another, working out our differences. That is not the

Republican party that exists today, and that is certainly not the administration that we have in power right now.

When the Republican Senate denied the right of President Obama to have his nominee for the Supreme Court, Merrick Garland, heard --

AMANPOUR: I think you even wrote that they stole a justice from the Democratic party.

CLINTON: Well, I think they did. I mean, to keep a Supreme Court seat open for a year, to deny a distinguished jurist, they could have voted him

down. They could have said, "Well, for ideological reasons, philosophical reasons, we're not going to vote for him." But no, they stonewalled. And

that was such a breach of Senate ethics and the constitutional responsibility of the Senate to advice and consent on nominations, that you

cannot be civil with a political party that wants to destroy what you stand for, what you care about.

That's why I believe if we are fortunate enough to win back the House and/or the Senate, that's when civility can start again. But until then,

the only thing that the Republicans seem to recognize and respect is strength.

And you heard how the Republican members, led by Mitch McConnell, the president, really demeaned the confirmation process, insulted and attacked

not only Dr. Ford but women who were speaking out. You know, look, I remember Republican operatives shutting down the voting in Florida in 2000.

I remember the swift voting of John Kerry. I remember the things that even the Republican party did to John McCain in 2000. I remember what they did

to me for 25 years, the falsehood, the lies, which, unfortunately, people believed because the Republicans have put a lot of time, money and effort

in promoting them.

So when you're dealing with an ideological party that is driven by the lust for power, that is funded by corporate interest who want a government that

does its bidding, it's hard -- you can be civil but you can't overcome what they intend to do unless you win elections.

And so, the answer to everything is to get back to a balance, to get back to what is called regular order. They don't even have committee processes.

They -- the idea that they wouldn't seek and obtain all of the written record from Kavanaugh, that they would not have done a full investigation,

that is not the way that they treat Democrats.

And so, unless we win and we say to the people of our country, "Look, we need to protect the rule of law. We need to protect processes that are in

place in the Congress and the government to protect you, to protect what you care about." So, this should go both ways, and that's what I'm hoping

for.

AMANPOUR: You talked about the papers and the written rhetoric and you talked about the Democrats. Well, apparently, when Elena Kagan was being

confirmed, Democrat handed over all her written paper and stuff she had done for the administration, and there seems to be sort of a question

amongst Democrats, should we fight dirty and meet them or whoever on the same playing field or should we, as Michelle Obama said, "When they go low,

we go high."

Rahm Emanuel who used to work for your husband, who also worked for President Obama has remembered President Clinton saying that, you know,

"Democrats since the Vietnam war have been afraid of using power, have been reluctant to, you know, be a bit more ruthless."

I mean, what is the answer? Especially when President Trump says about Al Franken, who was basically pushed out by your party of Senate because of

certain allegations, that the Democrats folded like a wet rag. Are you the wet rag party today?

CLINTON: Look, think Democrats have a real dilemma. We do believe in making government work. We're not interested in disabling it, cutting

taxes so dramatically that it gives you an excuse Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. We try to have empathy for the situations people find

themselves in, that's why support universal health care, why we wouldn't deprive people with pre-existing conditions from getting access to health

care, and the list goes on.

So, Democrats come to this current political moment, really torn, because on the one hand, we don't want to model bad behavior, we don't want to act

like there are no limits what should be done in a legislative or executive branch.

But on the other hand, if we don't get smarter -- and include myself in this, you know, and I did not know the extent to which there was Russian

interference. I knew there had been some in my election. I didn't understand the pressures from the right-wing, frankly, on Jim Comey that

would cause him to interfere in the election to my detriment. Those were things that were almost unimaginable.

Who in setting up a presidential campaign would say, "Oh, and don't forget, we have to worry about the Russians manipulating the outcome. We have to

worry about the FBI director intervening into it. We have to worry about WikiLeaks, which was (INAUDIBLE) subsidiary Russian intelligence. I mean,

who would have thought that those were the challenges we face.

So, we do have to get tougher and smarter and stronger. Not cross the line into lying, but there's enough truth and facts that should be more widely

known about what this Republican stand for. Whose bidding, they are doing. And where Trump really comes from.

And at some point, the accumulation of evidence about how Trump and his father manipulated their business, how they, in so many ways, broke, you

know, at least spirit if not the letter of tax laws, how he did business with the mafia, how he's indebted to the Russians. At some point, that has

to matter. But it won't matter unless Democrats keep driving this message about what's really at stake with the presidency of someone who admires

dictators, who clearly authoritarian tendencies.

You know, one of the reasons I gave the speech today about human rights is, I want people not to think of it as some highfalutin diplomatic endeavor

that academics study, I want people to understand that human rights are really the freedom that we want to have, the decency we should treat each

other with, the respect we should demand for ourselves, the opportunities we should have in democracies. And I want people to realize those are at

risk right now.

AMANPOUR: You said in your speech that in the years since the end of World War II, the universal declaration of human rights, the United Nations, all

of this world order that the United States built and led has done so much good. There's much, much less war, there's less disease, there's all --

that has more literacy. But you also said that freedom seems to be on the backfoot and freedom seems to be on the wane.

That's a really shocking thing to hear. We're sitting in Europe. You mentioned the nationalist right-wing governments of Hungary, Poland, which

are really assaulting the rule of law.

And I'm interested how you compare that, again, with what's happening in your own country where I asked you about left-wing conspiracy, you didn't

answer it, but Judge Kavanaugh in his opening statement the other day talked about a vast left-wing smear campaign, it was very political and

very partisan.

So, how does the U.S. rule of law in the Supreme Court with this now political taint to it measure up against actual assaults on independent

judiciaries right here in Eastern Europe and other parts?

CLINTON: I think this is one of the really important questions that the press as well as political leaders and the public need to unpack and

understand, why is it when the world, and particularly the West, is by any measure richer, safer, healthier, stronger?

What is giving rise to these yearnings, not for greater freedom and for a democracy that really lives up to its name where you don't try to throw

voters off the roles but you want everyone to vote? What is it that is motivating large numbers of people to seek the kind of leadership that will

limit freedom, starting with the press, academia, political parties?

And why is that so my on the right in the United States and in Europe look to Putin, a known authoritarian, someone who has journalists and political

opponents murdered with impunity? What is going on in the minds of 21st century Americans and Europeans that would lead them to say, you know, "I

just want to have security, stability and I think we need a strong leader"?

Now, some of it is traced to discriminatory feelings, prejudice bias that other people are getting ahead at a greater rate or somehow to their

disadvantage of me. And so, people look and say, "Well, these cultural changes, whether it's, you know, woman's right to choose or gay marriage or

whatever it might be," that somehow, they find threatening.

And so, there are cultural forces at work that are now spilling over into political allegiance that is often described as tribalism. So, yes, I want

my freedom but limit hers. Take away her right to choose. Oh, and you know what, I shouldn't have to sell a cake or provide a service to a gay

person because that impinges on my freedom. And all of a sudden you start to see the atomization and the fragmentation.

So, I think these are really important questions.

AMANPOUR: So, what happens though if some of these huge cultural issues which have the potential to rip, you know, the fabric of society apart even

further, comes to the Supreme Court at a time like this when even other justices have been saying, you know, "We used to have this kind of tacit,

sort of balance. There was always one of us who potentially would vote either way." And that's sort of a sum-up of what Elena Kagan said at

Princeton.

What happens now and are you worried, do you believe that with Justice Kavanaugh, who by the way attacked the Clintons, saying that all of this

was revenge for the Clintons --

CLINTON: Yes, I heard that.

AMANPOUR: And of course, he was on the Ken Starr Commission, I believe.

CLINTON: Yes, he was.

AMANPOUR: What do you think? Do your faith in rule of law in the United States Supreme Court going forward?

CLINTON: Well, I always have had even when I disagreed with decisions. I'm in a wait and see attitude. There will be some important cases before

the court. I don't know what private assurances Kavanaugh may have given to certain senators to win their vote. Those senators seem to have heard

him say that he's going to follow precedent, that he's not going to overturn Roe v. Wade. I will wait and see.

Now, the bigger question though is, what does it mean for the rule of law if the Supreme Court is seen as politically partisan? That is deeply

troubling. Because then people are going to disregard what the court says. People are going to believe that the court had an outcome that it sought to

obtain.

Now, I know the right has said for many years, "Well, we had activist judges that Democrats appointed." I don't argue with that. But I think in

many ways the activism was a reaction to social changes. So, was it activists to find that there was a right to an education under Brown v.

Board of Education and to order the desegregation of schools? Probably, but was it sufficiently rooted in the constitution and in the overall

understanding of what the United States has held out as a promise to all of its people regardless of race? I think so.

And you could go through case after case. So, in some ways, is the glass half empty? Is the glass half full? Here's what I'm hoping, Christiane,

I'm hoping that now that the confirmation battle has ended, Kavanaugh has been confirmed and seated on the Supreme Court, that the awesome

responsibility of that position will affect him and, frankly, everybody else up there, whoever they are, whoever they vote with.

Because we're losing faith in all of our institutions. People have a low opinion of the Congress, a low opinion of the press, a low opinion of now

the church, unfortunately, a low opinion of nearly everything. And if we don't rebuild our institutions, we can't rebuild our checks and balances.

And more than any political outcome, I worry about the constitutional crisis that this will present.

AMANPOUR: To foreign policy quickly. You mentioned in your speech and in some of your recent writings what's happening in China, for instance.

CLINTON: Yes.

AMANPOUR: President Trump seems to have a very good relationship with President Xi. Obviously, trade issue is a problem right now. But there's

also a surveillance state with a massive internment camp that you --

CLINTON: Right.

AMANPOUR: -- describe in Uyghur land where the Chinese Muslims live. And your concern about maybe Putin picking up that philosophy, that technology.

Explain a little bit.

CLINTON: Well, I think what China is doing, first with respect to the Uyghurs who are Muslims who are Chinese citizens, they are pursuing a

ruthless campaign against them, setting up internment camps, for example.

But it's not only about the Uyghurs. The Chinese are engaged in constructing a surveillance state that will surveil everyone. You don't

have to live in Western China. You can be in Beijing or Shanghai or any other part of China where the Han Chinese live, and you are now going to be

subjected to facial recognition, to something they call a social credit score where you get points from your government for doing things your

government approves of. And you get, apparently, demerits and maybe even punished for doing things your government doesn't approve of.

Now, who is making those decisions? There is a very concerted effort by this current Chinese government to prevent the internet from influencing

opinion inside China. Now, as they develop these tools, and they're very sophisticated, they're going to sell them. And it won't necessarily just

be the Russian who are competing to apply such tools, the Iranians, the North Koreans who already have a police state but can actually impose even

greater control through this, other countries that are electing populist or nationalist leaders who are creating authoritarian regimes even if they

were first elected. So, it's not going to only affect the Chinese people.

AMANPOUR: To that end, it appears that you and your husband, President Clinton, are going to go on a big city, 13-city wide speaking engagement

around the United States. It's just been announced. What is it you plan to say? What are you going to talk about?

CLINTON: Well, we were asked to do this. Apparently, there's some appetite for it. But it's going to be both personal, which is something

people are very interested in. Obviously, I'll talk about my grandchildren.

But I think from my perspective, it will be also answering questions about what's happening in our country and t world. Both Bill and I are deeply

concerned.

Earlier in the interview you quote what had Rahm Emanuel said about Bill. And, you know, Bill had to be incredibly strong, first to get elected, then

to get re-elected and to survive. And it was not easy by any means, obviously. But he really believes Democrats have to be tougher and have to

stand up to the bullying and the intimidation.

So, I think he'll have things to say about his own experience and how it applies here. I will certainly have a lot to say about what's going on in

the world today based on not only my Secretary of State years but my travel and my book, "What Happened," which came out in paperback, which has an

afterword where I talk about these threats to democracy.

I don't want it to be too serious because I think a lot of people will be coming just to see us, to show their support, to be part of a gathering of

like-minded folks. But I do want to leave some thoughts, as I tried to do in the speech today, about what each of us can do.

AMANPOUR: You say that you're going to talk about the difficulties that your husband went through, that you went through. Obviously, you're going

to be prepared to have questions about that moment in 1998, the impeachment, the allegations of sexual harassment against your own husband.

Are you prepared to answer those? Is he prepared to answer them? And how do you see that similar or different from what President Trump is being

accused of and Kavanaugh and others today?

CLINTON: Well, there's a very significant difference. And that is the intense, long lasting partisan investigation that was conducted in the

'90s. If, you know, the Republicans, starting with President Trump on down, want a comparison, they should welcome such an investigation

themselves.

AMANPOUR: Hillary Clinton, thank you very much indeed for joining me.

CLINTON: Good to talk to you.

[13:30:00] AMANPOUR: So, turning now to a completely different lane. One of Comedy Central's biggest stars, relatable, funny, with a pinch of

politics, Abbi Jacobson is the co-creator, actress, and writer of Broad City, which follows the everyday lives of two New York girls.

The comedian recently pressed pause on her real life too to take a solo road trip across America which inspired her new book. It's called "I May

Regret This", a series of self-discovery essays which puts her readers in the passenger seat as she reflects on love, loss, and work.

I spoke to Abbi Jacobson about navigating feminism and comedy in Trump town.

Abbi Jacobson, welcome to the program.

ABBI JACOBSON, AUTHOR, I MIGHT REGRET THIS: Thank you for having me.

AMANPOUR: So I Might Regret This, what might you regret precisely?

JACOBSON: Well, you know, it took me so long to find this title. I think I -- this book of essays is just very vulnerable. I was writing very

personally. And, you know, Broad City in a way is personal but I get to kind of hide behind this character the whole time.

And this just feels very much I'm putting much more of myself out there. I don't think I regret it. But that's the feeling I had while writing it,

was a little bit like what am I doing.

AMANPOUR: Well, it's nerve-wracking, isn't it?

JACOBSON: Yes.

AMANPOUR: I mean vulnerability, intimacy, all of that is just plain nerve- wracking.

JACOBSON: Yes.

AMANPOUR: Why did you go there?

JACOBSON: I think I was feeling -- so I went on this road trip. We had wrapped Broad City Season 4. I was feeling so overwhelmed with work and I

was also really heartbroken.

I had just basically been dumped a couple months so I was very heartbroken and I needed to get away from anything that I knew was like my routine

life. And I needed to be in L.A. for work and so I planned this road trip by myself.

And I think it's a mix of me writing in this longer format. I've never really written essays or a longer format other than scripts. And it was a

mix of being nervous about that and being nervous about just opening up so much.

AMANPOUR: You say about, you know, writing in the book, "I became a writer because being a working actor wasn't really happening. I had no control of

my career being just an actor. And as I've said before, I enjoyed being in control. So in a bizarre turn of events, I ended up in the driver's seat

of my acting experience by creating a part for myself."

JACOBSON: Yes. I entered the world of comedy and was like trying to audition and just could not -- I couldn't get parts on the stage there and

I couldn't even get terrible commercials. Like I wrote about in the book - -

AMANPOUR: Not even terrible commercials? Forget (INAUDIBLE).

JACOBSON: This is so embarrassing. I was like so -- I remember being upset that I didn't get this commercial for foot fungus cream.

AMANPOUR: Foot fungus cream?

JACOBSON: Yes. Because it was so rare for me to even get an audition for a commercial. But I was like I can't believe I didn't get this commercial.

It just was not working out.

And then Ilana and I had been doing improv forever together for like three years and we had such a clear dynamic that felt different than anything

else.

AMANPOUR: Let us play this little bit of a clip.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

ILANA GLAZER: Why would you go into a big building today of all days? Abbi, it's inauguration day.

JACOBSON: I know. I'm sorry, OK.

GLAZER: I also asked about my laser hair removal. Abbi, it's about to get I Am Legend up in here. You're going to need those --

JACOBSON: No, dude. But I prepaid for the package. What am I not going to finish a package? I'm sorry. I don't want a mustache for the

apocalypse.

GLAZER: Mustaches are going to be currency soon.

JACOBSON: I mean it's going to grow back. Leisurely, partly works on me.

GLAZER: I know. I think it's like the equipment and the settings more importantly.

JACOBSON: OK, OK, OK, it's happening. We are T minus 60 seconds until Trump is inaugurated.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

AMANPOUR: In this moment of really vitriolic and virulent conversation in public, Trump attacking us, potentially we're attacking him, how do you

feel about matching like with like? I mean it was very anti-Trump with a lot of swear words, very very vicious. What do you feel about being in

that mix of that rhetoric?

JACOBSON: It's starting to get a little scary to be so actively anti-Trump publicly. But also as a comedian, I mean that was this we do this like

bridge content going to hack into Broad City that allows us to do content that when we're not airing.

So the inauguration wasn't only we're airing and so that felt like a day that we wanted to comment on. And they're always intended [13:35:00] to be

funny but it's also -- I mean as a comedian, it's like, yes, funny first but you can't ignore what's going on in the world. And if our voices lend

itself to commenting on something that's important and significant for the time, I mean that's like my job.

AMANPOUR: A lot of what's happening in our political culture actually directly affects the faith and the rights of women. And I want to play

this really, really sweet clip which is when again you and Ilana are at Hillary Clinton's campaign headquarters in 2016 obviously before the

election and here it goes.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

JACOBSON: Holy.

GLAZER: Oh my God.

JACOBSON: Sorry. We are just so excited.

HILLARY CLINTON: It's all right. Just take your time.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

AMANPOUR: That pretty much sums it up.

JACOBSON: I mean I think she ad-lib take your time because we just went on and on. And she was -- I mean she was such a pleasure and I wish people

kind of got to see how she was with us on set. She was just laughing with us.

AMANPOUR: You and Ilana have come out and said that she shouldn't run again for president.

JACOBSON: I mean I adore -- I really love Hillary. I think that she has - - was the most experienced person to ever run for president. But I just

think that we need some fresh blood in there.

We need like somebody new to come in. I hope she -- and then so I said in that interview down there in D.C. too, I hope she continues to do

something. I'm so excited to see what she does next.

AMANPOUR: The rights of women and girls are always in play. You know some are saying that there's an unseemly backlash against Me Too, not just from

certain male quarters but actually a girl on girl so to speak.

Just went to a comedy show in London stand up and she did this routine called Girl On Girl. And it was actually about the backlash against women

from other women and women being encouraged to almost beat up on each other over this whole Me Too movement. What do you make of it and how do you

process and translate that for yourself and for your millennial female and male audience?

JACOBSON: I mean I haven't experienced that personally, the -- like a backlash of women against women. That's just something that exists that

people expect women to like be competitive with one another.

And like a lot of interviews Ilana and I used to do people would just ask us like what we fight about or like what makes us -- and it's like that's

such a bizarre place to go. Like why is that your go-to question? But I think it might go into the Me Too movement too where I don't know if that's

like a narrative that's put upon the movement.

AMANPOUR: Well, you know, it is actually interesting because we see certainly with the proliferation of social media and how young girls,

teenagers, young teenagers are on this all the time. And it's not just a kumbaya. There is quite a lot of cat fighting and unpleasantness between

young girls on social media. What do you -- what's going on and what do you think you'd like to say about that?

JACOBSON: I mean social media -- I have -- I'm of two minds of social media because it is why I have a career at all. We started on YouTube and

we shared -- you know my whole comedy career has begun because we shared stuff on social media.

But it is -- like it brings out the worst in us and it allows us to be anonymous and full of hate. And like I'm so happy that I did not grow up

with social media. Like I got -- I think I had Facebook when I was in college. I was like part of the first round of Facebook.

I didn't even have a cell phone. I cannot imagine what that must be like to be in high school and to be plugged in. And like the bullying that just

exists in person is tenfold on social media because you can hide behind that.

AMANPOUR: So what will the fifth season bring? We're in the post-election world but, you know, you've got at least another two years of this cycle.

What will this next season tell us?

JACOBSON: So this season, we don't go into feelings about this administration as much as we did in the fourth. It's commented on, you

know, everyone like one would in their everyday lives. But it's, you know, it ends. This is the last season and so there's --

AMANPOUR: That's it?

JACOBSON: Yes.

AMANPOUR: Why did you decide to end it?

JACOBSON: We -- it was tough. We thought about it for a long time. [13:40:00] And it's really about living in New York in your 20's and we're

playing younger versions of ourselves.

And it just felt like the kind of show that shouldn't go on forever and that we really want it to be good. And we don't want people -- I don't

know. I think you should end when people still love it.

AMANPOUR: A lot of people have looked at Broad City as a real sort of millennial feminist track. The "Wall Street Journal" came out with this

thing like a sneak, what was it? A sneak --

JACOBSON: Attack.

AMANPOUR: Sneak attack. How did you -- what did you get from that? What do you think it meant?

JACOBSON: I love that term because when we set out to write the show, you know, we never -- we didn't say, "Oh, let's make a feminist show." And

when that came out, we realized, oh, this is a sneak attack because it is so feminist. But it's just feminist by us being very true to who we are

and what we believe in. I think maybe at the time when we started doing the show, you kind of had to be a little sneaky about it.

I mean when we pitched the show, Girls was on the air as well and New Girl which like very different shows. But when we pitched, it was like networks

should be like we already have a show --

AMANPOUR: About girls.

JACOBSON: Yes. And it's like there can only be one. And now I feel like it's way more let's get more shows like this.

AMANPOUR: Abbi Jacobson, thank you so much.

JACOBSON: Thank you so much. What a pleasure.

AMANPOUR: So as politics in the United States continues to feel increasingly tribal and divisive, many are turning to the past to look for

answers.

In her new book "These Truths, A History of the United States", author Jill Lepore explores how American history has influenced some of the most

polarizing issues in politics today, such as race, women's rights, and hyper-partisanship.

Our Walter Isaacson sits down to see what it would take to redress this gaping wound and possibly rescue a democracy in distress.

WALTER ISAACSON, CONTRIBUTOR: Welcome to the show, Jill. Thanks for being here.

JILL LEPORE, AUTHOR: Thanks so much for having me.

ISAACSON: And on the best seller list with a scrawling, wonderful -

LEPORE: Who knew?

ISAACSON: -- narrative history of the United States. Who knew? And your theme is in your title, "These Truths", from one of the greatest sentences

ever written, the second (inaudible) of the declaration. What are these truths?

LEPORE: Well these truths in the Declaration of Independence that are self-evident, political equality, popular sovereignty, and natural rights.

And this is a nation that is founded on an idea, those particular three ideas, and unlike other countries that are founded on a common ancestry or

a common heritage or a chain of leaders, this is a nation that is founded on those ideas.

And so the way the book works is to try to figure out where did those ideas come from. They have a particular history and then to ask, you know,

whether the course of American history since the founding has belied them.

ISAACSON: Well the idea of equality, of course, is written by the people who write both the declaration and the constitution, but as you point out

in your book, if it's Madison, you also do Billy his slave, George Washington you do Henry. You weave the slaves in with the people writing

the constitution and the declaration. Why did you do that and what does that help teach?

LEPORE: Yes. So one of the things I want to call the readers' attention to is the asymmetry of the historical records. We know so much about

Madison, he's endlessly fascinating. We know a lot less about the people that he owned as chattel, as property.

And yet we are descended from both of those people, from all of those people. And to have to sort of struggle for racial equality and political

equality in our day means having a richer history and a fuller history.

So the -- and a more integrated history, right. So people sort of would study, you know, presidential history or political history and then maybe

also studied the history of slavery and emancipation and Jim Crowe and civil rights as if those are kind of separate tales, you know, you could

tell them in separate books.

But they're -- we know in our own day, these things, you know, Black Lives Matter and Obama's presidency and Trump's presidency are all part of the

same world. So how to restore that sense of the interconnectedness and I think the causal relationships between those two things. There's a big

commitment that I made in -- again, giving it a shot, trying to lay out a story that holds together.

ISAACSON: And you also weave in women that way, we share a common interest in Benjamin Franklin and --

LEPORE: Yes.

(CROSSTALK)

ISAACSON: -- a wonderful book you did on his sister Jane, right. And tell me how that story wove in and you brought women into the narrative?

LEPORE: Yes, what I'm trying to -- like with the history of race, there are these sort of segregated history in our textbooks. With women, they

really remain pretty much left out of any account of political history.

Women tend to sort of appear in 1848 and kind of curtsey and say we would like our rights and then they come back in 1920 and get the right to vote

and then they appear sort of, you know, protesting the America -- the beauty pageant [13:45:00] or whatever, Miss America in 1968.

And that's kind of it and it makes no sense. It doesn't explain the world we live in now where partisanship and struggles for women's equality before

the law are just explosively in confrontation with one another in our contemporary world.

So I started out wanting to be a historian because I wanted to write women's history. And I ended up writing political history but trying to

write political history that took women seriously as political actors. And one way I tried to do that here is both with, you know, individual

characters we might want to know more about like Jane Franklin is quite -- she's just a compelling person.

But also just thinking about all the decades when women didn't have the right to vote and yet influenced American politics outside of electoral

politics, through the work of moral suasion and the moral crusade, which becomes just a key feature of the American political style, the moral

crusade that's really brought into politics by women working as abolitionists.

It's fueled by the second great awakening of evangelical Christianity in the 1820s and '30s, working for women's rights, working for temperance,

later for prohibition. In the 20th century, women's moral crusades have generally moved to the right.

McCarthyism can really be understood as a moral crusade really run by women. The pro-life movement, of course, is a moral crusade. You could

think of the Me Too movement as a moral crusade too.

Women have really consistently been denied equal political power and the way that women have tended to try to influence politics has taken -- has

generally taken other forms that have big consequences for how our republic works.

ISAACSON: You talk about how the women involvement in politics has often been a very conservative thing. In fact, you highlight Phyllis Schlafly,

one of the women who was part of the original I guess '70s and '80s - 1970s, '80s, '90s, the New Right movement against abortion and other

things.

Do you feel that in some ways women's involvement, as you've said, is a conservative force as well as liberal?

LEPORE: It absolutely is both. I mean the women were really involved in the populous movement in the 19th century that is a left movement, but also

was a nativist movement, has both what we would term liberal and conservative dimensions. So they wouldn't -- those labels wouldn't have

applied at the time.

Prohibition is essentially a conservative movement. Schlafly is a good stand-in for how conservative women have aligned over the course of the

20th century. She enters politics in the 1950s as a McCarthy supporter.

She's a huge and really influential supporter of Barry Goldwater in 1964 and even before. And then she turns her attention to stopping the ERA

after it passes Congress and goes to the state's ratification in 1972, in part by conflating equal rights with abortion.

And she's just -- the last dying act of Phyllis Schlafly was to endorse Donald Trump in 2016. She went to the Republican Nominating Convention in

Cleveland. She endorsed him before he spoke at her funeral just before the election.

There's a really interesting trajectory there about women and conservativism that I think we've kind of lost sight of. And it -- I

wouldn't say that it explains everything in the world, but it's an important piece of an explanation of the second half of the --

ISAACSON: And it's interesting that you say that liberals have left out some of this conservative strand in women's politics. Is your book -- do

you consider it ideological at all in your approach to American history, meaning coming from a liberal side or coming from a conservative side?

LEPORE: So I was actually trying to reject the highly ideological interpretations of American history that we have been kind of stuck with on

the one hand. We have a sort of polarized past, people kind of line up there.

I mean less -- scholars don't do this, politicians do this. They offer - you know, there's a kind of conservative version of American history and

then there's a liberal version of American history.

And with this book, I would like to elicit a conversation about whether we can have a shared past, because I don't know how these partisan divisions

that make it impossible for us, you know, to formulate a budget, to complete a full Supreme Court, to pass pretty much any legislation. And I

think most importantly to think deeply about the need for political reform.

We have a lot of conversation in our country about resistance and revolution. And I think there's so much wrong structurally that we really

ought to be having reform conversations as well. And that's the spirit in which I tried to offer this account. Not to dilute something or be wishy-

washy about things, but to just take seriously that this is a set of things that did happen and here's my interpretation of them.

ISAACSON: Now, all of this seems to culminate both the strands, women rights both on the liberal and progressive side, and as you point out so

well in the book on the conservative side, in [13:50:00] the Kavanaugh hearings, and the Me Too moment that we're going through, how do you react

to that? How do you see the history leading us to that and where will it go?

LEPORE: Yes. I think that's the intersection of two different developments. One is the changing relationship between the public and the

Supreme Court, largely through the nomination process, but and the other is women struggle to gain equal protection of the law.

Though -- and I think we think about that more squarely. When we look at that, those confrontations, we're thinking about, well wow, if all the

violence against women and sexual harassment laws and sexual assault laws that have been passed in the 1970s had been enforced, we wouldn't be here

now. We're here because that didn't succeed.

Many women don't have equal rights and they don't have equal protection. I think that's the visible piece of what's going on now, separate from like

the partisan piece of it.

But the Supreme Court public opinion is a thing that actually kind of distracts me and captures my attention here, because throughout the 19th

century generally when president named a new Justice, the decision just went to the whole of the Senate, which is voted up or down and they almost

always voted up. It doesn't even really go to Committee.

When it started going to Committee, the Committee maybe had a few deliberations and they voted up or down and sent it to the Senate. The

first Justice nominee to appear before the Senate was in 1925. Like the idea that people are supposed to go and be interrogated before the Senate

Judiciary Committee, that's a very recent development on our history and that was just a weird kind of one-off until 1939 when Felix Frankfurter was

called to answer the charges he was a communist and he agreed to go.

And the only reason he was asked was because you go black in 1939, he'd been nominated by FDR. After he got through the Senate, it was revealed

that he had been in the KKK and the Senate thought, whoa, we should have brought him before the Committee and asked him about that.

So it's not until 1955 that it's even regular that nominees appear and since 1987 that that is a television spectacle. That is, of course, the

Robert Bork televised hearings, which is really the last spectacle of the Watergate hearing, honestly, I think is the best way to think about Bork.

But, now we have this notion, ever since the Merrick Garland situation, when Mitch McConnell said the American people will decide our next Justice.

That's actually now how it's set up. It's not a popularly -- it's not an elected position.

It's an appointment for life meant to be insulated from public opinion. So I think it's quite troubling to imagine that Twitter is deciding who will

hold the next seat on the Supreme Court.

ISAACSON: One of the themes in your work and Einstein once said it, is that in American Democracy there seems to be a gyroscope, just when it's

tipping one way it knows how to right itself. Do you think we have, in our history, in our DNA, and going forward, the mechanisms to right ourselves

when we seem to have become so divided?

LEPORE: I do. I do. Whether that will happen, I don't know. And I work pretty hard to hold onto that hope.

I think a lot about the speech that Frederick Douglas gave in 1894, shortly before his death, to an audience of school children in Manassas, Virginia,

black school children, and he -- think about everything that he had achieved that had been undone, right?

He fought for emancipation, for abolition, emancipation and equal rights. And by 1894, right, the Civil War has been won, the emancipation happened,

but Jim Crow has taken over.

The South wins the peace. There's violent segregation and an epidemic of lynching and he tells these school children to hope that what is necessary

in challenging times and the more challenging the times are is to do the hard work of figuring out where hope lies.

ISAACSON: Jill Lepore, thank you so much for being with us.

LEPORE: Thanks for having me.

ISAACSON: Appreciate it.

AMANPOUR: In these busy times and especially during this holiday period, it's always instructive to know how Americans were able to overcome

historic divisions in the past.

Tune in to tomorrow for the incredible story of how this Syrian doctor lobbied President Trump to stop a looking assault by the Assad regime on

the country's last rebel stronghold.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

RIM AL-BEZEM, SYRIAN DOCTOR: I am ecstatic. I'm very happy. I think he literally saved the lives of hundreds of thousands of people, if not

millions.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

AMANPOUR: But that is it for us for now. Remember, you can always listen to our podcast and see us online at amanpour.com and you could follow me on

Facebook and Twitter.

Thanks for watching. And goodbye from London.

END