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Hillary Clinton Criticizes Donald Trump for His Comments About Women; Presidential Candidates Campaign in Battleground States; Two Iowa Police Officers Killed in Ambush Attacks; Clinton Turns Focus from Emails to Trump's Character. Aired 8-8:30a ET

Aired November 02, 2016 - 08:00   ET

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


[08:00:00] HILLARY CLINTON, (D) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: The American dream itself is at stake.

DONALD TRUMP, (R) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Hillary is not the victim. The American people are the victims.

CLINTON: Why does he do these things? Who acts like this? I'll tell you who, a bully.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

ANNOUNCER: This is NEW DAY with Chris Cuomo and Alisyn Camerota.

ALISYN CAMEROTA, CNN ANCHOR: Good morning, everyone. Welcome to your NEW DAY. Up first, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump making their arguments. Clinton going after Trump's character and lashing out at what she calls his divisive vision.

CHRIS CUOMO, CNN ANCHOR: Donald Trump, staying on message, staying off the news shows not to screw up that message. He's saying Clinton is crooked and Obamacare has to go. He's also making an interesting pitch to Clinton's early supporters. He's saying, hey, if what Comey just said or didn't say made you change your mind, vote for me.

Only six days to go. Let's begin our coverage with CNN's Phil Mattingly in all-important Florida. Phil?

PHIL MATTINGLY, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Good morning, Chris. For four days all the Clinton campaign advisers were talking about was Jim Comey. They were attacking him, trying to undercut the premise and the rationale for that letter sent to Capitol Hill. No more. Here in Florida, yesterday, Hillary Clinton trying to turn the page. The reality here is this. The Clinton campaign recognizing that as we head into this final week of the campaign, it's a lot better to be talking about Donald Trump. Take a listen to what Hillary Clinton had to say.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

HILLARY CLINTON, (D) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: He calls women ugly, disgusting, nasty, all the time. He calls women pigs, rates bodies on a scale from one to 10. Why does he do these things? Who acts like this? And I'll tell you who, a bully. That's who.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MATTINGLY: It's very clear the Clinton campaign wants a referendum on Donald Trump, not James Comey, not the FBI, not Hillary Clinton's e- mail server. We also had an interesting moment yesterday here in Florida where Hillary Clinton lashed out, kind of showing her frustration with a specific Donald Trump related protester, but also Donald Trump in general. Take a listen.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

CLINTON: I am sick and tired of the negative, dark, divisive, dangerous vision and behavior of people who support Donald Trump.

(APPLAUSE)

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MATTINGLY: Now the interesting element, that moment brought more of a response from the crowd than we've seen for a long time, really firing up her supporters there. And that's going to mean a lot in these last couple days. Obviously it's all about getting out your coalition if you want to win on November 8th. The Clinton campaign focused very hard on that today.

Look across the map where all of the surrogates are going. Joe Biden comes down here to Florida. President Obama to North Carolina, Elizabeth Warren, Nevada, Bernie Sanders, Wisconsin, Michigan, trying to hit those labor voters that the Trump campaign thinks they can pick up.

But look where Hillary Clinton is. Arizona, a red state. A state Democrats traditionally don't look to let along send their people towards. The last five, six days of the election, the Clinton campaign seeing early voter turnout amongst Hispanics. That's not an expansion of the map that's a true battleground. Guys, you know very clearly if they win Arizona, this race is certainly going towards Hillary Clinton, trying to help push that forward today. Guys?

CUOMO: Phil, appreciate it. Don't get sun burned down there in Orlando.

Donald Trump staying away from TV interviews to stay on message. Trump making waves with this call to early voters, saying you voted for Clinton, now change your vote. CNN's Sara Murray live in Washington with more. What is it, seven states where you can actually do that? He was in Wisconsin where I think you can do it up to three times, right?

SARA MURRAY, CNN CORRESPONDENT: That's right. You can do it in Wisconsin. It's only a handful of states, and it's rare for voters to do this, but Donald Trump essentially making the pitch that look, we've learned more in the last few days, and it's not too late to change your mind. In fact Trump, take a listen to what he said.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

TRUMP: This is a message for any Democratic voters who have cast their ballots for Hillary Clinton and who are having a bad case of buyer's remorse. You can change your vote to Donald Trump. We'll make America great again, OK?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MURRAY: And the fact that Donald Trump made this pitch in Wisconsin is an indication of how the campaign is trying to branch out into more Democrat-friendly territory. They say they're going to spend $25 million on the airwaves, including in a number of blue leaning states.

And if you look at their travel schedule today you get a sense of how they're continuing to campaign in those places as well. Mike Pence, for instance, is going to be stopping in New Mexico and Colorado. Those are both states that appear to be leaning towards the Democrats but the Trump campaign is hoping to put in play. But Pence is also playing a little bit of defense. He's stopping by Arizona. This was red, but it's shaping up to be a little bit more of a battleground.

Now, as for Trump, he is going to be in Florida, a pivotal state for his campaign. His advisers say he's going to be pretty focused on the economy today. Back to you, Alisyn.

[08:05:01] CAMEROTA: OK, Sara, thanks so much for all of that. Joining us now to discuss it is Senator Chris Coons of Delaware. He is a Clinton supporter. Good morning, senator.

SEN. CHRIS COONS, (D) DELAWARE: Good morning, Alisyn.

CAMEROTA: OK, so let's try to take the pulse of where the Clinton campaign is today. Is it fair to say based upon her on the campaign trail and her words that she is feeling more frustrated and even anxious than she had hoped with a week left?

COONS: Well, I think Secretary Clinton would like to be spending this last week focusing on her positive message, on her record on her experience, and on her plan for how to grow the economy from the middle out, how to restore American manufacturing, how to keep us safer and stronger abroad, and how to strengthen education and opportunities for the working class here at home.

CAMEROTA: So why not focus on that?

COONS: She would really rather be having those arguments than the arguments going on. I was just out in the field campaigning in North Carolina and Wisconsin, and I know a lot of people who are fired up to get out there and vote early, and frankly a lot of people who are ready for this election to be over.

CAMEROTA: Look, they say if you want to know how something's going, follow the money, right? So if you follow the money in terms of where she's buying ads, there are some interesting choices. There are going to be new ads running in New Mexico and Michigan. Why focus on those sort of more traditionally blue states if -- if the campaign isn't feeling anxious right now?

COONS: Well, Alisyn, I think they're trying to make absolutely certain that the states that have been in the column for her for months stay in that column and there's no opportunity for Donald Trump to sort of break out of her blue firewall.

We've invested a lot of money and time, had a lot of surrogates going to states in recent weeks that are reached, that have historically voted Republican. And I think as is always the case in campaigns, the gaps have been tightening a little bit in recent days, and so they're investing funding in advertising and in sending surrogates to states that I pretty reliably believe will vote Democrat in this presidential election, but also where there's important state elections, federal elections as well, and where it's a good idea to make sure that we've secured the base.

CAMEROTA: Look, you say the polls are tightening. In a new ABC News tracking poll, the daily poll, they are exactly even. I mean it's a dead heat, 46 percent to 46 percent. How do you explain how at this late de it is this tight?

COONS: Well, Alisyn what I saw on your show earlier this morning was a state by state analysis, not a national analysis, but state by state shows that Secretary Clinton retains an important and comfortable lead in some critical states like New Hampshire and Pennsylvania and even North Carolina. So if you go through the electoral map, which is the map that going to matter on election day next week, she still remains ahead of Donald Trump.

But it is concerning that this is a campaign that's turned into one more about negatives than positives.

CAMEROTA: And to be clear, we want to show the CNN poll of polls in case any one poll is an outlier. We crunch the numbers of the top five polls, and here you see Hillary Clinton still with a lead, 47 percent to Donald Trump's 42 percent.

Senator, what do you make of what is happening with the FBI? Not just the letter that Director Comey sent to Congress, but this this next thing, this next surprise as it's being called, this tweet that was sent out with a link to a long dormant account at the FBI that suddenly revealed the heavily redacted documents about Bill Clinton's pardon of Marc Rich more than a dozen years ago. What do you think is going on with the FBI?

COONS: Alisyn, I looked into that. I read some articles about that last night. I'm deeply puzzled. The FBI and the Department of Justice have longstanding practices of not commenting on investigation underway, on not commenting where there isn't sufficient information, and of avoiding public comment when it might have undue influence on election.

Reporting suggests that James Comey, the director of the FBI, declined any public comment on investigations into Donald Trump's ties, his campaign manager's ties, to Russia earlier this summer following that longstanding practice, and I think that's a good practice and has stood as well. So I really was surprised by what you're referencing, this unjustified, unexplained release of now long outdated e-mails about a long closed investigation. James Comey was involved in that investigation when he was with the Department of Justice in a previous role.

CAMEROTA: Yes.

COONS: But it just sets a troubling pattern, and it's my hope that our public confidence in the FBI will be restored. I am certain that this latest revelation of some trove of e-mails that may or may not even be related to Hillary Clinton may or may not be duplicates, may or may not be personal.

CAMEROTA: Yes.

COONS: We really don't know much about it, and apparently neither did Director Comey. I'm confident that wild amount to nothing. And ultimately, voters who are going to the polls today, this week and up to next Tuesday, will be making up their mind on which of these candidates has a stronger vision for our future.

[08:10:07] CAMEROTA: Yes, they sure will. Senator Chris Coons thanks so much for being on NEW DAY.

COONS: Thank you.

CAMEROTA: Let's get to Chris.

CUOMO: All right, so Hillary Clinton's campaign is debuting a new ad once again using Trump's own words as an attack against him. This time it's about treatment of women. Here it is.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

TRUMP: Putting a wife to work is a very dangerous thing.

When I come home and dinner's not ready, I go through the roof.

Grab them by the -- And when you're a star they let you do it. You can do anything.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: More accusers coming forward to say they were sexually assaulted by Donald Trump.

TRUMP: I'll go backstage before a show. And everyone's getting dressed.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Donald Trump walked into the dressing room while contestants, some as young as 15, were changing.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

CUOMO: All right, with the uncomfortable task of dealing with uncomfortable information, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, senior adviser to the Trump campaign. It's an obvious ad, but it also has an obvious negative. How do you deal with it? SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS, SENIOR ADVISER TO DONALD J. TRUMP: Look, I

think Hillary Clinton is looking for any distraction she can find. She's had one of the worst weeks, probably the worst couple of weeks that any campaign has had this cycle. You've seen Obamacare skyrocketing. She is under criminal investigation by the FBI not just for herself, but also the Clinton Foundation. She's looking for any distraction she can find to distract voters from talking about her bad week, her failures.

And I think that this is a new low in American politics that she's going only to focus on personal attacks. She's got no rationale at this point why voters should be voting for her. And so she's going down the road she -- she originally campaigned she wouldn't do.

CUOMO: Well --

SANDERS: Think it shows the desperation in her campaign at this point.

CUOMO: It's certainly tight on both sides. That's why it's all negative all the time. Nobody's saying anything good about themselves. They're saying something bad about somebody else. The simple proposition there is, this is what the guy has said. And this is what the guy may have done. No doubt about him. Can you deny any of that?

SANDERS: He's certainly apologized for the things he said. Look, I can't verify any of the other accusations out there. But what I can verify is that Hillary Clinton's record I one of nothing but corruption and scandal. And she's been in government for 30 years and she has nothing to show for it. I think that's a real problem for her.

And that's why, again, this is a candidate who is under federal investigation. We haven't seen a presidential candidate hit this kind of low, I think, any time in modern politics. And that is a big problem for her and far bigger than any, you know, allegation that nobody can verify.

CUOMO: What's the difference between Clinton being investigated by the FBI and them saying we don't have enough evidence to make a case? And the various pros or inquiries or any of the special words that the FBI likes to use of their pursuing questions about Trump, Manafort, what's going on with any connections to Russia, or Ukrainian oligarchs that have connections to Russia. What's the difference between those two? No proof of any crime, that's why Comey doesn't want to talk about it, but what's the difference? There's no proof of any crime against Clinton either.

SANDERS: Look, I don't think you can compare the two. Hillary Clinton was the secretary of state and mishandled classified information. By pure definition, anybody that lets classified information fall into the hands of Anthony Weiner is by definition mishandling it. I don't think that those two things are in comparison at all.

CUOMO: Do we know that Anthony Weiner had classified information?

SANDERS: And Comey hasn't said that there's nothing there. That's why he's got an investigation at this point.

CUOMO: Comey said exactly that. He said we don't know if these e- mails are significant to the case.

SANDERS: We don't know, but he hasn't said that they aren't.

CUOMO: Oh, absolutely.

SANDERS: And if --

CUOMO: But he hasn't said that they are, either, and he certainly hasn't said that Anthony Weiner has classified information like you just did.

SANDERS: If they weren't significant he wouldn't have started this investigation --

CUOMO: He already acknowledged through the office that he hadn't even reviewed them yet. They haven't even been looked at so he couldn't have known.

SANDERS: But he has to know if there is significance there or he wouldn't have done this. He's an Obama appointee. I think everybody wants to attack Comey and make him the enemy here. The only person that has created this problem is Hillary Clinton. It's not Director Comey. It is Hillary Clinton's mess and she is the only person to blame in this process. Democrats were praising Comey just weeks ago, talking about how he's a man of integrity, a man of honor. And the second he doesn't agree with them, they start going after him.

CUOMO: Same thing you guys are doing.

SANDERS: That's the same flavor --

CUOMO: Same thing you guys are doing. Trump said horrible -- would you like me to read it to you what he said about Jim Comey? Do you want me to read them to you? No you don't, right. Lucky you didn't say it because we'd have a different conversation. But now he loves them. Now he says the FBI is back. Comey is great.

SANDERS: I think that's because there was so much there that was being ignored, and I think the American people demanded for answers and I think that's why Comey is now coming out saying, look, we've got to review this further.

[08:15:02] There obviously has to be something there. People want to know, they want answers, and I think he's done the right thing by at least opening it up and searching for those answers.

CUOMO: The reason I'm checking you carefully on this is, there's no question if you have e-mails you have to review them. Comey could have done it differently. He didn't. OK, that's his part of the conversation. You're not here for him.

But Donald Trump is going around the country saying, the truth has come out. Now, we know, boy, thank you, Huma. Thank you, Anthony Weiner. What does he know? What does he know that we don't?

Because Jim Comey told us we don't know what it is. We're going to look at it. What does he know?

SANDERS: Well, I also think you have to look at some of the things that have come out in WikiLeaks. Just moments before the story breaks, Podesta's e-mail very clearly lays out we've got to get rid of these e-mails. They knew something was coming. They knew they needed to cover it up. I mean, this is a big --

CUOMO: He didn't say cover it up. This is a problem. She was wrongly using the server. It was wrong.

SANDERS: Right.

CUOMO: Illegal? No. According to the FBI. But wrong. Damaging. Definitely.

What if I had your e-mail about what you guys talked about inside the campaign about how to deal with different situations?

SANDERS: I think you'd probably be pleasantly surprised at my emails, Chris.

CUOMO: Oh, ho, ho -- lay them on me.

SANDERS: Look, I got a lot of pictures of my kids. If you've got some spare time, we can put it out --

CUOMO: Oh, please. Sarah, God bless, the kids, do not expose them to this process. Thank you for joining us.

SANDERS: You bet. Thanks --

CUOMO: Six days to go. Stay healthy.

Alisyn?

CAMEROTA: All right, Chris we want to turn now back to that breaking news out of Iowa. A terrible story. Two police officers shot and killed in separate ambush attacks in the Des Moines area this morning. There is a massive manhunt under way for the killer at this hour.

CNN's Jean Casarez joins us now with all of the breaking details.

What have you learned?

JEAN CASAREZ, CNN CORRESPONDENT: And, Alisyn, the Des Moines police department is saying there's definitely a clear and present danger for all police officers in the area. This happened a little after 1:00 this morning. It was in Iowa, Urbandale. They got a call that shots had been fired. So, officers arrived at the scene. What do they find? They find one of their own, who has been shot dead, sitting in his patrol car. Other officers come to try to assist him, and about 20 minutes later, Des Moines officers just happen to find one of their officers at an intersection, in his patrol car, shot dead. Twenty minutes apart.

Listen to the press conference we've got some of that earlier this morning from the Des Moines police officers.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SERGEANT PAUL PARIZEK, DES MOINES POLICE DEPARTMENT: In all appearances, it looks just like that, that these officers were ambushed. It -- on the surface right now, just like I said we're just a few hours into this. It doesn't look like there was any interaction. Between these officers, and whoever the coward is that shot them while they sat in their cars. That's the best we got that we can explain at the scene right now. Both of them were in their cars.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

CASAREZ: So, they're still trying to put together a profile at this point of what this suspect or suspects may look like. They haven't come out with that. But there's definitely a manhunt to try to find exactly who did this and they are pairing the officers up now in Urbandale they only have 50 on the force, but they're pairing them up and saying that there is somebody out there shooting police officers and we have to find them before other officers are killed.

CAMEROTA: This is horrible. How can they even know who they're looking for? Do we think that there are surveillance videos from somewhere around?

CASAREZ: Urbandale has body cameras. Des Moines doesn't. But if you're ambushed how much would a body camera actually show?

CUOMO: Yeah, this is going to be tricky.

Also, there have been calls for a long time to harden the cruisers. Give them bulletproof windows, you know, make these more secure environments for them. Not in anticipation of this, but just in general.

This has a horrible, horrible familiarity to what they dealt with here in New York. Wound up being that mentally deranged guy who came up and killed two officers in their car cold blooded murder. It also casts a shadow on what's going on with policing in this country in terms of cops being victimized.

Last year, 123 cops killed on the job. This year to date, 111 now. You include these two officers, 113. But, more killed this year by firearm than all of last year.

CAMEROTA: Jean?

CASAREZ: And to be ambushed is really even a more selective number.

CAMEROTA: Absolutely.

Jean, thank you. And please come back when you have any more information.

CASAREZ: We will.

CUOMO: All right. So, both presidential candidates have big supporters and also big opponents. So how does that wind up creating advantage or disadvantage? Who wins on that score? Next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

CAMEROTA: Hillary Clinton and her surrogates barnstorming key battleground states today. Clinton is shifting her focus back to Donald Trump's character and away from renewed scrutiny over her e- mails.

So what will energize voters in the next six days?

Let's bring in CNN political commentator and former Donald Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, and national spokesperson for moveon.org, Karine Jean-Pierre. She's a Hillary Clinton supporter.

Nice to see both of you.

Karine, let me start with you.

As we heard on the trail yesterday, Hillary Clinton has gone back to talking about Donald Trump's character, the offensive things that he has said about women. If she's trying to appeal to, say, swing voters, or undecided voters, do you think that that's an energizing message? Or is it also possible it could just turn them off from voting?

KARINE JEAN-PIERRE, HILLARY CLINTON SUPPORTER: Well, I think, Alisyn, you have to remember that Election Day isn't actually on November 8th. It's actually happening right now and what she's doing is giving that character argument, right?

She and her surrogates are out there talking about why Donald Trump is unfit and really putting out on the line what is at stake in this race. So I think it's actually incredibly important for her to do that.

CAMEROTA: Are we going to hear, Corey, today, Donald Trump counter punching as he likes to do about these attacks?

[08:25:01] Or is he going to stay with a laser-like focused message on, say, repealing Obamacare?

COREY LEWANDOWSKI, CNN POLITICAL COMMENTATOR: I think Donald Trump's message for the next six days is why he should be elected president of the United States, why he's going to bring fundamental change to Washington. And if you look at the recent polls that have come out and you look specifically how Hillary Clinton's doing with white women, particularly white married women, she's losing to Donald Trump in that particular demographic.

If you look at how the African-American turnout is not turning out at the same level that we've seen in the last two presidential election cycles, that's very concerning for Hillary Clinton. So, she has to prosecute a case against Donald Trump because she doesn't have a case to vote --

CAMEROTA: So you're telling me that you think, knowing Donald Trump as well as you do, that he will be able to resist the counterpunch for which he is so famous?

LEWANDOWSKI: Look, you know me. I'm a counterpuncher kind of guy myself and I love when Donald Trump counterpunches.

But I think with six days to go in this election if you look at what he has done since Friday when the FBI came out and said we're going to reopen the investigation right now, he has been very precise, he's been very concise, he's out talking about what his plans for America which is let's fix the health care system. Let's stop our national debt growing. Let's get our jobs, and bring back -- fix these bad trade deals.

Look at the states he's going to. He's in Michigan, he's in Wisconsin, he's in Colorado, he's in New Hampshire on Friday. Places where there's an opportunity for him and his message has resonated with typically states that a Democrat will carry he has a real opportunity here to win.

CAMEROTA: Will we see him on television more? He's been a little bit invisible in the past few days since all of this broke.

LEWANDOWSKI: I think relatively speaking, he's doing three rallies today in Florida. He's got another one tomorrow in Florida --

CAMEROTA: But, you know, sit-down interviews.

LEWANDOWSKI: Look, I don't think Hillary Clinton is doing a whole bunch of sit-down interviews either right now to be fair.

CAMEROTA: Karine? What about, hold on, what about what Corey just said in terms of the enthusiasm with black voters that in terms of early voting that does seem to be down? How big of a concern do you think that is?

JEAN-PIERRE: Look, I mean, I think it's a bit unfair to historical figure as Barack Obama to numbers from 2008 and 2012. But with all that said, yes, they need to turn out more -- more of the early voting from the black community. And they just need to keep their gas on -- their foot on the gas to do that. But here's the thing, just looking at yesterday, for example, Hillary Clinton and her supporters were in 14 media markets. Donald Trump and Pence were in one media market, which is Pennsylvania. I mean, so there's something to say about that. She actually has the surrogate and the -- and the -- you know and t

backing to really reach out to these voters that she needs to. And also with early voting, it is trending positively for Democrats, right? We're doing better, there's a survey, a Florida survey that come out last night that looked at early voting and showed like 28 percent of the GOP, Republicans that are coming out to vote were actually crossing over and voting for Hillary Clinton.

And if that stands, that would be astounding, right? Because both John Kerry and both Barack Obama, they got less than 10 percent respectively from the GOP voters.

CAMEROTA: Hmm.

JEAN-PIERRE: So I think that was really important. And also she was winning early voting by 53 percent in Florida, which is a state that we all know, if Donald Trump doesn't win that state there's really no path for him at all.

CAMEROTA: Corey, you know --

LEWANDOWSKI: We just need to clear up one thing. Donald Trump was not just in Pennsylvania. He also did a massive rally in Wisconsin last night and his sons, which you know it's amazing that no one talks -- every time Chelsea Clinton is on the campaign trail, she's this great surrogate for her mother and she gets that credit.

Donald Trump's kids don't get that same credit. Donald Trump Jr. was in Ohio. His son Eric was in North Carolina. His daughter in law has been on the trail. Melania Trump is on the trail, Ivanka Trump is on the trail.

I don't see that on the map of where Donald Trump surrogates are. Look, if we're going to compare apples to apples --

JEAN-PIERRE: It's not apples to apples --

LEWANDOWSKI: He was in Pennsylvania and he was in Wisconsin and three events in Florida today and I think if you want to put his schedule up against Hillary Clinton's he does more events --

CAMEROTA: OK. Karine, why you say it's not apples to apples.

JEAN-PIERRE: It's not apples to apples. You're talking about Vice President Biden. You're talking about President Obama. You're talking about Senators warren, and, and, and Sanders. You're talking about --

LEWANDOWSKI: And Senator Ron Johnson and Scott Walker and all of the others that campaign --

(CROSSTALK)

JEAN-PIERRE: Yes, Scott Walker he does this event with Scott Walker yesterday you know first time in awhile. I mean it's just not the same. It's not -- CAMEROTA: I mean but, Karine, Donald Trump hasn't been in public

life. He can't have those sorts of high level --

JEAN-PIERRE: No, he -- well, that's because all his high level surrogates are running away from him. I mean that's what is happening because of Trumpism because of what he's putting out there because of the hateful rhetoric that he's been putting out there --

CAMEROTA: A good point. Hold on.

Karine has a good point. His previous GOP nominees and presidents are not rallying to his side, and there's a report that Jeb's son said that he believes that his grandfather, George H.W. Bush and his father -- his uncle, George W. Bush, are likely going to vote for Hillary Clinton.

LEWANDOWSKI: Here's what we saw yesterday, Donald Trump is getting right now about 86 percent of the Republicans that are voting for him which is a higher percentage. Hillary Clinton is getting of Democrats right now. His numbers continue to increase, her numbers continue to decrease.

So, at the end of the day, Mike Pence talked about this -- Republicans are coming home.