Morning Joe - 2 dead and 6 in critical condition after Catholic school attack
Episode Date: August 28, 20252 dead and 6 in critical condition after Catholic school attack ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We lost two angels today.
And please continue to pray for those still receiving care.
We can't change the past, but we can do something about the future.
There's an African proverb that says,
When you pray, move your feet.
So I beg you, I ask you to please pray, but don't stop with your words.
Let's make a difference and support this community, these children,
these families, these teachers,
never again can we let this happen the principal of anunciation catholic school following yesterday's
deadly shooting in minnesota while young students were literally praying in mass yeah um it is just
at this point thoughts and prayers you know people that that don't want to move their feet that don't
want to do the work required uh to stop the senseless killing will always say hopes and prayers hopes and
prayers. But Mike, as Mika just said, we talked yesterday while this was going on, those young children,
those young babies were praying and hoping for the start of a wonderful new year. And yet
we've just seen it, we've seen it way too much. This has happened so much. It's been happening
for 15, 20 years. And yes, you know, I think Mother Teresa said pray.
as if there's no such thing as work and work as if there's no such thing as prayer.
It's about time members of Congress and people in Washington, D.C. start doing this and stop
this madness. Joe, we have had live shooter drills in high schools and office parks for a quarter
of a century in America, 25 years of live shooter drills. And yesterday, in Minneapolis, one troubled individual
shooting into a Catholic Mass as the Mass was ongoing early in the morning,
managed to kill innocence and a sense of safety that will endure with the children
who were in that church and the parents who were there in that church for the rest of their lives.
And in Washington, D.C., we have the National Guard collecting trash.
There are many neighborhoods in Washington, D.C. with public safety is a daily concern,
Unlike neighborhoods where many of us do live, well, we don't have to worry about that.
But there's something wrong in America that we have to really work hard to figure out something has gone wrong in this country.
We're going to bring you a live report from Minneapolis in just a moment on that.
Plus, the mayor of Washington, D.C. gives some praise to the troops on the city streets,
but says certain parts of the federal takeover are not working.
We'll tell you what change of.
she wants to see. Also ahead, we'll go through the major shakeup at the CDC, HHS Secretary
RFK Jr., firing the agency's director less than a month after her Senate confirmation.
And I guess, Willie, the point he says, at least Abby Lowell, says she's not fired.
I mean, she's still, are there's saying there's still, she's still on the job.
But again, it's just what ghouls go and try to completely get rid of the very people who are part of a process.
Again, why don't we just talk about Donald Trump in Operation Warp Speed that just over the past couple of years, these vaccines have saved tens of millions of lives, opened up businesses, opened up schools, opened up churches, synagogues, opened up the world.
And now, again, this is a one-man mission that Republicans knew was coming.
The Senate Republicans knew would happen.
Doctors voting knew this would happen.
They voted for him anyway.
Here it is.
Fascinating moment at that cabinet meeting, that marathon cabinet meeting a couple days ago
where President Trump went on a long riff touting Operation Warped Speed,
remembering the difference it made, the lives it saved, which it did,
and then sort of realized that Bobby Kennedy Jr. was sitting down and said,
well, this is not going to go over well with him.
It's not going to make him comfortable.
Why are we enduring that?
Why are we tolerating that?
Exactly. Who cares?
And this is, by the way, the head of the CDC is not a Biden holdover.
This is a person who was confirmed by this Republican Senate under President Trump.
And yet, she said, I'm not going to go along with some of the craziest elements of Bobby Kennedy Jr.'s ideas.
And for that, she's about to lose her job.
Yeah.
All right.
We get to our top story this morning.
Minneapolis, two children, eight and ten, were killed yesterday when a shooter opened fire during
a morning mass at Annunciation Catholic Church. 17 other people, including 14 children and three adults
in their 80s, were injured. The children are students at the school and were attending an all-school
mass, an annual tradition for the new academic year, which began on Monday. Minneapolis, police
say the shooter aimed directly at the children in the pews through the church's stained-glast
windows. Those inside the church at the time of the shooting say the gunfire lasted about
two minutes. A 10-year-old fifth grader gave a first-hand account of what he saw and said his life
was saved by the heroic actions of a friend. How old are you? I'm 10. What grade are you in?
I'm in fifth. Can you talk a little bit about what?
you saw today um well it was like shots fired and then he kind of like got under the pews it kind of um
they shot through the um the stained glass windows I think and it was really scary when you heard
the shots what went through your head I was like the first one I was like what is that I thought
it was just something then I heard it again I just ran under the pew and then I
covered my head. My friend Victor, like, saved me, though, because he laid on top of me,
but he got hit. Your friend laid on top of you? Yeah, and he got hit. Is this something that
you practiced before? Um, yeah, we practice it like every month, or I don't know, but, yeah,
we've never practiced it in the, um, in the church, though. So that's Weston, a 10-year-old fifth
greater talking matter-of-factly about his friend Victor diving on top of them, taking a bullet
and saving his life. And to Mike's point about how this has just been normalized as part of our
culture, that kid is just speaking very matter-of-factly, 10 years old about what happened
inside a church pew and talking about the drills that we all know from our own children that
are just a part of their life. We used to have the fire drills. And you go, oh, so do the alarm,
you walk outside, you go back inside. They have active shooter drills. They now have slogans like
run, hide, fight, telling 10-year-olds to run at first, then hide, and if you're confronted with
a shooter, fight, throw a chair at him, do whatever you can. This is just a normal part of their lives
now. And it's just obscene. I mean, you're right. That young boy was talking very matter
factly about something that he's used to. They asked the question, have you ever done this before in
school? I mean, before he goes, yeah, we practiced in school, but not in church. And this is what, this is
normal? No, there's nothing normal about this, and it's not a great mystery. It's just not a great
mystery. We have laws that are on the book that continue to allow crackpots to go into gun
stores, get high-powered rifles and go and shoot up schools, go shoot up churches, go shoot up
country music concerts. And it seems to me Washington is far too comfortable doing that,
letting that happen and all these excuses and all the calls for for this that or the other
the kids were hoping and praying so hope pray and act yeah but but Republicans won't do that
third part in Congress they just won't do the third part now is not the time to talk about it
joining us but it keeps happening it keeps happening I mean I mean how many mass shootings do we have
it keeps happening where crackpots get a hold of a gun and they have more power in their hand,
like an evolving, than police officers do outside. Is that really what they want?
This is an American problem. NBC News, senior national correspondent Jay Gray,
joins us live from Minneapolis with more. Jay, what more details can you tell us?
Good morning, guys. Yeah, you're absolutely right. And this is the church where it all took place just behind us here,
There's still an inactive investigation going on, still locked down by police.
And so many in this neighborhood, this church, this Catholic school and church, really the anchor of an established neighborhood here.
And so many here asking the same questions and saying the same things that you're voicing this morning.
We've already seen early in the morning hours here, people just staring at the church, trying to understand how this could happen again.
And now in their community, kids gunned down.
in the pew of a church, the church just behind us here.
What we are learning is that the federal agents also involved in this investigation,
obviously the FBI looking at this as a potential hate crime or domestic terrorism.
And so they are saying this is really just the beginning, guys,
of what's going to be a long and a very drawn-out investigation,
trying to figure out how and why it all happened.
All right, NBC's Jay Gray reporting live this one.
Morning to Minneapolis. Thank you so much. You know, Rev. on the front of the New York Post, they say demonic, and then they, it's transgender maniac shoots up Catholic school. You know, they could very easily say time and time again, straight white maniac shoots up Catholic school or shoots up country music concert or shoots up this or shoots up that. I mean, I suppose some people try to distract from the ongoing mass slaughters that are going on of our children.
schools and churches and across the country of people that go to country music concerts of people
who are sitting in pews at churches at Baptist churches and I mean we could go on and on and
on so again I suppose they can focus on on whether it was transgender or straight white male
or whatever it was fact is this is happening too much we keep saying this is happening too much
and people will say who know that it's happening too much.
Oh, we can't talk about right.
Well, when do you talk about it?
When are the world, when do you talk about it?
For instance, last night, Kiev got absolutely demolished by the Russians.
When should we talk about that?
Next week?
No, we need to talk about it now.
I blame it all on Joe Biden.
And I think that that is that we're reaping.
The Bible says that a man soles he shall also reek.
We're reaping that we have sold an indifference and, you know,
or maybe a few hours of outrage.
And then we go on with our lives without correcting what's going on.
We understand this shooter had writings against blacks, had writings against Jews,
even writing against Donald Trump.
None of that defines the fact that someone this sick
that on the first day of school doing mass, they weren't even in class.
They were in a religious practice, decided that you're going to shoot innocent kids.
And those of us that have children or grandchildren, that could have been any one of them.
So rather than go on with our day, we need to stop and say, how do we stop this and force Republicans and Democrats to deal with this?
This is a civilization crisis in America, and we need to deal with it like that.
It is, and it hits people at home, and it does hit.
I mean, people sending their children to school on the first day.
We have a good family friend who was tearing up on the first day about sending their daughter to kindergarten on the first day.
And a lot of the concern, a lot of the angst for all the stories about these mass shootings.
Again, something can be done.
It's the only time you see one political party go, nothing can be done.
You can't do anything because this wouldn't have helped that shooting.
That wouldn't have helped this shooting.
And yet these shootings continue, whether it's in Nashville, whether it's,
whether it's here in Minneapolis, whether, again, it's in Texas, wherever it is.
The mass shootings continue.
And a lot of times it's far too easy for people who have mental illness to walk into a gun shop
and get an AR-15 and have more power inside of a church or inside of a school in Yvaldi
than police officers outside just sitting there waiting.
Merger Stoneman, Doug, just they're sitting outside waiting.
for the shootings of stop because they're overpowered by the single AR-15 that a madman got going in to a gun shop, you know, a day or two before.
You know, there's a couple of things here. There's a lot more than a couple of things going on here.
But one item that is for sure is there are more guns in America, as the mayor of Minneapolis pointed out.
There are more guns floating around the United States of America than there are people living in the United States.
States of America. There's something truly warped about that idea. The other aspect that you just
mentioned is we all think about taking our kids to school, holding their hands on their first day of
school, but it's not just elementary schools. It's sending a kid off to college, wondering if
they're going to be safe. It's having a son or a daughter who works and goes out the door every day to the
office because of the prevalence of guns. Now, are you telling me that in this country, supposedly the most
civilized greatest country in the world. There's no doubt about that. That we can't do anything about
this. We've lived with it for at least a quarter of a century, much longer than that. What is it
about this issue that prevents people from doing the common sense thing? By the way, it's not even
the number of guns. It's the illegal guns. It's the ghost guns. It's the illegal transfer of guns.
These people don't even want you to be able to monitor where AR-15s are being sold. There are people that
can drive around and they do drive around in neighborhoods and they open up the back of their cars
and there are a lot of AR-15s and other weapons of war in the back of their cars and they sell it
one gang to another gang one person to another person one mentally deranged person to another
mentally deranged person and instead they go oh my uncle just wanted to hand me a gun and
I would have to go through all of this yeah yeah maybe maybe maybe until we get our arms around
the illegal transfer of guns the fact that
But for most gun shootings, only, what, three, four percent of those gun shootings are actually shot by the people who legally own the guns?
Yeah, maybe we should do that.
And the shooter, police tell us the shooter in this incident in Minneapolis, had three guns, a rifle, a pistol, shotgun, all purchased legally and all purchased recently.
Police say they're also recovering more weapons at the home of the shooter.
And we talk about warning signs.
there now have been uncovered entire YouTube channels from this person expressing
violent thoughts, a sketch, a map, because it's believed that the person attended the school,
mother worked at the school, knew the building had sketched out map.
So you have a person who has shown, at least to people, they know, violence,
and no one intervenes between that violence, those threats of violence,
and the purchase of the gun.
There just has to be a way to see.
stop that person from having those guns. And that's something Melania Trump's talking about this morning
in a post. She's talking about preemptive action. And that's what we need. Preemptive action.
You know, after 9-11, they said if you see something, say something. That's what she's talking about.
If you see something, say something. Preemptive action. Making it harder for 18-year-olds to walk into
gun shops, get AR-15s. I mean, making it harder for people to get weapons of war. Until
they are screened. We're not talking about making them illegal, though about two-thirds of
Americans would be fine, making military-style weapons illegal. That's not even what we're talking
about now. But if you're going to sell a weapon of war to an 18 or 19 or 20 or 21-year-old,
you know, actually figure out, as the first lady says, you know, let's do some preemptive
screening to make sure that we're not going to have a tragedy like this happening.
Still ahead on morning, Joe, a lot to cover. CDC leadership.
is in disarray this morning after the Trump administration fired the agency's director hours
after she refused to resign under pressure from the nation's top health officials.
We'll dig into that shake-up, spurred by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Who's literally going to war on the same vaccines that he gave his children, that we gave our children,
that everybody gave their children over the past 50 years and eradicated diseases,
which, of course, are starting up right now.
How could Republicans have allowed this guy to get anywhere near the Department of HHS?
That's a good question.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you, doctor.
Thank you, doctor.
We'll be right back.
You're watching morning, Joe.
We'll be right back.
We need to be doing more than talking.
It can't just be words.
There needs to be action.
And when we have seen school shooting after school shooting,
when we have seen churches get shot up by horrible actors,
I think the impetus has to be on all of us as leaders to do a whole lot more.
Don't just say this is about thoughts and prayers right now.
These kids were literally praying.
It was the first week of school.
They were in a church.
They should be able to go to school or church
in peace without the fear or risk of violence and their parents should have the same kind of
assurance.
Past the hour, Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser says President Trump's federal law enforcement
surge has led to a drop in crime in the city but is criticizing the presence of immigration
agents and National Guard troops. At a press conference yesterday, Mayor Bowser thanked officers
and reported an 87% decrease in carjackings and a 15% drop and overall crime in the 20 days
since the federal takeover began.
We greatly appreciate the surge of officers that enhance what MPD has been able to do in this city.
We know that when carjackings go down, when use of gun goes down, when homicide or
robbery go down, neighborhoods feel safer and are safer. So this surge has been important to
us for that reason. However, the mayor went on to explain the presence of masked immigration
officers and National Guard soldiers from other states was not helping. Well, we know it's not
working is a break and trust between police and community, especially with new federal
partners in our community. We know having masked ICE agents in the community has not
worked, and National Guards from other states has not been an efficient use of those
resources. I'm devastated by people living in fear.
you know very clearly how I feel about our nation needing comprehensive immigration reform,
about the Congress establishing a pathway to citizenship for hardworking people who came to
this country for a better life, and who are not criminals, who are law abiding. And I think
when that question is finally answered, that's the only way to deal with this fear or to deal
with these agencies going after law-abiding people.
You know, Rev, the mayor, being extraordinarily pragmatic.
And I know that most of her constituents would like her to be yelling at Donald Trump right now,
but extraordinarily pragmatic.
I think, and saying, thank you so much.
This has been helpful.
Carjackings have gone down.
We greatly appreciate it.
Thank you for the partnership.
However, these are the areas that are causing our residents some concern.
I just think it's, I think that may be hopefully a way forward to forging a partnership,
even if not, she's trying.
I think that's the real point.
She's trying.
She took the high road.
Many of us, including me, took a very strong position and continued to about the takeovers
and the project to takeovers.
But she said, well, let's find some good.
in this. We already were seeing crime go down. This enhanced it. She gave them credit. It would be
the, in my opinion, the best thing for the country for the president or the administration to reach
out and have conversations with Mayor Bowser and Mayor Johnson and Chicago and others to see how
we can blend because none of us want crime. And I think she set a tone that gives them the
opportunity to say that we're not just being insensitive. We're not just doing something. We're not just
doing something wrong. We're not just doing something to black mares. We're willing to work together.
If they don't, I think their silence will speak volumes. Let's bring in from Washington,
columnist and associate editor for The Washington Post, David Ignatius, and MSNBC, Washington correspondent
and co-host of the weekend, Jackie Alamaney, back from attorney to leave. Good to see you, Jackie.
Great to have you back, Jackie. David Ignatius, as a Washington resident, you, you
you heard the mayor again being very pragmatic not not working to make political points but you got
the sense she was doing her best to represent her city and uh to to thank the president for the
good that has been done but try to have some sort of return to normalcy what did you think
Joe I was proud of our mayor I think she is trying to walk a fine line she is balancing
the desire of everybody who lives in Washington to have a safer city
against a concern about federalization, takeover of our law enforcement.
What we need in Washington is community policing, as every major city needs.
We need the police to be supported.
They need more money.
They need just in general more public support.
And that's consistently been her argument.
We don't need masked people on the streets, seizing people at their workplaces.
that's not a path to a safer Washington.
But I'm glad when I see people reaching out and saying,
here's the good that can be done in a common cause to make our city safer.
That shouldn't be a partisan issue, quite the opposite.
So good on Mayor Bousier.
Listening to and thinking about this terrible tragedy in Minneapolis,
response of Melania, Trump is exactly right. We do need to take preemptive action. And as she
has done on other issues, I hope she talks with her husband and says, President Trump, this is
your moment. You can speak to the people who are refused to limit these automatic weapons
and do something about them. Trump is the rare person who could actually make gun control
happen in a more emphatic way in our country and speak to this crisis that every, every week,
every month, we read tragic stories like this. But, you know, when I see people trying to work together
as Mayor Bauer has just done, I'm all for it. Jackie, let's talk about the reality on the ground
right now in Washington, where you live. How is all this playing these last couple of weeks of federal
troops coming in, of Donald Trump talking the way he's talked about the city?
of now Mayor Bowser saying, yeah, actually it has helped in some areas, but not in others.
What's the reality of how this is playing in Washington?
And then as we look beyond these 30 days that President Trump has, do you think it extends
further, he would need congressional approval to do that?
Yeah, Willie, I think that there, as David was saying, there is a resistance to sort of the
performative nature of what Trump is doing and in service of really what is a political message
But in the same vein, there's a recognition that when you're looking at the numbers, this is actually effective in some ways and that Democrats at the end of the day could be taking a page from Bowser's approach to Trump and what the National Guard has done, despite the tactics that have been extremely unpopular amongst Democrats.
But I think her coming out, and exactly as David was saying, and taking a conciliatory note and encouraging local and federal officials to work together.
together in furtherance of lowering crime is a message that I think Democrats can be getting
behind. It's what you guys were talking about yesterday. Whether or not the facts support
this, voters feel a certain way and they don't want to be told that when they're saying
that they feel unsafe, they are worried about public safety. They're worried about their
children going to school. They're worried about violence and gun safety issues, a range of
issues as related to public safety. They don't want to be told by Democrats, what you're feeling
is not valid, that, you know, getting, getting talked at with numbers and statistics instead
of a recognition of, okay, what can we be doing better? And so what Bowser did yesterday,
I think, is, is from, especially from messaging perspective, a positive step forward.
Yeah, David Ignatius, we're about to move on to the CDC story. But before we go,
I need to talk to you about what happened last night in Kyiv.
Vladimir Putin, once again, thumbing his nose that Donald Trump
decided to launch 600 attacks against the people of Kiev,
slaughtered children, slaughtered the elderly.
I think the British councilant based on reports I've seen may have been damaged.
But instead of choosing the negotiating table,
they chose to continue slaughtering young.
children. And again, this comes to the time when everybody's pushing for a ceasefire. And it
comes to the time when Donald Trump said he's going to wait to see what Vladimir Putin's
answers. It is here. One of the biggest attacks, the continued slaughter of children in
Kiev. It's insane that, you know, Putin is the largest kidnapper in the world. The
largest hostage taker in the world. I'm not sure what else the president's waiting for.
So, Joe, you're right. This is Putin's answer to Trump's pleas for peace, to bomb Kyiv even
harder. I've written a piece that will be published in a few hours that says the time for
security guarantees is right now. It's not in the future after some agreement. It's right now when
Ukrainians are cowering at night facing nightly drone and missile attacks.
I'd like to see our European allies in the United States moved to say right now to Ukraine,
as long as these negotiations go on, as long as we're not at peace yet,
we're going to provide guarantees that the civilian population of Ukraine will not be terrorized
on the way to an eventual settlement.
But I do think this situation should be intolerable,
most of all, to President Trump,
who has been correct in saying through the campaign
and through his presidency,
this bloodbath has to stop.
It isn't stopping.
So what next?
And I think the answer to what next
is to put more teeth in our promise
to protect Ukraine and its,
people. I'm talking about the front. The front line's going to continue. I'm talking about the
cities of Ukraine and the ordinary people who were living there. But it's time to rethink this.
And make no mistake, Mika, the targets last night were not military targets. They were
innocent people. They were innocent children. They were innocent grandparents. They were the ones,
Mike, who got slaughtered. Well, you know, Joe, that's a critical point that I don't think
receives enough attention. And I'd like to ask David about that exact point. This is not World War II
bombing, David, as we all know. This is not 30,000 feet upstairs and bombs scattered all across
a city randomly. This is targeted. The drones are targeted. They know where the drones are going.
They know that the drones are headed for civilian shelters and workplaces and residences. That's a war crime.
Why don't we hear more about this?
We should hear more.
The bombing in Kiev, when I've been in the city, has tended to be in suburban neighborhoods.
For a while, it was targeted against quasi-military targets.
But that's changed.
It's getting closer to the city center.
The weapons that are being used are much more terrorizing.
You know, I've been with Ukrainians as they just sat through dinner at the
as the sirens went off because, you know, there's just, there's a fatalism that's developed.
But we do need to look at the victims, especially as we head toward another winner in which Russia will target the heating infrastructure.
It will try to freeze Ukrainians out of their homes.
It will try to create a kind of desperation that we just need to see and feel.
But, Mike, you're absolutely right.
This increasingly involves the ordinary people of Ukraine, and we need to feel that in our gut.
The Washington Post, David Ignatius, thank you very much.
Of course, we'll be following this.
Also, when we come back, President Trump fires, who at least tries to fire, the director of the CDC, we'll have that story.
But I think it's RFK Jr.
That's the person that RFK Jr put in place.
I think it was all Republicans who voted her in.
No, we'll talk about it when we come back.
Way to go, Brown.
38 past the hour, the White House says it has fired CDC director Susan Monterez, less than one month after she was confirmed by the Senate.
One month.
That was quick.
It follows a dramatic back and forth in which Monterez was pressured to leave the agency after reportedly clashing with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over,
vaccine policy. But she refused to resign. The Washington Post reports Monterez was pressed for days
over whether she would support rescinding certain approvals for coronavirus vaccines. Then in a social
media post last night, the Department of Health and Human Services announced Monterez was no longer
the director of the CDC. But just hours later, her lawyers responded saying she had not resigned or been
fired, writing in part, quote, when she refused to rubber stamp unscientific, reckless directives,
and fired dedicated health experts, she chose protecting the public over serving a political
agenda. For that, she has been targeted. She will not resign. The White House responded with
a statement formally terminating Monterez, arguing she is not aligned with the president's
agenda of making America healthy again.
So wait.
I'm confused because he loved his warp speed.
Donald Trump's agenda is to undermine Donald Trump's.
Donald Trump's one of his greatest achievements.
He takes responsibility for making the vaccine available to America and opening up America again.
And the world.
Making it safe.
So the White House is now against that?
He was touting it two days ago at that cabinet meeting.
He went on a long speech about how great it was because it was.
You can't argue.
And how people are getting fired for agreeing with the president?
I don't get it. That's like, that's chaos.
Wow. So lawyers for Monterez say this is legally deficient that she remains as CDC director.
At least four top officials at the agency have announced their resignations, one saying he no longer can serve in the role because of the ongoing weaponization of public health by Bobby Kennedy Jr.
Join us now, Washington correspondent for the New York Times covering the intersection of health policy and politics.
Cheryl Gay Stolberg.
Cheryl, good morning.
So this is all a little bit confusing.
Can you kind of take us back through this and remind our viewers that, yes, the CDC director
was confirmed by this Republican Senate, that this was not a Biden holdover.
This isn't somebody that they opposed a minute ago and now do.
So what's going on here?
Well, a lot of chaos, as I think Mika said.
Yes, this CDC director, Dr. Susan Menaris, was confirmed by a Republican
Senate, she's an appointee of President Trump. She serves at the pleasure of the president.
Kennedy obviously wants her out. They've been tussling back and forth for days.
My sources tell me that Kennedy summoned her to his office on Monday and said either she had to
clear out the top ranks of CDC leadership and accept their advisory committee's recommendations
on vaccines, or she was going to be fired. She refused to go. She called Senator Bill Cassidy,
the chairman of the Senate Health Committee.
He, in turn, called Kennedy.
Kennedy was angry.
Kennedy summoned her back on Tuesday and said, you've got to go.
And the long and the short of it is, the White House now says she's been fired.
I just updated my story because shortly after midnight, her lawyers said that the firing
is, quote, legally deficient, that she serves at the pleasure of the president.
only President Trump can fire her.
He hasn't made an announcement.
So I think the ball is now in President Trump's court.
I'm going to be interested in seeing what is he going to say today?
Is he going to come out and fire this woman that he picked and stand with Bobby Kennedy or not?
So Cheryl, let's be specific about this point of conflict and the vaccines that Bobby Kennedy Jr.
and others want to get rid of.
And the CDC director appears to be defended.
what are we talking about here? Which vaccines? Well, I think we're talking certainly about
coronavirus vaccines, which we saw yesterday. The FDA limited recommendations. They approve the new
vaccine, but they narrowed down who can take it. It's unclear what other vaccines we might
be talking about. And I say that because we also know that the secretary has said there will
be a forthcoming report on the causes of autism. And as you and I know, the secretary has
embraced the theory, which has been discredited, that autism is caused by vaccines. We're all
waiting for that report. It's being written by someone who has also embraced the vaccine
autism theory. And so who knows what is coming next? And it may well be that their clash, his clash,
with Susan Monars is in anticipation of that forthcoming report.
Cheryl, I'm wondering if you can talk a little bit more about the relationship between Trump
and Bobby Kennedy.
I mean, we shouldn't be surprised here.
RFK has dedicated his life to medical misinformation and propagated a lot of false information
with regards to vaccines and autism.
But we know that Trump, at least in the last presidency, was pro-vaccine,
according to some of his advisors and,
and did get behind Operation Warp Speed.
Why has he sort of allowed RFK to stomp all over this legacy and push forward with this mandate?
So a couple of things about that.
President Trump has actually long expressed the view that vaccines cause autism.
As far back as 2007, he had a fundraiser for an autism awareness groups.
He's said repeatedly on social media and in a.
2015 presidential debate, that he thinks that kids are getting too many vaccines, you know, and
that, you know, autism is the result. But separate from that, he has a very unique relationship
with Bobby Kennedy. Bobby Kennedy is a very unique cabinet member, right? First of all,
he's a Kennedy. Trump is enamored with, you know, the Kennedy name. And Kennedy also brings
his own following to Trump. Kennedy helped Trump get elected. He merged his campaign with Trump's
and he brought a whole movement, his so-called Maha movement. And I think Trump is very well aware of that
and that a part of his base, a distinct part of his base is the Maha base and that is different
from the MAGA base. And so I think that's why we see Trump give Kennedy, you know, a fair amount
of leeway.
He said he was going to let Kennedy go wild on health.
Trump doesn't really care that much about health.
And so he's just to soon have Kennedy take it over.
So, you know, we'll see.
All right.
New York Times Washington correspondent, Sheryl Gay-Soulberg.
Thank you, as always, for you reporting.
Greatly appreciate it.
It's fascinating.
So, as you said, I guess Kennedy thinks he helped get Donald Trump elected.
much of the same way Elon Musk thinks he helped get Trump elected.
So I suppose Bobby Kennedy's totally fine with trashing what a lot of people will say
maybe Donald Trump's top legacy, and that is Operation Warp Speed.
So he's trashing it.
We'll see if Donald Trump's fine with him, trashing his top legacy.
We'll be following this.
All right, MSNBC, Washington correspondent Jackie Allen, many.
Thank you as well.
We'll be watching The Weekend.
And you're back right here on MSNBC, soon to be, MS now.
Okay.
We've got the mugs.
Let's just do it.
Can't we just do it?
Yeah, we've got it.
Yeah.
We've got it.
Let's go.
Come on.
All right.
Now.
Coming up, ESPN's Paul Feinbaum joins us to preview the college football regular
season kickoff.
We'll go through the big matchups slated for this weekend as, well, as the early favorites for
this season's playoff.
Morning Joe will be right back.
Kansas State, Kansas State, rushes five, back to the end zone,
and it's caught for a touchdown.
Dominic overbeats.
He will to haul it in.
The first score of 2025.
College football is back.
That's Iowa State touchdown
against Kansas State on Saturday,
marking the very first touchdown
of the 2025 college football season.
Cyclones beat the Wildcats,
24-21 in Dublin, Ireland,
the annual overseas game that kicks off the season.
Tonight, Boise State takes on
the University of South Florida
at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa.
All of it, though, prelude to this weekend's
marquee matchup, number one ranked, Texas, visiting the horseshoe to play the Ohio State
Buckeyes will mark the beginning of the first full season for Longhorns quarterback Arch
Manning as the starter. He is the nephew of NFL greats Peyton and Eli Manning. Joining us now,
the only man to talk to ahead of the first weekend or any weekend of college football, ESPN
commentator, the great Paul Feinbaum. Paul, it is so great to have you with us this morning.
what a slate we've got.
You got Texas at Ohio State, Alabama at FSU,
LSU at Clemson, and of course the Buccaneers of Charleston Southern come calling to Nashville
at the newly renovated First Bank Stadium, Diego Pavia and company.
We'll be ready.
But let's start with Texas.
What are you looking at on Saturday, Paul?
First of all, Willie, this is one of the biggest college football games we've ever had to open a season.
It's one versus three.
and the Arch Manning aspect of it is transcendent.
I don't think college football has perhaps ever, in the modern era, seen anyone like him.
Tim Tebow, when he came on, was much anticipated,
but he didn't have the credentials and the family lineage that Arch does,
and he's handled it so well, which is understandable, as to uncles are in the television business.
They're pretty good NFL Hall of Famers as well,
but there's such a combustible aspect to it.
And if it wasn't big enough, it's also, we'll talk about it in a second, the final headgear of
Lee Corso's amazing career. He is 90 years old, and this is his farewell. It's hard to get
any better. Yeah, he's, what a legend he has, Lee Corso, and given so much, and it's been so
fun to watch Herb Street and Fowler and those guys talk about him and remember him ahead of
this last game. Let's talk a little bit about Arch Manning, because his story, not just
that his lineage, but also the fact that he kind of sat and waited his turn, which we've been
talking about recently in this era of NIL, he could have jumped anywhere he wanted and become
the starter the next day. But he kind of sat and learned and waited. And the glimpses we have
gotten of him, Paul, different from Eli and Peyton, with all due respect, this kid can run the
football too. When he gets outside the pocket, he's good there as well. He reminds a few of us
old-timers of his grandfather, Archie Manning, who played at Ole Miss in the late 60s.
He was a fantastic running quarterback, and that's exactly what Arch is.
And on top of all that, the fact that he could have left for a lot of money, but he stayed,
and quite frankly, Willie, Texas would have been better with him last year than Quinn Ewers.
Uers got them to the semifinals, and really within three yards on the goal line of perhaps
tying Ohio State in that cotton ball.
But ultimately, he stuck around.
And if you go back into the 90s,
there's another guy named Manning who stuck around.
He could have been the number one pick in the draft.
He came back in 97 for his final season at Tennessee.
It does run in the family.
So Paul, let's talk about the second big game.
The game you and I would be watching closely on Saturday.
That is Alabama an FSU.
What do you see there?
I think it's going to be a fairly easy win for Alabama,
but not to worry you, Joe.
But Alabama's had a couple of injuries lately that do concern me.
Their top running back is out.
Their top defensive tackle is out.
And do I need to remind you of Caitlin DeBoer on the road three times last year
as an actual road game in neutral sight?
He managed to lose a double-digit favorite game.
So that's my only concern.
Beyond that, Florida State is a sorry program.
I'm wondering what you're telling.
I'm wondering about your tell.
Boy, you have just so.
doom dusted to defeat, not being worried and saying they're a bad program. You never do that.
A couple of us, and I'm being serious here. Does DeBoer have the fire in his gut that's necessary
to win in the SEC? Because I sure didn't see it last year. I'll spare you the cliches.
I haven't seen it either. He says this is going to be a different season. It's a reset. But Joe,
you play football. You can't change the culture after one season. It doesn't work.
So you better hope that he has the right players.
I do like the quarterback, Ty Simpson.
I think he's an upgrade over Jalen Milro
who drove everyone crazy last year.
He was the best runner on the team,
but he had never learned exactly how to pass the ball.
Yeah, well, you know, a lot of people are always saying,
oh, Jalen's going to do better this year,
because he's having fun.
And that's what I kept hearing, having fine.
Nobody had fun under saving.
Anybody that's played football in the Deep South
understands there's nothing fun about playing football in the SEC,
Nothing fun about even playing high school football.
It's about war, whether it's Friday nights or Saturday.
I have a final question.
It's a serious question.
It's inside baseball question for you, too.
The one thing I noticed, you know, people figured out that Millrow couldn't read defenses,
so defenses were rushing eight guys, and we had an offensive scheme that would, like,
would throw, you know, four guys deep.
Have we learned, do we have an offensive scheme this year where they'll actually throw
the ball in the flat, where they'll do slant passes, where you're, you know,
you'll be able. You'll be able to have a safety. We didn't have that last year. It was. It really
seriously was the worst offensive scheme I have seen a major college football football field in my
lifetime. Do we have actually a better plan forward this year?
Meek and Willie, I have missed this in the offseason. The answer, Joe, is yes. And it's very simple.
The name is Ryan Grubb.
Ryan Grubb was at Seattle last year in the NFL.
He was with DeBore when he played for the national championship.
And finally, Nick Saban tried to hire him a couple of years ago
what turned out to be his final season.
And it's too bad he didn't because Tommy Reeves was another disaster.
I still haven't gotten over that final play he called against Michigan in the Rose Bowl in overtime.
It's the worst play I've ever seen.
So yes, Ryan Grub is an outstanding offensive coordinator.
I think that will be the difference.
Joe, I'm upbeat.
I really believe Alabama, it looks like a 10-and-2 team
and a good run in the playoffs.
But I know you're a little skeptical, I understand it.
I'm skeptical until DeBore can actually prove, Willie,
that he knows how to coach the SEC.
We'll see.
He's going to get his chance coming up in two days from now.
So, Paul, before we let you go,
how about some other teams for people thinking about this season
to keep an eye on?
We know about all the big boys.
Ohio State opens at home against Texas.
If they clear that hurdle, they've got a nice path.
what are you looking at in terms of a team who could make a run deep into these playoffs?
Deep your eye on the LSU-Clemson game on Saturday night.
I think it's the best game of the day.
You have the two of the best quarterbacks in the country in Klebnik and Nussmeyer.
And Clemson is back.
They took a couple of years off after playing Alabama nearly every year for the national championship.
Dabo Sweeney has really put a tremendous defensive line together.
And, Willie, one more thing.
I had the opportunity two weeks ago to introduce.
you Diego Pavia, the quarterback at Vanderbilt, and I asked him what the outlook was, and he said,
we're going to win the national championship, and I look straight to the camera. And I said,
I said, are you joking? He said, he looked around and said, I don't see anybody cracking jokes.
I thought he was going to come through and grab my neck. He's deadly serious about that.
He doesn't lack for confidence. And one thing I will say, I was in Nashville before the Alabama game.
We went to the game where Vanderbilt upset Alabama, and I got to talk to him before the game.
And with that same deadpan, that straight face, I said, how are you feeling?
He said, we're getting ready to shock everybody but ourselves.
We know we can do it.
And then he did it.
I don't know about the national championship, but I like our team.
Okay.
That's exciting.
The end commentator.
Paul Feinbaum, thank you so much for being on the show this morning.
We appreciate it.