ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:00:37 GMT

Good evening.  From Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia and welcome to the first and only vice presidential debate of 2016, sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. I'm Elaine Quijano, anchor at CBSN and and correspondent for CBS News. It’s an honor to moderate this debate between Senator Tim Kaine and Governor Mike Pence. Both are longtime public servants who are also proud fathers of sons serving in the U.S. Marines. The campaigns have agreed to the rules of this ninety minute debate. There will be nine different segments covering domestic and foreign policy issues. Each segment will begin with a question to both candidates who will each have two minutes to answer. Then I'll ask follow-up questions to facilitate a discussion between the candidates. By coin toss, it’s been determined that Senator Kaine will be first to answer the opening question. We have an enthusiastic audience tonight. They've agreed to only express that enthusiasm once at the end of the debate and right now as we welcome Governor Mike Pence and Senator Tim Kaine.

(APPLAUSE)

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:01:42 GMT

Gentlemen, welcome. It truly is a privilege to be with both of you tonight. I’d like to start with the topic of presidential leadership. Twenty eight years ago tomorrow night, Lloyd Benson said the vice presidential debate was not about the qualifications for the vice presidency but about how, if tragedy should occur, the vice president has to step in without any margin for error, without time for preparation, to take over the responsibility for the biggest job in the world. What about your qualities, your skills and your temperament equip you to step into that role at a moment’s notice? Senator Kaine.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:02:43 GMT

Elaine, thank you for being here tonight, and Governor Pence, welcome. It is so great to be back at Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia. This is a very special place. Sixty five years ago, a young courageous woman, Barbara Johns, led a walkout of her high school, Moton High School. She made history by protesting school segregation. 

Leading up to the debate, there were a couple of interesting articles about the history of racial segregation in Farmville. Kaine’s father-in-law, Linwood Holton, was the governor of Virginia who integrated the schools, but it didn’t go smoothly in Farmville. Here’s a piece from the New York Times, and one from the Washington Post.

She believed our nation was stronger together. And that walkout led to the Brown versus Board of Education decision that moved us down the path toward equality. I am so proud to be running with another strong, history-making woman, Hillary Clinton, to be president of the United States. I'm proud because her vision of stronger together, building an economy that works for all, not just those at the top, being safe in the world, not only with a strong military but also strong alliances to battle terrorism and climate change. And also to build a community of respect, just like Barbara Johns tried to do sixty-five years ago. That's why I'm so proud to be her running mate.

Hillary told me why she asked me to be her running mate. She said the test of a Clinton administration will not be the signing of a bill or the passage of the bill. It'll be whether we can make somebody's life better, whether we can make a classroom better learning environment for school kids or teachers, whether we can make us safer. It’s going to be about results. And she said to me, you've been a missionary and a civil rights lawyer. You’ve been a city councilman and mayor. You been a lieutenant governor and governor and now a U.S. senator. I think you will help me figure out how to govern this nation so that we always keep in mind that the success of the administration is the difference we make in people's lives. And that's what I bring to the ticket. That experience, having served in all levels of government. But my primary role is to be Hillary Clinton's right-hand person and strong supporter as she puts together the most historic administration possible. And I relish that role. I’m so proud of her. I’ll just say this, we trust Hillary Clinton, my wife and I. We trust her with the most important thing in our life. We have a son deployed overseas in the Marine Corps right now. We trust Hillary Clinton as president and commander-in-chief. But the thought of Donald Trump as commander in chief scares us to death.

Both Pence and Kaine have sons serving in the Marines. Kaine’s son, Nathaniel, joined the Marines in 2012 and trained in North Carolina to deploy to Eastern Europe. Pence’s son, Michael, is in flight school in Florida. He graduated from Officer Candidate School in 2015.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:03:54 GMT

Governor Pence.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:03:55 GMT

Well, first off, thank you, Elaine, and thank you to Norwood University for the wonderful hospitality and the Commission on Presidential Debates.

Pence thanked “Norwood University” for hosting the debate. It is Longwood University.

It is deeply humbling for me to be here. To be surrounded by my wonderful family and Senator Kaine, it is is an honor to be here with you as well. And I just -- I also want to say -- thanks to everyone that is looking in tonight, who understands what an enormously important time this is in the life of our nation. For the last seven and a half years, we've seen America's place in the world weakened. We’ve seen an economy stifled by more taxes, more regulation, a war on coal and a failing healthcare reform come to be known as Obamacare.

Under the Bush administration, the top tax rate was 35 percent. Under the Obama administration, the wealthiest Americans are paying more, with a top rate of 39.6 percent.

About 20 million people have health insurance because of the Affordable Care Act, including about 10 million who buy insurance through Obamacare exchanges, and millions more who are covered by an expanded Medicaid program. However, many people say the premiums are too high and the only people who can afford it are those who get generous government subsidies. And many insurance companies have withdrawn from the program because they are losing money.

The American people know that we need a change. And so I want to thank all of you for being with us tonight. I also want to thank Donald Trump for making that call and inviting us to be a part of this ticket.

I have to tell you, I'm a small town boy from a place not too different from Farmville. I grew up with a cornfield in my backyard. My grandfather had immigrated to this country when he was about my son's age. My mom and dad built everything that matters in a small town in southern Indiana. They built a family and a good name, and a business. And they raised a family. I dreamed some day of representing my hometown in Washington D.C., but I honestly, Elaine, I never imagined, never imagined I would have the opportunity to be governor of the state that I love let alone, let alone sitting at a table like this, in this kind of position. So to answer your question, I would say I would hope that if the responsibility ever fell to me in this role, that I would meet it with the way that I'm going to be the responsibility, should I be elected Vice President of the United States. And that’s to bring a lifetime of experience, a lifetime growing up in a small town, a lifetime where I’ve served in the Congress of the United States, where I lead a state that works in the great state of Indiana and whatever other responsibilities might follow from this. I would hope and frankly I would pray to be able to meet that moment with that lifetime of experience.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:06:03 GMT

Senator Kaine, on the campaign trail you’ve praised Secretary Clinton's character, including her commitment to public service. Yet sixty percent of voters don't think she's trustworthy. Why do so many people distrust her? Is it because they have questions about her e-mails and the Clinton Foundation?

This has been one of Clinton’s weakest spots in polls. Only 41 percent of likely voters in a recent CNN poll said Clinton was more trustworthy than Trump, who came in slightly higher, at 45. She came out slightly ahead of Trump in terms of favorability, with 43 percent of voters seeing her favorably, compared with 39 percent who said the same of Trump.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:06:20 GMT

Elaine, let me tell you why I trust Hillary Clinton. Here’s what people should look at as they look at a public servant. Do they have a passion in their life that showed up before they were in public life? And have they held onto that passion throughout their life, regardless of whether they were in office are not, succeeding or failing? Hillary Clinton have that passion. From a time as a kid in a Methodist youth group in the suburbs of Chicago, she has been focused on serving others with a special focus on empowering families and kids. As a civil rights lawyer in the south with the children's Defense fund, First Lady of Arkansas and this country, Senator -- Secretary of State, it’s always been about putting others first, and that’s a sharp contrast with Donald Trump. Donald Trump always puts himself first. He built a  business career -- in the words of one of his campaign staffers, off the backs of the little guy. And as a candidate, he started his campaign with a speech where he called Mexicans rapists and criminals. And he has pursued the discredited and really outrageous lie that the Obama wasn't born in the United States. It is so painful to suggest that we go back to think about these days where an African-American could not be a citizen of United States. And I can't imagine how Governor Pence can defend the insult-driven selfish me-for-style of Donald Trump.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:07:40 GMT

Governor  Pence, let me ask you. You have said Donald Trump is “thoughtful, compassionate and steady.” Yet 67 percent of voters feel he is a risky choice and 65 percent feel he does not have the right kind of temperament to be president. Why do so many Americans think Mr. Trump is simply too erratic?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:07:56 GMT

Well, let me say first and foremost, that Senator, you and Hillary Clinton would know a lot about an insult-driven campaign. It really is remarkable. At a time when literally -- in the wake of Hillary Clinton's tenure as Secretary of State - where she was the architect of the Obama administration's foreign policy, we see entire portions of the world, particularly the wider Middle East, literally spinning out of control.

Clinton was a leading advocate for the 2011 military intervention in Libya, which Obama has since called the biggest mistake of his presidency. Clinton also was an early supporter of arming the so-called moderate rebels fighting the government of Syria — a policy Obama ultimately adopted later, even though he opted not to launch a conventional military attack against Syria’s President Bashar Assad.

The situation we’re watching hour-by-hour in Syria today, is a result of the failed foreign policy and the weak foreign policy that Hillary Clinton held lead in this administration and create. The newly emboldened aggression of Russia, whether it was in Ukraine or --

The war in Syria began as an uprising against Bashar Assad’s regime and was not the result of any U.S. policy. Clinton did warn autocratic leaders before the so-called Arab Spring, however, that the region’s foundations were “sinking into the sand.”

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:08:38 GMT

You gotta be -- you guys love Russia.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:09:38 GMT

Their heavy-handed approach...

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:10:38 GMT

You both have said Vladimir Putin is --

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:13:44 GMT

We will get to Russia in just a moment. But I do want to get back to -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:13:48 GMT

Thank you -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:13:52 GMT

You praised -- these guys have praised Vladimir Putin as a great leader -

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:13:55 GMT

Yes and Senator, we will get to that. In the meantime, the question is on running mates. Why the disconnect?  

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:14:00 GMT

I must've hit a nerve here because at a time of great challenge in the life of this nation, where we’ve weakened America's place in the world, stifled America’s economy, the campaign of Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine has been an avalanche of insults. Look, to get to your question of trustworthiness, Donald Trump has built a business through hard times and through good times. He’s brought an extraordinary business acumen. He’s employed tens of thousands of people in this country.

Trump made a fortune in real estate in the 1980s, but hit very hard times in 1990-91. His three casinos in New Jersey all filed for bankruptcy. He began rebuilding his businesses in the mid-1990s, but his casino operations fell into bankruptcy again in 2004 and again in 2009.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:14:28 GMT

And paid a few taxes and lost a billion dollars a year.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:14:31 GMT

But why the disconnect with your running mates?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:14:35 GMT

There's a reason why people question the trustworthiness of Hillary Clinton and that’s because they’re paying attention. I mean, the reality is that when she was Secretary of State, Senator, come on, she had a Clinton Foundation accepting contributions from foreign governments.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:14:50 GMT

You are Donald Trump’s apprentice - let me talk about -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:15:17 GMT

I think I’m still on my time.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:15:28 GMT

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:15:28 GMT

Isn’t this a discussion?  

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:15:34 GMT

I’d like to finish my sentence.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:15:45 GMT

Finish your sentence.

(CROSSTALK)

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:15:52 GMT

Governor Pence doesn’t think the world is going so well and he’s going to say it’s everybody’s fault.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:15:56 GMT

Do you?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:05 GMT

Let me tell you this. When Hillary Clinton became secretary of state, Governor Pence, do you know that Osama bin Laden was alive?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:10 GMT

Yes.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:15 GMT

Did you know that we had a hundred and seventy five thousand troops deployed in the battlefield in Iraq and Afghanistan? Do you know that Iran was racing toward a nuclear weapon and that Russia was expanding its stockpile?

Under Secretary Clinton's leadership, she was part of the national team, public safety team, that went after and revived the dormant hunt against bin Laden and wiped them off the face of the earth. She worked a deal with the Russians to reduce their chemical weapons stockpile. She worked a tough negotiation with nations around the world to eliminate the Iranian nuclear weapons program without firing a shot. 

The Iran nuclear deal was reached in July 2015. Hillary Clinton was not serving in the government. The deal slowed but does not eliminate Iran’s nuclear weapons program. Iran agreed to eliminate its stockpile of medium enriched uranium, to dramatically cut its stockpile of low enriched uranium, and to allow international inspectors to visit nuclear facilities — in exchange for relief from sanctions.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:31 GMT

To eliminate the Iranian nuclear weapons program?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:34 GMT

Absolutely, without firing a shot. And instead of seventy five thousand of our troops are deployed overseas we now have fifty thousand. These are very good very good things.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:42 GMT

And Iraq has been overrun by ISIS because Hillary Clinton failed to renegotiate.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:46 GMT

If you want to send more American troops -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:48 GMT

Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton, failed to renegotiate a status of forces agreement.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:50 GMT

No, that is incorrect.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:53 GMT

Gentlemen, we’ll get to this issues in just a moment.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:16:57 GMT

But I would like to correct -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:17:00 GMT

...an overrun vast areas -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:17:02 GMT

President Bush said we would leave Iraq at the end of 2011 and Elaine, Iraq did not want our troops to stay and they wouldn’t give us the protection for our troops. And guess what? If a nation where our troops are serving does not want us to say, we're not going to stay.

Bush did negotiate the conclusion of the American military presence in Iraq, but critics in 2011 faulted Obama for not working harder to secure an agreement with Baghdad to leave behind a residual force in Iraq. The administration cited Baghdad’s refusal to agree to a “Status of Forces Agreement” covering the laws governing U.S. troops in the country. The withdrawal of those U.S. combat troops, critics charge, created a security vacuum that contributed to the rise of the Islamic State. And when American forces began returning to Iraq after ISIS’s battlefield victories in 2014, they did so without a formal Status of Forces Agreement. Washington and Baghdad said at the time that existing diplomatic agreements were sufficient. Today there are more than 5,000 American troops deployed to Iraq and Syria.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:17:18 GMT

It was a failure of the Secretary of State.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:17:21 GMT

We need to move on gentleman. There are a lot of people in this country wondering about the economy. Let’s turn to the issue of the economy. According to the nonpartisan committee for responsible federal budget neither of your economic plans will reduce the growing 19 trillion dollar gross national debt. In fact, both your plans would add even more to it. Both of you were governors who balanced state budgets. Are you concerned that adding more debt to the debt could be disastrous for the country? Governor Pence.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:17:50 GMT

I think the fact that the under this past administration of which Hillary Clinton was a part, we’ve almost doubled the national debt, is atrocious. I mean I'm very proud of the fact that I come from a state that works. The state of Indiana has balanced budgets. We cut taxes we’ve made record investments in education and in infrastructure. I still finished my term of two million dollars in the bank. That's a little bit different than when Senator Kaine was governor here in Virginia. He actually, he actually tried to raise to raise taxes by about four billion dollars. He left his state about two billion dollars in the hole. In the state of Indiana we have cut unemployment in half. Unemployment doubled when he was governor. But I think he is a very fitting running mate for Hillary Clinton because in the wake of this season where American families are struggling in this economy, under the weight of higher taxes and Obamacare, and the war on coal, and stifling avalanche of regulation coming out of this administration, Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine want more of the same. It really is a remarkable. They actually are advocating a trillion dollars in tax increases which I get that, you try to raise taxes here in Virginia, you were unsuccessful.

Both states have unemployment rates below the national average of 4.9 percent. In Indiana, the rate is 4.5 percent. In Virginia, it is 3.9 percent.

But a trillion dollars in tax increases, more regulation, more of the same war on coal and more Obamacare that now even former President Bill Clinton calls Obamacare a crazy plan. But Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine want to build on Obamacare. They want to expand it into a single payer program and for all the world HIllary Clinton just thinks Obamacare is a good start.

Bill Clinton did call Obamacare “the craziest thing in the world” on Monday evening in a speech in Flint, Mich. He tried to walk it back Tuesday by explaining that it “did a world of good” for the tens of millions who gained health coverage. But he did not back off the idea that small-business owners and employees who make too much to qualify for subsidies have been left behind. Hillary Clinton’s position is that the Affordable Care Act needs to be expanded and revised to correct problems since it was enacted six years ago.

That Clinton and Senator wanted build on Obama care. Want expanded to a single-parent program and Clinton thinks Obama cares of start. Donald Trump and I have a plan to get this economy moving again,  just the way it worked in the nineteen eighties just the way it worked in the nineteen sixties. And that is by lowering taxes across the board for working families, small businesses and family farms. Ending the war on coal hat is hurting jobs and earnings economy here in Virginia. A repealing Obamacare lock stock and barrel.

Trump’s health care plan calls for repealing Obamacare and replacing it with health savings accounts. These accounts allow people to put money aside tax-free to pay for health care costs. He also calls for so-called high risk pools, which are designed to lower costs for people who have pre-existing medical conditions. He does not say what would happen to those who are already covered under Obamacare and pay for it with government subsidies.

And repealing all of the executive orders that Barack Obama has signed that are stifling economic growth in this economy.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, an international economic organization, evaluated the U.S. economy this summer and concluded: “Seven years after the financial crisis, the US economy has rebounded: output has surpassed its pre-crisis peak by 10%, robust private-sector employment gains have sharply reduced unemployment, fiscal sustainability has been largely restored and corporate profits are high.”

Comparing the economic records of Tim Kaine and Mike Pence as governors is not so much apples and oranges but apples during a bountiful harvest and apples during a deep drought.

Kaine’s tenure in the Virginia governor’s office coincided with the worst recession since the Great Depression. When he became governor in January 2006, unemployment in Virginia was 3.2 percent (1.5 below national average). When he left the governor’s office in January 2010, unemployment in Virginia was 7.4 percent (2.4 below national average).

Kaine boasts of cutting government spending by $5 billion. According to PolitiFact, he actually cut about $4.6 billion, with some of those cuts taking effect after Kaine left office.  

In his final budget proposal in late 2009, Kaine proposed a 1 percent income tax surcharge, with proceeds going to local governments in exchange for eliminating the state’s car tax.The plan would have also saved the state government $950 million a year — money Kaine wanted to patch a hole in the state budget. PolitiFact calculated that swapping the income tax surcharge for the car tax would have saved money for some car owners, but most would have ended up paying more. The proposal was rejected by the state General Assembly. Kaine also proposed taxes on cigarettes and alcohol, but those were rejected by Republican lawmakers. While governor, Kaine pushed through an income tax cut for low-income families and signed a repeal of the state’s estate tax.

Pence’s tenure in the Indiana governor’s office coincided with a gradual recovery from the Great Recession. When he became governor in January 2013, unemployment in Indiana was 8.4 percent (0.4 above national average). In August, unemployment in Indiana was 4.5 percent (0.4 below national average).

During Pence’s time as governor, Indiana has cut state income taxes and business taxes and eliminated the state’s estate tax.

We can get America moving again put on top of that the kind of trade deals that will put the American worker force and you got a prescription for real growth. When you get the economy growing, Elaine, is when you can do with the national debt. When we get back to three and a half to four percent growth - which Donald Trump’s will do - then we’ll have the resources to meet our nation's’ needs at home and abroad and we’re going to have the ability to bring down the national debt.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:20:18 GMT

Senator Kaine.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:20:19 GMT

Elaine, on the economy, there’s a fundamental choice for the American electorate. Do you want a you’re hired President in Hillary Clinton, or do you want a you’re fired president in Donald Trump? 

This is a line Kaine has been using since the first rally he and Clinton held together in Northern Virginia in mid-July. That rally was his audition, and that line seems to have stuck.

I think that is not such a hard choice. Hillary and I have a plan that is on the table that is a you’re hired plan. Five components -- first thing we do is we invest in manufacturing,infrastructure and research into clean energy jobs of tomorrow. Second thing is we invest in our workforce. From pre-k education to great teachers to debt-free college and tuition free college for families that make less than a hundred and twenty five thousand dollars a year. Third, we promote fairness by raising the minimum wage so you can't work full-time and be under the poverty level. And by paying women equal pay for equal work. Fourth, we promote small business growth, just we have done in Virginia to make it easier to start and grow small businesses. Hillary and I each grew up in small business families. My dad who ran a iron working and welding shop is here tonight. Fifth we have a tax plan that targets tax relief to middle-class individuals and small businesses and ask those at the very top who benefit as we come out the recession to pay more. The Trump plan is a different plan, it’s a “you’re fired” plan. And there’s two key elements to it. First, Donald Trump said wages are too high.

The federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour has not been increased by Congress since 2009.

Trump said in a November 2015 debate that wages were too high, though he has espoused different positions since then, which PolitiFact ruled a “full flop.”

Both Donald Trump and Mike Pence think we ought to eliminate the federal minimum wage. Mike Pence, when he was in Congress voted against raising the minimum wage above five dollars and fifteen cents. And he has been a one-man bulwark against minimum wage increases in Indiana. The second component of the plan is massive tax breaks to the very top. Trillions of dollars of tax breaks are people just like Donald Trump. 

Trump wants to cut income tax rates while capping deductions for the wealthy. He would also reduce the business tax rate to 15 percent and eliminate the estate tax. The conservative Tax Foundation estimates that his plan would reduce federal revenue by $4.4 trillion to $5.9 trillion over the next decade, which is a lot, but down from $10 trillion in his original plan. Some of that could be offset by economic growth, but even using “dynamic scoring,” the foundation says the plan cuts tax revenue by $2.6 trillion to $3.9 trillion over 10 years. (The higher figure is if the 15 percent business tax rate is applied to “pass through” entities.) The biggest beneficiaries of Trump’s tax cuts are the wealthy. The top 1 percent of earners see their after-tax income rise by between 10.2 percent and 16 percent.  Overall savings would be less than 1 percent.

Clinton would raise taxes on the wealthy — especially those making more than $5 million per year (2/10,000 people) — limit value of certain deductions, and increase the estate tax rate, while extending that tax to more families (with thresholds set at $3.5 million/$7 million for couples). The Tax Policy Center estimated that an earlier version of her plan would raise an extra $1.1 trillion over a decade, with three-quarters of that coming from the top 1 percent. Last month, Clinton modified her estate tax proposal, raising the top rate to 65 percent on estates of more than $500 million.

The problem Elaine, is that is exactly what we did ten years ago and it put the economy into the deepest recession in the since the 1930s. Independent analysts say the Clinton plan would grow the economy by 10.5 million jobs; the Trump plan would cost 3.5 million jobs. 

These figures appear to come from analyses of candidates’ economic policies that Moody’s Analytics released earlier this year. Clinton comes out better in those analyses: “During her presidency, the economy would create 10.4 million jobs, 3.2 million more than under current law,” Moody’s wrote in one report. Meanwhile, it wrote, “By the end of [Trump’s] presidency, there are close to 3.5 million fewer jobs and the unemployment rate rises to as high as 7 percent, compared with below 5 percent today.” However, Trump has announced new policies and altered his tax plan since then, so these figures (which are, by the way, estimates that rely on particular economic assumptions) may need some updating.

And Donald Trump -- why would he do this? Because his tax plan basically helps him and if he ever met his promise and he gave his tax returns to the American public like he said he would, we would see just how much his economic plan is really a Trump first plan.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:22:29 GMT

On that point, Governor Pence, The New York Times was part of 1995 tax return and reported he could've avoided paying federal income taxes for years. Yesterday, Mr. Trump said he brilliantly used the laws to pay as little tax as legally possible. Does that seem fair to you?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:22:48 GMT

Well, first let me say I appreciated you’re hired you're fired thing, Senator. You use that a whole lot and I think you're running mate use a lot of predone lines. 

That’s true. Kaine does use it a lot.

What you all just heard out there is more taxes two trillion dollars in more spending, more deficits, more debt, more government. And if you think that's all working, then you look at the other side of the table. The truth of the matter is policies this administration, which Hillary Clinton and Senator Kane want to continue, have one for this economy into the ditch. We’re in the slowest economic recovery since the Great Depression.

TIM KAINE: 15 million more jobs?

MIKE PENCE: There are millions more people living in poverty today than the day that Barack Obama with Hillary Clinton at his side stepped into the Oval Office.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:23:33 GMT

And the poverty level and the median income improved dramatically between 2014-2015. 

Private sector employers have added 15.1 million jobs since the trough of the recession in 2010. Unemployment, which peaked at 10 percent in October of 2009, has fallen to 4.9 percent. Unemployment among African-Americans, which peaked at 16.8 percent in March 2010, has fallen to 8.1 percent.  

Last month, we got the news that median family income finally rose last year by 5.2 percent, the first real increase since the Great Recession. Adjusting for inflation, the median is still slightly below the pre-recession peak of 2007, and below the all-time high, which was reached in 1999. All races saw gains last year, with Hispanics seeing a 6.1 percent increase, whites 4.4 percent, and African-Americans 4.1 percent.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:23:42 GMT

Honestly, Senator, you can roll out the numbers and the sunny side, but I got it tell you people in Scranton know different. People in Fort Wayne, Indiana know different.

This economy is struggling. The answer to this economy is not more taxes but it --

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:23:57 GMT

But it’s not to give away tax relief to those at the top. I am interested to hear whether he’ll defend his running mate not releasing his taxes and not paying taxes.  

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:24:07 GMT

Governor, with all due respect, the question was about whether it seems fair to you that Mr. Trump said he brilliantly used the laws to pay as little taxes as possible.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:24:15 GMT

This is probably the difference between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton and Senator Kaine. Hillary Clinton and Senator Kaine, and God bless you for it, career public servants, that’s great. Donald Trump is a businessman. Not a career politician. He actually built a business. Those tax returns that were -- came out publicly this week - showed that he made some pretty tough times twenty years ago. But like virtually every other business, including The New York Times not too long ago, he used what he used what’s called net operating loss. We have a tax code,Senator, that actually is designed to encourage entrepreneurship.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:24:50 GMT

But why won’t he actually release his tax returns?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:24:52 GMT

We’re answering the question about the business thing.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:24:55 GMT

I do want to come back on this but -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:24:57 GMT

His tax returns showed he went through a very difficult time but he used the tax code just the way it’s supposed to be used and he did it brilliantly.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:06 GMT

How do you know that? You haven’t seen his tax returns?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:08 GMT

Because he has worth billions of dollars today.

Trump’s net worth is not clear because he has refused to release his tax returns. Forbes magazine estimates his wealth at $3.7 billion, but others who have studied his business operations believe his wealth is a fraction of that, perhaps $150 million to $250 million.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:12 GMT

How do you know that?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:13 GMT

And with regard to paying taxes this whole riff of not paying taxes and people saying he didn't pay taxes for years, Donald Trump has created tens of thousands of jobs and he’s paid payroll taxes, property taxes....

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:17 GMT

Senator, I'm going to be about thirty seconds to respond and then I have a question about social security.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:34 GMT

Elaine, Donald Trump started this campaign in 2014. He said if he runs for president he’ll release his taxes. Second, he stood on the stage last week and when Hillary said you have been paying taxes he said, that makes me smart. So it’s smart not to pay for our military. It's smart not to pay for veterans. It’s smart not to pay for teachers. And I guess all of us who do pay for those things, I guess we're stupid.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:44 GMT

Senator, do you take all the deductions that you are entitled to? I do.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:25:59 GMT

The last thing I want to ask Governor Pence is Governor Pence had to give his tax returns to show he was qualified to be vice president. Donald Trump must give the American public his tax returns to show that he is qualified to be president. And he is breaking his promise.

While Donald Trump has refused to release his tax returns, breaking with tradition of four decades, his running mate, Mike Pence, released 10 years’ worth of tax returns in September. Pence and his wife, Karen, earned $113,000 last year. Nearly all of that is from Pence’s salary as governor. They paid about 8 percent in federal taxes and gave about 8 percent to charity.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:26:18 GMT

Elaine, I have to respond to this.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:26:20 GMT

You get very little time. Twenty seconds.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:26:24 GMT

I’ll be very respectful. Look, Donald Trump has filed over 100 pages of financial disclosure which is what the law requires. The American people can review that and he is going, Senator, he is going to release his tax returns when the audit is over. The people they're going to raise your tax returns if you can meet.

Donald Trump’s financial disclosure form is 92 pages long and can be viewed here. But tax experts say it is no substitute for his tax returns. Trump stands alone in recent history for not releasing his returns, which would give insight into his income and charitable giving. PolitiFact rated Trump’s claim that the financial disclosure is extensive and you don’t learn much from a tax return false.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:26:34 GMT

Richard Nixon released his tax returns when he was under audit -

This is true. Nixon was under audit when he released his tax returns, though he had already been re-elected at that time and was not running for office.

Domenico Montanaro wrote this piece about what the public can learn from a candidate’s tax returns, which gets into the history of how it became a tradition in American politics.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:26:43 GMT

Gentlemen - the people at home cannot understand either one of you when you speak over each other. I would please ask you to wait until it is the other is finished.

Senator Kaine - on the issue of social security. In eighteen years, when the Social Security trust funds run out of money, you will be seventy six. The committee for a responsible federal budget estimates your benefits could be cut by as much as seventy five hundred dollars per year. What would your administration do to prevent this cut?

The latest Social Security trustees’ report concludes the program’s “cost is projected to exceed its non-interest income.”

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:27:12 GMT

First, we are going to protect Social Security which is one of the greatest programs that the American government has ever done. It happened at a time when you would work your whole life - your whole life - raising your kids, being a Little League coach or a Sunday school teacher and then you would retire into poverty. And Social Security has enabled people to retire with dignity and overwhelmingly not be poverty. We have to keep it solvent and we will keep it solvent. And we will look for strategies like adjusting the payroll tax cap upward in order to do that. Here’s what Hillary and I will not do. And I want to make this very plain. We will never ever engage in a risky scheme to privatize Social Security. Donald Trump wrote a book and he said Social Security is a Ponzi scheme and privatization would be good for all of us.

Donald Trump did liken Social Security to a Ponzi scheme in a 2000 book. He did it this way, per BuzzFeed, which posted on this a year ago: “Fast-forward to 1941. This is the second year Social Security benefits have been paid. … The first recipients of Social Security, even once inflation was factored in, got the equivalent of a 36.5 percent annual interest rate on their initial contributions into the Social Security Trust Fund. For those retiring in 1956, their inflation-adjusted rate of return was still a respectable 12 percent. Julie Kosterlitz, in National Journal, compares that figure with this: ‘For those who are working now and looking to retire after 2015, their returns will be below 2 percent. And that’s if they ever get paid at all. Does the name Ponzi all of a sudden come to mind?’ ”

Trump advocated for raising the age limit to 70 (for those under 40) and for privatization. “Privatization would be good for all of us,” he wrote, adding, “On average, personal accounts would have provided a single woman with 58 percent more than Social Security, and wives with 208 percent more. Directing Social Security funds into personal accounts invested in real assets would swell national savings, pumping hundreds of billions of dollars into jobs and the economy. These investments would boost national investment, productivity, wages, and future economic growth.”

And when Congressman Pence was in Congress he was the chief cheerleader for the privatization of Social Security. Even after President Bush stopped pushing for it, Congressman Pence kept pushing for it. We're going to stand up against efforts to privatize Social Security and we will look for ways to keep it solvent going from focusing primarily on the payroll tax cap. 

You can find Hillary Clinton’s Social Security and Medicare plan here. She hasn’t given a lot of detail on how she would adjust the payroll tax cap; however, she has pledged not to raise taxes on the middle class. She has said people making up to $250,000 a year would be considered middle class for the purposes of tax policy. Trump’s campaign does not list Social Security in the “positions” section of its website. Otherwise we would have provided a link.  

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:22 GMT

Governor Pence, I’ll give you an opportunity to respond.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:24 GMT

Thanks, Elaine. There they go again. All Donald Trump and I have said is we will meet our obligations to our seniors. That’s it.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:30 GMT

Go read the book.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:40 GMT


 We said we're going to meet the obligations of Medicare. That is what this campaign is really about, Senator. And this is the old scare tactic that they roll out.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:45 GMT

You have a voting record, Governor.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:47 GMT

And I get all of that.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:52 GMT

I can’t believe you won’t defend your own voting record.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:28:55 GMT

I have to go back to it. You’re running with Hillary Clinton who wants to raise taxes by a trillion dollars, increase spending by two trillions dollars, and you say you're going to keep the promises of Social Security. Donald Trump and I are going to cut taxes.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:29:05 GMT

You’re not going to cut taxes. You’re going to raise taxes on the middle class.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:29:10 GMT

We will meet the obligations of Social Security and Medicare. If we stay on the path that your party has us on, we’re going to be in a mountain range of debt and we’re going to face hard choices -

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:29:23 GMT

Gentlemen, I want to move on now.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:29:25 GMT

And the debt explosion on the Trump plan is much, much bigger than anything on the Clinton side.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:29:30 GMT

Okay, let me move on to the issue of law enforcement and race relations. Law enforcement and race relations. After the Dallas police shooting, police chief David Brown, said, "We are asking cops to do too much in this country. Every societal failure we put it off on the cops to solve. Not enough mental health funding, not enough drug addiction funding, schools fail - let's give it to the cops.” Do we asked too much of police officers in this country and how would you specifically address the chief’s concerns? Senator Kane?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:30:03 GMT

Elaine I think that’s a very fair comment. We put a lot on police shoulders and this is something that I got a lot of scar tissue and experience on. I was a councilman and mayor Richmond and when I came in with one of the highest homicide rates in the United States. We fought very very hard over the course of my time in local office with our police department and we reduced our homicide right nearly in half. And then when I was governor of Virginia, we worked hard too. And we did something we had really wanted to do the cracked the top ten the ten safest states because we worked together. Here's what I learned as a mayor and governor. The way you make communities safer and the way you make police safer is through community policing. You build the bonds between the community and the police force. Build bonds of understanding and then when people feel comfortable in their communities that gap between the police and the communities they serve narrows. And when that gap narrows,  it’s safer for the communities and it safer for the police.

Clinton and Kaine want to devote $1 billion of their first federal budget toward better training and officer safety. They have talked often on the campaign trail about building bonds between police and minority communities, and Clinton recently spoke about wanting to pass a federal law that would ban racial profiling and to get local and federal authorities together to develop national standards for use of force by law enforcement.

That model still works across our country but there are some other models that don't work. An overly aggressive, more militarized model. Donald Trump recently said we need to do more to stop and frisk around the country. That would be a big mistake because it polarizes the relationship between the policing and the community.

Stop-and-frisk has been enormously controversial in New York and several other cities, with critics arguing it frays trust in law enforcement because it can disproportionately target innocent black and Latino men.

So here's what we’ll do. We will focus on community policing. And we’ll focus on...Hillary Clinton has rolled out a really comprehensive mental health reform package that she worked on with law enforcement professionals and we will also fight the scourge of gun violence in the United States. I'm a gun owner. I'm a strong Second Amendment supporter but I have a lot of scar tissue because when I was governor of Virginia there was a horrible shooting at Virginia Tech and we learned through that painful situation that gaps in the background record checks system should have been closed and it could've prevented that crime.

Kaine was governor of Virginia at the time of the 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech in which 33 people were killed, including the gunman. He has consistently supported expanded background checks, including the Manchin-Toomey bill, which failed to get out of the Senate in 2013. Kaine is a gun owner himself and says he supports the Second Amendment, but he earns an F from the National Rifle Association.

Mike Pence has an A rating from the NRA. He has backed legislation granting immunity to gun manufacturers and supported a bill that would require states with strict gun laws to recognize “concealed carry” permits from states with more relaxed rules.

And we're going work to do things like close background record checks and if we do we won’t have the tragedies that we did. One of those killed at Virginia Tech was a guy named Liviu Librescu.  He was a seventy plus year old Romanian Holocaust survivor. He survived the Holocaust, then he survived the Soviet Union takeover of his country, but then he was a visiting professor at Virginia Tech and he couldn't survive the scourge of gun violence. We can support the Second Amendment and do things like background record checks and make us safer and that will make police safer too.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:32:23 GMT

Governor Pence.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:32:25 GMT

You know, my uncle was a cop. A career cop on the beat in downtown Chicago. He was my hero when I was growing up we would go to visit my dad's family in Chicago, my three brothers and I would marvel at my uncle when he would come out in his uniform, sidearm at his side. Police officers are the best of us. And the men and women - white and African American, Asian, Latino, Hispanic - they put their lives on the line every day single day. And let me say, you know at the risk of agreeing with you, I think community policing is a great idea. And it's worked in the Hoosier state and we fully support that. Donald Trump and I are going to make sure that law enforcement have the resources and the tools to be able to really restore law and order to the cities and communities of this nation. That is probably why the 330,000 members of the Fraternal Order of Police endorsed Donald Trump to be the next President of the United States of America because they see his commitment to them. They see his commitment to law and order.

The Fraternal Order of Police union did recently endorse Trump. Clinton didn’t seek that endorsement. For more on what Trump and Pence mean when they say law and order, look at this NPR story.

While Trump has delivered mixed messages on policing, his running mate has tended to emphasize the idea of police officers as "good people." Law and order has been a major theme for Trump, a theme Pence is echoing. But Trump has also made statements sympathetic to African-American communities concerned about police overreach and expressing that he was "troubled" by recent killings of black men by police.

Just weeks ago, Trump reacted to such incidents by telling an audience near Cleveland that maybe police officers who "choke" shouldn't be in law enforcement. That same week, Pence delivered a speech in which he described police officers as "the best of us" and said there is too much talk of systemic racism in law enforcement.

But they also hear the bad mouthing, the bad mouthing, that comes from people seize upon tragedy in the wake of police shootings as a reason to use a broad brush to accuse law enforcement of implicit bias or institutional racism and that really has got to stop. I mean, when an African-American police officer in Charlotte, named Brentley Vinson, an All-Star football player who went to Liberty University, here in the state, came home followed his dad into law enforcement, joined the force in Charlotte in 2014, was involved in a police action shooting that claimed the life of Keith LaMont Scott. It was a tragedy. I mean we mourn with those who mourn. We grieve with those who grieve, we are saddened at the loss of life but Hillary Clinton actually referred to the moment as an example of implicit bias in the police force. Where she used her she was asked in the debate a week ago if there is implicit bias in law enforcement, her only answer was there's an implicit bias in everyone in the United States.

This recent NPR story chronicles implicit bias in the classroom.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:34:50 GMT

Can I explain?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:35:00 GMT

I just think we ought to stop seizing on these moments of tragedy. We got to assure the public that we will have a full and complete and transparent investigation whenever there's a loss of life because of police action. But Senator, please you know enough of this seeking every opportunity to demean law enforcement broadly by making of implicit bias every time tragedy strikes.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:35:12 GMT

Elaine, people shouldn’t be afraid to bring up issues of bias in law enforcement. And if you're afraid to have this discussion -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:35:42 GMT

I’m not afraid to bring that up -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:35:52 GMT

If you’re afraid to have the discussion you'll never solve it. And so here's an example, heartbreaking, we would agree this is a heartbreaking example. The guy Philando Castile, who was killed in St. Paul, he was a worker, a valued worker by local school, and he was killed for no apparent reason in an incident that will be discussed and will be investigated. But when folks went and explored the situation what they found was that Philando Castile, they called him Mr. Rogers with dreadlocks in the school where he worked, the kids loved him, that he had been stopped by police forty or fifty times before that fatal incident.

NPR reported Castile was stopped nearly four dozen times while driving.

And if you look at sentencing in this country, African American and Latinos get sense for the same crimes for different rates.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:35:59 GMT

We need criminal justice reform. Indiana has passed criminal justice reform.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:36:12 GMT

But I just want to say those who say we should not be able to bring up and talk about bias in the system, we will never solve the problem.

President Obama and Hillary Clinton have talked about sentencing disparities, particularly for drug crimes, as a major motivator for them to urge Congress to overhaul the federal sentencing laws.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:36:20 GMT

When an African-American police officer is  involved in a police action shooting involving an African-American, why would Hillary Clinton accuse that African-American police officer of implicit bias?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:36:30 GMT

I guess I can’t believe you are defending the position that there is no bias -

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:36:35 GMT

Governor Pence I have a question on that point. Your fellow Republican, Sen. Tim Scott, who is African American, recently spoke on the Senate floor. He said he was stopped seven times by law enforcement in one year.

Tim Scott did say this. Here’s more from NPR.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:36:50 GMT

A U.S. Senator.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:36:59 GMT

He said I have felt the anger, the frustration, the sadness, and the humiliation that comes with feeling like you're being targeted for nothing more than being just yourself. What would you say to Senator Scott about his experiences?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:37:02 GMT

Well, I have the deepest respect for Senator Scott and he’s a close friend. And what I would say is we need to adopt criminal justice reform nationally. I signed criminal justice reform in the state of Indiana, Senator, and we are very proud of it. I worked when I was in Congress on the Second Chance Act. We have got to do a better job recognizing and correcting the errors in the system that do reflect institutional bias in criminal justice.

Despite bipartisan support in both houses of Congress, federal efforts at sentencing reform have resulted in no action.

But what Donald Trump and I are saying is let's not have the reflex of assuming the worst of men and women in law enforcement. We truly do believe that law enforcement is not -

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:37:47 GMT

So would you would you say to Senator Scott, Governor?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:37:50 GMT

Law enforcement in this country is a force for good. They are the - they truly are people that put their lives on the line every single day. But I would suggest to you what we need to do is assert a stronger leadership at the national level to support law enforcement.

Policing and crime are primarily a local and state issue, but the federal government can serve as a “bully pulpit” or offer financial incentives like grant funds to encourage locals to change behavior, undergo training or buy body cameras for police.

You just heard Senator Kaine reject Stop and Frisk. I would suggest to you that the families that live in our inner city that are besieged in crime.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:38:19 GMT

What would tell Senator Scott?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:38:23 GMT

If I could jump in. I've heard Senator Scott make that eloquent plea and look, criminal justice is about respecting the law and being respected by the law. So there is a fundamental respect issue here.

And I just want to talk about the tone that set from the top. Donald Trump during this campaign has called Mexicans rapists and criminals. He’s called women slobs, pigs, dogs, disgusting. I don’t like saying that in front of my wife and my mother. He attacked an Indiana-born federal judge and said he is unqualified to hear a federal lawsuit because his parents were Mexican. He went after John McCain, a POW, and said he wasn't a hero because he been captured. He said African-Americans are living in hell and he perpetrated this outrageous and bigoted lie that President Obama is not a U.S. citizen. If you want to have a society where people are respected and respect laws you can’t have somebody at the top who demeans everybody that he talks about and again I can't believe that Governor Pence will defend the insult-driven campaign that Donald Trump has run.

This is a paragraph-long opposition research dump from Kaine. But Trump really has said all of these things. In the speech launching his campaign, Trump said of immigrants coming from Mexico: “They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.” As for comments about women, Trump has used all of those terms. The judge he attacked repeatedly is Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who was born in Indiana and is overseeing the Trump University fraud case. He questioned John McCain’s heroism because he was captured. And, of course, for years Trump was the leading voice questioning where President Obama was born and then questioning the validity of his birth certificate even after Obama released the long-form version.

Throughout the debate, Kaine repeated things Trump has said, trying to get Pence to respond. Pence largely avoided defending his running mate’s most controversial statements and positions.

 

Kaine noted that Hillary Clinton apologized for the phrasing of her "basket of deplorables" comment. He then listed a litany of inflammatory statements Trump has made about women, minorities and other groups and asked when Trump has ever apologized.

The closest Trump has come to apologizing was in August, when he expressed "regret" for some of these comments, saying:

"Sometimes, in the heat of debate, and speaking on a multitude of issues, you don’t choose the right words or you say the wrong thing. I have done that, and believe it or not I regret it."

That was the same week he brought in Kellyanne Conway as his new campaign manager, a pollster whose job has been to fine-tune Trump's message and keep him on script.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:39:24 GMT

I want to turn to our next segment now - immigration. Your running mates have both said that undocumented immigrants who have committed violent crimes should be deported. What would you tell the millions of undocumented immigrants who have not committed violent crimes. Governor Pence?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:39:41 GMT

Donald Trump has laid out a plan to end illegal immigration once and for all in this country. We’ve been talking it to death for twenty years. Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine want to continue the policies of open borders, amnesty, catch and release, sanctuary cities, all the things that are driving wages down in this country, Senator.  

Most experts say there’s little to support the claim that workers in the country illegally take U.S. jobs. Factcheck.org says ”study after study has shown that immigrants grow the economy, expand demand for goods and services that the foreign-born workers and their families consume, and thereby create jobs. There is even broad agreement among economists that while immigrants may push down wages for some, the overall effect is to increase average wages for American-born workers.”

Farm work is one of the areas where immigrants in the country illegally are believed to depress wages, according to a recent NPR report from the Rio Grande Valley of Texas.

And often with criminal aliens in the country, it is bringing heartbreak. But Donald Trump has a plan that he laid out in Arizona. That will deal systematically with illegal immigration beginning with border security, internal enforcement...

A June 2013 survey by the Pew Research Center shows that most Americans believe immigrants in the country illegally should meet certain requirements before they are allowed to stay in the U.S. legally. And most Americans believe such immigrants should pay fines before gaining legal status and they back a 10-year waiting period for most immigrants before permanent residency.

It’s probably why for the first time in the history of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, their union actually endorsed Donald Trump as the next President of the United States because they know they need help to enforce the laws of this country.

The Border Patrol has doubled in size since Sept. 11 to more than 21,000. Trump has proposed adding about 5,000 more. The bipartisan Senate bill in 2013 would have gone further, to 38,000.

Meanwhile, apprehensions at the Southwest border — a proxy for attempted crossings — have dropped by 79 percent from the peak in 2000. The Pew Research Center reports more Mexicans left the U.S. than entered between 2009 and 2014.

Deportations increased during Obama’s first four years in office, peaking in 2012 at nearly 410,000. Since then, deportations have been dropping, reaching a low of 235,000 last year. Since 2014, the administration has focused on deporting recent arrivals and criminals, with fewer deportations of longtime residents whose only crime was crossing the border. In all, about 2.8 million people have been deported under Obama.

Nearly 1 in 5 visitors who overstay a visa is from Canada — more than twice the number from Mexico.

And Donald Trump has laid out a priority to remove criminal aliens, remove people who have overstayed their visas. And once we have accomplished all of that, which will strengthen our economy, strengthen the rule of law in the country, and make our communities safer once the criminal aliens are out, then we’ll deal with those that remain. But have to tell you, I was just listening to the avalanche of insults coming out of Senator Kaine a minute ago...

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:40:41 GMT

These were Donald Trump - hold on

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:40:55 GMT

It is my time Senator.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:41:03 GMT

It is, in fact, the Governor’s time.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:41:05 GMT

I forgive you. He says ours is an insult-driven campaign? Dd you all just hear that? Ours is an insult driven campaign? To be honest with you, if And if Donald Trump had said all the things you said he said, in the way you said he's said them, he still wouldn't have a fraction of the insults that Hillary Clinton leveled when she said that half of our supporters were a basket of deplorables.

Trump literally did say all of those things Kaine listed above, and more. At a fundraiser, Clinton was describing Trump’s supporters and said you could put half in a basket of deplorables. For the full context, here’s a piece Domenico Montanaro wrote at the time.

She said they were irredeemable. They were not America. It’s extraordinary and then she laid one after the other -ism of millions of Americans who believe that we can have a stronger America at home and abroad. Who believe we can get this economy moving again. Who believe that we can end illegal immigration once and for all. So Senator this insult-driven campaign I mean that's small potatoes compared to Hillary Clinton calling half of Donald Trump supporters a basket of deplorables.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:42:03 GMT

Hillary Clinton said something on the campaign trail and the very next day she said you know what, I shouldn’t have said that.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:42:10 GMT

Senator this is his two minutes.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:42:14 GMT

Now we’re even. Look for Donald Trump  apologizing to John McCain for saying he wasn’t a hero. Did Donald Trump apologize for calling women slobs, pigs, dogs, disgusting.  

MIKE PENCE: She apologized for saying -

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:42:26 GMT

Governor, it is his two minutes, please.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:42:29 GMT

Did Donald Trump apologize for taking after somebody in a Twitter war and making fun of her weight? Did he apologize for saying African-Americans were living in hell? Did he apologize for saying President Obama was not even a citizen of the United States?

You will look in vain to see Donald Trump ever take responsibility for anybody and apologizing. Immigration. There’s two plans on the table. Hillary and I believe comprehensible immigration reform. Donald Trump believes the deportation nation. You have to pick your choice. Hillary and I want bipartisan reform that will put keeping families together as the top goal. Second that will help focus enforcement efforts on those who are violent. Third, that will do more border control and fourth it will provide a path to citizenship for those who work hard, pay taxes, play by the rules and take criminal background record checks. That is our proposal. Donald Trump proposes to deport sixteen million people, eleven million people who are here without documents and both Donald Trump and Pence wants to get rid of birthright citizenship. So if you’re born here, but your parents don't have documents they want to eliminate that, that’s another four and half million people. These guys - and Donald Trump has said it: deportation force. They want to go house to house, school to school, business-to-business and kick out 16 million people and I cannot believe that Governor pence would sit here and defend his running mate's claim that we should create a deportation force is that they will all be gone.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:43:59 GMT

Senator we have a deportation force it’s called Immigration and Customs Enforcement. And the union for Immigration and Customs Enforcement for the first time in their history endorsed Donald Trump to be the next president of the United States of America.

The National Immigration and Customs Enforcement Council in September endorsed Trump. That’s a union of 5,000 immigration officers, according to the Christian Science Monitor, which also reported that Trump won the endorsement by a vote in which Clinton garnered only 5 percent of members’ support. Importantly, this is a union that endorsed Trump. Trump has said that ICE itself has endorsed him; that’s entirely incorrect.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:10 GMT

So you like the sixteen million deportations ---

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:13 GMT

Senator that’s nonsense. What you just heard is they have a plan for open borders - amnesty.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:20 GMT

Our plan is like Ronald Reagan’s plan from 1986.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:25 GMT

They call it comprehensive immigration reform on capitol hill. We all know the routine. It is amnesty and you heard one of the last he mentioned was border security. That is how Washington always plays it.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:35 GMT

Governor --

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:36 GMT

No….border security three years ago...and Governor Pence was against it.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:38 GMT

Ronald Reagan said a nation without borders is not a nation. Donald Trump is committed to restoring the borders of this nation, securing the nation.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:44:40 GMT

Governor - how would these millions of undocumented immigrants leave? Would they be forcibly removed?

MIKE PENCE: Well, I think Donald Trump laid out a series of priorities that doesn’t end with border security, it begins with border security. And after we secure the border, not only build a wall, but beneath the ground and in the air, we do internal enforcement. But he said the focus has to be on criminal aliens. We just had a conversation about law enforcement. We just had a conversation about the violence that’s besetting our cities.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:45:19 GMT

The reality is there is heartbreak and tragedy that has stuck American families because people that came into this country illegally are now involved in criminal enterprise and activity we don’t have the resources or the will to deport them systematically.

By mentioning individual cases of violent crimes committed by immigrants in the country illegally, Pence and Trump exaggerate the link between illegal immigration and felonies.

“Innumerable studies have confirmed two simple yet powerful truths about the relationship between immigration and crime: immigrants are less likely to commit serious crimes or be behind bars than the native-born, and high rates of immigration are associated with lower rates of violent crime and property crime,” the The American Immigration Council said in July 2015.

And per the Congressional Research Service, December 2012, The overall proportion of non-citizens in federal and state prisons and local jails corresponds closely to the proportion of noncitizens in the total U.S. population.”

Donald Trump has said we’re going to move those people out, people who have overstayed their visas, we are going to enforce the law of this country. We’re going to strengthen immigration and customs enforcement with more resources and more personnel to be able to do that.

Pence says that Trump would focus on deporting criminal aliens. The Department of Homeland Security under the current administration has prioritized the deportation of felons over noncriminals and the deportation of  immigrants in the U.S. illegally, who are “the most significant threats to national security, border security and public safety.”  

And then Donald Trump has made it clear -- once we’ve done all of those things, that were going to reform the immigration system that we have.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:45:57 GMT

I have to correct Governor Pence.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:45:59 GMT

That's the order that you should do it. Border security, removing criminal aliens, upholding the law and then, Senator, I’ll work with you when you go back to the Senate, I promise you. We’ll work with you to reform the immigration system.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:46:12 GMT

I look forward to working together in whatever capacities we serve in. I just want to make it very very clear that he’s trying to fuzz up what Donald Trump has said. When Donald Trump spoke in Phoenix, he looked the audience in the eye and he said, no we’re building the wall. And we’re deporting everybody. He said, quote, they will all be gone. They will all be gone. 

We checked the transcript of Trump’s speech in Phoenix. Kaine quotes Trump correctly regarding the wall:

“We will build a great wall along the southern border. …We will use the best technology, including above and below ground sensors that's the tunnels. Remember that, above and below.”

But Kaine misquotes Trump when he claims Trump repeated an earlier vow to deport every immigrant living in the U.S. illegally. What Trump said is that he would aggressively remove the “2 million criminal aliens inside of our country.”  

“Day one, my first hour in office, those people are gone. And you can call it deported if you want. The press doesn't like that term. You can call it whatever the hell you want. They're gone.”

And it is one of those ones we really just go to the tape on it and see what Donald Trump has said.

A CNN poll released last month shows that 6 in 10 respondents oppose Trump’s plan to build a wall along the entire U.S.-Mexico border and two-thirds of them oppose mass deportation of all immigrants in the U.S. illegally. Voters are split on who would be a better president on immigration — Trump or Clinton. 

And add to it, we are nation of immigrants. Mike Pence and I both are descended from immigrant families. Some things, you know, maybe said weren’t so great about the Irish when they came. But we've done well by absorbing immigrants and it’s made our nation stronger. When Donald Trump says Mexicans are rapists and criminals, Mexican immigrants, when Donald Trump says about your judge - a Hoosier judge, he said that Judge Curiel was unqualified, unqualified to hear a case because his parents are Mexican, I can’t imagine how you could defend that.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:47:12 GMT

Gentleman, I’d like to shift now to the threat of terrorism. Do you think the world today is a safer or more dangerous place than it was eight years ago? Has the terrorist threat increased or decreased? Senator Kaine.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:47:25 GMT

They terrorist threat has decreased in some ways because bin Laden is dead. The terrorist threat has decreased in some ways because an Iranian nuclear weapons program has been stopped. The terrorist threat to United States troops has been decreased in some ways because there's not a hundred and seventy five thousand in a dangerous part of the world, there’s only fifteen thousand. But there are other parts of the world that are challenging.

Let me tell you this. To beat terrorism, there’s only one candidate who can do it. And that’s Hillary Clinton. Remember Hillary Clinton was the senator from New York on 9/11. She was there at the World Trade Center when they were still searching for victims and survivors. That seared on to her, the need to beat terrorism. And she's got a plan to do it. She was part of the national security team that wiped out bin Laden.

Here’s her plan to defeat ISIL. First, we gotta keep taking out their leaders on the battlefield. She was part of the team that got bin Laden, and she’ll lead the team that will get Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, the head of ISIS. Second, we’ve got to disrupt financing networks. Third, disrupt their ability to recruit on the Internet, in their safe havens. But fourth, we also have to work with allies to share and surge intelligence. That’s the Hillary Clinton plan, she’s got the experience to do it.

Clinton’s proposed plan as described here is effectively Obama’s plan to fight ISIL.

Donald Trump -- Donald Trump can't start a Twitter war with Miss Universe without shooting himself in the foot. Donald Trump doesn't have a plan. He said, I have a secret plan, and then he said I know more than all the generals about ISIL. And then he said, I want to call the generals to help me figure out a plan and finally, he said, I”m gonna fire all the generals, He doesn’t have a plan.  But he does have dangerous ideas. Here’s four. He trash talks the military. The military is a disaster. John McCain is no hero. The generals need all to be fired and I know more than them. He wants to tear up alliances. NATO is obsolete, and we’ll only work together with Israel if they pay big-league. Third, he loves dictators. He’s got kind of a personal Mount Rushmore -- Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong-Il, Muammar Gadhafi and Saddam Hussein. And last, and most dangerously, Donald Trump believes -- Donald Trump believes that the world will be safer if more nations have nuclear weapons. He said Saudi Arabia should get them. Japan should get them. Korea should get them. And when he was confronted with this and told, wait a minute, terrorists could get those -- proliferation could lead to nuclear war, here’s what Donald Trump said, and I quote, go-ahead folks, enjoy yourself. I’d love to hear Governor Pence tell me what’s so enjoyable or comical about nuclear war.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:49:56 GMT

Governor Pence?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:49:59 GMT

Did you work on that one a long time cause that had a lot of really creative lines in it.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:50:03 GMT

Well, I’m going to see if you can defend any of it.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:50:06 GMT

Look, I can defend, I can make it very clear to the American people. After traveling millions of miles as our Secretary of State, after being the architect of the foreign policy of this administration, America is less safe today than it was the day that Barack Obama became president of the United States. It is absolutely inarguable. We've weakened America's place in the world.

The perception of American weakness dates to at least the end of World War II. But by looking at various quantifiable measures, Foreign Affairs’ Gideon Rose argues the United States is richer and stronger in the present time than it has been in the past, noting: “It has a defense budget equivalent to those of the next seven countries combined and together with its allies accounts for three-quarters of all global defense spending. It has unparalleled power-projection capabilities and a globe-spanning intelligence network. It has the world’s reserve currency, the world’s largest economy, and the highest growth rate of any major developed country. It has good demographics, manageable debt, and dynamic, innovating companies that are the envy of the world.”

It’s been a combination of factors, but mostly it's been a lack of leadership. I mean, I will give you -- I was in Washington, D.C. on 9/11. I saw the clouds of smoke rise from the Pentagon.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:50:38 GMT

I was in Virginia, where the Pentagon --

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:50:42 GMT

I know you were. We all of lived through that day as a nation. It was heartbreaking. And I want to give this president credit for bringing Osama bin Laden to justice. But the truth is, Osama bin Laden led Al Qaeda. Our primary threat today is ISIS. And because Hillary Clinton failed to renegotiate a status of forces agreement, that would allowed some American combat troops to remain in Iraq and secure the hard-fought gains the American soldier had won by 2009, ISIS was able to be literally conjured up out of the desert is overrun vast areas that the American soldier had won in operation Iraqi Freedom. My heart breaks for the likes of Lance Corporal Scott Zubowski. He fell in Fallujah in 2005. He fought hard for some of the most difficult days in operation Iraqi Freedom. And he paid the ultimate sacrifice to defend our freedom and secure that nation. And that nation was secured in 2009. But because Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama failed to provide a status of forces agreement and leave sufficient troops in their, we are back at war.

Obama administration officials blamed Iraq’s unwillingness to agree to a Status of Forces Agreement for what they called their inability to leave a residual American force in Iraq. But when U.S. troops returned there in 2014 after ISIL’s military victories, they did so — and remain there — without such a deal. Washington and Baghdad said other existing diplomatic agreements were sufficient to govern the presence of American troops.

The president has just ordered more troops on the ground. We are back at war in Iraq, and Scott Zubowski, whose mom would always come to Memorial Day events in New Castle, Indiana, to see me and I’d always give her a hug, and tell her that we’re never going to forget her son. And we never will. Scott Zubowski and the sacrifices the American soldier made were squandered in Iraq because of this administration committed created a vacuum in which ISIS was able to grow. And a reference to the Iranian deal, the Iranian deal that Hillary Clinton initiated -- one hundred fifty billion dollars --

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:52:32 GMT

Stopping a nuclear weapons program without firing a shot.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:52:35 GMT

You essentially guaranteed that Iran will someday become a nuclear power because there’s no limitations once the period of time of the treaty comes off.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:52:42 GMT

Governor Pence, Mr. Trump has proposed extreme vetting of immigrants from parts of the world that export terrorism. But that does not address many of the recent terrorist attacks in the United States, such as the Orlando nightclub massacre and the recent bombings in New York and New Jersey. Those were homegrown, committed by U.S. citizens and legal residents. What specific tools would you use to prevent those kinds of attacks?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:53:19 GMT

Well, I think it’s a great question, Elaine. But it really does begin with us reforming our immigration system and putting the interest, particularly the safety and security of the American people, first. I mean Donald Trump has called for extreme vetting for people coming into this country so we don't bring people into the United States who are hostile to our Bill of Rights freedoms, who are hostile to the American way of life. But also Donald Trump I are committed to suspending the Syrian refugee program and programs and immigration from areas of the world that have been compromised by terrorism. Hillary Clinton and Tim Kane want to increase the Syrian refugee program program by five hundred -  

Here are the latest numbers of the U.S. refugee program. This fiscal year the U.S. took in 85,000 refugees, among them 12,500 from Syria. The State Department says they are well-vetted.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:53:49 GMT

Governor, is -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:53:52 GMT

But first, let’s put the safety of the American people first, instead of Hillary Clinton expanding the Syrian -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:53:59 GMT

Or instead of you violating the Constitution, by blocking people based on their national origin, rather than whether they’re dangerous.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:06 GMT

That’s absolutely false.  

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:08 GMT

That’s what the seventh circuit decided. Here’s the difference, Elaine. We have different views on refugee issues and on immigration.

Hillary I want to do enforcement based on - are people dangerous? These guys say all Mexicans are bad.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:20 GMT

That’s absolutely false.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:30 GMT

And with respect to refugees, we want to keep people out if they're dangerous. Donald Trump said keep them out of they’re Muslim. Mike Pence put a program in place to keep them out if  they are from Syria. And yesterday, an appellate court with three Republican judges struck down a Pence plan and said it was discriminatory.

This measure stopped the state from reimbursing refugee resettlement agencies for helping Syrians, as the Wall Street Journal reported. The three judges who ruled on this case were all conservative, as NPR’s Nina Totenberg wrote this week, and Donald Trump listed one of them as a potential Supreme Court nominee, should he be elected.

Judge Richard Posner wrote in the decision that they furthermore saw no indication of a particular threat from Syrian refugees, and that the law might not be effective anyway: “As far as can be determined from public sources, no Syrian refugees have been arrested or prosecuted for terrorist acts or attempts in the United States. And if Syrian refugees do pose a terrorist threat, implementation of the governor’s policy would simply increase the risk of terrorism in whatever states Syrian refugees were shunted to,” he wrote, as reported by Politico.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:33 GMT

And those judges -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:35 GMT

We should focus upon danger. Not upon discrimination.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:43 GMT

Those judges said  - it was because there wasn’t any evidence yet that ISIS had infiltrated the United States. Well Germany just arrested three Syrian refugees that we -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:54:57 GMT

But they told you there’s a right way and a wrong way to do it -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:55:00 GMT

Well, if you’re going to be critical on me on that, that’s fair game. I will tell you, after two Syrian refugees were involved in attack in Paris, that is called Paris’s 9/11.

The attackers in the 2015 Paris attack were European Union citizens. French and European officials said at the time they may have used the flow of migrants to cover their travel to and from Syria. 

as governor of the state of Indiana, I have no higher priority than safety and security of people in my state.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:55:15 GMT

By Governor, that’s -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:55:20 GMT

So you bet I suspended that program. And I stand by that decision and if I am vice President and Donald Trump is as president, were going to put the security of American --

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:55:28 GMT

Can we just be clear, Hillary and I will do immigration enforcement and we’ll vet refugees based on whether they’re dangerous or not. We won't do it based on discriminating against you or the country you come from our the religion that you practice. That is completely antithetical to the Jeffersonian values of equality.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:55:46 GMT

Elaine, the Director of the FBI or Homeland Security said we can’t know for certain who these people are coming from Syria.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:55:52 GMT

When we don’t know who they are, we don’t let them in.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:55:56 GMT

The FBI and Homeland Security said we can’t know for certain. You’ve got to err on the side of the safety and security of the American people. Senator.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:56:05 GMT

By trashing all Syrians or trashing all Muslims?

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:56:09 GMT

Senator Kaine, let me ask you this.  Secretary Clinton has talked about an intelligence surge. What exactly would an intelligence surge look like and how would that help identify terrorists with no operational connection to a foreign terrorist organization?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:56:23 GMT

Intelligence surge is two things, Elaine. It’s two things. First, dramatically increasing our intelligence capacity by hiring great professionals but also we’ve got from the best intel and cyber employees in the world right here in the United States working for many of our private sector companies. 

Intelligence budget and resources have already been dramatically increased in the 15 years since Sept. 11. The reforms have included the creation of the office of the Director of National Intelligence, the National Counterterrorism Center, the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies.

So it involves increasing her own workforce but also striking great partnerships with some of our cyber and intel experts in the private sector so we can, consistent with constitutional principles, gather more intelligence. But the second piece of this is really really important. It also means creating stronger alliances. Because you gather intelligence and then you share your intelligence back and forth with allies. And that's how you find out who may be trying to recruit, who may be trying to come from one country to the next. Alliances are critical. That's why Donald Trump’s claim that he wants - that NATO is obsolete and that we need to get rid of NATO is so dangerous.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:57:15 GMT

The science plan.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:57:19 GMT

Well he said NATO was obsolete. Well, if you push aside your alliances, who will you share intelligence with? Hillary Clinton is a secretary of State who knows how to build alliances. She built the sanctions regime around the world that stop[ed the Iranian nuclear weapons program. And that's what intelligence surge means -- better skill and capacity but also better alliances.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:57:37 GMT

I’d like to turn now to the tragedy in Syria.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:57:40 GMT

Can I speak about the cybersecurity surge at all?

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:57:44 GMT

You can have thirty seconds, Governor, quickly.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:57:47 GMT

First, Donald Trump just spoke about this issue this week. We have got to bring together the best resources in this country to understand that cyber warfare is the new warfare of the asymmetrical enemies that we face in this county. And I look forward if I’m privileged to be in this role to finding role working with you in the Senate to make sure that we resource that effort.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:58:10 GMT

We will work together in whatever roles we -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:58:12 GMT

I will also tell you that it’s important in this moment to remember that Hillary Clinton had a private server in her home that had classified information on it about drone strikes.  

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:58:23 GMT

Governor, your thirty seconds are up.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:58:26 GMT

emails from the President of the United States.  Her private server was subject to being hacked by foreign governments.

The FBI investigation did find classified material on the server Clinton used to conduct State Department business, and some of it was related to the targeted killing or drone program. Clinton aides told the FBI that some of those messages involved newspaper articles that openly discussed drone strikes even though the program is secret. Investigators found no evidence intruders actually broke into Clinton’s emails, but they said foreign governments are so sophisticated they may not have left such fingerprints.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:58:37 GMT

Neck

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:58:39 GMT

A full investigation concluded that not one reasonable prosecutor would take any additional step. You don’t get to decide the rights and wrongs of this. We have a justice system that does that. And Republican FBI director did an investigation and concluded -

The FBI director, James Comey, has served in Republican administrations and used to be a registered Republican voter. He did conclude “no reasonable prosecutor” would have filed charges in the Clinton email case, and he later wrote FBI employees an internal memo that the case was not a “close call.”

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:58:54 GMT

We are moving on now. Two hundred fifty thousand people -- one hundred thousand of them children.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:59:01 GMT

If your son or my son handled classified information the way Hillary Clinton did, they would be court-martialed.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:59:03 GMT

Is absolutely false and you know that.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:59:05 GMT

FBI diminished.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:59:08 GMT

Because the FBI did an investigation and they concluded that there was no reasonable prosecutor who would take it further.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:59:13 GMT

Senator Kaine, Governor Pence, please. I want to turn now to Syria. 250,000 people,100,000 of them children, are under siege in Aleppo, Syria. Bunker buster bombs, cluster munitions, and incendiary weapons are being dropped on them by Russian and Syrian militaries. Does the U.S. have the responsibility to protect civilians and prevent mass casualties on the scale? Governor Pence?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 01:59:43 GMT

The United States of America needs to begin to exercise strong leadership to protect the vulnerable citizens and a over a hundred thousand children in Aleppo. Hillary Clinton’s top priority when she became Secretary of State was the Russian reset. The Russian reset. After the Russian reset, the Russians invaded Ukraine and took over Crimea. And the small and bullying leader of Russia is now dictating terms to the United States to the point where all of the United States of America, the greatest nation on earth, just withdraws from talks about a cease-fire while Vladimir Putin puts a missile defense system in Syria while he marshals the forces and begins -- we have got to begin to lean into this with strong, broad-shouldered American leadership.

Again, very different tone here from Pence than we’ve heard from Trump, who has called Putin a leader “far more than our president has been.”

It begins by rebuilding our military. And the Russians of the Chinese have been making enormous investments in military. We have the smallest Navy since 1916. We have the lowest number of troops since the end of the second world war.

The Republicans’ attack talking point about the size of the Navy originated with Navy leaders themselves, who have long argued they need more funding to buy more ships. But the Pentagon and the Obama administration argue that the number of ships in the fleet — roughly 280 — is less important than the combat power each can deliver. The U.S. Navy is by almost any measure the most powerful in the world.

We've got to work with the Congress and Donald Trump will to rebuild our military and project American strength to the world. But about Aleppo and about Syria -- I truly do believe that what America ought to do right now is immediately establish safe zones so that the families with children can move out of those areas, work with our Arab partners, real time, right now, to make that happen. And secondly, I just have to tell you that the provocations by Russia need to be met with American strength. And if Russia chooses to be involved in continue -- continue I should say to be involved - in this barbaric attack on civilians in Aleppo, the United States of America should be prepared to use military force to strike military targets of the Assad regime to prevent them from this humanitarian crisis that is taking place in Aleppo. There's a broad range of other things that we ought to do as well. We ought to deploy a missile defense shield to the Czech Republic and Poland, which Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama pulled back on out of not wanting to offend the Russians back in 2009.

Pence is more forward leaning on Syria than Trump has been, advocating for safe zones. Kaine, too, said he supports such a move, but neither said how they would prevent Russian warplanes from bombing Aleppo.  

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:01:05 GMT

Governor, your two minutes are up.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:01:10 GMT

We just got to have American strength of the world stage. When Donald Trump becomes president of the United States, the Russians and the other countries in the world will know who they were dealing with -- a strong American president.

Pence has supported the idea of a no-fly zone and the protection of civilians. Neither he nor Kaine, however, explained how they would do that.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:02:05 GMT

Hillary and I also agree that the establishment of the humanitarian zone in northern Syria with the provision of international humanitarian consistent with UN Security Council resolution that was passed in February 2014 would be a very very good idea.  And Hillary also has the ability to stand up to Russia in a way that this ticket does not.

Donald Trump again and again has praised Vladimir Putin and is clear that he has business dealings with Russian oligarchs who are very connected to Putin. The Trump campaign management team had to be fired a month or so ago because of those shadowy connections with pro-Putin forces. Governor Pence made the odd claim -- he said inarguably Vladimir Putin is a better leader than President Obama. Vladimir Putin has run his economy into the ground. He persecutes LGBT folks and journalists. If you don't know the difference between dictatorship and leadership, then you got to go back to a fifth grade civics class.

I’ll tell you what offends me -- Governor Pence just said that Donald Trump will rebuild the military. No he won't. Donald Trump is avoiding paying taxes. The New York Times story, and we need to get this, but the New York Times story suggested that he probably didn't pay taxes for about eighteen years starting in 1995. Those years included the years of 9/11. So get this -- on 9/11 Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump’s hometown was attacked by the worst terrorist attack the history of the United States. Young men and women, young men and women, signed up to serve in the military to fight terrorism. Hillary Clinton went to Washington to get funds to rebuild her city and protect first responders, but Donald Trump was fighting a very different fight. It was a fight to avoid paying taxes so that he would not support the fight against terrorism. He wouldn't support troops. When a guy running for president will not support the troops, not support veterans, not support teachers, that is really important. And I set about Aleppo we do agree with the notion is we have to create a humanitarian zone in northern Syria. It’is very important.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:16 GMT

Governor Pence, you had mentioned a no fly zone. Where would you propose setting up a safe zones specifically? How would you keep it safe?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:24 GMT

Well, first and foremost, Donald Trump supports our troops. Donald Trump supports our veterans.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:29 GMT

He won’t pay taxes.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:30 GMT

Donald Trump has paid all the taxes - do you not take deductions?

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:35 GMT

Gentlemen, this is about Syria.

(CROSSTALK)

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:38 GMT

I’d like to ask -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:38 GMT

But it is about our troops.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:41 GMT

I understand why you want to change the subject. And let me be very clear on this Russian thing. The larger question here --

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:49 GMT

Do you think Donald Trump was smart not to pay taxes?

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:04:52 GMT

What we’re dealing with is, you know, -- there’s an old proverb that says that the Russian bear never dies it just hibernates. 

Very different tone here from Pence than we have heard from Donald Trump on Russia.

In the truth of the matter is the weak and feckless foreign policy of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama has awaken an aggression in Russia 

President Bush also tried to improve relations with Russia after the war in Georgia, traveling to Vladimir Putin’s dacha in the final year of the Bush administration. The Obama administration did try again with  its “reset button.” Administration officials say there was some success early on, including a nuclear arms reduction agreement and cooperation on Iran. Relations took a turn for the worse when Putin became president again, and the tensions keep mounting.  

that first appeared a few years ago with their move in Georgia and Crimea. Now there move into the wider Middle East and all the while all we do is fold our arms and say we are not having talks anymore. To answer your question, we just need American strength. We need to marshal the resources of our allies in the region and end the immediate, we need to act and act now to get people out of harm's way.

Russia’s move in Georgia came in 2008, before President Obama and Secretary Clinton took office.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:05:34 GMT

And exactly how would those safe zones work? How would they remain safe?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:05:38 GMT

The safe zones would have to be as the Senator said. There's already a framework for this that has been recognized by the international community. But the United States America needs to be prepared to work with our allies in the region to create a route for safe passage and then to protect people in those areas including with the no-fly zone. Look this is very tough stuff. I served on the foreign affairs committee for a decade. I traveled in and out of that region for ten years. I saw what the American soldier won in Operation Iraqi Freedom and to see the weak and feckless leadership that Hillary Clinton was the architect of in the foreign policy of the Obama administration -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:06:16 GMT

Let me come back and talk about -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:06:18 GMT

is deeply troubling to me -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:06:26 GMT

Let me talk about the things that Governor Pence does not want to acknowledge, Elaine. He doesn’t want to acknowledge that we stopped the Iranian nuclear weapons program.  

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:06:36 GMT

You didn’t.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:06:40 GMT

He doesn’t want to acknowledge that Hillary was part of the team that got bin Laden. 

That’s the third, maybe the fourth time Kaine has mentioned that Clinton was part of the team that got Osama bin Laden.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:06:42 GMT

I just did.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:06:49 GMT

He does not want to acknowledge -- that it’s a good thing-- not a bad thing that we're down from a hundred seventy five thousand troops deployed overseas to fifteen thousand. But let me tell you what would really make the Middle East dangerous,  Donald Trump’s idea that more nations should get nuclear weapons -- Saudi Arabia, Japan, South Korea.

True. Donald Trump did say at a CNN town hall in March that Japan should have nuclear weapons to deter a threat from North Korea, saying “the case could be made that let them protect themselves against North Korea. They'd probably wipe them out pretty quick." He then said it wouldn’t be bad if Saudi Arabia and South Korea had them, too. This sent shockwaves through Japan and South Korea, longtime American allies. Japan remains the only country in the world to have nuclear weapons used against it.

Ronald Reagan said something really interesting about nuclear proliferation back in the 1980s. He said the problem with nuclear proliferation is that some fool or maniac could trigger a catastrophic event. And I think that’s who Governor Pence’s running mate is. Exactly who President Reagan warned us about.  

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:08 GMT

Senator, oh come on, Senator. That was even beneath you and Hillary Clinton. And that, that’s pretty low.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:20 GMT

But do you think we should have more nuclear weapons in the world will make it safer?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:28 GMT

Senator, Ronald Reagan also said nuclear war should never be fought because it could never be won. And the United States of America needs to make investments in modernizing our nuclear force for both deterrence and -  

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:33 GMT

But can you defend Donald Trump’s claim that more nations should get nuclear weapons?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:36 GMT

Let me go back to this Iran thing. He keeps saying that they prevented -- that Hillary Clinton started the deal with the Iranians prevented Iran from getting a nuclear weapon.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:46 GMT

That’s what the Israeli head of the joint chiefs of staff is saying right now.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:50 GMT

Well, that’s not what Israel thinks.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:50 GMT

Gadi Eisenkot, you can go check it. Go to the tape.

 

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:53 GMT

That is not what -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:07:56 GMT

I visited him in his office.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:08:04 GMT

What this so-called Iran deal did was essentially guarantee -- when I was in Congress I fought hard on a bipartisan basis with Republican and Democrat members to move forward the toughest sanctions literally in the history of United States. We were bringing them to heel. But the goal was always that we would only lift the sanctions if Iran permanently renounced their nuclear --

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:08:33 GMT

Elaine, let me just mention -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:08:35 GMT

Elaine, let me finish my sentence. They have not renounced their nuclear ambitions. When the deal’s period runs out, there is no limitation on them obtaining weapons.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:08:45 GMT

1.7 billion dollars in a ransom payment.  

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:08:50 GMT

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:08:50 GMT

Six times tonight I have said to Governor Pence, I can’t imagine how you can defend your running mates position on one issue after the next. And in all six cases he has refused to defend them.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:02 GMT

No, no, don’t put words in my mouth.

(CROSSTALK)

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:05 GMT

And yet, he is asking you to vote for somebody that he cannot defend. And I just think that should be underlined.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:12 GMT

Gentlemen, let’s talk about Russia. This is a topic that has come up. I will give you an opportunity to do that.

(CROSSTALK)

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:20 GMT

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:20 GMT

More nations should get nuclear weapons.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:24 GMT

He never said that, Senator and you know that.

Here’s the transcript, in which Trump says, “But right now we’re protecting, we’re basically protecting Japan, and we are, every time North Korea raises its head, you know, we get calls from Japan and we get calls from everybody else, and ‘Do something.’ And there’ll be a point at which we’re just not going to be able to do it anymore. Now, does that mean nuclear? It could mean nuclear.” And another.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:27 GMT

Gentleman, Russia. Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, annexed Crimea, and has provided crucial military support to the Assad regime. What steps, if any, would your administration take to counter these actions? Senator Kaine?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:41 GMT

You’ve got to be tough on Russia. So let’s start with not praising Vladimir Putin as a great leader. Donald Trump and Mike Pence had said he is a great leader.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:53 GMT

No, we haven't.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:09:54 GMT

And he has business dealings with Russia that he refuses to disclose. Hillary Clinton has gone toe to toe with Russia. She went toe to toe with Russia as Secretary of State to do the new start agreement -- to reduce Russia's nuclear stockpile-- she has had the experience doing it. She went toe to toe with Russia and launched protests when they went into Georgia, and we’ve done the same thing about Ukraine -- but more than launching protests, we’ve put punishing economic sanctions on Russia that we need to continue.

Donald Trump on the other hand did not know Russia had invaded the Crimea. He was on a TV show a couple months back and said Russia and he said this, “I guarantee you this, Russia is not going into the Ukraine.” And he had to be reminded that they had gone into the Crimea two years before.

Hillary Clinton has gone toe to toe with Russia to work out a deal on new START. She got them engaged in a meaningful way to cap Iran's nuclear weapons program, and yet she stood up to them on issues such as Syria and their invasion of Georgia. 

Clinton was not involved in the negotiations on the Iran nuclear deal. They began under Secretary of State John Kerry. The Russian-Georgian war happened during George W. Bush’s presidency.

You have got to have the ability to do that and Hillary does. On the other hand, in Donald Trump you have some who praises Vladimir Putin all the time. America should really wonder -- about a President Trump who had a campaign manager with ties to Putin. Pro-Putin elements in the Ukraine who had to be fired for that reason. They should wonder when Donald Trump is sitting down with Vladimir Putin, is it going to be America's bottom line or is it going to be Donald Trump's bottom line that he’s going to be worried about with all of his business dealings? Now this could be solved if Donald Trump would be willing to release his tax returns as he told the American public he would do.

Kaine called Ukraine “the Ukraine” here and elsewhere tonight. This is an outdated reference, as William Taylor, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, explained to Time in 2014: “The Ukraine is the way the Russians referred to that part of the country during Soviet times,” he said. “Now that it is a country, a nation, and a recognized state, it is just Ukraine. And it is incorrect to refer to the Ukraine, even though a lot of people do it.”

That “the” matters, as linguist Anatoly Liberman told the BBC in 2012: "After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukrainians probably decided that the article denigrated their country [by identifying it as a part of Russia] and abolished 'the' while speaking English, so now it is simply Ukraine. That's why the Ukraine suddenly lost its article in the last 20 years; it's a sort of linguistic independence in Europe, it's hugely symbolic."

MIKE PENCE: (laughs)

TIM KAINE: And I know he is laughing at this, but every president since Richard Nixon has done it. Donald Trump has said I’m doing business with Russia. The only way the American public will see whether he has conflict of interests.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:11:37 GMT

He hasn’t -

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:11:47 GMT

Governor.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:11:49 GMT

Thanks. Just trying to keep up the insult-driven campaign on the other side --

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:11:58 GMT

I am just saying facts about your running mate.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:12:02 GMT

Senator two minutes.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:12:05 GMT

I am happy to defend him senator. Don’t put words in my mouth that I’m not defending him. Most of what you said is completely false. And the American people know that.

(CROSSTALK)

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:12:14 GMT

Senator, please, this is Governor Pence’s two minutes.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:12:17 GMT

Look, this is the alternative universe of Washington D.C. versus reality. Hillary Clinton's said her number one priority was a reset with Russia. That reset resulted in the invasion of Ukraine. After they’ve infiltrated what are called little green men -- Russian soldiers dressing up like Ukrainian dissidents, and then they moved all the way into Crimea and took over the Crimean peninsula.

Donald Trump knew that happened. He basically was saying it was not going to happen again. The truth of the matter is what you have in the rise of aggressive Russia -- which is an increase in its influence in Iran -- it’s now because of this deal - on a pathway in the future to obtain a nuclear -- the leading state sponsor of terror in the world in Iran now has a closer working relationship with Russia because of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama's foreign policy. And one hundred fifty billion dollars in sanctions all being lifted -- and then of course, Syria, really it is extraordinary -- Syria is imploding. You asked a very thoughtful question about the disaster and Aleppo. ISIS is headquartered in Raqqa-- Isis from Raqqa has overrun vast areas that have made a great sacrifice that American soldiers one in operation Iraqi Freedom. And yet the senator sits here, loyal soldier, I get all of that and saying that foreign policy of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama somehow made the world more secure. It really is astonishing.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:13:54 GMT

On the day that hostages -- we delivered four hundred million in cash as a ransom payment for Americans held by the radical --

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:14:08 GMT

Just today, Mr. Trump said that PUtin has no respect for Hillary Clinton and no respect for Obama. Why do you think he’ll respect a Trump Pence administration?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:14:20 GMT

Strength. Plain and simple.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:14:25 GMT

Business dealings.

MIKE PENCE: That’s nonsense.

(CROSSTALK)

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:14:30 GMT

Please, Senator. I’ll give you a chance to respond.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:14:32 GMT

Let me set this whole Putin thing. America is stronger than Russia. Our economy is sixteen times larger than the Russian economy. America’s political system is superior to the crony, corrupt, capitalist system in Russia in every way. When Donald Trump and I observe, as I have said, in Syria and Iran in Ukraine -- that the small and bullying leader of Russia has been stronger on the world stage than this administration -- that’s stating painful facts. That is not an endorsement of Vladimir Putin. That is an indictment of the weak and feckless leadership of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:15:15 GMT

This is one where you can go to the tape on it. But Governor Pence said inarguably Vladimir Putin is a better leader than President Obama.

Here is the Pence quote: "I think it's inarguable that Vladimir Putin has been a stronger leader in his country than Barack Obama has been in this country. And that's going to change the day that Donald Trump becomes president.” (Via CNN.)

In an NBC town hall, Trump himself said of Putin: “The man has very strong control over a country. Now, it’s a very different system, and I don’t happen to like the system, but certainly in that system, he’s been a leader. Far more than our president has been a leader. … I think I would have a very, very good relationship with Putin. I think I would have a very, very good relationship with Russia.” Trump defended himself by saying, “Well, he does have an 82 percent approval rating, according to the different pollsters, who, by the way, some of them are based right here."

Trump has a long history of saying nice things about Putin, including saying in 2007, “[H]e's doing a great job in rebuilding the image of Russia and also rebuilding Russia period.”

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:15:24 GMT

That is absolutely inaccurate.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:15:26 GMT

And I just think -

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:15:29 GMT

He has been stronger on the world stage.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:15:32 GMT

No, you said leader. If you mistake leadership for dictatorship and you can’t tell the difference, a country that’s running its economy into the ground, persecuting journalists -- if you can’t tell the difference, you shouldn’t be commander in chief.

(CROSSTALK)

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:15:44 GMT

Donald Trump’s sons say they have all these business dealings with Russia -- those could be disclosed with tax returns, but they refuse to do them. Americans need to worry about whether Donald Trump will be watching out for America's bottom line or his own bottom line.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:16:04 GMT

Senator Kaine what went wrong with the Russia reset?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:16:08 GMT

Vladimir Putin.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:16:14 GMT

Vladimir Putin is a dictator. He’s not a leader. Anyone who thinks otherwise doesn’t know Russian history and did not know Vladimir Putin. Hillary Clinton knows exactly who this guy is. John McCain said, I look in his eyes and I see KGB. Hillary kind of has that same feeling. So how do you deal with that? We do have to deal with Russia in a lot of different ways. There are areas where we can cooperate. So it was Hillary Clinton who worked with Russia on the new START treaty to reduce their nuclear weapon stockpile. It was Hillary Clinton that worked with Russia to get them engaged in a community of nations to stop the Iranian nuclear weapons program without firing a shot. She’s not going around praising Vladimir Putin as a great guy, but she knows how to sit down at table and negotiate tough deals. This is a very challenging part of the world, and we ought to have a commander-in-chief who is prepared and done it rather than somebody who goes around praising Putin as a great leader.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:17:10 GMT

I would like to ask now about North Korea, Iran and the threat of nuclear weapons. North Korea recently conducted its fifth and most powerful nuclear test. What specific steps would you take to prevent North Korea from developing a nuclear armed missile capable of reaching the United States? Governor Pence.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:17:29 GMT

Well, first we need to make a commitment to rebuild our military -- including modernizing our nuclear forces.

The Pentagon disputes that it needs “rebuilding.”

And we also need an effective American diplomacy. That will marshal the resources of nations in the Asian-Pacific rim to put pressure on North Korea -- on Kim Jong-Un to abandon his nuclear ambitions. It has to remain the policy of the United States of America -- the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula -- plain and simple.

There is nothing in this answer that is different from existing steps that have already been taken regarding America's Korea policy. The big question is North Korea's response to American diplomatic efforts so far, and its response is to continue its nuclear buildup. The division between North Korea-watchers on this topic is engagement — trying to talk to North Korea, and further options to sanction or cut it off so that it’s forced to talk. The U.S. has tried both tactics to varying degrees

And when Donald Trump is president of the United States, we are not going to have the kind of posture in the world that has Russia invading Crimea and Ukraine -- that has Chinese building new islands in the South China Sea -- that has literally the world including North Korea flouting American power. We are going to go back to the days of peace through strength. But I have to tell you -- all of this talk about tax returns -- I get it you want to keep bringing it up. It must have done well in some focus group.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:18:33 GMT

But -- Hillary Clinton and her husband set up a private foundation called the Clinton Foundation. While she was Secretary of State, the Clinton Foundation accepted tens of millions of dollars from foreign governments. And foreign donors -- now you all need to know out there -- this is basic stuff. Foreign donors and certainly foreign governments cannot participate in the American political process. They cannot make financial contributions. But the Clintons figured out a way to create a foundation where foreign governments and foreign donors could donate millions of dollars and then we found, thanks to the good work of the Associated Press, that more than half of her private meetings and she was Secretary of State were given to major donors of the Clinton Foundation. When you talk about all of these baseless rumors about Russia and the rest -- Hillary Clinton --

The Associated Press made waves in August with a story about the many meetings Clinton held while secretary of state with people who had contributed to the Clinton Foundation. The story said such donors accounted for “more than half the people outside the government who met with Hillary Clinton while she was secretary.” That calculation is based on a review of State Department planning schedules from the first half of Clinton’s tenure, which the AP had obtained through legal action. Reporters scrutinized meetings Clinton held with 154 people outside government and found 85 had contributed to the foundation. “The frequency of the overlap,” wrote the AP, “fuels perceptions that giving the foundation money was the price of admission for face time with Clinton.”

Clinton’s campaign complained the AP analysis was misleading because it excluded meetings with government officials and foreign diplomats and thus offered “a distorted portrayal of how often [Clinton] crossed paths with” foundation donors. The AP later revised a promotional tweet for the story, acknowledging that the original lacked “essential context.” The revised tweet dropped the phrase “more than half” and clarified that the analysis covered only a subset of Clinton’s meetings. The story noted that foundation donors who met with Clinton included  billionaire S. Daniel Abraham, who founded the Center for Middle East Peace; Nobel Prize-winning economist Muhammad Yunus, who was at odds with the Bangladeshi government; and financier Stephen Schwarzman, who sought help with a visa issue.

You ask the trustworthy question at the very beginning -- they are looking at the pay-to-play politics that she operated with the Clinton Foundation through her private server..

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:19:40 GMT

Senator Kaine.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:19:44 GMT

I’m going to talk about the foundation and then I will talk about North Korea. On the foundation -- I am glad to talk about the foundation. The Clinton Foundation is one of the highest rated charities in the world. It provides AIDS drugs to about eleven and a half million people. It helps Americans deal with opioid overdoses. It gets higher rankings for its charity than the American Red Cross does. The Clinton Foundation does an awful lot of good work. Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State took no action to benefit the foundation. The State Department did an investigation, and they concluded that everything Hillary Clinton did as Secretary of State was completely in the interest of the United States. So the foundation does good work and Clinton as Secretary of State acted in the interest of the United States. But let's compare this now with the Trump organization and the Trump Foundation.

New York’s Attorney General has ordered the Trump Foundation to stop soliciting contributions, after the Washington Post reported that the foundation failed to register with state authorities as required. Contributions from others have been the sole source of money for the foundation since 2009. Donald Trump stopped contributing his own money in 2008. Registering with the state would subject the foundation to regular audits. In 2013, the foundation contributed to a political action committee for Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, in violation of tax rules. Trump paid a $2,500 penalty to the IRS. The Washington Post has also reported foundation funds were used to settle claims against Trump’s for-profit businesses and to purchase items for Trump’s own benefit. The Trump campaign has disputed this account, but it has not identified any inaccuracies.

The Trump organization is an octopus-like organization -- with tentacles all over the world - whose conflict of interest can only be known if Donald Trump were to release his tax returns. He has refused to do it. His sons have said that the organization has a lot of business dealings in Russia. And remember the Trump organization is not a nonprofit -- it’s putting money into his pockets and into the pockets of his children, whereas the Clinton Foundation is a nonprofit, and no Clinton family member draws any salary.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:21:00 GMT

The Trump Foundation is a nonprofit.

(CROSSTALK)

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:21:08 GMT

In addition, Donald Trump has a foundation. The foundation was just fined for illegally contributing foundation dollars to a political campaign -- of a  Florida Attorney General. They made an illegal contribution and then try to hide it by disguising it as somebody else and the person they donated to was somebody whose office was charged with investigating Trump University. This is the difference between a foundation that does good work, and a Secretary of State who acted in according with American interest, and somebody who is conflicted and doing work around the world and will not share with the American public what he is doing and what those conflicts are.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:21:46 GMT

Governor, I will give you thirty seconds to respond because I know you want to -- but I again I will remind you both this was about North Korea.

(LAUGHTER)

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:21:54 GMT

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:21:54 GMT

Thank you. The Trump Foundation is a private family foundation. They give virtually every cent in the Trump Foundation to charitable causes.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:21:59 GMT

Political contributions?

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:22:11 GMT

Less than ten cents on the dollar of the Clinton Foundation has gone to charitable causes.

That number is not correct. According to Charity Watch, 88 percent of funds contributed to the Clinton Foundation go to programs. The Clinton Foundation has earned an A rating from the group.

It has been a platform for the Clintons to travel the world, to have staff -- but honestly, Senator we would know a lot more about it if Hillary Clinton would turn over the thirty three thousand e-mails that she refused to turn over--

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:22:29 GMT

Let's turn to Senator Kaine. If you had intelligence that North Korea was about to launch a missile, a nuclear armed missile capable of reaching the United States, would you take preemptive action?

It is estimated that North Korea could develop the capability to launch a missile that could reach the United States by 2020, according to the U.S. Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:22:46 GMT

Look -- a president should take action to defend the United States against imminent  threat. You have to. A president has to do that. Exactly what action you have to determine -- what your intelligence was, how certain you were of that intelligence -- but you would have to take action. You asked a question about how do we deal with North Korea. I'm on the Foreign Relations Committee. We just set up an extensive sanctions package against North Korea, and interestingly enough, Elaine, the UN followed and did virtually did the same package -- often China will use their veto on the Security Council to veto a package like that -- they are starting to get worried about North Korea too. So they actually supported the sanctions package

The package is U.N. Security Council Resolution 2270, passed in spring 2016. It was considered by the U.S. as “the toughest”-yet sanctions against North Korea. However, the question with all sanctions is enforcement. There is evidence, now that six months have passed, that the sanctions haven’t been enforced at least when it comes to North Korea’s key export, coal. China insisted on a livelihood loophole, which explains part of why coal hasn’t been cut off.

-- even though many of the sanctions are against Chinese firms -- Chinese financial institutions. So we are working together with China and we need to -- China is another one of those relationships where it is competitive, it is also challenging, and in times like North Korea we have to be able to cooperate. Hillary understands that very well. She went once famously to China and stood up at a  human rights meeting and look them in the eye and said -- women's rights are human rights -- they did not want her to say that, but she did. But she’s also worked on a lot of diplomatic and important diplomatic deals with China -- and that’s what it is going to take. The thing I would worry a little bit about is Donald Trump owes about $650 million to banks including the Bank of China -- I am not sure he could stand up so tough to the people who have loaned him money.

The New York Times found in an August investigation that Trump owed $650 million. The Times found that four financial institutions, including the Bank of China, lent funds toward a building in which Trump owns a partial stake. The Times also found that “a substantial portion of his wealth is tied up in three passive partnerships that owe an additional $2 billion to a string of lenders.”

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:24:13 GMT

I would like to turn to our next segment now -- and in this I would like to focus on social issues. You have both been open about the role that faith has played in your lives. Can you discuss in detail a time when you struggled to balance your personal faith and a public policy position? Senator Kaine.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:24:31 GMT

That is an easy one for me, I am really fortunate. I grew up in a wonderful household with great Irish Catholic parents -- my mom and dad are sitting right here. I was educated by Jesuits at Rockhurst High School in Kansas City. My 40th reunion is in ten days. And I worked with Jesuit missionaries in Honduras now nearly thirty five years ago --and  they were the heroes of my life. I try to practice my religion in a very devout way and follow the teachings of my church in my own personal life. But I don’t believe in this nation -- a first amendment nation where we do not raise any religion over the other and we allow people to worship as they please, that the doctrines of any one religion should be mandated for everyone. For me, the hardest struggle in my faith life was the Catholic Church is against the death penalty and so am I. But I was governor of a state -- and the state law said there was death penalty for crimes that the jury determined to be heinous. So I had to grapple with that. When I was running for governor -- I was attacked pretty strongly because my position on the death penalty. 

Although a devout Catholic, Kaine says he won’t impose his religious beliefs on others. Kaine is also personally opposed to the death penalty, but as governor, he observed Virginia law and oversaw the execution of 11 people. (He commuted the death penalty to life in prison in one case, convinced that the man was mentally incapacitated.) Kaine also has a 100 percent rating from Planned Parenthood Action Fund.

But I looked to the voters of Virginia in the eye and said look, this is my religion -- I'm not going to change my religious practice to get one vote, but I know how to take an oath and uphold the law, and if you elect me I will uphold law. And I was elected and I did. It was very difficult to allow executions to go forward, but in circumstances where I did not feel like there's a case for clemency, I told Virginia voters I would uphold the law and I did. That was a real struggle -- but I think it is really really important that those of us who have deep faith lives don’t feel like we can just substitute our own views for everybody else in society -- regardless of their views.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:26:16 GMT

Governor Pence.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:26:18 GMT

It’s a wonderful question and my Christian faith is at the very heart of who I am. I was also raised in a wonderful family of faith. It was church on Sunday morning and grace before dinner. But my Christian faith became real for me when I made a personal decision for Christ when I was a freshman in college. And I have tried to live that out -- however imperfectly every day of my life since. With my wife at my side, we have followed a calling into public service where we have tried to keep faith with the values that we cherish. And with regard to when I struggle, I appreciate and I have a great deal of respect for the Senator Kaine’s sincere faith. I truly do. But for me, I would tell you -- for me the sanctity of life proceeds out of the belief that ancient principle that where God says before you were formed in the womb I knew you. And so from my first time in public life, I sought to stand with great compassion for the sanctity of life.

During his last year in Congress, Pence received a 100 percent rating from National Right to Life. He has long advocated defunding Planned Parenthood. Earlier this year as governor, Pence signed one of the nation’s toughest anti-abortion laws. It would have outlawed the procedure even early in pregnancy if the abortion was motivated by fetal abnormality. The law, which was opposed even by some Republican opponents of abortion, was blocked over the summer by a federal judge.

Pence is citing a portion of Jeremiah 1:5, in which Jeremiah is describing how God called him: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the nations.” (New Revised Standard Version) This is a verse that abortion rights opponents commonly cite.

The state of Indiana is also -- sought to make sure we expand alternatives and health care counseling for women -- non-abortion alternatives. I'm also pleased with the fact we are well on our way in Indiana to becoming most pro-adoption state in America. I think if you’re going to be pro-life you should be pro-adoption. But what I can’t understand is with Hillary Clinton and now Senator Kaine at her side -- is to support a practice like partial birth abortion -- and to hold to the view -- I know Senator you hold pro-life views personally, but the very idea that a child that is almost born into the world could still have their life taken from them is just anathema to me. I cannot have conscious about a party that supports that. Or that - I know you have historically opposed taxpayer funding of abortion -- but Hillary Clinton wants to repeal the long-standing provision in the law where we said we wouldn’t use taxpayer dollars to fund abortion. So for me, my faith informs my life. I tried to spend a little time on my knees every day. But it all for me begins with cherishing the dignity, the worth, the value of every human life.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:28:51 GMT

Elaine, this is a fundamental question. Hillary and I are both people out of religious backgrounds -- her Methodist church experience was really formative for her as a public servant. But we really feel like you should live fully and with enthusiasm with the commands of your faith -- but it is not the role of the public servant to mandate that for everybody else.

Both Kaine and Pence have Catholic roots. Pence moved toward a more evangelical approach to Christianity and talks about his personal conversion experience in the language of evangelicals, often describing himself as a "Christian first." Pence has been spending time with conservative Christian leaders on the campaign trail, meeting with pastors in Colorado and holding a campaign appearance at a large evangelical church in Arizona, among other outreach events in recent weeks. It's a far more natural constituency for Pence than for his running mate, who has often struggled to speak the language of evangelicals.

So let's talk about abortion and choice. Let's talk about that. We support Roe vs. Wade. We support the constitutional right of American women to consult their own conscience, their own support of partner, their own minister, but make their own decision about pregnancy. That is something we trust American women to do that. And we don’t think that women should be punished as Donald Trump said they should for making the decision to have an abortion. Governor Pence wants to repeal Roe vs. Wade. He said he wants to put it on the ash heap of history, and our young people in the audience were not even born when Roe was decided. This is pretty important. Before Roe versus Wade -- states could pass criminal laws to do just that -- to punish women if they made the choice to terminate a pregnancy. I think you should live your moral values but the last thing, the very last thing that the government should do is have laws that would punish women who make reproductive choices. And that is the fundamental difference between a Clinton Kaine ticket -- and a Trump Pence ticket that wants to punish women who make that choice.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:30:28 GMT

It is really not. Donald Trump and I would never support legislation that punished women who made the heartbreaking choice to end a pregnancy.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:30:36 GMT

Then why did Donald Trump say that?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:30:38 GMT

Look. Look. He is not a polished politician like you and Hillary Clinton, and so you know --

Pence is correct. Trump is not a polished politician. He has frequently taken a position in an interview or a speech only to have to walk it back later. Trump’s statement about abortion in an interview with MSNBC’s Chris Matthews caused a political firestorm. Here are the initial remarks, which Trump’s campaign later tried to clean up:

MATTHEWS: Do you believe in punishment for abortion, yes or no, as a principle?

TRUMP: The answer is that there has to be some form of punishment.

MATTHEWS: For the woman?

TRUMP: Yes, there has to be some form.

NPR’s Danielle Kurtzleben wrote about the controversy at the time.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:30:46 GMT

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:30:46 GMT

That's not a polished -

(CROSSTALK)

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:30:49 GMT

Great line from the Gospel of Matthew. From the fullness of the heart, the mouth speaks. When Donald Trump says women should be punished or Mexicans are rapists and criminals, or John McCain is not a hero -- he is showing you who he is.

Kaine gets his own Bible reference in, just after Pence cited a verse from Jeremiah. A version of this phrase comes up in both Matthew and Luke. (Different translations have somewhat different wording.)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:31:05 GMT

Senator, you whipped out that Mexican thing again.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:31:11 GMT

Can you defend it?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:31:12 GMT

There are criminal aliens in this country, Tim, who have come into this country illegally who are perpetrating violence and taking American lives.

(CROSSTALK)

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:31:21 GMT

He also said that many of them are good people. You keep leaving that out of your quote. If you want me to go there, I will go there. But there is a choice here -- and it is a choice on life. I couldn’t be more proud to be standing with Donald Trump, who is standing for the right to life.

Trump's exact quote in his announcement speech was not that “many of them are good people,” but instead that Mexican immigrants were  “bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people."  — Jessica Taylor, political reporter

It’s a principle that Senator Kaine -- and I’m very gentle about this because I really do respect you -- it is a principle that you embrace and I have appreciated the fact that you have supported the amendment that bans use of taxpayer funding for abortion in the past -- but that is not Clinton's view. People need to understand -- we can come together as a nation. We can create a culture of life -- more and more young people today are embracing life because we know we are better for it. Like Mother Teresa said and that famous national prayer breakfast -- bring -- let's welcome the children into the world. There are so many families around the country who can’t have children. If we can have options so that families who can’t have children can adopt -

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:32:27 GMT

Why don't you trust women to make this choice for themselves? We can encourage people to support life, of course we can, but why don’t you trust women -- why doesn't Donald Trump trust women to make this choice for themselves? That is what we ought to be doing in public life. Living our lives of faith are our motivation with enthusiasm and excitement -- convincing each other, dialoguing with each other about important moral issues of the day -- but on fundamental issues of morality -- we should let women make their own decisions.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:32:58 GMT

A society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable -- the aging, the infirm, the disabled and the unborn. I believe it with all of my heart. I couldn’t be more proud to be standing with a pro-life candidate in Donald Trump.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:33:11 GMT

I do have one final question for you tonight. It has been a divisive campaign. Senator Kaine, if your ticket wins, what specifically are you going to do to unify the country and reassure the people who voted against you?

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:33:25 GMT

That’s a really important one. That may be the sixty four thousand dollar question because it has been a divisive campaign -- and again Hillary’s running a campaign about stronger together, and Donald Trump-- this is not directed at this man except to the extent he can’t defend Donald Trump-- Donald Trump has run a campaign that is been about one insult after the next.

But we do have to bring the country together. So here's what we’ll do. Clinton was first lady and then senator for eight years and Secretary of State. I served in the Senate and I am amazed, Elaine, as I talk to Republican senators how well they regard and respect Hillary Clinton. She was on the Armed Services committee -- she was on other committees -- she worked across the aisle when she was First Lady to get the CHIP program passed so that eight million low-income kids have health insurance in this country -- including one hundred fifty thousand in Indiana. To work across the aisle after 9/11 to get health benefits for the first responders who bravely went into the towers and into the Pentagon. She worked to get benefits - tri-care benefits - for National Guard members -- including Hoosiers and Virginians in the National Guard. She has a track record of working across the aisle to make things happen. I have the same track record. I was a governor of Virginia with two Republican houses -- and in the Senate, I have good working relationships across the aisle. Because I think it is fine to be a Democrat or Republican or  independent -- but after election day the goal is worked together. Clinton has a track record of accomplishment across the aisle that will enable her to do just that when we work with a new Congress in January.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:35:01 GMT

Governor how will you unify the country if you win?

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:35:04 GMT

Thank you, Elaine. And thanks for a great discussion tonight.

TIM KAINE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:35:07 GMT

Absolutely.

MIKE PENCE

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:35:08 GMT

Thank you, Senator. This is a very challenging time in the life of our nation. We can -- America's place in the world and the leadership of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama on the world stage has been followed by an economy that is truly struggling -- stifled by an avalanche of more taxes -- more regulation, Obamacare -- the war on coal and the kind of trade deals that have put American workers in the backseat. I think the best way that we can bring people together is through change in Washington D.C. You know, I served in Washington D.C. for twelve years  in the Congress of the United States, and I served with many Republicans and Democrats, men and women of goodwill. The potential is there to really change the direction of this country -- but it is going to take leadership to do it. The American people want to see our nation standing tall on the world stage again. They want to see us supporting our military -- rebuilding our military, commanding the respect of the world, and they want to see the American economy off to the races again. They want to see an American comeback -- and Trump's entire career has been about building -- it is about going through hardship just like a business person does -- finding a way through smarts and ingenuity and resilience to fight forward. And when Donald Trump becomes President of the United States, we are going to have a stronger America. When you hear him say he wants to make America great again, when we do that -- I truly do believe the American people are going to be standing taller. They’re going to see that real change can happen after decades of just talking about it. And when that happens, the American people are going to stand tall, stand together -- and we’ll have the kind of unity that has been missing for way too long.

ELAINE QUIJANO

Wed, 05 Oct 2016 02:36:56 GMT

Gentlemen, thank you so much. This concludes the vice presidential debate. My thanks to the candidates -- the commission and to you for watching. Please tune in this Sunday for the second presidential debate in Washington University in St. Louis. And the final debate on October 19th at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. From Farmville, Virginia. I’m Elaine Quijano of CBS News. Good night.