
Tamara Keith and Amy Walter on Trump’s NBC interview walkout
Clip: 6/8/2026 | 9m 34sVideo has Closed Captions
Tamara Keith and Amy Walter on Trump’s walkout from NBC interview
NPR’s Tamara Keith and Amy Walter of the Cook Political Report with Amy Walter join Amna Nawaz to discuss the latest political news, including Trump walking out under tough questioning on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Democrats facing character questions ahead of a battleground Senate race, and the president’s influence on the ballot in South Carolina.
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Tamara Keith and Amy Walter on Trump’s NBC interview walkout
Clip: 6/8/2026 | 9m 34sVideo has Closed Captions
NPR’s Tamara Keith and Amy Walter of the Cook Political Report with Amy Walter join Amna Nawaz to discuss the latest political news, including Trump walking out under tough questioning on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Democrats facing character questions ahead of a battleground Senate race, and the president’s influence on the ballot in South Carolina.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipAMNA NAWAZ: President Trump walks out under tough questioning from NBC, Democrats face character questions ahead of a battleground Senate race, and President Trump's influence is once again on the ballot in South Carolina.
Here to unpack it all is our Politics Monday duo.
That's Amy Walter of The Cook Political Report With Amy Walter and Tamara Keith of NPR.
Great to see you both.
AMY WALTER, The Cook Political Report: Good to be here.
AMNA NAWAZ: Let's start with this interview that's getting a lot of attention.
I think it's fair to say Trump officials proudly talk about how accessible this president is to the press.
We know he takes a lot of questions on the fly in the Oval Office, before leaving from the South Lawn, and even on very brief phone calls from reporters all the time, where he ends the conversation when he wants to.
He rarely sits down for extended, rigorous one-on-one interviews like the one with Kristen Welker on NBC's "Meet the Press."
As we played earlier, he got very frustrated, Tam, under questioning about his anti-weaponization fund and about rigged election claims she was asking for evidence about.
What stood out to you about how angry the president got in response?
TAMARA KEITH, National Public Radio: Well, so much of the questions that he takes, as you described, the calls, all of that, is on his terms.
He's calling on the questions that -- he's answering the questions that he wants.
And when he gets a question that he doesn't like, he very frequently attacks the journalists, most especially female journalists, and he attacks them in very personal terms.
You saw at various points during this interview him criticizing -- going after Kristen Welker and her questioning and her professionalism.
She stood up for herself.
But this -- at the end, as he's walking out, he was being pressed on this -- the soft spot for him, which is the 2020 election and his whole idea that the election was stolen and the election rigging and all of the things that he's been talking about for all of these years.
AMNA NAWAZ: Baseless ideas, we should underscore here, right?
TAMARA KEITH: Yes.
And that is why it is -- it is central to his identity.
And it continues to be something where he doesn't have a good answer to the question of, where's the evidence?
AMNA NAWAZ: Amy, how did you look at this, and also this larger argument where the White House is always saying, he's so available, he's very accessible to the press?
AMY WALTER: Right.
Well, listen, if you said why do you think the president chose to go on to a major platform, a Sunday show, I would say, well, probably because we're in a war in Iran, although which he calls not really a war, but there's that.
And voters are very upset, number one, about the actions being taken in Iran and the repercussions of it, namely higher inflation, gas prices, and that here's an opportunity for the president to explain his thinking, where are we going in Iran, what's the timeline, to give some clarity to that, and to also empathize with Americans who are saying, yes, but my gas price went up Inflation is still high.
They're in a farm state.
Fertilizer is too expensive.
That was a great opportunity to do that.
He provided none of that in this interview.
So, really, I think he uses it, to Tam's point, as an opportunity for him to say what he wants to say, be on the record for the issues that matter to him.
I do think it's more, though, than just obsessing about 2020 that becomes problematic.
And Lisa obviously did a whole piece on this before we came on of really undermining the integrity of elections and the idea that, as we go into 2026 election time, the president's numbers aren't looking particularly strong.
the difficulty that Republicans are going to have to hold on to both houses in this upcoming election.
Undermining this as a rigged election is only going to further the frustration, division that we have in this country about how our elections are handled and what it means to actually have a free and fair election that Americans can agree, whether they won or lost, was actually valid.
AMNA NAWAZ: Well, I know you have both been following the lead-up to the primary elections in Maine tomorrow very closely.
Fair to say, barring -- barring, rather, any kind of extraordinary upset, Graham Platner is likely to win the Democratic nomination.
Susan Collins is likely to win the Republican nomination.
And, of course, there's a number of scandals around Platner that have only grown in recent weeks from this list, I have to say, from the Nazi tattoo to sexting while married to ex-girlfriends alleging violence.
Platner denies any violence, we should say, but on everything else he says he's transformed.
And this is how one of his supporters actually sees it.
Take a listen.
GALEN LOWE, Graham Platner Supporter: It's refreshing to have someone actually own up to stuff that they have done and say, yes, that wasn't such a great idea.
I'm working to be a better person.
Why?
Because that's what we all need to do.
We all have flaws.
It's not a perfect world.
AMNA NAWAZ: So, Tam, not for Republicans, because I think President Trump has moved the bar so far, but, for Democrats, this sort of stuff would have been disqualifying not long ago.
What's changed?
TAMARA KEITH: I think that if you talk to a lot of Democrats, they would say Susan Collins.
They really see Maine as a solid pickup opportunity.
And any chance that there was for Democrats to put forward a different candidate -- and establishment Democrats absolutely did want to put forward a different candidate, Governor Janet Mills, who was seen as a strong recruit by Chuck Schumer and the Senate Democrats.
By the time she got into that race, Graham Platner already had huge momentum.
He was like riding a wave and she's there paddling and she can't - - she just can't catch it.
It was too late by the time she got in.
And so now, at this point, Democrats have the front-runner that they have.
And I think that there are lots of nuances here.
And a Democratic primary is also different than a general election.
And I think that we really will see a test not just in Maine, but also in Texas, where Ken Paxton, the Republican nominee in the Senate race, all of his dirty laundry was aired in that primary, and he won anyway.
And so I think there is a question of whether primary electorates are different than general electorates or whether we're in a new era where the sort of scandals that would have taken down a politician don't matter anymore.
AMY WALTER: Yes, and the -- by the time some of those first Reddit posts came out, Graham Platner had already built and established this sort of grassroots following.
I was actually up in Maine the day or the day after those first Reddit posts were revealed.
And sitting at an event, someone comes up to introduce Graham Platner and said, well, we all know this is probably the Democrats in Washington who leaked this.
So, the lack of faith and trust in the establishment, whether it is the candidates that they pick in Maine establishment, or whether it's the -- quote, unquote - - "establishment" in Washington, and the lack of faith too in how rumors like this get into the mainstream media, also important.
But I think Tam's point about the primary is also critical.
I don't think Graham Platner is losing support from Democrats.
This is a blue state.
So theoretically, you only need to win Democrats to win.
But this is where Susan Collins comes in.
If you look at her success over the years, it's not because she is winning Republicans, more Republicans.
It's that people who voted for Joe Biden in 2020 crossed over and voted for Susan Collins.
And the number one group to do this were women.
She won women by three points.
Joe Biden won women in that state by more than 23 points.
If Graham Platner is going to win in Maine, he's got to win women who crossed over to vote for Susan Collins.
We're not going to find out whether he can do that tomorrow night.
AMNA NAWAZ: Let me ask you too about South Carolina, because their gubernatorial primary, the Republican primary is also tomorrow.
From Louisiana to Texas, Amy, as you have seen, we have seen President Trump's influence in being able to oust incumbents for his pick to make it ahead.
In South Carolina, he's pushing for Lieutenant Governor Pam Evette.
How do you look at this?
What's going to happen here?
AMY WALTER: Yes, I think she's definitely a front-runner in this.
But these are also -- South Carolina and many of these Southern states have run-offs.
And so getting that nod is really important.
Where the president has yet to weigh in is in Georgia, which has a -- actually, next week, has a run-off in the Senate race there.
I think that is also notable.
TAMARA KEITH: Yes, and I will just say, in South Carolina, a governor's race is different than a Senate race or a congressional race.
And so I am certainly watching whether President Trump's influence is as strong when you're looking at a state race versus a federal race that has federal implications for how he's able to govern.
AMNA NAWAZ: Tamara Keith, Amy Walter, thank you both very much.
TAMARA KEITH: You're welcome.
AMY WALTER: You're welcome.
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