Mika Brzezinski - Page 12

Brzezinski, Halperin Slam 'Tone Deaf' Hillary

MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski and Bloomberg’s Mark Halperin criticized former first lady Hillary Clinton’s comments that she and her husband were “dead broke” when they left the White House. Brzezsinski said the comment was “not just a little tone deaf,” and

Brzezinski, Halperin Slam 'Tone Deaf' Hillary

Spitzer Gets Teary During 'Morning Joe'

Mika Brzezinski: How are you different than you were five, six years ago? What has changed, personally, of who you are? Eliot Spitzer: A lot of pain. A lot of pain. Mika: That’s it? Spitzer: Yeah, you got through that

Spitzer Gets Teary During 'Morning Joe'

MSNBC Host: 'NRA Sick In The Head'

MIKA BRZEZINSKI, MSNBC HOST: They are out of step, out of the mainstream, totally out of sync with what’s going on in our society. And quite frankly after seeing that, I think some of the people who run that thing

MSNBC Host: 'NRA Sick In The Head'

Mika To 'Morning Joe': 'You're Being Chauvinistic'

On MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” co-host Mika Brzezinski accused Joe Scarborough of being “chauvinistic.” Brzezinski: “I am afraid to use the word because it will not be good for you…you’re being chauvinistic right now and you need to stop — alright,”

Mika To 'Morning Joe': 'You're Being Chauvinistic'

Axelrod Shaves 'Stache

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy Because Morning Joe’s Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski helped raise $1 million for Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy David Axelrod’s charity he went on MSNBC to shave

Axelrod Shaves 'Stache

Collective Bargaining Is a Privilege, Not a Right

I keep hearing the narrative that somehow, as though it were written in stone, collective bargaining is a right for public sector unions. I would disagree entirely: collective bargaining is a privilege, not a right, for public sector unions. And

Burned for Being American

Another Sept. 11 is behind us, leaving something new and disturbing, a dark spawn to examine with plenty of careful soul-searching. That legacy begins with the reflexive, lockstep process by which an American citizen, Terry Jones, was simultaneously depicted and