“Really?” Cuomo shot back. “You have to think about it? You have to think about whether or not you would support a racist? Really?”
“I’d have to know who was running against him,” Kobach replied.
“A racist?” Cuomo said. “An admitted racist, you’d have to know more?”
“If he said he was a racist, then probably not, of course,” was the best Kobach could muster up.
“Kris, c’mon, man, it can’t be that partisan,” Cuomo said.
Kobach then dismissed the entire line of discussion as “ridiculous hypotheticals.”
See the full conversation below. The discussion about supporting an openly racist president begins at 5:40: Authorities in Venezuela on Tuesday released from prison a young musician who was jailed six weeks ago after taking to social media to vent her frustration against President Nicolás Maduro's government
Karen Palacios blasted the government in a message that went viral after losing her job as top clarinetist in the National Philharmonic. Her mother says a week later two strangers appeared at their home saying the 25-year-old was needed for an interview at the presidential palace.
Instead she was locked up at a military prison accused of violating Venezuela's hate law, which was passed by lawmakers loyal to Maduro in 2017. It threatens sentences up to 20 years for any message through television, radio or social media that instigates violence or hate. Critics say the government uses the law to crack down on dissent.
Rights groups condemned Palacios' arrest as an example of the deteriorating human rights situation. A recent U.N. report said that since 2014 more than 15,000 people have been detained for political motives including more than 2,000 this year alone.