Andrew Yang Appears on MSNBC After Public Criticisms of Network: ‘Our Message Is Too Important’
2020 presidential candidate Andrew Yang appeared on MSNBC tonight after his very public criticisms of the network.
Yang has called out MSNBC a few times in recent months for omitting him in coverage (at one point MSNBC’s Up apologized over a graphic shown on air displaying a poll that excluded Yang), and was particularly critical after the network’s Democratic debate:
I’m pretty sure I should be on this graphic. @MSNBC pic.twitter.com/fDlFmGpHXn
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) October 4, 2019
Pretty sure we should be on this graphic. @msnbc pic.twitter.com/7kbj2TzuHW
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) October 19, 2019
This is weird. Hey @msnbc 3 > 1. https://t.co/fyMFHxV4tA
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) November 17, 2019
Was asked to appear on @msnbc this weekend – and told them that I’d be happy to after they apologize on-air, discuss and include our campaign consistent with our polling, and allow surrogates from our campaign as they do other candidates’. They think we need them. We don’t.
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) November 23, 2019
The whole time we have gotten stronger. This is actually bad for MSNBC. It will only get worse after I make the next debates and keep rising in the polls. The people are smarter than MSNBC would like to think.
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) November 23, 2019
Earlier today, Yang tweeted he would be speaking with Chris Hayes, saying that a number of people at MSNBC reached out to him and “I decided that I’d prefer to speak to as many Americans as possible – our message is too important”:
I am sitting down for a remote interview with Chris Hayes from South Carolina tonight. Chris, and other MSNBC journalists, have reached out to me and the team in the past days. I decided that I’d prefer to speak to as many Americans as possible – our message is too important.
— Andrew Yang (@AndrewYang) December 27, 2019
Tonight Hayes questioned Yang on his famous $1000-a-month pledge for universal basic income and his concerns about the threat of automation, among other issues.
You can watch above, via MSNBC.
from Mediaite https://ift.tt/2Q4TaKI
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