operational decisions and will always honor the sacrifice of those 13 americans. former secretary state mike pompeo who, by the way, was in the middle of this planning in the previous administration will join us in moments. first to mark meredith live at the white house. mark? trace, good afternoon to you. this report that you re talking about basically blames the trump administration for what happened in august of 2021 under president biden s command where the u.s. ended the longest war in afghanistan. it basically detail what s the u.s. government has learned since that date. repeatedly blaming the trump administration for the conditions on the ground during that time period. the report says president biden still believes that pulling out of afghanistan was the right thing to do and the president thought staying in afghanistan was not an option. the white house admits it was surprised that the afghan government fell as quickly as it did and evacuations should have happene
a familiar face at the political act conference in maryland, former president trump makes his pitch to be the republican nominee for the white house again. bakhmut could be on the verge of falling to russian troops but ukrainian forces say they re holding on in the fight to keep the city. over a month since the toxic train derailment in east palestine ohio, another norfolk southern freight train derails in the state live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom. with laila during crowd greeted former u.s. president donald trump saturday at the conserve in maryland, trump spoke nearly two hours promising retribution against democrats and republicans an scientific strap hold of cpack attendees found 62% want him to be the next republican presidential nominee compared to 20% who want florida governor ron desantis, cnn national correspondent christian holmes is there to at the conference and has this report. former president trump talking to a therapeutic crowd here at cpack
pete: good morning rachel. great to be here. rachel: it s a beautiful sun morning. will: we ve got our faith and family concert series continuing this week, dante beau down share thes getting warmed up. pete: he s rocking. will: he s been rehearsing. pete: they re going to rock the house. rachel: i have gotten so much great feedback about this concert series. pete: yeah? rachel: i love it. pete: it is great. it is befitting the time of this easter season. rachel: absolutely. all leading up to easter sunday. pete: i m pretty excited, i m looking at the final edits of the second part of our jesus series about holy week, because we did the first one before christmas, it come cans occupant, i believe, on palm sunday. producers, we go film it and then producers spend six months getting every little element and aspect, that s the real heavy lift. will: on fox nation. pete: yeah. rachel: all right. well, we are off with a fox news alert. there was another norfolk southern train dera
[national anthem] [national anthem] will: good morning and welcome to fox and friends on this sunday morning, will cain, pete hegseth and rachel campos duffy. good morning. rachel: good morning. pete: come on in. we re here. will: feels like we never left. pete: we kind of never did. rachel: we kind of ended up at my house hanging out. pete: we did. we took rick, and we journeyed out to your beautiful home will: in maryland. rachel: it s far. i live in the country, purposefully. i can t go to tennessee pete: it was excellent, we had a great time. will: spent all day breaking down the problems of the world, and all the problems of the world ended by the end of the night. we had an hour-and-a-half long me, pete and rick in an uber sitting like this, i was in the middle seat [laughter] multiple wrong turns, lost in washington heights. pete: multiple requests by the driver to stop to get cigarette- will: which i denied. [laughter] rachel: the funny part is rick an
and supporting prop d to build more affordable housing hi, everyone, it s all happening. it s 4:00 in new york on election day. the end of a campaign that has been like none other in recent history. more than 44 million people have already voted and millions more will have voted before the polls close in the next few hours in all 50 states. it has been an election season defined not just by the issues that dominate every election including the state of the economy, how people feel about the state of the economy, but it s also been defined by an unprecedented threat to income on the ballot and the first national election after the january 6th insurrection. in nearly every state there are republicans who have affirmed their commitment to this same big lie that led to that attack on the u.s. capitol. their races for governor, attorney general, and secretary of state that could have major implications on the next election, 2024, especially if the twice impeached ex-president as