consortium of news organizations. ukraine s president zelenskyy is on the verge of disaster with ukrainian and russian forces saying the other is about to stage a nuclear incident at zaporizhzhia with russia telling its operators today not to report to work. and we ll look at the surprising senate race in pennsylvania. one of a handful of match-ups, key match-ups where democrat candidates are beating expectations in recent polls and republican leaders suggesting it s donald trump s fault for backing unqualified contenders. i think there s there s probably a greater likelihood that the house flips than the senate. the senate races are just different. they re statewide. candidate quality has a lot to do with the outcome. we begin with nbc justice and intelligence correspondent ken dilanian, and david loftman, chief of counterintelligence at the justice department s national security department. many legal experts were quite surprised by the judge s ruling and that tru
declassified, and consider whether to criminally charge mr. trump or people close to him. though the two potential crimes cited in the search warrant, the three actually, do not require the documents to be classified, what his broad claim that he had a standing order to declassify documents when he went upstairs at night and bringing papers with him? that s just nutty. first of all, we know that s a complete post hoc fabrication. this president is accustomed to fabrication. and a bevy of officials around him had no contemporaneous knowledge of such things. there are customs and practices about how executive branch officials declassify documents. it s true he had declassify authority, but he had to take real action memorialized in writing. nothing like that will exist.