seeks to change that by bringing them into the system. shannon? shannon: jennifer griffin, thank you so much for the fight is over for the one who is in hot water multiple times, specifically saying he won t colorado in hot water for refusing to take a customs gender transition celebration case. the case went all the way to the supreme court. stick around, we ll talk about how the case was resolved. are you thinking about your heart? well, i m managing my a1c, so i should be all set. right. actually, you re still at risk for a fatal heart attack or stroke. even if i m taking heart medicine, like statins or blood thinners? yep! that s why i asked my doctor what else i could do. she told me about jardiance. that s right. jardiance significantly reduces the risk of dying from a cardiovascular event for adults who have type 2 diabetes and heart disease. that s why the american diabetes association recommends the active ingredient in jardiance. and it lowers a1c? yeah- with diet and e
in the small alabama town and what it could mean on a larger scale. one pro choice sent out an email saying alarm bells should be ringing another called an very scary case, but here s what is going on in his alabama case. here is a complaint right here, it is 11 pages and mentions a man by the name of ryan majors, he and his girlfriend received in early february 2017. by february of that year, the girlfriend had an abortion, majors to the abortion clinic on behalf of himself and the unborn fetus six weeks old. he petitioned to represent the state of the unborn fetus, the estate, i should say, called baby row in this document. a probate judge in alabama signed off to allow majors to represent the estate of baby row. tonight, i spoke to majors attorney in alabama. to my knowledge, never has and a statement opened for an aborted fetus in the united states of america. and what that means is that this
white house. you think about what jussie smollett has done, which essentially says, hey, these are the trump supporters are attacking me, which i think encourages violence or a pushback. it is particularly problematic, we ve seen an uptick in this, 76% of likely u.s. voters say they fear political violence. this isn t surprising to me, i think it is something that has to stop, especially when you see the left continuing to say we must preach tolerance and they don t preach it themselves. it s problematic. we the case in oklahoma, a student encountered another kid that had a maga hat on and said to him, take it off, do you want me to rip it off, there was jostling, and he apparently ripped the hat off the kids had. he is facing potential trouble for that. but in the midst of that, in the same week the media discovered jussie smollett he faked a hate crime, they ignored a man charged with pulling a gun on a couple wearing sp 23 hats, a woman being arrested for assault and battery for a m
foundation, former member of the federal election commission himself. hans, i will start with you, you ve seen the filings, what you make of the case so far? they are potentially very serious violations here. she had her chief of staff or in legal control of a political action committee, so there is potential for not only illegal contributions that benefited her campaign, illegal coordination, and also reporting violations, there is certainly enough there for the fec to open up an investigation, and if it looks like this was an intentional and knowing violation, there would be potential for the justice department to open up a criminal violation. shannon: a separate from the fec based on what they found? the washington times has this in their article today, saying it appears she is involved in a self-dealing arrangement, particularly troublesome for ms. ocasio-cortez because the new york democrat presents herself as a working class champion against a corrupting special interest. j
ocasio-cortez on the campaign violence violation, it seems untenable to argue there shouldn t be investigations. you have 37 indictments or guilty pleas at this point, over 100 documented contacts during the trump transition with the russians. shannon: don t think the special counsel will be able to handle this? there are different per views and functions. as hans just said, sometimes a democratic investigation will look to have legislative reform, and there are half-dozen that i can think that could potentially come out of this. 37 indictments or guilty pleas, 100 contacts. shannon: why did they need to go back and to all of the same request for documents and the same people in the same information? because this congress looks at it three different lens than a special counsel. the special counsel is looking not necessarily. the special counsel is looking at whether to prosecute or not prosecute, period, and a case. it could make a democrat mike recommendation on impeachment.