good day. i m chris jansing live at msnbc head quarters in new york city. if you re watching this from an airplane gate, you already know the headline. more than 8500 flights delayed or cancelled after a key system went down. your flight was supposed to leave at 9:30 this morning? yeah. what time are you going to get to leave? 5:00 p.m. wow. so what are you going to do? just wait. how much more do passengers have to take before something is done to fix the airline system? plus house republicans are staing the first battles of what looks to be an all out political war over the next two years. votes on abortion rights, immigration and the irs are expect anded soon. is it just for show? and somehow the catastrophic situation in continueses to get even worse. relentless rainstorms have led to the deaths of 17 people. hundreds of homes have been damaged. some ripped right off their foundations. i ll speak live to the local sheriff about how they are coping, even
Of a global pandemic. Carrico and wiseman were both professors at the university of pennsylvania. Executive Vice President of U Penn School of medicine said it has charned the world and indeed it has. Thanks for being with us. Id love to. The lead with jake tapper starts right now. Today donald trump called the judge overseeing his fraud case a trump hater. Im not sure that was a smart move. The lead starts rielg now. With millions of dollars on the line, and his future businesses in new york at stake, donald trump shows up for day one of His Civil Fraud Trial Blasting not only prosecutors, but insulting the very judge who will decide how much trump must pay in a case where hes already been found liable for fraud. And as trump pleads his case, here comes some shocking comments and a new warning from one of his former longest serving white house officials. This official going on the record setting the record straight only on the lead. Exclusively confirming a number of very damning deta
every june. the final days of the supreme court term where you see the running of the reporters. maybe you have seen this scene before. the court of course takes its own time. the big and close cases often spark the most debates and rewrites. they tend to come in these last days of the term, typically late june where clerks and reporters and new reporters, assistants, interns come sprinting out of the court old-school with those key june rulings. in fact, it was late june 12 years ago the supreme court upheld oberweis in one of its last days in session.amacare in last days in session. people came out because you don t know which day the ruling happens and they filled the front area there, late june, a monumental case in one of the last days of the term. or maybe you remember where you were in the otherwise slow week when the court made history. that s our msnbc coverage there. we were showing some of the same stuff you see in the other footage of at the time, oh, and i was ou