america reports on this monday afternoon. democrats scoring big wins over the tax and spend bill. will they pay the price as many republicans are suggesting come the midterm elections? hello, and welcome everyone. sandra smith in new york city. bill: hope you had a great weekend. good weekend, too, at home. john roberts has the day off. let s get to it now. months of negotiations, different versions of build back better. democratic senators manchin and sinema get on board with schumer s passage, kind of was a secret to everybody. sandra: and manchin claiming the $740 billion bill would not raise taxes on the middle class, republicans are making the case otherwise. bill: warning that billions in extra spending will come back to haunt democrats election time in november. sandra: and in the middle of all of it, aishah is live on capitol hill, manchin and sinema are dealing with serious fallout from every direction after this passage. hey, sandra, good to see you. tha
faced with a key piece of evidence with his signature. then, israeli military says they have surrounded gaza city. we ll have the latest from the ground as the white house calls for a humanitarian pause. and capitol hill clashes. the houses israel aid bill hits a wall in the senate. plus, rising tension between republicans over tommy tuberville s military blockade. as the 11th hour gets underway on this thursday night. good evening, once again, i m stephanie ruhle. live at msnbc headquarters here at 30 rockefeller center. we are following two major legal stories tonight in new york city. a jury, in just four hours, has found former cryptocurrency king and ftx founder sam bankman-fried guilty on all counts. we ll have much more on that coming up. you know i want to talk about that tonight, but first, just a few blocks away from that trial, donald trump s sons don junior and eric both testified today in the new york civil fraud case now threatening the family business. under qu
live at msnbc headquarters here at 30 rockefeller center. we are following two major legal stories tonight in new york city. a jury, in just four hours, has found former cryptocurrency king and ftx founder sam bankman-fried guilty on all counts. we ll have much more on that coming up. you know i want to talk about that tonight, but first, just a few blocks away from that trial, donald trump s sons don junior and eric both testified today in the new york civil fraud case now threatening the family business. under questioning, they tried to distance themselves from the financial documents at the heart of the case. they told the court they knew very little about the statements that inflated their families wealth, despite serving as executive vice presidents at the trump organization. nbc s lauren jarrett has the latest on what went down in court. for a second straight day, the trump suns back in court. eric trump appearing combative at times under questioning by the new york a
month on the doors of their rooms at two residence halls. the fact that we had 201 anti-semitic incidents on college campuses last year, an 86% increase from 2016, is just staggering. reporter: professor eric rasmussen posts this article are women destroyi ining acade academic freedom should protect me even if i believed all the things the pro vo s the attributed to me. at syracuse, furious students have protested for days over their school s response to
surfaced of them talking about gassing views a jews and talking about their hatred of black people. a year later hateful rhetoric aimed at blacks and jews keeps appearing. in a tearful address, the chancellor said he understand the students fear after his mixed race family faced attacks when they lived in the south. my wife was subjected to many racial epithets. their car tires were slashed, my kids dog was shot. there was little investigation. those responsible for never found. the chancellor ended by saying that was then and in the south. this is 2019 and in syracuse, where he says hate has no place. he finally agreed to sign onto nearly all of the students demands trying to make his campus safer and more inclusive.