date of birth matches a georgia resident who died in 2020. 2,506 ballots were cast by individuals whose name and date of birth matches an incarcerated felony. 4,502 illegal ballots were cast by individuals who do not appear on the states voter rolls. that s january 4th, donald trump, two days before the january 6th attack on the capitol speaking in georgia and making those claims about election fraud in georgia he knew were false, and now a judge says trump and his legal team also knowingly made those false claims in court. that s a problem. we ll have some new reporting on that. plus, an eye opening conversation with pennsylvania democrats. is abortion really a make or break issue for them in the midterms? and should president biden run for reelection? we ll play for you what voters are saying in a new focus group with elise jordan. and when asked if he would vote for trump if he runs for reelection, former vice president mike pence dodges the question and instead, hint at
theater, died. no, no, no, it was a tumultuous and difficult time. that s the thing about reading your book and any history book really is that the oil painting or the statue or the story we tell ourselves is always much more complicated. how did he do it, all those factions you re talking about, forget even the south that was against him, in the north, how did lincoln pull them together. there was just enough of his kind of centrist republican sensibility to push forward. but as joe says, 39% of the vote, and heading into 1864, i think one of the most important moments in american history, arguably, have been in the middle of august, 1864. the chairman of the republican national committee, henry raymond, also the editor of the new york times, which tells you how long ago this was, goes to washington to meet with lincoln and says, if you keep
famous one named abraham lincoln. in august 1864, the height of the civil war, president lincoln addressed the 166th ohio regimen. said to the soldiers, and i quote, i happen to temporarily occupy this big white house. i am living witness that one of your children may look to come here as my father s child has. judge jackson, we are all just temporary occupants of the senate, the house, even with the lifetime appointment to the highest court in the land. you, judge jackson, are one of mr. lincoln s living witnesses of an america that is unafraid of challenge, willing to risk change, confident of the basic goodness of our citizens, and you re a living witness to the fact that in america, all is possible. and recognize my colleague and friend, ranking member senator grassley. judge jackson, congratulations. welcome to you and your family. i thank you for taking time to