David with National Security team covering issues like the strategy in afghanistan and the threat of a nuclear north korea. Donald trump does better than anybody else to sell his policies. He is the salesman. He is the deal closer. Steve 6 01 in new york city on saturday morning. We start with a fox news alert. Two Police Officers ambushed and shot overnight. One of those officers is dead. Abby it happened at kissimmee, florida outside of orlando. The officer injured in that shooting is now fighting for his life. Todd ellison barber is in d. C. With the very latest. Good morning. Good morning, yall. Three suspects are in custody. Police say right now they are looking for a fourth. Police chief jeff odel says the officers were responding to reports of suspicious persons when they came under fire shortly before 9 30 p. M. The chief says his officers responded to the initial call at approximately 9 27. Five minutes later, at 9 32, the first call came in for an officer down. Both officers
Campaign staff believed not only would donald trump not be president , he probably should not be. And to say that trump knew nothing, nothing at all about the basic intellectual functions of the job was a comic understatement. And of inauguration day, nearly one year ago, throughout the morning he was visibly fighting with his wife, who seemed on the verge of tears. The white house is now firing back that bannon has lost his mind. But not everything in this book appears to come from bannon. Were one hour out of the Daily Briefing at the white house, and that could be interesting to say the least. Lets get right to it with our team of reporters. Nbc news intelligence and National Security reporter ken dlanian joins us from our d. C. Bureau. Nbcs Hallie Jackson is at the white house. Also in Washington White House bureau chief for the Washington Post and msnbc political analyst phil rucker. Ken, lets start with this don junior meeting. This idea that bannon says it was treasonous for don
Strategy so far that the president s legal team is taking when it comes to this book, fire and fury. Hallie, it is a battle and war that is escalating by the minute. Just moments ago, as you said, we have confirmed that President Trumps legal team sent a cease and desist order to that book and the publisher. I have it right here in my hands. Let me read you a little bit of it, hallie. In your upcoming book, fire and fury we are identifying false and baseless statements that youre making about mr. Trump. Theyre essentially trying to get the publisher and author to hold off on publishing this. This follows a cease and desist order that was sent to steve bannon overnight. You have breached the agreement by communicating with author Michael Wolff disclosing confidential information and making disparaging and, in some cases, outright defamatory statements to mr. Wolff about mr. Trump, his family members and the company. Of course, some of the most inflammatory statements cited in that book
Steve Timms From a 16 year old apprentice to delivering contracts worth billions, in-Cumbria speaks to new BAE boss Steve Timms about the future of Barrow shipyard in its 150th year. This year BAE plans to recruit another 850 apprentices, the majority of them in the north of England. It’s a recruitment scheme Steve Timms, the new managing director of BAE Systems Submarines, strongly believes in. After all, he worked his way up from entering British Aerospace’s apprenticeship scheme at the age of 16 with eight ‘good’ O-Levels to overseeing billion-pound defence contracts and employing thousands of people. “I was a bit fed up of school,” he said. “I was my father’s disappointment,” he jokes, saying he had two brothers at university but decided to follow his dad into British Aerospace where he became a craft apprentice. He quickly moved off the shopfloor and into management. After a decade learning on the job he attended the University of Warwick to do a Ma
Steve Timms From a 16 year old apprentice to delivering contracts worth billions, in-Cumbria speaks to new BAE boss Steve Timms about the future of Barrow shipyard in its 150th year. This year BAE plans to recruit another 850 apprentices, the majority of them in the north of England. It’s a recruitment scheme Steve Timms, the new managing director of BAE Systems Submarines, strongly believes in. After all, he worked his way up from entering British Aerospace’s apprenticeship scheme at the age of 16 with eight ‘good’ O-Levels to overseeing billion-pound defence contracts and employing thousands of people. “I was a bit fed up of school,” he said. “I was my father’s disappointment,” he jokes, saying he had two brothers at university but decided to follow his dad into British Aerospace where he became a craft apprentice. He quickly moved off the shopfloor and into management. After a decade learning on the job he attended the University of Warwick to do a Ma