and he wanted it to be true that his hand-picked attorney general would come out publicly and say that there was widespread voter fraud that would ultimately overturn the election results. and he wanted it to be true that rudy giuliani s wild suggestion that he proclaimed victory before all the votes were even counted would not be challenged by his campaign manager or any of his advisers. a group we learned today was on something called team normal. and he wanted it to be true that someone stole a second term from him, not that he just lost the election. now, these are things that he wanted to be true. but, as i said, there s a difference between believing something and wanting it to be true. now, the committee today set out to try to show the american electorate that trump couldn t possibly have actually believed any of the things he wanted to be true, not when adviser after campaign manager after campaign lawyer after deputy attorney general after attorney general after s
and so our humble team saves the day by working together. on miro. [zoom call] .pivot. work bye. vacation hi! book with priceline. cause when you save more, you can “no way!” more. no wayyyy. no waaayyy! no way! [phone ringing] hm. no way! no way! priceline. every trip is a big deal. what s on the horizon? the answers lie beyond the roads we know. we recognize that energy demand is growing, and the world needs lower carbon solutions to keep up. at chevron, we re working to find new ways forward, through investments and partnerships in innovative solutions. like renewable natural gas from cow waste, hydrogen-fueled transportation, and carbon capture. we may not know just what lies ahead, but it s only human. to search for it. the news continues. let s hand it over to laura coates and cnn tonight. anderson, thank you so much. i m laura coates and this is cnn tonight. look, there s a difference between believing something skbanting it to be true. see, donald trump
his wife giselle gave an update on his condition earlier on morning joe. he feels great. he wants to get out. they hold him longer but the surgery went great and on the way to a full recovery. democratic pennsylvania attorney general shapiro will go head to head with doug mastriano this november. in north carolina, incumbent republican congressman hawthorne lost his bid conceding to chuck head wards. let s start with nbc news national political correspondent steve kornacki at the big board. good morning. where do things stand for the senate in pennsylvania? yeah. good morning, jose. what a close one we got here. mehmet oz, that is his statewide lead is .2%. just over 2,500 votes. to keep in mind, number one, it appears that the biggest source of outstanding votes in allegheny county where pittsburgh is. it s also david mrk cormick s home county and we think 6,000 or 7,000 uncounted votes. election day votes that have not been tallied so far. in allegheny county on the
here because he s recovering from a stroke. that s his wife gisele. earlier, they laid out the stake of the race on morning joe. i don t think it s night and day, it s going to make a difference between codifying roe v. wade or looking to raise the minimum wage and addressing climate issues. it s really two different sides of the coin. in the governor s race, republican leadership is reeling, worrying about the general election now that state senator doug mastriano won the gop nomination for governor. he rose to prominence by denying the 2020 election results, big ally of donald trump. and was in washington on january 6th. some are probably worried because of all of that he s unelectable in a general against the dem-nominee ad josh shapiro. and in a blow, madison cawthorn will not be returning to congress, losing a race that many said was his to lose. steve kornacki has that on the big board. and sweden and finland just jointly submitted their applications to join n
1,000 interviews, hundreds of thousands of documents. and these public hearings will be the product of all of that hard work. so, that s what we re focused on right now, to the extent that other federal agencies are watching and tuning in, as you showed, the attorney general say, that s positive. that s good. but our task and our responsibility is to just singularly tell the truth. so, the way you ve gone about it and almost had a documentary style, you re drawing from different video tape statements, also live testimony. it s obviously been broken down between different members of the committee. what do we expect to come next? we were told today the big cliff hanger is bring in the eastman memo, work that was done, attempts to correct the department of justice. what s next? well, we re going to highlight the different pressure campaigns that the former president undertook in order to accomplish his task, his goal. and his goal was to ensure that there was not a peaceful transfer o