it s upended the case, upended the week, and we have put together a new video crash course of what s been going down, and why it matters. take a look. video recorded statements to prosecutors have leaked. this sort of evidence is basically how prosecutors are going to tear down trump s defense piece by piece. that is a devastating blow for the former president. sharply incriminating information. he said the boss is not going to leave under any circumstances. the only time you want to hear somebody say the boss is not going to leave is after if third encore of a bruce springsteen concert right before the opening notes of thunder road. surprising? no. unhappy? yes. i m not happy you and your colleague got to do the story. all his instincts told him he was defrauded, that the the election was a big fraud. making sure that everyone that is involved in the criminal enterprise is held responsible. there was a big shouting match in which rudy called me every name
judge chutkan might rule on this? i think those are very different questions. the rules and federal courts are clear. cameras are prohibited. media groups have come in and they have argued a couple of different things, and one is that the rule is unconstitutional, that it violates first amendment rights so judge chutkan should set it aside. the other is a technical argument about the nature of broadcast which says that this can be done in a way that wouldn t violate the rule. i think it s unlikely that judge chutkan would go ahead and alter the long-standing practice in federal court, but that s very unfortunate because this is a case that should be put on television so that everyone can see it as it happens. the real problem is that donald trump s response in this case, this sort of last-minute response that he files, saying they jacks mitt is engaging in a show trial that he wants to conduct under cover of darkness, is really nothing other than theater because that is sim
tonight. she s the chair of the usually obscure senate rules committee i know where you re going with this one. it did the weirdest thing today. the senate rules committee voted to change a senate rule and so we ve got to hear about that. don t do that every day. they sure don t. and it s a good tease, lawrence. it took the madness of tuberville to provoke the senate rules committee to actually vote to change a senate rule. the madness of tuberville could be a three by bbc series but unfortunately it s an american drama playing out in real life, right here. it will be the title of a limited series at some point. i am sure. thanks, alex. today, in response to leaks of prosecution video interviews in the case of georgia versus don trump and multiple codefendants, just attorney fani willis did exactly, and i mean exactly, what joyce vance predicted she would do last night on this program. there wasn t a formal protective order in place that i think we ll see
wider women s summit making news about this issue. our job in the news is to make sure we report everything that we have. we have a denial there from the d.a. we have an accusation that it came from somewhere else. we don t have confirmation of where this came from, and even if the d.a. is telling what she believes is the truth, that she no one she knows did this, that doesn t mean they didn t. if you re in the d.a. s office, this stuff is coming out and you re going, okay, gear up for another big day, because this complicates matters. the testimony shows a lot. when you re covering this trial, the first headline is there is bad news for those remaining defendants holding out. we ve shown you the chart where you have key figures that face heat for the coup, in georgia and in the open jack smith case in d.c., where they re technically called unindicted coconspirators, but all that means is they could get indicted later. eastman, now face this newly revealed testimony from th
you re going to see her in a few moments on video explaining this to georgia prosecutors. we re just making sense of it, and we have that for you this hour as well as something else, quite special, a brand new interview with legendary journalist, bob woodward. we caught up with him in washington for the summit series that debuts tonight. this is brand new. we were work in georgetown near his home where he took me through his personal library. we get a look inside the home library and a political journalistic history that we can tell you quite clearly, you will not see anywhere else. tonight, that s coming up, bob woodward new on the beat. all the heat on donald trump, from the coup news i just mentioned to why historians and other experts say there s a very certain way you have to confront some of what he said this weekend. our top story right now is the big news out of the supreme court which has been absolutely under fire for months over the revelations that justice cla