today on the program, election day in america is almost upon us. we are going to bring it. at stake, control of congress. it s a choice. between two vastly different visions for america. will the democrats lose their slim majority? i will talk to bill maher about what tuesday s results will mean for the next two years. then the u.n. s annual climate conference began today in egypt. a damning new report tells us the world won t come close to meeting its temperature target for the end of the century. but in all the gloom, there is some good news about climate action. i will talk to an expert. and left wing populism beat out right wing populism in brazil last week, but can lula succeed in getting the economy to grow and bringing the country back together when he comes to power? we ll explore. first, here s my take. as an immigrant to america who has traveled a great deal around the world, i ve always been certain that america was the best place for people hike me.
there are not two bra sayles. there are two brazils, unfortunately, he s already trying to find that center on the social sides of things. i do think we are going to see in his cabinet, it s going to be more incremental and see him try to reform the center. that polarization is still there. in fact, we ve seen it this last week in brazil with truckers and others blocking the roads and many protests appearing. so it will be a huge challenge for his administration. one of the big differences people are expecting is that bolsonaro seemed unconcerned about climate change, was more than happy to continue deforesting the amazon, all that kind of thing. and lula has criticized that and promised to change. but there is a fundamental problem. brazil is a huge agricultural exporter. a lot of the kind of policies that have made it hard to achieve climate goals are stuff that helps brazil s economy. i think this is one of the