sandra: america reports with the justice department last hour submitting proposed redactions to the affidavit used as the basis of the search of former president trump s florida home. now it s up to a federal judge to determine how much of that document the public will actually get to see. hello, welcome, everyone. i m sandra smith in new york. happy friday eve. john: as we like to call it around here, that s what thursday is. good to see you, sandra. the federal judge who approved the warrant to search mar-a-lago is set to weigh the pros and cons of releasing portions of the affidavit. the judge acknowledged heavy redactions to make the document in essence meaningless. justice department maintaining it could be dangerous to release any part of the affidavit saying it could compromise the investigations. republicans, along with several news organizations are pressing for more information about what prompted the unprecedented search of a former president s home. sandra
traffic, a challenge for electrically-powered cars. jonathan, thanks. what i think is interesting, sandra, some manufacturers of future electric vehicles like dodge are going to give them exhaust pipes that make them sound like gas-powered cars. sandra: amazing. there s a large chunk of the e.v. car purchasers who actually give back their electric vehicles, they get frustrated, don t have access to charge their vehicles, it s frustrating for long road trips, there is some estimates a fifth of the e.v. buyers actually return the vehicles for gas vehicles. there is that, the grid problem and how much electricity we can possibly provide and john, if anything happens to the grid, what happens then? the lithium we count on china in large part for and the cost of those e.v. vehicles, all huge obstacles, a lot of this in the wall street journal, coming up. john: and the alaskan governor has a lot of thoughts