just a moment. right now, as well, millions of people across the country and around the world, really, continuing to experience this dangerously high temperatures. we re going to break down the latest on the sweltering heat wave and what can be done. also, to capitol hill. democrats in the house eyeing a measure to ban assault weapons, but the bill facing pretty strong opposition from republicans and slim odds of passing in the senate. we ll talk about that. we re going to speak with the highland park mayor who testified before the senate about her town s recent tragedy. that s coming up. hey, everybody. we re going to begin this hour in washington, where ten hours from now, the house january 6th committee is going to hold its latest hearing in prime-time, a season finale of sorts to this initial batch of hearings, with even more expected later on this year, possibly in the fall. tonight s hearing is going to dive into those crucial 187 minutes the committee says it took
marriage. how that will play out in the senate, why do they even need to do it. the 11th hour gets underway on this tuesday night. good evening, once again, i am stephanie ruhle, live at msnbc headquarters here in new york city. the january 6th committee gathers more evidence ahead of thursday s primetime hearing. the secret service is coming under some major scrutiny tonight over missing text messages from january 5th and sixth. on friday, the committee issued a subpoena for those messages after inspector general notified them that they had been deleted. today, nbc news learned the agency, now, has said they have no new text related to the attack to give house members, meaning they can t find any of them. the secret services they lost the texts as part of a technology upgrade. they received for requests from congressional committees on january 16th to preserve records, and they had this planned migration for the 25th, i believe, of january. nobody along the way stopped a
thursday s primetime hearing. the secret service is coming under some major scrutiny tonight over missing text messages from january 5th and sixth. on friday, the committee issued a subpoena for those messages after inspector general notified them that they had been deleted. today, nbc news learned the agency, now, has said they have no new text related to the attack to give house members, meaning they can t find any of them. the secret services they lost the texts as part of a technology upgrade. they received for requests from congressional committees on january 16th to preserve records, and they had this planned migration for the 25th, i believe, of january. nobody along the way stopped and thought, well, maybe we shouldn t do the migration of data and of the devices until we are able to fulfill these requests. their process, as explained to us, was simply to leave it to the agent to determine whether or not there was anything on their phones worth saving that was necess
construction here manufacture and you go back and ask all the people who grew up in this beautiful place what they d rather have. do they want the plant back with everything it had or what you re going to have? i will be dumbfounded if you find anybody other than for pure sentimental reasons saying, i would rather have a coal plant. i ll end by telling you another quick story. when we moved from scranton when coal died in scranton, everything died in scranton. and my dad was a coal miner. my great grandfather was a mining engineer. but my dad was in sales. and there was no work, so we left to go down to delaware. i told you where those oil plants were. but i remember driving home, when you take the trolly in scranton, going out north washington and adams avenues, within 15 blocks we didn t live in the most prestigious neighborhood in the region, in the town, where the scrantons and other good decent people live there was a you would go buy a wall that my recollection
country where more than 95% of buildings don t have air conditioning. forecasters have now been forced to improvise as they deal with the kind of heat they never thought they d see. a number of people have been saying maps in the past never looked this dark, they haven t because we have never seen temperatures as high as this in the uk before. this color scale was designed to not show temperatures like this for the uk. even the maps are not prepared for this. lots to talk about. tim miller is a writer at large for the bull work and msnb political analyst. these temperatures are insane. frankly we are not built for them, we re not built for the impact if they keep getting worse. after years of you and your colleagues warning about climate change, what is your message now today? the message is that this is what we anticipated. it s exactly what we saw coming. and there hasn t been a more urgent plan to act than now. we have such a short window to curb off this dangerous t