and this time instead the wall street journal broke< ■ thewm+■ that david ñipecker helpedxd ca and killñr stories about trump d wa hush money payments to trump sxi which brings us to this week. whether to charge trump for his role in thos=d hush money
pounce he knew kelly was angry an hope she would finally agree t roll on ira. he offered her a plea deal and exchange for testifyin against ira, she would get 1 years in prison with a chanc for parole in four her attorney jonathan reps explains why she took the deal i am fairly confident the judge would give her close t the max which would be 2 years. that s an awfully long time. the pleating felt safe? anything involving stat prison, that s years in length it s going to be an ugly number the alternative had there been a conviction would have been much more drastic. with the police in place, kell was set to be the prosecutio star witness against ira in this twisted tale of gree and lies, could anyone b trusted? coming up, answering for the past what i did was wrong. thinking about the future some people call this a twisted love story
one side of our politics lawrence, that intentional. right? i, mean the republicans cannot achieve a majority anymore so they are anti majorit party. we see that with their efforts to use the filibuster in the senate to stop with th majority of americans want the suppress voter turnout because a majority would defeat them and they tell these lies about voting systems so that peopl think their vote doesn t count and they stay at home. but what i also saw was th frustration that, you know, as a lot more is going to come out, that the most powerful perso in the world used his power or not for the good of the nation not for the good of the people of georgia but in hi persistence and hi determination and this desperation, he came so clos to depriving each of those jurors and each georgian o having their vote counted. and we know, donald trump is a repeat offender. and if he is given the chanc
lawrence, that is intentional. right? i mean, the republicans cannot achieve a majority anymore so they are anti majorit party. we see that with their efforts to use the filibuster in the senate to stop what th majority of americans want the suppress voter turnout because a majority would defeat them and they tell these lies about voting systems so that peopl think their vote doesn t count and they stay at home. but what i also saw was th frustration that, you know, as a lot more is going to come out, that the most powerful perso in the world used his power or not for the good of the nation not for the good of the people of georgia but in hi persistence and hi determination and this desperation, he came so clos to depriving each of those jurors and each georgian o having their vote counted. and we know, donald trump is a repeat offender. and if he is given the chanc to do that again he will get better at it and h will be more persistent, mor determined, more desperate, an
presence there most of the work is done outside of that town however, they are headquartere there. and that is why their case i brought their. i think some people who are watching this might be wondering how an fda approve drug, that has been used for over 20 years, how is it possible to challenge th safety of a drug that has been widely used for so long now? yes, of course, let s g through the basic, basic arguments for the plaintiffs they are saying this drug neve should ve been approved. there was not enough consideration given to how i would affect younger people. of course, with what the fda and other intervenors ar saying, this has been on the market for more than 20 years. if we thought there were significant safety issues, the would have risen now, we don t know the judge will decide. you know, there is a chanc that he ultimately agrees with the plaintiffs but it s hard to say this will stop medication abortions in right here on msnbc. the rachel maddow show starts right no