outrage. i m used to the lies. i m not used to cruelty. can the bill pass this week? dennis mcdonagh will be here and the changing globe. heat waves and natural disasters raise pressure to act on the climate crisis. with some falling short, will it be too late? i ll ask the new australian prime minister in his exclusive first u.s. interview ahead. hello, i m jake tapper in washington where the state of our union is wondering if political tides may be turning. president biden is back in isolation this morning after testing positive with a rebound case of covid after being treated with paxlovid, though his doctor says he no longer has any symptoms. this time biden does have some good news to mull over. first, the bipartisan passage of the bill to boost competition with china on the manufacturing of semiconductors and second a sudden possible deal in congress on a massive plan to begin to tackle the climate crisis, high drug prices and address big companies that avoid taxe
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
president biden. will it change how voters are feeling about him these days? the president tours flood-ravaged kentucky today in his first trip in weeks. and the mayor of albuquerque believes the muslim men killed in his city were targeted. the hunt are for the killer is now on. that s what we are watching at this hour. thank you for being here. i m indkate bolduan. a legislative victory that has the potential to redefine the president s legacy and boost his sagging approval ratings less than 100 days out from the midterm elections. the senate passed what they have called the inflation reduction act without a single republican vote. the landmark bill now heads to the house. they are set to vote on it on friday. the bill includes nearly $370 billion to combat the climate crisis, the largest such investment in u.s. history. it also includes significant tax and health policies in there, such as giving medicare the power for the first time to negotiate the prices of certain p