oceangate, the owner of the submersible says it will suspend all operations, not much of a surprise, suspending all operations based out of everret, washington, oceangate will suspend all operations. that is out there for today and we ll see when and if they get going again. meanwhile in washington, u.s. attorney david weiss supposed to answer congress s questions on the hunter biden matter, but he will not meet that deadline and why he says he will not supply. we ll tell you. gillian. gillian: treasury secretary janet yellen is in china on a high stakes mission to try to ease tensions between washington and beijing. doug holtz-eakin is on tap to tell us what the economic implications are for this trip. she s going to end up looking like a pawn from the chinese
already arrested 200, last count, 227 known suspected terrorists off the fbi watch list. nearly 1.8 million got-aways, they chose not to turn themselves over, about he released and transported to the working where they are, and work authorization for 5 to 7 years, they paid more to get away, why. because they don t want to be vetted, don t want to be fingerprinted. gillian: another major challenge this week in the region is scorching temperatures along the southern border. this is making border patrol agents jobs a lot more stressful and more difficult. it s also really hurting migrants trying to cross into the united states there. so far in the past week 13 migrants have been found dead, according to cbp and 226
dan calls it u.s. the u.s. in the sky, you have iran probing us in the sea, and north korea as well. bill: pentagon briefing in about an hour s time. see if it s relevant when the questions are raised at the briefing. all right. 13 past the hour. what s next, gillian. gillian: reporters grilled the white house during the press briefing. trying to find out what officials know about that cocaine that was found in the west wing on sunday and when exactly they found out about it. what s the word from the white house today. are we going to get more details. bill: about a century ago after the white house had silent cal, does it now have silent joe. hitting the mute button during interesting moments. we ll talk to our political panel whether it s a good re-election strategy. talk talk too much
state went, events have been going in the wrong direction. we have had revelations of china using cuba as a base for spying, we have the u.s. taking actions to restrict access to artificial intelligence chips by china, export controls that china just announced, aimed at the u.s. semiconductor industry, so we had the president call president xi a dictator, and so she arrives at a tense moment in what was already a tense relationship. no one has high expectations, usually the staff is trying to negotiate some sort of agreement or landmark achievement that they can sign while there, that s not happening. so i think the best thing that can come of this is the two largest economies on the globe can continue to have an open dialogue about the disappointments they have with each other and the u.s. has a long list of grievances with china s behavior in trade and national security and so the dialogue would be a good thing and frankly, i think secretary
cake and taco bell. i m hungry, everything sounds amazing. lots of weddings, taco bell wedding, i ll be there. $777. here is america reports. thank you, ladies. good afternoon, cancerous chemicals potentially flooding our nation s drinking water. a new government study finding forever chemicals as they are known coming out of america s faucets with a nearly 50/50 chance it s happening in your home. they have our attention, i m bill hemmer live in new york. gillian, good to be back with you again today. hello there. gillian: nice to see you for day two, bill. welcome to america reports. according to the u.s. geological survey, up at that 45% of the faucets have pfas, only 32 can be detected in lab tests. the chemicals are linked to