court in our land in the first place. the decision is set to have major legal political, social and cultural fallout. shannon bream, chief legal correspondent, is with us now. as we get going here and i was just reading about this. there are states now that are already starting to trigger their bans against abortion. we saw this coming. i would like to start there and explain how that happens expeditiously. a number of these states planned ahead and that s on both ends of the spectrum on the issue of abortion rights. sometimes they will restrict everything before a heartbeat and exceptions or not. those state laws are ready to kick in. some passed in anticipation of what would happen potentially today. there are other states on the other end of the spectrum. i cited colorado as one of these states where they passed laws wanting to extend abortion rights to women. basicically there you can get an abortion up to the end of your pregnancy. the laws have already been passed and
that . oh my god . i was screaming reading that . well, pretty much sums it up, doesn t it? now there are a lot of shiny objects being dangled in front of us lately by the democrats and a few of those demented have never trump . and i m here tonight to tell you that none of them will have any measurable effect on the midterms or really change the public s realization that under democrat leadership america is just going down the tubes. now the first attempt, a distraction or shiny object. a former aide to mark meadows, cassidy hutchinson was slotted into what was billed as a special super duper special session of the january six committee today. and i spoke with some former white house staffers, three or four of them in the afternoon and they knew her well and not one person had anything good to say about her performance today because they watched especially the second hand claim supposedly from tony arenado, another trump aide that was supposedly one of their big blockbusters
Illinois State Representative District 82 candidate, Nicole La Ha Zwiercan, expressed gratitude for the success of the inaugural "Heels for the House" fundraiser hosted by House Republican Leader Tony McCombie (R-Savanna).
back in the beginning part of his presidency 73%. from july to august of 202169%. f 2021 to 2022, 52%. now just 46%. i am not sure i would have ever imagined a few years ago that a democratic president would have this low of an approval rating among hispanic. latino voters are still expected to vote as a majority for democrats, but in the margins republican gains could mean the difference between winning and losing congress. one place where that shift is dramatic is south texas. they elected a republican in rio grande valley for the first time in a century. congresswoman flores. what are the polls telling us about the race for congress? how does biden s low approval rating among hispanic translate in a choice for congress? from october of 2016, you see
but it s never goofod for an incumbent to almost barely scrape by in a primary before a general remember, like. a couple of years ago wheney sai they said, well, beto o rourked is going to be at the forefront outside better flipping texas to blue .ne i mean, that so was i think we w that headline so many times. k do you think pieces that we have, mendola, the new beddoe of wisconsin, it s the same story. let s stay in south texas where gop congresswoman flores is battling that democrat congressman vicentg.e gonzalez.e that s the third or fourth district. now she s running for her first full term after she won that special election. we all reportem afted on it.. this really does seem like a hispanic wave in some sections of the country for republican s. yes.st m yes.exic i think the first mexican-american woman elected to congress for the speciagressl term, she s the first democrathr republican in history, elected to herd congressional seat .ssa now, because of rewriting these two i