eastern. our thanks to you for let us into your home. we are so grateful. the beat with ari melber starts now. thank you. i ll see you tonight. i want to mention to viewers nicolle was just reporting on the new u.s. air strikes in syria. we have more on that later but we begin with the big political news right now in america. so tonight i say welcome to the beat with ari melber, and welcome to the beat with james carville, one of our special leadoff guests as we track what is clearly a political earthquake in america. democrats surging to victories as these results poured a win for conservative ohio that s upending politics across that state and the nation today. it puts pressure on the republicans who are squaring off in tonight s debate as nicolle just mentioned. this was a moment that was supposed to go different little you re looking at live shots where they re supposed to be talking. it was a moment the republicans were hoping to discuss better news. but right no
After 2,600 years, women read Torah in Tbilisi for the first time
forward.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from forward.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
a donation to my opponents are not the same donation to me, that would be any legal contribution and we will review our options about the way twitter has treated us. so much talk about social media here in washington has been about russia used it to metal and was election interference being discussed today originate at the kremlin, it came from california. mike? mike: peter doocy reporting on capitol hill. conservative ohio congressman jim jordan wants to be the next speaker of the house next year. jordan made the announcement last night and sent his letter to colleagues today. jordan is a former chairman of the house the house freedom caucus and he faces a likely competition from with steve s colleagues. house republicans are divided tonight over impeachment proceedings against the number two official in the justice department. chief intelligence correspondent catherine herridge looks at both