fireworks as they investigate into elon musk and his purchase of twitter. live, president biden will be holding a news conference with the president of the finland that is nato s newest member. cocaine in the white house how it got there and who is to blame, congress looking for answers in a closed-door briefing by the secret service as a biden administration to insist while questions from the news media. welcome to a brand-new wall as america s newsroom. i am dana perino. lindamood and i like it. i like your. your funny. don t you think this he could knows by now, if they are there not telling us because right now that briefings people what they ve learned on the coke from last week last week in the west wing. the presence of illegal drugs raising questions of the level of security maintained in the white house, and a discovery that white powder forcing the evacuation of the entire building. now lawmakers are hoping the secret service can identify the culprit.
designed to create diverse student bodies at our countries colleges and universities. we re going to talk about why that ruling is so much better than just a college admission process. plus, the conservative-leaning court also presided president biden s debt forgiveness plan was unlawful, which means payments will default again soon. we are talking to biden s domestic policy chief about what the president can do to still give americans some form of relief for their student loan debt and much more. and when it comes to this idea of color blindness the conservatives want you to believe is their way of not seeing race as a factor in legislation or policymaking. well, i say they are lying. i ll explain why later this hour. i am symone sanders-townsend, folks, live from new orleans, today. hey essence. and i have got something to say. elections have consequences, and supreme court rulings have ramifications. millions of americans will soon feel the consequences of this n
doesn t care about the profitability and doesn t care we have to bear an on board government enforcement agent more than the crew will make. will they real in the regulators. these cases deal with fishermen but the ruling could impact a lot more across american industry as we say hello. back in new york, bill hemmer, here we go. had a good time in iowa? dana: i m dana perino. this is america s newsroom. yes, i m glad to be back in my own bed. i could have used three more hours of sleep. i love this supreme court case. it is a big one. it might sound small but it could change everything in d.c. and federal agencies are watching it closely. this one commercial fishermen are fighting the government on a rule forces them to help fund a federal conservation program costing ships $7 hundred per day and experts say that could bankrupt the entire industry. let s get to the chief legal correspondent shannon bream at the supreme court. do you share my enthusiasm? dana, you know
hello and welcome everyone. i m michael holmes in atlanta. appreciate your company. we begin with breaking news, and concerns about a possible widening of conflict in the middle east. the u.s. and uk have been striking houthi targets in yemen following a surge of attacks by the iran-backed rebels against commercial vessels in the red sea. have a look at these images that came in a short time ago, showing american fighter jets taking off from the uss eisenhower aircraft carrier. a senior u.s. military official says it is unclear what percentage of who the assets were destroyed inside yemen, but said the amount was significant. houthis say they retaliated. we are told u.s. and coalition forces hit more than 60 targets at 16 of the locations, and those targets included the militants radar systems along with storage and launch sites for ballistic myself, cruise missiles, and drones. i can show you where they are located. you can see there on the map, the u.s. has carried out s
the country, including a former president, was the subject of a hearing today in a federal courthouse in washington, d.c. attorneys for donald trump and federal prosecutors argued over trump s claim that the federal election case against him should be dismissed because everything he did in the postelection period was in his official capacity as president. the three-judge panel that is hearing the case appeared spectacle of that claim. the ex-president and jack smith were in the courtroom today. trump has been claiming that president joe biden has been forcing him to appear in court, which is not true, he did have no obligation to appear at today s hearing. trump s attorney argued that allowing the prosecution of donald trump would, quote, open a pandora s box, but the judge has pushed back on that and many of the arguments he was making. trump s lawyer also argued that the president could only be prosecuted if he was impeached and convicted by the senate first, no matter what