as we approach the 21st anniversary of 9/11 this sunday, it is america now standing with the british commonwealth, as it mourns the loss of its longest reigning monarch, queen elizabeth ii. this morning, we will remember her legacy and discuss the future of the british monarchy under the reign of king charles iii. good morning and welcome to morning joe. it is friday, september 9th. along with joe, willie, and me, we have u.s. special correspondent for bbc news, katty kay. presidential historian and rogers chair in the american presidency at vanderbilt university, jon meacham. and the host of way too early, white house bureau chief at politico, jonathan lemire is with us. the other big stories we re following this morning, and there are many, the justice department appeals the decision to grant a special master in the investigation into donald trump s handling of classified documents. former trump adviser steve bannon indicted in new york city as he turned himself i
right now, london was bombed. she gave the radio address, god willing, all will be well. she was reassuring us when she was 14 years old. i think that, in this case, the child was the father of the woman. let me read one thing, if i can. mika will probably doze off. i m good. she ll give me a second. mika is kind of like the queen, she watches this and tries to, you know, endure. so here s what churchill said. this is a paragraph that he put in or suggested to the queen for her coronation address on the night she became queen. she was crowned in westminster abby. she s gone through this sacred right, been elevated to basically being one of god s