special coverage on the new hampshire primary is starting right now. just, no forceable cast ballots in the first-in-the-nation primary. you know that new hampshire is just the second contests of the 2024 election cycle, it can very well be the end of the republican race. yes, the primary base could be wrapped up tomorrow night before january even comes to a close. of course, it s naturally over. until it s over. as of last night, the florida governor ron desantis dropping, out this is now finally the one-on-one race that nikki haley has wanted, the one she s been asking for. right now, on the eve of this new hampshire primary, she s the only one is still standing between donald trump and the republican nomination. she is also currently 19 points behind him in the latest new hampshire tracking poll, just out this morning. what does nikki haley have to justify sticking in the race after tomorrow? that seems to be the million dollar question. 4 million dollar question. can sh
all five people, including a 19-year-old, on board a titanic tourist submerible died while diving toward the ship s wreckage. it comes as we re learning the u.s. navy may have actually picked up the implosion sounds on its underwater microphones. meanwhile, there are more prominent voices criticizing the vessel, pointing out its fatal flaws. james cameron, yeah. also ahead, we re going to go through indian prime minister modi s state visit at the white house and the impact it could have on u.s. relations with other world powers. plus, two outspoken, far right republicans trying to rewrite history on capitol hill. we ll explain. and is it possible? tomorrow marks the one year since the overturning of roe. we ll take a look at new polling on the supreme court s decision. good morning and welcome to morning joe. it is friday, june 23rd. good to have you with us. also with us, we have the host of way too early and white house bureau chief at politico, jonathan lem
decisions in minutes with major cases like affirmative action, student loans and lgbtq rights still undecided. this as tomorrow marks one year since the most consequential decision in a generation. it was devastating on top of terrifying, on top of infuriating. one year after the court overturned roe, where the battle over reproductive rights stands today. also ahead, the titan tragedy, what went wrong, and did the navy know the search was hopeless before anyone else? plus, if you ve been waiting to buy or sell, you don t want to miss this. more on a shake-up in the housing market that we haven t seen in a decade. let s begin this morning at the supreme court where, again, we re awaiting news any moment with the court s term winding down, we could get decisions on some major cases, on affirmative action, lgbtq+ rights and student loans. while we wait, we can t forget the significance that tomorrow will bring, one year since the overturning of roe v. wade, a year tha
a new wave of deadly attacks on civilians. does a weakened vladimir putin and a divided russian military help ukraine? to the extent moscow is distracted by its own internal divisions, it may help. it s early days. i think this will play out over the next weeks and months. president biden is in chicago to deliver a key economic policy address as the white house crafts a strategy to combat the growing concerns among voters over the president s age. good day, everyone. i m andrea mitchell in new york today. former president trump s explanation for the leaked audio recording from bedminster, where he appears to be showing a classified document about the war in iran to people with security clearances at his new jersey golf resort or people without security clearances, of course. that s evolving by the day with two new lines of defense on tuesday. first in new hampshire, to fox news digital. a whole desk full of lots of papers, mostly newspaper articles, copies of maga
shut down, in some cases, doctors stopped performing what had been routine medical care out of fear of litigation or imprisonment, leaving some women with life altering conditions and scarring, both physical and emotional. on the broad end, more than 25 million women of child bearing age from 14 to 44 live in states where it is hard or impossible to get full reproductive care. millions more say those restrictions and bans go too far. by more than a two to one ratio, voters say abortion access across the country has become too difficult, rather than too easy. when put directly to the people, abortion access has largely been a winning issue. we ve seen it time and time again. but when left to state lawmakers, buffeted by the safety of their gerrymandered districts, that access has been rolled back systematically. do those truths hold? how long will abortion be a motivating issue. and are those districts really all that safe when the vast majority of women and most men say lawma