consortium of news organizations. ukraine s president zelenskyy is on the verge of disaster with ukrainian and russian forces saying the other is about to stage a nuclear incident at zaporizhzhia with russia telling its operators today not to report to work. and we ll look at the surprising senate race in pennsylvania. one of a handful of match-ups, key match-ups where democrat candidates are beating expectations in recent polls and republican leaders suggesting it s donald trump s fault for backing unqualified contenders. i think there s there s probably a greater likelihood that the house flips than the senate. the senate races are just different. they re statewide. candidate quality has a lot to do with the outcome. we begin with nbc justice and intelligence correspondent ken dilanian, and david loftman, chief of counterintelligence at the justice department s national security department. many legal experts were quite surprised by the judge s ruling and that tru
addressed the media calling the attack an affront to democracy and freedom to speech. the suspect, a man in his 40s, was arrested on the spot, in possession of what nhk is describing as a handmade gun. he made no attempt to flee before being swarmed by the security detail. witnesses say abe was shot from behind, he didn t collapse after the first shot, but did collapse after the second shot before receiving cpr. while controversial figure here in japan at times, abe is an incredibly important figure, not only here in japan, but around the world, and news of this shooting has absolutely sent shock waves around the nation, and the world. hours following this shooting, many have taken to social media to say that they hoped at the time that he would pull through with many calling today s shooting a barbaric act that shakes the root of democracy, saying that whether or not you agree with this political stances, violence to suppress political stances is unacceptable. and i mentione
the president and his team send out multiple emails a day, dozens of them seeking donations and they re getting them. the money is flowing in. and so, what we ve seen is that the support that the president feels that he s getting from his base, even those who maybe were on the fence about him in recent months, that it s pouring in. the belief among the president and his team is that republicans are rallying around him. that this is something that he likes, it s a fight, they like to see him in a fight. they like to see him fighting particularly washington institutions. this goes back to the reason why they supported president trump in the first place back in 2016. so, what you re seeing is a number of republicans who support the president, former president, coming out and saying they back him and showing that they do with this money he s been raising. david, were you at all
justice will find you wherever you are. and that our government will hold you accountable for your crimes against our citizens. diane foley, who has been so heroic. thank you, ken. ken, carol, david, thank you very much for being here. a potential nuclear disaster in europe. a ukraine power plant in the middle of a high-stakes feud that could send radioactive materials sweeping across europe and the rest of the world. what s being done to prevent that from happening. you re watching andrea mitchell reports. stay with us. ith us largest and fastest 5g network. but, they don t. they only cover select cities with 5g. so, for me and the hundreds of drivers in my fleet, staying connected, cutting downtime, and delivering on time depends on t-mobile 5g. and with coverage of over 96% of interstate highway miles, they ve got us covered. (vo) unconventional thinking delivers four times the 5g coverage of
we don t know if they will lead to charges, but there s growing concern about his current predicament. david, who followed the paper trail on trump s exaggerated philanthropic claims and he s using the same style and attitude in his public approach to these documents. i think you re right. he often makes grand claims about things and often gives multiple claims. as jonathan said, in the hopes that something will stick with somebody. that was the case with his charitable contributions. he would make all kinds of claims about giving to this or that, and almost all of it wasn t true. i see that as an approach of his, if not to win the argument but to confuse the argument enough that people are not sure what to believe. i hope your viewer the and generals are used to this playbook now and it s not shockingly as new and hard to process as when trump first came on the political scene. talk about allen weisselberg