conversations from the past month. we begin this morning with a discussion about the potential dangers of a second trump presidency. editor in chief of the atlantic, jeffrey goldberg, recently joined us to discuss the publication s special issue, which features 24 writers each outlining the threats they say a second trump term would pose to the united states and the world. we have a lot of writer at the atlantic who spent many years covering different aspects of trump and trumpism, and i wanted just to pull them all together in one, easy to read package. one copy of the print magazine, obviously it s online right now at theatlantic.com. mm-hmm. i wanted our writers to describe, as best as they could, what would happen in their areas of expertise if trump became president again. the next trump presidency will be worse. the restraints will be off. there won t be any quote, unquote, adults in the world. mckay coppins has a piece, who will get jobs in the next trump adm
[ laughter ] it is shaping up to be a classic biden s disaster. toxic and preventable and completely off the rails. although, that family a controlled burn is what hunter feels when he [ laughter ] the town hall erupted citizens and vented their anger over the handling o f the derailed toxic train which had the media asking important questions. why didn t they wear masks or did they get their boosters? roll it. everybody is concerned. i am concerned. i speak with them everyday, they have been working with us tremendously. they should because they re the ones who screwed this up. no one knocked on my door. i live feet from the police station, why didn t sirens go off? [ bleep ] so where is our top leaders? all of this? well, president biden spoke about railroad projects on wednesday but ignored the situation in ohio. what a mistake? that s like him giving a speech on alzheimer s while not wearing any pants. we know transportation secretary mayor pete have been slow t
putin s land grab. russian president vladimir putin announces the annexation of four regions of ukraine, escalating the conflict and growing widespread condemnation from around the world. american is fully prepared to defend every single inch of nato territory. ukraine responds by asking to join nato. so how real is the nuclear threat from russia? i ll talk to nato secretary-general stoltenberg. and the two parties are divided. inflation, crime, and open borders. while democrats take a different path, centering on abortion. a cold, heartless, violent approach to women s health. new numbers from the telemundo poll. how decisive will latinos be in deciding which part controls congress? joining me are julio vacara, susan page, symone ch sanders-townsend, former chief spokeswoman for kamala harris, and steven a., editor of the dispatch. n centers the longer running show in television history, thinks meet the press with chuck todd. good sunday morning. for many
always the successful friend i have. i was going to talk about your successes over a deck raid of reporting. you covered a lot of disasters. yes, i did. i cover the coriann s wedding. does it disturb you as much as i disturbs me? they are doing a banged-up job. people will address it. it is l lli lilike a zombie apocalyps nothing happened and two days later, people are biting each other. are you looking forward to that? yes, i am. i am starting on my own. good for you, jim. that makes me happy. lydia, you are a business reporter or so you claim. this will town is getting royally screwed, right? they just came out of covid, that s going to happen to their
(soft music) welcome welcome back. in 2020, the bloc is growing. our new nbc news/telemundo polls offers some clues. republicans do believe they can make some inroads. to start, this is where democrats have an advantage. they fault between the ages every 18 and 34, only a quarter of americans overall are in that group. they re less likely to have a college degree, but it is a gap that has been closing over the last deck raid. latino voters, while they lean pretty democratic, the gap isn t