the january 6th committee. that house committee is still at work. one of the washington post reporters behind the latest january 6th scoop will join us. plus, for the first time we re learning of the secret scramble on the day of the insurrection, prompted by something president trump said and something the house committee is now investigating. also, the race to lead the country s second biggest city going down to the wire, a billionaire businessman up against someone who at one point was reportedly on the short list for president biden s vp. we have a lot to get to. i want to bring in garrett haake, along with white house correspondent carol lee. i want to start with you, cara. at times briefings can be somewhat lighthearted. now this one. matthew mccoy hi had a very clear and emotional message not just to the audience in the briefing room, but presumably the audience watching live across the country. that s right, hallie, he made an impassioned plea to pass legislat
end of issue. it s the on the ground experience of voters here. as d.a. bodine mentioned there, auto theft is one of the top categories, that touches every category and economic strata of the city. he s suffering from a terrible lack of cooperation from the san francisco police department, which as openly spoken of real tension between his office, one that predates his time here, but right now there s a literal lack of cooperation between the two. so we really are looking at this big picture of real dysfunction when it comes to law enforcement and prosecution here in san francisco. the question now becomes, does this become a referendum on progressive justice reform across the country? the d.a. definitely argues this is within the playbooks of law
about an hour, and we ll try to catch that. if you get to rick caruso, we will take that, too. jacob, you re in san francisco, where there s a d.a. recall race. let me stay here, because it looks like she s heading out. i can t tell geographically where your camera person is, but i know you re close. i want to let you do your thing here, as she walks out after casting her ballot. go ahead. reporter: i m right in front of here. i cannot speak to her. i m not allowed. good to know. reporter: yes, just so you know, her campaign is very, very clear about that, but you see her meeting and greeting people here at the mall. this is her district. okay. reporter: you can see her face in all window sills around
enforcement. we ll see a possible law in the books in illinois being considered that would allow the people to recall the progress i have d.a. in cook county, chicago. so we re seeing a move away from what has been the reformist attitudes we saw coming out of majority floyd case and others, and how this becomes a set of political tactics, and whether by all accounts here, a very cutting-edge d.a., whether he can survive this recall vote. we re going to talk a quick break, but more than 100 days of the russian invasion of ukraine, and a possible cholera outbreak in mariupol.
we suspect that that is one reason why not just the georgia d.a. who you referenced is investigating this, but the federal department of justice is doing so as well. talk about that fulton county d.a. because your reporting says she s also investigating whether the appointment of these fake trump electors broke state law according to some of your sources. explain the link between her investigation and this reporting here. we know that that d.a. s investigation has been ongoing for quite a while, and she s looking at a number of different things, not just this elector. in some respect, the one that feels as though it might be heating up a little bit is the fbi and the justice department. our reporting also shows that there are a number of people involved with this effort who have received recent subpoenas from the justice department and been requested for interview, in particular there were a group of people who were supposed to be trump electors but didn t show up that day, either