the attorney general s a.p. interview. and had thrown his lunch against the wall. literally calling for the vice president to be f ing hung. and mark had responded something to the effect of, you heard it, pat. he thinks mike deserves it. said something to the effect of, and very cheerily, mark, something needs to be done or people are going to die and the blood is going to be on your f hands. some of the most explosive moments from yesterday s sixth hearing on the capitol attack. good morning and welcome to way too early on this wednesday, june 29th. i m katty kay in for jonathan lemire. a former west wing aide delivered bomb shell testimony at yesterday s last-minute january 6th hearing. cassidy hutchinson testified that donald trump and chief of staff mark meadows ignored warnings about potential violence before the attack and did nothing to stop it once the attack was under way. according to hutchinson, trump knew there were weapons in the crowd. but during his spe
overturned roe v. wade. ever since we ve seen trigger laws across the country going into effect. we ve seen celebration from those who wanted roe to be overturned. you ve all seen protests from those who didn t. it s been triggering. antiabortion activists have been accused of being cruel and controlling. abortion rights activists have been accused of exaggerating the harm of overturning roe v. wade. even been accused of concocting victims whose stories will pull on the heartstrings of america. including the accused of concocting the story of a ten year old girl who was raped and forced to take an abortion outside of her own state. because men, a story like that would really prove the problem of having no exceptions with abortion bans. or blame the bands themselves. but the truth is, this case gained national attention since president biden referred to the little girl while discussing abortion rights actions. telling the story of how she had to cross state lines from ohio to
also, it s already pushing 100 degrees in las vegas, and it s only going to get worse. the stark new warning on global temperatures from the united nation, and who officials there think should foot the bill in the fight. our nbc news reporters are following all of the latest developments and we begin with msnbc legal correspondent lisa rubin on trump s new york gag order. so trump s lawyers are asking the judge to lift the order. the d.a. is opposing it. what are we expecting here? well, the d.a. s office, chris, has let the judge know that they would like to submit real briefs, meaning extended argument with case citations and the like on june 13th and june 27th. those are not coincidentally the same dates that briefs are due first from trump s lawyers and then from the d.a. with respect to his sentence. what i think will happen here is that the gag order will remain in place but will be significantly narrowed, and when i think about who will be let free from the gag order
so is the concern over contraception, you think, real? i think one of the concerns that s kind of missing from the conversation is that no one agrees on the definition of contraception, right? so it s true that you don t hear many conservatives saying they oppose contraception, that s emerging on the right as an argument. common contraceptions, a common point by major groups like students for life. we saw it in the hobby lobby decision from the supreme court in 2014. the argument that iuds, birth control pills, emergency contraceptives should be banned under abortion laws. so i think there are threats to contraceptives. they re not the threats we may have come to expect. that s one of the reasons this is a harder issue for republicans. they re not just voting against this because it s a messaging bill. they voted for messaging bill about same-sex marriage. they re also voting against contraception as the tougher issue for their base than a lot of other things. there s also an argum
Polish President Andrzej Duda has vetoed a law designed to facilitate access to emergency contraceptives, citing "the will to respect constitutional rights and health protection of children," his office said on Friday. Both chambers of parliament had adopted the amendment to the pharmaceutical act provided for women and girls from the age of 15 to be able to obtain the morning-after pill without a prescription in future. Duda is from the nationalist Law and Justice Party (PiS) which was ousted i