you re watching the context on bbc news. five months since the war began, the first ship carrying grain has left ukraine under the watchful eye of the russians patrolling the black sea. the ship is bound for lebanon. we will get the thoughts tonight from odesa, where further ships are being loaded. germany turns back to coal as the gas shortages threaten a winter of blackouts and economic misery. but why are they not returning to nuclear? another weekend of extreme weather in the us as california s biggest wildfire this year continues to burn out of control. tonight with the context, nathalie tocci, former eu foreign policy advisor. and hagar chemali, former us government advisor, host of the political satire series oh my world. a warm welcome to the programme. rarely has a ship set sail from ukraine with so much hope, and so much anticipation, riding on it. the sierre leone registered razoni left the port of odesa at 09:30 this morning and into the black sea, bound for t
motorcade driving through the edinburgh airport. he will fly then to northern ireland to meet with leaders and receive condolences while mourners in london prepare for the arrival of the queen s coffin to that city this afternoon. with us we have columnist and associate editor for the washington post, david ignatius, and host of way too early and author of the big lie, jonathan lemire. a busy day, the report out of the new york times that we ll dig into about new subpoenas issued to a wide range of people in donald trump s orbit around the effort to overturn the 2020 election. right. you know, at first glance, surprising, after you think about it, not so much. there is a reason, of course, why we have all of these investigations moving forward and whether it s the records investigation or whether it s around january the 6th or because donald trump obviously broke the law, time and again. and you even have the most hard right lawyers saying what attorney general barr
to the un. tonight with the context, victoria coates a former advisor to the us energy secretary and long term trump staffer and anand menon, director of the thinktank uk in the changing europe. hello. welcome to the programme. it is a crucial night for the january 6th committee. this will be their eighth hearing, maybe the final televised hearing before the report is pubished in the autumn. and this is the point at which the committee mustjoin the dots for their prime time audience. through seven previous hearings, the committee has laid out a case, that the former president was at the center of witnesses, including former trump and white house officials have testified the president knew he had lost but continued to pressure state officials, lawmakers and thejustice department to overturn the result in his favour. and when it failed, when vice president pence refused to help him, he called on the mob. we fight like hell, and if you don t fight like hell, you re not going to
criminal activity involved here. new details on the wrong desantis migrant scandal. and what the republican senate candidate in georgia when it comes to charity. when all in starts right now. good evening from new york, i m chris hayes. donald trump just had one of the worst legal days of his entire life, which is saying something. and it comes amidst a set of ex alerting threats from local, state, and federal law enforcement. so, last, night the 11th circuit court of appeals, as we have reported, issued a pretoria reeling against the ex president, overruling a previous decision, widely criticized by a trump appointed district judge, saying the department of justice can resume using the 100 classified documents seized from trump s home in florida, in their investigation into his handling of the sensitive materials. doj has said this is linked to possible traction of justice and espionage act violations. also yesterday, new york attorney general announced a quarter
i m chris hayes. donald trump just had one of the worst legal days of his entire life, which is saying something. and it comes amidst a set of ex alerting threats from local, state, and federal law enforcement. so, last, night the 11th circuit court of appeals, as we have reported, issued a pretoria reeling against the ex president, overruling a previous decision, widely criticized by a trump appointed district judge, saying the department of justice can resume using the 100 classified documents seized from trump s home in florida, in their investigation into his handling of the sensitive materials. doj has said this is linked to possible traction of justice and espionage act violations. also yesterday, new york attorney general announced a quarter of a billion dollar civil lawsuit against donald trump. his company, members of his family, including three of his adult children, accusing them of committing, and her, words a staggering amount of fraud. if that s two to successfu