Established. We have a minnesota delegation contest every single year and i won the first year and then have lost every time so [laughter] but it was a lot of fun and it is my entry with the tater to the hot dish, what which involves some tater to the and some pepper jack cheese. And in an iowasouthern minnesota good folk lower, it was very popular in statewide in minnesota but then i was getting emails only from southern minnesota which said you might want to use a different type of cheese because the pepper jack was so spicy. No one from northern minnesota said that at all. In addition to bryce with his great leadership, thank you, bryce, for that, we have shirley from the city council. Where are you . Thank you very much for being here and your leep leadership and your fourth of july first and that youre ready for, and also, she is not from this district but maybe you know her. She is actually from mason city, right . Marion, right . Ok, i got that. From that area and she was the fi
My name is tom steyer and im running for president. Steyer joins us in steyer joins us in a sunday exclusive. Can a billionaire win over democratic voters . And as more accusers come forward, the fallout over the Jeffrey Epstein case hits the white house. Chris christie and rahm emanuel join the powerhouse roundtable to tackle the weeks biggest headlines. Announcer from abc news, its this week. Here now, chief White House Correspondent jonathan karl. Good morning. And welcome to this week. We begin with troubling new images from the border, human beings held by the u. S. Government in inhumane conditions. We have heard the Horror Stories for weeks. Sick children in unsanitary conditions. A migrant woman told to drink water from a toilet. The president called the reports phony. And on friday, the Vice President and several republican members of Congress Went to the border to prove the critics wrong. To showcase the treatment of detained migrants. It became a tale of two detention center
never-before-seen video. plus, attorney general merrick garland is pressed about the justice department s response to the attack on the capitol. we ll show you his response to a question about prosecuting former president trump. and concerns about the next election have the senate taking rare, bipartisan action. there is promising progress on a bill to prevent future coup attempts. good morning. welcome to morning joe. it is thursday, july 21st. big night tonight. with joe and me, we have the host of way too early and white house bureau chief at politico, jonathan lemire. former chairman of the republican national committee, michael steele. good to have you both. we begin with a new development surrounding those deleted texts from the secret service from the day before and the day of the january 6th attack on the capitol. a senior secret service official tells nbc news that employees received at least three emails, including one before the insurrection wow.
legislative spending bill, addressing climate change and inflation. the question for them is will that help them keep their majority? tuesday, voters in five states, arizona, kansas, michigan, missouri, and washington state, they re going to hold some primary elections. our teams are standing by coast coast tracking where we stand 100 days from the election day. helping us breakdown key races over the next hour and key issues that are bound to trigger orders to a poll, shaquille brewster and marshall michigan, and in kansas. where reproductive rights are on the ballot this tuesday. i m going to start with you. you owe our congressional races to watch just there. how is the antiabortion amendment shaping discussions there? richard, i m standing in front of one of just five abortion clinics in kansas. it has also become one of the few places people can seek abortion in this entire region. after the supreme court overturned roe v. wade many of the surrounding states enacte
Can the senate save itself and the country . He spoke at the brooking institute. Let me try to call this full house to order, if i may. Welcome to brookings. My name is bill gallston. Im a senior fellow in governance studies. Thank you so much for coming and welcome also to the people who are watching this event live on cspan. Todays topic is the past, the present and possible future of the u. S. Senate. The occasion of this discussion is the publication of ira shapiros second book on the senate, this one entitled, broken can the senate save itself and the country . Those of oh you who read his first book on the senate will know how passionately he reveres the senate as an institution and will not be surprised to learn how distressed he is by what he describes as its precipitous decline. This topic could not be more timely. We are just days from the expiration of yet another shortterm continuing budget resolution and perhaps even more pertinently, from a promised open Senate Debate on