and a disturbing new study reveals that 8 million americans earning more than $100,000 a year are living paycheck to paycheck. meanwhile, president biden is touting electric vehicle tax credits tweeting this, on my watch the great american road trip will be fully electrified with a picture of himself in a luxury hummer. one that doesn t even qualify. the starting price of that vehicle is 87,000 vehicle, which is double the medium american salary. after severe criticism the white house said the president driving a jeep that actually disqualified. ainsley come it is difficult to take them serious because the point remains that no matter what the president starts touting, it is always toned epic in concept and tone-deaf in optics with however he tries to market it. ainsley: is pushing these electric vehicles and everybody cares about the environment to some extent and possibly win down the road but they are very expensive. you have two-thirds of americans living paycheck to
the sunday show. this sunday, we re following a lot of breaking news, including that mass shooting in monterrey, parkville fournié. this left ten people dead. we ll bring you the latest in just a moment. we begin with breaking news in the classified investigation. the white house is facing mounting questions after a reveal the federal agents search president biden s home in wilmington delaware for 13 hours on friday, and found more items with classified markings. the search was prompted by a white house, not the justice department, according to a white house official. the president s personal attorney issued a statement saying, quote, doj took possession ofmaterials deemed within the scope of its inquiry. including six items consisting of documents of classification markings, and surrounding materials. some of which were from the president surface in senate, and some of which were from his tenure as vice president. this is the fourth instance of classified documents being fo
candidates are all over the trail yuck trying to convince people to get the pole. we are in georgia and pennsylvania, where important races are still in play. plus i have my conversation with wisconsin lieutenant governor mandela barnes. he could become the first black senator from his state. they also opened up about being the underdog at what republicans are telling him on the campaign trail. and congressman jim clyburn is joining us today. yes, the wig is here, y all. he s going to talk about why he is refusing to give into the idea of republicans winning control of the house on tuesday. i m simone sanders townsend, and i have something to say! today, y all. bring in the election is a. it has been a long campaign season, but now there s less than 48 hours until the midterm elections. and election day. there s so much at stake in so much going on in this race to the finish. i m talking about control of congress, balance of power in state legislatures and a handful of gove
former president trump s home in florida. we do not know a lot about what will transpire in that hearing, but we do know that trump s team is already taking issue with some of of the judge s directives dlaming they do not want to tip their hand over potential legal defense if the former president might be indicted. more on that and the trump team s latest filing on the court of appeals in just a minute. plus hurricane feast owe na strengthened into a category 3 storm potentially on track to become a category 4. there s the map. you can see turks and caicos getting pounded. it has been crushing the caribbean islands for days leaving catastrophic destruction in its wake. coming up, the potential impact for folks up and down the east coast. finally, my conversation with the deputy secretary of state wendy sherman on the united nations general assembly and president biden s scheduled speech tomorrow. this morning the u.n. chief started things off by telling the assembly that th
was struggling. i always thought i was pretty empathetic, emphatic. i think i was very, excuse me, empathetic. you know, that s an example of the stroke, empathetic. before having a stroke. but now after having that stroke is, i really understand, you know, much more kind of the challenges that americans have day in and day out. what you saw and heard there, the auditory processing challenges, the speech challenges howard: the nbc correspondent also shared this observation with her viewers we did find that in small talk before the interview without captioning it seemed it was difficult for fetterman to understand our conversation. howard: this prompted a fierce backlash. podcaster kara swisher called burns account just nonsense. maybe this reporter was just bad at small talk. new york magazine offered up a cover story on fetterman saying his comprehension is not at all impaired. he understands everything. burns didn t suggest otherwise, but plenty of stories have r