this state s governor or to at least compete for that pick. you have the current governors brian kemp looking like he with cruise past former senator david perdue. and if georgia s a test of the strengths of the former president s endorsement, then alabama may be a test of what happens when he takes that endorsement away, with mo brooks making a late push for a senate seat. we re also live on the ground in tex. we have you covered with the democratic primarily getting a ton of attention, between a incumbent and a political newcomer backed by some of the biggest names in the progressive movement. blayne alexander and alison barber are joining us, on set, a reporter emma hurt and some key questions from our political experts here, from greg of course, himself. first, if the polls are accurate can brian kemp unify georgia republicans? number two, what does it mean for donald trump? and what does the former president do tomorrow or the day after or the day after? would he suppo
from the planning stages to that dramatic moment you saw there. that s a 10 ton bomb exploding. in the background, you can hear those weird chants of allah akbar. sounds echoing and also in video, an eerie interview with a homicide bomber who says that he will take revenge on anyone who insults islam and the quran. new information this morning on that horrific crash in texas that killed 14 people on sunday. police now trying to identify the victims, all suspected illegal immigrants and they say the men, women and children from mexico, honduras and guatemala were carrying toothbrushes and a change of clothes but no identification. federal immigration agents are looking into the human smuggling aspect of the case and the scene is less than an hour away from the site of the nation s most deadly immigrant smuggling case where 19 immigrants died in 2003 after being put in a sweltering trailer. for the fifth straight year, our nation s debt soaring by at least $1 trillion. new figures from t
jon: new developments in the drew peterson pretrial hearing. peterson s attorney says he plans to call just two witnesses to the stand today. that means we could see closing arguments later this afternoon. this proceeding will determine what, if any, hearsay evidence a judge will allow into peterson s upcoming murder trial. peterson, as you might know, is charged with first-degree murder in the 2004 death of his third wife, kathleen savio. you ll recall his fourth wife, stacy, disappeared in 2007. peterson has not been charged in connection with that case. joining us now on the phone is stacy peterson s family spokesperson, pamela bosco. it s been almost a month that this hearing has been underway all right, we just lost our connection. it s a very unusual case. the illinois legislature passed a law, some call it the drew law although it is not officially named that, that allows
small business owners create new jobs. reporter: vice president biden backed up today s event speaking before the president and also placing an op-ed in usa today. mr. obama s sending cabinet secretaries to 35 communities across the country over the next few days to make the case the stimulus act is working, jon. jon: all right. so that s the white house view, what do republicans have to say? reporter: some republicans say the stimulus act hasn t created any new job, others say it hasn t created enough, and both have public opinion on their side. one poll suggests only 6% of the country believes the stimulus act has actually created jobs despite the nonpartisan congressional budget office report that it has created or saved two million jobs. the white house says the pessimistic public view is a result of the current recession and years of declining salaries beforehand. house minority leader john boehner says the fact is americans are not getting what they paid for. he notes that
ammunition. and these all would have stemmed from her fleeing the house where she had shot her brother and holding up someone else in an attempt to get a getaway car. harris: i want everyone to understand why we would talk with a boston reporter when this case happened just last week at alabama university. police and prosecutors are looking into her past, and that looking into her past has led them back to where you are in massachusetts, and there s more today. the pancake house incident. reporter: right. you know, what led police back to massachusetts was the chief of police in braintree saying that this case should have been and could have been handled differently more than 20 years ago. and as you said before in your introduction can, there were new charges that were uncovered against amy bishop back in 2002. she punched another mother in the head when the mother got the booster seat that she wanted for her own child, and as she was punching this woman, she said, i