she. it s important to point out that the biden push was very different. a very sharp contrast to donald trump s handling of the situation. in a moment i will talk to congressman jim clyburn, a member of the democratic leadership, about that and the looming debt ceiling showdown with house republicans this week. plus more calls for the removal of serial liar george santos from office. we will look into his mysterious political fortune. in missouri, democratic women fight back against an effort to police what they wear. i spent 1200 dollars on a suit and i can t wear it in the peoples house because someone who doesn t have the range tells me it s inappropriate. and that s not why any of us were elected, mister speaker. none of us. and that is state representative rachel who will join me this hour to talk about her battle to bear arms. we start this hour at the top here with president biden and his allies defending their handling of classified materials as a third disco
similar situation. the situations aren t completely analogous on that front. you can argue that there should have been more transparency when the documents were first found in president biden s office back in november. according to everything we know now, there are still significant differences between these two cases. it does provide a very good opportunity for people who didn t show a lot of concern about donald trump s documents to suddenly argue that this is fair play. you wrote a piece about the sudden proliferation of special councils. here s something on that. quote, our countries polarization and a growing mistrust of federal law enforcement, particularly on the right, have pushed this to the forefront. this begs the question, is the special counsel even necessary? it seems to be impacting decisions after criminal justice. it s worth emphasizing that merrick garland in his news conference last week said that this was something he was looking at even before the public knew a
When India launched its first state-backed investment fund in 2015, the project was met with great enthusiasm. Officials hoped to raise billions of dollars to improve the nation's infrastructure and attract foreign manufacturers.
steady, vaccine or no vaccine? beautiful. that s exactly correct. the background rate is what we re seeing now. there s been no increase, particularly no increase above that background rate among children who already have been vaccinated. as i say, these analyses will continue, but so far, so good. you know, as we look at more and more young people getting the vaccine, the initial numbers in that first week since pfizer was authorized for kids was fantastic for those 12 and up. but moving forward, there s a lot of questions about how this is going to impacts families who have children. some children were eligible to get vaccinated, some who are not old enough and how that s impacting decisions families are making. i m just curious, what s your message to families like that? look, i m one of those families. i have a 14-year-old one shot in and an 11-year-old won t be eligible until he turns 12 in march. just a few days ago or a few weeks ago, you had two children
agents themselves to lead to results. all we had was the testimony denying that it impacted the decisions they made and they implied bias impacting decisions. in the chairman trying to get documents from the chairman pistols at their still frustrated. what are you expecting in terms of rod rosenstein and next steps on that? we expect our friday night more documents to be forthcoming by the doj. that being said, if it does not comply fully with subpoenas we might see a contempt order for rosenstein. christopher wray said the tension between oversight and protection and integrity we are seeing that here. i think it is clear the balance should favor transparency. emily, thanks for your time. the news continues at the top of the hour with eric shawn and arthel neville. to help minimize blood sugar spikes you can really feel it. glucerna. everyday progress. the first survivor of ais out there.sease