indictment is five pages long. here, fani willis gets to drill down much more deeply and i think we re going to get a lot more detail and new information that we hadn t seen before. i appreciate it, let s go back to jake in d.c.. thanks anderson. i m still s here with a cape, abby philip, jeanne, and laura coates. on the channel that is basically donald trump s defense network, lindsey graham, the senator for south carolina, said earlier something along the lines of this should be decided at the ballot box and not in a bunch of liberal droves to strengthen the man in jail. they re weaponizing the law. it is an interesting thing. first of all, what is interesting about that is one of the strongest pieces of evidence against donald trump, that tate from brad raffensperger, who we should once again remind people is a very conservative republican, and that tape trump asks him to find 11,780 votes.
Charley was the first of four hurricanes to hit the state in 2004 the other three being Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne. Charley was the strongest of the four.
values that are embedded in the constitution and the amendment. outside of what the court does. jeanne, the idea of powerlessness resonated again in another big ruling this weekend involving free speech rights and the lgbtq+ community, what are the implications you think of that case and the courts ruling particularly the fact that it was brought on hypothetical grounds, that s the part that i find the most stunning about this, this was all kind of ferryland made up, maybe in a future i may want to, maybe possibly. the court said, yeah, okay, let s go with it. this is an area of law where sometimes courts are going to say it is too hypothetical, you don t get to be a plaintive in this case. we see a lot of instances of that where the plaintiffs are asserting a right that maybe the court doesn t want to affirm.
coleman junior. he s host of the charles coleman podcast. also with us, harvard law school professor, jeanne she s also contributing writer at the new yorker. welcome to you both. jeanne, i want to start with you. the president of howard university, one of the nation s top hbcus, spoke to my colleague katie fang earlier. here s what he said. we sent african americans to medical school than anyone else. and we also sent more african americans from those programs we send them in the past two decades in stanford, m.i.t., harvard and yale. those schools combined, 160 million. getting more applications as not necessarily desirable if we don t have the funding to take most of this. that lawyer, and as someone who works at a very school that prompted this case, what are your thoughts on this ruling? well, i disagree with it.