make it last till the next big stage and the next place that you ll get tens of millions of people, july 30th and 31st. so elizabeth warren that you mentioned getting more and more of a serious look. bloomberg story in the past week said that wall street is taking elizabeth warren more seriously. senator kamala harris who has over the weekend gave a speech talking about her plan to help black homeowners. like how does she keep out there? and julian castro is going to announce a couple of policy initiatives including one on guns. all right, mike allen. have a great week. we ll be reading axios a.m. in a little bit while. and that does it for us. i m geoff bennett with jo ling kent. great to have you here. thanks for having me. morning joe starts right now. in june of 1775, the
headquarte headquarters, we pressed the head of it on privacy? can homeowners trust alexa? absolutely. so customers understand the new technology. and for us to real i will educate customers and to be able to answer their questions about what is happening. amazon says storing what you ask alexa to do trains the artificial intelligence to better serve you in the future. it s important to recognize, if you re going to use a device for convenience sake, you re giving up a certain amount of privacy. leaving consumers wondering who is listening on the other side. jo ling kent, nbc news, new york. from health care to the border crisis, even weighing in on north korea, what the democratic presidential contenders had to say this week on the campaign trail. -i m not calling him dad. -oh, n-no. -look, [sighs] i get it. some new guy comes in
north korea was venting frustrations through state media saying that it didn t want to negotiate with secretary of state mike pompeo anymore. if they expected north korea to return to negotiating table, they had to replace pompeo. they didn t likepl the way he w talking in the sense that the u.s. was looking for full dee luke larization before there would be sanctions relief. jo ling, i want to touch a bit on thean role of china in this. yeah. as we know, the regional dynamics dictate that not much happen here without china s hand being somehow involved. they went into the g20 meeting and the bilateral with jinping, both sides very hardened in terms of where they were with the trade war and the deteriorationan of trade talks d came a away from it with the announcement that they would resume trade talks and also that very curious backtrack that
breaking overnight. a moment for the history books. president trump greeting north korean leader kim jong-un at the demilitarized zone. stepping over that border into north korea. i want to thank you. that was quick notice. president trump later saying both sides will restart meetings on north korea s nuclear program. president trump he s calling this pro gles. are you going to give him credit for being the first u.s. sitting president to set foot into north
version of volume 2, which is the obstruction of justice. for most of the american public, that s the one we want to look at. the underlying evidence in the unredacted portions of the section. we know that mueller stated that but for that office of legal counsel opinion that said you cannot indict a sitting u.s. president. that s the question that should be posed to robert mueller, would you have indicted donald trump regardless of his status? is that a question you would ask? absolutely. i would want to know, if your hands weren t bound or tied by this office of legal counsel memorandum that said you can t indict a sitting president, would you have pursued an indictment against him? jo ling, the reality is this. there s several people that haven t read the mueller report, some members of congress haven t taken the time to read, perhaps one of the most important