years. it seems to me an extraordinary thing that the fbi would recommend that the deputy director of the fbi be fired for lying to an inspector general. that s a startling thing. it s not like something that happens every day. john, kaitlan, you re going to stay with us. katie, thank you so much for your terrific reporting. we also have coming up, this new audio of president trump, admitting he made up facts in a meeting with canadian prime minister justin trudeau. what the white house is now saying about the president s words caught on tape at a private fund-raiser this week.
since the cold war. and sparking a war of words. unacceptable, unjustified, and short-sighted, russia says. britain s prime minister calling for united action against russia. to stand up for our values and to send a clear message to those who would seek to undermine them. the nerve agent so deadly, they remain in critical condition nine days later. a police officer first responder still hospitalized. the investigation now focused on skripal s car, mystery still surrounds how the nerve agent was deployed, and the identity of the would-be assassin. keir simmons, thank you so much. my panel is back with me. caitlyn huey-burns. john podoritz, columnist for the new york post. let s put in the perspective of what nikki haley said yesterday. quote, theresa may find it hard to win allies to put increased
gna national security agency and others who can block some of these potential assaults. chris, frankly, we ve been on the defensive with the russians for a very long time. we remain on the defensive as it relates to what they re going to do next. so it s great we understand how they re going to operate now, as john said. but we re just not at a point where in the people that i talk to that are in the law enforcement community, we re not at a point where we re anticipating the next move. it s difficult. and so i think that the sanctions, if it can sort of clip, and it s one of the few things that actually have worked as far as getting russia s attention. if they can kind of clip their ability to do these type of attacks, a lot of people in the law enforcement community believe that s at least one effective step. but frankly, the russians only respect only respect significant pushback. and so, you know, throwing a couple people out of the country and a round of sanctions is probably
and figures involved in this that people have not heard. the manafort piece is really interesting, because of the potential for cooperation with other people involved. and because, you know, obviously, manafort was the chairman of the campaign, that the trump administration has taken pains to distance itself from it. but the more that this evolves, the more questions are released about it, especially if you have the cooperation element. yeah, and one of the key parlor games has been, how will this impact john, the 2018 elections. now we know that paul manafort is set to go to trial in september. so these questions can continue to roil. conservatives have been pushing for the president simply to pardon manafort. i have heard very little of anybody saying that manafort should be pardoned. but i do want to push back on what matt was saying. go ahead. there is a history of judges dealing with independent counsels who are who have questions about their reach.
do things concern. good morning, everyone, it is thursday, august 3rd. with us, we have a veteran columnist editor of commentary magazine john podoritz. director of domestic policy studies at stanford, fellow at the hoover institution, lee chen. also steve ratner with us, jeremy peters, and kacie hunt is with us. let s take a look at the new poll taken from july 27th to august 1st. it has president trump s approval rating at 33%, down seven points since the end of june. 61% disapprove among voters that