hackers stole from one of the agency computer networks. and researchers show the program that kept millions out of poverty is expiring. plus the biden administration is reacting after several reports revealed how migrant children are being exploited for cheap labor here in the u.s. and as the defense rests in the alex murdaugh trial. we begin at the u.s. supreme court. right now the justices are hearing arguments on whether president biden has the authority to wipe out more than $400 billion in student loan debt. the president s plan is being challenged by six states that say only congress could act on that. the plan was announced last summer, but lower courts put it on hold. the high court is expected to announce a decision later this year. with us now to talk about this, nbc news washington correspondent our reporter outside the u.s. court, and lindsey reiser. reporter: essentially what you have is two parties arguing that the biden administration didn t follow the pr
and transmission of classified national defense information. that could carry a 15 year prison sentence. his father shouting quote i love you to his son during the hearing. lawmakers demanding answers to how he had access to such sensitive files. teixeira share them with a video game chat group before the spill that wider and social media. former director of national intelligence john ratcliff telling fox earlier this case is not like other high profile intel leaks. week ultimately ended up with the kinds of abuses that we saw with edward snowden and bradley manning using wiki leaks. jack teixeira is a very different situation for its individual initially thought it was as few as 50 documents taken one at a time from a classified facility. insider threats program is not really designed for that type of person who is not even trying to share that information publicly as the others were through wiki leaks. if our president by just back from his trip to ireland says he too wan
we had literally people in pittsburgh and southern california walking into synagogues and shooting people while they were praying. sojerusalems is real in this country and around the world. and when you say i want to start killing jews, you inspire people. and he needs to be completely ostracized. thank you all very much. we ll continue this conversation. that does it for us. jose diaz-balart picks it up right now. good morning, 10:00 a.m. eastern, 7:00 a.m. pacific. we are just two weeks away from election day. this morning people are lining up for the first day of early in-person voting across three more states. this after a critical debate in battleground florida. we ve accomplished an awful lot, but we ve only begun to fight. he won t even tell you if he will serve four years if you reelect him. i mean, come on, you deserve better than that. we ll break down where these races stand this morning and also this morning a russian court has rejected an appeal from wn
happening. that s a pretty big aha moment. then, why a far-right victory in italy is sending shockwaves throughout europe and beyond? and just when you thought cool treatment of asylum seekers could not backfire anymore it s not just an effectual that is hurting people in order to get attention. when all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i am chris hayes. this week, the january 6th committee returns from recess, with another public hearing that maybe it s last. tens of millions of americans watched the first set of hearings in june, july. there s some evidence that put a good effect. a poll conducted in the days before the eight hearings show that 40% of republicans believe donald trump is at least partly to blame for the attack on the capitol, up from 33% before the hearings. and all along, the committee s goals for these public hearings have been pretty clear. most importantly, they want to err the most salient facts about just what happened o
happening. that s a pretty big aha moment. then, why a far-right victory in italy is sending shockwaves throughout europe and beyond? and just when you thought cool treatment of asylum seekers could not backfire anymore it s not just an effectual that is hurting people in order to get attention. when all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i am chris hayes. this week, the january 6th committee returns from a kind of a recess, with another public hearing that may be it s last. tens of millions of americans watched the first set of hearings in june, july. there s some evidence that put a good effect. a poll conducted in the days before the eight hearings show that 40% of republicans believe donald trump is at least partly to blame for the attack on the capitol, up from 33% before the hearings. and all along, the committee s goals for these public hearings have been pretty clear. most importantly, they want to err the most salient facts about just wh