eastern, 7:00 a.m. pacific. i m jose diaz-balart. we begin this hour are the fallout from the house january 6th s last hearing before the midterm elections. the committee voting unanimously to subpoena former president trump over his role in the attack on the capitol. bennie thompson saying he must be held accountable. he is required to answer for his actions. he s required to answer to those police officers who put their lives and bodies on the line to defend our democracy. he s required to answer to those millions of americans who votes he wanted to throw out as part of his scheme to remain in power. now, just a short time ago, trump posted a long letter on his social media site criticizing the committee for not investigating the 2020 election and accusing it of ignoring facts about his actions leading up to the riot. but he does not say if he will comply with the subpoena. the panel also presented never before seen communications from the days leading up to the attack,
that wraps up the hour for me. i m jose diaz-balart. i ll see you tomorrow night. thank you for the privilege of your time. yasmin vossoughian picks up with more news right now. good morning. what a friday it is. i m live for you here at msnbc headquarters in new york city. a defiant response from the former president this morning after the january 6th committee voted unanimously to subpoena him in their final investigative hearing accusing the panel of wasting money. ahead, where this all goes next. and then reaction to the jarring new evidence presented, including this never-before-seen footage from inside the capitol on january 6th showing top congressional leaders scrambling to get help and regain control. it was, in fact, shot by house speaker nancy pelosi s daughter. now apparently everybody on the floor is putting on tear gas masks to prepare for a breach. i m trying to get more information they re putting on their tear gas masks. can you believe this? can yo
as you said, there are about 150,000 of those and they can continue to try to claim asylum, go to immigration court. it s not an immediate work authorization, but they may be in much better shape than those who are coming here now. we always learn something from you. thank you very much for being with us this morning. journalists from the new york times spent days with venezuelan migrants as they made their way across a dangerous 66-mile stretch of jungle known as the darien gap. they wrote, it became clear that a combination of desperation, the pull of the american dream and social media posts are creating a humanitarian crisis unlike any previously seen in the darien gap. joining us now, julia turkewitz and federico rios, a photo journalist also with the times based in columbia. thank you for being with us. julie, you wrote that you saw a humanitarian crisis unlike