Welcome back from the break. Thank you to amazon and web services for hosting our break at the sponsor. Thank you. Now were going to be talking about zero trust, a topic near and dear to some of our hearts, for those of you that havent been to the dream port, you should go over there and talk to them about their zero trust efforts as well. First of all, id like to introduce our moderator, mr. Tom temmon, he is the anchor of the federal drive from federal news network. Thank you, tom, for moderating the panels. His panelists are rick howard the chief Security Officer from palo alto networks. Sylvia burns, the deputy chief Information Officer for enterprise strategy, fidc. And michael friedrick. Over to you, tom. If you have a streaming device you can hear my voice on the radio now through the magic of streaming technology. Our topic today and its really great to be in such a nice intimate setting here with listeners that are close by, we are going to talk about something that in many wa
we re in. the pain at the pump could be playing a big role in how they feel. the white house still shifting blame for gas prices but americans are not buying it. half, 50% are saying the president and his policies are to blame. the top white house economic advisor is playing some dodge ball. haven t played that since fourth grade. this guy is good at it. brian dietz refusing to say what the white house plan on inflation might show results. when do you expect us to see a meaningful change in inflation or in growth? give us a rough idea, how many months, how many years? let me finish the point i was making. manufacturing is come back at a record rate. i want to ask you again when do you expect to see inflation at 2%? will it take three months, a year, will it take two years? we re focused on the policies that will actually accelerate that process. give me a ballpark? there is a lot of people out there in the predicting business. we re in the building business. i t
opportunity to hear testimony about the events leading up to the insurrection, and donald trump s possible role in fomenting and pushing known election lies. known because even his family members and top republican aides were learning were adamant there simply was no there there. now, trump is not on any of these ballots. but the connective tissue is a platform that echoes his sentiments. but as much as the committee has tried to convey that what we saw on january 6th is a continued threat, the question is whether these hearings impact the voters at all. perhaps giving them any pause about electing a trump-backed candidate, assuming of course they even watched these hearings. and even still, the 2020 lies are casting a very big shadow over many of these 2022 races. particularly in south carolina, where the polls have now closed but votes are still being counted. so here s where that revenge part comes in again. you have two incumbent republican members of congress in this dee
day after dramatic testimony where the january 6th committee showed what went on behind the scenes at the white house after president trump was told that he lost the election but refused to believe it and instead pushed his election lies. we are watching two key races in south carolina. that s where two gop members of the house are fighting to win renomination, both facing candidates backed by the former president. representative tom rice is one of ten house republicans that voted to impeach former president trump after the insurrection at the capitol. representative nancy mace didn t vote to impeach trump but refused to join if pack of house republicans who tried to block certification of joe biden s victory and has been aligning herself with the former president ever since. and polls just closed in nevada where a trump-backed candidate is running for the republican senate nomination. and in south carolina we re seeing more results coming in. and that s why i have the best o
will be, and challenging the democratic incumbent senator who is defending a seat, a seat in a state where joe biden won by about two percentage points. a nail biter today. john king, you are following key races out of south carolina, incumbents, representative nancy mace and representative tom rice, one of the rare republicans to impeach trump after the insurrection. what is the latest there? let s move across the country and look at the house. pull up south carolina. votes coming in a little more quickly than nevada but we re several hours in now. this is very interesting here. the seventh district russell frey is donald trump s candidate here, a conservative running against the incumbent. tom rice had that seat since 2012 and won big in the tea party year. he is getting 25% of the vote right now, disappointing for a republican incumbent who represented the district for a decade. 99% of the vote in. we re still tallying the final votes. the 50% plus one you avoid a run-