çó election, and encouraging people to gather in washington on january 6th. now their testimony couldçó hel doj fill in the gap of their investigation,cbma11e■ when it comes to trump s conduct jf before, during, and after abc news notes that some of the aides that have been ordered to testify have already appeared before the grand jury, but did not answer some questions related tot( interactions with e formerfáq r donald trump is reportedly likely to appeal. joining us nowj are our my guests.lpw3t(fá it is good to see you all. carol, let s start with you. there s always axd pointr trump novela, where you have to got( back to the glossary andok reminded of who all theseq peopp are, now ordered to testify. it s like a who s who of the trump administration. walkm3t through who theyjf are. yout( know, you re absolutel right to characteriz]■á it that way. fos haven t been mentioned in a long time while we have been covering the biden white house. let s take a few
tonight keeping them honest with signs other times in the political climate today. they run the gambit from the downright dangerous to the nearly trembling and absurd. it s fair to ask if there is a threat connecting all of them, political philosophy of nihilism driving it or whether this was a moment for whatever reason that one example, new mexico, for home shot at belonging to democratic officials. the man now in custody and charged in connection with the crimes was a republican who lost the state house race in a landslide and refused to concede. he seemed agitated, he seemed a little aggressive to me. i did not consider him a threat then, but he was upset that he lost the election. that s debbie o malley, who joins us shortly. she said police who may be who tweeted after the election, quote, trump just sentenced for 2024, i stand with him. i never conceded my h g 14 race, not considering my options. the options he allegedly chose was politically motivated, that
a new study laying out the real danger to your health when you do not get enough. this is what we re watching at this hour. thank you for being here. president biden is taking more steps to try to lower gas prices today, and it s no coincidence he s making these moves with the midterm elections less than three weeks away. this afternoon the president is expected to announce he s authorizing the release of another 15 million barrels of oil from the nation s emergency stockpile. gas prices have dropped significantly from the peak this summer, but they are still higher than this time a year ago, and they know it and are taking note. let s start at the white house. jeremy diamond is there. what are you learning that the president is going to say today? reporter: well, kate, president biden is expect to announce 15 million barrels of oil to be released from the u.s. strategic reserve. that would round out the 180 million barrels of oil the president had pledged to release last s
always see my glass half-full especially while i am waiting for the pill to dissolve in my drink. because that s what america is. i believe we have a lot of room for optimism because, like a with the iphone at the bottom of the escalator, things can only look up. because after all right now, everything is down in the dumps, we are talking more than don lemons ratings are nancy pelosi s neckline, the economy, crime, how can this get any worse. oh, yeah, kilmeade is on today. talk about getting off on a good foot. we do have reason to think positively for a whole bunch of things. you ve heard of the slippery slope and i don t mean the ramp that slides the ups delivery man into my basement. it s when stuff keeps getting worse by virtue of it already being bad. i believe 2023 is the year when the slope hits the wall and that s because stuff just went too far. we let did not stick the driver s seat and it s time for the pendulum to swing back to some form of normalcy. the adults n
the best team toet get the job b done? done? now, if the answer t now, if the answer to thoseimagn isestions is no, and i imagine it is fo fr most of you, then neither man is really capableatr of serving as a us senator or the u.s. president . at least not without a lot of people making decisions for him. r protecting him from scrutiny and hiding the truth from the voters. from thand of course, this is t what s happening in both cases. now, nbc news reporter dasha burns dared to provide facts that actually help pennsylvania voters answe r the questionmelyi on their mind. namely, is fetterman realls y well enough to takeb on the demands of the job of us senator because of his stroke? becdrans campaign require closed captioning technology for this interview to essentially read our questions l as we ask them t. and lester, in small talk before the interview, without captioning, it wasn t clear heda was understanding our conversationnd. s wa now, mind you, this wassit-do the