captions by vitac www.vitac.com and tonight, straight from the source, breaking news as trump s longtime moneyman, adam weisselberg, is now in talks to plead guilty again, this time for allegedly lying on the twns stand at trump s civil fraud trial. in another landmark trial we ve watched today, the mother of ethan crumbly took the stand in her own defense. and a mea culpa from the pentagon, as lloyd austin faced reporters for the first time since his secretive hospital stay, apologizing for not telling the president, saying, quote, i did not handle this right. i m kaitlan collins, and this is the source. tonight, the man who spent decades helping run donald trump s family business, allen weisselberg, could be on the verge of pleading guilty for the second time. this time to a perjury charge, we are told. the 76-year-old was the chief financial officer of the trump organization for decades. he went to jail at rite gers for about 100 days last year. that was fo
tonight, starting this ice, a trump victory and michigan. i demand for recusal in maine, and a looming appeal and colorado. the fight to keep or kick the former president off the ballot across the country. plus, 19 days out from the first votes of 2024, new ads and new strategies from trump s republican rivals. the question is, will it make a difference? also, a new frontier of one of america s biggest media companies now going to battle with artificial intelligence and what it means. i m kaitlan collins, and this is the source. tonight, two state supreme courts with two very different outcomes over whether or not donald trump is disqualified from seeking the presidency for a third time under the 14th amendment s insurrectionist ban. and michigan, justice is rejecting an effort to boot trump from the primary ballot on procedural grounds. though appearing to leave the door open for renewing these efforts playing out in many states in the general election. meanwhile, the republ
vision of democratic socialism. we re here with kristen solstice anderson. what exactly it is that socialism means and this fight to define it. kristen, i ll hear from you first and jamal, i would like your take as well. what exactly how are american voters defining it right now? is it young versus old, people who remember the cold war versus people who don t, or is there something else? there is a generational divide. younger people are much more positive about socialism but they re also not defining it as the government controlling the means of production and running the economy. they re defining it as people working together. what will be fascinating is as folks like bernie sanders who want to define and defend the term socialism, how do they define it? is it something like a sweden or denmark where you have a robust social safety net and tax rates
we re winning in florida very big. so our big question today is, should the trump campaign be worried about 2020 or is it too soon? let s begin with that big speech that bernie sanders is about to give. joining me now, shaquille brewster, host of the hill tv, jamal simmons and washington examiner columnist kristen solstice anderson. shaq, let me begin with you. a lot of this rhetoric we ve been hearing from republicans have been, if anything, aimed at undermining him. we heard this kind of anti-socialism rhetoric in the state of the union address, and it s something that, you know, people have been hammering. it seems like bernie sanders wants to take that head on. he s embracing the label. that s exactly right. this is him leaning into an issue that has been a line of attack from republicans and even some in his own party. the campaign and i hear
kristen solstice anderson, a communication strategy. bill shine knew in the communication shop formerly of fox news and seems they got in a room together and decided here s how we ll explain this one after 24 hours saying nothing. it s going to be that you ve misspoke on one word and that you were misunderstood, that you didn t conjugate a verb the way you meant to conjugate a verb. is that the best they can do and really what the white house thought would convince the american public that, yes, the president of the united states does believe that putin is a bad guy who meddled in our election? there s a slice of trump s base that no matter what the explanation had been would have agreed with it. wom have bought it, said, great. he s put this matter to bed. i think there is another slice of people they were trying to speak to, which are those who believe that trump is prone to misspeaking. that s not a hard thing to believe. right? so in a way, they re trying to lean into a belief