rachel maddow show, there is more from where that came from. for months, rachel and her producers have been doing a really deep dive into the nbc archives to find the tape and the best stories of the candidates that you ve probably never seen before. it is called the tale of the time. naturally. and rachel will be right here tomorrow night to bring you a very special first else. they have found some amazing footage that tell a unique story about these presidential candidates. how they got their start. how they became who they are and the battles they ve been fighting along the way. hillary roham clinton is a twofer. today on capitol hill, those two titles commanded a great deal of attention and a little tension. nbc s lisa myers reports on the first lady s day as first witness. you re going to blind me.
really deep dive into the nbc archives to find the tape and the best stories of the candidates that you ve probably never seen before. it is called the tale of the time. naturally. and rachel will be right here tomorrow night to bring you a very special first else. they have found some amazing footage that tell a unique story about these presidential candidates. how they got their start. how they became who they are and the battles they ve been fighting along the way. hillary roham clinton is a twofer. today on capitol hill, those two titles commanded a great deal of attention and a little tension. nbc s lisa myers reports on the first lady s day as first witness. you re going to blind me. it was a sellout crowd with 200 lining the crowds. hillary clinton was succinct and to the point. americans can no longer wait
the best stories of the candidates that you ve probably never seen before. it is called the tale of the time. naturally. and rachel will be right here tomorrow night to bring you a very special first else. they have found some amazing footage that tell a unique story about these presidential candidates. how they got their start. how they became who they are and the battles they ve been fighting along the way. hillary roham clinton is a twofer. today on capitol hill, those two titles commanded a great deal of attention and a little tension. nbc s lisa myers reports on the first lady s day as first witness. you re going to blind me. it was a sellout crowd with 200 lining the crowds. hillary clinton was succinct and to the point. americans can no longer wait for health care reform. as we sit here today, literally
the courtroom. coming up, we re joined by michael bloomberg. he ll discuss the battle coming up in congress over gun control. turning to economic news now, ten of the country s biggest banks have agreed to a huge payout, $8.5 billion in settlements they improperly foreclosed on homeowners who should have never been pushed out of their houses. some are saying the compensation is come took little, too late. lisa myers reports. reporter: it s billed as the largest cash payout from banks from abuses during the foreclosure cross-ices. critics say not nearly enough to compensate for the actual damage. in homes and lives. under the agreement between ten banks and federal legislators, 3.8 billion homeowners involved in any state of the foreclosure process in 2009 and 2010 would
the debate over this is certain to continue, with the tax breaks first established under president bush set to expire at the end of this year. the second of four congressional hearings will take place on capitol hill today. in the growing scandal over wasteful spending by a government agency. current and former officials from the general services administration will face a new round of questioning this morning, over 2010 conference in las vegas. it follows a tense hearing yesterday where as nbc s lisa myers reports, questions about possible kickbacks and allegations of bribery came up. what happened in vegas ended up on capitol hill. and the gsa official in charge of the lavish conference, jeff neily, asserted his right to remain silent six times. mr. chairman, i respectfully decline to answer any questions here today based upon my fifth amendment constitutional privilege. reporter: but neily seemed less reticent about his vegas