to understand her in a new way? a different way? yes. so the funny thing about the book was, i thought writing about her murder would be the very difficult thing, you know, for all the obvious and gruesome reasons. but in the end, what proved the hardest was learning about her life before the murder. in fact, before my brothers and i were born, so what made her a journalist, the kind of country she grew up in. and that was all new to me. and it made, for personal reasons, the book its own reward. and it was only once i learned about her early years that i understood why she did the kind ofjournalism she did, and what drove her. had she been somewhat reticent about it in life? i mean, by the time she was murdered, you were in your late 20s. but ijust wonder how much you had talked to her about that really rather extraordinary decision she took as a very young woman, to get into writing and then into journalism. never, i m embarrassed to say. and i. you know, i guess i have a t
conversations from the past month. we begin this morning with a discussion about the potential dangers of a second trump presidency. editor in chief of the atlantic, jeffrey goldberg, recently joined us to discuss the publication s special issue, which features 24 writers each outlining the threats they say a second trump term would pose to the united states and the world. we have a lot of writer at the atlantic who spent many years covering different aspects of trump and trumpism, and i wanted just to pull them all together in one, easy to read package. one copy of the print magazine, obviously it s online right now at theatlantic.com. mm-hmm. i wanted our writers to describe, as best as they could, what would happen in their areas of expertise if trump became president again. the next trump presidency will be worse. the restraints will be off. there won t be any quote, unquote, adults in the world. mckay coppins has a piece, who will get jobs in the next trump adm
strictly speaking, to do with them or with america. that effort began many years earlier. july 22nd, 2016. that s the day that wikileaks published thousands of emails from the servers of the democratic national committee in washington. those emails prove that party officials have rigged the democratic process, the primary process, in favor of hillary clinton, and against the insurgent populist candidate that year, bernie sanders of vermont. within days, the chair of the dnc, debbie wasserman schultz, resigned in disgrace. the wikileaks scandal broke on the same day that hillary clinton shows her running mate, senator tim kaine, and it overshadows the nominatit followed. but more significantly, the wikileakscen to split the democratic party into pieces. more than 13 million bernie sanders voters, many of the young people, learned that the process they had always believed in was, in fact, a sham. they had been cheated. democratic leaders had to act quickly in the face of this t
addicted to drugs even when she was pregnant. but will it sway the jurors? let s go outfront. good evening, everyone. i m kate bolduan in for erin burnett. outfront tonight, breaking news. cnn learning exclusively that the department of justice issued a new subpoena to the national archives for more documents related to its investigation into january 6th. according to sources, the request for additional material pertains to both before and after the insurrection. it s a possible sign that the adoj is ramping up its investigation into the role that trump and his staff may have played in the events leading up to the capitol riot. and to be clear, this is yet another federal investigation involving the former president, separate from what the fbi what led the fbi to conduct a search of mar-a-lago. and there s also news on that front tonight. the former president is responding in court for the first time since the fbi searched his home. trump is filing this lawsuit agains
Coming up on ayman, lawmakers return to the hill, with a big todo list. But hardliner House Republicans are threatening to shut it all down unless they get what they want, and that is an Impeachment Vote against joe biden. Plus, a group of colorado voters are suing to keep donald trump off the 2020 ballot. Runs the organization hoping that hes going to join us live on the show. In the Ultra Conservative Fifth Circuit says those Controversial Border buoys can remain in the rio grande river. Even as tragedies mount. Im ayman lets get started i this week, lawmakers return to washington, with a bloated and urgent to do less ahead of them. On the agenda, an Emergency Funding Request from the Biden Administration for disaster, eight following the fires in maui, and hurricane a dahlia. Passing a reauthorizing the fa, the debate about more money for ukraine. More and more. And most critically, staving off another government shutdown, by a federal budget, by September 30th Deadline now, you are