significant sizeable majority of republicans to either except or move on from january 6th. but when you look at the broader country beyond that, democrats and most critically independents, there is still repulsed by january 6th. seeing the images that i know you ve been showing on your show earlier today. it is not, an embrace of january 6th, trump s role in, it the participants in it, that s not gonna play well in a general election. it s one of the reasons why the biden campaign is spending so much time between the president s speech yesterday, between the new ad that began airing this week. that is correlated with the democratic national committee. they want to talk about this. and there s a reason why. the american people have not all of a sudden gonna one 80 on january 6th, even if some republicans have. okay. steve shepard, what a great year, we ll see you again soon. thank you. the fight for a woman s right to choose picks up momentum in a surprising state. a surprising state
doing, in terms of putting these arguments in front of the, court is trying to give himself as many options to try to get out of this as he can. but, one of the things about the highlight, alex, is that the timing could not be worse. you re talking about january 6th being in a week. so, this is going to be the shadow of what we experience as a nation, it s going to be on our conscious, nice and fresh, even as you re talking about february and early february being the day where it s going to come before the courts. we are still going to be reliving that trauma as a nation, and that could not come at a worse time for donald trump to be dealing with this very issue. look, this next aspect i m gonna ask about is pretty stunning, because trump s lawyer is openly applying pressure to justice brett kavanaugh, saying trump went through hell to get him appointed, and that he s going to quote, step up. legally, is this a good strategy, charles? this quasi-quid pro quo assessment, or can it bac
that s the conclusion of that project. i think in terms of turnout in this primary, it does right now seem like republicans are pretty energized about voting in this race. especially those who li trump and want him to be nominated again. we ll see how that bears out once that comes time for people to go to the polls. let me ask you quickly about a poll, it s got almost curious question in analysis. a washington post university of maryland poll that finds that one quarter of americans, that s one in four, believe the fbi instigated january 6th. do you think this reflects how much support trump has going into this election, steve? you know, i want to just cast a little bit of doubt on that finding. when you ask people who think that they definitely instigate a january 6th, that only 30% of americans. this is still a pretty fringe position, i wrote this for politico, donald trump has succeeded in convincing a
they had to make that emergency landing. alex? yeah, you make a good point. they haven t gotten to maybe 30,000 feet, which could be cruising altitude. so, 10,000 feet allowed for a little bit better recovery, that s for sure. all right, priscilla, letting all of our viewers know, we are going to interview an faa investigator. we ll get to that as soon as we get him on the line. in the meantime, we thank. you let s go to more headlines, with major developments and efforts to keep donald trump off of state ballots. the supreme court will hear arguments over the next four weeks on whether he s banned from the ballot in colorado. we ll be allowed to stand. trump will return to d.c. on tuesday, three years and three days after the january 6th capitol attack. when the appeals court judges will hear his argument he is entitled to presidential immunity from prosecution related to that attack. and new today, president biden is marking the anniversary with a message on social media, stressing