select intelligence committees, house and senate, and participated in the mueller report as well. her name is throughout the mueller report. certainly more than 100 times where she is listed. and they are saying, according to what we re hearing from members hearing these arguments, that of course the content of the mueller report findings, the information that goes back to her previous testimony, is something that the white house considers to not be an issue of exerting privilege. they see this as separate. they talk about a chilling effect for future white house advisers at a senior level. if they can be compelled to give their insights and experiences and first-hand accounts of what the president was thinking, doing, saying, et cetera. so there is a mixed picture here. hope hicks goes back so far in the president s sphere of influence that she was with him during the campaign, the transition, the white house. left the white house in march of last year. so there is a mixed bag of what
conference for tomorrow morning but i ve obtained a copy of the lawsuit. it says the tesla model x was defective in that the passenger protection systems would not, could not and did not perform in a manner as safely as an ordinary consumer would expect. march of last year walter wong was headed to his job as a apple engineer when his tesla x veered into a barrier. he died at the hospital from impact injuries. the battery bursting into flames. i was the first to report that walter wong reported to his family on seven to ten occasions, his model x veered towards that same barrier and he took it to the dealer but they couldn t address the issue. his wife explained what happened in our exclusive issue. he want to show me the last time it happen. so he told you that the car would drive to that same barrier? yes.
of how decrepit his own economy is and he knows there are great benefits but also risks when you open up your economy as he might. then if his people lose the fear they have in his government and attain some economic freedom it could risk regime security. it is a delicate balancing act. bill: the president with the arrival committee for the moment and he will make his way into his own limousine and make a trek across town and this was a president who was here in march of last year in danang, the halfway mark between hanoi and ho chi minh city in the south. danang was an air base during the war. it transformed itself into a vacation paradise, a coastal city with all the trappings of 2019 modern day. so the president has seen and gotten a taste of this country on that trip.
had they gone along with the president s plan to end the dreamer plan, co-hahe could hav leveraged that decision. but that didn t happen. estimates are coming in the cost of the shutdown will soon exceed the price tag for the president s wall on the border, the financial research firm s&p says the cost will hit $6 billion by the end of the week. that s more than what the president has requested for his wall. very, very sad. jim acosta, thank you very much. let s get back to the russia investigation right now. we are joined by the chairman of the house intelligence committee, congressman adam schiff. thanks for joining us. let me start with the news that we have been reporting that the special counsel is investigating the relationship between the trump presidential campaign and the national rifle association. here is what you wrote in march of last year. let me read it to our viewers. the majority refused to investigate whether russian
neither side has felt it to the point where they feel like there s political expediency where it might end their political career. i think as more people agitate for it and as they start to do things like this and have votes on the senate floor and really put democrats on the mark, i think the american people are going to understand they don t want to negotiate, they want to resist, they don t want to give trump any wins and they re going to own the shutdown and the american people will say enough is enough, vote on the wall or come up with a deal that you think you can live with. rob: let s look at the evolution of this as it s gone along here with the president and the white house, the first offer was from march of last year, $12 billion, he wanted the solid concrete wall. said no to daca. the second offer, he bumped it up, $25 billion, he wanted the coast to coast wall. he wanted to restrict chain migration and maybe an extension of daca. you go to january of this year, $5.7 billion