office. [cheering] you go, colorado. it s not partisan, it s about applying historic principles. what do you say to the republican candidates argument the voters should have the say and not the courts? why are you standing with confederates. john: democrats celebrate the move to ban trump from the 2024 ballot, president biden is going to hit the campaign trail, other states are looking into it. jacqui: slow start to president biden s re-election campaign, heading to the polls weeks from today, the biden campaign is saying that president biden, kamala harris, and others will fend off his challengers in the democratic primary. john: the shift in strategy as polls show president biden struggling to energize his democratic base. and much win swing states. jacqui: karl rove standing by and whether the effort to ban trump from the ballot might backfire. peter, is the campaign planning a rose garden strategy for the president? peter: they say they are not, jacqui,
with katie g pavlik, harold f junior, jesse watters and has a restraining order against the elf on the shelf. danna perino, the five. danna kratz a painting republicans as murderers for simply wantingepub to have secu borders. check out what s happening in eagls hae pass, texas right now. a massive migrant sneaking around in a linesn that akwould the tswoa jealous. thousands of waiting to be processed by border patrol aftel they crossed into america illegally. texas governor, greg abbott, responding to this insanity by n enacting powers allowing cops t arrest illegals and boot them back to mexico. basically, he s doing the job that joe biden should be doing. of course reacting two that by playing the murder card. you look at somebody like oo greg cavetk t, my governor, his solution is basically to say, work to kill people trying to come in. that s not a solution. the governor of texas needs to take a look in the mirror of the chaos he is causing for thi countr hy. this i
performing on this weekend. former navy seal how we remember to remember. thanks to the service members we have onset this morning. joey, who you hanging out with? there s no better place for a marine than surrounded bay bunch of sailors and i m in the safest place. you were surprised to find out i was in the marine corp.; is that right? yes, sir. tell me about your service. jaire i m here with the uss wasp from tennessee and i ve been here for 13 years. reporter: 13 years and in 13 years you understand memorial day. i was telling the producer when you interviewed young service members for different per spect and i have what does memorial day mean for you? it s about remembering the people that served well before me and those that aren t here today. reporter: it s as simple as that. you look a bit younger than that guy. i doubt you ve been in as long. how long? i hit my year mark in february, sir. i m from san diego, california, and i m 19 years old, youngest on boa
nicolle wallace. all of the president s men, or in this case, four times indicted ex-presidents with notorious outliers and enablers. rudy giuliani is in court, a jury is deliberating for a second day on that right now, as soon as there is news from the courtroom, we re going to head right to our reporter in washington. and, of course, mark meadows, trump s former chief of staff turned codefendant in the interference case. he s he heart of the sprawling, high octane racketeering case brought by fanni willis, a case that s spooked meadows so badly, that he s using every oce of his firepower to get it moved to federal court, arguing everything he did was part of his official job as chief of staff. specifically, he s trying to dust off a 234-year-old federal statute which allows officials charged with state crimes to transfer them to federal court if the alleged criminal behavior was carried out as part of that person as official duties. meadows argues he was acting as trump