leader of the soviet union. and we talk to the child refugee from ghana who s now at the summit of britain s fashion journalism. hello and welcome to the programme. russia has been accused of shelling a town near the zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in ukraine, where a team from the un nuclear watchdog is expected on thursday. the plant, which was taken by russia in march sits on the banks of the dnieper river, 200 kilometres from crimea, which it annexed in 2014. our correspondent james waterhouse has the latest from kyiv. the chances of international inspectors making it to the zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant were once remote. they are now looking a lot more promising or probable. at the moment, they are in the city of zaporizhzhia, a good hour and a half from the plant itself, but there are still bends in the road. moscow installed officials say they don t yet have the right permissions to make it through their own military checkpoints. in their words, they will have to g
griffin and barred him from seeking or holding any federal or state position for life. the decision reads in part that griffin spread lies about the election, spent months normalizing that violence might be necessary to keep president trump in office, assumed a leadership role in the mob, egged on violence and breached restricted capitol grounds. we re going to have more on that groundbreaking decision and what it could mean for other participants in moments. first, we have a lot of questions about judge eileen canon s decision to grant donald trump a special master including why it took so long to make the decision, who might get appointed and most importantly what it means for the criminal investigation. there are also questions about the legal basis judge canon used to decide in trump s favor. the new york times spoke with a half dozen people familiar with the law and precedent and all of them raised concerns, one even going so far as to call the ruling, quote, deeply pr
morning. i heard you talking to one of the people who got off the bus said they were from venezuela they said no, the border is o open. griff: that s right, brian, ainsley, steve. mommy s ago two buses showed up. we confirmed with officials in texas governor abbott s office that there is a total of 101 migrants. there is 53 on one bus. 48 on the other. both buses originating in eagle pass, texas. and we are meeting some of the migrants. what s your name sir? what zero. where are you from. we are from venezuela. griff: venezuela. do you know where you are? yeah. we know where we are. we are in washington, d.c. in front of the white house. griff: this is in front of vice president harris home. okay. thank you. griff: did they tell you that you were going to go to the vice president harris house? yeah. just now. griff: they did just now. who are you here with. my family. griff: this is your family? and what would you like to say? would you like to say
you want to know the truth. the enemy of the state is him and the group that control him. the fbi and the justice department have become vicious monsters controlled by radical left scoundrels, lawyers and media who tell him what to do. cnn chief national affairs correspondent jeff zeleny is live for us this pittsburgh. i want to ask you about one moment over the weekend about the former president s rally and it was very unusual. cynthia hughes who runs a support group for january 6th participants spoke, she was given this platform to speak at trump s rally and was telling the story of her nephew who is a january 6th rioter and a nazi sympathizer who once said that hitler should have finished the job, which, you know, makes it kind of tough for trump and his supporters to really push back on this semi-fascist moniker that biden is giving. boy, it sure does. i mean, of all the defendants from january 6th the former president could have invited to speak at his rally for all