conduct the investigations if t the e executive branch won t back them up. joining us now, former chairman of oversight reform committee. former utah congressman jason chaffetz. welcome chairman. i want to know what your oversight list of priorities would be. but you are the chairman of oversight. you get to pick what you want to look into. but you cannot enforce your own subpoenas that is up to the biden administration. that is the most difficult thing, we were both chairmen of that committee, i think the moral cases out there. the media does not always report it. hillary clinton s i-t person issued two s subpoenas they never showed up and they never enforced it. with that said, the table is set, every major issue, the democrats held no hearings on, so, it is a wide open plate there are a lot of things to go after. trey: we had dinner one night with late justice scalia. i asked him about the tools of congress and their ability to stand up for themselves and whether or not
with justice jackson s swearing in. and promises a new legal debate over states influence over elections. nearly one week since the reversal of roe v. wade, the president endorses and into the filibuster to codify abortion rights, as legal pressure mounts across the country, as the 11th hour gets underway on this thursday night. good good evening, i am alicia menendez, in for stephanie ruhle. there are new developments tonight, in the ongoing investigation for january 6th. the new york times reports that donald trump s political organization and allies have paid for or promise to cover legal fees for more than a dozen witnesses, raising questions about whether the former president may be trying to influence their testimony. the times points out, there is nothing illegal about a third party covering the legal fees for a witness. it says, the issue came under increased scrutiny following the testimony of former trump white house aide cassidy hutchinson, she recently fired a l
witness pressure in the january 6th investigation. plus, the supreme court closes out its term with more key decisions, and makes history with justice jackson s swearing in. and promises a new legal debate over states influence over elections. nearly one week since the reversal of roe v. wade, the president endorses and into the filibuster to codify abortion rights, as legal pressure mounts across the country, as the 11th hour gets underway on this thursday night. good evening, i am alicia menendez, in for stephanie ruhle. there are new developments tonight, in the ongoing investigation for january 6th. the new york times reports that donald trump s political organization and allies have paid for or promise to cover legal fees for more than a dozen witnesses, raising questions about whether the former president may be trying to influence their testimony. the times points out, there is nothing illegal about a third party covering the legal fees for a witness. it says, the is
with news that could furtherer ratchet up the tensions. the pentagon is saying t ining s getting ready to send ships to syria. i want to go straight to the pentagon to barbara starr. i was listening to your exchange there in the pentagon briefing earlier today. you were pressing them a bit. tell me about the exchange. reporter: there s been a bit of confusion. there s a urth vessel that turned back to russia. it was a bit of a surprise when the pentagon announced it has information that three warships from russia were headed to syria. i want you to have a listen to what they had to say. the russian military is preparing to dispatch some we think it has supplies and perhaps personnel to their base there. we have no indication that these vessels and that material is being sent to syria for any other puose than the russian military has acknowledged themselves that it s for re-supply and with protection to have that at that facility. what reporter: so far the russian gove