warning from the american cancer society. colorectal cancer is fast rising among younger adults, under 55, and doctors can t seem to figure out why. nbc s tom costello has more. at 45 justin kelly thought he was probably too young to get colon cancer but when his doctor said the recommended screening age it dropped from 55 to 45, he ordered a mail-in colo guard test, a colonoscopy confirmed stage 3 cancer, and justin began. you wouldn t have made it to 50 without coming in to see me. that s how far along it was. justin is part of a younger generation of americans who colo rectal cancer rates have doubled over 25 years. in 1995, 11% of those 55 and younger were diagnosed with colon cancer, by 2019, it was 20%. unfortunately there has been a r3 democrats. what do they think of his message for a likely reelection campaign. the jury about to get instructions and begin deliberations in the alec murdaugh double murder trial. how prosecutors just rebutted the defense s clo
times that donald trump may have committed to cutting a deal to trade white house documents as an exchange for fbi files related to his 2016 campaign russia investigation. we ll have more on that report in just a few minutes. also not this, our women are taking to the streets in washington d.c. and several states and cities as we count down 31 base so the midterms. the women s march is holding hundreds of events today and support of reproductive rights, will have a lot of reports for that for you. also overseas, a new setback for russian president vladimir putin. and after celebrating his 70th birthday, a massive explosion rocked a key bridge that links russia and crimea and ukraine officials refer to that attack as, quote a sick burn, no one has claimed responsibility. and new fallout from president biden s warning about the risk of nuclear armageddon. russia s top of using nuclear weapons as a responsible. and there s no way to use, to use them without unintended conseque
former republican congressman david jolly, and new york times national political respondent, lisa lair, you wrote a great article on cpac, and you said that for rising stars, it s losing its pull. more of a kind of side show, right, than a feature act. what is what s happening right now at cpac tell us? that s a great question. i think it tells us that cpac has become much more of an event that exists on the farther fringes of the maga movement than emblematic of the debates happening inside the entire republican party. part of what we saw evolve with this event under the trump administration is it really became a reflection of former president trump s image and his movement, rather than a broader discussion over issues in the conservative movement and a place where many, you know, establishment politicians and very powerful republican party politicians would go to win over the conservative base.
ready for big structural change in this country. [ cheers ] they re ready for change and i got a plan for that. they re all enthusiastic. those are just four of the 19 different democratic presidential candidates who showed up at the iowa 2019 hall of fame event this weekend. joining me now, david wiegle, national political respondent for the washington post. aimee allison, founder of she the people, which held its own presidential forum in april. msnbc contributor sam seeder, host of the majority report and ring of fire radio. welcome to all of you. dave, i m going to start with you. you are there on the ground. what s the feeling? it looks very energetic the pieces we added together and put on tv. i thought your segment about the des moines register poll, elizabeth warren is getting large crowds, audiences that are signing up to support her. they can change their minds, but
now is the time to fight like hell. let s remove every barrier in place, a new voting rights act for this country. no more purges of the voter rolls or voter i.d.s to keep people out. right now in america there is a real hunger, there are people ready for big structural change in this country. they re ready for change and i got a plan for that. they re all enthusiastic. those are just four of the 19 different democratic presidential candidates who showed up at the iowa 2019 hall of fame event this weekend. joining me now, david wiegle, national political respondent for the washington post. aimee allison, founder of she the people, which held its own presidential forum in april. msnbc contributor sam seeder, host of the majority report and ring of fire radio. welcome to all of you. dave, i m going to start with you. you are there on the ground. what s the feeling?