listen. president trump: nancy pelosi hands out subpoenas like they re cookies. i will tell you, when a jim and mark meadows, jim jordan and devin and all these people when they went to paul ryan to get a subpoena, paul would say well, let s take it easy. let s not this. it was impossible. you couldn t get a subpoena. she hands out subpoenas like they re cookies. bill: it was a clever line. i guess trying to just cut through this and understand it. give us perspective on where the investigation of the investigators is today. what has moved forward, sir? so what i would remind the president had it mostly right but also what he didn t talk about was how d.o.j. and f.b.i. continually blocked our subpoenas. we had very targeted subpoenas and oftentimes they would use the mueller team, for example, as the reason why they couldn t
immigration deal last minute here. the push back is coming from members of the president s own party, republicans are now signaling an all out tariff revolt could be in the works. let s go to lauren fox on capitol hill. i mean, lauren, you name it, ted cruz, ron jongsen, john thune, rob portman, are they going to act on their words of warning here. reporter: you can add mitch mcconnell the majority leader to that list, pop gee. sure. reporter: the list was very long and republican members and aides that i spoke to out of that meeting were furious about the president s tariffs and also the fact that those white house and justice officials who they sent yesterday couldn t answer basic questions about how the president s tariff policy would actually be implemented about i monday, whether or not the president would issue a new national emergency on the border to create those tariffs, what exactly their path was. that makes it hard for republican senators to decide how and whether the
the attorney general about to release the details. in what way will they be released, do you know? we do expect the report to be delivered today, that s bill barr s report from the principal conclusions of the mueller investigation. that is expected to happen today, but the big questions still loom of what will we learn in this report? does it answer questions of obstruction of justice and collusion relating to the president s actions? do they explain why they did not interview the president and require a sit-down interview with him? another big question here is how detailed is this summary going to be? they ve been together now two days behind closed doors, bill barr and rod rosenstein, so we can gather maybe they re trying to work through some of these issues. they know there is a bipartisan call for transparency on this report and the findings. i think what decision this is bill barr s first big moment as attorney general now this go-round? this go-round, and this is
caucus happy. and will they be happy? that nancy pelosi definitely can t answer. that is a hard thing to do. and what the impact of the resolution is is an interesting question. can i throw one other quick thing in there? the other part of the politics of this is the democrats are rushing to try to get this done today because republicans smell blood in the water. they were coming up with their own resolution to try to they can make procedures in the house. to put them in a bind. yes. politics at play at least in part. thanks. coming up, as democrats are preparing to vote on this resolution condemning hate speech, is that going to be enough for the head of the anti-defamation league? he will be joining us next. it is one of the central questions of president trump s
addresses, birth dates, social security numbers and driver s license numbers. always testifying today, separately, the ceo of marriott which had its own breach it answer for back in november of 2018. last year marriott the world s largest hotel chain confirmed the company s reservation system had been hacked. that breach affected 383 million guests. during the period of four years, those hackers were able to access guest names and addresses, that makes sense, credit card numbers, phone numbers and this one continues to puzzle me, passport information. why marriott was storing passport information is beyond me. but that was a much bigger breach and the difference is this one is incidental, this is a company that does why beyond you? when you join you for things like that, they ask you for all sorts of information. you think a hotel wouldn t need the passport information? if they need it, they need when you re there. why store it in their system.