in his son s scandals. sandra: september jobs report just out, which is now raising all sorts of new concerns about the direction of the u.s. economy. hello, welcome, everyone, sandra smith in new york. and trace, great to have you again. great to see you. i m trace gallagher in for john roberts. this is america reports. in a few minutes the president is set to make remarks on the economy at an auto plant in maryland. september jobs report shows a tightening labor market, unemployment unexpectedly falling to 3.5% from 3.7% after 57,000 workers dropped out of the labor force. meantime, 263,000 jobs were added last month, which is down from the 315,000 in august. sandra: and while the white house may be celebrating, the dow is tumbling, down 584 points with just a couple hours left in the trading day. we are watching that for you, still below 30,000, and with gas prices rising for 13 straight days now, and oil surging 14% this week alone, investors are growing more conc
until the midterms. when true democracy goes away, people get hurt. and it s hard to recover. we have to walk away from politics as usual. it s a choice between two vastly different visions for america. with the economy and inflation top of mind for voters, president biden is also focusing on the u.s. workforce set to deliver remarks on that this afternoon. about the same time, we re expecting the fed s announcement of another interest rate hike going up three quarters of a percentage point for the fourth consecutive time. what their decision today means for your wallet. new details rounding the attack on speaker pelosi s husband, paul. the washington post and nbc news confirm a live camera feed was rolling on the pelosi home on the night of the attack and the post reports that while cameras captured the break-in, no one was watching the feed at the time. ahead, new questions about security. we are going to start with the president s remarks tonight on threats t
degree on property that ought to be returned would result in reputational harm of a decidedly different order of magnitude. new york times points this out, quote, her ruling seemed to carve out a special exception to the normal legal process for the former president and reject the justice department s implicit argument that trump be treated like any other investigative subject. there are significant questions on how her new ruling will work, especially since the special master is permitted to review documents based on trump s claims of executive privilege. they re claims that have been rejected by the current head of the executive branch, that would be president joe biden. from the times reporting, quote, after trying for months to get the documents back from trump, the national archives, the agency that safeguards presidential records told his lawyers in a letter in may that both the justice department and the biden white house did not believe the former president s execut
will: growing number texas, fall basically meant football season, but i lived up here for a good 15 years and the northeast does fall right. i mean the weather, the leaves obviously but then what we just did, the apples and apple sigh darling stone i don t think i ever had an apple cider doughnut before moving up here. rachel: really? will: no, the cake doughnut not so popular. it s good. rachel: it s one of the benefits of i grew up in arizona where you just had two seasons, hot and not so hot. here you have four seasons and the fall is a real thing and unlike in wisconsin, you re right, up here in the northeast, it lingers. it s a long season and really beautiful and it s so great to see the leaves and as we had the food and colors, it s awesome. todd: at reason fall is great in new york city, autumn in new york, you mention the word linger. what doesn t linger in the fall is horrific smells that fill the entire city scape during the summer. they go away as temperature
the man who was bin laden s number two in al-qaeda, the man who took over as al-qaeda s leader after bin laden was killed by u.s. navy s.e.a.l.s. the string of attacks and murders attributed to ayman al-zawahiri is stomach turning. he was the ideological mastermind behind the term of al-qaeda and groups like that towards indiscriminate mass murder of civilians anywhere including muslims all in the name of islamic piety. and how he got there now looking back at it seemed like a straight shot, but if you sort of dropped in on him at any time in his biography you wouldn t have known he was going there. by the time he was 15 years old he was a committed radical who wanted to try to impose islamic theocracy by force. he formed his first terrorist cell when he was all of 15 years old. when islamic militants did assassinate egypt s president at a military parade in 1991 ayman al-zawahiri was one of hundreds islamic radicals tried and imprisoned for that crime. he was tortured for ye