dresses his wounds as well as the pediatrician of the town of uvalde and he was there with the families at the moment they learned their child would not come home. he will never, ever get those mother s screams out of his head. i raced to the hospital to find parents outside yelling children s names in desperation and sobbing as they begged for any news related to their child. those mothers cries i will never get out of my head, but what i did find was something no prayer would ever relieve. two children whose bodies were pulvarized, decapitated, whose flesh had been ripped apart that the only clue was the blood-spattered cartoon clothes clinging to life and finding none. i can only hope these two bodies were a tragic exception to the list of survivors and as i waited there with my fellow uvalde doctors, nurses, first responders and hospital staff for other casualties we hope to save, they never arrived. all that remained was the bodies of 17 more children, the two teacher
it s where we begin the hour with white house chief of staff ron klain. ron, i know that everything from baby formula to inflation to weapons for ukraine to the first prime time hearing of the 1/6 committee to guns lands on your desk before it lands on the president s desk. i wonder if you can just take me inside this moment for all of you at the white house. reporter: yeah, nicolle, the agenda is full and complete. a lot going on, but i think this gun issue has really hit everyone at the white house, starting with the president, of course, as you said, two-time prime time addresses in less than two weeks, and then that powerful statement yesterday at the white house by matthew mcconaughey, who s a native of uvalde, and came to talk about his work with the families there, and so i think this is a very emotional time for us. the president s encouraged by the progress being made on capitol hill. he got a briefing yesterday from senator chris murphy here at the white house, but this is