we know that s one of the reasons why he s on the supreme court. i think this is tantamount to sticking a dagger in our back. we will gun to see a kind of segregated higher education landscape. we re going to see that become wider and wider. what s next, gay marriagesome. is this leading to no women in colleges soon? who knows? [laughter] no women in colleges. we can dream. i joke. [laughter] and biden wasn t done sobbing, running over to the safe pace of msnbc. i find it just so out of sorts with the basic value system of the american people. do you to worry that that without court reform this conservative majority is too young and too conservative, that they might do too much harm? i think they may do too much harm. i think that some of the court are beginning to the realize their legitimacy is being questioned in ways that it hasn t been questioned e in the past. he ended that interview the only way he knows how, but with by awkwardly shuffling off th
against president biden s student loan bailout plan on friday but its allies are vowing that the fight is not over. rachel: that s right. defiant democrats are also face something tough questions. after the supreme court quoted nancy pelosi s own words in their decision. joey: our very own martin meredith is live at the white house and he s got more on this story. martin. reporter: joey, rachel and steve good morning to all three of you. president biden said he s disappointed in last week s supreme court ruling which nullified his efforts to cancel some student loan debt but the administration says it s working on a plan b. it s really important, first of all, borrowers hear loud and clearly we re not stopping the fight that we recognize how important this is. within hours of the supreme court decision, which we totally disagree with, i think is wrong, we announced that we are moving forward with another pathway to debt relief. reporter: that other pathway includes
cameroon is offering the vaccine free of charge to all infants up to the age of six months old, with patients requiring four doses in total. the jab is effective in at least 36% of cases, according to researchers. the aim is to roll out the programme to 19 more countries this year. here s aurelia nguyen from gavi, the vaccine alliance. translation: to me, this is truly a turning point. - we have been working on a malaria vaccine for a very long time. it took 30 years. it is a disease that is very difficult because it is transmitted by a parasite with a lifecycle that is very complicated. therefore, to see that we have a tool which will be useful to us, which has an effectiveness that has been demonstrated, we have really studied to be sure there are no side effects which would cause problems. dr mary hemel is senior technical lead for malaria vaccines at who she told me more about the programme roll out in cameroon. there s a lot of excitement in cameroon tonight, or today,
julie: thank you. again, we will not stop until we find those cowards who decided to just shoot dozens of people causing two people to lose their lives and we are going to be here until we find them and hold them accountable. rich: brandon scott after police say at least two suspects opened fire at a block party in south baltimore killing two and injuring dozens more. welcome to a new hour of america s newsroom, i m rich edson. julie: i m julie banderas. thank you very much for joining us today. so it was part of a violent poll day weekend across the nation. in chicago at least 18 people were shot, two of them killed. mike tobin is live in chicago with more. mike. actually in chicago you saw 30 people shot can including baltimore as well. we aren t through the holiday weekend yet. in chicago multiple shootings. sad, familiar pattern. the first murder came just after 8:00 p.m. friday in a neighborhood called chicago. a dodge charger opened fire. is areas like river
there is the is the ingraham from washington tonight. shocking video of a journalist getting arrested just for doing his job. the video and that journalist are here tonight. but, first, mr. trump goes to washington. that s the focus of tonight s angle. laura: the same federal court building where many of the j-6 defendants have been sentenced to prison sentences longer than convicted rapist, donald trump and today as a three-judge panel, appellate panel heard arguments on his claim of presidential immunity for actions he took when he was in office. his lawyer john sawyer pointed out a key concern. we are in a situation where we have the prosecution of the chief political opponent who is winning in every poll presidential election upcoming next year and is being prosecuted by the administration that he is seeking to replace that is the frightening future. that is tailor made to launch cycles reef cripple nation that will shape our republic for the future. laura: a val