cluster bombs to be sent to kyiv for use in this war. that is a decision that the man whose hand he is shaking, prime minister sunak disagrees with. there s tough conversations to be had at nato. he also met with king charles at windsor a couple of i don t know. awkward moments in this. this president visits windsor cast. back home, he s facing a barrage of related tough headlines. quote step aside joe biden, the president has no business running for office at age 80. that from elliot cohen of the atlantic. and this from axios. old yeller. biden s private fury details his quick temporarier and outbursts . let s bring in pete hegseth, fox and friends co host and an iraq and afghanistan war veteran and juan williams, senior political analyst. great to have you with us. thanks for being here today. juan, would you agree there s increasing questions among democrats about whether or not the president can sustain and fulfill a second term? i don t know if they re increasin
sporting a familiar look, smoke from the wildfires in canada are filling the skies again. madonna is recovering after a health scare and spending several days in icu. a full recovery is expected. i hope she recovered. when he gets rolling he is just so fun to watch at his craft. we begin with another chapter in the hunter biden saga. he is said to be deposed in the defamation lawsuit where hunter left his so called laptop from hell. john paul mack issac is being sued. that s right he reported the contents of the laptop to the fbi when he discovered damming photos and files. hunter s deposition today will be recorded, but it is unclear if video or a transcript will be made public. and you have to figure the very first question that the computer guys lawyers are going to ask hunter is is this your laptop? do you remember dropping it off? don t be surprised if he says don t remember. he is probably going to say that. that is usually the answer. i don t remember. th
the last scheduled decision day of the term, we could finally get some answers on some massive undecided cases. rulings on affirmative action, student loan forgiveness, and lgbtq+ rights among others. decisions that could impact all of us, and they could come down at any minute, and we have a full lineup of guests and experts on this. i want to begin with nbc news correspondent julia ainsley who s standing by at the supreme court for us. julia, set the scene there, how might this go down? reporter: well, you re right, this is the last scheduled day, ana, but we re expecting another day possibly to get on the court s schedule for tomorrow. that would leave just two days left in june when they typically wrap up their term, and they have these three huge decisions left. so doing the math, we expect at least one of those big decisions to come today, either when it comes to religious rights versus free speech, religious rights and lgbt rights. of course affirmative action, and h
interview. there s so much going on. we want to get the court ruling, which we will, but first, i wanted to get your thoughts, really, on the interview that you did and i want to play for our viewers the part where you did discuss what is a huge issue for the nation right now, one president who does oversee a doj, while a former president awaits trial. i want to play from your interview. i made a commitment that i would not in any way interfere with the justice department, who they prosecuted, if they prosecuted, how they proceeded. i ve not spoken once, not one single time, with the attorney general on any specific case. not once. i have faith the justice department will move in the direction that is consistent with the law. and so, it may take time, but i have faith that they re going to do the right but i ve not spoken about that. the president s answer there to you, i m curious your thoughts.on t surprise you that it was rachel maddow that sort of articulated this b
standardized tests and their grades and then they argued with harvard and north carolina that they were starting to only allow a certain percentage of them to come to the school at some of the most prestigious colleges in the country. this is a big deal. chief justice roberts writing in his decision many universities have for too long done just the opposite. in doing so, they have concluded wrongly that the touchstone of an individual s identity is not challenges bested, skills built or lessons learned but the color of their skin. our constitutional history does not tolerate that choice. then we heard from president biden. here s what he said. i strongly disagree with the court s decision. we cannot let this decision be the last word. discrimination still exists in america. martha: okay. winsom sears and marc are here. first, to shannon bream who has been excellent in coverage of this today. we ll have more tomorrow. she was outside the supreme court. hi, shannon. hi