brown jackson as the courts new term begins tomorrow. i am jonathan capehart, this is the sunday show. this sunday, residents and relief workers are on rescue missions, coping through the rubble as floridians grapple through the trauma and devastation left by hurricane ian. water came up to about here. when it got to there, the way they were saying on the news i thought it would eventually go over our heads. i called my daughters and i said goodbye. it was very traumatic. i went into the water and save three people. i lost one friend, i couldn t savor. she got washed away. the devastation is unbelievable. i was a paramedic fireman for 25 years. it is just unbelievable. nbc news has confirmed at least 77 deaths have been caused by ian and florida and north carolina. more than 800,000 floridians and tens of thousands in the carolinas remain without power. creating a new facet of this emergency. some hospitals in the area now scrambling to evacuate critically ill patient
i m simone sanders, and i have something to say. d i have something to say what s a weekend has been. it started with former president trump telling the world the fbi had entered his florida home mar-a-lago. and now, we are getting a look at the search warrant that started at all after the department of justice and sealed it. now that weren t told us where agents searched in the home, but it is what they seized in the roughly 20 boxes of government records that she really need to pay attention to. so, what was it? well. we have 11 sets of documents altogether. three sets classified as confidential, three classified secret, and for top secret. and one set of t s s c i. that sounds for top secret sensitive compartmentalized information. that is the queen mother of all classified documents. we also learned this week that this search warrant traces back to the very top of the department of justice, attorney general merrick garden linda himself. i personally approved the decisio
black caucus is holding its annual legislative conference in washington right now. they have influential events that are putting a spotlight on key issues that will likely be on the ballot next month. and could offer a preview of how democrats can keep control of congress. joining me now in studio is host of politicsnation, reverend al sharp. he is also founder and president of the national action network, and the author of righteous troublemakers, untold stories of the social justice movement in america. and one more point, it s his birthday tomorrow. so birthday boy, reverend al sharpton. thank you very much for coming back to the sunday show. thank you. glad to be with you, always. so, what s the mood among democrats? again, this is cbc weekend. tons of folks around. what is the mood among democrats? are they still confident today about their prospects in november, as they were at the beginning of the summer? you know, at the conference the last couple of days, i sense a real
me that s right. yes. i want to say before. we go miss louis, i love. you thank you. thank, you but i will say before we go, how proud we are of you young lady. congratulations to you, and carry on. thank you so much. miss jennifer lewis, ladies and gentlemen, the mother of black hollywood. a songstress, an i can, we thank you. and thank you, for watching symone on the saturday. i am symone sanders townsend, and you can catch me right here on msnbc every saturday and sunday at 4 pm eastern, and on peacock grammy opposites on the msnbc hub every monday and tuesday. and having up on social media, you can find highlights, news, and exciting things in the works for the show on instagram, twitter, and the tiktok. politics nation with reverend al sharp picks up things, right after a short break. up things, righ after a short break. after a short break. o brainstorm.
the martin luther king iii s group, to me nationally, because we cannot risk their moving this dime of the voting rights that was guaranteed after the 60s. after the 65 voting rights act that was damaged in 2013 with shelby versus holder, that now has come into almost irreparable harm with section two. so time is not something that we have, and we wanted to put the president on alert on that. you must remember that the voting rights act did not come from lyndon johnson down. it came from the fights in selma, alabama, up, and that s what we intend to do to make shup that this country stands for the right for people to use their vote. democracy is at stake here. reverend al sharp ton, thank you. you can catch the rev coming up at 5:00 p.m. eastern on politicsnation right after this show, right here, of