coming up on the second hour of ayman, the fight of a lifetime. election denialism is threatening to take over arizona. i ll speak with katie hobbs, the democratic nominee for governor and secretary of state about her efforts to stop the conspiracies once and for all. then outrage in georgia. one woman sounds off after her struggle to cast a ballot. hear how she fought back, and the latest on the brutal assault of speaker nancy pelosi s has been, what democrats are saying, and what republicans are not. i am ayman mohyeldin, let s get started. call it trump s election denier trifecta on the arizona bout. the republican contenders for secretary of state, attorney general and governor of arizona have all loudly echoed trump s election lies, and they continue to spread disinformation about voting just ten days before the midterms. that this information in part as led to a series of voter intimidation issues across the state. secretary of state and gubernatorial candidat
es back on it was worth it. by the way, those ridiculous trump immediate post demanding an electron for blake masters are just two in what has been a cascade of rage posting nonsensical wild ramblings on social media. dozens of branson outburst ain t that democrats, republicans, the united states of the country, the media, the murdoch empire. fox news as a network, washington journal and near post has laid must of the blame at the republican red wave that wasn t directly at the feet of the former president. gone on the days are calling donald trump a profit. instead he had not seen as the problem. check out the cover from trump s favorite new york post. quote. humpty-dumpty couldn t build a wall and had a great fall. can all the gop s men put the party back together again? as for the gop s men, trump has directed a lot of anger at a new rival, florida s republican governor ron desantis who won reelection on tuesday in a
to proceed with this case. there is no getting around the fact, particularly when you add to that the idea iran and china documents that were very dangerous were in-depth piled or classified information. david, trump aide kash patel publicly claim that trump at the cost by the records before leaving office, but the new york times reports that patel refused to answer many questions this month before a grand jury in washington. hearing evidence about trump standing at the documents, citing his fifth amendment right against self incrimination. are those two ideas in congruent? if you so believe that he did the classified documents, why would you be afraid to say that in front of a grand jury and not think that you potentially be self incriminating yourself? ayman, i think your instinct is right. there s probably more to it. at the very least, he s afraid of other collateral damage. trump is the type of person
i think the court is going to be forced to make a decision that there is no legitimate privilege, either executive privilege or attorney-client privilege. to me, it s been obvious for many years that there is no such privilege, that it gets waived when there is a need for it in a criminal case like this and possibly even for congress. the congress is less clear that it will be way, but certainly, the department of justice, there s no privileged. don t get testimony they re looking for, and that s going to move us forward a lot. i think that the two lawyers particularly have nothing to hide. they particularly seem to have been advised that everything going on was wrong, that it should not be done, so they did the right thing back down and should be proud of the and willing to this if i. david, talk to me about the strategy here of trying to crack trump s attorney client privilege claims. it s a tool that he uses often,
in fact, the new york times reports what the justice department has forced the top two lawyers and trump were asked to provide additional grand jury testimony, as prosecutors investigate trump s attacks to overturn the 2020 election. according to the times, it s part of a broader effort by federal prosecutors to appeal to trump s long held strategy and using attorney-client privilege to stall or investigations. joining us now is jill wine-banks, former assistant msnbc contributor and david hennessy, former prosecutor, a cnbc contributor. good to have you both with us. jill, i ll start with you. what do you believe is the most significant legal development of the last week? there are so many, we always start with these broad questions to get your personal expertise on it? i think the combination is what is so powerful, is that we have so many witnesses there are about to be forced to tell the truth, to testify.