the final day of his fraud trial as police show up to the judges home address. justices are getting underway, police on long island responded to a bomb threat at the judges home. tonight, the ongoing and persistent menace of violence surrounding the ex president. i could stand in the middle of fifth avenue and shoot somebody, and i wouldn t lose any voters, okay? and the risky poses to the country itself. donald j trump was president and does not believe in american style democracy. he doesn t. senator brian schatz joins me live. then. mister president. thank you very much. welcome. great to see you. the craven pandering or fox news to republican front runner, and what it would take to make the primary an actual competition. it s going to be a two person race. we know that. when all in starts, right now. good evening from new york. i m chris hayes. we are monitoring breaking news tonight out of the middle east, specifically eamon, where u.s. and britis
the post watergate years investigating abuses of power at the highest levels of government as a staffer of the story church committee. among many americans who do not want to see donald trump winning back the white house. for a good number of republicans he would know mostly ones running against and would not even express that sentiment out loud. there is a growing fear of an overly large republican primary field. or a third party spoiler candidate throwing the election to trump. today i gather three republicans who had previously vied for president against donald trump. former congressman joe walsh, former governor bill well and mark stanford will join me to talk it all out. then juneteenth is about seeing my interview with the force of nature to dismiss oprah reid the activists who made it. happen if you do not know what juneteenth is all about then you definitely need to see this interview because now more than ever this crucial piece of american history must be taught l
thank you so much for spending part of your tuesday with. we re grateful. the beat with ari melber, i want to hear what you have to say about the novel legal arguments we heard today. i appreciate that. we rely as well. we watch you, novel, extreme, dangerous, you re ono something. we re going to get to it. thank you, appcie it. welcome to the beat, i am ari melber, today marked the most controversial court hearing in the coup of donald trump. we can see the motorcade driving up to the washington courthouse today. some important things happened. trump pulled up so that he, the defendant, could attend this crucial appeals hearinwhh determines if this march coup trial will happen or not. trump and psktfuelga context laid out. i want to start withhe key developments that we learned from this hearing. one, trump is likely to lose. the judges were very skeptical, across the hearing of these extreme claims. most accounts of the hearing reported on that and how all three jud
expecting temperatures of up to 28, possibly 30 degrees. that is hotter than e peter and madrid at the moment and that is why an amber heat health alert is in place and what that means is that people of all ages are at first but particularly those over the age of 65 and some concern it could put pressure on the nhs. let s speak to a general manager at a care home. how are you coping there? coping there? good afternoon, how are ou? coping there? good afternoon, how are you? yeah. coping there? good afternoon, how are you? yeah, we coping there? good afternoon, how are you? yeah, we are coping there? good afternoon, how are you? yeah, we are ok. - coping there? good afternoon, how are you? yeah, we are ok. we - coping there? good afternoon, how are you? yeah, we are ok. we are | are you? yeah, we are ok. we are managing the heat quite well. our care home as part of a big organisation care home so we have got a lot of support. 0nce organisation care home so we have got a
bret: but, obviously, breaking tonight, an historic day. one that both republicans and democrats described as, quote: a sad day. the first former or current president of the united states to be arrested and booked in federal criminal court. former president donald trump pleaded not guilty to all 37 counts in the indictment alleging that the former president illegally kept hundreds of classified documents at his mar-a-lago home, even after a subpoena to return them. potentially risking the disclosure of top secret national defense secrets. the former president is defiant, proclaiming his innocence from what he describes as as another witch-hunt and he accuses president biden s administration of targeting him, the leading g.o.p. challenger. the former president is on his way to his golf club in bedminster, new jersey where he will hold a fundraiser tonight and is expected to deliver remarks about this day and the charges he faces. correspondent mark meredith is outside the mi