how does a message get so lost. how do we hear so many different [inaudible] i m going to start with this and ask my colleagues if they want to comment as well. multiple systemic failures. our report does not look at other comments made to try to compare, contrast and whatsoever, we ve laid out the basic facts as we were charged with to do. which i said earlier on about lie enforcement, the officers who knew or should have known that this was an active shooter situation, by their training and experience, should have done more. we are very clear on that. not every officer on the scene had that same information. or had that same opportunity to comply with their training. one of the things this committee has not done, because we are a three-person committee. it s to go through and determine which law enforcement personnel knew wet, where did they know and when they knew it. in order to do that, i think it s going to take many months to go through all the different video, bod
of what we can expect to hear. we will show evidence of the president s involvement in this scheme, and also show evidence about what his own lawyers came to think about this scheme. and we ll show courageous state officials who stood up and said they wouldn t go along with this plan to call legislatures back into session. let s begin with manu raju who is live this morning on capitol hill. so manmanu, walk us through whoe we expecting to hear from today. reporter: we expect to hear from four witnesses who will talk about the intense pressure campaign launched by donald trump and his allies to overturn the electoral results, the pressure they withstood re rejecting those efforts. and also the real life consequences, particularly facing a georgia election worker, former georgia election worker who will testify later today about the real threats to her personal safety, to her family s safety, because of what she says were lies that were pushed by donald trump, by rudy giu
fainting during competition. anita alvarez thankfully is doing all right but it was certainly a big scare. we will tell you what her coach is saying. is saying. good morning. welcome to way too early, on this thursday, june 23rd. i m jonathan lemire. thanks for joining us. the january 6th committee is set to hold its fifth hearing this afternoon, and it will be the final one this month. it will focus on donald trump s efforts to get the justice department to help them overturn the 2020 election. it has been reported that when then acting attorney general jeffrey rosen resisted trump s pressure, the former president came close to replacing him with mid-level d.o.j. official jeffrey clark, who had repeatedly pushed to help advance the big lie. today, we re going to hear testimony from the former acting a. g., as well as his deputy at that time, richard donahue, and assistant a. g. to the office of legal counsel steve engel. the three witnesses were all part of an extraordin
her number one must see is paul mccartney, and nanny pat says she will be down the front and taking no prisoners. colin paterson, bbc news, glastonbury. well, i wouldn t mess with her. let s look at the weather. good afternoon. great weather for the first day of glastonbury. lots of sunshine. tomorrow is probably going to be mostly fine as well. but we are going to see some showers developing during the course of the afternoon tomorrow. i hope they will miss glastonbury but there is that a chance. these are these guys across the uk, sunshine in england and wales. more cloud in the north west. these are these guys. if beautiful afternoon. the highest temperatures will be around the midlands. 28 degrees. when we have that cloud, it is closer to the teens. those pollen levels are still very high. widely across the uk. from tomorrow they will start to ease. let s look at the forecast for the rest of the afternoon and into the rest of the afternoon and into the evening. not muc
are paying diesel. the president wants to suspend that through september. he needs congressional approval to get it done, however. members of both parties are a bit skeptical. dana: jason chaffetz echoed concerns of republicans who say it won t address the real issue. it s a pure gimmick and does not solve the problem at all. it really doesn t. we have a supply problem and the president has no plan other than to go to the saudis, cut some gas tax, tap into the strategic petroleum reserve, all of which are bad ideas. produce the energy at home and they can solve the problem. that s not what he is doing. bill: what is he doing? peter doocy joins us from the north lawn leading the coverage today. good morning. even if this gas tax holiday gets passed by congress, it is unclear this morning exactly how much help people are going to get. markets don t respond to gimmicks. the administration it is an unserious solution to a serious problem and they are just not takin