the gop. today, fresh perspectives. so let s fete right to it. first up, an interview with a biden aide. when it comes to joe biden, there s been a sudden shift in the narrative wins. i m sure you felt it. headlines are describing this week as one of the biggest and best of the biden presidency, filled with political wins and policy victories and many of those so-called wins happening when he was in isolation with covid. another win this weekend is now that he s covid free. so is the press pulling all of it together? is the news getting through? some prominent democrats don t think so, tweeting the media two weeks ago are saying biden was responsible for inflation and high gas prices. but the shift in the winds doesn t blow away inflation or monkeypox or homelessness or illegal border crossings. there is still many reasons for the media to be skeptical. one person who can help us is michael larosa, who worked for biden s campaign in 2020. and he joined the administration as
to impersonate what was required in that state which was only biden electors. the other, a trump campaign lawyer who worked in arizona and new mexico. here s what that fraud meeting looked like in georgia where republicans got together and together sat in a room and claimed to represent the will of the voters. whether it is elkor fraud or massive voter fraud is being investigated. then you have brad carver, there he was, so happy at the motel, putting it on film. telling on themselves, we ll find out. according to prosecutors, whether this is a chargeable crime. the january 6th committee revealed trump s lawyers for starters thought the whole thing looked illegal. did you hear the white house council s office say this plan to have electors meet and cast votes for donald trump in states that he had lost was not legally sound? yes, sir. mr. meadows, mr. giuliani, and giuliani s associates. they knew it at the time. then there is the secret footage we keep hearing about fr
. maria: good sunday morning, happy father s day to all, welcome to sunday morning futures , i am maria bartiromo, thank you for joining me. today expanded the base, president trump meeting with black voters, congressional republicans, business leaders to unite around his agenda ripping through blue states as black, hispanics and young people pivot to trump while joe biden fundraisers and hobnob with hollywood this weekend. all of this asset republicans fight back on what they call biden s weaponize government vowing to block anybody nominees until after the election. coming up texas senator ted cruz on aging merrick garland and contempt of congress, missouri senator eric schmidt on joe biden s d.o.j. in the moves to take down joe s number one political enemy donald trump along with florida congresswoman anna paulina luna on whether president biden makes it to the election or will he be pushed to withdraw after more gaffes on the world stage. in italy at the g7, covid a for
now on bbc news, it s time for today s episode of newscast, recorded earlier for bbc radio 4. newscast from the bbc. so today we re going to look back at the manifestos that were published this week. what was your name for it, laura, in the end? many festos week. some people called it the manifestival. we re also going to just reflect on what s happening with the polls because there was a kind of quite symbolic moment in one poll that people were talking about earlier this week. and also, i just thought we re halfway through the election now, this is precisely the halfway point, what s everyone s kind of vibe at the moment? laura? my vibe? yes. goodness me. i m not sure i ve ever been asked that before. i think there s something topsy turvy about this whole election, because normally when you have a governing party putting forward a manifesto, they re the ones saying, carry on as we are, in a sense, they re sort of going for the status quo, which the conservatives are sayin
episode of newscast, recorded earlier for bbc radio 4. newscast from the bbc. so today we re going to look back at the manifestos that were published this week. what was your name for it, laura, in the end? many festos week. some people called it the manifestival. we re also going to just reflect on what s happening with the polls because there was a kind of quite symbolic moment in one poll that people were talking about earlier this week. and also, i just thought we re halfway through the election now, this is precisely the halfway point, what s everyone s kind of vibe at the moment? laura? my vibe? yes. goodness me. i m not sure i ve ever been asked that before. i think there s something topsy turvy about this whole election, because normally when you have a governing party putting forward a manifesto, they re the ones saying, carry on as we are, in a sense, they re sort of going for the status quo, which the conservatives are saying don t risk a change, don t risk it,