stolen by fraud. that was testimony from former attorney general bill barr, played during the second hearing into the attack on the capitol, saying donald trump was detached from reality, as he tried to overturn the 2020 election. we will have the key take-aways from day two of testimony. plus, after yesterday s intense sell-off, stock futures are in the green so far this morning. as investors brace for a larger than expected interest rate hike. we ll have the latest read on the economy. and the race to turn that bipartisan compromise on gun safety into law and the process of writing the bill hits a snag. good morning. and welcome to way too early. on this tuesday, june 14th. i m jonathan lemire. thanks for being with us. we begin today with the second hearing into the january 6th attack on the capitol. the house select committee made the case yesterday that donald trump had an inner circle of advisers telling him the truth, that the election was not stolen, but t
i m jake tapper. aides say this second hearing will drill down on evidence that president trump knew he lost the election but spread false claims of fraud anyway, ignoring court rulings, ignoring the will of the american people. lead-off witness, bill stepien, who has firsthand knowledge about what trump knew about the election numbers. stepien tells cnn he is appearing under subpoena. also testifying today, former fox digital content director chris stirewalt. he was fired after his accurate call of arizona for joe biden. we ll hear directly from republicans who investigated and rejected claims of election fraud in the key states of georgia and pennsylvania, and felt trump s anger for it, former u.s. attorney bijay . . ak and al schmidt and ben ginsburg will testify there was no widespread fraud in 2020 and discuss the trump team s failed challenge to the election results. the select house committee is aiming to connect more dots between the insurrection and its allegation
now it s an improper purpose based on what we heard from hershman saying the only thing i want to hear from you is orderly transition. if you don t do that, you re improperly there. you have a case, but there s still work to be done. cheney talked about the eastman memo, the notion of who was in the house? who was in the room where it happened to say this is what we re going to do. the conjuring moment of figuring out what to do next. i think that might be the piece that is most lacking, but this was a phenomenal stride toward supporting each of the elements. right. and the big lie is the first step to proving that criminal case, to prove that they knew it was a lie, and it was a lie and that they knew it was a lie. and then they vhave to connect t to what they did with it. i thought the last portion of the hearing was interesting, because we the end to forget about the grift. the quarter of a billion dollars they raised by lying to people about the election, and lying on m
presidential election and prevent the transfer of presidential power. the election lies. i made it clear i did not agree with the idea of saying the election was stolen and put out, i told the president this was [ bleep ]. the riot. i was slipping in people s blood. it was carnage. it was chaos. and the warning. i say this to my republican colleagues who are defending the indefensible. there will come a day when donald trump is gone, but your dishonor will remain. this morning, i ll talk to one of the members of the january 6th committee, democrat elaine luria. the documentary filmmaker who testified on thursday and the republican congressman who defied his party and voted for an independent commission. turned out to be the only clear evidence that could identify her at the shooting. how about that. gun safety demonstrations, coast to coast. even if democrats and republicans do reach a deal, will the limited changes really make a difference? joining me for ins
my news team is here with me. allie, where does this bipartisan framework on guns go from here? what s in the deal and what s not in the deal? yeah, what s in the deal is just as important as what s not in the deal. we have heard democrats, including joe biden, lay out things that he wanted to see in the senate framework. and some of the things he wanted in there are in there. others, though, are not. let s look first. you can see it on your screen as what is in this framework. and i m saying framework, because this is not yet a written bill in terms of having text, which is why we only have people saying they re supportive of the framework, opposed to people like senator mitch mcconnell, saying specifically in some of his statements that he supports the negotiation opposed to the underlying bill itself. that s because that bill doesn t exist yet. you can see it on the screen, funding for states to implement red flag laws, that s early interventions that someone who has peo