Trey good evening. You think you for joining us. I am Trey Gowdy and it is to ben 30 a. In less than a month, americas pick a new P President re and whc the most consequential election in our lifetime. Both candidates stopping in key state as Harris And Trump deadlocked in Battleground H most in the whole margin of error. Esid but holes dont electCase president s, you do. Trump made his Case in wisconsin earlier today. We are a failinble,g nation. We are a failing nation. We are a nation in decLine. We are a nation in distress. And we are going to get it fixed very quickly. But you know what . If we have to go with another w four years with these people, these people and she is worse and she is worse than biden, in my opinion. Trey meanwhile Harris Wasamn in the birthplace of the Republican Party among other states this week. The tragic truth that we are facing in this election, that there is actually an Honestqu Question about onees of the candidates will uphold the oath to the consti
Whole story. I m te house staff. Even after the disastrous cnn debate against former president donald trump and the growing calls from democrats for him to pass the torch, biden seemed dug in. So the question is, what finally changed his mind? over the next hour, cnn s pamela brown examines the rise and fall of candidate joe biden from his motivations for running against donald trump to the final days and hours before his historymaking decision. [music playing] pamela brown (voiceover): it was summer 2017, joe biden was out of the vice presidency, out of washington dc, and in his home state of delaware. Evan osnos: joe biden found himself in a place he hadn t been in his entire adult life, frankly. His politics had defined his identity, and now all of a sudden, he was a man without a purpose. Jeff zeleny: it was always hanging over the question, would he get back in and run? jill biden: every single day, would come up to me at work or in the grocery store or the pharmacy, people on the
I cant give a timeline, because theres a number of outstanding ways to which we will have to see, whether thats through tightening up legislation, whether thats around the legal framework about how we can get these companies and these these building owners. Weve got thousands of people, Hundreds Of Thousands in the Cladding Scandal Campaign statement yesterday, still living in homes with the same risks in grenfell seven years ago. They are looking to you as the deputy prime minister, the Housing Secretary, to say when by, to put a deadline there. Which is why my Remediation Acceleration Plan is about how i can speed up that process. Leon, 330,000 People Cant sell their flats until the cladding is removed, unless they can find Cash Buyers in limbo. There are people living in fear of the cladding outside their apartment. Surely, with six years of inquiry and £11 billion there to deal with the problem, we could set a deadline. Problem, we could set a deadline. , . ,. , deadline. Youd hav
Welcome to this special edition of hannity. Hanz in for chaffet sean. In just a moment, we ll get full reaction and analysism kamala s disastrous interview on cnn. . Tht first, we ll take you live to the annual gathering of moms for liberty, where formere id president trump is speaking. Let ent tris speaks listen in fd i ve heard you talk about yourt mom in interviews before. Ve she was obviously a very strong woman. Warys she hard on you with school? tell us about your mom. A little bit. No, she wa no. S a she was greaty i had a great mother, great father, very different people. Dmy mother came from scotlandce and she came over to this country. Other people from scotland, you know, actually, that s hidden. Do you know that some of the biggeshet, smartest, mostin brilliant leaders in come from scotland and nobody knows it, ro or at least, you know, their parents came from scotland, but it scotland. Scotland did very well in this country out. It s very g we have people and i know that o
that s going to do it for me today. deadline: white house starts now. hi everyone. it s 4:00 in new york. i m ali velshi in for nicolle wallace. an incredibly important question looming over democracy, can presidents be held accountable for crimes committed in office. a unanimous ruling by the d.c. court of appeals rejected donald trump s claims of immunitity in the federal election case. the decision by the judges is a stinging rebuke of the ex-president in what has become a months long push to get the charges against him dismissed. in their ruling, the judges make the point that while donald trump is a former president of the united states, he is in the eyes of the law, just another criminal defendant. for the purposes of this criminal case, frp has become citizen trump with all the any executive immunity that may have protected him while he served as president no longer protects him in this prosecution. prosecuting presidents for things they did in office would have