political pressure push it into doing things and handle an investigation in ways it wouldn t otherwise conduct, and the hillary clinton investigation probable the most prominent example but probably not the only person in the department who made decisions about that case because of the pressure they were getting from republicans on capitol hill. once you start departing from the way you would conduct investigations and start doing things because people on the hill are saying put resources here, not where the facts or the law justify resources being spent, you really start to make mistakes that can come to mark your tenure and have very difficult to undo. i wonder what you made of tom cotton s saying they re too busy and they should spend some of that time in human capitol investigating people who were protesting outside justices home after the supreme court dobbs decision. thursday an answer to that. no matter what you think about
0 brown of ohio, thank you so much. chris, thank you, always. that is all in on this wednesday night. alex wagner tonight starts right now, good evening, alex. what is happened in the railroad companies. we all experts of the efficiency mechanisms of employed in the last decade. the stock buyback. it s exactly what, one of the things that happen in covid. system running in the background you don t think about. how did the chemical get across the country? the whole system of that. purplepurple around the country and powerful systems that want the public to pay for the risk as much as possible operating thin background and then a disaster happens between a potential rail strike and this accident it s blown the whole thing open and we re acutely aware of all the risks involved thanks to you at home for joining us tonight do you remember this photo the iconic image of classified documents splayed out on the floor of donald trump s mar-a-lago home after the fbi searched it las
when we come back, how far the january 6th committee can go in holding the twice-impeached disgraced ex-president accountable. increasingly seems to come down to the potential cooperation of former vice president mike pence. we have brand-new reporting to tell you about on the growing tension between the pence camp and the committee. and there s some brand-new subpoenas from the january 6th committee to tell you about as well. plus, the can t-miss, must-watch moment from dr. fauci s testimony on capitol hill today when he confronted rand paul for his monstrous ways. deadline white house continues after a quick break. ways deadline white house continues after a quick break. [bacon sizzles] [bacon sizzles] [electronic music plays]
mission control, we are go for launch. t-minus two minutes and counting. um, she s eating the rocket. -copy that, she s eating the rocket. i assume we needed that? [chomping sound] lunchables! built to be eaten. she has eaten the rocket. [girl burps] over. facebook is under more public and political scrutiny than ever thanks to frances haugen s testimony on capitol hill. also they could face new legal scrutiny. s.e.c. chair gary gensler told
government. it s time chuck schumer. they ve done that. it s time chuck schumer starts playing tough. absolutely. politico s sam stein, thank you very much. thanks, guys. coming up, after testimony on capitol hill from a facebook whistle employeer, the naacp is demanding a meeting with the social media company to discuss hate speech on its platform. more on morning joe. act, congress can tackle it head on. with tax credits for clean energy companies that create millions of new jobs. .and ramp up new technology and clean energy manufacturing. it means families pay less for utilities. .and america becomes the global leader in clean energy it s time to build back better. and that means taking on climate change. with clean energy jobs