repercussions for the election this year and also for the future of american democracy. it is arguably the most important election case to reach the supreme court since bush v gore nearly a quarter century ago. the question before the court is pretty simple actually. does section 3 of the 14th amendment, which bars, quote, an officer of the united states who, quote, engaged in insurrection from holding public office actually apply to the man who incited the january 6th riot, who tried to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power for the first time since the civil war. the colorado state supreme court has already ruled that, yes, trump should be barred from the ballot in that state based on the insurrection that he clearly engaged in. quote, president trump is disqualified from holding the office of president under section 3 because he is disqualified it would be a wrongful act under the election code for the secretary to list him as a candidate on the presidential primary ballot
fireworks as they investigate into elon musk and his purchase of twitter. live, president biden will be holding a news conference with the president of the finland that is nato s newest member. cocaine in the white house how it got there and who is to blame, congress looking for answers in a closed-door briefing by the secret service as a biden administration to insist while questions from the news media. welcome to a brand-new wall as america s newsroom. i am dana perino. lindamood and i like it. i like your. your funny. don t you think this he could knows by now, if they are there not telling us because right now that briefings people what they ve learned on the coke from last week last week in the west wing. the presence of illegal drugs raising questions of the level of security maintained in the white house, and a discovery that white powder forcing the evacuation of the entire building. now lawmakers are hoping the secret service can identify the culprit.
and how it s transforming the world around us. yeah, that includes in health care, where we meet the ai helping radiologists to diagnose cancer. you can see these little white dots. the ai is highly suspicious. and in the fast moving game of ai artwork, who owns what? and can artists protect their work? for some time artificial intelligence has been all around us. you might not have noticed it, but your video streaming services, social media feeds, the maps on your smartphones, they ve all been steadily improving their performance because the computers behind them have been learning. and then last year, something important happened. ai got human or at least it felt like it did. companies like google and openai started showing off stunning photorealistic images like these, all created by ai from short text descriptions. and then ai started having conversations with us. they were starting to generate stuff that felt human. this field of generative ai seems to have exploded so
southwest, from texas to florida, too. just a short time ago, phoenix hitting 110 degrees for a 12th day in a row. in california, meanwhile, at this hour, all eyes on a massive landslide, destroying or condemning at least 12 homes already. they are now worried about 16 more homes. the ground shifting. what s driving this? matt gutman live on the scene. the urgent manhunt right now in the northeast across state lines for that dangerous murder suspect. tonight here, the new image. the sheets he used to escape, and what they re now looking at. the suspected killer and where they think he could be. alex presha reporting. president biden on the world stage. the nato summit. and now president zelenskyy is there, furious that ukraine is being denied nato membership. biden and zelenskyy now set to meet tomorrow. and what the white house is saying tonight. elizabeth schulze is there. the republican senator under fire tonight for what he said about white nationalists. our rache
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