president biden: no. todd: griff jenkins is in washington with the latest from the president s trip. griff. griff: good morning, carley and todd. joe biden s first trip to asia ends just moments from now. you are looking live at air force one, waiting to get wheels up from tokyo, just after 6 p.m. there. caps swing through south korea and japan intended to highlight a new economic pact. as you saw, the president leaves major questions looming over the u.s. policy toward taiwan, which the white house was forced to walk back in a statement and defense secretary austin tried to clean up yesterday. our one china policy has not changed. he reiterated that policy and our commitment to peace and stability across the taiwan strait. griff: not the first time the white house has had to clarify for the president, drawing harsh criticism from china s leaders and earlier this morning in one of the president s last public events, biden was hammered with questions over whether he
put out another fire. forced to walk back military intervention. this is amateur hour at 1600 pennsylvania. inside out, foul. the baseball landed in a beer cup and he just the whole beer with the ball in the cup. georgia then it would all make sense. all eyes are on georgia, texas. minnesota. where else can we look? alabama. brian: arkansas. ainsley: texas. brian: not a lot. but i think a lot of people looking at georgia. ainsley: sarah huckabee sanders she will probably win. brian: that was it. we are out of that shot now. just the three of us for the rest of the three hours. have some commercials. ainsley: we will highlight all of the primaries for you today. it s another midterm primary day in america. brian: it s a big one. ainsley: voters getting set to hit the polls in five more states today. will: you heard us rattle off some georgia and texas spotlight taking center stage with big endorsement. brian: we also have a bush in this race.
Brian Kemp has thus far declined getting into the 2024 presidential race. But insiders also say he's cracked the door a bit more recently as Trump's troubles pile up.
Photo Illustration by Kelly Caminero / The Daily Beast / GettyAs the field of GOP presidential candidates grows but struggles to gain ground on Donald Trump, Republicans and Democrats have increasingly noticed that one of the figures best-positioned to take on the former president remains on the sidelines.Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, one of the only high-profile Republicans to have ever come out stronger from a battle with Trump, has conspicuously stiff-armed buzz about his own presidential prospect
Some of the GOP’s biggest stars are helping vulnerable candidates in the final weeks of the midterm elections while helping themselves to national exposure ahead of 2024.