candidate he cost bush the election. ross perot struck a cord with voters and shook up america s political landscape in the process. mobilized over 30 million voters to get him on the ballot and was the most successful third party candidate in u.s. history. jesse: a third party candidate can be deadly in the general. right now, half of americans say they would consider voting for a third party candidate if it s trump vs. biden: so there is an open lane and someone is sliding in. his name is cornell west. can these bleak times, i have decided to run for truth and justice which takes the form of running for president of the united states as a con democrat for people s party. cornell west a far left guy. there is an appetite on the left antiwar. bernie sanders abandon the people that voted for them once their party got in power. cornell people s party founded by one of bernie s old staffers. tried to recruit bernie-to-run in 2020. he thought he would have a better chance
supreme court says, not so fast, to special counsel jack smith, giving the former president s go-slow legal strategy a big boost. the former president says he knows nothing about hitler, while repeating and defending his hitler-like language. plus a survivor of the october 7th massacre and her remarkable journey. good evening. anderson is off tonight. and we begin with the supreme court s decision not to decide, at least just yet, the central question that could invalidate many of the charges against the former president. namely, does donald trump enjoy immunity from prosecution for actions he took as president? the judge in his january 6th trial ruled he did not. special counsel jack smith asked the supreme court to bypass the d.c. circuit and take it now. and today the court said no. cnn s katelyn polantz joins us with more. kate lynne, we have a decision, not a clear understanding of an explanation of why the justices decided this. walk us through what we know, how man
video campaign offering russians a secure way to safely share secrets about the war in ukraine. inside that strategy, next. and the critical meeting in the next 60 minutes between president biden and kevin mccarthy over the debt ceiling. what we just learned from an influential member of congress. our nbc reporters are following all of the latest developments for us. let s start at the white house where against backdrop of a slightly nervous wall street, that high level, high stakes meeting is about to get underway with the full faith and credit of the u.s. at stake. monica alba joins us with more. so, monica, what is the white house saying ahead of this meeting? well, much like last week when we were in this exact position, chris, when the president had invited the top congressional leaders to come to the oval office for this meeting, remember that white house officials lowered expectations, saying there wouldn t be a major breakthrough as a result of this meeting. we ar
hello and welcome to the programme. america grammy award winning singer tina turner, widely hailed as the queen of rock and roll, has died. she was 83 years old. her publicist said she had been suffering from a long illness. born anna mae bullock in the state of tennessee, she became famous in the late 1960s performing as a duo in a turbulent musical partnership with her abusive husband ike turner. as a solo artist with global hits like what s love got to do with it, the best and private dancer, she sold more than 180 million albums worldwide. her high kicking, inexhaustable energy on stage made her a defining icon of pop music in the 1980s. david sillito looks back at her life and career. # when you were a young boy # did you have a puppy # that always followed you around. 1966, river deep, mountain high. in yourface, hip shaking, sweat drenched, passionate, pop perfection. # and do i love you, my oh my # river deep, mountain high.# however, in america, the song was a flop.
broadcast it to the world and i hope a lot of people in upper management are asleep right now. laura: you know what i m going to say. i m going to say tweet me at ingraham angle if you like hannity better with a tie or not. sean: you re like an adopted sister who never stops poking and prodding. laura: i m going to poke you. i ll do my best for the next hour. i m laura ingraham this is the ingraham angle tonight. thanks for spending time with us. sabotaging america is the focus of tonight s and. you know we spend more than $800 billion a year on our military and the pentagon just announced another $1.2 billion in assistance for ukraine today. but for almost 2.5 years, our elected officials have allowed our country to be invaded. yeah, i m going to say it, invaded. overrun by millions of people who are gaming the system by fraudulently claiming asylum. now countless others, several hundred thousand at least, have gotten away, they ve run, they ve walked, they waded acros