people for your vote. if we would not have joe biden in the white house. tonight, the effort to persuade rank and file republicans the former arizona house speaker rusty bowers on his conversations with the special counsel. then, as the ex president s body man is finally arraigned, how walt nada chose to be a defendant instead of a witness. plus, how two democratic governors used a favor republican mnuchin maneuver to turn their agendas into law and how the wildly successful rollout of the threads social media platform kicked off a billionaire battle for the ages. but offered me money. offer me power. i don t care. when all in starts, right now. good evening from new york. i m chris hayes. mike pence is in the very first presidential contest state of iowa tonight in the midst of the three-day campaign spectacle. although there s nothing more predictable than a former vice president iran for the white house, mike pence is in a unique position. not only was he number
calling on the president to susspend interest payments for student loans for 12 months. nancy mace on that and who pays for it. she s here. welcome, everyone. i m not neil cavuto. neil cavuto is getting well-deserved vacation. i m edward lawrence. this is a special edition of your world. first to jacqui heinrich on what the white house is saying about next steps for this. jacqui? yeah, the white house is going to have a hard time fulfilling calls from alexandria ocasio-cortez and others to suspect interest on students loan payments during that 12-month great period the administration is enacting before payments resume. as part of the budget agreement, the president signed in to law those payments must start again after august. the first ones are due in october. the only reason this grace period is considered a valid work around is because the bills would still be due but interest would be accruing. otherwise, it would be a postponement, which is barred under the new law.
republican congressman george santos who admitted to lying about parts of his background arrested. he is in federal custody this morning. we have the 13 count indictment and we ll break down the very serious charges he s facing. moments from now, homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas is set to give live remarks on operations at the southern border, one day before the health restrictions known as title 42 were set to be lifted. we re live on both sides of the border as the amount of people seeking asylum trying to seek asylum continues to build. and e. jean carroll speaking out one day after a federal jury found donald trump liable for sexually abusing and defaming her. we ll play for you what she had to say. in washington, a standoff between president biden and top republicans with just weeks to go before what could be a catastrophic default on the nation s debt. and we are following breaking news at this hour. right now, new york republican congressman george
marcus moore in ukraine. 24 hours after the deadly shooting rampage in atlanta the alleged gunman charge. as we now learn about the woman killed, a mother of two young children, a beloved cdc employee. four other women wounded. steve osunsami in atlanta. the deadly subway confrontation under investigation in new york city. disturbing video showing a former marine using a choke hold to restrain a man who witnesses say was acting erratically and threatening other passengers. the man later dying in the hospital. protesters demanding the former marine now face charges. the new report claiming the billionaire mega donor who paid for vacations or supreme court justice clarence thomas and bought justice thomas mother s home now comes reporting that the donor paid the private school tuition for thomas great-nephew who thomas raised as a son. n karl reporting tonight. the verdict for singer ed sheeran on whether he copied marvin gaye s song. you will hear his reaction tonight.
legal news. it is the first conviction of anyone for defying the house january 6 committee as well. we have experts about to join us who were inside the courtroom . this is a major deal. prosecutors basically made may have won their case that steve bannon hid insurrection evidence by refusing to show up or testify or provide documents requested under that lawful subpoena. mr. bannon faces up to two years in prison in a precedent- making a victory. for the justice department and the house, we have a lot to get to. a lot of angles. we go right into the breaking news to the people who know it best. armor federal prosecutor john flannery has dealt with exactly these kind of cases and has been counsel to three confessional crannies congressional committees. josh gerstein has been covering the story. he is out side the courthouse. josh, tell us how this news came down and what it means. well ari, good to see you. deliberations were very short in this case. the trial was pretty