shannon: political firestorm igniting just a month before super tuesday capping off a week of wins for chief rival former president trump. it up biden department of ingested liquor could show off the hook for some of his very egregious crimes. quick to the president s attorney general -based pressure over his appointment of a special counsel? the way the president s demeanor in that report was characterized, could not be more wrong on the facts. and clearly politically motivated because he will get reaction to all of this with republican senator tom cotton democratic congressman adam smith. then, israel prime minister order to s military to come up with a plan to evacuate more than a million palestinians sheltering in the southern gaza city have been expected ground offensive rigorous military operations would be a disaster for this people nuts on something we would support groups will speak with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu live. plus, in congress a bitter b
plus this vote the yeas are 214 and the nays are 216. the resolution is not adopted. a major and humiliating setback for house republicans as they failed to impeach homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas. how the drama unfolded on the house floor and the surprise move by democrats in the vote s final minute. and also ahead we ll show you the pretty embarrassing election results out of nevada. who republican voters picked over nikki haley in the state s primary race even though donald trump s name wasn t even on the ballot. good morning and welcome to way too early on this wednesday, february 7th. i m jonathan lemire. thanks for starting your day with us, and it is an extraordinarily busy news day, and we ll begin here. a federal appeals court has rejected donald trump s claim he is immune from prosecution in his election interference case. the three-judge panel in the d.c. circuit court of appeals ruled unanimously yesterday that there was no basis for tru
night in a stunning rebuke. it was a mess what happened here, but we re cleaning it up. the chasm between the two parties is wider than it s ever been. where does washington go now on issues millions of americans care about? plus, can donald trump be kept off the colorado s primary ballot for his role leading up to the january 6th attack on the capitol. that s the high-stakes question that will be argued before the supreme court tomorrow. what to expect in court and the critical implications for the decision. a defiant prime minister bibi netanyahu just moments ago telling the world israel will not stop until all of hamas is gone from gaza. those comments coming after a new hamas counterproposal for a cease fire and hostage deal, so what happens now? but we begin on capitol hill where chaos is winning in a battle over compromise. as soon as an hour from now, the senate will vote on whether to proceed with a $118 billion national security package including for the bo
fox news at night. and breaking tonight, the results are astounding. a california school district, where just one out of 20 kids can do math at grade level, says the answer to low test scores is to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer money on, quote, woke kindergarten, a program that advocates getting rid of everything from police to whiteness to israel. but instead of boosting performance, the program has done the exact opposite. bill melugin is reviewing the numbers and the curriculum he s live with more on what he found good evening. good evening to you. it s pretty wild, this elementary school is up in the bay area and spent a quarter million dollars in federal money for what is being called a woke program to try and boost their low test scores but all that ended up happening is their test scores fell even further. so take a look. this is glass brook elementary school, a predominately low-income school with mostly minority students. years ago it was strug
trump s prediction there is, again, it s not their role to abide by what the impacts could be in terms of bedlam or the political impact, but also if they were to abide by that, they re essentially giving in to trump. i mean, remember that he is the one that helped cause helped fan the flames that led to the insurrection, however they decide, right? and that is still an ongoing threat that people are dealing with, people of both parties, legislated officials, people in the judiciary who are not political at all because of this rhetoric. so it s already happening regardless of how the supreme court decides on this, and i think that s important to remember. jen psaki and michael steele, our thanks to both of you. let s do a quick reset at the top of the hour, i m ana cabrera alongside my colleagues, josé diaz-balart and andrea mitchell. thank you for being with us as we continue our special coverage of the arguments before the supreme court that we brought to you live on a