,laura .ilme killing americanris is notcans competing with thempetin united states. g it s competitive, strong response from our commander in chief to impose costs on china. but we all know that s notis going to happen. well n, we know why it s not going to happen.t a lo i think we ve got a lot of people compromised by china, the united states , and they have been for a long timeercise and made a lot of money exercise a lot of influence and influence peddling here ince the united states . and we are alllot paying the pe for a lot of greed and a lot of those in the administration right now. but you bet. and we re going to stayt is on this, john . the most important issuesu om america s facing. thank you. pro a special from pbs providevisth the latest reason why they should stop receiving anyg special taxpayers assistance. we ll show you special taxpayer assistance. we re going to show you in i moments. plus, former nban star andrew bogut is here to share the details of the gender opti
i m more than happy to accept the results, and it s the same shame that senator johnson can t accept the same thing. wisconsin is one of those states that is always an era. joe biden won victories tend to be narrow because the state is deeply purple. it s a very sharp divide between the two parties. joe biden won the state by 21,000 votes. what seems to be happening in wisconsin is that republicans, when they can t win outright, fair and square, they tried to diminish or dilute democratic power in the state through gerrymandering and otherwise basically shrinking the power of democrats to represent the state. even if they have the votes, if you will. i believe democrats have to win the statewide vote by 12 points just to get 50 seats in the assembly, according to the marquette university law school. republicans, on the other hand, could garner the majority of seats in the state assembly with just 45 votes. i think that strikes people as, on its face, undemocratic. but then there
has is certain what he s going to do. my guess is he will move in. he has to do something. by the way, i have indicated to him. the two things he said to me that he wants guarantees on, one is ukraine will never be part of nato. and two, that nato there will not be strategic weapons stationed in ukraine. well, we can work out something on the second piece depending on what he does along the russian line as well n the border in the european area of russia. on the first piece, the likelihood that ukraine is going to join nato in the near term is not very likely based on much more work they have to to in terms of democracy and a to you other things going on there. and whether or not the major allies in the west would vote to the bring ukraine in right now.
0 of your second, third, and fourth years? ashley? when you gave thattors forceful speech about voting rights in atlanta you conveyed it as being on the right side of history. my question, does president biden believe those people who voted against the filibuster to open up debate on voting rates, are they racist? joe, quickly to you. american consumers are hurting so much. what additional measures are you prepared to take to curve inflation and bring it down. that does it for us. thanks to all of you for watching. deadline: white house picks up our special coverage here on msnbc now. se picks up our special coverage here on msnbc now. hi there, everyone. it is 4:00 in new york. we are less than two minutes away from president biden s news conference. just his second solo domestic news conference as president. this marks the official ends of his first year in office. the white house today setting the stage for what they are describing as a reset moment, an opportunity to
as they have been insistent they have done the best they can do and now suddenly in the face of many of the things we have talked about already, we will talk about more, they seem to be acknowledging that message was not always falling on skeptical ears across the political spectrum. well n the first half of this first year of biden s presidency, getting the pandemic under control, getting the vaccine out there, you know, that was the keystone to their argument they were making about how president biden was showing that the government could work for people again, that he was showing people that we were going to put the worst behind us and the best days ahead of us were ahead of us. it was freedom from the pandemic. it was defeating the virus. and that was what was driving those really high approval numbers we saw in the early days of his presidency. since august when we really first saw that surge in florida driven by delta, those numbers obviously have come way down,