planes were rerouted. some began to run low on fuel. now a the faa lied as it often does and blamed connective weather. but w this is not a weather problem. this is a systemic problem since vaccine mandates took effect for airlines and air traffic controllers a were federally regulated, air travel in this country has been a mess . it s been a disaster. they did it on purpose from the start of the year through june 13 , commercial airlines canceled more than one hundred and twenty thousand commercial flights. they delayed another eight hundred thousand flights. that means 20% of all domesticts air flights in this country were delayed or canceled with passengers waiting an average of forty minutes. many routes are becoming soin unpredictable that airlines are canceling them outright. jetblue is killing twenty seven regular routes this summertb permanently peak travel season, delta eliminating one hundred . now what is the administration doing about this deliberately makingng it worse? wh
you know, for years many, many, manyific, they d celebrate a 13r old who ratted out his own father for taking a little tooo much grain. they killed the kidle because the parents turned him in and then the boy ended up beinged martyred and celebrated throughout the soviet as being an informant forever. yeah, that s that s what thisye is in npr. they are turning everyone into informants against each other. you catch somebody with a mask halfway down their face, you rat them out. this is where the left has become a bunch of soviet hall monitors and this is the policy they ve instituted inside taxpayer funded npr. if you had to pick the home of virtue signaling you would probably pick npr offices and they of course of the last ones hanging on to masking and now turning to as you pointe informing on their coworkers it s absolutely stunning, vince. but what we expect from npr. yeah, no. and the reality here is if you re wondering whyy so many of your democrat friends became sort of like a ta
for w h y y and fun fact, she was once an intern of our own steve kornacki. katie, what do you think about his win, were people around the state have been saying about him? well, we had a very last-minute attempt by republican insiders in pennsylvania, to go or less supports of barletta who has been trailing him in the polls. and that really speaks to what s republicans in the state are thinking about. not necessarily that they can t support mashed ran out and his policies, a lot of them ask randall mentioned, the mainstream of the gop at this point. getting rid of abortion. but because they have concern whether or not he can beach dasha perot. i ll just say as well, these are similar concerns to the ones that people had about donald trump in 2016, and he went on to be teller canton in the general election and in pennsylvania. you never know what s going to happen to these. true true, michael, let s talk about pennsylvania s democratic senate candidates. what is it about josh fette
scatterings of votes coming in as well. anything significant we see we ll let you know. the biggest single one we re keeping an eye on is that one, bucks county. a real nail biter in pennsylvania. steve tracking that. given that we are watching this, i want to go before we bring back michael steele, watching all this tonight, we go on the ground to whyy in philadelphia, katie meyer, political reporter there. thank you for joining us. what do you make of it at this hour given what we re learning and just how tight it is? yeah. it s very tight. this is a race where both of the candidates who are now competing for these votes coming in the suburbs don t have extremely tight ties to pennsylvania or to the areas where they live. so, yeah. oz has montgomery county listed as his hometown on the ballot but he doesn t have a deep history there and a political history there. that does matter in this race where you really can t tell how the votes are going to split in these again really imp