insights with us. thank you so much. that does it for me. thank you for watching. ali will be back here next saturday and sunday morning from 10 am to noon eastern. stay right where you are. inside jen psaki begins right now. well it s been a pretty demoralizing week. three major supreme court decisions with far-reaching consequences. one effectively scrapping affirmative action programs. one invalidating president biden s student loan debt relief plan. one clearing the way for businesses to refuse service to lgbtq+ americans. i ll talk about that, and how democrats should be fighting back, and the politics of pennsylvania with the state s governor, josh shapiro, who s coming up first. plus, law professor and former clerk to judge sonia studio more, is joining me to talk about the impact of the supreme court decisions. we talk about the uncertainty facing many college students graduates, education secretary, miguel cardona, we ll talk about the and she is the first openly
cameras and the country. what does he know, what is he willing to tell the committee? he is appearing under subpoena which adds a wrinkle of uncertainty and how much he will be cooperative. today s hearing will focus on trump s lies about election fraud and how they helped fuel the mob that attacked the capitol on january 6th. we ll hear evidence that trump knew the claims were baseless but spread the lies anyway. a member telling new day it could lead to the potential prosecution of trump. we are laying out a road map for the american people to understand all of the facts and, you know, i think the justice department is watching very closely, like the chairman said, all of the information to the committee as collected will be shared with the department of justice in a way they can evaluate it. and elaine loria says they will show with evidence with not just one congressman, but other congressmen sought pardons from trump. we ve been asked, is there hard evidence? t
margin of error. there is also the looming threat of third party candidates, according to the same poll, 34% of registered voters say they are willing to consider supporting a third party or independent candidate. if biden and trump are the nominees in 2024. this includes more democrats than republicans, outside a polling, unseen additional nbc republicans who broke from trump endorsed biden in 2020 are cooling to the prospect. there is sitting on the sidelines of biden s reelection campaign at this point. a feat zero in on pennsylvania, one of the most closely watched battleground states, there are similar warning signs. pennsylvania voters showing virtual dead heat between trump and biden, 47% of all registered voters there, and 46% support biden. it s hard to overstate how important this will be and the 2024 race. it s always an important state. that was highlighted when the
wouldn t do it. he resigned. al schmidt, also a republican, he was overseeing the election in philadelphia. of course, as you know, trump was trying to zero in on pennsylvania, falsely saying there was election fraud there. we know there wasn t. and then ben ginsburg, a renowned conservative attorney, very respected. he s going to come out and talk about all these court cases the trump campaign lost. he ll come out and say, according to a source familiar, that there was no widespread election fraud. again, you re going to see the committee use words from republicans, from people inside trump world trying to use it against the former president. there are a lot of questions about what the campaign was doing, fund-raising, knowingly off of what was a lie, but the committee is really going to try to stay zeroed in on donald trump, right, what he knew, how much, how often he was told, no, you didn t win the election. yeah, i think both. pam s absolutely right about all