labor loosey-goosey but women making decisions about their own body roll down the gates side note, i did not know you worked at the bronx zoo. i was cashier and was pretty good if i do say so myself thank you, my friend. and thanks to all of you at home for joining us this hour yesterday when the news broke fox had reached a last minute settlement with dominion there was surprise and disappointment. damn it, i want my trial. i want it. i guess it s satisfying for dominion they had to fork over a pile of crash. what we need is fox news personalities who will look into the camera and admit they lied over and over again for the 2020 election america did not get to watch rupert murdoch raise his right hand and swear to thel the truth and nothing but the truth. they did not get any mea culpaas under oath what the country did get to see is a $787.5 million concession from fox, a nearly $788 million pay out that suggest fox was scared what awaited the company at trial, a p
this law of the land. it says, no person in the united states shall on the basis of sex be excluded from participation in being denied the benefits of or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance. again, in honor of this anniversary, we unveiled a portrait which will hang in the halls. it s about our first. the first she s actually the first woman of color to serve in the congress. so she s honored for her first burt also for what she accomplished. we already have good friday morning. i m garrett haake in washington listening to house speaker nancy pelosi reacting to what is the most seismic supreme court ruling in a generation. continuing breaking news coverage. granting abortion rights nationwide. this is the most highly anticipated decision in this supreme court session. probably the most highly anticipated decision in at least a decade. this decision centered on the case dobbs versus jackson inv
says he needs more weapons, and for the west, the star of russia of oil money. a sunday shopping trip turn s intoa political assault. video catches a supermarket worker slapping giuliani in the back. up first for us, the new supreme court math that will dramatically rewire american life. just today, a 6-3 high court ruling sided with a high school football coach who lost his job for praying on the sideline. last week the high court tossed out restrictions on carrying a concealed firearm. on friday, the court shredded the 50 year of precedence in the roe v. wade decision. that leaves us with two worlds, where abortions are legal and one where the options to getting one is insurmountable. it s both american law and politics. debates about contraception or what can be done to stop women from traveling to get an abortion or medications in the mail. justice clarence thomas live in washington for us, jessica, this decision today, 6-3 again. a conservative majority. it s another
justice clarence thomas where he writes, quote, in future cases, we should reconsider all of this court s substantive due process precedents, including griswold, lawrence, and obergefell. he is talking about reconsidering decisions on gay rights and the right to contraception. joining me now inside the growing protests, nbc s julia ainsley. josh letterman is at the white house where the president just spoke and barbara mcquaid former u.s. attorney and msnbc analyst. julia, i ve watched the crowd grow bigger by the minute. what is it like there and what is the mood? what are people telling you? reporter: well, here, chris, if you saw that, what we got from the leak just a few weeks ago would take any steam or pressure off this situation when the final decision came you would be wrong. i was there that day. it is even more fraught today. we re seeing a lot of intense emotions. some women are crying. people who had an abortion and some people who feel directly, personally viol
statements or about holding a press conference. the justice department declined all of those requests that i was just referencing because we did not think that they were appropriate based on the facts and the law. repeated attempts to over turn the election. much of yesterday hearing focused on jeffrey clark who played a central role in pushing trump s false election frauds and who trump wanted to install as the acting attorney general. just hours before yesterday s hearing, federal agents raided clark s home. we ll have much more on what led them to do that. our panel of experts join us as we cover the angles. the sarah, the select committee bringing into focus doj official jeffrey clark s role. significant role in the former president s scheme. yes, absolutely. rolling out how former president trump wanted to just set aside jeff rosen and steal jeffrey clark as the acting attorney general. look, the witnesses are in person and in their video testimony were not holding